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1.
The kinetics of transfer of two electrons from a photodonor (a system containing eosin and NADH or 4;,5;-dibromofluorescein and NADH) to Fe-protein (Av2) and the kinetics of transfer of the first and second electrons from Av2 to Mo-Fe-protein (Av1) were studied by kinetic laser spectroscopy of nitrogenase from Azotobacter vinelandii. The effects of the substrates of nitrogenase (nitrogen, acetylene, and protons) on the intramolecular electron transfer in nitrogenase were studied. Analysis of the effect of photodonor excitation radiation intensity on the rate of electron transfer was used to determine the transfer rate constants for the first (k1) and second (k2) electrons from Av2 to Av1. In the presence of MgATP, two electrons are sequentially transferred from Av2 to Av1, and no delay between these reactions was detected. The first electron transferred from Av2 to Av1 is not targeted to the substrate; k1 = 154 +/- 15 sec-1 at 23 degrees C for the system 4;,5;-dibromofluorescein-NADH; k2 = 53 +/- 5 sec-1, 95 +/- 9 sec-1, and 24 +/- 2 sec-1 at 23 degrees C in the presence of nitrogen, acetylene, and argon, respectively. An unidentified slow step (k3 = 18 +/- 2 sec-1 at 23 degrees C) may be associated with electron transfer within Av1.  相似文献   

2.
The organization of the (Ca2+-Mg2+)-ATPase has been studied in reconstituted systems by fluorescence polarization of the ATPase labeled with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) and resonance energy transfer between ATPase labeled with FITC and with eosin isothiocyanate (EITC). The fluorescence polarization of FITC-ATPase was found to decrease with increasing labeling ratio FITC:ATPase, indicating depolarization as a result of resonance energy transfer between ATPase molecules. Fluorescence polarization was, however, independent of the molar ratio of phospholipid to protein above a molar ratio of 50:1. Resonance energy transfer between FITC-ATPase and EITC-ATPase was also found to be independent of phospholipid:protein ratio. It is suggested therefore that the ATPase is not randomly distributed in the plane of the membrane but rather forms ordered clusters (probably rows of monomers or dimers) on the fluorescence time scale (nanoseconds) even in the presence of a large excess of phospholipid. This organization within the membrane is dependent both on the chemical structure of the phospholipid and on its physical phase.  相似文献   

3.
Famoxadone is a new cytochrome bc(1) Q(o) site inhibitor that immobilizes the iron-sulfur protein (ISP) in the b conformation. The effects of famoxadone on electron transfer between the iron-sulfur center (2Fe-2S) and cyt c(1) were studied using a ruthenium dimer to photoinitiate the reaction. The rate constant for electron transfer in the forward direction from 2Fe-2S to cyt c(1) was found to be 16,000 s(-1) in bovine cyt bc(1). Binding famoxadone decreased this rate constant to 1,480 s(-1), consistent with a decrease in mobility of the ISP. Reverse electron transfer from cyt c(1) to 2Fe-2S was found to be biphasic in bovine cyt bc(1) with rate constants of 90,000 and 7,300 s(-1). In the presence of famoxadone, reverse electron transfer was monophasic with a rate constant of 1,420 s(-1). It appears that the rate constants for the release of the oxidized and reduced ISP from the b conformation are the same in the presence of famoxadone. The effects of famoxadone binding on electron transfer were also studied in a series of Rhodobacter sphaeroides cyt bc(1) mutants involving residues at the interface between the Rieske protein and cyt c(1) and/or cyt b.  相似文献   

4.
This work develops and utilizes a non-steady-state model for evaluating the interactions between sorption and biodegradation of hydrophobic organic compounds in soil-slurry systems. The model includes sorption/desorption of a target compound, its utilization by microorganisms as a primary substrate existing in the dissolved phase, and/or the sorbed phase in biomass and soil, oxygen transfer, and oxygen utilization as an electron acceptor. Biodegradation tests with phenanthrene were conducted in liquid and soil-slurry systems. The soil-slurry tests were performed with very different mass transfer rates: fast mass transfer in a flask test at 150 rpm, and slow mass transfer in a roller-bottle test at 2 rpm. The results of liquid tests indicate that biodegradation of the soil-soluble organic fraction did not significantly enhance the biodegradation rate. In the slurry tests, phenanthrene was degraded more rapidly than in liquid tests, but at a similar rate in both slurry systems. Modeling analyses with several hypotheses indicate that a model without biodegradation of compound sorbed to the soil was not able to account for the rapid degradation of phenanthrene, particularly in the roller-bottle slurry test. The model with sorbed-phase biodegradation and the same biokinetic parameters, but unique mass transfer coefficients, simulated the experimental data in both slurry tests most successfully. Reduced mass transfer resistance to bacteria attached to the soil is the most likely phenomenon accounting for rapid sorbed-phase biodegradation.  相似文献   

