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1.
1. Techniques and experiments are described concerned with the millisecond kinetics of EPT-detectable changes brought about in cytochrome c oxidase by reduced cytochrome c and, after reduction with various agents, by reoxidation with O2 or ferricyanide. Some experiments in the presence of ligands are also reported. Light absorption was monitored by low-temperature reflectance spectroscopy. 2. In the rapid phase of reduction of cytochrome c oxidase by cytochrome c (less than 50 ms) approx. 0.5 electron equivalent per heme a is transferred mainly to the low-spin heme component of cytochrome c oxidase and partly to the EPR-detectable copper. In a slow phase (less than 1 s) the copper is reoxidized and high-spin ferric heme signals appear with a predominant rhombic component. Simultaneously the absorption band at 655 nm decreases and the Soret band at 444 nm appears between the split Soret band (442 and 447 nm) of reduced cytochrome a. 3. On reoxidation of reduced enzyme by oxygen all EPR and optical features are restored within 6 ms. On reoxidation by O2 in the presence of an excess of reduced cytochrome c, states can be observed where the low-spin heme and copper signals are largely absent but the absorption at 655 nm is maximal, indicating that the low-spin heme and copper components are at the substrate side and the component(s) represented in the 655 nm absorption at the O2 side of the system. On reoxidation with ferricyanide the 655 nm absorption is not readily restored but a ferric high-spin heme, represented by a strong rhombic signal, accumulates. 4. On reoxidation of partly reduced enzyme by oxygen, the rhombic high-spin signals disappear within 6 ms., whereas the axial signals disappear more slowly, indicating that these species are not in rapid equilibrium. Similar observations are made when partly reduced enzyme is mixed with CO. 5. The results of this and the accompanying paper are discussed and on this basis an assignment of the major EPR signals and of the 655 nm absorption is proposed, which in essence is that published previously (Hartzell, C.R., Hansen, R.E. and Beinert, H. (1973) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S. 70, 2477-2481). Both the low-spin (g=o; 2.2; 1.5) and slowly appearing high-spin (g=6; 2) signals are attributed to ferric cytochrome a, whereas the 655 nm absorption is thought to arise from ferric cytochrome a3, when it is present in a state of interaction with EPR-undectectable copper. Alternative possibilities and possible inconsistencies with this proposal are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
1. Techniques and experiments are described concerned with the millisecond kinetics of EPR-detectable changes brought about in cytochrome c oxidase by reduced cytochrome c and, after reduction with various agents, by reoxidation with O2 or ferricyanide. Some experiments in the presence of ligands are also reported. Light absorption was monitored by low-temperature reflectance spectroscopy.2. In the rapid phase of reduction of cytochrome c oxidase by cytochrome c (< 50 ms) approx. 0.5 electron equivalent per hame a is transferred mainly to the low-spin heme component of cytochrome c oxidase and partly to the EPR-detectable copper. In a slow phase (> 1 s) the copper is reoxidized and high-spin ferric heme signals appear with a predominant rhombic component. Simultaneously the absorption band at 655 nm decreases and the Soret band at 444 nm appears between the split Soret band (442 and 447 nm) of reduced cytochrome a.3. On reoxidation of reduced enzyme by oxygen all EPR and optical features are restored within 6 ms. On reoxidation by O2 in the presence of an excess of reduced cytochrome c, states can be observed where the low-spin heme and copper signals are largely absent but the absorption at 655 nm is maximal, indicating that the low-spin heme and copper components are at the substrate side and the component(s) represented in the 655 nm absorption at the O2 side of the system. On reoxidation with ferricyanide the 655 nm absorption is not readily restored but a ferric high-spin heme, represented by a strong rhombic signal, accumulates.4. On reoxidation of partly reduced enzyme by oxygen, the rhombic high-spin signals disappear within 6 ms, whereas the axial signals disappear more slowly, indicating that these species are not in rapid equilibrium. Similar observations are made when partly reduced enzyme is mixed with CO.5. The results of this and the accompanying paper are discussed and on this basis an assignment of the major EPR signals and of the 655 nm absorption is proposed, which in essence is that published previously (Hartzell, C. R., Hansen, R. E. and Beinert, H. (1973) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S. 70, 2477–2481). Both the low-spin (g = 3; 2.2; 1.5) and slowly appearing high-spin (g = 6; 2) signals are attributed to ferric cytochrome a, whereas the 655 nm absorption is thought to arise from ferric cytochrome a3, when it is present in a state of interaction with EPR-undetectable copper. Alternative possibilities and possible inconsistencies with this proposal are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
R. Wever  B. F. Van Gelder 《BBA》1974,368(3):311-317
1. The photodissociation reaction of the cytochrome c oxidase-CO compound in the presence of azide was studied by EPR at 15°K. Addition of CO in the dark to cytochrome c oxidase, partially reduced (2 electrons per 4 metal ions) in the presence of azide brings about a decrease in intensity of the azide-induced low-spin heme signal at g = 2.9, 2.2 and 1.67 and an increase in intensity of both the low-spin heme signal at g = 3 and the copper signal at g = 2. Subsequent illumination with white light at room temperature of this sample causes an enhancement of the azide-induced signal at g = 2.9, and a decrease in intensity of both signals at g = 3 and g = 2. It is shown that these changes in the EPR spectrum are reversible.

