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1.
The oxidized binuclear heme a3/CuB center of slow forms of bovine cytochrome oxidase exhibits a characteristic EPR signal at g' = 12. Following the (rapid) dithionite reduction of heme a and CuA, an additional EPR signal becomes apparent at g' = 2.95. As electrons enter the binuclear center this signal decays at the same slow rate as the g' = 12 signal. In the fully oxidized slow enzyme the small g' = 2.95 signal is usually masked by the g = 3 heme a signal, but it is readily detectable at low temperatures and high microwave powers. It is present in both the intrinsic and formate-ligated slow enzymes, but not in any form of fast preparation. The g' = 2.95 signal has similar temperature dependence and microwave power saturation characteristics to the g' = 12 signal. We conclude that the signal arises from the same population of binuclear centers responsible for the g' = 12 signal. The appearance of a signal at g' = 2.95 in X-band EPR is consistent with, but does not prove, the model of Hagen where the g' = 12 signal arises from a ferryl heme a3, with CuB cuprous and EPR-silent (Hagen, W. R. (1982) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 708, 82-98).  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
The EPR absorption properties of the hemes of cytochrome oxidase and their liganded derivatives were examined in oriented multilayers from isolated oxidase, mitochondrial membranes and membrane fragments of a bacterium, Paracoccus denitrificans. The hemes of the oxidase in all the systems investigated were oriented normal to the plane of the multilayers. The directions of the g signals corresponding to the gx and gy axes of the g tensor were found to be different in low-spin ferric heme in fully oxidized oxidase and in half-reduced liganded oxidase. It is suggested that this different orientation of gx and gy in fully oxidized oxidase and half-reduced liganded oxidase arises because the respective EPR signals belong to two different hemes, those of cytochrome a and a3.  相似文献   

4.
Orientations of the active site chromophores of the mitochondrial redox carriers have been investigated in hydrated, oriented multilayers of mitochondrial membranes using optical and EPR spectroscopy. The hemes of cytochrome c oxidase, cytochrome c1, and cytochromes b were found to be oriented in a similar manner, with the normal to their heme planes lying approximately in the plane of the mitochondrial membrane. The heme of cytochrome c was either less oriented in general or was oriented at an angle closer to the plane of the mitochondrial membrane than were the hemes of the "tightly bound" mitochondrial cytochromes. EPR spectra of the azide, sulfide and formate complexes of cytochrome c oxidase in mitochondria in situ obtained as a function of the orientation of the applied magnetic field relative to the planes of the membrane multilayers showed that both hemes of the oxidase were oriented in such a way that the angle between the heme normal and the membrane normal was approx. 90 degrees.  相似文献   

5.
Incubation of cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) in its resting state in saturated ammonium sulfate, at room temperature overnight, gave EPR signals characteristic of a single Cu(II) center. From the g// and A// values it is concluded that this is a square-planar type 2 copper center, and superhyperfine splitting shows the presence of three nearly equivalent 14N nuclei in the plane. It is suggested that this center, also formed by incubating the enzyme in 10% methanol followed by direct irradiation, must be the CuB center. This type 2 copper EPR spectrum is identical to the EPR spectrum of CuB reported for the isolated cytochrome bo3 complex from Escherichia coli; and to the EPR spectrum reported for the sulfobetaine 12 heat-treated cytochrome c oxidase complex. It is argued that a small perturbation in the system causes decoupling of the magnetic coupling of the heme a3-CuB binuclear center and the appearance of the type 2 EPR signal.  相似文献   

