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1.
The reaction between cytochrome c oxidase and ferrocytochrome c has been investigated by the stopped-flow method. It has been found that only one electron acceptor, a heme group, in the oxidase is rapidly reduced by cytochrome c. The presence of N3- does not affect the reduction of the acceptor, which supports the hypothesis that this is identical with cytochrome a. The results are consistent with the existence of a simple equilibrium between cytochrome a and cytochrome c: c-2 + a-3+ in equilibrium c-3+ + a-2+ with an equilibrium constant corresponding to an oxidation-reduction potential of cytochrome a 30 mV higher than that for cytochrome c at pH 7.4. The oxidation-reduction potential of the a-3+ /a-2+ couple, 285 mV (based on a potential of 255 mV for cytochrome c), and the optical properties of the reduced form indicate that it is identical with neither of the reduced hemes seen in potentiometric titrations. The oxidase species resulting from the rapid reduction of cytochrome a by cytochrome c is proposed to represent a metastable intermediate state which, under anaerobic conditions, eventually is transformed into a more stable state characterized by a reduced high-potential heme.  相似文献   

2.
To understand general aspects of stability and folding of c-type cytochromes, we have studied the folding characteristics of cytochrome c553 from Desulfovibrio vulgaris (Hildenborough). This cytochrome is structurally similar but lacks sequence homology to other heme proteins; moreover, it has an abnormally low reduction potential. Unfolding of oxidized and reduced cytochrome c553 by guanidine hydrochloride (GuHCl) was monitored by circular dichroism (CD) and Soret absorption; the same unfolding curves were obtained with both methods supporting that cytochrome c553 unfolds by an apparent two-state process. Reduced cytochrome c553 is 7(3) kJ/mol more stable than the oxidized form; accordingly, the reduction potential of unfolded cytochrome c553 is 100(20) mV more negative than that of the folded protein. In contrast to many other unfolded cytochrome c proteins, upon unfolding at pH 7.0 both oxidized and reduced heme in cytochrome c553 become high-spin. The lack of heme misligation in unfolded cytochrome c553 implies that its unfolded structure is less constrained than those of cytochromes c with low-spin, misligated hemes.  相似文献   

3.
WEFT-NOESY and transfer WEFT-NOESY NMR spectra were used to determine the heme proton assignments for Rhodobacter capsulatus ferricytochrome c2. The Fermi contact and pseudo-contact contributions to the paramagnetic effect of the unpaired electron in the oxidized state were evaluated for the heme and ligand protons. The chemical shift assignments for the 1H and 15N NMR spectra were obtained by a combination of 1H-1H and 1H-15N two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy. The short-range nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) data are consistent with the view that the secondary structure for the oxidized state of this protein closely approximates that of the reduced form, but with redox-related conformational changes between the two redox states. To understand the decrease in stability of the oxidized state of this cytochrome c2 compared to the reduced form, the structural difference between the two redox states were analyzed by the differences in the NOE intensities, pseudo-contact shifts and the hydrogen-deuterium exchange rates of the amide protons. We find that the major difference between redox states, although subtle, involve heme protein interactions, orientation of the heme ligands, differences in hydrogen bond networks and, possible alterations in the position of some internal water molecules. Thus, it appears that the general destabilization of cytochrome c2, which occurs on oxidation, is consistent with the alteration of hydrogen bonds that result in changes in the internal dynamics of the protein.  相似文献   

4.
The crystal structure of the soluble domain of the membrane bound cytochrome c(552) (cytochrome c(552)') from Paracoccus denitrificans was determined using the multiwavelength anomalous diffraction technique and refined at 1.5 A resolution for the oxidized and at 1. 4 A for the reduced state. This is the first high-resolution crystal structure of a cytochrome c at low ionic strength in both redox states. The atomic model allowed for a detailed assessment of the structural properties including the secondary structure, the heme geometry and interactions, and the redox-coupled structural changes. In general, the structure has the same features as that of known eukaryotic cytochromes c. However, the surface properties are very different. Cytochrome c(552)' has a large strongly negatively charged surface part and a smaller positively charged area around the solvent-exposed heme atoms. One of the internal water molecules conserved in all structures of eukaryotic cytochromes c is also present in this bacterial cytochrome c. It contributes to the interactions between the side-chain of Arg36 and the heme propionate connected to pyrrole ring A. Reduction of the oxidized crystals does not influence the conformation of cytochrome c(552)' in contrast to eukaryotic cytochromes c. The oxidized cytochrome c(552)', especially the region of amino acid residues 40 to 56, appears to be more flexible than the reduced one.  相似文献   

