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1.
Luna VM  Chen Y  Fee JA  Stout CD 《Biochemistry》2008,47(16):4657-4665
Cytochrome ba3 is a cytochrome c oxidase from the plasma membrane of Thermus thermophilus and is the preferred terminal enzyme of cellular respiration at low dioxygen tensions. Using cytochrome ba 3 crystals pressurized at varying conditions under Xe or Kr gas, and X-ray data for six crystals, we identify the relative affinities of Xe and Kr atoms for as many as seven distinct binding sites. These sites track a continuous, Y-shaped channel, 18-20 A in length, lined by hydrophobic residues, which leads from the surface of the protein where two entrance holes, representing the top of the Y, connect the bilayer to the a3-CuB center at the base of the Y. Considering the increased affinity of O2 for hydrophobic environments, the hydrophobic nature of the channel, its orientation within the bilayer, its connection to the active site, its uniform diameter, its virtually complete occupation by Xe, and its isomorphous presence in the native enzyme, we infer that the channel is a diffusion pathway for O2 into the dinuclear center of cytochrome ba3. These observations provide a basis for analyzing similar channels in other oxidases of known structure, and these structures are discussed in terms of mechanisms of O2 transport in biological systems, details of CO binding to and egress from the dinuclear center, the bifurcation of the oxygen-in and water-out pathways, and the possible role of the oxygen channel in aerobic thermophily.  相似文献   

2.
Cytochrome ba(3) (ba(3)) of Thermus thermophilus (T. thermophilus) is a member of the heme-copper oxidase family, which has a binuclear catalytic center comprised of a heme (heme a(3)) and a copper (Cu(B)). The heme-copper oxidases generally catalyze the four electron reduction of molecular oxygen in a sequence involving several intermediates. We have investigated the reaction of the fully reduced ba(3) with O(2) using stopped-flow techniques. Transient visible absorption spectra indicated that a fraction of the enzyme decayed to the oxidized state within the dead time (~1ms) of the stopped-flow instrument, while the remaining amount was in a reduced state that decayed slowly (k=400s(-1)) to the oxidized state without accumulation of detectable intermediates. Furthermore, no accumulation of intermediate species at 1ms was detected in time resolved resonance Raman measurements of the reaction. These findings suggest that O(2) binds rapidly to heme a(3) in one fraction of the enzyme and progresses to the oxidized state. In the other fraction of the enzyme, O(2) binds transiently to a trap, likely Cu(B), prior to its migration to heme a(3) for the oxidative reaction, highlighting the critical role of Cu(B) in regulating the oxygen reaction kinetics in the oxidase superfamily.  相似文献   

3.
The oxidative part of the catalytic cycle of the caa(3)-type cytochrome c oxidase from Thermus thermophilus was followed by time-resolved optical spectroscopy. Rate constants, chemical nature and the spectral properties of the catalytic cycle intermediates (Compounds A, P, F) reproduce generally the features typical for the aa(3)-type oxidases with some distinctive peculiarities caused by the presence of an additional 5-th redox-center-a heme center of the covalently bound cytochrome c. Compound A was formed with significantly smaller yield compared to aa(3) oxidases in general and to ba(3) oxidase from the same organism. Two electrons, equilibrated between three input redox-centers: heme a, Cu(A) and heme c are transferred in a single transition to the binuclear center during reduction of the compound F, converting the binuclear center through the highly reactive O(H) state into the final product of the reaction-E(H) (one-electron reduced) state of the catalytic site. In contrast to previous works on the caa(3)-type enzymes, we concluded that the finally produced E(H) state of caa(3) oxidase is characterized by the localization of the fifth electron in the binuclear center, similar to the O(H)→E(H) transition of the aa(3)-type oxidases. So, the fully-reduced caa(3) oxidase is competent in rapid electron transfer from the input redox-centers into the catalytic heme-copper site.  相似文献   

