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1.
A new ruthenium-cytochrome c derivative was designed to study electron transfer from cytochrome bc1 to cytochrome c (Cc). The single sulfhydryl on yeast H39C;C102T iso-1-Cc was labeled with Ru(2,2'-bipyrazine)2(4-bromomethyl-4'-methyl-2,2'-bipyridine) to form Ru(z)-39-Cc. The Ru(z)-39-Cc derivative has the same steady-state activity with yeast cytochrome bc1 as wild-type yeast iso-1-Cc, indicating that the ruthenium complex does not interfere in the binding interaction. Laser excitation of reduced Ru(z)-39-Cc results in electron transfer from heme c to the excited state of ruthenium with a rate constant of 1.5 x 10(6) x s(-1). The resulting Ru(I) is rapidly oxidized by atmospheric oxygen in the buffer. The yield of photooxidized heme c is 20% in a single flash. Flash photolysis of a 1:1 complex between reduced yeast cytochrome bc1 and Ru(z)-39-Cc at low ionic strength leads to rapid photooxidation of heme c, followed by intracomplex electron transfer from cytochrome c1 to heme c with a rate constant of 1.4 x 10(4) x s(-1). As the ionic strength is raised above 100 mM, the intracomplex phase disappears, and a new phase appears due to the bimolecular reaction between solution Ru-39-Cc and cytochrome bc1. The interaction of yeast Ru-39-Cc with yeast cytochrome bc1 is stronger than that of horse Ru-39-Cc with bovine cytochrome bc1, suggesting that nonpolar interactions are stronger in the yeast system.  相似文献   

2.
A noncovalent complex of the apoprotein (1-104) and cyanogen bromide heme fragment containing residues 1 to 65, (1-65) H, has been prepared from horse heart cytochrome c. Conditions under which the redundant portions of the ferrous complex can be removed by limited trypsin digestion have been devised. The complementing fragments have been isolated from the derived complexes and four apofragments and one heme fragment have been identified in the amino acid sequence of cytochrome c. They are (39-104), (40-104), (54-104), (56-104), and (1-53)H. The formation of an ordered ferric complex composed of one heme fragment and one apofragment for the cases (1-53)H (39-104), (1-53)H-(40-104), (1-53)H-(54-104), and (1-53)H-(56-104) has been demonstrated by the quenching of the tryptophan 59 fluorescence and the regain of biological activity in a cytochrome b2 assay. The apparent dissociation constant has been estimated as less than 3 X 10(-7) M in all the aforementioned cases. Thus, the region (between residues 38 and 57) of the amino acid sequence permissible for cleavage without disruption of the ordered structure indicated by the present in vitro experiments corresponds to that (between residues 38 and 57) evolutionally deleted in the three-dimensional structure of Pseudomonas aeruginosa cytochrome c551 discovered by Dickerson et al. (Dickerson, R.E., Timkovich, R., and Almassy, R.J. (1976) J. Mol. Biol. 100, 473-491).  相似文献   

3.
The interactions of cytochrome c1 and cytochrome c from bovine cardiac mitochondria were investigated. Cytochrome c1 and cytochrome c formed a 1:1 molecular complex in aqueous solutions of low ionic strength. The complex was stable to Sephadex G-75 chromatography. The formation and stability of the complex were independent of the oxidation state of the cytochrome components as far as those reactions studied were concerned. The complex was dissociated in solutions of ionic strength higher than 0.07 or pH exceeding 10 and only partially dissociated in 8 M urea. No complexation occurred when cytochrome c was acetylated on 64% of its lysine residues or photooxidized on its 2 methionine residues. Complexes with molecular ratios of less than 1:1 (i.e. more cytochrome c) were obtained when polymerized cytochrome c, or cytochrome c with all lysine residues guanidinated, or a "1-65 heme peptide" from cyanogen bromide cleavage of cytochrome c was used. These results were interpreted to imply that the complex was predominantly maintained by ionic interactions probably involving some of the lysine residues of cytochrome c but with major stabilization dependent on the native conformations of both cytochromes. The reduced complex was autooxidizable with biphasic kinetics with first order rate constants of 6 X 10(-5) and 5 X U0(-5) s-1 but did not react with carbon monoxide. The complex reacted with cyanide and was reduced by ascorbate at about 32% and 40% respectively, of the rates of reaction with cytochrome c alone. The complex was less photoreducible than cytochrome c1 alone. The complex exhibited remarkably different circular dichroic behavior from that of the summation of cytochrome c1 plus cytochrome c. We concluded that when cytochromes c1 and c interacted they underwent dramatic conformational changes resulting in weakening of their heme crevices. All results available would indicate that in the complex cytochrome c1 was bound at the entrance to the heme crevice of cytochrome c on the methionine-80 side of the heme crevice.  相似文献   