5.
Cytochrome c oxidase forms tight binding complexes with the cytochrome c analog, porphyrin cytochrome c. The behaviour of the reduced and pulsed forms of the oxidase with porphyrin cytochrome c have been followed as functions of ionic strength; this behaviour has been compared with that of the resting oxidase [Kornblatt, Hui Bon Hoa and English (1984) Biochemistry 23, 5906-5911]. All forms of the cytochrome oxidase studied bind one porphyrin cytochrome c per 'functional' cytochrome oxidase (two heme a); it appears as though porphyrin cytochrome c and cytochrome c compete for the same site on the oxidase. The resting enzyme binds cytochrome c 8 times more strongly than porphyrin cytochrome c; the reduced enzyme, in contrast, binds the two with almost equal affinity. In all three cases, resting, pulsed and reduced, the heme-to-porphyrin distance is estimated to be about 3 nm. The tight-binding complexes formed between cytochrome oxidase and porphyrin cytochrome c can be dissociated by salt. Debye-Hückel analysis of salt titrations indicate that the resting enzyme and the reduced enzyme are similar in that the product of the interaction charges on the two proteins is about -14. The product of the charges for the pulsed enzyme is -25, indicating that on average another positive and negative charge take part in the interaction of the two proteins. While there is one tight binding site for cytochrome c per two heme a, cytochrome c is able to 'communicate' with four heme a. In the absence of cytochrome c, electron transfer from tetramethylphenylenediamine to the oxidase to oxygen results in the conversion of the resting form to the 'oxygenated'; in the presence of cytochrome c, the same electron transfer results in the appearance of the 'pulsed' form. Cytochrome c titrations of the enzyme show that a ratio of only one cytochrome c to four heme a is sufficient to convert all the oxidase to the 'pulsed' form. Porphyrin cytochrome c, like cytochrome c, catalyzes the same conversion with the same stoichiometry. The binding data and salt effects indicate that major structural alterations occur in the oxidase as it is converted from the resting to the partially reduced and subsequently to the pulsed form.  相似文献   

6.
The photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides produces a heme protein (SHP), which is an unusual c-type cytochrome capable of transiently binding oxygen during autooxidation. Similar proteins have not only been observed in other photosynthetic bacteria but also in the obligate methylotroph Methylophilus methylotrophus and the metal reducing bacterium Shewanella putrefaciens. A three-dimensional structure of SHP was derived using the multiple isomorphous replacement phasing method. Besides a model for the oxidized state (to 1.82 A resolution), models for the reduced state (2.1 A resolution), the oxidized molecule liganded with cyanide (1. 90 A resolution), and the reduced molecule liganded with nitric oxide (2.20 A resolution) could be derived. The SHP structure represents a new variation of the class I cytochrome c fold. The oxidized state reveals a novel sixth heme ligand, Asn(88), which moves away from the iron upon reduction or when small molecules bind. The distal side of the heme has a striking resemblance to other heme proteins that bind gaseous compounds. In SHP the liberated amide group of Asn(88) stabilizes solvent-shielded ligands through a hydrogen bond.  相似文献   

7.
A c type cytochrome isolated from Synechococcus lividus grown on water and 2H2O media, has been studied by resonance Raman spectroscopy. The spectra were taken on the oxidized and reduced protein with excitation within the Soret band at 441.6 nm to determine whether individual resonance Raman bands of the heme shift upon deuterium substitution and also to provide a comparison with the spectra of horse heart cytochrome c. Some of the shifts observed with the deuterated heme c are larger than the corresponding shifts in meso-deuterated metalloporphyrins suggesting mixing of peripheral substituent vibrations with the skeletal modes of the porphyrin macrocycle. The algal cytochrome exhibits resonance Raman spectra roughly similar to those of horse heart cytochrome c, consistent with its optical absorption spectra which is typical of c type cytochromes, although a detailed comparison reveals note-worthy differences between the spectra of the two proteins; this may be a reflection of the effect of non-methionine ligands and protein environment on the vibrations of the c type heme in the algal cytochrome.  相似文献   

