首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Finazzi G 《Biochemistry》2002,41(23):7475-7482
The pH dependence of cytochrome b(6)f catalytic activity has been measured in whole cells of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii over the 5-8 range. An acid pH slowed the reactions occurring at the lumenal side of the complex (cytochrome b(6) and f reduction) and affected also the rate and amplitude of the slow electrogenic reaction (phase b), which is supposed to reflect transmembrane electron flow in the complex. On the other hand, a direct measurement of the transmembrane electron flow from the kinetics of cytochrome b(6) oxidation revealed no pH sensitivity. This suggests that a substantial fraction of the electrogenicity associated with cytochrome b(6)f catalysis is not due to electron transfer in the b(6) hemes but to a plastoquinol-oxidation-triggered charge movement, in agreement with previous suggestions that a redox-coupled proton pump operates in cytochrome b(6)f complex. The pH dependence of cytochrome b(6)f activity has also been measured in two mutant strains, where the glutamic 78 of the conserved PEWY sequence of subunit IV has been substituted for a basic (E78K) and a polar (E78Q) residue [Zito, F., Finazzi, G., Joliot, P., and Wollman, F.-A. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 10395-10403]. Their comparison with the wild type revealed that this residue plays an essential role in plastoquinol oxidation at low pH, while it is not required for efficient activity at neutral pH. Its involvement in gating the redox-coupled proton pumping activity is also shown.  相似文献   

2.
Deniau C  Rappaport F 《Biochemistry》2000,39(12):3304-3310
We have studied the effect of protium/deuterium substitution on different kinetics associated with the turnovers of cytochrome b(6)f complex in whole cells of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Both the oxidation of cytochrome f and the reduction of hemes b were only little affected by the isotopic substitution. Contrasting with this, the initial slope of the electrogenic phase associated with cytochrome b(6)f turnover was slowed by a factor of 4 by H(2)O/D(2)O substitution. Whereas in the presence of H(2)O the electrogenic phase developed concomitantly with cytochrome b reduction, it lagged for a few hundreds of microseconds after cytochrome b reduction in the presence of D(2)O. We propose that a proton pump is triggered by the oxidation of plastoquinol at the Q(o) site. The proton transfer is specifically delayed upon isotopic substitution, accounting for the lack of significant effect on the electron-transfer reaction as well as for the strong decrease of the initial rate of the electrogenic phase.  相似文献   

3.
1. A study is presented of the effects of pH, transmembrane pH gradient and electrical potential on oxidoreductions of b and c cytochromes in ox heart mitochondria and 'inside-out' submitochondrial particles. 2. Kinetic analysis shows that, in mitochondria at neutral pH, there is a restraint on the aerobic oxidation of cytochrome b566 with respect to cytochrome b562. Valinomycin plus K+ accelerates cytochrome b566 oxidation and retards net oxidation of cytochrome b562. At alkaline pH the rate of cytochrome b566 oxidation approaches that of cytochrome b562 and the effects of valinomycin on b cytochromes are impaired. 3. At slightly acidic pH, oxygenation of antimycin-supplemented mitochondria causes rapid reduction of cytochrome b566 and small delayed reduction of cytochrome b562. Valinomycin or a pH increase in the medium promote reduction of cytochrome b562 and decrease net reduction of cytochrome b566. 4. Addition of valinomycin to mitochondria and submitochondrial particles in the respiring steady state causes, at pH values around neutrality, preferential oxidation of cytochrome b566 with respect to cytochrome b562. The differential effect of valinomycin on oxidation of cytochromes b566 and b562 is enhanced by substitution of 1H2O of the medium with 2H2O and tends to disappear as the pH of the medium is raised to alkaline values. 5. Nigericin addition in the aerobic steady state causes, both in mitochondria and submitochondrial particles, preferential oxidation of cytochrome b562 with respect to cytochrome b566. This is accompanied by c cytochrome oxidation in mitochondria but c cytochrome reduction in submitochondrial particles. 6. In mitochondria as well as in submitochondrial particles, the aerobic transmembrane potential (delta psi) does not change by raising the pH of the external medium from neutrality to alkalinity. The transmembrane pH gradient (delta pH) on the other hand, decrease slightly. 7. The results presented provide evidence that the delta psi component of the aerobic delta microH+ (the sum of the proton chemical and electrical activities) exerts a pH-dependent constraint on forward electron flow from cytochrome b566 to cytochrome b562. This effect is explained as a consequence of anisotropic location of cytochromes b566 and b562 in the membrane and the pH-dependence of the redox function of these cytochromes. Transmembrane delta pH, on the other hand, exerts control on electron flow from cytochrome b562 to c cytochromes.  相似文献   