4.
In cytochrome c oxidase, the terminal respiratory enzyme, electron transfers are strongly coupled to proton movements within the enzyme. Two proton pathways (K and D) containing water molecules and hydrophobic amino acids have been identified and suggested to be involved in the proton translocation from the mitochondrial matrix or the bacterial cytoplasm into the active site. In addition to the K and D proton pathways, a third proton pathway (Q) has been identified only in ba3-cytochrome c oxidase from Thermus thermophilus, and consists of residues that are highly conserved in all structurally known heme-copper oxidases. The Q pathway starts from the cytoplasmic side of the membrane and leads through the axial heme a3 ligand His-384 to the propionate of the heme a3 pyrrol ring A, and then via Asn-366 and Asp-372 to the water pool. We have applied FTIR and time-resolved step-scan Fourier transform infrared (TRS2-FTIR) spectroscopies to investigate the protonation/deprotonation events in the Q-proton pathway at ambient temperature. The photolysis of CO from heme a3 and its transient binding to CuB is dynamically linked to structural changes that can be tentatively attributed to ring A propionate of heme a3 (1695/1708 cm(-1)) and to deprotonation of Asp-372 (1726 cm(-1)). The implications of these results with respect to the role of the ring A propionate of heme a3-Asp372-H2O site as a proton carrier to the exit/output proton channel (H2O pool) that is conserved among all structurally known heme-copper oxidases, and is part of the Q-proton pathway in ba3-cytochrome c oxidase, are discussed.  相似文献   

5.
The cytochrome aa(3)-type quinol oxidase from the archaeon Acidianus ambivalens and the ba(3)-type cytochrome c oxidase from Thermus thermophilus are divergent members of the heme-copper oxidase superfamily of enzymes. In particular they lack most of the key residues involved in the proposed proton transfer pathways. The pumping capability of the A. ambivalens enzyme was investigated and found to occur with the same efficiency as the canonical enzymes. This is the first demonstration of pumping of 1 H(+)/electron in a heme-copper oxidase that lacks most residues of the K- and D-channels. Also, the structure of the ba(3) oxidase from T. thermophilus was simulated by mutating Phe274 to threonine and Glu278 to isoleucine in the D-pathway of the Paracoccus denitrificans cytochrome c oxidase. This modification resulted in full efficiency of proton translocation albeit with a substantially lowered turnover. Together, these findings show that multiple structural solutions for efficient proton conduction arose during evolution of the respiratory oxidases, and that very few residues remain invariant among these enzymes to function in a common proton-pumping mechanism.  相似文献   

6.
The accessibility of large substrates to buried enzymatic active sites is dependent upon the utilization of proteinaceous channels. The necessity of these channels in the case of small substrates is questionable because diffusion through the protein matrix is often assumed. Copper amine oxidases contain a buried protein-derived quinone cofactor and a mononuclear copper center that catalyze the conversion of two substrates, primary amines and molecular oxygen, to aldehydes and hydrogen peroxide, respectively. The nature of molecular oxygen migration to the active site in the enzyme from Hansenula polymorpha is explored using a combination of kinetic, x-ray crystallographic, and computational approaches. A crystal structure of H. polymorpha amine oxidase in complex with xenon gas, which serves as an experimental probe for molecular oxygen binding sites, reveals buried regions of the enzyme suitable for transient molecular oxygen occupation. Calculated O(2) free energy maps using copper amine oxidase crystal structures in the absence of xenon correspond well with later experimentally observed xenon sites in these systems, and allow the visualization of O(2) migration routes of differing probabilities within the protein matrix. Site-directed mutagenesis designed to block individual routes has little effect on overall k(cat)/K(m) (O(2)), supporting multiple dynamic pathways for molecular oxygen to reach the active site.  相似文献   