8.
A Desbois  M Tegoni  M Gervais  M Lutz 《Biochemistry》1989,28(20):8011-8022
Resonance Raman spectra of Hansenula anomala L-lactate:cytochrome c oxidoreductase (or flavocytochrome b2), of its cytochrome b2 core, and of a bis(imidazole) iron-protoporphyrin complex were obtained at the Soret preresonance from the oxidized and reduced forms. Raman contributions from both the isoalloxazine ring of flavin mononucleotide (FMN) and the heme b2 were observed in the spectra of oxidized flavocytochrome b2. Raman diagrams showing frequency differences of selected FMN modes between aqueous and proteic environments were drawn for various flavoproteins. These diagrams were closely similar for flavocytochrome b2 and for flavodoxins. This showed that the FMN structure must be very similar in both types of proteins, despite their very different proteic pockets. However, the electron density at this macrocycle was found to be higher in flavocytochrome b2 than in these electron transferases. No significant difference was observed between the heme structures in flavocytochrome b2 and in cytochrome b2 core. The porphyrin center-N(pyrrole) distances in the oxidized and reduced heme b2 were estimated to be 1.990 and 2.022 A from frequencies of porphyrin skeletal modes, respectively. The frequency of the vinyl stretching mode of protoporphyrin was found to be very affected in resonance Raman spectra of flavocytochrome b2 and of cytochrome b2 core (1634-1636 cm-1) relative to those observed in the spectra of iron-protoporphyrin [bis(imidazole)] complexes (1620 cm-1). These specificities were interpreted as reflecting a near coplanarity of the vinyl groups of heme b2 with the pyrrole rings to which they are attached. The low-frequency regions of resonance Raman indicated that the iron atoms of the four hemes b2 are in the porphyrin plane whatever their oxidation state. The histidine-Fe-histidine symmetric stretching mode was located at 205 cm-1 in the spectra of flavocytochrome b2 and of cytochrome b2 core. It was insensitive to the iron oxidation state and indicated strong Fe-His bonds in both states.  相似文献   

9.
A K Churg  A Warshel 《Biochemistry》1986,25(7):1675-1681
X-ray structural information provides the opportunity to explore quantitatively the relation between the microenvironments of heme proteins and their redox potentials. This can be done by considering the protein as a "solvent" for its redox center and calculating the difference between the electrostatic energy of the reduced and oxidized heme. Such calculations are presented here, applying the protein dipoles-Langevin dipoles (PDLD) model to cytochrome c. The calculations focus on an evaluation of the difference between the redox potentials of cytochrome c and the octapeptide-methionine complex formed by hydrolysis of cytochrome c. The corresponding difference (approximately 7 kcal/mol) is accounted for by the PDLD calculations. It is found that the protein provides basically a low dielectric environment for the heme, which destabilizes the oxidized heme (relative to its energy in water). The effect of the charged propionic acids on the heme is examined in a preliminary way. It is found that the negative charges of these groups are in a hydrophilic rather than a hydrophobic environment and that the protein-water system provides an effective high dielectric constant for their interaction with the heme. The dual nature of the dielectric effect of the cytochrome (a low dielectric constant for the self-energy of the heme and a high dielectric constant for charge-charge interactions) is discussed. The findings of this work are consistent with the difference between the folding energies of the reduced and oxidized cytochrome c.  相似文献   

10.
A J Wand  H Roder  S W Englander 《Biochemistry》1986,25(5):1107-1114
The hydrogen exchange behavior of the N-terminal helical segment in horse heart cytochrome c was studied in both the reduced and the oxidized forms by use of two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance methods. The amide protons of the first six residues are not H bonded and exchange rapidly with solvent protons. The most N-terminal H-bonded groups--the amide NH of Lys-7 to Phe-10--exhibit a sharp gradient in exchange rate indicative of dynamic fraying behavior, consistent with statistical-mechanical principles. This occurs identically in both reduced and oxidized cytochrome c. In the oxidized form, residues 11-14, which form the last helical turn, all exchange with a similar rate, about one million times slower than the rate characteristic of freely exposed peptide NH, even though some are on the aqueous face of the helix and others are fully buried. These and similar observations in several other proteins appear to document local cooperative unfolding reactions as determinants of protein H exchange reactions. The N-terminal segment of cytochrome c is insensitive to the heme redox state, as in the crystallographic model, except for residues closest to the heme (Cys-14 and Ala-15), which exchange about 15-fold more slowly in the reduced form. The cytochrome c H exchange results can be further considered in terms of the conformation of the native and the transiently unfolded forms and their free energy relationships in both the reduced and the oxidized states.  相似文献   