2. These results demonstrate that upon photodissociation, CO is replaced by azide wheras upon incubation in the dark CO expels azide from its binding site in cytochrome c oxidase.

3. Concomitantly with the binding of CO and dissociation of the azide molecule, and vice versa, electron redistributions occur as inferred from the changes in the intensity of the copper signal at g = 2.

4. The results are explained in a model of cytochrome c oxidase with either a common binding site (cytochrome a3)* for CO and azide or in a model with anti-cooperative interaction between two different sites of binding.

5. Similar types of experiments with cyanide instead of azide show that cyanide is more firmly bound to partially reduced cytochrome c oxidase than CO and azide. The affinity of ligands for partially reduced enzyme decreases in the sequence: cyanide, CO (dark), azide and CO (illuminated).  相似文献   


4.
1. The photodissociation reaction of the cytochrome c oxidase-CO compound was studied by EPR at 15 °K. Illumination with white light at both room and liquid N2 temperatures of the partially reduced cytochrome c oxidase (2 electrons per 4 metals) in the presence of CO, causes the appearance of a rhombic (gx = 6.60, gy = 5.37) high-spin heme signal.This signal disappears completely upon darkening of the sample and reappears upon illumination at room temperature; accordingly the photolytic process is reversible. Under these conditions, no great changes in the intensities are observed, neither of the copper signal at g = 2, nor of the low-spin heme signal at g = 3, 2.2 and 1.5.2. In the presence of ferricyanide (2 mM) and CO, both the low-spin heme signal (g = 3.0, 2.2 and 1.5) and the copper signal of the partially reduced enzyme have intensities about equal to those of the completely oxidized enzyme in the absence of CO. Upon illumination of the carboxy-cytochrome c oxidase in the presence of ferricyanide, it was found that the rhombic high-spin heme signal appears without affecting appreciably the copper of low-spin heme signals. Thus, in the presence of ferricyanide the EPR-detectable paramagnetism of the illuminated carboxy-cytochrome c oxidase is higher than in the untreated oxidized enzyme.3. The membrane-bound cytochrome c oxidase reduced with NADH in the presence of CO and subsequently oxidized with ferricyanide shows a similar rhombic high-spin heme signal (gx = 6.62, gy = 5.29) upon illumination at room temperature. This signal disappears completely upon darkening and reappears upon illumination at room temperature.  相似文献   

5.
Phospholipids are essential components for electron transport activity of cytochrome oxidase. Recently, we have found that the removal of phospholipids from the oxidase affected the copper and low-spin heme signals, and conceivably other paramagnetic centers as demonstrated by EPR spectroscopy. At 4.2–30 °K, the signal amplitudes and power saturation behaviors were studied at approximately g = 2.0 for the copper signal, and in the neighborhood of g = 3.0 for the low-spin heme signal. After depletion of phospholipids the amplitude of the copper signal decreased 25–30% at 12–30 °K and below 12 °K 40–50% under nonsaturating conditions. The amplitude of the low-spin heme signal decreased 60–70% at 4.2–20 °K. Below 14 °K both signals became more resistant to power saturation, but the copper signal was more readily saturated above this temperature, compared to the oxidase with about 25% lipid. After removal of phospholipids, the spectral features of the copper signal remained essentially the same, but the low-spin heme signal broadened and became very asymmetric to show two signals as revealed by the second harmonic EPR spectra. These findings may explain, at least partially, the wide variations in percentage of EPR detectable copper and heme of cytochrome oxidase reported by different laboratories. Unequivocally, the EPR behavior of cytochrome oxidase is not only affected by the protein moiety, but also by the associated phospholipids of the enzyme.  相似文献   

