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1.
1. Techniques and experiments are described concerned with the millisecond kinetics of EPR-detectable changes brought about in cytochrome c oxidase by reduced cytochrome c and, after reduction with various agents, by reoxidation with O2 or ferricyanide. Some experiments in the presence of ligands are also reported. Light absorption was monitored by low-temperature reflectance spectroscopy.2. In the rapid phase of reduction of cytochrome c oxidase by cytochrome c (< 50 ms) approx. 0.5 electron equivalent per hame a is transferred mainly to the low-spin heme component of cytochrome c oxidase and partly to the EPR-detectable copper. In a slow phase (> 1 s) the copper is reoxidized and high-spin ferric heme signals appear with a predominant rhombic component. Simultaneously the absorption band at 655 nm decreases and the Soret band at 444 nm appears between the split Soret band (442 and 447 nm) of reduced cytochrome a.3. On reoxidation of reduced enzyme by oxygen all EPR and optical features are restored within 6 ms. On reoxidation by O2 in the presence of an excess of reduced cytochrome c, states can be observed where the low-spin heme and copper signals are largely absent but the absorption at 655 nm is maximal, indicating that the low-spin heme and copper components are at the substrate side and the component(s) represented in the 655 nm absorption at the O2 side of the system. On reoxidation with ferricyanide the 655 nm absorption is not readily restored but a ferric high-spin heme, represented by a strong rhombic signal, accumulates.4. On reoxidation of partly reduced enzyme by oxygen, the rhombic high-spin signals disappear within 6 ms, whereas the axial signals disappear more slowly, indicating that these species are not in rapid equilibrium. Similar observations are made when partly reduced enzyme is mixed with CO.5. The results of this and the accompanying paper are discussed and on this basis an assignment of the major EPR signals and of the 655 nm absorption is proposed, which in essence is that published previously (Hartzell, C. R., Hansen, R. E. and Beinert, H. (1973) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S. 70, 2477–2481). Both the low-spin (g = 3; 2.2; 1.5) and slowly appearing high-spin (g = 6; 2) signals are attributed to ferric cytochrome a, whereas the 655 nm absorption is thought to arise from ferric cytochrome a3, when it is present in a state of interaction with EPR-undetectable copper. Alternative possibilities and possible inconsistencies with this proposal are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Experiments are described on oxido-reductive titrations of cytochrome c oxidase as followed by low-temperature EPR and reflectance spectroscopy. The reductants were cytochrome c or NADH and the oxidant ferricyanide. Experiments were conducted in the presence and absence of either cytochrome c or carbon monoxide, or both. An attempt is made to provide a complete quantitative balance of the changes observed in the major EPR signals. During reduction, the maximal quantity of heme represented in the high-spin ferric heme signals (g approximately 6; 2) is 25% of the total heme present, and during reoxidation 30%. With NADH reduction there is little difference between the pattern of disappearance of the low-spin ferric heme signals in the absence or presence of cytochrome c. The copper and high-spin heme signals, however, disappear at higher titrant concentrations in the presence of cytochrome c than in its absence. In these titrations, as well as in those with ferrocytochrome c, the quantitative balance indicates that, in addition to EPR-detectable components, EPR-undetectable components are also reduced, increasingly so at higher titrant concentrations. The quantity of EPR-undectable components reduced appears to be inverely related to pH. A similar inverse relationship exists between pH and appearance of high-spin signals during yhe titration. At pH 9.3 the quantity of heme represented in the high-spin signals is less than 5%, whereas it approximately doubles from pH 7.4 to pH 6.1. In the presence of CO less of the low-spin heme and copper signals disappears for the same quantity of titrant consumed, again implying reduction of EPR undetectable components. At least one of these components is represented in a broad absorption band centered at 655 nm. The stoichiometry observed on reoxidation, particularly in the presence of CO, is not compatible with the notion that the copper signal represents 100% of the active copper of the enzyme as a pair of interacting copper atoms.  相似文献   

