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1.
The bifurcated reaction at the Q(o)-site of the bc(1) complex provides the mechanistic basis of the proton pumping activity through which the complex conserves redox energy in the proton gradient. Structural information about the binding of quinone at the site is lacking, because the site is vacant in crystals of the native complexes. We now report the first structural characterization of the interaction of the native quinone occupant with the Rieske iron-sulfur protein in the bc(1) complex of Rhodobacter sphaeroides, using high resolution EPR. We have compared the binding configuration in the presence of quinone with the known structures for the complex with stigmatellin and myxothiazol. We have shown by using EPR and orientation-selective electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) measurements of the iron-sulfur protein that when quinone is present in the site, the isotropic hyperfine constant of one of the N(delta) atoms of a liganding histidine of the [2Fe-2S] cluster is similar to that observed when stigmatellin is present and different from the configuration in the presence of myxothiazol. The spectra also show complementary differences in nitrogen quadrupole splittings in some orientations. We suggest that the EPR characteristics, the ESEEM spectra, and the hyperfine couplings reflect a similar interaction between the iron-sulfur protein and the quinone or stigmatellin and that the N(delta) involved is that of a histidine (equivalent to His-161 in the chicken mitochondrial complex) that forms both a ligand to the cluster and a hydrogen bond with a carbonyl oxygen atom of the Q(o)-site occupant.  相似文献   

2.
The mitochondrial bc1 complex catalyzes the oxidation of ubiquinol and the reduction of cytochrome (cyt) c coupled to a vectorial translocation of protons across the membrane. On the basis of the three-dimensional structures of the bc1 complex in the presence of the inhibitor stigmatellin, it was assumed that the substrate quinol binding involves the cyt b glutamate residue E272 and the histidine 181 on the Rieske protein. Although extensive mutagenesis of glutamate E272 has been carried out, different experimental results were recently obtained, and different conclusions were drawn to explain its role in the bifurcated electron/proton transfer at the QO site. This residue is not totally conserved during evolution. We show in this study that replacement of E272 with apolar residues proline and valine naturally present in some organisms did not abolish the bc1 activity, although it slowed down the kinetics of electron transfer. The Km value for the binding of the substrate quinol was not modified, and the EPR data showed that the quinone/quinol binding still occurred in the mutants. Binding of stigmatellin was retained; however, mutations E272P,V induced resistance toward the QO site inhibitor myxothiazol. The pH dependence of the bc1 activity was not modified in the absence of the glutamate E272. Our results suggest that this residue may not be involved in direct substrate binding or in its direct deprotonation. Revertants were selected from the respiratory deficient mutant E272P. The observed suppressor mutations introduced polar residues serine and threonine at position 272. The data lead us to suggest that E272 may be involved in a later step on the proton exit pathway via the interaction with a water molecule.  相似文献   

3.
F Daldal  M K Tokito  E Davidson    M Faham 《The EMBO journal》1989,8(13):3951-3961
Several spontaneous mutants of the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter capsulatus resistant to myxothiazol, stigmatellin and mucidin--inhibitors of the ubiquinol: cytochrome c oxidoreductase (cyt bc1 complex)--were isolated. They were grouped into eight different classes based on their genetic location, growth properties and inhibitor cross-resistance. The petABC (fbcFBC) cluster that encodes the structural genes for the Rieske FeS protein, cyt b and cyt c1 subunits of the cyt bc1 complex was cloned out of the representative isolates and the molecular basis of inhibitor-resistance was determined by DNA sequencing. These data indicated that while one group of mutations was located outside the petABC(fbcFBC) cluster, the remainder were single base pair changes in codons corresponding to phylogenetically conserved amino acid residues of cyt b. Of these substitutions, F144S conferred resistance to myxothiazol, T163A and V333A to stigmatellin, L106P and G152S to myxothiazol + mucidin and M140I and F144L to myxothiazol + stigmatellin. In addition, a mutation (aer126) which specifically impairs the quinol oxidase (Qz) activity of the cyt bc1 complex of a non-photosynthetic mutant (R126) was identified to be a glycine to an aspartic acid replacement at position 158 of cyt b. Six of these mutations were found between amino acid residues 140 and 163, in a region linking the putative third and fourth transmembrane helices of cyt b. The non-random clustering of several inhibitor-resistance mutations around the non-functional aer126 mutation suggests that this region may be involved in the formation of the Qz inhibitor binding/quinol oxidation domain(s) of the cyt bc1 complex. Of the two remaining mutations, the V333A replacement conferred resistance to stigmatellin exclusively and was located in another region toward the C terminus of cyt b. The L106P substitution, on the other hand, was situated in the transmembrane helix II that carries two conserved histidine residues (positions 97 and 111 in R. capsulatus) considered to be the axial ligands for the heme groups of cyt b. The structural and functional roles of the amino acid residues involved in the acquisition of Qz inhibitor resistance are discussed in terms of the primary structure of cyt b and in relation to the natural inhibitor-resistance of various phylogenetically related cyt bc/bf complexes.  相似文献   