6.
1.Upon addition of sulphide to oxidized cytochrome c oxidase, a low-spin heme sulphide compound is formed with an EPR signal at gx = 2.54, gy = 2.23 and gz = 1.87. Concomitantly with the formation of this signal the EPR-detectable low-spin heme signal at g = 3 and the copper signal near g = 2 decrease in intensity, pointing to a partial reduction of the enzyme by sulphide. 2. The addition of sulphide to cytochrome c oxidase, previously reduced in the presence of azide or cyanide, brings about a disappearance of the azido-cytochrome c oxidase signal at gx = 2.9, gy = 2.2, and gz = 1.67 and a decrease of the signal at g = 3.6 of cyano-cytochrome c oxidase. Concomitantly the sulphide-induced EPR signal is formed. 3. These observations demonstrate that azide, cyanide and sulphide are competitive for an oxidized binding site on cytochrome c oxidase. Moreover, it is shown that the affinity of cyanide and sulphide for this site is greater than that of azide.  相似文献   

7.
Experiments are described on oxido-reductive titrations of cytochrome c oxidase as followed by low-temperature EPR and reflectance spectroscopy. The reductants were cytochrome c or NADH and the oxidant ferricyanide. Experiments were conducted in the presence and absence of either cytochrome c or carbon monoxide, or both. An attempt is made to provide a complete quantitative balance of the changes observed in the major EPR signals. During reduction, the maximal quantity of heme represented in the high-spin ferric heme signals (g approximately 6; 2) is 25% of the total heme present, and during reoxidation 30%. With NADH reduction there is little difference between the pattern of disappearance of the low-spin ferric heme signals in the absence or presence of cytochrome c. The copper and high-spin heme signals, however, disappear at higher titrant concentrations in the presence of cytochrome c than in its absence. In these titrations, as well as in those with ferrocytochrome c, the quantitative balance indicates that, in addition to EPR-detectable components, EPR-undetectable components are also reduced, increasingly so at higher titrant concentrations. The quantity of EPR-undectable components reduced appears to be inverely related to pH. A similar inverse relationship exists between pH and appearance of high-spin signals during yhe titration. At pH 9.3 the quantity of heme represented in the high-spin signals is less than 5%, whereas it approximately doubles from pH 7.4 to pH 6.1. In the presence of CO less of the low-spin heme and copper signals disappears for the same quantity of titrant consumed, again implying reduction of EPR undetectable components. At least one of these components is represented in a broad absorption band centered at 655 nm. The stoichiometry observed on reoxidation, particularly in the presence of CO, is not compatible with the notion that the copper signal represents 100% of the active copper of the enzyme as a pair of interacting copper atoms.  相似文献   

8.
Two-subunit SoxB-type cytochrome c oxidase in Bacillus stearothermophilus was over-produced, purified, and examined for its active site structures by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and resonance Raman (RR) spectroscopies. This is cytochrome bo3 oxidase containing heme B at the low-spin heme site and heme O at the high-spin heme site of the binuclear center. EPR spectra of the enzyme in the oxidized form indicated that structures of the high-spin heme O and the low-spin heme B were similar to those of SoxM-type oxidases based on the signals at g=6.1, and g=3.04. However, the EPR signals from the CuA center and the integer spin system at the binuclear center showed slight differences. RR spectra of the oxidized form showed that heme O was in a 6-coordinated high-spin (nu3 = 1472 cm(-1)), and heme B was in a 6-coordinated low-spin (nu3 = 1500 cm(-1)) state. The Fe2+-His stretching mode was observed at 211 cm(-1), indicating that the Fe2+-His bond strength is not so much different from those of SoxM-type oxidases. On the contrary, both the Fe2+-CO stretching and Fe2+-C-O bending modes differed distinctly from those of SoxM-type enzymes, suggesting some differences in the coordination geometry and the protein structure in the proximity of bound CO in cytochrome bo3 from those of SoxM-type enzymes.  相似文献   