3.
Experiments are described on oxido-reductive titrations of cytochrome c oxidase as followed by low-temperature EPR and reflectance spectroscopy. The reductants were cytochrome c or NADH and the oxidant ferricyanide. Experiments were conducted in the presence and absence of either cytochrome c or carbon monoxide, or both. An attempt is made to provide a complete quantitative balance of the changes observed in the major EPR signals. During reduction, the maximal quantity of heme represented in the high-spin ferric heme signals (g ~ 6; 2) is 25% of the total heme present, and during reoxidation 30%. With NADH reduction there is little difference between the pattern of disappearance of the low-spin ferric heme signals in the absence or presence of cytochrome c. The copper and high-spin heme signals, however, disappear at higher titrant concentrations in the presence of cytochrome c than in its absence. In these titrations, as well as in those with ferrocytochrome c, the quantitative balance indicates that, in addition to EPR-detectable components, EPR-undetectable components are also reduced, increasingly so at higher titrant concentrations. The quantity of EPR-undetectable components reduced appears to be inversely related to pH. A similar inverse relationship exists between pH and appearance of high-spin signals during the titration. At pH 9.3 the quantity of heme represented in the high-spin signals is < 5%, whereas it approximately doubles from pH 7.4 to pH 6.1. In the presence of CO less of the low-spin heme and copper signals disappears for the same quantity of titrant consumed, again implying reduction of EPR undetectable components. At least one of these components is represented in a broad absorption band centered at 655 nm. The stoichiometry observed on reoxidation, particularly in the presence of CO, is not compatible with the notion that the copper signal represents 100% of the active copper of the enzyme as a pair of interacting copper atoms.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of CO on the optical absorbance spectrum of partially reduced cytochrome c oxidase has been studied. The changes at 432 and 590 nm suggest that the cytochrome alpha2/3+ - CO compound is formed preferentially and that concomitantly a second electron is taken up by the enzyme. From the CO-induced changes at 830 nm it is concluded that in the partially reduced enzyme addition of CO causes reoxidation of the copper component of cytochrome c oxidase. Addition of CO to partially reduced enzyme (2 electrons per 4 metal ions) also brings about a decrease in the intensities of electron paramagnetic resonance signals of high-spin heme iron near g = 6 and of the low-spin heme at g = 2.6. Concomitantly both the low-spin heme a signal at g = 3 and the copper signal at g = 2 increase in intensity. These results demonstrate that formation of the reduced diamagnetic cytochrome a3 - CO compound is accompanied by reoxidation of both the copper component detectable by electron paramagnetic resonance and possibly also by cytochrome a.  相似文献   

5.
1. The major EPR signals from native and cytochrome c-reduced beef heart cytochrome c oxidase (EC 1.9.3.1) are characterized with respect to resonance parameters, number of components and total integrated intensity. A mistake in all earlier integrations and simulations of very anisotropic EPR signals is pointed out. 2. The so-called Cu2+ signal is found to contain at least three components, one "inactive" form and two nearly similar active forms. One of the latter forms, corresponding to about 20% of the total EPR detectable Cu, has not been observed earlier and can only be resolved in 35 GHz spectra. It is not reduced by cytochrome c and is thought to reflect some kind of inhomogeneity in the enzyme preparation. The 35 GHz spectrum of the cytochrome c reducible component shows a rhombic splitting and can be well simulated with g-values 2.18, 2.03 and 1.99. The origin of such a unique type of Cu2+ spectrum is discussed. 3. The low-spin heme signal in the oxidized enzyme (g = 3.03, 2.21, 1.45) is found to correspond closely to one heme and shows no signs of interaction with other paramagnetic centres. 4. The high-spin heme signals appearing in partly reduced oxidase are found to consist of at least three species, one axial and two rhombic types. An integration procedure is described that allows the determination of the total integral intensity of high-spin heme EPR signals only by considering the g = 6 part of the signals. In a titration with ascorbate and cytochrome c the maximum intensity of the g = 6 species corresponds to 23% of the enzyme concentration.  相似文献   

