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1.
Nitrous oxide reductase (N2OR), Pseudomonas stutzeri, catalyses the 2 electron reduction of nitrous oxide to di-nitrogen. The enzyme has 2 identical subunits (Mr approximately 70,000) of known amino acid sequence and contains approximately 4 Cu ions per subunit. By measurement of the optical absorption, electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and low-temperature magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectra of the oxidised state, a semi-reduced form and the fully reduced state of the enzyme it is shown that the enzyme contains 2 distinct copper centres of which one is assigned to an electron-transfer function, centre A, and the other to a catalytic site, centre Z. The latter is a binuclear copper centre with at least 1 cysteine ligand and cycles between oxidation levels Cu(II)/Cu(II) and Cu(II)/Cu(I) in the absence of substrate or inhibitors. The state Cu(II)/Cu(I) is enzymatically inactive. The MCD spectra provide evidence for a second form of centre Z, which may be enzymatically active, in the oxidised state of the enzyme. Centre A is structurally similar to that of CuA in bovine and bacterial cytochrome c oxidase and also contains copper ligated by cysteine. This centre may also be a binuclear copper complex.  相似文献   

2.
The smallest molecular weight subunit (subunit IV), which contains no redox prosthetic group, is the only supernumerary subunit in the four-subunit Rhodobacter sphaeroides bc1 complex. This subunit is involved in Q binding and the structural integrity of the complex. When the cytochrome bc1 complex is photoaffinity labeled with [3H]azido-Q derivative, radioactivity is found in subunits IV and I (cytochrome b), indicating that these two subunits are responsible for Q binding in the complex. When the subunit IV gene (fbcQ) is deleted from the R. sphaeroides chromosome, the resulting strain (RSdeltaIV) requires a period of adaptation before the start of photosynthetic growth. The cytochrome bc1 complex in adapted RSdeltaIV chromatophores is labile to detergent treatment (60-75% inactivation), and shows a four-fold increase in the Km for Q2H2. The first two changes indicate a structural role of subunit IV; the third change supports its Q-binding function. Tryptophan-79 is important for structural and Q-binding functions of subunit IV. Subunit IV is overexpressed in Escherichia coli as a GST fusion protein using the constructed expression vector, pGEX/IV. Purified recombinant subunit IV is functionally active as it can restore the bc1 complex activity from the three-subunit core complex to the same level as that of wild-type or complement complex. Three regions in the subunit IV sequence, residues 86-109, 77-85, and 41-55, are essential for interaction with the core complex because deleting one of these regions yields a subunit completely or partially unable to restore cytochrome bc1 from the core complex.  相似文献   

3.
Ubiquinol: cytochrome c reductase was isolated from Neurospora mitochondria as a protein-detergent complex and dissociated by mild salt treatment. Three parts were obtained and characterized. Firstly, a complex containing the subunits III (cytochrome b), IV (cytochrome c1), VI, VII, VIII and IX; secondly, a complex containing the subunits I and II; and thirdly, the single subunit V (iron-sulphur subunit). Membrane crystals were prepared from the cytochrome bc1 subunit complex and by combining tilted electron microscopic views of the crystals, a low-resolution three-dimensional structure was calculated. This structure was compared to that of the whole cytochrome reductase (previously determined by electron microscopy of membrane crystals). Protein density absent from the structure of the subunit complex was then attributed to the missing subunits according to their size and shape and their association with the phospholipid bilayer.  相似文献   

4.
The cytochrome bc1 complex has been isolated from rat-liver mitochondria by two different procedures. The enzyme isolated by either procedure exhibits a specific cytochrome b and cytochrome c1 heme content of approximately 8 and 4 nmol/mg protein respectively. Both preparations contain only seven polypeptides on sodium dodecylsulfate gel electrophoresis, with the following apparent molecular weights: I, 50000; II, 46000; III, 33000; IV, 25000; V, 12500; VI, 10000; VII, 5600. The polypeptide composition is identical to that of the beef-heart enzyme isolated by cholate/ammonium sulfate fractionation. Furthermore, with the exception of subunit II (core protein 2), the apparent molecular weights of the subunits are identical in the rat-liver and beef-heart enzymes.  相似文献   