4.
Cascade Blue acetyl azide is an amine reactive compound with spectral properties ideally suited for fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) studies in which heme prosthetic groups serve as acceptors. To demonstrate utility of the Cascade Blue-heme spectroscopic ruler, cytochrome c was employed as a test case to calibrate distance measurements obtained from FRET analysis. Following modification, stoichiometrically labeled cytochrome c was digested with trypsin and derivatized fragments were analyzed by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization and electrospray ionization mass spectrometry to identify Lys25 as the predominant site of covalent modification. FRET analysis on derivatized protein demonstrated nearly complete quenching of Cascade Blue fluorescence, indicating the labeled lysine residue to reside within 30 A of the heme prosthetic group. Sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) denaturation resulted in an approximately 28% recovery of fluorescence, demonstrating the utility of this donor-acceptor pair for evaluating distance changes of 30-90 A. Modeling the Cascade Blue donor molecule onto Lys25 of a cytochrome c NMR structure confirmed a distance of < or =30 A from the heme acceptor, as determined by FRET analysis. Further modeling of the SDS-denatured state as an extended chain suggested a maximum separation distance of 45 A, also consistent with results derived from FRET analysis.  相似文献   

5.
The 1:1 covalently cross-linked complex between horse cytochrome c and yeast cytochrome c peroxidase (ccp) has been formed by a slight modification of the method of Waldmeyer and Bosshard [Waldmeyer, B., & Bosshard, H. R. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 5184-5190]. This earlier study has been extended to show that efficient cross-linking of the two proteins can occur in a variety of buffers over a broad ionic strength range. The substitution of ferrocytochrome c for ferricytochrome c in the cross-linking studies resulted in an increased yield of 1:1 complex (approximately 10-20%) under the conditions studied. An improved method for purifying the covalent complex in relatively large quantities is presented here as are the results of electrophoresis and proton NMR studies of the complex. Both electrophoresis and NMR studies indicate modification of some surface acidic amino acids in the covalent complex by the carbodiimide. The proton hyperfine-shifted resonances of cytochrome c are broadened in the covalent complex relative to free cytochrome c, and the resonances corresponding to the cytochrome c heme 3-CH3 and 8-CH3 groups are shifted closer together in the complex. Integration of NMR resonances confirms a 1:1 complex as the primary cross-linking reaction product. However, we also demonstrate that the covalent complex can be further coupled to ccp and to cytochrome c to form higher molecular weight aggregates.  相似文献   

6.
分别于514.5nm及604um波长激发下,对游离的细胞色素C,细胞色素氧化酶以及细胞色素C和细胞色素氧化酶的复合体的共振拉曼光谱进行了分析比较,在形成复合体时,双方蛋白的共振拉曼谱均有所变化,一个共同的特征性变化是A2gv221130cm-1,v211312cm-1,v201400cm-2,和v191584cm-1强度都有增强,其中变化最明显的是A2gv191584cm-1峰,在游离态中,I1540/i1582>1,在结合态中I1550/I1582<1。  相似文献   