6.
Helmut Beinert  Robert W. Shaw 《BBA》1977,462(1):121-130
In oxidized, resting cytochrome c oxidase (EC 1.9.3.1) and under most conditions of partial reduction ? 50% of the heme components are detected by EPR spectroscopy. When the enzyme is fully reduced in the presence of equimolar quantities of cytochrome c, anaerobic reoxidation by an excess of a chemical oxidant (ferricyanide, porphyrexide) produces intense high and low spin heme signals simultaneously. The time range in which maximal high spin signals are observed is 0.1–2 s after mixing. Under these conditions 35–50% of the total heme a is accounted for by the low spin heme signal and 35–40% by the high spin signals, with the rhombic component accounting for 30–35% of the total heme. It is concluded that under these conditions, the major portion of both heme components must be EPR detectable. Thus, if the generally accepted assignment of the low spin signal to cytochrome a is adopted, it follows that in the experiments described, cytochrome a3 is represented in the rhombic high spin signal. The quantities of heme represented in the axial high spin signal are too small for a definitive assignment; these signals could originate from either heme. When after formation of high spin signals as described, O2 is admitted, the rhombic signal is eliminated within 4 ms. In the presence of the strongest rhombic high spin signals, the absorption band at 655 nm is only ? 25% developed. The implications of these findings are discussed in the context of present hypotheses concerning the state and interactions of cytochrome c oxidase components during oxidation-reduction.  相似文献   

7.
The EPR signals of oxidized and partially reduced cytochrome oxidase have been studied at pH 6.4, 7.4, and 8.4. Isolated cytochrome oxidase in both non-ionic detergent solution and in phospholipid vesicles has been used in reductive titrations with ferrocytochrome c.The g values of the low- and high-field parts of the low-spin heme signal in oxidized cytochrome oxidase are shown to be pH dependent. In reductive titrations, low-spin heme signals at g 2.6 as well as rhombic and nearly axial high-spin heme signals are found at pH 8.4, while the only heme signals appearing at pH 6.4 are two nearly axial g 6 signals. This pH dependence is shifted in the vesicles.The g 2.6 signals formed in titrations with ferrocytochrome c at pH 8.4 correspond maximally to 0.25–0.35 heme per functional unit (aa3) of cytochrome oxidase in detergent solution and to 0.22 heme in vesicle oxidase. The total amount of high-spin heme signals at g 6 found in partially reduced enzyme is 0.45–0.6 at pH 6.4 and 0.1–0.2 at pH 8.4. In titrations of cytochrome oxidase in detergent solution the g 1.45 and g 2 signals disappear with fewer equivalents of ferrocytochrome c added at pH 8.4 compared to pH 6.4.The results indicate that the environment of the hemes varies with the pH. One change is interpreted as cytochrome a3 being converted from a high-spin to a low-spin form when the pH is increased. Possibly this transition is related to a change of a liganded H2O to OH? with a concomitant decrease of the redox potential. Oxidase in phosphatidylcholine vesicles is found to behave as if it experiences a pH, one unit lower than that of the medium.  相似文献   

8.
1. The photodissociation reaction of the cytochrome c oxidase-CO compound was studied by EPR at 15 °K. Illumination with white light at both room and liquid N2 temperatures of the partially reduced cytochrome c oxidase (2 electrons per 4 metals) in the presence of CO, causes the appearance of a rhombic (gx = 6.60, gy = 5.37) high-spin heme signal.This signal disappears completely upon darkening of the sample and reappears upon illumination at room temperature; accordingly the photolytic process is reversible. Under these conditions, no great changes in the intensities are observed, neither of the copper signal at g = 2, nor of the low-spin heme signal at g = 3, 2.2 and 1.5.2. In the presence of ferricyanide (2 mM) and CO, both the low-spin heme signal (g = 3.0, 2.2 and 1.5) and the copper signal of the partially reduced enzyme have intensities about equal to those of the completely oxidized enzyme in the absence of CO. Upon illumination of the carboxy-cytochrome c oxidase in the presence of ferricyanide, it was found that the rhombic high-spin heme signal appears without affecting appreciably the copper of low-spin heme signals. Thus, in the presence of ferricyanide the EPR-detectable paramagnetism of the illuminated carboxy-cytochrome c oxidase is higher than in the untreated oxidized enzyme.3. The membrane-bound cytochrome c oxidase reduced with NADH in the presence of CO and subsequently oxidized with ferricyanide shows a similar rhombic high-spin heme signal (gx = 6.62, gy = 5.29) upon illumination at room temperature. This signal disappears completely upon darkening and reappears upon illumination at room temperature.  相似文献   

