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1.
Sulfite oxidase (SOX) is a homodimeric molybdoheme enzyme that oxidizes sulfite to sulfate at the molybdenum center. Following substrate oxidation, molybdenum is reduced and subsequently regenerated by two sequential electron transfers (ETs) via heme to cytochrome c. SOX harbors both metals in spatially separated domains within each subunit, suggesting that domain movement is necessary to allow intramolecular ET. To address whether one subunit in a SOX dimer is sufficient for catalysis, we produced heterodimeric SOX variants with abolished sulfite oxidation by replacing the molybdenum-coordinating and essential cysteine in the active site. To further elucidate whether electrons can bifurcate between subunits, we truncated one or both subunits by deleting the heme domain. We generated three SOX heterodimers: (i) SOX/Mo with two active molybdenum centers but one deleted heme domain, (ii) SOX/Mo_C264S with one unmodified and one inactive subunit, and (iii) SOX_C264S/Mo harboring a functional molybdenum center on one subunit and a heme domain on the other subunit. Steady-state kinetics showed 50% SOX activity for the SOX/Mo and SOX/Mo_C264S heterodimers, whereas SOX_C264S/Mo activity was reduced by two orders of magnitude. Rapid reaction kinetics monitoring revealed comparable ET rates in SOX/Mo, SOX/Mo_C264S, and SOX/SOX, whereas in SOX_C264S/Mo, ET was strongly compromised. We also combined a functional SOX Mo domain with an inactive full-length SOX R217W variant and demonstrated interdimer ET that resembled SOX_C264S/Mo activity. Collectively, our results indicate that one functional subunit in SOX is sufficient for catalysis and that electrons derived from either Mo(IV) or Mo(V) follow this path.  相似文献   

2.
3.
The inhibition by superoxide dismutase of cytochrome c reduction by a range of semiquinone radicals has been studied. The semiquinones were produced from the parent quinones by reduction with xanthine and xanthine oxidase. Most of the quinones studied were favored over O2 as the enzyme substrate, and in air as well as N2, semiquinone radicals rather than superoxide were produced and they caused the cytochrome c reduction. With all but one of the quinones (benzoquinone), cytochrome c reduction in air was inhibited by superoxide dismutase, but the amount of enzyme required for inhibition was up to 100 times greater than that required to inhibit reduction by superoxide. It was highest for the quinones with the highest redox potential. These results demonstrate how superoxide dismutase can inhibit cytochrome c reduction by species other than superoxide. They can be explained by the dismutase displacing the equilibrium: semiquinone + O2 ? quinone + O2? to the right, thereby allowing the forward reaction to out-compete other reactions of the semiquinone. The implication from these findings that superoxide dismutase-inhibitable reduction of cytochrome c may not be a specific test for superoxide production is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Cell-free extracts of Thiobacillus acidophilus prepared at neutral pH showed oxidation of sulfite to sulfate with ferricyanide as electron acceptor. Horse heart cytochrome c could be used as alternative electron acceptor; however, the observed activity was only 0.1% of that found for ferricyanide. The enzyme responsible for the oxidation of sulfite was purified to homogeneity. The purified enzyme was a monomer of 42 kDa and contained one haem c per monomer. Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopical analysis of the sulfite:cytochrome c oxidoreductase showed the presence of molybdenum (V), only after reduction of the enzyme with sulfite. The pH optimum for the enzymatic reaction was 7.5 and the temperature optimum 40°C. Enzymatic activity was strongly reduced in the presence of the anions: chloride, phosphate and nitrate. In contrast to other enzymes involved in sulfur metabolism and previously isolated from T. acidophilus, sulfite:cytochrome c oxidoreductase activity is not stimulated by the presence of sulfate ions.  相似文献   

5.
Molybdenum Oxidation by Thiobacillus ferrooxidans   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Thiobacillus ferrooxidans AP19-3 oxidized molybdenum blue (Mo5+) enzymatically. Molybdenum oxidase in the plasma membrane of this bacterium was purified ca. 77-fold compared with molybdenum oxidase in cell extract. A purified molybdenum oxidase showed characteristic absorption maxima due to reduced-type cytochrome oxidase at 438 and 595 nm but did not show absorption peaks specific for c-type cytochrome. The optimum pH of molybdenum oxidase was 5.5. The activity of molybdenum oxidase was completely inhibited by sodium cyanide (5 mM) or carbon monoxide, and an oxidized type of cytochrome oxidase in a purified molybdenum oxidase was reduced by molybdenum blue, indicating that cytochrome oxidase in the enzyme plays a crucial role in molybdenum blue oxidation.  相似文献   