4.
The cytochrome b(6)f complex is an obligatory electron transfer and proton-translocating enzyme in all oxygenic photosynthesis. Its operation has been described by the "Q-cycle." This model proposes that electrons are transferred from plastoquinol to plastocyanin (the reductant of P700 in Photosystem I) through, obligatorily in series, the iron-sulfur and the cytochrome f redox centers in the cytochrome b(6)f complex. However, here we demonstrate that (a) the iron-sulfur center-dependent reductions of plastocyanin and P700 are much faster than cytochrome f reduction, both in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii cytochrome f mutants and in the wild type, and (b) the steady-state photosynthetic electron transport does not correlate with strongly inhibited cytochrome f reduction kinetics in the mutants. Thus, cytochrome f is not an obligatory intermediate for electrons flowing through the cytochrome b(6)f complex. The oxidation equivalents from Photosystem I are delivered to the high potential chain of the cytochrome b(6)f complex both at the cytochrome f level and, independently, at another site connected to the quinol-oxidizing site, possibly the iron-sulfur center.  相似文献   

5.
N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD) has been reported to inhibit proton translocation by cytochrome bc(1) and b(6)f complexes without significantly altering the rate of electron transport, a process referred to as decoupling. To understand the possible role of DCCD in inhibiting the protonogenic reactions of cytochrome bc(1) complex, we investigated the effect of DCCD modification on flash-induced electron transport and electrochromic bandshift of carotenoids in Rb. sphaeroides chromatophores. DCCD has two distinct effects on phase III of the electrochromic bandshift of carotenoids reflecting the electrogenic reactions of the bc(1) complex. At low concentrations, DCCD increases the magnitude of the electrogenic process because of a decrease in the permeability of the membrane, probably through inhibition of F(o)F(1). At higher concentrations (>150 microM), DCCD slows the development of phase III of the electrochromic shift from about 3 ms in control preparations to about 23 ms at 1.2 mM DCCD, without significantly changing the amplitude. DCCD treatment of chromatophores also slows down the kinetics of flash-induced reduction of both cytochromes b and c, from 1.5-2 ms in control preparations to 8-10 ms at 0.8 mM DCCD. Parallel slowing of the reduction of both cytochromes indicates that DCCD treatment modifies the reaction of QH(2) oxidation at the Q(o) site. Despite the similarity in the kinetics of both cytochromes, the onset of cytochrome c re-reduction is delayed 1-2 ms in comparison to cytochrome b reduction, indicating that DCCD inhibits the delivery of electrons from quinol to heme c(1). We conclude that DCCD treatment of chromatophores leads to modification of the rate of Q(o)H(2) oxidation by the iron-sulfur protein (ISP) as well as the donation of electrons from ISP to c(1), and we discuss the results in the context of the movement of ISP between the Q(o) site and cytochrome c(1).  相似文献   