6.
Amino acid sequence data have revealed that the bo-type ubiquinol oxidase from Escherichia coli is closely related to the eukaryotic aa3-type cytochrome c oxidases. In the cytochrome c oxidases, the reduction of oxygen to water occurs at a binuclear center comprised of heme a3 and Cu(B). In this paper, Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy of CO bound to the enzyme is used to directly demonstrate that the E. coli bo-type ubiquinol oxidase also contains a heme-copper binuclear center. Photolysis of CO ligated to heme o at low temperatures (e.g., 30 K) results in formation of a CO-Cu complex, showing that there is a heme-Cu(B) binuclear center similar to that formed by heme a3 and Cu(B) in the eukaryotic oxidase. It is further demonstrated that the cyoE gene product is required for the correct assembly of this binuclear center, although this polypeptide is not required as a component of the active enzyme in vitro. The cyoE gene product is homologous to COX10, a nuclear gene product from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which is required for the assembly of yeast cytochrome c oxidase. Deletion of the cyoE gene results in an inactive quinol oxidase that is, however, assembled in the membrane. FTIR analysis of bound CO shows that Cu(B) is present in this mutant but that the heme-Cu(B) binuclear center is abnormal. Analysis of the heme content of the membrane suggests that the cyoE deletion results in the insertion of heme B (protoheme IX) in the binuclear center, rather than heme O.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
Nitrous oxide reductase from Wolinella succinogenes, an enzyme containing one heme c and four Cu atoms/subunit of Mr = 88,000, was studied by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) at 9.2 GHz from 6 to 80 K. In the oxidized state, low spin ferric cytochrome c was observed with gz = 3.10 and an axial Cu resonance was observed with g parallel = 2.17 and g perpendicular = 2.035. No signals were detected at g values greater than 3.10. For the Cu resonance, six hyperfine lines each were observed in the g parallel and g perpendicular regions with average separations of 45.2 and 26.2 gauss, respectively. The hyperfine components are attributed to Cu(I)-Cu(II) S = 1/2 (half-met) centers. Reduction of the enzyme with dithionite caused signals attributable to heme c and Cu to disappear; exposure of that sample to N2O for a few min caused the reappearance of the g = 3.10 component and a new Cu signal with g parallel = 2.17 and g perpendicular = 2.055 that lacked the simple hyperfine components attributed to a single species of half-met center. The enzyme lost no activity as the result of this cycle of reduction and reoxidation. EPR provided no evidence for a Cu-heme interaction. The EPR detectable Cu in the oxidized and reoxidized forms of the enzyme comprised about 23 and 20% of the total Cu, respectively, or about one spin/subunit. The enzyme offers the first example of a nitrous oxide reductase which can have two states of high activity that present very different EPR spectra of Cu. These two states may represent enzyme in two different stages of the catalytic cycle.  相似文献   

8.
M Fabian  G Palmer 《Biochemistry》1999,38(19):6270-6275
The redox states of the "peroxy" (P) and "ferryl" (F) intermediates formed during reoxidation of reduced bovine cytochrome c oxidase have been probed by reduction with both ferrocytochrome c and acetylpyridine NADH under anaerobic conditions using optical spectroscopy. The reduction of the P and F forms revealed that both are in very similar redox states. One-electron reduction of either the P or F form yields an optical spectrum primarily due to oxidized enzyme implying that the heme iron of cytochrome a3 is in the ferryl state in both forms. The F and P forms were found to be 1 and less than 1.3 oxidizing equiv, respectively, above the oxidized enzyme. The slightly higher oxidation state in the P form is interpreted as being due to an optically undetectable redox center presumably located in the binuclear cavity.  相似文献   

9.
The cytochrome-bo quinol oxidase of Escherichia coli contains a high-spin b-type heme (cytochrome o), a low-spin b-type heme (cytochrome b) and copper. The EPR signal from cytochrome o is axial high spin and when titrated potentiometrically gives a bell-shaped curve. The low-potential side of this curve (Em7 approx. 160 mV) corresponds to the reduction/oxidation of the cytochrome. The high-potential side (Em7 approx. 350 mV) is proposed to be due to reduction/oxidation of a copper center; in the CuII form tight cytochrome o-copper spin coupling results in a net even spin system and loss of the EPR spectrum. Optical spectra of the alpha-bands of the reduced cytochromes at 77 K show that cytochrome b has its maxima at 564 nm when cytochrome o is oxidized but that this shifts to 561 nm when cytochrome o (max. 555 nm) is reduced. Both a heme-copper (cytochrome o-CuII) and a heme-heme (cytochrome o-cytochrome b) interaction are indicated in this quinol oxidase. These results indicate that cytochrome-bo quinol oxidase has a binuclear heme-copper catalytic site and suggest striking structural similarity to subunit I of the cytochrome aa3 system.  相似文献   