5.
The reduction of molecular oxygen to water is catalyzed by complicated membrane-bound metallo-enzymes containing variable numbers of subunits, called cytochrome c oxidases or quinol oxidases. We previously described the cytochrome c oxidase II from the hyperthermophilic bacterium Aquifex aeolicus as a ba(3)-type two-subunit (subunits I and II) enzyme and showed that it is included in a supercomplex involved in the sulfide-oxygen respiration pathway. It belongs to the B-family of the heme-copper oxidases, enzymes that are far less studied than the ones from family A. Here, we describe the presence in this enzyme of an additional transmembrane helix "subunit IIa", which is composed of 41 amino acid residues with a measured molecular mass of 5105 Da. Moreover, we show that subunit II, as expected, is in fact longer than the originally annotated protein (from the genome) and contains a transmembrane domain. Using Aquifex aeolicus genomic sequence analyses, N-terminal sequencing, peptide mass fingerprinting and mass spectrometry analysis on entire subunits, we conclude that the B-type enzyme from this bacterium is a three-subunit complex. It is composed of subunit I (encoded by coxA(2)) of 59000 Da, subunit II (encoded by coxB(2)) of 16700 Da and subunit IIa which contain 12, 1 and 1 transmembrane helices respectively. A structural model indicates that the structural organization of the complex strongly resembles that of the ba(3) cytochrome c oxidase from the bacterium Thermus thermophilus, the IIa helical subunit being structurally the lacking N-terminal transmembrane helix of subunit II present in the A-type oxidases. Analysis of the genomic context of genes encoding oxidases indicates that this third subunit is present in many of the bacterial oxidases from B-family, enzymes that have been described as two-subunit complexes.  相似文献   

6.
The cytochrome d terminal oxidase complex is one of two terminal oxidases in the aerobic respiratory chain of Escherichia coli. Previous work has shown by dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis that this enzyme contains two subunits (I and II) and three cytochrome components, b558 , a1, and d. Reconstitution studies have demonstrated that the enzyme functions as a ubiquinol-8 oxidase and catalyzes an electrogenic reaction, i.e. turnover is accompanied by a charge separation across the membrane bilayer. In this paper, monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies were used to obtain structural information about the cytochrome d complex. It is shown that antibodies directed against subunit I effectively inhibit ubiquinol-1 oxidation by the purified enzyme in detergent, whereas antibodies which bind to subunit II have no effect on quinol oxidation. The oxidation rate of N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine, in contrast, is unaffected by antisubunit I antibodies, but is inhibited by antibodies against subunit II. It is concluded that the quinol oxidation site is on subunit I, previously shown to be the cytochrome b558 component of the complex, and that N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine oxidation occurs at a secondary site on subunit II. The antibodies were also used to analyze the results of a protein cross-linking experiment. Dimethyl suberimidate was used to cross-link the subunits of purified, solubilized oxidase. Immunoblot analysis of the products of this cross-linking clearly indicate that subunit II probably exists as a dimer within the complex. Finally, it is shown that the purified enzyme contains tightly bound lipopolysaccharide. This was revealed after discovering that one of the monoclonal antibodies raised against the purified complex is actually directed against lipopolysaccharide. The significance of this finding is not known.  相似文献   

7.
Subunit arrangement in beef heart complex III   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Beef heart mitochondrial complex III was separated into 12 polypeptide bands representing 11 different subunits by using the electrophoresis conditions described by Sch?gger et al. [(1986) Methods Enzymol. 126, 224-237]. Eight of the 12 polypeptide bands were identified from their NH2-terminal sequences as obtained by electroblotting directly from the NaDodSO4-polyacrylamide gel onto a solid support. The topology of the subunits in complex III was explored by three different approaches. (1) Protease digestion experiments of submitochrondrial particles in the presence and absence of detergent showed that subunits II and VI are on the M side of the inner membrane and subunits V and XI on the C side. (2) Labeling experiments with the membrane-intercalated probes [125I]TID and arylazidoPE indicated that cytochrome b is the predominant bilayer embedded subunit of complex III, while the non-heme iron protein appears to be peripherally located. (3) Cross-linking studies with carbodiimides and homobifunctional cleavable reagents demonstrated that near-neighbor pairs include subunits I+II, II+VI, III+VI, IV+V, V+X, and reagents demonstrated that near-neighbor pairs include subunits I+II, II+VI, III+VI, IV+V, V+X, and VI+VII. The cytochrome c binding site was found to include subunits IV, VIII, and X. The combined data are used to provide an updated model for the topology of beef heart complex III.  相似文献   