6.
Evolutionary conservation of substructure architecture between yeast iso-1-cytochrome c and the well-characterized horse cytochrome c is studied with limited proteolysis, the alkaline conformational transition and global unfolding with guanidine-HCl. Mass spectral analysis of limited proteolysis cleavage products for iso-1-cytochrome c show that its least stable substructure is the same as horse cytochrome c. The limited proteolysis data yield a free energy of 3.8 ± 0.4 kcal mol−1 to unfold the least stable substructure compared with 5.05 ± 0.30 kcal mol−1 for global unfolding of iso-1-cytochrome c. Thus, substructure stabilities of iso-1-cytochrome c span only ∼1.2 kcal mol−1 compared with ∼8 kcal mol−1 for horse cytochrome c. Consistent with the less cooperative folding thus expected for the horse protein, the guanidine-HCl m-values are ∼3 kcal mol−1M−1 versus ∼4.5 kcal mol−1M−1 for horse versus yeast cytochrome c. The tight free energy spacing of the yeast cytochrome c substructures suggests that its folding has more branch points than for horse cytochrome c. Studies on a variant of iso-1-cytochrome c with an H26N mutation indicate that the least and most stable substructures unfold sequentially and the two least stable substructures unfold independently as for horse cytochrome c. Thus, important aspects of the substructure architecture of horse cytochrome c, albeit compressed energetically, are preserved evolutionally in yeast iso-1-cytochrome c.  相似文献   

7.
Ferrous myoglobin was oxidized by sulfur trioxide anion radical (STAR) during the free radical chain oxidation of sulfite. Oxidation was inhibited by the STAR scavenger GSH and by the heme ligand CO. Bimolecular rate constants for the reaction of STAR with several ferrous globins and biomolecules were determined by kinetic competition. Reaction rate constants for myoglobin, hemoglobin, neuroglobin, and flavohemoglobin are large at 38, 120, 2,600, and ≥ 7,500 × 106 m−1 s−1, respectively, and correlate with redox potentials. Measured rate constants for O2, GSH, ascorbate, and NAD(P)H are also large at ∼100, 10, 130, and 30 × 106 m−1 s−1, respectively, but nevertheless allow for favorable competition by globins and a capacity for STAR scavenging in vivo. Saccharomyces cerevisiae lacking sulfite oxidase and deleted of flavohemoglobin showed an O2-dependent growth impairment with nonfermentable substrates that was exacerbated by sulfide, a precursor to mitochondrial sulfite formation. Higher O2 exposures inactivated the superoxide-sensitive mitochondrial aconitase in cells, and hypoxia elicited both aconitase and NADP+-isocitrate dehydrogenase activity losses. Roles for STAR-derived peroxysulfate radical, superoxide radical, and sulfo-NAD(P) in the mechanism of STAR toxicity and flavohemoglobin protection in yeast are suggested.  相似文献   

8.
Sulfite oxidase (EC 1.8.3.1) from the plant Arabidopsis thaliana is the smallest eukaryotic molybdenum enzyme consisting of a molybdenum cofactor-binding domain but lacking the heme domain that is known from vertebrate sulfite oxidase. While vertebrate sulfite oxidase is a mitochondrial enzyme with cytochrome c as the physiological electron acceptor, plant sulfite oxidase is localized in peroxisomes and does not react with cytochrome c. Here we describe results that identified oxygen as the terminal electron acceptor for plant sulfite oxidase and hydrogen peroxide as the product of this reaction in addition to sulfate. The latter finding might explain the peroxisomal localization of plant sulfite oxidase. 18O labeling experiments and the use of catalase provided evidence that plant sulfite oxidase combines its catalytic reaction with a subsequent non-enzymatic step where its reaction product hydrogen peroxide oxidizes another molecule of sulfite. In vitro, for each catalytic cycle plant SO will bring about the oxidation of two molecules of sulfite by one molecule of oxygen. In the plant, sulfite oxidase could be responsible for removing sulfite as a toxic metabolite, which might represent a means to protect the cell against excess of sulfite derived from SO2 gas in the atmosphere (acid rain) or during the decomposition of sulfur-containing amino acids. Finally we present a model for the metabolic interaction between sulfite and catalase in the peroxisome.  相似文献   