10.
Sulfite oxidase purified from livers of tungsten-treated rats has been used for EPR studies of tungsten substituted at the molybdenum site of the enzyme in a fraction of the molecules. The EPR signal of W(V) in sulfite oxidase is quite similar to that of Mo(V) in its line shape and in its sensitivity to the presence of anions such as phosphate and fluoride. Hyperfine interaction with a dissociable proton is also observed in both signals. The pH-dependent alteration in line shape exhibited by the Mo(V) EPR signal of the rat liver enzyme. Incomplete reduction of the tungsten center at pH 9 is indicated by attenuated signal intensity at this pH. The W(V) signal has g values lower than those of the Mo(V) signal, has a much broader resonance envelope, and is much less readily saturated by increasing microwave power. Kinetic studies on the reduction of the heme and tungsten centers of sulfite oxidase have shown that reduction of de-molybdo forms of sulfite oxidase by sulfite is catalyzed by the residual traces of native molybdenum-containing molecules. Reduction is accomplished by electron transfer involving intermolecular heme-heme interaction. The W(V) signal is generated only after all the heme centers are reduced. The rate and extent of heme reduction at pH 9 are the same as at pH 7. Studies on the reoxidation of W(V) and reduced heme by O2 and by cytochrome c suggest that the cytochrome b5 of sulfite oxidase is the site of electron transfer to cytochrome c, whereas oxidase activity is the property of the molybdenum center. It appears that the tungsten center in sulfite oxidase is incapable of oxidizing sulfite.  相似文献   

11.
The EPR absorption properties of the hemes of cytochrome oxidase and their liganded derivatives were examined in oriented multilayers from isolated oxidase, mitochondrial membranes and membrane fragments of a bacterium, Paracoccus denitrificans. The hemes of the oxidase in all the systems investigated were oriented normal to the plane of the multilayers. The directions of the g signals corresponding to the gx and gy axes of the g tensor were found to be different in low-spin ferric heme in fully oxidized oxidase and in half-reduced liganded oxidase. It is suggested that this different orientation of gx and gy in fully oxidized oxidase and half-reduced liganded oxidase arises because the respective EPR signals belong to two different hemes, those of cytochrome a and a3.  相似文献   

12.
Orientations of the active site chromophores of the mitochondrial redox carriers have been investigated in hydrated, oriented multilayers of mitochondrial membranes using optical and EPR spectroscopy. The hemes of cytochrome c oxidase, cytochrome c1, and cytochromes b were found to be oriented in a similar manner, with the normal to their heme planes lying approximately in the plane of the mitochondrial membrane. The heme of cytochrome c was either less oriented in general or was oriented at an angle closer to the plane of the mitochondrial membrane than were the hemes of the “tightly bound” mitochondrial cytochromes. EPR spectra of the azide, sulfide and formate complexes of cytochrome c oxidase in mitochondria in situ obtained as a function of the orientation of the applied magnetic field relative to the planes of the membrane multilayers showed that both hemes of the oxidase were oriented in such a way that the angle between the heme normal and the membrane normal was approx. 90°.  相似文献   