8.
A highly active, large-scale preparation of ubiquinol:cytochrome c2 oxidoreductase (EC 1.10.2.2; cytochrome bc1 complex) has been obtained from Rhodobacter sphaeroides. The enzyme was solubilized from chromatophores by using dodecyl maltoside in the presence of glycerol and was purified by anion-exchange and gel filtration chromatography. The procedure yields 35 mg of pure bc1 complex from 4.5 g of membrane protein, and its consistently results in an enzyme preparation that catalyzes the reduction of horse heart cytochrome c with a turnover of 250-350 (mumol of cyt c reduced).(mumol of cyt c1)-1.s-1. The turnover number is at least double that of the best preparation reported in the literature [Ljungdahl, P. O., Pennoyer, J. D., Robertson, D. C., & Trumpower, B. L. (1987) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 891, 227-241]. The scale is increased 25-fold, and the yield is markedly improved by using this protocol. Four polypeptide subunits were observed by SDS-PAGE, with Mr values of 40K, 34K, 24K, and 14K. N-Terminal amino acid sequences were obtained for cytochrome c1, the iron-sulfur protein subunit, and for cytochrome b and were identical with the expected protein sequences deduced from the DNA sequence of the fbc operon, with the exceptions that a 22-residue fragment is processed off of the N-terminus of cytochrome c1 and the N-terminal methionine residue is cleaved off both the b cytochrome and iron-sulfur protein subunits. Western blotting experiments indicate that subunit IV is not a contaminating light-harvesting complex polypeptide.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Ubiquinol-cytochrome c oxidoreductase (cytochrome bc1) complex from Paracoccus denitrificans consists of only three polypeptide subunits (Yang, X., and Trumpower, B. L. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 12282-12289), whereas the analogous complexes of eukaryotic mitochondria consist of nine or more polypeptides (Schagger, H., Link, T. A., Engel, W. D., and von Jagow, G. (1986) Methods Enzymol. 126, 224-237). Using the purified three-subunit Paracoccus complex we have tested whether this simple cytochrome bc1 complex has the same electron transfer pathway and proton translocation activity as the bc1 complexes of mitochondria. Under presteady state conditions, the effects of inhibitors on reduction of cytochromes b and c1 by quinol and oxidant-induced reduction of cytochrome b indicate a cyclic electron transfer pathway and two routes of cytochrome b reduction in the three-subunit Paracoccus cytochrome bc1 complex. A novel method was developed to incorporate the cytochrome bc1 complex into liposomes with the detergent dodecyl maltoside. The enzyme reconstituted into liposomes translocated protons with an H+/2e value of 3.9. Carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone eliminated proton translocation, while permitting the scalar release of protons from quinol, and thus reduced the H+/2e ratio to 2. These values agree with the predicted stoichiometries for proton translocation by a protonmotive Q cycle pathway. No inhibition of proton translocation by N',N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide was detected when the Paracoccus cytochrome bc1 complex was incubated with N',N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide before or after reconstitution into liposomes. Electron transfer in the three-subunit complex thus appears to occur by a protonmotive Q cycle pathway identical to that in mitochondrial cytochrome bc1 complexes. Only three polypeptides, cytochromes b, c1, and the Rieske iron-sulfur protein, are required for respiration and energy transduction in the cytochrome bc1 complex. The function of the supernumerary polypeptides in mitochondrial bc1 complexes is thus unclear.  相似文献   