9.
The redox-driven proton pump cytochrome c oxidase is that enzymatic machinery of the respiratory chain that transfers electrons from cytochrome c to molecular oxygen and thereby splits molecular oxygen to form water. To investigate the reaction mechanism of cytochrome c oxidase on the single vibrational level, we used time-resolved step-scan Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and studied the dynamics of the reduced enzyme after photodissociation of bound carbon monoxide across the midinfrared range (2300-950 cm−1). Difference spectra of the bovine complex were obtained at -20°C with 5 μs time resolution. The data demonstrate a dynamic link between the transient binding of CO to CuB and changes in hydrogen bonding at the functionally important residue E(I-286). Variation of the pH revealed that the pKa of E(I-286) is >9.3 in the fully reduced CO-bound oxidase. Difference spectra of cytochrome c oxidase from beef heart are compared with those of the oxidase isolated from Rhodobacter sphaeroides. The bacterial enzyme does not show the environmental change in the vicinity of E(I-286) upon CO dissociation. The characteristic band shape appears, however, in redox-induced difference spectra of the bacterial enzyme but is absent in redox-induced difference spectra of mammalian enzyme. In conclusion, it is demonstrated that the dynamics of a large protein complex such as cytochrome c oxidase can be resolved on the single vibrational level with microsecond Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. The applied methodology provides the basis for future investigations of the physiological reaction steps of this important enzyme.  相似文献   

10.
1. The NADPH-oxidizing activity of a 100 000 × g particulate fraction of the postnuclear supernatant obtained from guinea-pig phagocytosing polymorphonuclear leucocytes has been assayed by simultaneous determination of oxygen consumption, NADPH oxidation and O?2 generation at pH 5.5 and 7.0 and with 0.15 mM and 1 mM NADPH.2. The measurements of oxygen consumption and NADPH oxidation gave comparable results. The stoichiometry between the oxygen consumed and the NADPH oxidized was 1 : 1.3. A markedly lower enzymatic activity was observed, under all the experimental conditions used, when the O?2 generation assay was employed as compared to the assays of oxygen uptake and NADPH oxidation.4. The explanation of this difference came from the analysis of the effect of superoxide dismutase and of cytochrome c which removes O?2 formed during the oxidation of NADPH.5. Both superoxide dismutase and cytochrome c inhibited the NADPH-oxidizing reaction at pH 5.5. The inhibition was higher with 1 mM NADPH than with 0.15 mM NADPH.6. Both superoxide dismutase and cytochrome c inhibited the NADPH-oxidizing reaction at pH 7.0 with 1 mM NADPH but less than at pH 5.5 with 1 mM NADPH.7. The effect of superoxide dismutase at pH 7.0 with 0.15 mM NADPH was negligible.8. In all instances the inhibitory effect of cytochrome c was greater than that of superoxide dismutase.9. It was concluded that the NADPH-oxidizing reaction studied here is made up of three components: an enzymatic univalent reduction of O2; an enzymatic, apparently non-univalent, O2 reduction and a non-enzymatic chain reaction.10. These three components are variably and independently affected by the experimental conditions used. For example, the chain reaction is freely operative at pH 5.5 with 1 mM NADPH but is almost absent at pH 7.0 with 0.15 mM NADPH, whereas the univalent reduction of O2 is optimal at pH 7.0 with 1 mM NADPH.  相似文献   

11.
An iron-hexacyanide-covered microelectrode sensor has been used to continuously monitor the kinetics of hydrogen peroxide decomposition catalyzed by oxidized cytochrome oxidase. At cytochrome oxidase concentration ≈1 μM, the catalase activity behaves as a first order process with respect to peroxide at concentrations up to ≈300–400 μM and is fully blocked by heat inactivation of the enzyme. The catalase (or, rather, pseudocatalase) activity of bovine cytochrome oxi- dase is characterized by a second order rate constant of ≈2•102 M-1•sec-1 at pH 7.0 and room temperature, which, when divided by the number of H2O2 molecules disappearing in one catalytic turnover (between 2 and 3), agrees reasonably well with the second order rate constant for H2O2-dependent conversion of the oxidase intermediate FI-607 to FII-580. Accordingly, the catalase activity of bovine oxidase may be explained by H2O2 procession in the oxygen-reducing center of the enzyme yielding superoxide radicals. Much higher specific rates of H2O2 decomposition are observed with preparations of the bacterial cytochrome c oxidase from Rhodobacter sphaeroides. The observed second order rate constants (up to ≈3000 M-1•sec-1) exceed the rate constant of peroxide binding with the oxygen-reducing center of the oxidized enzyme (≈500 M-1•sec-1) several-fold and therefore cannot be explained by catalytic reaction in the a 3/CuB site of the enzyme. It is proposed that in the bacterial oxidase, H2O2 can be decomposed by reacting with the adventitious transition metal ions bound by the polyhistidine-tag present in the enzyme, or by virtue of reaction with the tightly-bound Mn2+, which in the bacterial enzyme substitutes for Mg2+ present in the mitochondrial oxidase.  相似文献   