6.
The lumen segment of cytochrome f consists of a small and a large domain. The role of the small domain in the biogenesis and stability of the cytochrome b(6)f complex and electron transfer through the cytochrome b(6)f complex was studied with a small domain deletion mutant in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. The mutant is able to grow photoautotrophically but with a slower rate than the wild type strain. The heme group is covalently attached to the polypeptide, and the visible absorption spectrum of the mutant protein is identical to that of the native protein. The kinetics of electron transfer in the mutant were measured by flash kinetic spectroscopy. Our results show that the rate for the oxidation of cytochrome f was unchanged (t(12) = approximately 100 micros), but the half-time for the reduction of cytochrome f is increased (t(12) = 32 ms; for wild type, t(12) = 2.1 ms). Cytochrome b(6) reduction was slower than that of the wild type by a factor of approximately 2 (t(12) = 8.6 ms; for wild type, t(12) = 4.7 ms); the slow phase of the electrochromic band shift also displayed a slower kinetics (t(12) = 5.5 ms; for wild type, t(12) = 2.7 ms). The stability of the cytochrome b(6)f complex in the mutant was examined by following the kinetics of the degradation of the individual subunits after inhibiting protein synthesis in the chloroplast. The results indicate that the cytochrome b(6)f complex in the small domain deletion mutant is less stable than in the wild type. We conclude that the small domain is not essential for the biogenesis of cytochrome f and the cytochrome b(6)f complex. However, it does have a role in electron transfer through the cytochrome b(6)f complex and contributes to the stability of the complex.  相似文献   

7.
The pgr1 mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana carries a single point mutation (P194L) in the Rieske subunit of the cytochrome b6/f (cyt b6/f) complex and is characterised by a reduced electron transport activity at saturating light intensities in vivo. We have investigated the electron transport in this mutant under in vitro conditions. Measurements of P700 reduction kinetics and of photosynthetic electron transport rates indicated that electron transfer from cyt b6/f to photosystem I is not generally reduced in the mutant, but that the pH dependence of this reaction is altered. The data imply that the pH-dependent inactivation of electron transport through cyt b6/f is shifted by about 1 pH unit to more alkaline pH values in pgr1 thylakoids in comparison with wild-type thylakoids. This interpretation was confirmed by determination of the transmembrane deltapH at different stromal pH values showing that the lumen pH in pgr1 mutant plants cannot drop below pH 6 reflecting most likely a shift of the pK and/or the redox potential of the oxidised Rieske protein.  相似文献   

8.
To better understand the mechanism of divergent electron transfer from ubiquinol to the iron-sulfur protein and cytochrome b(L) within the cytochrome bc(1) complex, we have examined the effects of antimycin on the presteady state reduction kinetics of the bc(1) complex in the presence or absence of endogenous ubiquinone. When ubiquinone is present, antimycin slows the rate of cytochrome c(1) reduction by approximately 10-fold but had no effect upon the rate of cytochrome c(1) reduction in bc(1) complex lacking endogenous ubiquinone. In the absence of endogenous ubiquinone cytochrome c(1), reduction was slower than when ubiquinone was present and was similar to that in the presence of ubiquinone plus antimycin. These results indicate that the low potential redox components, cytochrome b(H) and b(L), exert negative control on the rate of reduction of cytochrome c(1) and the Rieske iron-sulfur protein at center P. If electrons cannot equilibrate from cytochrome b(H) and b(L) to ubiquinone, partial reduction of the low potential components slows reduction of the high potential components. We also examined the effects of decreasing the midpoint potential of the iron-sulfur protein on the rates of cytochrome b reduction. As the midpoint potential decreased, there was a parallel decrease in the rate of b reduction, demonstrating that the rate of b reduction is dependent upon the rate of ubiquinol oxidation by the iron-sulfur protein. Together these results indicate that ubiquinol oxidation is a concerted reaction in which both the low potential and high potential redox components control ubiquinol oxidation at center P, consistent with the protonmotive Q cycle mechanism.  相似文献   

9.
Energy transduction in the cytochrome bc(1) complex is achieved by catalyzing opposite oxido-reduction reactions at two different quinone binding sites. We have determined the pre-steady state kinetics of cytochrome b and c(1) reduction at varying quinol/quinone ratios in the isolated yeast bc(1) complex to investigate the mechanisms that minimize inhibition of quinol oxidation at center P by reduction of the b(H) heme through center N. The faster rate of initial cytochrome b reduction as well as its lower sensitivity to quinone concentrations with respect to cytochrome c(1) reduction indicated that the b(H) hemes equilibrated with the quinone pool through center N before significant catalysis at center P occurred. The extent of this initial cytochrome b reduction corresponded to a level of b(H) heme reduction of 33%-55% depending on the quinol/quinone ratio. The extent of initial cytochrome c(1) reduction remained constant as long as the fast electron equilibration through center N reduced no more than 50% of the b(H) hemes. Using kinetic modeling, the resilience of center P catalysis to inhibition caused by partial pre-reduction of the b(H) hemes was explained using kinetics in terms of the dimeric structure of the bc(1) complex which allows electrons to equilibrate between monomers.  相似文献   