9.
Pseudomonas cytochrome c peroxidase contains two hemes, one of which is shown to be in low-spin and one in high-spin state. The ferric enzyme reveals absorption maxima at 640 and 705 nm. The alkaline transition of these bands indicates the sixth iron-binding ligand of the low-spin and high-spin heme to be, respectively, a methionyl residue and a water molecule. The high-spin heme reacts with hydrogen peroxide to form a ferryl structure, which is the reactive intermediate in the peroxidatic reaction. The ferrous enzyme binds carbon monoxide in a 1:1 molar ratio, whereas the ferric form is unreactive towards small anionic ligands like F- and CN-. On this basis the peroxidase may also be classified as a cytochrome cc'.  相似文献   

10.
Cytochrome bd-type ubiquinol oxidase contains two hemes b (b(558) and b(595)) and one heme d as the redox metal centers. To clarify the structure of the reaction center, we analyzed Escherichia coli cytochrome bd by visible absorption, EPR and FTIR spectroscopies using azide and cyanide as monitoring probes for the exogenous ligand binding site. Azide-binding caused the appearance of a new EPR low-spin signal characteristic of ferric iron-chlorin-azide species and a new visible absorption band at 647 nm. However, the bound azide ((14)N(3)) anti-symmetric stretching infrared band (2, 010.5 cm(-1)) showed anomalies upon (15)N-substitutions, indicating interactions with surrounding protein residues or heme b(595) in close proximity. The spectral changes upon cyanide-binding in the visible region were typical of those observed for ferric iron-chlorin species with diol substituents in macrocycles. However, we found no indication of a low-spin EPR signal corresponding to the ferric iron-chlorin-cyanide complexes. Instead, derivative-shaped signals at g = 3.19 and g = 7.15, which could arise from the heme d(Fe(3+))-CN-heme b(595)(Fe(3+)) moiety, were observed. Further, after the addition of cyanide, a part of ferric heme d showed the rhombic high-spin signal that coexisted with the g(z) = 2.85 signal ascribed to the minor heme b(595)-CN species. This indicates strong steric hindrance of cyanide-binding to ferric heme d with the bound cyanide at ferric heme b(595).  相似文献   

11.
Second derivative absorption spectra are reported for the aa3-cytochrome c oxidase from bovine cardiac mitochondria, the aa3-600 ubiquinol oxidase from Bacillus subtilis, the ba3-cytochrome c oxidase from Thermus thermophilis, and the aco-cytochrome c oxidase from Bacillus YN-2000. Together these enzymes provide a range of cofactor combinations that allow us to unequivocally identify the origin of the 450-nm absorption band of the terminal oxidases as the 6-coordinate low-spin heme, cytochrome a. The spectrum of the aco-cytochrome c oxidase further establishes that the split Soret band of cytochrome a, with features at 443 and 450 nm, is common to all forms of the enzyme containing ferrocytochrome a and does not depend on ligand occupancy at the other heme cofactor as previously suggested. To test the universality of this Soret band splitting for 6-coordinate low-spin heme A systems, we have reconstituted purified heme A with the apo forms of the heme binding proteins, hemopexin, histidine-proline-rich glycoprotein and the H64V/V68H double mutant of human myoglobin. All 3 proteins bound the heme A as a (bis)histidine complex, as judged by optical and resonance Raman spectroscopy. In the ferroheme A forms, none of these proteins displayed evidence of Soret band splitting. Heme A-(bis)imidazole in aqueous detergent solution likewise failed to display Soret band splitting. When the cyanide-inhibited mixed-valence form of the bovine enzyme was partially denatured by chemical or thermal means, the split Soret transition of cytochrome a collapsed into a single band at 443 nm.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Electron paramagnetic resonance and electronic absorption spectral changes upon addition of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) to ferric and ferrous cytochrome c have been measured at 77 degrees K and at room temperature. The spectral changes upon addition of SDS to ferric cytochrome c were performed, in two steps, from native low-spin to another low-spin spectrum and subsequently to high-spin-like spectrum. On the other hand, the spectral changes upon addition of SDS to ferrous cytochrome c proceeded, in one step, from native low-spin to high-spin spectrum. The high-spin-like spectrum of ferric cytochrome c and the high-spin spectrum of ferrous cytochrome c in the presence of high concentrations of SDS are, respectively, apparently similar to those of ferric and ferrous cytochrome c' at physiological pH in spectral features. These spectral similarities suggest the similarities in the heme stereochemistry and the ground state of heme iron. Further, the spectra of cytochrome c in the presence of SDS varied with the change of pH values. The ferric high-spin-like and ferrous high-spin spectra were stable at neutral pH and below it. Conformational changes of cytochrome c upon addition of SDS are also discussed.  相似文献   

