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1.
The oxidation-reduction potentials of the two c-type hemes of Pseudomonas aeruginosa cytochrome c peroxidase (ferrocytochrome c:hydrogen-peroxide oxidoreductase EC 1.11.1.5) have been determined and found to be widely different, about +320 and -330 mV, respectively. The EPR spectrum at temperatures below 77 K reveals only low-spin signals (gz 3.24 and 2.93), whereas optical spectra at room temperature indicate the presence of one high-spin and one low-spin heme in the enzyme. Optical absorption spectra of both resting and half-reduced enzyme at 77 K lack features of a high-spin compound. It is concluded that the heme ligand arrangement changes on cooling from 298 to 77 K with a concomitant change in the spin state. The active form of the peroxidase is the half-reduced enzyme, in which one heme is in the ferrous and the other in the ferric state (low-spin below 77 K with gz 2.84). Reaction of the half-reduced enzyme with hydrogen peroxide forms Compound I with the hemes predominantly in the ferric (gz 3.15) and the ferryl states. Compound I has a half-life of several seconds and is converted into Compound II apparently having a ferric-ferric structure, characterized by an EPR peak at g 3.6 with unusual temperature and relaxation behavior. Rapid-freeze experiments showed that Compound II is formed in a one-electron reduction of Compound I. The rates of formation of both compounds are consistent with the notion that they are involved in the catalytic cycle.  相似文献   

2.
J A Tan  J A Cowan 《Biochemistry》1990,29(20):4886-4892
A high molecular weight multiheme c-type cytochrome from the sulfate-reducing bacterium Desulfovibrio vulgaris (Hildenborough) has been spectroscopically characterized and compared with the tetraheme cytochrome c3. The protein contains a pentacoordinate high-spin heme (gz 6.0) and two hexacoordinate low-spin hemes (gz 2.95, gy 2.27, gx 1.48). From analysis of the g values for the low-spin hemes by the procedure of Blumberg and Peisach (Palmer, 1983) and comparison with with the optical spectra from a variety of c-type cytochromes, it is likely that these low-spin hemes are bound by two histidine residues. The NO derivative displayed typical rhombic EPR features (gx 2.07, gz 2.02, gy 1.99). Addition of azide does not lead to coupling between heme chromophores, but the ligand is accessible to the high-spin heme. The use of a glassy-carbon electrode to perform direct (no promoter) electrochemistry on the cytochrome is illustrated. Differential pulse polarography of the native protein gave two waves with reduction potentials of -59 (5) and -400 (8) mV (versus NHE). The cyanide adduct gave two waves with reduction potentials of -263 (8) and -401 (8) mV. The cytochrome was found to catalyze the reduction of nitrite and hydroxylamine.  相似文献   

3.
M?ssbauer and EPR spectroscopy were used to characterize the heme prosthetic groups of the nitrite reductase isolated from Desulfovibrio desulfuricans (ATCC 27774), which is a membrane-bound multiheme cytochrome capable of catalyzing the 6-electron reduction of nitrite to ammonia. At pH 7.6, the as-isolated enzyme exhibited a complex EPR spectrum consisting of a low-spin ferric heme signal at g = 2.96, 2.28, and 1.50 plus several broad resonances indicative of spin-spin interactions among the heme groups. EPR redox titration studies revealed yet another low-spin ferric heme signal at g = 3.2 and 2.14 (the third g value was undetected) and the presence of a high-spin ferric heme. M?ssbauer measurements demonstrated further that this enzyme contained six distinct heme groups: one high-spin (S = 5/2) and five low-spin (S = 1/2) ferric hemes. Characteristic hyperfine parameters for all six hemes were obtained through a detailed analysis of the M?ssbauer spectra. D. desulfuricans nitrite reductase can be reduced by chemical reductants, such as dithionite or reduced methyl viologen, or by hydrogenase under hydrogen atmosphere. Addition of nitrite to the fully reduced enzyme reoxidized all five low-spin hemes to their ferric states. The high-spin heme, however, was found to complex NO, suggesting that the high-spin heme could be the substrate binding site and that NO could be an intermediate present in an enzyme-bound form.  相似文献   