10.
G M Soriano  W A Cramer 《Biochemistry》2001,40(50):15109-15116
Plastoquinol oxidation and proton transfer by the cytochrome b(6) f complex on the lumen side of the chloroplast thylakoid membrane are mediated by high and low potential electron transport chains. The rate constant for reduction, k(bred), of cytochrome b(6) in the low potential chain at ambient pH 7.5-8 was twice that, k(fred), of cytochrome f in the high potential chain, as previously reported. k(bred) and k(fred) have a similar pH dependence in the presence of nigericin/nonactin, decreasing by factors of 2.5 and 4, respectively, from pH 8 to an ambient pH = 6, close to the lumen pH under conditions of steady-state photosynthesis. A substantial kinetic isotope effect, k(H2O)/k(D2O), was found over the pH range 6-8 for the reduction of cytochromes b(6) and f, and for the electrochromic band shift associated with charge transfer across the b(6)f complex, showing that isotope exchange affects the pK values linked to rate-limiting steps of proton transfer. The kinetic isotope effect, k(bred)(H2O)/k(bred) (D2O) approximately 3, for reduction of cytochrome b in the low potential chain was approximately constant from pH 6-8. However, the isotope effect for reduction of cytochrome f in the high potential chain undergoes a pH-dependent transition below pH 6.5 and increased 2-fold in the physiological region of the lumen pH, pH 5.7-6.3, where k(fred)(H2O)/k(fred)(D2O) approximately 4. It is proposed that a rate-limiting step for proton transfer in the high potential chain resides in the conserved, buried, and extended water chain of cytochrome f, which provides the exit port for transfer of the second proton derived from p-side quinol oxidation and a "dielectric well" for charge balance.  相似文献   

11.
Cytochrome f from the photosynthetic cytochrome b(6)f complex is unique among c-type cytochromes in its fold and heme ligation. The 1. 9-A crystal structure of the functional, extrinsic portion of cytochrome f from the thermophilic cyanobacterium Phormidium laminosum demonstrates that an unusual buried chain of five water molecules is remarkably conserved throughout the biological range of cytochrome f from cyanobacteria to plants [Martinez et al. (1994) Structure 2, 95-105]. Structure and sequence conservation of the cytochrome f extrinsic portion is concentrated at the heme, in the buried water chain, and in the vicinity of the transmembrane helix anchor. The electrostatic surface potential is variable, so that the surface of P. laminosum cytochrome f is much more acidic than that from turnip. Cytochrome f is unrelated to cytochrome c(1), its functional analogue in the mitochondrial respiratory cytochrome bc(1) complex, although other components of the b(6)f and bc(1) complexes are homologous. Identical function of the two complexes is inferred for events taking place at sites of strong sequence conservation. Conserved sites throughout the entire cytochrome b(6)f/bc(1) family include the cluster-binding domain of the Rieske protein and the heme b and quinone-binding sites on the electrochemically positive side of the membrane within the b cytochrome, but not the putative quinone-binding site on the electrochemically negative side.  相似文献   