11.
Modeling studies suggest that electrons are transferred from cytochrome c to cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) with cytochrome c predominantly bound at a site facing the gamma-meso edge of the CcP prosthetic heme group (Poulos, T.L., and Kraut, J. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 10322-10330). As shown here, guaiacol and ferrocyanide are oxidized at a different site of CcP. Thus, the oxidations of cytochrome c and guaiacol are differentially inactivated by phenylhydrazine and sodium azide. The loss of guaiacol oxidation activity correlates with covalent binding of 1 equivalent of [14C]phenylhydrazine to the protein, whereas the slower loss of cytochrome c activity correlates with the appearance of a 428-nm absorbance maximum attributed to the formation of a sigma-phenyl-iron heme complex. The delta-meso-phenyl and 8-hydroxymethyl derivatives of heme are formed as minor products. Catalytic oxidation of azide to the azidyl radical results in inactivation of CcP and formation of delta-meso-azidoheme. Reconstitution of apo-CcP with delta-meso-azido-, -ethyl-, and -(2-phenylethyl)heme yields holoproteins that give compound I species with H2O2 and exhibit 80, 59, and 31%, respectively, of the control kcat value for cytochrome c oxidation but little or no guaiacol or ferrocyanide oxidizing activity. Conversely, CcP reconstituted with gamma-meso-ethylheme is fully active in the oxidation of guaiacol and ferrocyanide but only retains 27% of the cytochrome c oxidizing activity. These results indicate that guaiacol and ferrocyanide are primarily oxidized near the delta-meso-heme edge rather than, like cytochrome c, at a surface site facing the gamma-meso edge.  相似文献   

12.
Mitochondria from glucagon-treated rats oxidize succinate, but not ascorbate plus tetramethylphenylenediamine, faster in the uncoupled state than do control mitochondria. The rate of O(2) uptake in the presence of both substrates is equal to the sum of the rates of the O(2) uptake in the presence of either substrate alone. It is concluded that the mitochondrial respiratory chain is limited at some point between cytochromes b and c and that this step is regulated by glucagon. Measurement of the cytochrome spectra under uncoupled conditions in the presence of succinate and rotenone demonstrates a crossover between cytochromes c and c(1) when control mitochondria are compared with those from glucagon-treated rats, cytochrome c being more oxidized and cytochrome c(1) more reduced in control mitochondria. Under conditions where pyruvate metabolism is studied the control mitochondria are generally more oxidized than those from glucagon-treated rats, the redox state of cytochrome b-566 correlating with the rate of pyruvate metabolism in sucrose medium. However, when the redox state of the mitochondria is taken into account, a crossover between cytochromes c and c(1) is again apparent. The spectra of the b cytochromes are complex, but cytochrome b-562 appears to become more reduced relative to cytochrome b-566 in mitochondria from glucagon-treated rats than in control mitochondria. This can be explained by the existence of a more alkaline matrix in glucagon-treated rats, the redox potential for cytochrome b being pH-sensitive. It is concluded that glucagon stimulates electron flow between cytochromes c(1) and c. The physiological significance of these findings is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
The heme ligation in the isolated c domain of Paracoccus pantotrophus cytochrome cd(1) nitrite reductase has been characterized in both oxidation states in solution by NMR spectroscopy. In the reduced form, the heme ligands are His69-Met106, and the tertiary structure around the c heme is similar to that found in reduced crystals of intact cytochrome cd1 nitrite reductase. In the oxidized state, however, the structure of the isolated c domain is different from the structure seen in oxidized crystals of intact cytochrome cd1, where the c heme ligands are His69-His17. An equilibrium mixture of heme ligands is present in isolated oxidized c domain. Two-dimensional exchange NMR spectroscopy shows that the dominant species has His69-Met106 ligation, similar to reduced c domains. This form is in equilibrium with a high-spin form in which Met106 has left the heme iron. Melting studies show that the midpoint of unfolding of the isolated c domain is 320.9 +/- 1.2 K in the oxidized and 357.7 +/- 0.6 K in the reduced form. The thermally denatured forms are high-spin in both oxidation states. The results reveal how redox changes modulate conformational plasticity around the c heme and show the first key steps in the mechanism that lead to ligand switching in the holoenzyme. This process is not solely a function of the properties of the c domain. The role of the d1 heme in guiding His17 to the c heme in the oxidized holoenzyme is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
We report the first resonance Raman scattering studies of NO-bound cytochrome c oxidase. Resonance Raman scattering and optical absorption spectra have been obtained on the fully reduced enzyme (a2+, a2+(3) NO) and the mixed valence enzyme (a3+, a2+(3) NO). Clear vibrational frequency shifts are detected in the lines associated with cytochrome a in comparing the two redox states. With 441.6 nm excitation the fully reduced preparation yields a spectrum similar to that of carbon monoxide-bound cytochrome c oxidase and is dominated by the spectrum of reduced cytochrome a. In contrast, in the mixed valence preparation no contributions from reduced cytochrome a are evident in the spectrum, verifying that this heme is no longer in the Fe2+ state. In the mixed valence NO-bound samples, a line appears at approximately 545 cm-1, a frequency similar to that found in NO-bound hemoglobin and myoglobin and assigned as an Fe-N-O-bending mode in those proteins. We do not detect this line in the spectrum of the fully reduced NO-bound enzyme. The carbonyl line of the cytochrome a3 heme formyl group in the fully reduced NO-bound enzyme appears at approximately equal to 1666 cm-1 in the resonance Raman spectrum. In the mixed valence NO-bound preparation the frequency of the carbonyl line increases by 1.2 cm-1 to approximately equal to 1667 cm-1. Thus, modes in cytochrome a2+(3) NO are sensitive to the redox state of the cytochrome a and/or CuA centers. We propose that the redox sensitivity of the formyl mode and the Fe-N-O mode results from an interaction between cytochrome a2+(3) (NO) and the cytochrome a-CuA pair, and is linked to the cytochrome a3 (NO) by the coupling between CuB and the NO-bound cytochrome a3 heme.  相似文献   