12.

Background

In the membrane-bound enzyme cytochrome c oxidase, electron transfer from cytochrome c to O2 is linked to proton uptake from solution to form H2O, resulting in a charge separation across the membrane. In addition, the reaction drives pumping of protons across the membrane.

Methods

In this study we have measured voltage changes as a function of pH during reaction of the four-electron reduced cytochrome c oxidase from Rhodobacter sphaeroides with O2. These electrogenic events were measured across membranes containing purified enzyme reconstituted into lipid vesicles.

Results

The results show that the pH dependence of voltage changes (primarily associated with proton transfer) during O2 reduction does not match that of the previously studied absorbance changes (primarily associated with electron transfer). Furthermore, the voltage changes decrease with increasing pH.

Conclusions

The data indicate that cytochrome c oxidase does not pump protons at high pH (10.5) (or protons are taken from the “wrong” side of the membrane) and that at this pH the net proton-uptake stoichiometry is ∼ 1/2 of that at pH 8. Furthermore, the results provide a basis for interpretation of results from studies of mutant forms of the enzyme.

General significance

These results provide new insights into the function of cytochrome c oxidase.  相似文献   

13.
J. Wilms  J. Lub  R. Wever 《BBA》1980,589(2):324-335
1. The steady-state oxidation of ferrocytochrome c by dioxygen catalyzed by cytochrome c oxidase, is inhibited non-competitively towards cytochrome c by methanethiol, ethanethiol, 1-propanethiol and 1-butanethiol with Ki values of 4.5, 91, 200 and 330 μM, respectively.2. The inhibition constant Ki of ethanethiol is found to be constant between pH 5 and 8, which suggests that only the neutral form of the thiol inhibits the enzyme.3. The absorption spectrum of oxidized cytochrome c oxidase in the Soret region shows rapid absorbance changes upon addition of ethanethiol to the enzyme. This process is followed by a very slow reduction of the enzyme. The fast reaction, which represents a binding reaction of ethanethiol to cytochrome c oxidase, has a k1 of 33 M?1 · s?1 and dissociation constant Kd of 3.9 mM.4. Ethanethiol induces fast spectral changes in the absorption spectrum of cytochrome c, which are followed by a very slow reduction of the heme. The rate constant for the fast ethanethiol reaction representing a bimolecular binding step is 50 M?1 · s?1 and the dissociation constant is about 2 mM. Addition of up to 25 mM ethanethiol to ferrocytochrome c does not cause spectral changes.5. EPR (electron paramagnetic resonance) spectra of cytochrome c oxidase, incubated with methanethiol or ethanethiol in the presence of cytochrome c and ascorbate, show the formation of low-spin cytochrome a3-mercaptide compounds with g values of 2.39, 2.23, 1.93 and of 2.43, 2.24, 1.91, respectively.  相似文献   

14.
The catalytic mechanism of Pseudomonas cytochrome c peroxidase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The catalytic mechanism of Pseudomonas cytochrome c peroxidase has been studied using rapid-scan spectrometry and stopped-flow measurements. The reaction of the totally ferric form of the enzyme with H2O2 was slow and the complex formed was inactive in the peroxidatic cycle, whereas partially reduced enzyme formed highly reactive intermediates with hydrogen peroxide. Rapid-scan spectrometry revealed two different spectral forms, one assignable to Compound I and the other to Compound II as found in the reaction cycle of other peroxidases. The formation of Compound I was rapid approaching that of diffusion control. The stoichiometry of the peroxidation reaction, deduced from the formation of oxidized electron donor, indicates that both the reduction of Compound I to Compound II and the conversion of Compound II to resting (partially reduced) enzyme are one-electron steps. It is concluded that the reaction mechanism generally accepted for peroxidases is applicable also to Pseudomonas cytochrome c peroxidase, the intramolecular source of one electron in Compound I formation, however, being reduced heme c.  相似文献   