12.
The kinetics of electron transfer between cytochrome-c oxidase and ruthenium hexamine has been characterized using the native enzyme or its cyanide complex either solubilized by detergent (soluble cytochrome oxidase) or reconstituted into artificial phospholipid vesicles (cytochrome oxidase-containing vesicles). Ru(NH3)2+6 (Ru(II] reduces oxidized cytochrome a, following (by-and-large) bimolecular kinetics; the second order rate constant using the cyanide complex of the enzyme is 1.5 x 10(6) M-1 s-1, for the enzyme in detergent, and slightly higher for COV. In the case of COV the kinetics are not affected by the addition of ionophores. Upon mixing fully reduced cytochrome oxidase with oxygen (in the presence of excess reductants), the oxidation leading to the pulsed enzyme is followed by a steady state phase and (eventually) by complete re-reduction. When the concentrations of dioxygen and oxidase are sufficiently low (micromolar range), the time course of oxidation can be resolved by stopped flow at room temperature, yielding an apparent bimolecular rate constant of 5 x 10(7) M-1 s-1. After exhaustion of oxygen and end of steady state, re-reduction of the pulsed enzyme by the excess Ru(II) is observed; the concentration dependence shows that the rate of re-reduction is limited at 3 s-1 in detergent; this limiting value is assigned to the intramolecular electron transfer process from cytochrome a-Cua to the binuclear center. Using the reconstituted enzyme, the internal electron transfer step is sensitive to ionophores, increasing from 2-3 to 7-8 s-1 upon addition of valinomycin and carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone. This finding indicates for the first time an effect of the electrochemical potential across the membrane on the internal electron transfer rate; the results are compared with expectations based on the hypothesis formulated by Brunori et al. (Brunori, M., Sarti, P., Colosimo, A., Antonini, G., Malatesta, F., Jones, M.G., and Wilson, M.T. (1985) EMBO J. 4, 2365-2368), and their bioenergetic relevance is discussed with reference to the proton pumping activity of the enzyme.  相似文献   

13.
The plastoquinone pool during dark adaptation is reduced by endogenous reductants and oxidized at the expense of molecular oxygen. We report here on the redox state of plastoquinone in darkness, using as an indicator the chlorophyll fluorescence kinetics of whole cells of a Chlamydomonas reinhardtii mutant strain lacking the cytochrome b(6)f complex. When algae were equilibrated with a mixture of air and argon at 1.45% air, plastoquinol oxidation was inhibited whereas mitochondrial respiration was not. Consequently, mitochondrial oxidases cannot be responsible for the oxygen consumption linked to plastoquinol oxidation. Plastoquinol oxidation in darkness turned out to be sensitive to n-propyl gallate (PG) and insensitive to salicylhydroxamic acid (SHAM), whereas mitochondrial respiration was sensitive to SHAM and PG. Thus, both PG treatment and partial anaerobiosis allow to draw a distinction between an inhibition of plastoquinol oxidation and an inhibition of mitochondrial respiration, indicating the presence of a plastoquinol:oxygen oxidoreductase. The possible identification of this oxidase with an oxidase involved in carotenoid biosynthesis is discussed in view of various experimental data.  相似文献   

14.
We have addressed the functional and structural roles of three domains of the chloroplast Rieske iron-sulfur protein; that is, the flexible hinge that connects the transmembrane helix to the soluble cluster-bearing domain, the N-terminal stromal protruding domain, and the transmembrane helix. To this aim mutants were generated in the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Their capacities to assemble the cytochrome b6f complex, perform plastoquinol oxidation, and signal redox-induced activation of the light-harvesting complex II kinase during state transition were tested in vivo. Deletion of one residue and extensions of up to five residues in the flexible hinge had no significant effect on complex accumulation or electron transfer efficiency. Deletion of three residues (Delta3G) dramatically decreased reaction rates by a factor of approximately 10. These data indicate that the chloroplast iron-sulfur protein-linking domain is much more flexible than that of its counterpart in mitochondria. Despite greatly slowed catalysis in the Delta3G mutant, there was no apparent delay in light-harvesting complex II kinase activation or state transitions. This indicates that conformational changes occurring in the Rieske protein did not represent a limiting step for kinase activation within the time scale tested. No phenotype could be associated with mutations in the N-terminal stromal-exposed domain. In contrast, the N17V mutation in the Rieske protein transmembrane helix resulted in a large decrease in the cytochrome f synthesis rate. This reveals that the Rieske protein transmembrane helix plays an active role in assembly-mediated control of cytochrome f synthesis. We propose a structural model to interpret this phenomenon based on the C. reinhardtii cytochrome b6f structure.  相似文献   