4.
We have obtained evidence for conformational communication between ubiquinol oxidation (center P) and ubiquinone reduction (center N) sites of the yeast bc1 complex dimer by analyzing antimycin binding and heme bH reduction at center N in the presence of different center P inhibitors. When stigmatellin was occupying center P, concentration-dependent binding of antimycin occurred only to half of the center N sites. The remaining half of the bc1 complex bound antimycin with a slower rate that was independent of inhibitor concentration, indicating that a slow conformational change needed to occur before half of the enzyme could bind antimycin. In contrast, under conditions where the Rieske protein was not fixed proximal to heme bL at center P, all center N sites bound antimycin with fast and concentration-dependent kinetics. Additionally, the extent of fast cytochrome b reduction by menaquinol through center N in the presence of stigmatellin was approximately half of that observed when myxothiazol was bound at center P. The reduction kinetics of the bH heme by decylubiquinol in the presence of stigmatellin or myxothiazol were also consistent with a model in which fixation of the Rieske protein close to heme bL in both monomers allows rapid binding of ligands only to one center N. Decylubiquinol at high concentrations was able to abolish the biphasic binding of antimycin in the presence of stigmatellin but did not slow down antimycin binding rates. These results are discussed in terms of half-of-the-sites activity of the dimeric bc1 complex.  相似文献   

5.
Although several X-ray structures have been determined for the mitochondrial cytochrome (cyt) bc(1) complex, none yet shows the position of the substrate, ubiquinol, in the quinol oxidase (Q(o)) site. In this study, the interaction of molecular oxygen with the reactive intermediate Q(o) semiquinone is used to probe the Q(o) site. It has been known for some time that partial turnover of the cyt bc(1) complex in the presence of antimycin A, a Q(i) site inhibitor, results in accumulation of a semiquinone at the Q(o) site, which can reduce O(2) to superoxide (O(2)(*)(-)). It was more recently shown that myxothiazol, which binds close to the cyt b(L) heme in the proximal Q(o) niche, also induces O(2)(*)(-) production. In this work, it is shown that, in addition to myxothiazol, a number of other proximal Q(o) inhibitors [including (E)-beta-methoxyacrylate-stilbene, mucidin, and famoxadone] also induce O(2)(*)(-) production in the isolated yeast cyt bc(1) complex, at approximately 50% of the V(max) observed in the presence of antimycin A. It is proposed that proximal Q(o) site inhibitors induce O(2)(*)(-) production because they allow formation, but not oxidation, of the semiquinone at the distal niche of the Q(o) site pocket. The apparent K(m) for ubiquinol at the Q(o) site in the presence of proximal Q(o) site inhibitors suggests that the "distal niche" of the Q(o) pocket can act as a fully independent quinol binding and oxidation site. Together with the X-ray structures, these results suggest substrate ubiquinol binds in a fashion similar to that of stigmatellin with H-bonds between H161 of the Rieske iron-sulfur protein and E272 of the cyt b protein. When modeled in this way, mucidin and ubiquinol can bind simultaneously to the Q(o) site with virtually no steric hindrance, whereas progressively bulkier inhibitors exhibit increasing overlap. The fact that partial turnover of the Q(o) site is possible even with bound proximal Q(o) site inhibitors is consistent with the participation of two separate functional Q(o) binding niches, occupied simultaneously or sequentially.  相似文献   