13.
Electrons were discretely injected into oxidized cytochrome c oxidase in liposomes by laser flash excitation of bound ruthenium [II] bispyridyl, and the membrane potential was recorded by time-resolved electrometry. Membrane potential is generated in a fast phase when an electron is transferred from the excited dye, via the CuA center, to heme a at a relative dielectric depth d inside the membrane [Zaslavsky, D., Kaulen, A. D., Smirnova, I. A., Vygodina, T., and Konstantinov, A. A. (1993) FEBS Lett. 336, 389-393]. Subsequently, membrane potential may develop further in a slower event, which is due to proton transfer into the enzyme from the opposite side of the membrane [Ruitenberg, M., Kannt, A., Bamberg, E., Ludwig, B., Michel, H., and Fendler, K. (2000) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 97, 4632-4636]. Here, we confirm that injection of the first electron into the fully oxidized cytochrome c oxidase from Paracoccus denitrificans is associated with a fast electrogenic 11 micros phase, but there is no further electrogenic phase up to 100 milliseconds when special care is taken to ensure that only fully oxidized enzyme is present initially. A slower electrogenic 135 micros phase only becomes apparent and grows in amplitude upon increasing the number of light flashes. This occurs in parallel with a decrease in amplitude of the 11 micros phase and correlates with the number of enzyme molecules that are already reduced by one electron before the flash. The electrogenic 135 micros phase does not appear with increasing flash number in the K354M mutant enzyme, where electron and proton transfer into the binuclear center is delayed. We conclude that the 135 micros phase, and its associated proton uptake, take place on electron injection into enzyme molecules where the binuclear heme a3-CuB site is already reduced by one electron, and that it is accompanied by oxidation of heme a with a similar time constant. Reduction of heme a is not associated with electrogenic proton uptake into the enzyme, neither in the fully oxidized nor in the one-electron-reduced enzyme. The extent of the electrogenic 135 micrcos phase also rules out the possibility that reduction of the binuclear center by the second electron would be coupled to proton translocation in addition to the electrogenic uptake of a proton.  相似文献   

14.
The reaction of cytochrome c oxidase with hydrogen peroxide has been of great value in generating and characterizing oxygenated species of the enzyme that are identical or similar to those formed during turnover of the enzyme with dioxygen. Most previous studies have utilized relatively low peroxide concentrations (millimolar range). In the current work, these studies have been extended to the examination of the kinetics of the single turnover of the fully reduced enzyme using much higher concentrations of peroxide to avoid limitations by the bimolecular reaction. The flow-flash method is used, in which laser photolysis of the CO adduct of the fully reduced enzyme initiates the reaction following rapid mixing of the enzyme with peroxide, and the reaction is monitored by observing the absorbance changes due to the heme components of the enzyme. The following reaction sequence is deduced from the data. (1) The initial product of the reaction appears to be heme a(3) oxoferryl (Fe(4+)=O(2)(-) + H(2)O). Since the conversion of ferrous to ferryl heme a(3) (Fe(2+) to Fe(4+)) is sufficient for this reaction, presumably Cu(B) remains reduced in the product, along with Cu(A) and heme a. (2) The second phase of the reaction is an internal rearrangement of electrons and protons in which the heme a(3) oxoferryl is reduced to ferric hydroxide (Fe(3+)OH(-)). In about 40% of the population, the electron comes from heme a, and in the remaining 60% of the population, Cu(B) is oxidized. This step has a time constant of about 65 micros. (3) The third apparent phase of the reaction includes two parallel reactions. The population of the enzyme with an electron in the binuclear center reacts with a second molecule of peroxide, forming compound F. The population of the enzyme with the two electrons on heme a and Cu(A) must first transfer an electron to the binuclear center, followed by reaction with a second molecule of peroxide, also yielding compound F. In each of these reaction pathways, the reaction time is 100-200 micros, i.e., much faster than the rate of reaction of peroxide with the fully oxidized enzyme. Thus, hydrogen peroxide is an efficient trap for a single electron in the binuclear center. (4) Compound F is then reduced by the final available electron, again from heme a, at the same rate as observed for the reduction of compound F formed during the reaction of the fully reduced oxidase with dioxygen. The product is the fully oxidized enzyme (heme a(3) Fe(3+)OH(-)), which reacts with a third molecule of hydrogen peroxide, forming compound P. The rate of this final reaction step saturates at high concentrations of peroxide (V(max) = 250 s(-)(1), K(m) = 350 mM). The data indicate a reaction mechanism for the steady-state peroxidase activity of the enzyme which, at pH 7.5, proceeds via the single-electron reduction of the binuclear center followed by reaction with peroxide to form compound F directly, without forming compound P. Peroxide is an efficient trap for the one-electron-reduced state of the binuclear center. The results also suggest that the reaction of hydrogen peroxide to the fully oxidized enzyme may be limited by the presence of hydroxide associated with the heme a(3) ferric species. The reaction of hydrogen peroxide with heme a(3) is very substantially accelerated by the availability of an electron on heme a, which is presumably transferred to the binuclear center concomitant with a proton that can convert the hydroxide to water, which is readily displaced.  相似文献   