15.
The effect of Zn2+ on the rates of electron transfer and of voltage generation in the cytochrome bc1 complex (bc1) was investigated under excitation of Rhodobacter capsulatus chromatophores with flashing light. When added, Zn2+ retarded the oxidation of cytochrome b and allowed to monitor (at 561-570 nm) the reduction of its high potential heme b(h) (in the absence of Zn2+ this reaction was masked by the fast re-oxidation of the heme). The effect was accompanied by the deceleration of both the cytochrome c(1) reduction (as monitored at 552-570 nm) and the generation of transmembrane voltage (monitored by electrochromism at 522 nm). At Zn2+ <100 microM the reduction of heme b(h) remained 10 times faster than other reactions. The kinetic discrepancy was observed even after an attenuated flash, when bc1 turned over only once. These observations (1) raise doubt on the notion that the transmembrane electron transfer towards heme b(h) is the main electrogenic reaction in the cytochrome bc1 complex, (2) imply an allosteric link between the site of heme b(h) oxidation and the site of cytochrome c1 reduction at the opposite side of the membrane, and (3) indicate that the internal redistribution of protons might account for the voltage generation by the cytochrome bc1 complex.  相似文献   

16.
Laser-Activated Electron Transport in a Chlamydomonas Mutant   总被引:3,自引:3,他引:0  
Following laser activation of electron transport in the pale green mutant of Chlamydomonas reinhardii, the following kinetics are observed: 1) A rapid absorption decrease at 421 mmu (half-time < 2 x 10(-6) sec) recovering with a half-time of approximately 7 x 10(-3) sec. 2) Oxidation of cytochrome f at 554 mmu with a half-time of 1 x 10(-4) sec. 3) Oxidation of cytochrome of type b, at 432 and 564 mmu, with a half-time of approximately 6 x 10(-3) sec, following a 2 x 10(-3) sec lag.THE RESULTS ARE INTERPRETED ACCORDING TO A LINEAR ELECTRON TRANSPORT SEQUENCE: system I trap <-- cytochrome f <-- <-- cytochrome b with an additional molecule of cytochrome b in the cyclic photophosphorylation pathway. Experiments with uncouplers provide evidence for a site of photophosphorylation between cytochrome f and cytochrome b.Additional studies involve inhibitors of electron transport, the temperature dependence and quantum efficiency of cytochrome oxidation, and the effect of oxygen and pre-illumination on the laser-induced absorption changes.  相似文献   

17.
Quinone-reductase (Q(i)) domains of cyanobacterial/chloroplast cytochrome bf and bacterial/mitochondrial bc complexes differ markedly, and the cytochrome bf Q(i) site mechanism remains largely enigmatic. To investigate the bf Q(i) domain, we constructed the mutation R214H, which substitutes histidine for a conserved arginine in the cytochrome b(6) polypeptide of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. SPCC 7002. At high light intensity, the R214H mutant grew approximately 2.5-fold more slowly than the wild type. Slower growth arose from correspondingly slower overall turnover of the bf complex. Specifically, as shown in single flash turnover experiments of cytochrome b(6) reduction and oxidation, the R214H mutation partially blocked electron transfer to the Q(i) site, mimicking the effect of the Q(i) site inhibitor 2-N-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide. The kinetics of cytochrome b(6) oxidation were largely unaffected by hydrogen-deuterium exchange in the mutant but were slowed considerably in the wild type. This suggests that although protonation events influenced the kinetics of cytochrome b(6) oxidation at the Q(i) site in the wild type, electron flow limited this reaction in the R214H mutant. Redox titration of membranes revealed midpoint potentials (E(m,7)) of the two b hemes similar to those in the wild type. Our data define cytochrome b(6) Arg(214) as a key residue for Q(i) site catalysis and turnover of the cytochrome bf complex. In the recent cytochrome bf structures, Arg(214) lies near the Q(i) pocket and the newly discovered c(i) or x heme. We propose a model for Q(i) site function and a role for Arg(214) in plastoquinone binding.  相似文献   