15.
When rat liver mitochondria were suspended in 0.15 m KCl, the cytochrome c appeared to be solubilized from the binding site on the outside of the inner membrane and trapped in the intermembrane space. When the outer membrane of these mitochondria was disrupted with digitonin at a digitonin concentration of 0.15 mg/mg of protein, the solubilized cytochrome c could be released from mitochondria along with adenylate kinase. When mitochondria were suspended in 0.15 m KCl instead of 0.33 m sucrose, the ADPO ratio observed with succinate, β-hydroxybutyrate, malate + pyruvate or glutamate as substrates was little affected. A number of cycles of State 4-State 3-State 4 with ADP was observed. The respiratory control ratios, however, were decreased, particularly when glutamate was used as the substrate. Cytochrome c oxidase activity was also decreased to 55% when assayed using ascorbate + N,N,N′,N′-tetramethyl-p-phenylene-diamine (TMPD) as substrates. Suspension of mitochondria in 0.15 m KCl resulted in an enhancement of the very low NADH oxidation by intact mitochondria and a twofold enhancement of sulfite oxidation. Trapped cytochrome c in outer membrane vesicles prepared from untreated and trypsin-treated intact mitochondria was found to be readily reduced by NADH and suggests that some cytochrome b5 is located on the inner surface of the outer membrane. The enhanced NADH oxidase could therefore reflect the ability of cytochrome c to mediate intermembrane electron transport. The enhanced sulfite oxidase activity was sensitive to cyanide inhibition and coupled to oxidative phosphorylation (ADPO < 1) unlike the activity of mitochondria in sucrose medium. These results suggest that free cytochrome c in the intermembrane space can mediate electron transfer between the sulfite oxidase and the inner membrane.  相似文献   

16.
Addition of nifurtimox (a nitrofuran derivative used for the treatment of Chagas' disease) to rat liver microsomes produced an increase of (a) electron flow from NADPH to molecular oxygen, (b) generation of both superoxide anion radical (O2?) and hydrogen peroxide, and (c) lipid peroxidation. The nifurtimox-stimulated NADPH oxidation was greatly inhibited by NADP+ and p-chloromercuribenzoate, and to a lesser extent by SKF-525-A and metyrapone. These inhibitions reveal the function of both the NADPH-cytochrome P-450 (c) reductase and cytochrome P-450 in nifurtimox reduction. Superoxide dismutase, catalase (in the presence of superoxide dismutase), and hydroxyl radical scavengers (mannitol, 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-1-oxide) inhibited the nifurtimox-stimulated NADPH oxidation, in accordance with the additional operation of a reaction chain including the hydroxyl radical. Further evidence supporting the role of superoxide anion and hydroxyl radicals in the nifurtimox-induced NADPH oxidation resulted from the effect of specific inhibitors on NADPH oxidation by O2? (generated by the xanthine oxidase reaction) and by OH. (generated by an iron chelate or the Fenton reaction). Production of O2? by rat kidney, testes and brain microsomes was significantly stimulated by nifurtimox in the presence of NADPH. It is postulated that enhanced formation of free radicals is the basis for nifurtimox toxicity in mammals, in good agreement with the postulated mechanism of the trypanocide effect of nifurtimox on Trypanosoma cruzi.  相似文献   

17.
Yu Liu 《BBA》2007,1767(1):45-55
Formamide is a slow-onset inhibitor of mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase that is proposed to act by blocking water movement through the protein. In the presence of formamide the redox level of mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase evolves over the steady state as the apparent electron transfer rate from cytochrome a to cytochrome a3 slows. At maximal inhibition cytochrome a and cytochrome c are fully reduced, whereas cytochrome a3 and CuB remain fully oxidized consistent with the idea that formamide interferes with electron transfer between cytochrome a and the oxygen reaction site. However, transient kinetic studies show that intrinsic rates of electron transfer are unchanged in the formamide-inhibited enzyme. Formamide inhibition is demonstrated for another member of the heme-oxidase family, cytochrome c oxidase from Bacillus subtilis, but the onset of inhibition is much quicker than for mitochondrial oxidase. If formamide inhibition arises from a steric blockade of water exchange during catalysis then water exchange in the smaller bacterial oxidase is more open. Subunit III removal from the mitochondrial oxidase hastens the onset of formamide inhibition suggesting a role for subunit III in controlling water exchange during the cytochrome c oxidase reaction.  相似文献   