4.
MauG is a diheme enzyme possessing a five-coordinate high-spin heme with an axial His ligand and a six-coordinate low-spin heme with His-Tyr axial ligation. A Ca(2+) ion is linked to the two hemes via hydrogen bond networks, and the enzyme activity depends on its presence. Removal of Ca(2+) altered the electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) signals of each ferric heme such that the intensity of the high-spin heme was decreased and the low-spin heme was significantly broadened. Addition of Ca(2+) back to the sample restored the original EPR signals and enzyme activity. The molecular basis for this Ca(2+)-dependent behavior was studied by magnetic resonance and M?ssbauer spectroscopy. The results show that in the Ca(2+)-depleted MauG the high-spin heme was converted to a low-spin heme and the original low-spin heme exhibited a change in the relative orientations of its two axial ligands. The properties of these two hemes are each different than those of the heme in native MauG and are now similar to each other. The EPR spectrum of Ca(2+)-free MauG appears to describe one set of low-spin ferric heme signals with a large g(max) and g anisotropy and a greatly altered spin relaxation property. Both EPR and M?ssbauer spectroscopic results show that the two hemes are present as unusual highly rhombic low-spin hemes in Ca(2+)-depleted MauG, with a smaller orientation angle between the two axial ligand planes. These findings provide insight into the correlation of enzyme activity with the orientation of axial heme ligands and describe a role for the calcium ion in maintaining this structural orientation that is required for activity.  相似文献   

5.
Cytochrome c(m552) (cyt c(m552)) from the ammonia-oxidizing Nitrosomonas europaea is encoded by the cycB gene, which is preceded in a gene cluster by three genes encoding proteins involved in the oxidation of hydroxylamine: hao, hydroxylamine oxidoreductase; orf2, a putative membrane protein; cycA, cyt c(554). By amino acid sequence alignment of the core tetraheme domain, cyt c(m552) belongs to the NapC/TorC family of tetra- or pentaheme cytochrome c species involved in electron transport from membrane quinols to a variety of periplasmic electron shuttles leading to terminal reductases. However, cyt c(m552) is thought to reduce quinone with electrons originating from HAO. In this work, the tetrahemic 27 kDa cyt c(m552) from N. europaea was purified after extraction from membranes using Triton X-100 with subsequent exchange into n-dodecyl beta-d-maltoside. The cytochrome had a propensity to form strong SDS-resistant dimers likely mediated by a conserved GXXXG motif present in the putative transmembrane segment. Optical spectra of the ferric protein contained a broad ligand-metal charge transfer band at approximately 625 nm indicative of a high-spin heme. Mossbauer spectroscopy of the reduced (57)Fe-enriched protein revealed the presence of high-spin and low-spin hemes in a 1:3 ratio. Multimode EPR spectroscopy of the native state showed signals from an electronically interacting high-spin/low-spin pair of hemes. Upon partial reduction, a typical high-spin heme EPR signal was observed. No EPR signals were observed from the other two low-spin hemes, indicating an electronic interaction between these hemes as well. UV-vis absorption data indicate that CO (ferrous enzyme) or CN(-) (ferric or ferrous enzyme) bound to more than one and possibly all hemes. Other anionic ligands did not bind. The four ferrous hemes of the cytochrome were rapidly oxidized in the presence of oxygen. Comparative modeling, based on the crystal structure and conserved residues of the homologous NrfH protein from Desulfovibrio of cyt c(m552), predicted some structural elements, including a Met-ligated high-spin heme in a quinone-binding pocket, and likely axial ligands to all four hemes.  相似文献   

