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1.
Cytochrome c oxidase (CytcO) is a membrane-bound enzyme, which catalyzes the reduction of di-oxygen to water and uses a major part of the free energy released in this reaction to pump protons across the membrane. In the Rhodobacter sphaeroides aa? CytcO all protons that are pumped across the membrane, as well as one half of the protons that are used for O? reduction, are transferred through one specific intraprotein proton pathway, which holds a highly conserved Glu286 residue. Key questions that need to be addressed in order to understand the function of CytcO at a molecular level are related to the timing of proton transfers from Glu286 to a "pump site" and the catalytic site, respectively. Here, we have investigated the temperature dependencies of the H/D kinetic-isotope effects of intramolecular proton-transfer reactions in the wild-type CytcO as well as in two structural CytcO variants, one in which proton uptake from solution is delayed and one in which proton pumping is uncoupled from O? reduction. These processes were studied for two specific reaction steps linked to transmembrane proton pumping, one that involves only proton transfer (peroxy-ferryl, P→F, transition) and one in which the same sequence of proton transfers is also linked to electron transfer to the catalytic site (ferryl-oxidized, F→O, transition). An analysis of these reactions in the framework of theory indicates that that the simpler, P→F reaction is rate-limited by proton transfer from Glu286 to the catalytic site. When the same proton-transfer events are also linked to electron transfer to the catalytic site (F→O), the proton-transfer reactions might well be gated by a protein structural change, which presumably ensures that the proton-pumping stoichiometry is maintained also in the presence of a transmembrane electrochemical gradient. Furthermore, the present study indicates that a careful analysis of the temperature dependence of the isotope effect should help us in gaining mechanistic insights about CytcO.  相似文献   

2.
We have investigated the dynamics of proton equilibration within the proton-transfer pathway of cytochrome c oxidase from bovine heart that is used for the transfer of both substrate and pumped protons during reaction of the reduced enzyme with oxygen (D-pathway). The kinetics of the slowest phase in the oxidation of the enzyme (the oxo-ferryl --> oxidized transition, F --> O), which is associated with proton uptake, were studied by monitoring absorbance changes at 445 nm. The rate constant of this transition, which is 800 s(-)(1) in H(2)O (at pH approximately 7.5), displayed a kinetic deuterium isotope effect of approximately 4 (i.e., the rate was approximately 200 s(-)(1) in 100% D(2)O). To investigate the kinetics of the onset of the deuterium isotope effect, fully reduced, solubilized CO-bound cytochrome c oxidase in H(2)O was mixed rapidly at a ratio of 1:5 with a D(2)O buffer saturated with oxygen. After a well-defined time period, CO was flashed off using a short laser flash. The time between mixing and flashing off CO was varied within the range 0. 04-10 s. The results show that for the bovine enzyme, the onset of the deuterium isotope effect takes place within two time windows of O transition is internal proton transfer from a site, proposed to be Glu (I-286) (R. sphaeroides amino acid residue numbering), to the binuclear center. The spontaneous equilibration of protons/deuterons with this site in the interior of the protein is slow (approximately 1 s).  相似文献   

3.
In the reaction cycle of cytochrome c oxidase from Rhodobacter sphaeroides, one of the steps that are coupled to proton pumping, the oxo-ferryl-to-oxidized transition (F --> O), displays a large kinetic deuterium isotope effect of about 7. In this study we have investigated in detail the dependence of the kinetics of this reaction step ?k(FO)(chi) on the fraction (chi) D(2)O in the enzyme solution (proton-inventory technique). According to a simplified version of the Gross-Butler equation, from the shape of the graph describing k(FO)(chi)/k(FO)(0), conclusions can be drawn concerning the number of protonatable sites involved in the rate-limiting proton-transfer reaction step. Even though the proton-transfer reaction during the F --> O transition takes place over a distance of at least 30 A and involves a large number of protonatable sites, the proton-inventory analysis displayed a linear dependence, which indicates that the entire deuterium isotope effect of 7 is associated with a single protonatable site. On the basis of experiments with site-directed mutants of cytochrome c oxidase, this localized proton-transfer rate control is proposed to be associated with glutamate (I-286) in the D-pathway. Consequently, the results indicate that proton transfer from the glutamate controls the rate of all events during the F --> O reaction step. The proton-inventory analysis of the overall enzyme turnover reveals a nonlinear plot characteristic of at least two protonatable sites involved in the rate-limiting step in the transition state, which indicates that this step does not involve proton transfer through the same pathway (or through the same mechanism) as during the F --> O transition.  相似文献   