18.
Heimann S  Ponamarev MV  Cramer WA 《Biochemistry》2000,39(10):2692-2699
Based on the atomic structures of the mitochondrial cytochrome bc(1) complex, it has been proposed that the soluble domain of the [2Fe-2S] Rieske iron-sulfur protein (ISP) must rotate by ca. 60 degrees and translate through an appreciable distance between two binding sites, proximal to cytochrome c(1) and to the lumen-side quinol binding site. Such motional freedom implies that the electron-transfer rate should be affected by the lumenal viscosity. The flash-induced oxidation of cytochrome f, the chloroplast analogue of cytochrome c(1), was found to be inhibited reversibly by increased lumenal viscosity, as was the subsequent reduction of both cytochrome b(6) and cytochrome f. The rates of these three redox reactions correlated inversely with lumenal viscosity over a viscosity range of 1-10 cP. Reduction of cytochrome b(6) and cytochrome f was not concerted. The rate of cytochrome f reduction was observed to be approximately half that of cytochrome b(6) regardless of the actual viscosity, implying that the path length traversed by the ISP in reduction of cytochrome f is twice that of cytochrome b(6). This suggests that upon initiation of electron transfer by a light flash, cytochrome b(6) reduction requires movement of reduced ISP from an initial position predominantly proximal to cytochrome f, apparently favored by the reduced ISP, to the quinol binding site at which the oxidant-induced reduction of cytochrome b(6) is initiated. Subsequent reduction of cytochrome f requires the additional movement of the ISP back to a site proximal to cytochromef. There is no discernible viscosity dependence for cytochrome b(6) reduction under oxidizing conditions, presumably because the oxidized ISP preferentially binds proximal to the quinone binding niche. The dependence of the cytochrome redox reaction on ambient viscosity implies that the tethered diffusional motion of the ISP is part of the rate limitation for charge transfer through the b(6)f complex.  相似文献   

19.
Recent kinetics experiments using mutants of the bc(1) complex (ubihydroquinone-cytochrome c oxidoreductase) iron-sulfur subunit with modified hinge regions have revealed the crucial role played by the large scale movement of its [2Fe-2S] cluster domain during the activity of this enzyme. In particular, one of these mutants (+1Ala) with an insertion of one alanine residue in the hinge region is partially deficient in performing this movement. We found that this defect can be overcome by the appearance of a second mutation substituting the leucine at position 286 in the ef loop of cytochrome b with a phenylalanine. Detailed studies of these mutants and their derivatives revealed that the ef loop acts as a barrier that needs to be crossed for multiple turnovers of the enzyme but not for a single turnover ubihydroquinone oxidation site catalysis. These findings indicate that the movement of the iron-sulfur subunit is composed of two discrete parts: a "micro-movement" at the cytochrome b interface, during which the [2Fe-2S] cluster interacts with ubihydroquinone oxidation site occupants and catalyzes ubihydroquinone oxidation, and a "macro-movement," during which the cluster domain swings away from cytochrome b interface, crosses the ef loop, and reaches a position close to cytochrome c(1) heme, to which it ultimately transfers an electron.  相似文献   

20.
The effects of dibromothymoquinone (DBMIB) and methylviologen (MV) on the Chl a fluorescence induction transient (OJIP) were studied in vivo. Simultaneously measured 820-nm transmission kinetics were used to monitor electron flow through photosystem I (PSI). DBMIB inhibits the reoxidation of plastoquinol by binding to the cytochrome b(6)/f complex. MV accepts electrons from the FeS clusters of PSI and it allows electrons to bypass the block that is transiently imposed by ferredoxin-NADP(+)-reductase (FNR) (inactive in dark-adapted leaves). We show that the IP phase of the OJIP transient disappears in the presence of DBMIB without affecting F(m). MV suppresses the IP phase by lowering the P level compared to untreated leaves. These observations indicate that PSI activity plays an important role in the kinetics of the OJIP transient. Two requirements for the IP phase are electron transfer beyond the cytochrome b(6)/f complex (blocked by DBMIB) and a transient block at the acceptor side of PSI (bypassed by MV). It is also observed that in leaves, just like in thylakoid membranes, DBMIB can bypass its own block at the cytochrome b(6)/f complex and donate electrons directly to PC(+) and P700(+) with a donation time tau of 4.3 s. Further, alternative explanations of the IP phase that have been proposed in the literature are discussed.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号