5.
Biochemical reactions involving electron transfer between substrates or enzyme cofactors are both common and physiologically important; they have been studied by means of a variety of techniques. In this paper we review the application of photochemical methods to the study of intramolecular electron transfer in hemoproteins, thus selecting a small, well-defined sector of this otherwise enormous field. Photoexcitation of the heme populates short-lived excited states which decay by thermal conversion and do not usually transfer electrons, even when a suitable electron acceptor is readily available, e.g., in the form of a second oxidized heme group in the same protein; because of this, the experimental setup demands some manipulation of the hemoprotein. In this paper we review three approaches that have been studied in detail: (i) the covalent conjugation to the protein moiety of an organic ruthenium complex, which serves as the photoexcitable electron donor (in this case the heme acts as the electron acceptor); (ii) the replacement of the heme group with a phosphorescent metal-substituted porphyrin, which on photoexcitation populates long-lived excited states, capable of acting as electron donors (clearly the protein must contain some other cofactor acting as the electron acceptor, most often a second heme group in the oxidized state); (iii) the combination of the reduced heme with CO (the photochemical breakdown of the iron-CO bond yields transiently the ground-state reduced heme which is able to transfer one electron (or a fraction of it) to an oxidized electron acceptor in the protein; this method uses a "mixed-valence hybrid" state of the redox active hemoprotein and has the great advantage of populating on photoexcitation an electron donor at physiological redox potential).  相似文献   

6.
A family of 12 different mixed ligand complexes of iron with cyanide and substituted 1,10-phenanthroline was prepared. The electron transfer properties of each reagent were systematically manipulated by varying the substituent(s) on the aromatic ring system and the stoichiometry of the two types of ligands in the complex. Values for the standard reduction potentials of each member of this family of electron transfer reagents were determined and spanned from 500 to 900 mV. The one-electron transfer reactions between each of these substitution-inert reagents and the high potential blue copper protein, rusticyanin, from Thiobacillus ferrooxidans were studied by stopped flow spectrophotometry under acidic conditions. For comparison with the protein results, the kinetics of electron transfer between each of these reagents and sulfatoiron were also investigated. The Marcus theory of electron transfer was successfully applied to this set of kinetic data to demonstrate that 10 of the 12 reagents had equal kinetic access to the redox center of the rusticyanin and utilized the same reaction pathway for electron transfer. The utility of these synthetic electron transfer reagents in characterizing the electron transfer properties of very high potential, redox-active metalloproteins is illustrated.  相似文献   

7.
The kinetics of electron transfer from reduced high-potential iron-sulfur protein (HiPIP) to the photooxidized tetraheme cytochrome c subunit (THC) bound to the photosynthetic reaction center (RC) from the purple sulfur bacterium Allochromatium vinosum were studied under controlled redox conditions by flash absorption spectroscopy. At ambient redox potential Eh = +200 mV, where only the high-potential (HP) hemes of the THC are reduced, the electron transfer from HiPIP to photooxidized HP heme(s) follows second-order kinetics with rate constant k = (4.2 +/- 0.2) 10(5) M(-1) s(-1) at low ionic strength. Upon increasing the ionic strength, k increases by a maximum factor of ca. 2 at 640 mM KCl. The role of Phe48, which lies on the external surface of HiPIP close to the [Fe4S4] cluster and presumably on the electron transfer pathway to cytochrome heme(s), was investigated by site-directed mutagenesis. Substitution of Phe48 with arginine, aspartate, and histidine completely prevents electron donation. Conversely, electron transfer is still observed upon substitution of Phe48 with tyrosine and tryptophan, although the rate is decreased by more than 1 order of magnitude. These results suggest that Phe48 is located on a key protein surface patch essential for efficient electron transfer, and that the presence of an aromatic hydrophobic residue on the putative electron-transfer pathway plays a critical role. This conclusion was supported by protein docking calculations, resulting in a structural model for the HiPIP-THC complex, which involves a docking site close to the LP heme farthest from the bacteriochlorophyll special pair.  相似文献   