4.
In the membrane-bound redox-driven proton pump cytochrome c oxidase, electron- and proton-transfer reactions must be coupled, which requires controlled modulation of the kinetic and/or thermodynamic properties of proton-transfer reactions through the membrane-spanning part of the protein. In this study we have investigated proton-transfer reactions through a pathway that is used for the transfer of both substrate and pumped protons in cytochrome c oxidase from Rhodobacter sphaeroides. Specifically, we focus on the formation of the so-called F intermediate, which is rate limited by an internal proton-transfer reaction from a possible branching point in the pathway, at a glutamic-acid residue (E(I-286)), to the binuclear center. We have also studied the reprotonation of E(I-286) from the bulk solution. Evaluation of the data in terms of a model presented in this work gives a rate of internal proton transfer from E(I-286) to the proton acceptor at the catalytic site of 1.1 x 10(4) s(-1). The apparent pK(a) of the donor (E(I-286)), determined from the pH dependence of the F-formation kinetics, was found to be 9.4, while the pK(a) of the proton acceptor at the catalytic site is likely to be > or = 2.5 pH units higher. In the pH range up to pH 10 the proton equilibrium between the bulk solution and E(I-286) was much faster than 10(4) s(-1), while in the pH range above pH 10 the proton uptake from solution is rate limiting for the overall reaction. The apparent second-order rate constant for proton transfer from the bulk solution to E(I-286) is >10(13) M(-1) s(-1), which indicates that the proton uptake is assisted by a local buffer consisting of protonatable residues at the protein surface.  相似文献   

5.
Lepp H  Svahn E  Faxén K  Brzezinski P 《Biochemistry》2008,47(17):4929-4935
Cytochrome c oxidase couples electron transfer from cytochrome c to O 2 to proton pumping across the membrane. In the initial part of the reaction of the reduced cytochrome c oxidase with O 2, an electron is transferred from heme a to the catalytic site, parallel to the membrane surface. Even though this electron transfer is not linked to proton uptake from solution, recently Belevich et al. [(2006) Nature 440, 829] showed that it is linked to transfer of charge perpendicular to the membrane surface (electrogenic reaction). This electrogenic reaction was attributed to internal transfer of a proton from Glu286, in the D proton pathway, to an unidentified protonatable site "above" the heme groups. The proton transfer was proposed to initiate the sequence of events leading to proton pumping. In this study, we have investigated electrogenic reactions in structural variants of cytochrome c oxidase in which residues in the second, K proton pathway of cytochrome c oxidase were modified. The results indicate that the electrogenic reaction linked to electron transfer to the catalytic site originates from charge transfer within the K pathway, which presumably facilitates reduction of the site.  相似文献   

6.
A theory of proton coupled electron transfer (PCET) is reviewed with application to charge transfer steps in the photosystem II oxygen-evolving complex (PSII/OEC). The relation between PCET when it is a concerted electron proton transfer (ETPT) process and hydrogen-atom transfer (HAT) reactions is discussed. Signatures expected for HAT reactions in terms of the size of the kinetic isotope effect and overall magnitude of the rate constant are discussed in the context of PSII/OEC. The formal similarity of ETPT to proton transfer and translocation is used to introduce a combined quantum mechanical (for the transferring protons) and molecular dynamics for the heavy-atom degrees of freedom approach. The method is used to examine double proton transfer in cytochrome c oxidase where two waters and a glutamate (Glu286) that is implicated in the proton translocation mechanism form a cyclic hydrogen bonded structure. Protonation of the glutamate is found to occur in agreement with experimental results.  相似文献   