15.
Krithika Ganesan  Robert B. Gennis 《BBA》2010,1797(6-7):619-624
The K-pathway is one of the two proton-input channels required for function of cytochrome c oxidase. In the Rhodobacter sphaeroides cytochrome c oxidase, the K-channel starts at Glu101 in subunit II, which is at the surface of the protein exposed to the cytoplasm, and runs to Tyr288 at the heme a3/CuB active site. Mutations of conserved, polar residues within the K-channel block or inhibit steady state oxidase activity. A large body of research has demonstrated that the K-channel is required to fully reduce the heme/Cu binuclear center, prior to the reaction with O2, presumably by providing protons to stabilize the reduced metals (ferrous heme a3 and cuprous CuB). However, there are conflicting reports which raise questions about whether blocking the K-channel blocks both electrons or only one electron from reaching the heme/Cu center. In the current work, the rate and extent of the anaerobic reduction of the heme/Cu center were monitored by optical and EPR spectroscopies, comparing the wild type and mutants that block the K-channel. The new data show that when the K-channel is blocked, one electron will still readily enter the binuclear center. The one-electron reduction of the resting oxidized (“O”) heme/Cu center of the K362M mutant, results in a partially reduced binuclear center in which the electron is distributed about evenly between heme a3 and CuB in the R. sphaeroides oxidase. Complete reduction of the heme/Cu center requires the uptake of two protons which must be delivered through the K-channel.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
Das TK  Mazumdar S 《Biopolymers》2000,57(5):316-322
Picosecond time-resolved fluorescence studies are carried out on cyanide-inhibited and heat-modified cytochrome c oxidase in aqueous lauryl maltoside surfactant solution, as well as in an aqueous vesicle, to understand the conformational changes associated with electron transfer and proton pumping activity of the enzyme. The tryptophan fluorescence decay profiles follow a four exponential model, which also matches the lifetime maxima obtained in a maximum entropy method analysis. The fast lifetime components are highly affected by the reduction and chemical modification of the enzyme. Changes in these lifetime components are related to the conformational changes in the vicinity of the heme centers of the enzyme. The cyanide-inhibited enzyme in the oxidized form shows a fluorescence decay profile similar to that of the native oxidized form, indicating that the conformational changes due to cyanide binding are very small. However, reduction of the cyanide-inhibited enzyme that leaves cyanide bound heme alpha3 oxidized causes a large increase in the fluorescence lifetimes, which indicates very significant conformational changes due to electron transfer to the dinuclear Cu(A) and heme alpha centers. A comparison of the tryptophan fluorescence decay of various other modified forms of the enzyme leads us to propose that the possible site of conformational coupling is located near heme alpha instead of the binuclear heme alpha3-Cu(B) center.  相似文献   