7.
Proteolysis experiments have been used to monitor the conformational transitions from an unfolded to a folded state occurring when the apo form of horse cytochrome c (cyt c) binds the heme moiety or when two fragments of cyt c form a native-like 1:1 complex. Proteinase K was used as a proteolytic probe, in view of the fact that the broad substrate specificity of this protease allows digestion at many sites along a polypeptide chain. The rather unfolded apo form of cyt c binds heme with a concomitant conformational transition to a folded species characterized by an enhanced content of helical secondary structure. While the holoprotein is fully resistant to proteolytic digestion and the apoprotein is digested to small peptides, the noncovalent complex of the apoprotein and heme exhibits an intermediate resistance to proteolysis, in agreement with the fact that the more folded structure of the complex makes the protein substrate more resistant to proteolysis. The noncovalent native-like complex of the two fragments 1-56 and 57-104 of cyt c, covering the entire polypeptide chain of 104 residues of the protein, is rather resistant to proteolysis, while the individual fragments are easily digested. Fragment 57-104 is fast degraded to several peptides, while fragment 1-56 is slowly degraded stepwise from its C-terminal end, leading initially mostly to fragments 1-48 and 1-40 and, at later stages of proteolysis, fragments 1-38, 1-35, 1-33, and 1-31. Thus, proteolysis data indicate that the heme containing fragment 1-56 has a rather compact core and a C-terminal flexible tail. Upon prolonged incubation of the complex of fragments 1-56 and 57-104 (nicked cyt c) with proteinase K, a chain segment is removed from the nicked protein, leading to a gapped protein complex of fragments of 1-48 and 57-104 and, on further digestion, fragments 1-40 and 57-104. Of interest, the chain segment being removed by proteolysis of the complex matches the omega-loop which is evolutionarily removed in cyt c of microbial origin. Overall, rates and/or resistance to proteolysis correlates well with the extent of folding of the protein substrates, as deduced from circular dichroism measurements. Thus, our results underscore the utility of proteolytic probes for analyzing conformational and dynamic features of proteins. Finally, a specific interest of the cyt c fragment system herewith investigated resides in the fact that the fragments are exactly the exon products of the cyt c gene.  相似文献   

8.
Assimilatory NADH:nitrate reductase (EC 1.6.6.1), a complex Mo-pterin-, cytochrome b(557)-, and FAD-containing protein, catalyzes the regulated and rate-limiting step in the utilization of inorganic nitrogen by higher plants. A codon-optimized gene has been synthesized for expression of the central cytochrome b(557)-containing fragment, corresponding to residues A542-E658, of spinach assimilatory nitrate reductase. While expression of the full-length synthetic gene in Escherichia coli did not result in significant heme domain production, expression of a Y647* truncated form resulted in substantial heme domain production as evidenced by the generation of "pink" cells. The histidine-tagged heme domain was purified to homogeneity using a combination of NTA-agarose and size-exclusion FPLC, resulting in a single protein band following SDS-PAGE analysis with a molecular mass of approximately 13 kDa. MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry yielded an m/z ratio of 12,435 and confirmed the presence of the heme prosthetic group (m/z=622) while cofactor analysis indicated a 1:1 heme to protein stoichiometry. The oxidized heme domain exhibited spectroscopic properties typical of a b-type cytochrome with a visible Soret maximum at 413 nm together with epr g-values of 2.98, 2.26, and 1.49, consistent with low-spin bis-histidyl coordination. Oxidation-reduction titrations of the heme domain indicated a standard midpoint potential (E(o)') of -118 mV. The isolated heme domain formed a 1:1 complex with cytochrome c with a K(A) of 7 microM (micro=0.007) and reconstituted NADH:cytochrome c reductase activity in the presence of a recombinant form of the spinach nitrate reductase flavin domain, yielding a k(cat) of 1.4 s(-1) and a K(m app) for cytochrome c of 9 microM. These results indicate the efficient expression of a recombinant form of the heme domain of spinach nitrate reductase that retained the spectroscopic and thermodynamic properties characteristic of the corresponding domain in the native spinach enzyme.  相似文献   