15.
Oxidation of liposome phospholipids has been studied in the presence of cytochrome c. Sonicated vesicles of soya bean or egg-yolk lipids, or purified phospholipid preparations, were treated with oxidized cytochrome c at a 10:4 lipid/protein ratio (w/w). Lipid peroxidation was examined by oxygen polarography, gas-liquid chromatography (GLC) and the thiobarbituric acid test. Oxidized, but not reduced, cytochrome effectively catalyzes lipid oxidation under these conditions. Oxygen consumption and disappearance of unsaturated fatty acids follow closely similar patterns, the O2 consumption rate showing a maximum (1.53 mol O2/min per mol heme) shortly before fatty acid loss reaches its peak. GLC and O2 consumption data suggest that monohydroperoxides are the most abundant oxidized species in the system. The thiobarbituric acid reaction, however, appears only to be of qualitative value in peroxidation studies. In order to test the mechanism through which oxidation occurs in our system, the effect of liposome composition and the presence of antioxidants was tested, both on cytochrome c binding to bilayers and on O2 consumption. Oxidized and reduced cytochrome c bind the lipid bilayers with similar affinity, but only the oxidized form is active in autoxidation. Antioxidants do not modify either cytochrome c binding to sonicated liposomes. Lipid composition does influence considerably cytochrome binding, and O2 consumption is correspondingly altered. Studies with various antioxidants and inhibitors suggest that both free radicals and singlet oxygen may be involved in the process under study.  相似文献   

16.
In the reductive phase of its catalytic cycle, cytochrome c oxidase receives electrons from external electron donors. Two electrons have to be transferred into the catalytic center, composed of heme a(3) and Cu(B), before reaction with oxygen takes place. In addition, this phase of catalysis appears to be involved in proton translocation. Here, we report for the first time the kinetics of electron transfer to both heme a(3) and Cu(B) during the transition from the oxidized to the fully reduced state. The state of reduction of both heme a(3) and Cu(B) was monitored by a combination of EPR spectroscopy, the rapid freeze procedure, and the stopped-flow method. The kinetics of cytochrome c oxidase reduction by hexaamineruthenium under anaerobic conditions revealed that the rate-limiting step is the initial electron transfer to the catalytic site that proceeds with apparently identical rates to both heme a(3) and Cu(B). After Cu(B) is reduced, electron transfer to oxidized heme a(3) is enhanced relative to the rate of entry of the first electron.  相似文献   

17.
The kinetics of dithionite reduction of the oxidized heme nonapeptide fragment of horse heart cytochrome c have been measured as a function of ionic strength at pH 7 and pH 9 by the stopped-flow technique. Dithionite concentration dependences indicate that the radical anion monomer, SO2-., is the active reductant. The pH 7 ionic strength dependence suggests that the heme peptide is reacting as a negatively charged molecule (its overall charge is calculated to be -1). Comparison of these results with the known rate of dithionite reduction of cytochrome c indicates that the heme nonapeptide has substantially greater inherent reactivity than cytochrome c, perhaps due to the greater accessibility of the heme.  相似文献   