9.
The purified cytochrome aa3-type oxidase from Sulfolobus acidocaldarius (DSM 639) consists of a single subunit, containing one low-spin and one high-spin A-type hemes and copper [Anemüller, S. and Sch?fer, G. (1990) Eur. J. Biochem. 191, 297-305]. The enzyme metal centers were investigated by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy (EPR), coupled to redox potentiometry. The low-spin heme EPR signal has the following g-values: gz = 3.02, gy = 2.23 and gx = 1.45 and the high-spin heme exhibits an almost axial spectrum (gy = 6.03 and gx = 5.97, E/D < 0.002). In the enzyme as isolated the low-spin resonance corresponds to 95 +/- 10% of the enzyme concentration, while the high-spin signal accounts for only 40 +/- 5%. However, taking into account the redox potential dependence of the high-spin heme signal, this value also rises to 95 +/- 10%. The high-spin heme signal of the Sulfolobus enzyme shows spectral characteristics distinct from those of the Paracoccus denitrificans one: it shows a smaller rhombicity (gy = 6.1 and gx = 5.9, E/D = 0.004 for the P. denitrificans enzyme) and it is easier to saturate, having a half saturation power of 148 mW compared to 360 mW for the P. denitrificans protein, both at 10 K. The EPR spectrum of an extensively dialyzed and active enzyme sample containing only one copper atom/enzyme molecule does not display CuA-like resonances, indicating that this enzyme contains only a CUB-type center. The EPR-redox titration of the high-spin heme signal, which is assigned to cytochrome a3, gives a bell shaped curve, which was simulated by a non-interactive two step redox process, with reduction potentials of 200 +/- 10 mV and 370 +/- 10 mV at pH = 7.4. The decrease of the signal amplitude at high redox potentials is proposed to be due to oxidation of a CUB(I) center, which in the CUB(II) state is tightly spin-coupled to the heme a3 center. The reduction potential of the low-spin resonance was determined using the same model as 305 +/- 10 mV at pH = 7.4 by EPR redox titration. Addition of azide to the enzyme affects only the high-spin heme signal, consistent with the assignment of this resonance to heme a3. The results are discussed in the context of the redox center composition of quinol and cytochrome c oxidases.  相似文献   

10.
1. The major EPR signals from native and cytochrome c-reduced beef heart cytochrome c oxidase (EC 1.9.3.1) are characterized with respect to resonance parameters, number of components and total integrated intensity. A mistake in all earlier integrations and simulations of very anisotropic EPR signals is pointed out. 2. The so-called Cu2+ signal is found to contain at least three components, one "inactive" form and two nearly similar active forms. One of the latter forms, corresponding to about 20% of the total EPR detectable Cu, has not been observed earlier and can only be resolved in 35 GHz spectra. It is not reduced by cytochrome c and is thought to reflect some kind of inhomogeneity in the enzyme preparation. The 35 GHz spectrum of the cytochrome c reducible component shows a rhombic splitting and can be well simulated with g-values 2.18, 2.03 and 1.99. The origin of such a unique type of Cu2+ spectrum is discussed. 3. The low-spin heme signal in the oxidized enzyme (g = 3.03, 2.21, 1.45) is found to correspond closely to one heme and shows no signs of interaction with other paramagnetic centres. 4. The high-spin heme signals appearing in partly reduced oxidase are found to consist of at least three species, one axial and two rhombic types. An integration procedure is described that allows the determination of the total integral intensity of high-spin heme EPR signals only by considering the g = 6 part of the signals. In a titration with ascorbate and cytochrome c the maximum intensity of the g = 6 species corresponds to 23% of the enzyme concentration.  相似文献   