13.
A detailed study is presented of the room-temperature absorption, natural and magnetic circulation-dichroism (c.d. and m.c.d.) spectra of cytochrome c oxidase and a number of its derivatives in the wavelength range 700-1900 nm. The spectra of the reduced enzyme show a strong negative c.d. band peaking at 1100nm arising from low-spin ferrous haem a and a positive m.c.d. peak at 780nm assigned to high-spin ferrous haem a3. Addition of cyanide ion doubles the intensity of the low-spin ferrous haem c.d. band and abolishes reduced carbonmonoxy derivative the haem a32+-CO group shows no c.d. or m.c.d. bands at wavelengths longer than 700nm. A comparison of the m.c.d. spectra of the oxidized and cyanide-bound oxidized forms enables bands characteristic of the high-spin ferric form of haem a33+ to be identified between 700 and 1300nm. At wavelengths longer than 1300nm a broad positive m.c.d. spectrum, peaking at 1600nm, is observed. By comparison with the m.c.d. spectrum of an extracted haem a-bis-imidazole complex this m.c.d. peak is assigned to one low-spin ferric haem, namely haem a3+. On binding of cyanide to the oxidized form of the enzyme a new, weak, m.c.d. signal appears, which is assigned to the low-spin ferric haem a33+-CN species. A reductive titration, with sodium dithionite, of the cyanide-bound form of the enzyme leads to a partially reduced state in which low-spin haem a2+ is detected by means of an intense negative c.d. peak at 1100 nm and low-spin ferric haem a33+-CN gives a sharp positive m.c.d. peak at 1550nm. The c.d. and m.c.d. characteristics of the 830nm absorption band in oxidized cytochrome c oxidase are not typical of type 1 blue cupric centres.  相似文献   

14.
Cytochrome c(m552) (cyt c(m552)) from the ammonia-oxidizing Nitrosomonas europaea is encoded by the cycB gene, which is preceded in a gene cluster by three genes encoding proteins involved in the oxidation of hydroxylamine: hao, hydroxylamine oxidoreductase; orf2, a putative membrane protein; cycA, cyt c(554). By amino acid sequence alignment of the core tetraheme domain, cyt c(m552) belongs to the NapC/TorC family of tetra- or pentaheme cytochrome c species involved in electron transport from membrane quinols to a variety of periplasmic electron shuttles leading to terminal reductases. However, cyt c(m552) is thought to reduce quinone with electrons originating from HAO. In this work, the tetrahemic 27 kDa cyt c(m552) from N. europaea was purified after extraction from membranes using Triton X-100 with subsequent exchange into n-dodecyl beta-d-maltoside. The cytochrome had a propensity to form strong SDS-resistant dimers likely mediated by a conserved GXXXG motif present in the putative transmembrane segment. Optical spectra of the ferric protein contained a broad ligand-metal charge transfer band at approximately 625 nm indicative of a high-spin heme. Mossbauer spectroscopy of the reduced (57)Fe-enriched protein revealed the presence of high-spin and low-spin hemes in a 1:3 ratio. Multimode EPR spectroscopy of the native state showed signals from an electronically interacting high-spin/low-spin pair of hemes. Upon partial reduction, a typical high-spin heme EPR signal was observed. No EPR signals were observed from the other two low-spin hemes, indicating an electronic interaction between these hemes as well. UV-vis absorption data indicate that CO (ferrous enzyme) or CN(-) (ferric or ferrous enzyme) bound to more than one and possibly all hemes. Other anionic ligands did not bind. The four ferrous hemes of the cytochrome were rapidly oxidized in the presence of oxygen. Comparative modeling, based on the crystal structure and conserved residues of the homologous NrfH protein from Desulfovibrio of cyt c(m552), predicted some structural elements, including a Met-ligated high-spin heme in a quinone-binding pocket, and likely axial ligands to all four hemes.  相似文献   