7.
We have investigated the electron-proton coupling during the peroxy (P(R)) to oxo-ferryl (F) and F to oxidised (O) transitions in cytochrome c oxidase from Rhodobacter sphaeroides. The kinetics of these reactions were investigated in two different mutant enzymes: (1) ED(I-286), in which one of the key residues in the D-pathway, E(I-286), was replaced by an aspartate which has a shorter side chain than that of the glutamate and, (2) ML(II-263), in which the redox potential of Cu(A) is increased by approximately 100 mV, which slows electron transfer to the binuclear centre during the F-->O transition by a factor of approximately 200. In ED(I-286) proton uptake during P(R)-->F was slowed by a factor of approximately 5, which indicates that E(I-286) is the proton donor to P(R). In addition, in the mutant enzyme the F-->O transition rate displayed a deuterium isotope effect of approximately 2.5 as compared with approximately 7 in the wild-type enzyme. Since the entire deuterium isotope effect was shown to be associated with a single proton-transfer reaction in which the proton donor and acceptor must approach each other (M. Karpefors, P. Adelroth, P. Brzezinski, Biochemistry 39 (2000) 6850), the smaller deuterium isotope effect in ED(I-286) indicates that proton transfer from E(I-286) determines the rate also of the F-->O transition. In ML(II-263) the electron-transfer to the binuclear centre is slower than the intrinsic proton-transfer rate through the D-pathway. Nevertheless, both electron and proton transfer to the binuclear centre displayed a deuterium isotope effect of approximately 8, i.e., about the same as in the wild-type enzyme, which shows that these reactions are intimately coupled.  相似文献   

8.
Cytochrome c oxidase is a membrane-bound enzyme, which catalyses the one-electron oxidation of four molecules of cytochrome c and the four-electron reduction of O(2) to water. Electron transfer through the enzyme is coupled to proton pumping across the membrane. Protons that are pumped as well as those that are used for O(2) reduction are transferred though a specific intraprotein (D) pathway. Results from earlier studies have shown that replacement of residue Asn139 by an Asp, at the beginning of the D pathway, results in blocking proton pumping without slowing uptake of substrate protons used for O(2) reduction. Furthermore, introduction of the acidic residue results in an increase of the apparent pK(a) of E286, an internal proton donor to the catalytic site, from 9.4 to ~11. In this study we have investigated intramolecular electron and proton transfer in a mutant cytochrome c oxidase in which a neutral residue, Thr, was introduced at the 139 site. The mutation results in uncoupling of proton pumping from O(2) reduction, but a decrease in the apparent pK(a) of E286 from 9.4 to 7.6. The data provide insights into the mechanism by which cytochrome c oxidase pumps protons and the structural elements involved in this process.  相似文献   

9.
During the last few years our knowledge of the structure and function of heme copper oxidases has greatly profited from the use of site-directed mutagenesis in combination with biophysical techniques. This, together with the recently-determined crystal structures of cytochrome c oxidase, has now made it possible to design experiments aimed at targeting specific pump mechanisms. Here, we summarize results from our recent kinetic studies of electron and proton-transfer reactions in wild-type and mutant forms of cytochrome c oxidase from Rhodobacter sphaeroides. These studies have made it possible to identify amino acid residues involved in proton transfer during specific reaction steps and provide a basis for discussion of mechanisms of electron and proton transfer in terminal oxidases. The results indicate that the pathway through K(I-362)/T(I-359), but not through D(I-132)/E(I-286), is used for proton transfer to a protonatable group interacting electrostatically with heme a 3, i.e., upon reduction of the binuclear center. The pathway through D(I-132)/E(I-286) is used for uptake of pumped and substrate protons during the pumping steps during O2 reduction.  相似文献   