11.
Experiments are described on oxido-reductive titrations of cytochrome c oxidase as followed by low-temperature EPR and reflectance spectroscopy. The reductants were cytochrome c or NADH and the oxidant ferricyanide. Experiments were conducted in the presence and absence of either cytochrome c or carbon monoxide, or both. An attempt is made to provide a complete quantitative balance of the changes observed in the major EPR signals. During reduction, the maximal quantity of heme represented in the high-spin ferric heme signals (g ~ 6; 2) is 25% of the total heme present, and during reoxidation 30%. With NADH reduction there is little difference between the pattern of disappearance of the low-spin ferric heme signals in the absence or presence of cytochrome c. The copper and high-spin heme signals, however, disappear at higher titrant concentrations in the presence of cytochrome c than in its absence. In these titrations, as well as in those with ferrocytochrome c, the quantitative balance indicates that, in addition to EPR-detectable components, EPR-undetectable components are also reduced, increasingly so at higher titrant concentrations. The quantity of EPR-undetectable components reduced appears to be inversely related to pH. A similar inverse relationship exists between pH and appearance of high-spin signals during the titration. At pH 9.3 the quantity of heme represented in the high-spin signals is < 5%, whereas it approximately doubles from pH 7.4 to pH 6.1. In the presence of CO less of the low-spin heme and copper signals disappears for the same quantity of titrant consumed, again implying reduction of EPR undetectable components. At least one of these components is represented in a broad absorption band centered at 655 nm. The stoichiometry observed on reoxidation, particularly in the presence of CO, is not compatible with the notion that the copper signal represents 100% of the active copper of the enzyme as a pair of interacting copper atoms.  相似文献   

12.
The electron paramagnetic resonance (epr) properties of cytochrome c oxidase have been examined with special attention to the effect of added ligands and of interactions between the redox components. The fully oxidized preparations have a very small g6 signal which increases greatly as the redox potential is made more negative, a process exactly paralleling the disappearance of the g3 signal. The potential for half appearance or disappearance (Em), respectively, is 380 mV at pH 7.0 and 300 mV at pH 8.5. This identifies the changes as accompanying reduction of cytochrome a3 because the Em of the “invisible copper” is 340 mV and pH independent. Nitric oxide (NO) binds reduced cytochrome a3 to form a paramagnetic species. This resulting epr signal is strongly dependent on the redox state of cytochrome a, another expression of heme-heme interaction in cytochrome oxidase. The NO compound is also unique in that under the appropriate conditions three of the four redox components (cytochrome a3, cytochrome a, and the “visible” copper) are epr active. In potentiometric titrations in the presence of azide the formation of the azide compound responsible for the g2.9 signal appears to require reduction of both cytochrome a3 and the “invisible copper.” An internal sulfur compound is present which, at alkaline pH values, can bind the heme responsible for the g6 signal and change it to a low-spin sulfur compound with a signal at approximately g2.6. Evidence is also presented for the cytochrome c oxidase in situ being an equilibrium mixture of two different conformational states.  相似文献   

13.
Magnetic circular dichroism (MCD), electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), and optical absorption spectroscopies have been used to monitor the concentrations of oxidized and reduced heme and copper during stoichiometric reductive titrations of purified beef heart cytochrome oxidase. The MCD data are deconvoluted to obtain the concentrations of reduced cytochromes a and a3 during the titrations; analysis of the EPR spectra provides complementary data on the concentrations of the EPR-detectable species. For the native enzyme in the absence of exogenous ligands, cytochromes a and a3 are reduced to approximately the same extent at all points in the titration. The reduction of the EPR-detectable copper, on the other hand, initially lags the reduction of the two cytochromes but in the final stages of the titration is completely reduced prior to either cytochrome a or a3. These non-Nernstian titration results are interpreted to indicate that the primary mode of heme-heme interaction in cytochrome oxidase involves shifts in oxidation-reduction potential for each of the two cytochromes such that a change in oxidation state for one of the hemes lowers the oxidation-reduction potential of the second heme by approximately 135 mV. In these titrations high spin species are detected which account for 0.25 spin/oxidase maximally. Evidence is presented to indicate that at least some of these signals can be attributed to cytochrome a3+ which has undergone a low-spin to high-spin state transition in the course of the titration. In the presence of carbon monoxide the oxidation-reduction properties of cytochromes a and a3 are markedly altered. The a32+. CO complex is fully formed prior to reduction of either cytochrome a3+ or the EPR-detectable copper. The g = 3 EPR signal attributed to cytochrome a3+ decreases as the MCD intensity of cytochrome a2+ increases; no significant high-spin intensity is observed at any intermediate stage of reduction. We interpret these Nernstian titration results to indicate that in the presence of ligands the oxidation-reduction potential of cytochrome a relative to cytochrome a3 is determined by the oxidation-reduction state of the stabilized cytochrome a3 ligand complex; if ligand binding occurs to reduced cytochrome a3 then cytochrome a titrates with a lower potential; cytochrome a titrates with a higher potential if oxidized cytochrome a3 is stabilized by ligand binding.  相似文献   