9.
The fully oxidized complex of cytochrome c and cytochrome oxidase formed at low ionic strength was studied by resonance Raman spectroscopy. The spectra of the complex and of the individual components were compared over a wide frequency range using Soret band excitation. In both partners of the complex, structural changes occur in the heme groups and in their immediate protein environment. The spectra of the complex in the 1600-1700 cm-1 frequency range were dominated by bands from the cytochrome oxidase component, whereas those in the 300-500 cm-1 range were dominated by bands from the cytochrome c component, hence allowing separation of the contributions from the two individual species. For cytochrome c, spectral changes were observed which correspond to the induction of the conformational state I and the six-coordinated low-spin configuration of state II on binding to cytochrome oxidase. While in state I the structure of cytochrome c is essentially the same as in solution, state II is characterized by a structural rearrangement of the heme pocket, leading to a weakening of the axial iron-methionine bond and an opening of the heme crevice which is situated in the center of the binding domain for cytochrome oxidase. The relative contributions of the two cytochrome c states were estimated to be approximately in the ratio 1:1 in the complex.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Cardiolipin, a phospholipid specific to the mitochondrion, interacts with the small electron transfer heme protein cytochrome c through both electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions. Once in a complex with cardiolipin, cytochrome c has been shown to undergo a conformational change that leads to the rupture of the bond between the heme iron and the intrinsic sulfur ligand of a methionine residue and to enhance the peroxidatic properties of the protein considered important to its apoptotic activity. Here we report that the ferric cytochrome c/cardiolipin complex binds nitric oxide tightly through a multistep process in which the first step is the relatively slow displacement (5 s(-1)) from heme coordination of an intrinsic ligand that replaces methionine in the complex. Nanosecond photolysis of the nitrosyl adduct demonstrated that a fraction of the nitric oxide escapes from the heme pocket and subsequently recombines to the heme in second-order processes (k = 1.8 × 10(6) and 5.5 × 10(5) M(-1) s(-1)) that, under these conditions, were much faster than recombination of the intrinsic ligand with which they compete. Ultrafast (femtosecond) laser photolysis showed that the geminate recombination of nitric oxide to the heme occurred with time constants (τ = 22 and 72 ps) and that ~23% of the photolyzed nitric oxide escaped into the bulk phase. This high value for the escape fraction relative to other heme proteins indicates the open nature of the heme pocket in this complex. These results are summarized in a scheme and are discussed in terms of the possible modulation of the apoptotic activity of cytochrome c by nitric oxide.  相似文献   

12.
Cytochrome c1 forms an active complex with cytochrome c as previously reported (Chiang, Y. L., Kaminsky, L. S., and King, T. E. (1976) J. Biol. Chem. 251, 29-36). It also forms a complex with cytochrome oxidase with heme ratio of 1:1. This cytochrome c1.oxidase complex has been purified by ammonium sulfate fractionation and is stable in media of high ionic strength (greater than 0.1 M) but dissociates as the pH deviates from neutral. The purified cytochrome c1 aggregates to an oligomer, presumably a pentamer. No agent has been found to depolymerize isolated c1 without denaturation. However, in the cytochrome c1.oxidase complex, these two cytochromes apparently were depolymerized to form smaller aggregates, if not monomeric units, as judged by sedimentation behavior. Cytochrome c1 also forms a ternary complex with cytochrome c and oxidase in the heme ratio of 1:1:1. This complex can be prepared by any of the following four methods: (i) c1 + c + oxidase: (ii) c1.c complex + oxidase; (iii) c1 + c.oxidase complex: or (iv) c + c1.oxidase complex. The mode of formation of these complexes is all from pure protein-protein interactions. Cytochrome c1 is also incorporated into phospholipid vesicles and these vesicles show about 200 molecules of phospholipid/cytochrome c1 in terms of heme. The spectrophotometric, circular dichroic, sedimentation behavior and enzymic properties of these complexes have been investigated.  相似文献   