6.
We have investigated the mechanism responsible for half-of-the-sites activity in the dimeric cytochrome bc(1) complex from Paracoccus denitrificans by characterizing the kinetics of inhibitor binding to the ubiquinol oxidation site at center P. Both myxothiazol and stigmatellin induced a 2-3 nm shift of the visible absorbance spectrum of the b(L) heme. The shift generated by myxothiazol was symmetric, with monophasic kinetics that indicate equal binding of this inhibitor to both center P sites. In contrast, stigmatellin generated an asymmetric shift in the b(L) spectrum, with biphasic kinetics in which each phase contributed approximately half of the total magnitude of the spectral change. The faster binding phase corresponded to a more symmetrical shift of the b(L) spectrum relative to the slower binding phase, indicating that approximately half of the center P sites bound stigmatellin more slowly and in a different position relative to the b(L) heme, generating a different effect on its electronic environment. Significantly, the slow stigmatellin binding phase was lost as the inhibitor concentration was increased. This implies that a conformational change is transmitted from one center P site in the dimer to the other upon stigmatellin binding to one monomer, rendering the second site less accessible to the inhibitor. Because the position that stigmatellin occupies at center P is considered to be analogous to that of the quinol substrate at the moment of electron transfer, these results indicate that the productive enzyme-substrate configuration is prevented from occurring in both monomers simultaneously.  相似文献   

7.
Following addition of myxothiazol to antimycin-treated chromatophores from Rhodobacter sphaeroides poised at an ambient redox potential (E(h)) of approximately 300 mV, the amplitude of the flash-induced cytochrome c(1) oxidation in the ms range increased, indicating a decrease in the availability of electrons from the immediate donor to c(1), the Rieske iron-sulfur protein (ISP). Because the effect was seen only over the limited E(h) range, we conclude that it is due to a decrease in the apparent midpoint redox potential (E(m)) of the ISP by about 40 mV on addition of myxothiazol. This is in line with the change in E(m) previously seen in direct redox titrations. Our results show that the reduced ISP binds with quinone at the Q(o) site with a higher affinity than does the oxidized ISP. The displacement of ubiquinone by myxothiazol leads to elimination of this preferential binding of the ISP reduced form and results in a shift in the midpoint potential of ISP to a more negative value. A simple hypothesis to explain this effect is that myxothiazol prevents formation of hydrogen bond of ubiquinone with the reduced ISP. We conclude that all Q(o) site occupants (ubiquinone, UHDBT, stigmatellin) that form hydrogen bonds with the reduced ISP shift the apparent E(m) of the ISP in the same direction to more positive values. Inhibitors that bind in the domain of the Q(o) site proximal to heme b(L) (myxothiazol, MOA-stilbene) and displace ubiquinone from the site cause a decrease in E(m) of ISP. We present a new formalism for treatment of the relation between E(m) change and the binding constants involved, which simplifies analysis. Using this formalism, we estimated that binding free energies for hydrogen bond formation with the Q(o) site occupant, range from the largest value of approximately 23 kJ mol(-1) in the presence of stigmatellin (appropriate for the buried hydrogen bond shown by structures), to a value of approximately 3.5 kJ mol(-1) in the native complex. We discuss this range of values in the context of a model in which the native structure constrains the interaction of ISP with the Q(o) site occupant so as to favor dissociation and the faster kinetics of unbinding necessary for rapid turnover.  相似文献   

8.
Gao X  Wen X  Esser L  Quinn B  Yu L  Yu CA  Xia D 《Biochemistry》2003,42(30):9067-9080
Cytochrome bc(1) is an integral membrane protein complex essential to cellular respiration and photosynthesis. The Q cycle reaction mechanism of bc(1) postulates a separated quinone reduction (Q(i)) and quinol oxidation (Q(o)) site. In a complete catalytic cycle, a quinone molecule at the Q(i) site receives two electrons from the b(H) heme and two protons from the negative side of the membrane; this process is specifically inhibited by antimycin A and NQNO. The structures of bovine mitochondrial bc(1) in the presence or absence of bound substrate ubiquinone and with either the bound antimycin A(1) or NQNO were determined and refined. A ubiquinone with its first two isoprenoid repeats and an antimycin A(1) were identified in the Q(i) pocket of the substrate and inhibitor bound structures, respectively; the NQNO, on the other hand, was identified in both Q(i) and Q(o) pockets in the inhibitor complex. The two inhibitors occupied different portions of the Q(i) pocket and competed with substrate for binding. In the Q(o) pocket, the NQNO behaves similarly to stigmatellin, inducing an iron-sulfur protein conformational arrest. Extensive binding interactions and conformational adjustments of residues lining the Q(i) pocket provide a structural basis for the high affinity binding of antimycin A and for phenotypes of inhibitor resistance. A two-water-mediated ubiquinone protonation mechanism is proposed involving three Q(i) site residues His(201), Lys(227), and Asp(228).  相似文献   