10.
The N139D mutant of cytochrome c oxidase from Rhodobacter sphaeroides retains full steady state oxidase activity but completely lacks proton translocation coupled to turnover in reconstituted liposomes (Pawate, A. S., Morgan, J., Namslauer, A., Mills, D., Brzezinski, P., Ferguson-Miller, S., and Gennis, R. B. (2002) Biochemistry 41, 13417-13423). Here, time-resolved electron transfer and vectorial charge translocation in the ferryl-oxo --> oxidized transition (transfer of the 4th electron in the catalytic cycle) have been studied with the N139D mutant using ruthenium(II)-tris-bipyridyl complex as a photoactive single-electron donor. With the wild type oxidase, the flash-induced generation of Deltaphi in the ferryl-oxo --> oxidized transition begins with rapid vectorial electron transfer from CuA to heme a (tau approximately 15 micros), followed by two protonic phases, referred to as the intermediate (0.4 ms) and slow electrogenic phases (1.5 ms). In the N139D mutant, only a single protonic phase (tau approximately 0.6 ms) is observed, which was associated with electron transfer from heme a to the heme a3/CuB site and decelerates approximately 4-fold in D2O. With the wild type oxidase, such a high H2O/D2O solvent isotope effect is characteristic of only the slow (1.5 ms) phase. Presumably, the 0.6-ms electrogenic phase in the N139D mutant reports proton transfer from the inner aqueous phase to Glu-286, replacing the "chemical" proton transferred from Glu-286 to the heme a3/CuB site. The transfer occurs through the D-channel, because it is observed also in the N139D/K362M double mutant in which the K-channel is blocked. It is concluded that the intermediate electrogenic phase observed in the wild type enzyme is missing in the N139D mutant and is because of translocation of the "pumped" proton from Glu-286 to the D-ring propionate of heme a3 or to release of this proton to the outer aqueous phase. Significantly, with the wild type oxidase, the protonic electrogenic phase associated with proton pumping (approximately 0.4 ms) precedes the electrogenic phase associated with the oxygen chemistry (approximately 1.5 ms).  相似文献   

11.
The aspartate-132 in subunit I (D(I-132)) of cytochrome c oxidase from Rhodobacter sphaeroides is located on the cytoplasmic surface of the protein at the entry point of a proton-transfer pathway used for both substrate and pumped protons (D-pathway). Replacement of D(I-132) by its nonprotonatable analogue asparagine (DN(I-132)) has been shown to result in a reduced overall activity of the enzyme and impaired proton pumping. The results from this study show that during oxidation of the fully reduced enzyme the reaction was inhibited after formation of the oxo-ferryl (F) intermediate (tau congruent with 120 microseconds). In contrast to the wild-type enzyme, in the mutant enzyme formation of this intermediate was not associated with proton uptake from solution, which is the reason the DN(I-132) enzyme does not pump protons. The proton needed to form F was presumably taken from a protonatable group in the D-pathway (e.g., E(I-286)), which indicates that in the wild-type enzyme the proton transfer during F formation takes place in two steps: proton transfer from the group in the pathway is followed by faster reprotonation from the bulk solution, through D(I-132). Unlike the wild-type enzyme, in which F formation is coupled to internal electron transfer from CuA to heme a, in the DN(I-132) enzyme this electron transfer was uncoupled from formation of the F intermediate, which presumably is due to the impaired charge-compensating proton uptake from solution. In the presence of arachidonic acid which has been shown to stimulate the turnover activity of the DN(I-132) enzyme (Fetter et al. (1996) FEBS Lett. 393, 155), proton uptake with a time constant of approximately 2 ms was observed. However, no proton uptake associated with formation of F (tau congruent with 120 micros) was observed, which indicates that arachidonic acid can replace the role of D(I-132), but it cannot transfer protons as fast as the Asp. The results from this study show that D(I-132) is crucial for efficient transfer of protons into the enzyme and that in the DN(I-132) mutant enzyme there is a "kinetic barrier" for proton transfer into the D-pathway.  相似文献   

12.
Proton translocation in the catalytic cycle of cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) proceeds sequentially in a four-stroke manner. Every electron donated by cytochrome c drives the enzyme from one of four relatively stable intermediates to another, and each of these transitions is coupled to proton translocation across the membrane, and to uptake of another proton for production of water in the catalytic site. Using cytochrome c oxidase from Paracoccus denitrificans we have studied the kinetics of electron transfer and electric potential generation during several such transitions, two of which are reported here. The extent of electric potential generation during initial electron equilibration between CuA and heme a confirms that this reaction is not kinetically linked to vectorial proton transfer, whereas oxidation of heme a is kinetically coupled to the main proton translocation events during functioning of the proton pump. We find that the rates and amplitudes in multiphase heme a oxidation are different in the OH-->EH and PM-->F steps of the catalytic cycle, and that this is reflected in the kinetics of electric potential generation. We discuss this difference in terms of different driving forces and relate our results, and data from the literature, to proposed mechanisms of proton pumping in cytochrome c oxidase.  相似文献   