13.
Elberry M  Yu L  Yu CA 《Biochemistry》2006,45(15):4991-4997
Cytochrome c(1) of Rhodobacter sphaeroides ubiquinol-cytochrome c oxidoreductase contains several insertions and deletions that distinguish it from the complex of other higher organisms. Additionally, this bacterial cytochrome c(1) contains two nonconserved cysteines, C145 and C169, with the latter included in the second long insertion located upstream of the sixth heme ligand, M185. The orientation of the insertions and the state of these non-heme binding cysteines remain unknown. Mutating one or both cysteines is found to have comparable effects on the functionality of the cytochrome bc(1) complex. Mutants show an electron transfer activity decreased to a rate that is still high enough to support delayed photosynthetic growth. The mutated cytochrome c(1) has a decreased E(m) without any alteration in the heme ligation environment since none of the mutants binds carbon monoxide. The low E(m) is believed to be caused by a structural modification in the head domain of cytochrome c(1). Analysis of the mutants reveals that the two cysteines form a disulfide bridge. Cleavage of cytochrome c(1) between the two cysteines followed by gel electrophoresis shows two fragments only under reducing conditions, confirming the existence of a disulfide bridge. The disulfide bridge is essential in maintaining the structural integrity of cytochrome c(1) and thus the functionality of the cytochrome bc(1) complex.  相似文献   

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

15.
16.
The de novo design and synthesis of ruthenium-labeled cytochrome b5 that is optimized for the measurement of intracomplex electron transfer to cytochrome c are described. A single cysteine was substituted for Thr-65 of rat liver cytochrome b5 by recombinant DNA techniques [Stayton, P. S., Fisher, M. T., & Sligar, S. G. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 13544-13548]. The single sulfhydryl group on T65C cytochrome b5 was then labeled with [4-(bromomethyl)-4'-methylbipyridine] (bisbipyridine)ruthenium2+ to form Ru-65-cyt b5. The ruthenium group at Cys-65 is only 12 A from the heme group of cytochrome b5 but is not located at the binding site for cytochrome c. Laser excitation of the complex between Ru-65-cyt b5 and cytochrome c results in electron transfer from the excited state Ru(II*) to the heme group of Ru-65-cyt b5 with a rate constant greater than 10(6) s-1. Subsequent electron transfer from the heme group of Ru-65-cyt b5 to the heme group of cytochrome c is biphasic, with a fast-phase rate constant of (4 +/- 1) x 10(5) s-1 and a slow-phase rate constant of (3 +/- 1) x 10(4) s-1. This suggests that the complex can assume two different conformations with different electron-transfer properties. The reaction becomes monophasic and the rate constant decreases as the ionic strength is increased, indicating dissociation of the complex.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
Mei H  Geren L  Miller MA  Durham B  Millett F 《Biochemistry》2002,41(12):3968-3976
The interaction of yeast iso-1-cytochrome c (yCc) with the high- and low-affinity binding sites on cytochrome c peroxidase compound I (CMPI) was studied by stopped-flow spectroscopy. When 3 microM reduced yCc(II) was mixed with 0.5 microM CMPI at 10 mM ionic strength, the Trp-191 radical cation was reduced from the high-affinity site with an apparent rate constant >3000 s(-1), followed by slow reduction of the oxyferryl heme with a rate constant of only 10 s(-1). In contrast, mixing 3 microM reduced yCc(II) with 0.5 microM preformed CMPI *yCc(III) complex led to reduction of the radical cation with a rate constant of 10 s(-1), followed by reduction of the oxyferryl heme in compound II with the same rate constant. The rate constants for reduction of the radical cation and the oxyferryl heme both increased with increasing concentrations of yCc(II) and remained equal to each other. These results are consistent with a mechanism in which both the Trp-191 radical cation and the oxyferryl heme are reduced by yCc(II) in the high-affinity binding site, and the reaction is rate-limited by product dissociation of yCc(III) from the high-affinity site with apparent rate constant k(d). Binding yCc(II) to the low-affinity site is proposed to increase the rate constant for dissociation of yCc(III) from the high-affinity site in a substrate-assisted product dissociation mechanism. The value of k(d) is <5 s(-1) for the 1:1 complex and >2000 s(-1) for the 2:1 complex at 10 mM ionic strength. The reaction of horse Cc(II) with CMPI was greatly inhibited by binding 1 equiv of yCc(III) to the high-affinity site, providing evidence that reduction of the oxyferryl heme involves electron transfer from the high-affinity binding site rather than the low-affinity site. The effects of CcP surface mutations on the dissociation rate constant indicate that the high-affinity binding site used for the reaction in solution is the same as the one identified in the yCc*CcP crystal structure.  相似文献   