7.
It has recently become evident that many bacterial respiratory oxidases are members of a superfamily that is related to the eukaryotic cytochrome c oxidase. These oxidases catalyze the reduction of oxygen to water at a heme-copper binuclear center. Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy has been used to examine the heme-copper-containing respiratory oxidases of Rhodobacter sphaeroides Ga. This technique monitors the stretching frequency of CO bound at the oxygen binding site and can be used to characterize the oxidases in situ with membrane preparations. Oxidases that have a heme-copper binuclear center are recognizable by FTIR spectroscopy because the bound CO moves from the heme iron to the nearby copper upon photolysis at low temperature, where it exhibits a diagnostic spectrum. The FTIR spectra indicate that the binuclear center of the R. sphaeroides aa3-type cytochrome c oxidase is remarkably similar to that of the bovine mitochondrial oxidase. Upon deletion of the ctaD gene, encoding subunit I of the aa3-type oxidase, substantial cytochrome c oxidase remains in the membranes of aerobically grown R. sphaeroides. This correlates with a second wild-type R. sphaeroides is grown photosynthetically, the chromatophore membranes lack the aa3-type oxidase but have this second heme-copper oxidase. Subunit I of the heme-copper oxidase superfamily contains the binuclear center. Amino acid sequence alignments show that this subunit is structurally very highly conserved among both eukaryotic and prokaryotic species. The polymerase chain reaction was used to show that the chromosome of R. sphaeroides contains at least one other gene that is a homolog of ctaD, the gene encoding subunit I of the aa3-type cytochrome c oxidase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Understanding of the chemical nature of the dioxygen and nitric oxide moiety of ba3-cytochrome c oxidase from Thermus thermophilus is crucial for elucidation of its physiological function. In the present work, direct resonance Raman (RR) observation of the Fe-C-O stretching and bending modes and the C-O stretching mode of the CuB-CO complex unambiguously establishes the vibrational characteristics of the heme-copper moiety in ba3-oxidase. We assigned the bands at 507 and 568 cm(-1) to the Fe-CO stretching and Fe-C-O bending modes, respectively. The frequencies of these modes in conjunction with the C-O mode at 1973 cm(-1) showed, despite the extreme values of the Fe-CO and C-O stretching vibrations, the presence of the alpha-conformation in the catalytic center of the enzyme. These data, distinctly different from those observed for the caa3-oxidase, are discussed in terms of the proposed coupling of the alpha-and beta-conformations that occur in the binuclear center of heme-copper oxidases with enzymatic activity. The CuB-CO complex was identified by its nu(CO) at 2053 cm(-1) and was strongly enhanced with 413.1 nm excitation indicating the presence of a metal-to-ligand charge transfer transition state near 410 nm. These findings provide, for the first time, RR vibrational information on the EPR silent CuB(I) that is located at the O2 delivery channel and has been proposed to play a crucial role in both the catalytic and proton pumping mechanisms of heme-copper oxidases.  相似文献   

9.
A search for conformational changes at the cytosolic entrance to the proton channels of the heme-copper quinol oxidase (QO), cytochrome bo3, E. coli, has been carried out using site directed nitroxide spin labeling (SDSL) of cysteine residues. These were positioned at R134 and R309, on loops that link helices II and III and VI and VII at the entrances to the D and K proton channels, respectively. The motional characteristics of both labels have been determined using X- and W-band EPR spectroscopy at room temperature in selected redox levels in the reaction sequence of QO with oxygen, namely, the mixed valence carbon monoxide form (COMV), the oxidized (O) and super-oxidized (PM) states. The O to PM step is accompanied by the uptake of protons through the K pathway. We find no evidence for changes in the motional characteristics of either label that are expected to be associated with helical motions at the entrances to the channels. Because kinetic studies of mutants show that the redox gating of protons occurs deep within the D channel close to the heme-copper site, the present study implies that no motion is transmitted to the ends of the helices.  相似文献   

10.
The crystal structure of the heme-copper oxidases suggested a putative channel of oxygen entry into the heme-copper site of O(2) reduction. Changing a conserved valine near this center in cytochrome bo(3) of Escherichia coli to isoleucine caused a significant increase in the apparent K(M) for oxygen with little or no change in V(max), suggesting that oxygen diffusion had been partially blocked [Riistama, S., Puustinen, A., García-Horsman, A., Iwata, S., Michel, H., and Wikstr?m, M. (1996) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1275, 1-4]. To study this phenotype further using rapid kinetic methods, the corresponding change (V279I) has been made in cytochrome aa(3) from Paracoccus denitrificans. In this mutant, the apparent K(M) for oxygen is 8 times higher than in the wild-type enzyme, whereas V(max) is decreased only to approximately half of the wild-type value. Flow-flash kinetic measurements show that the initial binding of oxygen to the heme of the binuclear site is indeed much slower in the mutant than in the wild-type enzyme. However, the subsequent phases of the reaction with O(2) are also slow although the pure heme-to-heme electron transfer process is essentially unperturbed. It is suggested that the mutation sterically hinders O(2) entry into the binuclear site and that it may also perturb the structure of local water molecules involved in proton transfer to this site.  相似文献   