8.
A large series of compounds was screened for ability to protect trypsin from eosin-sensitized photodynamic inactivation. Eosin-sensitized photooxidation reactions of this type typically proceed via the triplet state of the dye and often involve singlet state oxygen as the oxidizing entity. In order to determine the mechanisms by which trypsin is protected from photoinactivation, a number of good protective agents (inhibitors) and some non-protective agents were selected for more detailed flash photolysis studies. Good inhibitors such as p-phenylenediamine, n-propyl gallate, serotonin creatinine sulfate and p-toluenediamine competed efficiently with oxygen and with trypsin for reaction with the triplet state of eosin. The inhibitors were shown to quench triplet eosin to the ground state and/or reduce triplet eosin to form the semireduced eosin radical and an oxidized form of the inhibitor. In the latter case, oxidized inhibitor could react by a reverse electron transfer reaction with the semi-reduced eosin radical to regenerate ground state eosin and the inhibitor. The good inhibitors also competed effectively with trypsin for oxidation by semioxidized eosin, thus giving another possible protective mechanism. Non-inhibitors such as halogen ions and the paramagnetic ions Co++, Cu++ and Mn++ reacted only slowly with triplet and with seimioxidized eosin. The primary pathway for the eosin-sensitized photooxidation of trypsin at pH 8.0 involved singlet oxygen, although semioxidized eosin may also participate.  相似文献   

9.
Cytochrome c3 from Desulfovibrio gigas is electrostatically adsorbed on Ag electrodes coated with self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) of 11-mercaptoundecanoic acid. The redox equilibria and electron transfer dynamics of the adsorbed four-heme protein are studied by surface enhanced resonance Raman spectroscopy. Immobilization on the coated electrodes does not cause any structural changes in the redox sites. The potential-dependent stationary experiments distinguish the redox potential of heme IV (-0.19 V versus normal hydrogen electrode) from those of the other hemes for which an average value of -0.3 V is determined. Taking into account the interfacial potential drops, these values are in good agreement with the redox potentials of the protein in solution. The heterogenous electron transfer between the electrode and heme IV of the adsorbed cytochrome c3 is analyzed on the basis of time-resolved experiments, leading to a formal electron transfer rate constant of 15 s(-1), which is a factor of 3 smaller than that of the monoheme protein cytochrome c.  相似文献   

10.
Nitrogenase is a globally important enzyme that catalyses the reduction of atmospheric dinitrogen into ammonia and is thus an important part of the nitrogen cycle. The nitrogenase enzyme is composed of a catalytic molybdenum-iron protein (MoFe protein) and a protein containing an [Fe4-S4] cluster (Fe protein) that functions as a dedicated ATP-dependent reductase. The current understanding of electron transfer between these two proteins is based on stopped-flow spectrophotometry, which has allowed the rates of complex formation and electron transfer to be accurately determined. Surprisingly, a total of four Fe protein molecules are required to saturate one MoFe protein molecule, despite there being only two well-characterized Fe-protein-binding sites. This has led to the conclusion that the purified Fe protein is only half-active with respect to electron transfer to the MoFe protein. Studies on the electron transfer between both proteins using rapid-quench EPR confirmed that, during pre-steady-state electron transfer, the Fe protein only becomes half-oxidized. However, stopped-flow spectrophotometry on MoFe protein that had only one active site occupied was saturated by approximately three Fe protein equivalents. These results imply that the Fe protein has a second interaction during the initial stages of mixing that is not involved in electron transfer.  相似文献   

11.
M A Cusanovich  G Tollin 《Biochemistry》1980,19(14):3343-3347
Cytochrome c-552 from Chromatium vinosum is an unusual heme protein in that it contains two hemes and one flavin per molecule. To investigate whether intramolecular electron transfer occurs in this protein, we have studied its reduction by external photoreduced flavin by using pulsed-laser excitation. This approach allows us to measure reduction kinetics on the mirosecond time scale. Both fully reduced lumiflavin and lumiflavin semiquinone radical reduce cytochrome c-552 with second-order rate constants of approximately 1.4 x 10(6) M-1s-1 and 1.9 x 10(8) M-1 s-1, respectively. Kinetic and spectral data and the results of similar studies with riboflavin indicate that both the flavin and heme moieties of cytochrome c-552 are reduced simultaneously on a millisecond time scale, with the transient formation of a protein-bound flavin anion radical. This is suggested to be due to rapid intramolecular electron transfer. Further, steric restrictions play an important role in the reduction reaction. Studies were conducted on the redox processes following photolysis of CO-ferrocytochrome c-552 in which the flavin was partly oxidized to resolve the kinetics of electron transfer between the heme and flavin of cytochrome c-552. Based on these results, we conclude that intramolecular electron transfer from ferrous heme to oxidized flavin occurs with a first-order rate constant of greater than 1.4 x 10(6) s-1.  相似文献   