6.
The purified cytochrome aa3-type oxidase from Sulfolobus acidocaldarius (DSM 639) consists of a single subunit, containing one low-spin and one high-spin A-type hemes and copper [Anemüller, S. and Sch?fer, G. (1990) Eur. J. Biochem. 191, 297-305]. The enzyme metal centers were investigated by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy (EPR), coupled to redox potentiometry. The low-spin heme EPR signal has the following g-values: gz = 3.02, gy = 2.23 and gx = 1.45 and the high-spin heme exhibits an almost axial spectrum (gy = 6.03 and gx = 5.97, E/D < 0.002). In the enzyme as isolated the low-spin resonance corresponds to 95 +/- 10% of the enzyme concentration, while the high-spin signal accounts for only 40 +/- 5%. However, taking into account the redox potential dependence of the high-spin heme signal, this value also rises to 95 +/- 10%. The high-spin heme signal of the Sulfolobus enzyme shows spectral characteristics distinct from those of the Paracoccus denitrificans one: it shows a smaller rhombicity (gy = 6.1 and gx = 5.9, E/D = 0.004 for the P. denitrificans enzyme) and it is easier to saturate, having a half saturation power of 148 mW compared to 360 mW for the P. denitrificans protein, both at 10 K. The EPR spectrum of an extensively dialyzed and active enzyme sample containing only one copper atom/enzyme molecule does not display CuA-like resonances, indicating that this enzyme contains only a CUB-type center. The EPR-redox titration of the high-spin heme signal, which is assigned to cytochrome a3, gives a bell shaped curve, which was simulated by a non-interactive two step redox process, with reduction potentials of 200 +/- 10 mV and 370 +/- 10 mV at pH = 7.4. The decrease of the signal amplitude at high redox potentials is proposed to be due to oxidation of a CUB(I) center, which in the CUB(II) state is tightly spin-coupled to the heme a3 center. The reduction potential of the low-spin resonance was determined using the same model as 305 +/- 10 mV at pH = 7.4 by EPR redox titration. Addition of azide to the enzyme affects only the high-spin heme signal, consistent with the assignment of this resonance to heme a3. The results are discussed in the context of the redox center composition of quinol and cytochrome c oxidases.  相似文献   

7.
Chlorite dismutase (EC 1.13.11.49), an enzyme capable of reducing chlorite to chloride while producing molecular oxygen, has been characterized using EPR and optical spectroscopy. The EPR spectrum of GR-1 chlorite dismutase shows two different high-spin ferric heme species, which we have designated 'narrow' (gx,y,z = 6.24, 5.42, 2.00) and 'broad' (gz,y,x = 6.70, 5.02, 2.00). Spectroscopic evidence is presented for a proximal histidine co-ordinating the heme iron center of the enzyme. The UV/visible spectrum of the ferrous enzyme and EPR spectra of the ferric hydroxide and imidazole adducts are characteristic of a heme protein with an axial histidine co-ordinating the iron. Furthermore, the substrate analogs nitrite and hydrogen peroxide have been found to bind to ferric chlorite dismutase. EPR spectroscopy of the hydrogen peroxide adduct shows the loss of both high-spin and low-spin ferric signals and the appearance of a sharp radical signal. The NO adduct of the ferrous enzyme exhibits a low-spin EPR signal typical of a five-co-ordinate heme iron nitrosyl adduct. It seems that the bond between the proximal histidine and the iron is weak and can be broken upon binding of NO. The midpoint potential, Em(Fe3+/2+) = -23 mV, of chlorite dismutase is higher than for most heme enzymes. The spectroscopic features and redox properties of chlorite dismutase are more similar to the gas-sensing hemoproteins, such as guanylate cyclase and the globins, than to the heme enzymes.  相似文献   

8.
Cytochrome b(561) from bovine adrenal chromaffin vesicles contains two hemes b with EPR signals at g(z) = 3.69 and 3.14 and participates in transmembrane electron transport from extravesicular ascorbate to an intravesicular monooxygenase, dopamine beta-hydroxylase. Treatment of purified cytochrome b(561) in an oxidized state with a sulfhydryl reagent, 4,4'-dithiodipyridine, caused the introduction of only one 4-thiopyridine group per b(561) molecule at either Cys57 or Cys125. About half of the heme centers of the modified cytochrome were reduced rapidly with ascorbate as found for the untreated sample, but the final reduction level decreased to approximately 65%. EPR spectra of the modified cytochrome showed that a part of the g(z) = 3.14 low-spin EPR species was converted to a new low-spin species with g(z) = 2.94, although a considerable part of the heme center was concomitantly converted to a high-spin g = 6 species. Addition of ascorbate to the modified cytochrome caused the disappearance or significant reduction of the EPR signals at g(z) = 3.69 and 3.14 of low-spin species and at g = 6.0 of the high-spin species, but not for the g(z) approximately 2.94 species. These results suggested that the bound 4-thiopyridone at either Cys57 or Cys125 affected the intravesicular heme center and converted it partially to a non-ascorbate-reducible form. The present observations suggested the importance of the two well-conserved Cys residues near the intravesicular heme center and implied their physiological roles during the electron donation to the monodehydroascorbate radical.  相似文献   