11.
We have applied FTIR and time-resolved step-scan Fourier transform infrared (TRS(2)-FTIR) spectroscopy to investigate the dynamics of the heme-Cu(B) binuclear center and the protein dynamics of mammalian aa(3), Pseudomonas stutzeri cbb(3), and caa(3) and ba(3) from Thermus thermophilus cytochrome oxidases. The implications of these results with respect to (1) the molecular motions that are general to the photodynamics of the binuclear center in heme-copper oxidases, and (2) the proton pathways located in the ring A propionate of heme a(3)-Asp372-H(2)O site that is conserved among all structurally known oxidases are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
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   

14.
Acidianus ambivalens is a hyperthermoacidophilic archaeon which grows optimally at approximately 80 degrees C and pH 2.5. The terminal oxidase of its respiratory system is a membrane-bound quinol oxidase (cytochrome aa(3)) which belongs to the heme-copper oxidase superfamily. One difference between this quinol oxidase and a majority of the other members of this family is that it lacks the highly-conserved glutamate (Glu(I-286), E. coli ubiquinol oxidase numbering) which has been shown to play a central role in controlling the proton transfer during reaction of reduced oxidases with oxygen. In this study we have investigated the dynamics of the reaction of the reduced A. ambivalens quinol oxidase with O(2). With the purified enzyme, two kinetic phases were observed with rate constants of 1.8&z.ccirf;10(4) s(-1) (at 1 mM O(2), pH 7.8) and 3. 7x10(3) s(-1), respectively. The first phase is attributed to binding of O(2) to heme a(3) and oxidation of both hemes forming the 'peroxy' intermediate. The second phase was associated with proton uptake from solution and it is attributed to formation of the 'oxo-ferryl' state, the final state in the absence of quinol. In the presence of bound caldariella quinol (QH(2)), heme a was re-reduced by QH(2) with a rate of 670 s(-1), followed by transfer of the fourth electron to the binuclear center with a rate of 50 s(-1). Thus, the results indicate that the quinol donates electrons to heme a, followed by intramolecular transfer to the binuclear center. Moreover, the overall electron and proton-transfer kinetics in the A. ambivalens quinol oxidase are the same as those in the E. coli ubiquinol oxidase, which indicates that in the A. ambivalens enzyme a different pathway is used for proton transfer to the binuclear center and/or other protonatable groups in an equivalent pathway are involved. Potential candidates in that pathway are two glutamates at positions (I-80) and (I-83) in the A. ambivalens enzyme (corresponding to Met(I-116) and Val(I-119), respectively, in E. coli cytochrome bo(3)).  相似文献   

15.
16.
We describe the design of Escherichia coli cells that synthesize a structurally perfect, recombinant cytochrome c from the Thermus thermophilus cytochrome c552 gene. Key features are (1) construction of a plasmid-borne, chimeric cycA gene encoding an Escherichia coli-compatible, N-terminal signal sequence (MetLysIleSerIleTyrAlaThrLeu AlaAlaLeuSerLeuAlaLeuProAlaGlyAla) followed by the amino acid sequence of mature Thermus cytochrome c552; and (2) coexpression of the chimeric cycA gene with plasmid-borne, host-specific cytochrome c maturation genes (ccmABCDEFGH). Approximately 1 mg of purified protein is obtained from 1 L of culture medium. The recombinant protein, cytochrome rsC552, and native cytochrome c552 have identical redox potentials and are equally active as electron transfer substrates toward cytochrome ba3, a Thermus heme-copper oxidase. Native and recombinant cytochromes c were compared and found to be identical using circular dichroism, optical absorption, resonance Raman, and 500 MHz 1H-NMR spectroscopies. The 1.7 A resolution X-ray crystallographic structure of the recombinant protein was determined and is indistinguishable from that reported for the native protein (Than, ME, Hof P, Huber R, Bourenkov GP, Bartunik HD, Buse G, Soulimane T, 1997, J Mol Biol 271:629-644). This approach may be generally useful for expression of alien cytochrome c genes in E. coli.  相似文献   