18.
It has recently been proposed that the role of neuroglobin in the protection of neurons from ischaemia induced cell death requires the formation of a transient complex with cytochrome c. No such complex has yet been isolated. Here, we present the results of soft docking calculations, which indicate one major binding site for cytochrome c to neuroglobin. The results yield a plausible structure for the most likely complex structure in which the hemes of each protein are in close contact. NMR analysis identifies the formation of a weak complex in which the heme group of cytochrome c is involved. surface plasmon resonance studies provide a value of 45muM for the equilibrium constant for cytochrome c binding to neuroglobin, which increases significantly as the ionic strength of the solution increases. The temperature dependence of the binding constant indicates that the complex formation is associated with a small unfavourable enthalpy change (1.9kcalmol(-1)) and a moderately large, favourable entropy change (14.8calmol(-1)deg(-1)). The sensitivity of the binding constant to the presence of salt suggests that the complex formation involves electrostatic interactions.  相似文献   

19.
The kinetics of formation of noncovalently bound ferrous complexes derived from fragments of horse heart cytochrome c have been investigated. When the reactions are initiated by combining ferrous heme fragments with an appropriate apofragment, in the presence of 50 mM imidazole, second order rate processes are observed with rate constants essentially the same as those reported with ferric heme fragments (Parr, G. R., and Taniuchi, H. (1979) J. Biol. Chem. 254, 4836-4842). An additional, probably consecutive, kinetic process is also demonstrated. If imidazole is not present in the reaction buffer, the kinetic profiles are dramatically altered. While this is partially due to aggregation (dimerization) of the ferrous heme fragments, it can nevertheless be demonstrated that the complementation reactions with apofragments are much faster than those observed with the corresponding ferric heme fragments (in the absence of imidazole). These results reflect the effect of the oxidation state of the heme iron on the folding mechanism and, thus, the manifold nature of protein folding pathways. The rate of reduction of productive ferric complexes by sodium ascorbate was investigated and biphasic reactions were found in all cases. The data indicate an equilibrium between two forms of the ferric complexes. The results of an experiment in which the complementation of ferric (1-25)H and (23-104) was carried out in the presence of sodium ascorbate indicate that the intermediate complex (Parr, G. R., and Taniuchi, H. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 8914-8918) is not reducible by ascorbate. Thus, the increase in oxidation-reduction potential occurring on formation of the productive complex from the unbound heme fragment occurs at a late stage of the overall reaction, possibly coinciding with ligation of methionine 80 to the heme iron.  相似文献   

20.
BACKGROUND: The cytochrome bc(1) complex is part of the energy conversion machinery of the respiratory and photosynthetic electron transfer chains. This integral membrane protein complex catalyzes electron transfer from ubiquinol to cytochrome c. It couples the electron transfer to the electrogenic translocation of protons across the membrane via a so-called Q cycle mechanism. RESULTS: The cytochrome bc(1) complex from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae was crystallized together with a bound antibody Fv fragment. The structure was determined at 2.3 A resolution using multiple isomorphous replacement, and refined to a crystallographic R factor of 22.2% (R(free) = 25.4%). The complex is present as a homodimer. Each 'monomer' of the refined model includes 2178 amino acid residues of subunits COR1, QCR2, COB, CYT1, RIP1, QCR6, QCR7, QCR8 and QCR9 of the cytochrome bc(1) complex and of the polypeptides V(H) and V(L) of the Fv fragment, the cofactors heme b(H), heme b(L), heme c(1), the [2Fe-2S] cluster and 346 water molecules. The Fv fragment binds to the extrinsic domain of the [2Fe-2S] Rieske protein and is essential for formation of the crystal lattice. CONCLUSIONS: The approach to crystallize membrane proteins as complexes with specific antibody fragments appears to be of general importance. The structure of the yeast cytochrome bc(1) complex reveals in detail the binding sites of the natural substrate coenzyme Q6 and the inhibitor stigmatellin. Buried water molecules close to the binding sites suggest possible pathways for proton uptake and release. A comparison with other cytochrome bc(1) complexes shows features that are specific to yeast.  相似文献   

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