9.
Resonance Raman spectra are reported for native horseradish peroxidase (HRP) and cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP) at 290, 77 and 9 K, using 406.7 nm excitation, in resonance with the Soret electronic transition. The spectra reveal temperature-dependent equilibria involving changes in coordination or spin state. At 290 K and pH 6.5, CCP contains a mixture of 5- and 6-coordinate high-spin FeIII heme while at 9 K the equilibrium is shifted entirely to the 6-coordinate species. The spectra indicate weak binding of H2O to the heme Pe, consistent with the long distance, 2.4 Å, seen in the crystal structure. At 290 K HRP also contains a mixture of high-spin FeIII hemes with the 5-coordinate form predominant. At low temperature, a small 6-coordinate high-spin component remains but the 5-coordinate high-spin spectrum is replaced by another which is characteristic either of 6-coordinate low-spin or 5-coordinate intermediate spin heme. The latter species is definitely indicated by previous EPR studies at low temperature. This behavior implies that, in contrast to CCP, the distal coordination site of HRP is only partially occupied by H2O at any temperature and that lowering the temperature significantly weakens the Fe-proximal imidazole bond. Consistent with this inference, the 77 K spectrum of reduced HRP shows an appreciable fraction of molecules having an Fe-imidazole stretching frequency of 222 cm−1, a value indicating weakened H-bonding of the proximal imidazole.

Resonance Roman spectroscopy Horseradish peroxidase Cytochrome c peroxidase Coordination equilibrium  相似文献   


10.
11.
The electron spin resonance (ESR) spectra of human and rabbit ferriheme-hemopexin complexes at 30oK show an ESR absorption characterized by gx = 1.60, gy = 2.25 and gz = 2.86, characteristic of low-spin ferriheme-proteins. The low-spin nature of the heme-iron in heme-hemopexin is corroborated by the observation of nuclear hyperfine splitting in M?ssbauer spectra at 4.2oK. The similarity of the ESR spectra of ferriheme-hemopexin with those of low-spin cytochromes which coordinate heme via two histidine residues points to a similar coordination mechanism in hemopexin. In contrast, the ESR spectra of the 1:1 and 2:1 complexes of heme with human serum albumin display signals at g = 6.0 and g = 2.0, characteristic of high-spin ferrihemeproteins.  相似文献   

12.
Aerobic phototrophic bacterium Roseobacter denitrificans has a nitric oxide reductase (NOR) homologue with cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) activity. It is composed of two subunits that are homologous with NorC and NorB, and contains heme c, heme b, and copper in a 1:2:1 stoichiometry. This enzyme has virtually no NOR activity. Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra of the air-oxidized enzyme showed signals of two low-spin hemes at 15 K. The high-spin heme species having relatively low signal intensity indicated that major part of heme b3 is EPR-silent due to an antiferromagnetic coupling to an adjacent CuB forming a Fe-Cu binuclear center. Resonance Raman (RR) spectrum of the oxidized enzyme suggested that heme b3 is six-coordinate high-spin species and the other hemes are six-coordinate low-spin species. The RR spectrum of the reduced enzyme showed that all the ferrous hemes are six-coordinate low-spin species. ν(Fe-CO) and ν(C-O) stretching modes were observed at 523 and 1969 cm−1, respectively, for CO-bound enzyme. In spite of the similarity to NOR in the primary structure, the frequency of ν(Fe-CO) mode is close to those of aa3- and bo3-type oxidases rather than that of NOR.  相似文献   

13.
The nature of the heme centers in the hexa-heme dissimilatory nitrite reductase from the bacterium Wolinella succinogenes has been investigated with EPR and magnetic circular dichroism spectroscopy. The EPR spectrum of the ferric enzyme is complex showing, in addition to magnetically isolated low-spin ferric hemes with g values of 2.93, 2.3 and 1.48, two sets of signals at g = 10.3, 3.7 and 4.8, 3.21, which we assign to two pairs of exchange coupled hemes. The MCD spectra show that the isolated hemes are bis-histidine coordinated and that there is one high-spin ferric heme. The exchange coupling is lost on treatment with SDS.  相似文献   

14.
The spectral properties of both ferric and ferrous cytochromes c' from Alcaligenes sp. N.C.I.B. 11015 are reported. The EPR spectra at 77 K and the electronic, resonance Raman, CD and MCD spectra at room temperature have been compared with those of the other cytochromes c' and various hemoproteins. In the ferrous form, all the spectral results at physiological pH strongly indicated that the heme iron(II) is in a high-spin state. In the ferric form, the EPR and electronic absorption spectra were markedly dependent upon pH. EPR and electronic spectral results suggested that the ground state of heme iron(III) at physiological pH consists of a quantum mechanical admixture of an intermediate-spin and a high-spin state. Under highly alkaline conditions, identification of the axial ligands of heme iron(III) was attempted by crystal field analysis of the low-spin EPR g values. Upon the addition of sodium dodecyl sulfate to ferric and ferrous cytochrome c', the low-spin type spectra were induced. The heme environment of this low-spin species is also discussed.  相似文献   