10.
A systemic study has been made of copper and heme a binding to subunits of beef heart cytochrome c oxidase. Copper and heme a were readily mobilized by ionic detergents, high ionic strengths, temperatures above 0 degrees C, thiol compounds, and gel-bound peroxides and free radicals when the subunits of the oxidase were dissociated from one another during polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Most subunits showed some affinity for heme a and copper under these conditions. However, in the presence of specific mixtures of ionic and nonionic detergents (e.g. 0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate, 0.025% Triton X-100) at temperatures below 0 degrees C and in buffers of low ionic strength using 10 to 12% polyacrylamide gels preelectrophoresed for 3 days with thioglycolate, about 90% of the Cu was found on subunit II (Mr = 24,100), and heme a was found in equal amounts of subunits I (Mr = 35,800) and II. The oxidized-reduced and reduced-CO absorption spectra of these subunits resembled those of cytochrome c oxidase. It appears probable that in the native enzyme, subunit I contains heme a and subunit II contains copper and heme a. A relationship of mammalian cytochrome c oxidase to the two-subunit microbial cytochrome oxidase systems appears to exist.  相似文献   

11.
The mitochondrial cytochrome bc1 complex is a multifunctional membrane protein complex. It catalyzes electron transfer, proton translocation, peptide processing, and superoxide generation. Crystal structure data at 2.9 A resolution not only establishes the location of the redox centers and inhibitor binding sites, but also suggests a movement of the head domain of the iron-sulfur protein (ISP) during bc1 catalysis and inhibition of peptide-processing activity during complex maturation. The functional importance of the movement of extramembrane (head) domain of ISP in the bc1 complex is confirmed by analysis of the Rhodobacter sphaeroides bc1 complex mutants with increased rigidity in the ISP neck and by the determination of rate constants for acid/base-induced intramolecular electron transfer between [2Fe-2S] and heme c1 in native and inhibitor-loaded beef complexes. The peptide-processing activity is activated in bovine heart mitochondrial bc1 complex by nonionic detergent at concentrations that inactivate electron transfer activity. This peptide-processing activity is shown to be associated with subunits I and II by cloning, overexpression and in vitro reconstitution. The superoxide-generation site of the cytochrome bc1 complex is located at reduced bL and Q*-. The reaction is membrane potential-, and cytochrome c-dependent.  相似文献   

12.
The precursor proteins to the subunits of ubiquinol:cytochrome c reductase (cytochrome bc1 complex) of Neurospora crassa were synthesized in a reticulocyte lysate. These precursors were immunoprecipitated with antibodies prepared against the individual subunits and compared to the mature subunits immunoprecipitated or isolated from mitochondria. Most subunits were synthesized as precursors with larger apparent molecular weights (subunits I, 51,500 versus 50,000; subunit II, 47,500 versus 45,000; subunit IV (cytochrome c1), 38,000 versus 31,000; subunit V (Fe-S protein), 28,000 versus 25,000; subunit VII, 12,000 versus 11,500; subunit VIII, 11,600 versus 11,200). Subunit VI (14,000) was synthesized with the same apparent molecular weight. The post-translational transfer of subunits I, IV, V, and VII was studied in an in vitro system employing reticulocyte lysate and isolated mitochondria. The transfer and proteolytic processing of these precursors was found to be dependent on the mitochondrial membrane potential. In the transfer of cytochrome c1, the proteolytic processing appears to take place in two separate steps via an intermediate both in vivo and in vitro. In vivo, the intermediate form accumulated when cells were kept at 8 degrees C and was chased into mature cytochrome c1 at 25 degrees C. Both processing steps were energy-dependent.  相似文献   