17.
We report the first study of O(2) migration in the putative O(2) channel of cytochrome ba(3) and its effect to the properties of the binuclear heme a(3)-Cu(B) center of cytochrome ba(3) from Thermus thermophilus. The Fourier transform infrared spectra of the ba(3)-CO complex demonstrate that in the presence of 60-80 micro m O(2), the nu(C-O) of Cu(B)1+-C-O at 2053 cm(-1) (complex A) shifts to 2045 cm(-1) and remains unchanged in H(2)O/D(2)O exchanges and in the pH 6.5-9.0 range. The frequencies but not the intensities of the C-O stretching modes of heme a(3)-CO (complex B), however, remain unchanged. The change in the nu(C-O) of complex A results in an increase of k(-2), and thus in a higher affinity of Cu(B) for exogenous ligands. The time-resolved step-scan Fourier transform infrared difference spectra indicate that the rate of decay of the transient Cu(B)1+-CO complex at pH 6.5 is 30.4 s(-1) and 28.3 s(-1) in the presence of O(2). Similarly, the rebinding to heme a(3) is slightly affected and occurs with k(2) = 26.3 s(-1) and 24.6 s(-1) in the presence of O(2). These results provide solid evidence that in cytochrome ba(3), the ligand delivery channel is located at the Cu(B) site, which is the ligand entry to the heme a(3) pocket. We suggest that the properties of the O(2) channel are not limited to facilitating ligand diffusion to the active site but are extended in controlling the dynamics and reactivity of the reactions of ba(3) with O(2) and NO.  相似文献   

18.
Recent electrostatics calculations on the cytochrome c oxidase from Paracoccus denitrificans revealed an unexpected coupling between the redox state of the heme-copper center and the state of protonation of a glutamic acid (E78II) that is 25 A away in subunit II of the oxidase. Examination of more than 300 sequences of the homologous subunit in other heme-copper oxidases shows that this residue is virtually totally conserved and is in a cluster of very highly conserved residues at the "negative" end (bacterial cytoplasm or mitochondrial matrix) of the second transmembrane helix. The functional importance of several residues in this cluster (E89II, W93II, T94II, and P96II) was examined by site-directed mutagenesis of the corresponding region of the cytochrome bo(3) quinol oxidase from Escherichia coli (where E89II is the equivalent of residue E78II of the P. denitrificans oxidase). Substitution of E89II with either alanine or glutamine resulted in reducing the rate of turnover to about 43 or 10% of the wild-type value, respectively, whereas E89D has only about 60% of the activity of the control oxidase. The quinol oxidase activity of the W93V mutant is also reduced to about 30% of that of the wild-type oxidase. Spectroscopic studies with the purified E89A and E89Q mutants indicate no perturbation of the heme-copper center. The data suggest that E89II (E. coli numbering) is critical for the function of the heme copper oxidases. The proximity to K362 suggests that this glutamic acid residue may regulate proton entry or transit through the K-channel. This hypothesis is supported by the finding that the degree of oxidation of the low-spin heme b is greater in the steady state using hydrogen peroxide as an oxidant in place of dioxygen for the E89Q mutant. Thus, it appears that the inhibition resulting from the E89II mutation is due to a block in the reduction of the heme-copper binuclear center, expected for K-channel mutants.  相似文献   

19.
The cytochrome bo quinol oxidase of Escherichia coli is homologous in sequence and in structure to cytochrome aa3 type cytochrome oxidase in subunit I, which contains the catalytic core. The cytochrome bo enzyme forms a formate complex which exhibits 'g = 12' and 'g = 2.9' EPR signals at X band; similar signals have previously been observed only in association with the 'slow' and formate-ligand states of cytochrome oxidase. These signals arise from transitions within integral spin multiples identified with the homologous heme-copper binuclear catalytic centers in both enzymes.  相似文献   

20.
Pitcher RS  Brittain T  Watmough NJ 《Biochemistry》2003,42(38):11263-11271
Cytochrome cbb(3) oxidase, from Pseudomonas stutzeri, contains a total of five hemes, two of which, a b-type heme in the active site and a hexacoordinate c-type heme, can bind CO in the reduced state. By comparing the cbb(3) oxidase complex and the isolated CcoP subunit, which contains the ligand binding bishistidine-coordinated c-type heme, we have deconvoluted the contribution made by each center to CO binding. A combination of rapid mixing and flash photolysis experiments, coupled with computer simulations, reveals the kinetics of the reaction of c-type heme with CO to be complex as a result of the need to displace an endogenous axial ligand, a property shared with nonsymbiotic plant hemoglobins and some heme-based gas sensing domains. The recombination of CO with heme b(3), unlike all other heme-copper oxidases, including mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase, is independent of ligand concentration. This observation suggests a very differently organized dinuclear center in which CO exchange between Cu(B) and heme b(3) is significantly enhanced, perhaps reflecting an important determinant of substrate affinity.  相似文献   

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