15.
The molecular biology and biochemistry of denitrification in gram-negative bacteria has been studied extensively. However, little is known about this process in gram-positive bacteria. We have purified the NO reductase from the cytoplasmic membrane of the gram-positive bacterium Bacillus azotoformans. The purified enzyme consists of two subunits with apparent molecular masses of 16 and 40 kDa based on SDS-PAGE. Analytical and spectroscopic determinations revealed the presence of one non-heme iron, two copper atoms and of two b-type hemes per enzyme complex. Heme c was absent. Using EPR and UV-visible spectroscopy, it was determined that one of the hemes is a low-spin heme b, in which the two axial histidine imidazole planes are positioned at an angle of 60-70 degrees. The second heme b is high-spin binding CO in the reduced state. The high-spin heme center and the non-heme iron are EPR silent. They are proposed to form a binuclear center where reduction of NO occurs. There are two novel features of this enzyme that distinguish it from other NO reductases. First, the enzyme contains copper in form of copper A, an electron carrier up to now only detected in cytochrome oxidases and nitrous oxide reductases. Second, the enzyme uses menaquinol as electron donor, whereas cytochrome c, which is the substrate of other NO reductases, is not used. Copper A and both hemes are reducible by menaquinol. This new NO reductase is thus a menaquinol:NO oxidoreductase. With respect to its prosthetic groups the B. azotoformans NO reductase is a true hybrid between copper A containing cytochrome oxidases and NO reductases present in gram-negative bacteria. It may represent the most ancient "omnipotent" progenitor of the family of heme-copper oxidases.  相似文献   

16.
The heme components of chlorosome-depleted membranes of the green-gliding bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus were studied by EPR spectroscopy. The four major species, which are present in approximately equimolar quantities, are characterized by the following gz values, redox midpoint potentials and orientations of heme planes with respect to the plane of the membrane: gz = 3.40, Em = +280 mV, 30 degrees; gz = 3.33, Em = 0 mV, 45 degrees; gz = 3.03, Em = +95 mV, 40-50 degrees and gz = 2.95, Em = +150 mV, 90 degrees. These four hemes were attributed to cytochrome c554, the membrane-bound immediate electron donor to the photosynthetic reaction centre in Chloroflexus. All hemes except that with the highest potential were able to undergo photooxidation at 4 K. The photooxidation of the lowest potential heme was stable, whereas that of the +95 mV and the +150 mV hemes reversed on increasing the temperature to 100 K in darkness, due to charge recombination. The ability to photooxidize these hemes at 4 K was lost upon aging of samples. The results demonstrate that a reaction-centre-associated tetraheme cytochrome subunit, analogous to that of purple bacteria, is also present in C. aurantiacus.  相似文献   

17.
Resonance Raman spectra are reported for native horseradish peroxidase (HRP) and cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP) at 290, 77 and 9 K, using 406.7 nm excitation, in resonance with the Soret electronic transition. The spectra reveal temperature-dependent equilibria involving changes in coordination or spin state. At 290 K and pH 6.5, CCP contains a mixture of 5- and 6-coordinate high-spin FeIII heme while at 9 K the equilibrium is shifted entirely to the 6-coordinate species. The spectra indicate weak binding of H2O to the heme Pe, consistent with the long distance, 2.4 Å, seen in the crystal structure. At 290 K HRP also contains a mixture of high-spin FeIII hemes with the 5-coordinate form predominant. At low temperature, a small 6-coordinate high-spin component remains but the 5-coordinate high-spin spectrum is replaced by another which is characteristic either of 6-coordinate low-spin or 5-coordinate intermediate spin heme. The latter species is definitely indicated by previous EPR studies at low temperature. This behavior implies that, in contrast to CCP, the distal coordination site of HRP is only partially occupied by H2O at any temperature and that lowering the temperature significantly weakens the Fe-proximal imidazole bond. Consistent with this inference, the 77 K spectrum of reduced HRP shows an appreciable fraction of molecules having an Fe-imidazole stretching frequency of 222 cm−1, a value indicating weakened H-bonding of the proximal imidazole.Resonance Roman spectroscopyHorseradish peroxidaseCytochrome c peroxidaseCoordination equilibrium  相似文献   