12.
Electron transfer from the Rieske iron-sulfur protein to cytochrome c(1) (cyt c(1)) in the Rhodobacter sphaeroides cytochrome bc(1) complex was studied using a ruthenium dimer complex, Ru(2)D. Laser flash photolysis of a solution containing reduced cyt bc(1), Ru(2)D, and a sacrificial electron acceptor results in oxidation of cyt c(1) within 1 micros, followed by electron transfer from the iron-sulfur center (2Fe-2S) to cyt c(1) with a rate constant of 80,000 s(-1). Experiments were carried out to evaluate whether the reaction was rate-limited by true electron transfer, proton gating, or conformational gating. The temperature dependence of the reaction yielded an enthalpy of activation of +17.6 kJ/mol, which is consistent with either rate-limiting conformational gating or electron transfer. The rate constant was nearly independent of pH over the range pH 7 to 9.5 where the redox potential of 2Fe-2S decreases significantly due to deprotonation of His-161. The rate constant was also not greatly affected by the Rieske iron-sulfur protein mutations Y156W, S154A, or S154A/Y156F, which decrease the redox potential of 2Fe-2S by 62, 109, and 159 mV, respectively. It is concluded that the electron transfer reaction from 2Fe-2S to cyt c(1) is controlled by conformational gating.  相似文献   

13.
Sulfite-oxidizing molybdoenzymes convert the highly reactive and therefore toxic sulfite to sulfate and have been identified in insects, animals, plants, and bacteria. Although the well studied enzymes from higher animals serve to detoxify sulfite that arises from the catabolism of sulfur-containing amino acids, the bacterial enzymes have a central role in converting sulfite formed during dissimilatory oxidation of reduced sulfur compounds. Here we describe the structure of the Starkeya novella sulfite dehydrogenase, a heterodimeric complex of the catalytic molybdopterin subunit and a c-type cytochrome subunit, that reveals the molecular mechanism of intramolecular electron transfer in sulfite-oxidizing enzymes. The close approach of the two redox centers in the protein complex (Mo-Fe distance 16.6 A) allows for rapid electron transfer via tunnelling or aided by the protein environment. The high resolution structure of the complex has allowed the identification of potential through-bond pathways for electron transfer including a direct link via Arg-55A and/or an aromatic-mediated pathway. A potential site of electron transfer to an external acceptor cytochrome c was also identified on the SorB subunit on the opposite side to the interaction with the catalytic SorA subunit.  相似文献   

14.
The native cysteine residues of green fluorescent protein (GFP) at positions 48 and 70 were replaced by non-thiolic amino acids, and new cysteine sites were introduced at specific, surface positions. Based on molecular modeling of the GFP structure, the sites chosen for mutagenesis to Cys were glutamic acid at position 6 and isoleucine at position 229. These new, unique cysteine sites provided reactive thiol groups suitable for site-specific chemical modification by eosin-based fluorescence labels. The new constructs were designed to serve as the basis of proof of principle for fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) using an enzyme-activated (trypsin) intervening sequence between native and chemically conjugated fluorophores. These eosin moieties provided chemical FRET partners for the native GFP chromophore. On excitation, these GFP-eosin constructs exhibited strong intramolecular FRET, with quenching of the native GFP (511 nm) fluorophore emission and emission around 540 nm, corresponding to eosin. GFP mutants engineered with trypsin-sensitive sequences close to the eosin site, so that on trypsinolysis FRET was destroyed, the emission wavelength switching from that of the chemical FRET partner back to that of the native GFP fluorophore, providing efficient, ratio-based detection. This protein engineering provides the basis for novel bioprobes for enzymatic triggering using intramolecular FRET between GFP and carefully sited chemical labels.  相似文献   