9.
Since available structures of native bc(1) complexes show a vacant Q(o)-site, occupancy by substrate and product must be investigated by kinetic and spectroscopic approaches. In this brief review, we discuss recent advances using these approaches that throw new light on the mechanism. The rate-limiting reaction is the first electron transfer after formation of the enzyme-substrate complex at the Q(o)-site. This is formed by binding of both ubiquinol (QH(2)) and the dissociated oxidized iron-sulfur protein (ISP(ox)). A binding constant of approximately 14 can be estimated from the displacement of E(m) or pK for quinone or ISP(ox), respectively. The binding likely involves a hydrogen bond, through which a proton-coupled electron transfer occurs. An enzyme-product complex is also formed at the Q(o)-site, in which ubiquinone (Q) hydrogen bonds with the reduced ISP (ISPH). The complex has been characterized in ESEEM experiments, which detect a histidine ligand, likely His-161 of ISP (in mitochondrial numbering), with a configuration similar to that in the complex of ISPH with stigmatellin. This special configuration is lost on binding of myxothiazol. Formation of the H-bond has been explored through the redox dependence of cytochrome c oxidation. We confirm previous reports of a decrease in E(m) of ISP on addition of myxothiazol, and show that this change can be detected kinetically. We suggest that the myxothiazol-induced change reflects loss of the interaction of ISPH with Q, and that the change in E(m) reflects a binding constant of approximately 4. We discuss previous data in the light of this new hypothesis, and suggest that the native structure might involve a less than optimal configuration that lowers the binding energy of complexes formed at the Q(o)-site so as to favor dissociation. We also discuss recent results from studies of the bypass reactions at the site, which lead to superoxide (SO) production under aerobic conditions, and provide additional information about intermediate states.  相似文献   

10.
The [2Fe-2S] cluster of the Rieske iron-sulfur protein is held between two loops of the protein that are connected by a disulfide bridge. We have replaced the two cysteines that form the disulfide bridge in the Rieske protein of Saccharomyces cerevisiae with tyrosine and leucine, and tyrosine and valine, to evaluate the effects of the disulfide bridge on assembly, stability, and thermodynamic properties of the Rieske iron-sulfur cluster. EPR spectra of the Rieske proteins lacking the disulfide bridge indicate the iron-sulfur cluster is assembled in the absence of the disulfide bridge, but there are significant shifts in all g values, indicating a change in the electronic structure of the [2Fe-2S] iron-sulfur center. In addition, the midpoint potential of the iron-sulfur cluster is lowered from 265 mV in the Rieske protein from wild-type yeast to 150 mV in the protein from the C164Y/C180L mutant and to 160 mV in the protein from the C164Y/C180V mutant. Ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase activities of the bc(1) complexes with Rieske proteins lacking the disulfide bridge are less than 1% of the activity of the bc(1) complex from wild-type yeast, even though normal amounts of the iron-sulfur protein are present as judged by Western blot analysis. These activities are lower than the 105-115 mV decrease in the midpoint potential of the Rieske iron-sulfur cluster can account for. Pre-steady-state reduction of the bc(1) complexes with menadiol indicates that quinol is not oxidized through center P but is oxidized through center N. In addition, the levels of stigmatellin and UHDBT binding are markedly diminished, while antimycin binding is unaffected, in the bc(1) complexes with Rieske proteins lacking the disulfide bridge. Taken together, these results indicate that the ubiquinol oxidation site at center P is damaged in the bc(1) complexes with Rieske proteins lacking the disulfide bridge even though the iron-sulfur cluster is assembled into the Rieske protein.  相似文献   

11.
The orientation of the g-tensors of the Rieske iron-sulfur protein subunit was determined in a single crystal of the bovine mitochondrial cytochrome bc1 complex with stigmatellin in the Qo quinol binding site. The g-tensor principal axes are skewed with respect to the Fe-Fe and S-S atom direction in the 2Fe2S cluster, which is allowed by the lack of rigorous symmetry of the cluster. The asymmetric unit in the crystal is the active dimer, and the g-tensor axes have slightly different orientations relative to the iron-sulfur cluster in the two halves of the dimer. The g approximately 1.79 axis makes an average angle of 30 degrees with respect to the Fe-Fe direction and the g approximately 2.024 axis an average angle of 26 degrees with respect to the S-S direction. This assignment of the g-tensor axis directions indicates that conformations of the Rieske protein are likely the same in the cytochrome bc1 and b6f complexes and that the extent of motion of the Rieske head domain during the catalytic cycle has been highly conserved during evolution of these distantly related complexes.  相似文献   