18.
R. Boelens  R. Wever 《BBA》1979,547(2):296-310
Under continuous illumination the CO binding curve of reduced carboxy-cytochrome c oxidase maintains the shape of the binding curve in the dark. The apparent dissociation constant calculated from the binding curves at various light intensities is a linear function of the light intensity.Marked differences are observed between the light-induced difference spectra of the fully reduced carboxy-cytochrome c oxidase and the mixed-valence carboxy-cytochrome c oxidase. These differences are enhanced in the presence of ferricyanide as an electron acceptor and are explained by partial oxidation of cytochrome a3 in the mixed-valence enzyme after photodissociation.Upon addition of CO to partially reduced formate cytochrome c oxidase (a2+a3+3 · HCOOH) the cytochrome a2+3 · CO compound is formed completely with a concomitant oxidation of cytochrome a and the Cu associated with cytochrome a. During photodissociation of the CO compound the formate rebinds to cytochrome a3 and cytochrome a and its associated Cu are simultaneously reduced. These electron transfer processes are fully reversible since in the dark the a3+3 · HCOOH compound is dissociated slowly with a concomitant formation of the a2+3 · CO compound and oxidation of cytochrome a.When these experiments are carried out in the presence of cytochrome c, both cytochrome c and cytochrome a are reduced upon illumination of the mixed-valence carboxy-cytochrome c oxidase. In the dark both cytochrome c and cytochrome a are reoxidized when formate dissociates from cytochrome a3 and the a2+3 · CO compound is formed back. Thus, in this system we are able to reverse and to modulate the redox state of the different components of the final part of the respiratory chain by light.  相似文献   

19.
Hydrogen Peroxide Metabolism in Yeasts   总被引:4,自引:1,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
A catalase-negative mutant of the yeast Hansenula polymorpha consumed methanol in the presence of glucose when the organism was grown in carbon-limited chemostat cultures. The organism was apparently able to decompose the H2O2 generated in the oxidation of methanol by alcohol oxidase. Not only H2O2 generated intracellularly but also H2O2 added extracellularly was effectively destroyed by the catalase-negative mutant. From the rate of H2O2 consumption during growth in chemostat cultures on mixtures of glucose and H2O2, it appeared that the mutant was capable of decomposing H2O2 at a rate as high as 8 mmol · g of cells−1 · h−1. Glutathione peroxidase (EC 1.11.1.9) was absent under all growth conditions. However, cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP; EC 1.11.1.5) increased to very high levels in cells which decomposed H2O2. When wild-type H. polymorpha was grown on mixtures of glucose and methanol, the CCP level was independent of the rate of methanol utilization, whereas the level of catalase increased with increasing amounts of methanol in the substrate feed. Also, the wild type decomposed H2O2 at a high rate when cells were grown on mixtures of glucose and H2O2. In this case, an increase of both CCP and catalase was observed. When Saccharomyces cerevisiae was grown on mixtures of glucose and H2O2, the level of catalase remained low, but CCP increased with increasing rates of H2O2 utilization. From these observations and an analysis of cell yields under the various conditions, two conclusions can be drawn. (i) CCP is a key enzyme of H2O2 detoxification in yeasts. (ii) Catalase can effectively compete with mitochondrial CCP for hydrogen peroxide only if hydrogen peroxide is generated at the site where catalase is located, namely in the peroxisomes.  相似文献   

20.
Intact spheroplasts of the cyanobacterium (blue-green alga) Anacystis nidulans oxidized various exogenous c-type cytochromes with concomitant outward proton translocation while exogenous ferricytochrome c was not reduced. The H+/e stoichiometry was close to 1 with each of the cytochromes and did not depend on the actual rate of the oxidase reaction. Observed proton ejections were abolished by the uncoupler carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone. Cyanide, azide, and carbon monoxide inhibited cytochrome c oxidation and proton extrusion in parallel while dicyclohexylcarbodiimide affected proton translocation more strongly than cytochrome c oxidation. The cytoplasmic membrane of A. nidulans appears to contain a proton-translocating cytochrome c oxidase similar to the one described for mitochondria.  相似文献   

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