15.
The reaction of fully reduced soluble bovine heart cytochrome oxidase with O2 at 173K was investigated by low-temperature optical and e.p.r. spectroscopy, and the kinetics of the reaction were analysed by non-linear optimization techniques. The only e.p.r. signals seen during the course of the reaction are those attributable to low-spin cytochrome a3+ and CuA2+. Quantitative analysis of e.p.r. signals shows that, at the end point of the reaction at 173K, nearly 100% of CuA is in the cupric state but only about 40% of cytochrome a is in the ferric low-spin state. The optical spectra recorded at this stage of the reaction show incomplete oxidation of haem and the absence of a 655 nm absorption band. The only reaction scheme that accounts for both the e.p.r. and optical data is a four-intermediate mechanism involving a branching pathway. The reaction is initiated when fully reduced cytochrome oxidase reacts with O2 to form intermediate I. This is then converted into either intermediate IIA or intermediate IIB. Of these, intermediate IIB is a stable end product at 173 K, but intermediate IIA is converted into intermediate III, which is the stable state at 173 K in this branch of the mechanism. The kinetic analysis of the e.p.r. data allows the unambiguous assignments of the valence states of cytochrome a and CuA in the intermediates. Intermediate I contains cytochrome a2+ and CuA+, intermediate IIA contains low-spin cytochroma a3+ and CuA+, intermediate IIB contains cytochrome a2+ and CuA2+, and intermediate III contains low-spin cytochrome a3+ and CuA2+. The electronic state of the O2-binding CuBa3 couple during the reoxidation of cytochrome oxidase is discussed in terms of an integrated structure containing CuB, cytochrome a3 and O2.  相似文献   

16.
The spin state of the heme in superoxide (O(2)(.)(-))-producing cytochrome b(558) purified from pig neutrophils was examined by means of room-temperature magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) under physiological conditions. Cytochrome b(558) with varying amounts of low-spin and high-spin heme was prepared by either pH adjustment or heat treatment, and the O(2)(.)(-)-forming activity in a cell-free system was found to correlate with the low-spin heme content. The possibility that the O(2)(.)(-)-forming activity results from a transient high-spin ferric heme form that is induced during activation by anionic amphophils has also been investigated. EPR spectra of cytochrome b(558) activated by either arachidonic acid or myristic acid, showed that a transient high-spin ferric species accounting for approximately 50% of the heme appeared in the presence of arachidonic acid, but not in the presence of myristic acid. Hence the appearance of a transient high-spin ferric heme species on activation with an amphophil does not afford a common activation mechanism in the NADPH oxidase system. The EPR results for cytochrome b(558) activated with arachidonic acid showed that the transient high-spin ferric heme can bind cyanide. However, the high-spin ferric heme does not contribute to the O(2)(.)(-) production of cytochrome b(558) in cell-free assays in the presence of cyanide.  相似文献   

17.
Two-subunit SoxB-type cytochrome c oxidase in Bacillus stearothermophilus was over-produced, purified, and examined for its active site structures by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and resonance Raman (RR) spectroscopies. This is cytochrome bo3 oxidase containing heme B at the low-spin heme site and heme O at the high-spin heme site of the binuclear center. EPR spectra of the enzyme in the oxidized form indicated that structures of the high-spin heme O and the low-spin heme B were similar to those of SoxM-type oxidases based on the signals at g=6.1, and g=3.04. However, the EPR signals from the CuA center and the integer spin system at the binuclear center showed slight differences. RR spectra of the oxidized form showed that heme O was in a 6-coordinated high-spin (nu3 = 1472 cm(-1)), and heme B was in a 6-coordinated low-spin (nu3 = 1500 cm(-1)) state. The Fe2+-His stretching mode was observed at 211 cm(-1), indicating that the Fe2+-His bond strength is not so much different from those of SoxM-type oxidases. On the contrary, both the Fe2+-CO stretching and Fe2+-C-O bending modes differed distinctly from those of SoxM-type enzymes, suggesting some differences in the coordination geometry and the protein structure in the proximity of bound CO in cytochrome bo3 from those of SoxM-type enzymes.  相似文献   