12.
Zu Y  Couture MM  Kolling DR  Crofts AR  Eltis LD  Fee JA  Hirst J 《Biochemistry》2003,42(42):12400-12408
Rieske [2Fe-2S] clusters can be classified into two groups, depending on their reduction potentials. Typical high-potential Rieske proteins have pH-dependent reduction potentials between +350 and +150 mV at pH 7, and low-potential Rieske proteins have pH-independent potentials of around -150 mV at pH 7. The pH dependence of the former group is attributed to coupled deprotonation of the two histidine ligands. Protein-film voltammetry has been used to compare three Rieske proteins: the high-potential Rieske proteins from Rhodobacter sphaeroides (RsRp) and Thermus thermophilus (TtRp) and the low-potential Rieske ferredoxin from Burkholderia sp. strain LB400 (BphF). RsRp and TtRp differ because there is a cluster to serine hydrogen bond in RsRp, which raises its potential by 140 mV. BphF lacks five hydrogen bonds to the cluster and an adjacent disulfide bond. Voltammetry measurements between pH 3 and 14 reveal that all the proteins, including BphF, have pH-dependent reduction potentials with remarkably similar overall profiles. Relative to RsRp and TtRp, the potential versus pH curve of BphF is shifted to lower potential and higher pH, and the pK(a) values of the histidine ligands of the oxidized and reduced cluster are closer together. Therefore, in addition to simple electrostatic effects on E and pK(a), the reduction potentials of Rieske clusters are determined by the degree of coupling between cluster oxidation state and histidine protonation state. Implications for the mechanism of quinol oxidation at the Q(O) site of the cytochrome bc(1) and b(6)f complexes are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
In the Rieske iron-sulfur protein (ISP) of the ubiquinol:cytochrome c(2) oxidoreductase (bc(1) complex) of Rhodobacter sphaeroides, residue Tyr 156 is located close to the iron-sulfur cluster. Previous studies of the equivalent residue in both Saccharomyces cerevisiae [Denke, E., Merbitz-Zahradnik, T., Hatzfeld, O. M., Snyder, C. H., Link, T. A., and Trumpower, B. L. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 9085-9093] and Paracoccus denitrificans [Schroter, T., Hatzfeld, O. M., Gemeinhardt, S., Korn, M., Friedrich, T., Ludwig, B. , and Link, T. A. (1998) Eur. J. Biochem. 255, 100-106] have indicated that mutations at this site can lead to modifications in the redox potential of the ISP. To study the effect of similar modifications on the thermodynamic behavior and kinetics of partial reactions of the bc(1) complex upon flash activation, we have constructed four mutant strains of Rb. sphaeroides where Tyr 156 was mutated to His, Leu, Phe, or Trp. The bc(1) complex was assembled and able to support photosynthetic growth in all mutants. Three substitutions (Leu, Phe, Trp) led to alteration of the midpoint potential (E(m)) of the ISP and a slowing in rate of quinol oxidation, suggesting that electron transfer from quinol to the oxidized ISP controls the overall rate and that this step includes the high activation barrier. The Trp mutation led to an increase of approximately 1 pH unit in the pK value of the oxidized ISP. The pH dependence of the rate of quinol oxidation in this mutant was also shifted up by approximately 1 pH unit, showing the importance of the protonation state of the ISP for quinol oxidation. This provides support for a model in which the dissociated form of the oxidized ISP is required for formation of the enzyme-substrate complex [Ugulava, N., and Crofts, A. R. (1998) FEBS Lett. 440, 409-413].  相似文献   