13.
Beef heart cytochrome c oxidase was labeled at a single sulfhydryl group by treatment with 5 mM N-iodoacetylamidoethyl-1-aminonaphthalene-5-sulfonate (1,5-I-AEDANS) at pH 8.0 for 4 h. Sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis revealed that the enzyme was exclusively labeled at subunit III, presumably at Cys-115. The high affinity phase of the electron transfer reaction with horse cytochrome c was not affected by acetylamidoethyl-1-aminonaphthalene-5-sulfonate (AEDANS) labeling. Addition of horse cytochrome c to dimeric AEDANS-cytochrome c oxidase resulted in a 55% decrease in the AEDANS fluorescence due to the formation of a 1:1 complex between the two proteins. Forster energy transfer calculations indicated that the distance from the AEDANS label on subunit III to the heme group of cytochrome c was in the range 26-40 A. In contrast to the results with the dimeric enzyme, the fluorescence of monomeric AEDANS-cytochrome c oxidase was not quenched at all by binding horse heart cytochrome c, indicating that the AEDANS label on subunit III was at least 54 A from the heme group of cytochrome c. These results support a model in which the lysines surrounding the heme crevice of cytochrome c interact with carboxylates on subunit II of one monomer of the cytochrome c oxidase dimer and the back of the molecule is close to subunit III on the other monomer. In order to identify the cysteine residues that ligand copper A, a new procedure was developed to specifically remove copper A from cytochrome c oxidase by incubation with 2-mercaptoethanol followed by gel chromatography. Treatment of the copper A-depleted cytochrome c oxidase preparation with 1,5-I-AEDANS resulted in labeling sulfhydryl groups on subunit II as well as on subunit III. No additional subunits were labeled. This result indicates that the copper A binding site is located at cysteines 196 and/or 200 of subunit II and that removal of copper A exposes these residues for labeling by 1,5-I-AEDANS. Alternative copper A depletion methods involving incubation with bathocuproine sulfonate (Weintraub, S.T., and Wharton, D.C. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 1669-1676) or p-(hydroxymercuri)benzoate (Li, P.M., Gelles, J., Chan, S.I., Sullivan, R.J., and Scott, R.A. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 2091-2095) were also investigated. Treatment of these preparations with 1,5-I-AEDANS resulted in labeling cysteine residues on subunits II and III. However, additional sulfhydryl residues on other subunits were also labeled, preventing a definitive assignment of the location of copper A using these depletion procedures.  相似文献   

14.
Zara V  Conte L  Trumpower BL 《The FEBS journal》2007,274(17):4526-4539
We have examined the status of the cytochrome bc(1) complex in mitochondrial membranes from yeast mutants in which genes for one or more of the cytochrome bc(1) complex subunits were deleted. When membranes from wild-type yeast were resolved by native gel electrophoresis and analyzed by immunodecoration, the cytochrome bc(1) complex was detected as a mixed population of enzymes, consisting of cytochrome bc(1) dimers, and ternary complexes of cytochrome bc(1) dimers associated with one and two copies of the cytochrome c oxidase complex. When membranes from the deletion mutants were resolved and analyzed, the cytochrome bc(1) dimer was not associated with the cytochrome c oxidase complex in many of the mutant membranes, and membranes from some of the mutants contained a common set of cytochrome bc(1) subcomplexes. When these subcomplexes were fractionated by SDS/PAGE and analyzed with subunit-specific antibodies, it was possible to recognize a subcomplex consisting of cytochrome b, subunit 7 and subunit 8 that is apparently associated with cytochrome c oxidase early in the assembly process, prior to acquisition of the remaining cytochrome bc(1) subunits. It was also possible to identify a subcomplex consisting of subunit 9 and the Rieske protein, and two subcomplexes containing cytochrome c(1) associated with core protein 1 and core protein 2, respectively. The analysis of all the cytochrome bc(1) subcomplexes with monospecific antibodies directed against Bcs1p revealed that this chaperone protein is involved in a late stage of cytochrome bc(1) complex assembly.  相似文献   