18.
The interactions of cytochrome c1 and cytochrome c from bovine cardiac mitochondria were investigated. Cytochrome c1 and cytochrome c formed a 1:1 molecular complex in aqueous solutions of low ionic strength. The complex was stable to Sephadex G-75 chromatography. The formation and stability of the complex were independent of the oxidation state of the cytochrome components as far as those reactions studied were concerned. The complex was dissociated in solutions of ionic strength higher than 0.07 or pH exceeding 10 and only partially dissociated in 8 M urea. No complexation occurred when cytochrome c was acetylated on 64% of its lysine residues or photooxidized on its 2 methionine residues. Complexes with molecular ratios of less than 1:1 (i.e. more cytochrome c) were obtained when polymerized cytochrome c, or cytochrome c with all lysine residues guanidinated, or a "1-65 heme peptide" from cyanogen bromide cleavage of cytochrome c was used. These results were interpreted to imply that the complex was predominantly maintained by ionic interactions probably involving some of the lysine residues of cytochrome c but with major stabilization dependent on the native conformations of both cytochromes. The reduced complex was autooxidizable with biphasic kinetics with first order rate constants of 6 X 10(-5) and 5 X U0(-5) s-1 but did not react with carbon monoxide. The complex reacted with cyanide and was reduced by ascorbate at about 32% and 40% respectively, of the rates of reaction with cytochrome c alone. The complex was less photoreducible than cytochrome c1 alone. The complex exhibited remarkably different circular dichroic behavior from that of the summation of cytochrome c1 plus cytochrome c. We concluded that when cytochromes c1 and c interacted they underwent dramatic conformational changes resulting in weakening of their heme crevices. All results available would indicate that in the complex cytochrome c1 was bound at the entrance to the heme crevice of cytochrome c on the methionine-80 side of the heme crevice.  相似文献   

19.
Circular dichroism spectra of bovine heart aa(3)-type cytochrome c oxidase have been studied with a major focus on the Soret band π → π* transitions, B(0(x,y)), in the two iron porphyrin groups of the enzyme. The spectra of the fully reduced and fully oxidized enzyme as well as of its carbon monoxide and cyanide complexes have been explored. In addition, CD spectra of the reduced and oxidized ba(3)-type cytochrome c oxidase from Thermus thermophilus were recorded for comparison. An attempt is made to interpret the CD spectra of cytochrome c oxidase with the aid of a classical model of dipole-dipole coupled oscillators taking advantage of the known 3D crystal structure of the enzyme. Simultaneous modeling of the CD and absorption spectra shows that in the bovine oxidase, the dipole-dipole interactions between the hemes a and a(3), although contributing significantly, cannot account either for the lineshape or the magnitude of the experimental spectra. However, adding the interactions of the hemes with 22 aromatic amino acid residues located within 12 ? from either of the two heme groups can be used to model the CD curves for the fully reduced and fully oxidized oxidase with reasonable accuracy. Interaction of the hemes with the peptide bond transition dipoles is found to be insignificant. The modeling indicates that the CD spectra of cytochrome oxidase in both the reduced and oxidized states are influenced significantly by interaction with Tyr244 in the oxygen-reducing center of the enzyme. Hence, CD spectroscopy may provide a useful tool for monitoring the redox/ionization state of this residue. The modeling confirms wide energy splitting of the orthogonal B(x) and B(y) transitions in the porphyrin ring of heme a.  相似文献   

20.
The environment of the heme site of a low-potential soluble cytochrome (c552) from alkaliphilic Bacillus firmus RAB has been characterized with resonance Raman scattering and compared to that of horse heart cytochrome c. The Raman data indicate that vibrational bands sensitive to the axial ligation of the heme, as well as modes sensitive to the heme peripheral environment in cytochrome c552, are distinct from those of horse heart cytochrome c. The spectra of cytochrome c552 display resonance Raman modes indicative of a methionine as the sixth ligand in the oxidized form, while the reduced form appears to contain a nitrogenous-based sixth ligand. In addition, Q-band excitation reveals differences among vibrational modes in cytochrome c552 that are sensitive to the amino acid environment surrounding the heme.  相似文献   

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