15.
A role of the hinge protein is studied in the electron transfer reaction between cytochromes c1 and c, using highly purified "one-band" cytochrome c1 and "two-band" cytochrome c1. The results show that the hinge protein (Hp), which is essential for a stable ionic strength-sensitive c1-Hp-c complex, seems to play a certain role in electron transfer between cytochromes c1 and c; Keq for electron transfer reaction between cytochromes c1 and c in the presence of the hinge protein is found to be about 40% higher than that in the absence of the hinge protein at low ionic strength, but no difference exists at high ionic strength. We propose a hypothesis that the hinge protein may function as regulator for the electron transfer reaction between cytochromes c1 and c, and this may be at least one of the roles of the hinge protein in mitochondria.  相似文献   

16.
The following question has been addressed in the present work. How external high (up to 8 kbar) hydrostatic pressure acts on photoinduced intramolecular electron transfer and on exciton relaxation processes? Unlike phenomena, as they are, have been studied in different systems: electron transfer in an artificial Zn-porphyrin-pyromellitimide (ZnP-PM) supramolecular electron donor-acceptor complex dissolved in toluene measured at room temperature; exciton relaxation in a natural photosynthetic antenna protein called FMO protein measured at low temperatures, between 4 and 100 K. Spectrally selective picosecond time-resolved emission technique has been used to detect pressure-induced changes in the systems. The following conclusions have been drawn from the electron transfer study: (i) External pressure may serve as a potential and sensitive tool not only to study, but also to control and tune elementary chemical reactions in solvents; (ii) Depending on the system parameters, pressure can both accelerate and inhibit electron transfer reactions; (iii) If competing pathways of the reaction are available, pressure can probably change the branching ratio between the pathways; (iv) The classical nonadiabatic electron transfer theory describes well the phenomena in the ZnP-PM complex, assuming that the driving force or/and reorganisation energy depend linearly on pressure; (v) A decrease in the ZnP-PM donor-acceptor distance under pressure exerts a minor effect on the electron transfer rate. The effect of pressure on the FMO protein exciton relaxation dynamics at low temperatures has been found marginal. This may probably be explained by a unique structure of the protein [D.E. Trondrud, M.F. Schmid, B.W. Matthews, J. Mol. Biol. 188 (1986) p. 443; Y.-F. Li, W. Zhou, E. Blankenship, J.P. Allen, J. Mol. Biol., submitted]. A barrel made of low compressibility beta-sheets may, like a diving bell, effectively screen internal bacteriochlorophyll a molecules from external influence of high pressure. The origin of the observed slow pico = and subnanosecond dynamics of the excitons at the exciton band bottom remains open. The phenomenon may be due to weak coupling of phonons to the exciton states or/and to low density of the relevant low-frequency ( approximately 50 cm(-1)) phonons. Exciton solvation in the surrounding protein and water-glycerol matrix may also contribute to this effect. Drastic changes of spectral, kinetic and dynamic properties have been observed due to protein denaturation, if the protein was compressed at room temperature and then cooled down, as compared to the samples, first cooled and then pressurised.  相似文献   

17.
In this minireview an overview is presented of the kinetics of electron transfer within the cytochrome bc (1) complex, as well as from cytochrome bc (1) to cytochrome c. The cytochrome bc (1) complex (ubiquinone:cytochrome c oxidoreductase) is an integral membrane protein found in the mitochondrial respiratory chain as well as the electron transfer chains of many respiratory and photosynthetic bacteria. Experiments on both mitochondrial and bacterial cyatochrome bc (1) have provided detailed kinetic information supporting a Q-cycle mechanism for electron transfer within the complex. On the basis of X-ray crystallographic studies of cytochrome bc (1), it has been proposed that the Rieske iron-sulfur protein undergoes large conformational changes as it transports electrons from ubiquinol to cytochrome c (1). A new method was developed to study electron transfer within cytochrome bc (1) using a binuclear ruthenium complex to rapidly photooxidize cytochrome c (1). The rate constant for electron transfer from the iron-sulfur center to cytochrome c (1) was found to be 80,000 s(-1), and is controlled by the dynamics of conformational changes in the iron-sulfur protein. Moreover, a linkage between the conformation of the ubiquinol binding site and the conformational dynamics of the iron-sulfur protein has been discovered which could play a role in the bifurcated oxidation of ubiquinol. A ruthenium photoexcitation method has also been developed to measure electron transfer from cytochrome c (1) to cytochrome c. The kinetics of electron transfer are interpreted in light of a new X-ray crystal structure for the complex between cytochrome bc (1) and cytochrome c.  相似文献   