14.
The dissociation constants for the binding of Rhodobacter capsulatus cytochrome c2 and its K93P mutant to the cytochrome bc1 complex embedded in a phospholipid bilayer were measured by plasmon waveguide resonance spectroscopy in the presence and absence of the inhibitor stigmatellin. The reduced form of cytochrome c2 strongly binds to reduced cytochrome bc1 (Kd = 0.02 microM) but binds much more weakly to the oxidized form (Kd = 3.1 microM). In contrast, oxidized cytochrome c2 binds to oxidized cytochrome bc1 in a biphasic fashion with Kd values of 0.11 and 0.58 microM. Such a biphasic interaction is consistent with binding to two separate sites or conformations of oxidized cytochrome c2 and/or cytochrome bc1. However, in the presence of stigmatellin, we find that oxidized cytochrome c2 binds to oxidized cytochrome bc1 in a monophasic fashion with high affinity (Kd = 0.06 microM) and reduced cytochrome c2 binds less strongly (Kd = 0.11 microM) but approximately 30-fold more tightly than in the absence of stigmatellin. Structural studies with cytochrome bc1, with and without the inhibitor stigmatellin, have led to the proposal that the Rieske protein is mobile, moving between the cytochrome b and cytochrome c1 components during turnover. In one conformation, the Rieske protein binds near the heme of cytochrome c1, while the cytochrome c2 binding site is also near the cytochrome c1 heme but on the opposite side from the Rieske site, where cytochrome c2 cannot directly interact with Rieske. However, the inhibitor, stigmatellin, freezes the Rieske protein iron-sulfur cluster in a conformation proximal to cytochrome b and distal to cytochrome c1. We conclude from this that the dual conformation of the Rieske protein is primarily responsible for biphasic binding of oxidized cytochrome c2 to cytochrome c1. This optimizes turnover by maximizing binding of the substrate, oxidized cytochrome c2, when the iron-sulfur cluster is proximal to cytochrome b and minimizing binding of the product, reduced cytochrome c2, when it is proximal to cytochrome c1.  相似文献   

15.
The cytochrome bc(1) complex (bc(1)) is a major contributor to the proton motive force across the membrane by coupling electron transfer to proton translocation. The crystal structures of wild type and mutant bc(1) complexes from the photosynthetic purple bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides (Rsbc(1)), stabilized with the quinol oxidation (Q(P)) site inhibitor stigmatellin alone or in combination with the quinone reduction (Q(N)) site inhibitor antimycin, were determined. The high quality electron density permitted assignments of a new metal-binding site to the cytochrome c(1) subunit and a number of lipid and detergent molecules. Structural differences between Rsbc(1) and its mitochondrial counterparts are mostly extra membranous and provide a basis for understanding the function of the predominantly longer sequences in the bacterial subunits. Functional implications for the bc(1) complex are derived from analyses of 10 independent molecules in various crystal forms and from comparisons with mitochondrial complexes.  相似文献   

16.
We have investigated the oxidation of the reduced ubiquinol:cytochrome c reductase (bc1 complex) isolated from beef heart mitochondria. The oxidation of cytochrome c1 by both potassium ferricyanide and cytochrome c in the ascorbate-reduced bc1 complex is not a first-order process. This is taken as evidence that cytochrome c1 is in rapid equilibrium with the Rieske iron-sulphur center. Among the several inhibitors tested, only 5-n-undecyl-6-hydroxy-4,7-dioxobenzothiazole and stigmatellin are seen to affect this redox equilibrium between the high-potential centers of the beef heart bc1 complex. The oxidation of cytochrome b by cytochrome c in both the succinate-reduced and the fully reduced bc1 complex is blocked by all the inhibitors tested. This inhibition occurs simultaneously with an acceleration in the oxidation of cytochrome c1, even after extraction of the endogenous ubiquinone which is present in the bc1 preparation. Almost complete extraction of ubiquinone from the bc1 complex has no effect upon the rapid phase of cytochrome b oxidation, nor does it alter the inhibition of cytochrome b oxidation by the various inhibitors. The oxidation of cytochrome b by exogenous ubiquinones is stimulated by myxothiazol and partially inhibited by antimycin. However, the addition of both these inhibitors together completely blocks the oxidation of cytochrome b by quinones. In contrast, the simultaneous addition of antimycin and myxothiazol has no such synergistic effect upon the oxidation of cytochrome b by cytochrome c. Our data show that intramolecular electron transfer from cytochrome(s) b to the Rieske iron-sulphur center can take place in the bc1 complex without involvement of endogenous ubiquinone-10. This electron pathway is sensitive to all the inhibitors of the enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
A detergent-solubilized, three-subunit-containing cytochrome bc1 complex, isolated from the photosynthetic bacterium R. rubrum, has been shown to be highly sensitive to stigmatellin, myxothiazol, antimycin A and UHDBT, four specific inhibitors of these complexes. Oxidation-reduction titrations have allowed the determination of Em values for all the electron-carrying prosthetic groups in the complex. Antimycin A has been shown to produce a red shift in the alpha-band absorbance maximum of one of the cytochrome b hemes in the complex and stigmatellin has been shown to alter both the Em and EPR g-values of the Rieske iron-sulfur protein in the complex. Western blots have revealed antigenic similarities between the cytochrome subunits of the R. rubrum complex and those of the related photosynthetic bacteria, Rb. capsulatus and Rb. sphaeroides. The R. rubrum complex has been incorporated into liposomes. These liposomes exhibit respiratory control and are able to couple electron transfer from quinol to cytochrome c to proton translocation across the liposome membrane in a manner consistent with a Q-cycle mechanism. It can thus be concluded that neither electron transport nor coupled proton translocation by the cytochrome bc1 complex requires more than three subunits in R. rubrum.  相似文献   