14.
G M Baker  G Palmer 《Biochemistry》1987,26(11):3038-3044
Incubation of cytochrome oxidase at high pH induces changes in several spectral properties. The optical Soret maximum shifts to longer wavelength, and there is an apparent loss in intensity of the 655-nm band, effects that are normally assigned either to a spin-state transition in cytochrome a3 or to a reduction of heme a. However, magnetic circular dichroism spectra show that cytochrome a3 remains high spin and that both cytochrome a and cytochrome a3 are oxidized. At the same time, there is the appearance of a low-spin signal indicative of hydroxide-imidazole coordination which we assign as arising from a structural transition at cytochrome a, rather than at cytochrome a3, as has been proposed previously. With longer incubation times, a new copper signal appears with electron paramagnetic resonance parameters markedly different from those obtained from copper centers which have undergone denaturation. Spin quantitation establishes that this new resonance does not arise from CuA and suggests that high pH breaks the magnetic coupling present at the cytochrome a3-CuB center. A significant proportion of cytochrome a3 may be converted to a low-spin thiolate during this process.  相似文献   

15.
The cytochrome bo quinol oxidase of Escherichia coli is one of two respiratory O2 reductases which the bacterium synthesizes. The enzyme complex contains copper and 2 mol of b-type heme. Electron paramagnetic resonance (epr) spectroscopy of membranes from a strain having amplified levels of this enzyme complex reveals signals from low- and high-spin b-type hemes, but the copper, now established as a component of the oxidase, is not directly detectable by epr. The high-spin signal from the cytochrome bo complex, which we attribute to cytochrome o, when titrated potentiometrically, gives a bell-shaped curve. The low potential side of this curve is biphasic (Em7 approximately 180 and 280 mV) and corresponds to the reduction/oxidation of the cytochrome(s). The high potential side of the bell-shaped curve is monophasic (Em7 approximately 370 mV) and is proposed to be due to reduction/oxidation of a copper center which, when in the Cu(II) form, is tightly spin-coupled to a heme, probably cytochrome o, resulting in a net even spin system and loss of the epr spectrum. The low-spin cytochrome b titrates biphasically with Em7 values of approximately 180 and 280 mV, similar to the high-spin component but without the loss of signal at high potentials.  相似文献   

16.
Interactions of Vibrio (formerly Achromobacter) fischeri nitrite reductase were studied by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. The spectrum of the oxidized enzyme showed a number of features which were attributed to two low-spin ferric hemes. These comprised an unusual derivative peak at g = 3.7 and a spectrum at g = 2.88, 2.26, and 1.51. Neither heme was reactive in the oxidized state with the substrate nitrite and with cyanide and azide. When frozen under turnover conditions (i.e., reduction in the presence of excess nitrite), the enzyme showed the spectrum of a nitrosyl heme derivative. The g = 2.88, 2.26, and 1.51 signals reappeared partially on reoxidation by nitrite, indicating that the nitrosyl species which remained arose from the g = 3.7 heme. The nitrosyl derivative showed a 14N nuclear hyperfine splitting, Az = 1.65 mT. The nitrosyl derivative was produced by treatment of the oxidized nitrite reductase with nitric oxide or hydroxylamine. Exchange of nitric oxide between the nitrosyl derivative and NO gas in solution was observed by using the [15N]nitrosyl compound. A possible reaction cycle for the enzyme is discussed, which involves reduction of the enzyme followed by binding of nitrite to one heme and formation of the nitrosyl intermediate.  相似文献   