18.
One equivalent of Fe3+ -mesoporphyrin (heme) is coordinated by two axial histidine ligands to a preferred site on histidine-rich glycoprotein (HRG). This study shows that titration of this stochiometric heme.HRG complex with 0-20 equivalents of Cu2+ produces a series of pronounced spectral changes indicative of multiple, sequential alterations of the heme environment. A monotonic low- to high-spin heme transition characterized by a decrease in resonance amplitude at g = 2.99, an increase at g = 6.0, and an increase in absorptivity at 620 nm is induced with the addition of the first 10 Cu2+ equivalents. Furthermore, optical absorption and circular dichroism spectra exhibit isosbestic and isodichroic points throughout the addition of the first 8 and 12 equivalents, respectively. The isosbestic points imply a transition between two optically well defined axial heme coordinations, and the isodichroic points suggest that these axial coordinations also represent two distinct protein conformations. A second isosbestic is formed during the addition of 14-20 equivalents of Cu2+, again suggesting well-defined coordinations; however, changes in the EPR spectra over this range are more complex. Whereas the amount of low-spin (g = 2.99) heme.HRG complex continues to decrease with the addition of 10-20 Cu2+ equivalents, the amount of the high-spin (g = 6.0) complex reaches a maximum near 14 equivalents and decreases markedly thereafter. Of potentially greater significance is the appearance of signals at g = 9.3 (maximum), 7.7 (maximum), 4.8 (crossover), and 1.61 (minimum) after addition of 10 or more Cu2+ equivalents. Some of these signals are similar to those exhibited by cardiac cytochrome c oxidase upon reduction and reoxidation. Thus, even without the addition of exogenous reductants and oxygen, the interaction of Cu2+ with the stoichiometric heme.HRG complex may produce structural features similar to those found in a mechanistically important but poorly understood form of cardiac cytochrome c oxidase.  相似文献   

19.
MauG is a diheme enzyme possessing a five-coordinate high-spin heme with an axial His ligand and a six-coordinate low-spin heme with His-Tyr axial ligation. A Ca(2+) ion is linked to the two hemes via hydrogen bond networks, and the enzyme activity depends on its presence. Removal of Ca(2+) altered the electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) signals of each ferric heme such that the intensity of the high-spin heme was decreased and the low-spin heme was significantly broadened. Addition of Ca(2+) back to the sample restored the original EPR signals and enzyme activity. The molecular basis for this Ca(2+)-dependent behavior was studied by magnetic resonance and M?ssbauer spectroscopy. The results show that in the Ca(2+)-depleted MauG the high-spin heme was converted to a low-spin heme and the original low-spin heme exhibited a change in the relative orientations of its two axial ligands. The properties of these two hemes are each different than those of the heme in native MauG and are now similar to each other. The EPR spectrum of Ca(2+)-free MauG appears to describe one set of low-spin ferric heme signals with a large g(max) and g anisotropy and a greatly altered spin relaxation property. Both EPR and M?ssbauer spectroscopic results show that the two hemes are present as unusual highly rhombic low-spin hemes in Ca(2+)-depleted MauG, with a smaller orientation angle between the two axial ligand planes. These findings provide insight into the correlation of enzyme activity with the orientation of axial heme ligands and describe a role for the calcium ion in maintaining this structural orientation that is required for activity.  相似文献   

20.
J Wang  H Zhu  M R Ondrias 《Biochemistry》1992,31(51):12847-12854
Ferric cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP) undergoes a ligation-state transition from a pentacoordinate, high-spin (5c/hs) heme to a hexacoordinate, low-spin (6c/1s) heme when titrated over a pH range of 7.30-9.70. This behavior is similar to that exhibited by the ferrous form of the enzyme. However, the photodissociation of the low-spin, axial ligand, exhibited by ferrous CCP at alkaline pH, is not observed for ferric CCP. Instead, a photoinduced reduction of the ferric heme is apparent in the pH range 7.90-9.70. In the absence of O2 and redox mediators such as methyl viologen (MV2+), the reoxidation of the photoreduced enzyme is very slow (tau 1/2 approximately 3 min). F(-)-bound CCP(III) (6c/hs) displays similar pH-dependent photoreduction. Horseradish peroxidase, however, does not. The formation of 6c/1s heme coincides with the onset of appreciable photoreduction (between laser pulses, > 60 ms) of CCP (III) at alkaline pH, suggesting a global protein conformational rearrangement within or around its heme pocket. Photoreduction of alkaline CCP(III) most likely involves intramolecular electron transfer (ET) from the aromatic residue in the proximal heme pocket to the photoexcited heme. We speculate that the kinetics of electron transfer are affected by changes in the orientation of Trp-191.  相似文献   

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