15.
Cytochrome caa3, a cytochrome c oxidase from Thermus thermophilus, is a two-subunit enzyme containing the four canonical metal centers of cytochrome c oxidases (cytochromes a and a3; copper centers CuA and CuB) and an additional cytochrome c. The smaller subunit contains heme C and was termed the C-protein. We have cloned the genes encoding the subunits of the oxidase and determined the nucleotide sequence of the C-protein gene. The gene and deduced primary amino acid sequences establish that both the gene and the protein are fusions with a typical subunit II sequence and a characteristic cytochrome c sequence; we now call this subunit IIc. The protein thus appears to represent a covalent joining of substrate (cytochrome c) to its enzyme (cytochrome c oxidase). In common with other subunits II, subunit IIc contains two hydrophobic segments of amino acids near the amino terminus that probably form transmembrane helices. Variability analysis of the Thermus and other subunit II sequences suggests that the two putative transmembrane helices in subunit II may be located on the surface of the hydrophobic portion of the intact cytochrome oxidase protein complex. Also in common with other subunits II is a relatively hydrophilic intermembrane domain containing a set of conserved amino acids (2 cysteines and 2 histidines) which have previously been proposed by others to serve as ligands to the CuA center. We compared the subunit IIc sequence with that of related proteins. N2O reductase of Pseudomonas stutzeri, a multi-copper protein that appears to contain a CuA site (Scott, R.A., Zumft, W.G., Coyle, C.L., and Dooley, D.M. (1989) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 86, 4082-4086), contains a 59-residue sequence element that is homologous to the "CuA sequence motif" found in cytochrome oxidase subunits II, including all four putative copper ligands. By contrast, subunit II of the Escherichia coli quinol oxidase, cytochrome bo, also contains a region homologous to the CuA motif, but it lacks the proposed metal binding histidine and cysteine residues; this is consistent with the apparent absence of CuA from cytochrome bo.  相似文献   

16.
Thermal stability of membrane-reconstituted yeast cytochrome c oxidase   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
P E Morin  D Diggs  E Freire 《Biochemistry》1990,29(3):781-788
The thermal dependence of the structural stability of membrane-reconstituted yeast cytochrome c oxidase has been studied by using different techniques including high-sensitivity differential scanning calorimetry, differential detergent solubility thermal gel analysis, and enzyme activity measurements. For these studies, the enzyme has been reconstituted into dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) and dielaidoylphosphatidylcholine (DEPC) vesicles using detergent dialysis. The phospholipid moiety affects the stability of the enzyme as judged by the dependence of the denaturation temperature on the lipid composition of the bilayer. The enzyme is more stable when reconstituted with the 18-carbon, unsaturated phospholipid (DEPC) than with the 14-carbon saturated phospholipid (DMPC). In addition, the shapes of the calorimetric transition profiles are different in the two lipid systems, indicating that not all of the subunits are affected equally by the lipid moiety. The overall enthalpy change for the enzyme denaturation is essentially the same for the two lipid reconstitutions (405 kcal/mol of protein for the DMPC and 425 kcal/mol for the DEPC-reconstituted enzyme). In both systems, the van't Hoff to calorimetric enthalpy ratios are less than 0.2, indicating that the unfolding of the enzyme cannot be represented as a two-state process. Differential detergent solubility experiments have allowed us to determine individual subunit thermal denaturation profiles. These experiments indicate that the major contributors to the main transition peak observed calorimetrically are subunits I and II and that the transition temperature of subunit III is the most affected by the phospholipid moiety. Experiments performed at different scanning rates indicate that the thermal denaturation of the enzyme is a kinetically controlled process characterized by activation energies on the order of 40 kcal/mol.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
Two different forms of procarboxypeptidase A (I and II) were obtained from pig pancreas extracts. The Mr values, the pattern found on polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulphate, and the sedimentation coefficients indicate that form I is a binary complex formed by two different subunits, whereas form II is a monomer. The carboxypeptidase A-precursor subunit of form I and the form II monomer are very similar with respect to Mr value, amino acid composition and fragmentation by CNBr and iodosobenzoic acid. The activation process of both forms is unspecific with respect to the activating enzyme, the peptide released during activation is unusually long (Mr approx.sor subunit of form I and the form II monomer are very similar with respect to Mr value, amino acid composition and fragmentation by CNBr and iodosobenzoic acid. The activation process of both forms is unspecific with respect to the activating enzyme, the peptide released during activation is unusually long (Mr approx.sor subunit of form I and the form II monomer are very similar with respect to Mr value, amino acid composition and fragmentation by CNBr and iodosobenzoic acid. The activation process of both forms is unspecific with respect to the activating enzyme, the peptide released during activation is unusually long (Mr approx. 12500) and, in the case of the binary complex, the activation with trypsin follows a rather complex pattern, suggesting that the accompanying subunit of form I might play a modulating role in the activation process. Although the appearance of enzymic activity is rather slow, a protein with an Mr equivalent to that of active carboxypeptidase A is found very early in the activation process. Both zymogens are glycoproteins (so far no carbohydrate has been reported in any procarboxypeptidase A) and both contain two strongly bound Zn2+ ions/molecule. Other chemical and physical properties were also determined.  相似文献   