18.
Electron crystallography of the chloroplastic b(6)f complex allowed the calculation of projection maps of crystals negatively stained or embedded in glucose. This gives insights into the overall structure of the extra- and transmembrane domains of the complex. A comparison with the structure of the bc(1) complex, the mitochondrial homologue of the b(6)f complex, suggests that the transmembrane domains of the two complexes are very similar, confirming the structural homology deduced from sequence analysis. On the other hand, the extramembrane organisation of the c-type cytochrome and of the Rieske protein seems quite different. Nevertheless, the same type of movement of the Rieske protein is observed in the b(6)f as in the bc(1) complex upon the binding of the quinol analogue stigmatellin. Crystallographic data also suggest movements in the transmembrane domains of the b(6)f complex, which would be specific of the b(6)f complex.  相似文献   

19.
Biochemical analyses of Rubrivivax gelatinosus membranes have revealed that the cytochrome bc(1) complex is highly resistant to classical inhibitors including myxothiazol, stigmatellin, and antimycin. This is the first report of a strain exhibiting resistance to inhibitors of both catalytic Q(0) and Q(i) sites. Because the resistance to cytochrome bc(1) inhibitors is primarily related to the cytochrome b primary structure, the petABC operon encoding the subunits of the cytochrome bc(1) complex of Rubrivivax gelatinosus was sequenced. In addition to homologies to the corresponding proteins from other organisms, the deduced amino acid sequence of the cytochrome b polypeptide shows (i) an E303V substitution in the highly conserved PEWY loop involved in quinol/stigmatellin binding, (ii) other substitutions that could be involved in resistance to cytochrome bc(1) inhibitors, and (iii) 14 residues instead of 13 between the histidines in helix IV that likely serve as the second axial ligand to the b(H) and b(L) hemes, respectively. These characteristics imply different functional properties of the cytochrome bc(1) complex of this bacterium. The consequences of these structural features for the resistance to inhibitors and for the properties of R. gelatinosus cytochrome bc(1) are discussed with reference to the structure and function of the cytochrome bc(1) complexes from other organisms.  相似文献   

20.
The rate of quinol oxidation by cytochrome bc(1)/b(6)f complex is in part associated with the redox potential (E(m)) of its Rieske [2Fe-2S] center, for which an approximate correlation with the number of hydrogen bonds to the cluster has been proposed. Here we report comparative resonance Raman (RR) characterization of bacterial and archaeal high-potential Rieske proteins and their site-directed variants with a modified hydrogen bond network around the cluster. Major differences among their RR spectra appear to be associated in part with the presence or absence of Tyr-156 (in the Rhodobacter sphaeroides numbering) near one of the Cys ligands to the cluster. Elimination of the hydrogen bond between the terminal cysteinyl sulfur ligand (S(t)) and Tyr-Oeta (as with the Y156W variant, which has a modified histidine N(epsilon) pK(a,ox)) induces a small structural bias of the geometry of the cluster and the surrounding protein in the normal coordinate system, and significantly affects some Fe-S(b/t) stretching vibrations. This is not observed in the case of the hydrogen bond between the bridging sulfide ligand (S(b)) and Ser-Ogamma, which is weak and/or unfavorably oriented for extensive coupling with the Fe-S(b/t) stretching vibrations.  相似文献   

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