18.
The biosynthesis of methylamine dehydrogenase (MADH) from Paracoccus denitrificans requires four genes in addition to those that encode the two structural protein subunits. None of these gene products have been previously isolated. One of these, mauG, exhibits sequence similarity to diheme cytochrome c peroxidases and is required for the synthesis of the tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ) prosthetic group of MADH. A system was developed for the homologous expression of MauG in P. denitrificans. Its signal sequence was correctly processed, and it was purified from the periplasmic cell fraction. The protein contains two covalent c-type hemes, as predicted from the deduced sequence. EPR spectroscopy reveals that the protein as isolated possesses about equal amounts of one high-spin heme with axial symmetry and one low-spin heme with rhombic symmetry. The low-spin heme contains a major and minor component suggesting a small degree of heme heterogeneity. The high-spin heme and the major low-spin heme component each exhibit resonances that are atypical of c-type hemes and dissimilar to those reported for diheme cytochrome c peroxidases. MauG exhibited only very weak peroxidase activity when assayed with either c-type cytochromes or o-dianisidine as an electron donor. Fully reduced MauG was shown to bind carbon monoxide and could be reoxidized by oxygen. The relevance of these unusual properties of MauG is discussed in the context of its role in TTQ biogenesis.  相似文献   

19.
1. The reaction of myeloperoxidase with fluoride, chloride and azide has been studied by EPR. 2. Fluoride decreases the rhombicity of the high-spin heme signal of myeloperoxidase and the nuclear spin of the fluoride atom induces a splitting in g parallel of 35 G. This observation demonstrates that fluoride binds as an axial ligand to the heme iron of the enzyme. 3. Addition of chloride to the fluoride-treated enzyme increases the rhombicity of the high-spin heme signal and brings about a disappearance of the splitting at g parallel. The addition of azide to the fluoride-treated enzyme changes the spin state of the heme iron from a high-to a low-spin state (gx = 2.68, gy = 2.22 and gz = 1.80). 4. Upon addition of chloride or fluoride to low-spin azido-myeloperoxidase this compound is converted into the high-spin chlorido- or fluorido-myeloperoxidase. These observations demonstrate that these ligands compete for a binding site at or close to the heme iron of myeloperoxidase.  相似文献   

20.
The tetraheme cytochrome c subunit of the Rubrivivax gelatinosus reaction center was isolated in the presence of octyl beta-D-thioglucoside by ammonium sulfate precipitation and solubilization at pH 9 in a solution of Deriphat 160. Several biochemical properties of this purified cytochrome were characterized. In particular, it forms small oligomers and its N-terminal amino acid is blocked. In the presence or absence of diaminodurene, ascorbate and dithionite, different oxidation/reduction states of the isolated cytochrome were studied by absorption, EPR and resonance Raman spectroscopies. All the data show two hemes quickly reduced by ascorbate, one heme slowly reduced by ascorbate and one heme only reduced by dithionite. The quickly ascorbate-reduced hemes have paramagnetic properties very similar to those of the two low-potential hemes of the reaction center-bound cytochrome (gz = 3.34), but their alpha band is split with two components peaking at 552 nm and 554 nm in the reduced state. Their axial ligands did not change, being His/Met and His/His, as indicated by the resonance Raman spectra. The slowly ascorbate-reduced heme and the dithionite-reduced heme are assigned to the two high-potential hemes of the bound cytochrome. Their alpha band was blue-shifted at 551 nm and the gz values decreased to 2.96, although the axial ligations (His/Met) were conserved. It was concluded that the estimated 300 mV potential drop of these hemes reflected changes in their solvent accessibility, while the reduction in gz indicates an increased symmetry of their cooordination spheres. These structural modifications impaired the cytochrome's essential function as the electron donor to the photooxidized bacteriochlorophyll dimer of the reaction center. In contrast to its native state, the isolated cytochrome was unable to reduce efficiently the reaction center purified from a Rubrivivax gelatinosus mutant in which the tetraheme was absent. Despite the conformational changes of the cytochrome, its four hemes are still divided into two groups with a pair of low-potential hemes and a pair of high-potential hemes.  相似文献   

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