18.
An enzyme complex with ubiquinol-cytochrome c oxidoreductase, cytochrome c oxidase, and ubiquinol oxidase activities was purified from a detergent extract of the plasma membrane of aerobically grown Paracoccus denitrificans. This ubiquinol oxidase consists of seven polypeptides and contains two b cytochromes, cytochrome c1, cytochrome aa3, and a previously unreported c-type cytochrome. This c-type cytochrome has an apparent Mr of 22,000 and an alpha absorption maximum at 552 nm. Retention of this c cytochrome through purification presumably accounts for the independence of ubiquinol oxidase activity on added cytochrome c. Ubiquinol oxidase can be separated into a 3-subunit bc1 complex, a 3-subunit c-aa3 complex, and a 57-kDa polypeptide. This, together with detection of covalently bound heme and published molecular weights of cytochrome c1 and the subunits of cytochrome c oxidase, allows tentative identification of most of the subunits of ubiquinol oxidase with the prosthetic groups present. Ubiquinol oxidase contains cytochromes corresponding to those of the mitochondrial bc1 complex, cytochrome c oxidase complex, and a bound cytochrome c. Ubiquinol-cytochrome c oxidoreductase activity of the complex is inhibited by inhibitors of the mitochondrial bc1 complex. Thus it seems likely that the pathway of electron transfer through the bc1 complex of ubiquinol oxidase is similar to that through the mitochondrial bc1 complex. The number of polypeptides present is less than half the number in the corresponding mitochondrial complexes. This structural simplicity may make ubiquinol oxidase from P. denitrificans a useful system with which to study the mechanisms of electron transfer and energy transduction in the bc1 and cytochrome c oxidase sections of the respiratory chain.  相似文献   

19.
The structural relationship between isoenzymes I and II of chloroplast glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (D-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate: NADP+ oxidoreductase (phosphorylating) EC 1.2.1.13) has been established at the protein level. The complete primary structure of subunits A and B of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase I from Spinacia oleracea has been determined by sequence analysis of the corresponding tryptic peptides, aligned by fragments derived from cyanogen bromide and Staphylococcus proteinase V8 digestions and by partially sequencing each intact subunit. Subunit A has an Mr of 36,225 and consists of 337 amino acid residues, whilst subunit B (Mr 39,355) consists of 368 residues. The amino acid sequence of subunit B, as determined through direct analysis of the protein, is identical to that recently deduced at cDNA level (Brinkmann et al. (1989) Plant Mol. Biol. 13, 81-94). The two subunits share a common portion of amino acid sequence which differs by 66 amino acid residues. Subunit B has an extra C-terminal sequence of 31 amino acid residues. Chloroplast glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase II was partially characterized by sequencing the N-terminal portion of the intact protein and some of its tryptic peptides. The sequences of all the examined fragments fit precisely that of the corresponding regions of subunit A from glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase I.  相似文献   

20.
Bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase consists of 12 stoicheiometric polypeptide chains of at least 11 different types. The enzyme contains 14--16 cysteine residues; the distribution of nearly all cysteine residues over the subunits has been established. In native cytochrome c oxidase two thiol groups reacted rapidly and stoicheiometrically with 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB). These thiol groups are located in subunits I and III, respectively. This implies that subunit I is not fully buried in the hydrophobic core of the enzyme. After dissociation of the enzyme by sodium dodecyl sulphate more thiol groups became available to DTNB, in addition to those in subunits I and III, at least one in subunit II, two in fraction V/VI and one to two in the smallest subunit fraction. It is shown that separation of the subunits of cytochrome c oxidase by gel permeation chromatography in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulphate depends on the pH of the elution medium. The elution volume of subunits I, III and VII is dependent on pH, that of the others independent.  相似文献   

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