18.
The influence of hydrodynamic conditions on the dissolution rate of crystalline naphthalene as a model polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) was studied in stirred batch reactors with varying impeller speeds. Mass transfer from naphthalene melts of different surface areas to the aqueous phase was measured and results were modeled according to the film theory. Results were generalized using dimensionless numbers (Reynolds, Schmidt, and Sherwood). In combined mass transfer and biodegradation experiments, the effect of hydrodynamic conditions on the degradation rate of naphthalene by Pseudomonas 8909N was studied. Experimental results were mathematically described using mass-transfer and microbiological models. The experiments allowed determination of mass-transfer and microbiological parameters separately in a single run. The biomass formation rate under mass transfer limited conditions, which is related to the naphthalene biodegradation rate, was correlated to the dimensionless Reynolds number, indicating increased bioavailability at increased mixing in the reactor liquid. The methodology presented in which mass transfer processes are quantified under sterile conditions followed by a biodegradation experiment can also be adapted to more complex and realistic systems, such as particulate, suspended PAH solids or soils with intrapartically sorbed contaminants when the appropriate mass-transfer equations are incorporated.  相似文献   

19.
Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase, purified from maize leaves, is rapidly inactivated by the fluorescence probe dansyl chloride. The loss of activity can be ascribed to the covalent modification of an R-NH2 group, presumably the epsilon-NH2 group of lysine. Analysis of the data by the statistical method of Tsou [Sci. Sin. 11, 1535-1558 (1962)] provides clear evidence that a pH 8 eight R-NH2 groups can be modified in the tetrameric form of the enzyme, four of which are essential for catalytic activity. Essential groups are modified about five times more rapidly than the non-essential ones. The enzyme was completely protected against inactivation by Mg2+ plus phosphoenolpyruvate and consequently binding of the modifier to the essential groups is completely abolished. Hence the four essential groups seemed to be located at or near the active site(s). One of the four essential groups was modified with dansyl chloride and the other three progressively with eosin isothiocyanate. In the doubly labeled protein non-radiative single-singlet energy transfer between dansyl chloride (donor) and eosin isothiocyanate (acceptor) was observed. The low variance (+/- 5%) in the efficiency of energy transfer obtained at a particular acceptor stoichiometry (0.8-1.1, 1.9-2.1, 2.9-3.1) in triplicate samples provided confidence that the measured transfer efficiency may be interpreted as transfer between specific sites. The distances calculated from the efficiency of resonance energy transfer revealed two acceptor sites, equally separated, 4.8-5.1 nm from the donor site and third site being 6.4 nm apart from the donor. Under conditions where the tetrameric enzyme dissociates into the monomers, no transfer of resonance energy between the protein-bound dansyl chloride and eosin isothiocyanate was observed. Most likely the four essential lysyl residues in the tetrameric enzyme are located in different subunits of the enzyme, hence each of the subunits would contain a substrate-binding site with one lysyl residue crucial for activity.  相似文献   

20.
The electron transfer reactions between a lipid bilayer-modified gold electrode and oxidized spinach plastocyanin have been studied by cyclic voltammetry, using either an electrically neutral phosphatidylcholine (PC) bilayer or a positively charged PC bilayer containing 40 mol% dimethyldioctadecylammonium chloride, at two ionic strengths of electrolyte (0.02 and 0.2 M NaClO4). Plastocyanin was found to interact strongly enough with the lipid membrane to support an efficient electron transfer reaction with the electrode. The interaction forces, and therefore the mode of diffusion of plastocyanin molecules to the electrode, which limits the electron transfer rate, could be controlled by the PC concentration. At low lipid concentrations (0-5 mg/ml), electrostatically attractive interactions between specific microelectroactive sites on the surface of the lipid membrane and plastocyanin molecules predominate, producing a radial mode of diffusion of the protein molecules to the electrode surface. On the other hand, at high lipid concentrations (greater than 5 mg/ml), interaction between plastocyanin and the lipid membrane occurs via hydrophobic forces, and a linear diffusion of protein molecules limits the electron transfer process. These observations support and extend other experimental and theoretical results which indicate two possible sites on the surface of the plastocyanin molecule, one hydrophobic and one negatively charged, which are able to participate in electron transfer reactions. We conclude that electrochemical measurements with the present system provide a new approach to the study of redox protein-membrane interactions.  相似文献   

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