18.
The mechanism of the dioxygen (O(2)) reduction conducted by cytochrome bo-type quinol oxidase was investigated using submillisecond-resolved freeze-quench EPR spectroscopy. The fully reduced form of the wild-type enzyme (WT) with the bound ubiquinone-8 at the high-affinity quinone-binding site was mixed with an O(2)-saturated solution, and the subsequent reaction was quenched at different time intervals from 0.2 to 50 ms. The EPR signals derived from the binuclear center and heme b were weak in the time domain from 0.2 to 0.5 ms. The signals derived from the ferric heme b and hydroxide-bound ferric heme o increased simultaneously after 1 ms, indicating that the oxidation of heme b is coupled to the formation of hydroxy heme o. In contrast, the enzyme without the bound ubiquinone-8 (Delta UbiA) showed the faster oxidation of heme b and the slower formation of hydroxy heme o than WT. It is interpreted that the F(I) intermediate possessing ferryl-oxo heme o, cupric Cu(B), and ferric heme b is converted to the F(II) intermediate within 0.2 ms by an electron transfer from the bound ubiquinonol-8 to ferric heme b. The conversion of the F(II) intermediate to the hydroxy intermediate occurred after 1 ms and was accompanied by the one-electron transfer from heme b to the binuclear center. Finally, it is suggested that the hydroxy intermediate possesses no bridging ligand between heme o and Cu(B) and is the final intermediate in the turnover cycle of cytochrome bo under steady-state conditions.  相似文献   

19.
Membrane-bound heme-copper oxidases catalyze the reduction of O(2) to water. Part of the free energy associated with this process is used to pump protons across the membrane. The O(2) reduction reaction results in formation of high-pK(a) protonatable groups at the catalytic site. The free energy associated with protonation of these groups is used for proton pumping. One of these protonatable groups is OH(-), coordinated to the heme and Cu(B) at the catalytic site. Here we present results from EPR experiments on the Rhodobacter sphaeroides cytochrome c oxidase, which show that at high pH (9) approximately 50% of oxidized heme a(3) is hydroxide-ligated, while at low pH (6.5), no hydroxide is bound to heme a(3). The kinetics of hydroxide binding to heme a(3) were investigated after dissociation of CO from heme a(3) in the enzyme in which the heme a(3)-Cu(B) center was reduced while the remaining redox sites were oxidized. The dissociation of CO results in a decrease of the midpoint potential of heme a(3), which results in electron transfer (tau approximately equal 3 micros) from heme a(3) to heme a in approximately 100% of the enzyme population. At pH >7.5, the electron transfer is followed by proton release from a H(2)O molecule to the bulk solution (tau approximately equal 2 ms at pH 9). This reaction is also associated with absorbance changes of heme a(3), which on the basis of the results from the EPR experiments are attributed to formation of hydroxide-ligated heme a(3). The OH(-) bound to heme a(3) under equilibrium conditions at high pH is also formed transiently after O(2) reduction at low pH. It is proposed that the free energy associated with electron transfer to the binuclear center and protonation of this OH(-) upon reduction of the recently oxidized enzyme provides the driving force for the pumping of one proton.  相似文献   

20.
1.Upon addition of sulphide to oxidized cytochrome c oxidase, a low-spin heme sulphide compound is formed with an EPR signal at gx = 2.54, gy = 2.23 and gz = 1.87. Concomitantly with the formation of this signal the EPR-detectable low-spin heme signal at g = 3 and the copper signal near g = 2 decrease in intensity, pointing to a partial reduction of the enzyme by sulphide. 2. The addition of sulphide to cytochrome c oxidase, previously reduced in the presence of azide or cyanide, brings about a disappearance of the azido-cytochrome c oxidase signal at gx = 2.9, gy = 2.2, and gz = 1.67 and a decrease of the signal at g = 3.6 of cyano-cytochrome c oxidase. Concomitantly the sulphide-induced EPR signal is formed. 3. These observations demonstrate that azide, cyanide and sulphide are competitive for an oxidized binding site on cytochrome c oxidase. Moreover, it is shown that the affinity of cyanide and sulphide for this site is greater than that of azide.  相似文献   

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