17.
It had been observed previously that a pair of transient EPR resonances (g = 1.78 and 1.69) appears within less than 5 ms on reoxidation of reduced cytochrome c oxidase by O2. Since the location of other lines that are part of the same signal was not known, the quantity of the paramagnetic species involved, and thus the significance of the observed resonances, remained questionable. We have now found a broad resonance at g = 5 which is obviously associated with those at g = 1.78 and 1.69. The width of the signal (approximately 250 mT) at the observed intensity suggests that it represents a significant fraction of one of the components of the enzyme. The signal disappears within less than 5 ms on addition of cyanide or sulfide but only within several hundred milliseconds after addition of ferrocytochrome c. This behavior suggests that it originates from the a3 component of the enzyme. It is suggested that the species represented in the signal is either identical with or part of what has been named collectively the "oxygenated" form and recently described "activated" forms of the enzyme. On reoxidation of reduced oxidase with oxygen enriched 90% in 17O, no change of signal shape was seen.  相似文献   

18.
Abstract Membranes of the extremely thermoacidophilic archaeon Desulfurolobus ambivalens grown under aerobic conditions contain a quinol oxidase of the cytochrome aa 3-type as the most prominent hemoprotein. The partially purified enzyme consists of three polypeptide subunits with apparent molecular masses of 40, 27 and 20 kDa and contains two heme A molecules and one copper atom. CO difference spectra suggest one heme to be a heme a 3-centre. The EPR spectra indicate the presence of a low-spin and a high-spin heme species. Redox titrations of the solubilized enzyme show the presence of two reduction processes, with apparent potentials of + 235 and + 330 mV. The enzyme cannot oxidize reduced cytochrome c , but rather serves as an oxidase of caldariella quinone. Due to their very simple composition, D . ambivalens cell appear as a promising candidate to study Structure-function relationships of cytochrome aa 3 in the integral membrane state.  相似文献   

19.
N R Mattatall  L M Cameron  B C Hill 《Biochemistry》2001,40(44):13331-13341
Cytochrome aa3-600 or menaquinol oxidase, from Bacillus subtilis, is a member of the heme-copper oxidase family. Cytochrome aa3-600 contains cytochrome a, cytochrome a3, and CuB, and each is coordinated via histidine residues to subunit I. Subunit II of cytochrome aa3-600 lacks CuA, which is a common feature of the cytochrome c oxidase family members. Anaerobic reduction of cytochrome aa3-600 by the substrate analogue 2,3-dimethyl-1,4-naphthoquinone (DMN) resolves two distinct kinetic phases by stopped-flow, single-wavelength spectrometry. Global analysis of time-resolved, multiwavelength spectra shows that during these distinct phases cytochromes a and a3 are both reduced. Cyanide binding to cytochrome a3 enhances the fast phase rate, which in the presence of cyanide can be assigned to cytochrome a reduction, whereas cytochrome a3-cyanide reduction is slow. The steady-state activity of cytochrome aa3-600 exhibits saturation kinetics as a function of DMN concentration with a Km of 300 microM and a maximal turnover of 63.5 s(-1). Global kinetic analysis of steady-state spectra reveals a species that is characteristic of a partially reduced oxygen adduct of cytochrome a3-CuB, whereas cytochrome a remains oxidized. Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy of the oxidase in the steady state shows the expected signal from ferricytochrome a, and a new EPR signal at g = 2.01. A model of the catalytic cycle for cytochrome aa3-600 proposes initial electron delivery from DMN to cytochrome a, followed by rapid heme to heme electron transfer, and suggests possible origins of the radical signal in the steady-state form of the enzyme.  相似文献   

20.
Cytochrome c oxidase (cytochrome aa3-type) [EC 1.9.3.1] was purified from Erythrobacter longus to homogeneity as judged by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and some of its properties were studied. The spectral properties of the oxidase closely resembled those of mitochondrial and other bacterial cytochromes aa3. The enzyme showed absorption peaks at 430 and 598 nm in the oxidized form, and at 444 and 603 nm in the reduced form. The CO compound of the reduced enzyme showed peaks at 432 and 600 nm. The enzyme oxidized eukaryotic ferrocytochromes C more rapidly than E. longus ferrocytochrome c. The reactions catalyzed by the enzyme were 50% inhibited by 0.7 microM KCN. The enzyme contained 1 g atom of copper and 1 g atom of magnesium per mol of heme a. The enzyme molecule seemed to be composed of two identical subunits, each with a molecular weight of 43,000.  相似文献   

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