13.
One of the key problems of molecular bioenergetics is the understanding of the function of redox-driven proton pumps on a molecular level. One such class of proton pumps are the heme-copper oxidases. These enzymes are integral membrane proteins in which proton translocation across the membrane is driven by electron transfer from a low-potential donor, such as, e.g. cytochrome c, to a high-potential acceptor, O(2). Proton pumping is associated with distinct exergonic reaction steps that involve gradual reduction of oxygen to water. During the process of O(2) reduction, unprotonated high pK(a) proton acceptors are created at the catalytic site. Initially, these proton acceptors become protonated as a result of intramolecular proton transfer from a residue(s) located in the membrane-spanning part of the enzyme, but removed from the catalytic site. This residue is then reprotonated from the bulk solution. In cytochrome c oxidase from Rhodobacter sphaeroides, the proton is initially transferred from a glutamate, E(I-286), which has an apparent pK(a) of 9.4. According to a recently published structure of the enzyme, the deprotonation of E(I-286) is likely to result in minor structural changes that propagate to protonatable groups on the proton output (positive) side of the protein. We propose that in this way, the free energy available from the O(2) reduction is conserved during the proton transfer. On the basis of the observation of these structural changes, a possible proton-pumping model is presented in this paper. Initially, the structural changes associated with deprotonation of E(I-286) result in the transfer of a proton to an acceptor for pumped protons from the input (negative) side of the membrane. After reprotonation of E(I-286) this acceptor releases a proton to the output side of the membrane.  相似文献   

14.
Cytochrome c oxidase from Rhodobacter sphaeroides has two proton-input pathways leading from the protein surface towards the catalytic site, located within the membrane-spanning part of the enzyme. One of these pathways, the D-pathway, contains a highly conserved Glu residue [E(I-286)], which plays an important role in proton transfer through the pathway. In a recent study, we showed that a mutant enzyme in which E(I-286) was re-located to the opposite side of the D-pathway [EA(I-286)/IE(I-112) double mutant enzyme] was able to pump protons, although with a stoichiometry that was lower than that of the wild-type enzyme (approximately 0.6 H(+)/e(-)) (Aagaard et al. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 15847-15850). These results showed that the residue must not necessarily be located at a specific place in the amino-acid sequence, but rather at a specific location in space. In this study, we have investigated the effect of moving E(I-286) on the kinetics of specific reaction steps of the catalytic cycle in the pH range 6-11. Our results show that during the reaction of the four-electron reduced enzyme with O(2), the rates of the two first transitions (up to formation of the 'peroxy' intermediate, P(r)) are the same for the double mutant as for the wild-type enzyme, but formation of the oxo-ferryl (F) and fully oxidized (O) states, associated with proton uptake from the bulk solution, are slowed by factors of approximately 30 and approximately 400, respectively. Thus, in spite of the dramatically reduced transition rates, the proton-pumping stoichiometry is reduced only by approximately 40%. The apparent pK(a) values in the pH-dependencies of the rates of the P(R)-->F and F-->O transitions were >3 and approximately 2 units lower than those of the corresponding transitions in the wild-type enzyme, respectively. The relation between the modified pK(a)s, the transition rates between oxygen intermediates and the pumping stoichiometry is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Michel H 《Biochemistry》1999,38(46):15129-15140
Cytochrome c oxidase catalyzes the reduction of molecular oxygen to water, a process in which four electrons, four protons, and one molecule of oxygen are consumed. The reaction is coupled to the pumping of four additional protons across the membrane. According to the currently accepted concept, the pumping of all four protons occurs after the binding of oxygen to the reduced enzyme and is exclusively coupled to the last two electron transfer steps. A careful analysis of the existing data shows that there is no experimental evidence for this paradigm. It is more likely that only three protons are pumped during the second half of the catalytic cycle of cytochrome c oxidase after the reaction with oxygen. In this article a variant of a recent mechanistic model of proton pumping by electrostatic repulsion is discussed. It is based on the electroneutrality principle in a way that in the catalytic cycle each electron transfer to the membrane-embedded electron acceptors is charge-compensated by uptake of one proton. The mechanism takes into account the findings with mutant cytochrome c oxidases and explains the results of many recent experiments, including the effects of hydrogen peroxide.  相似文献   

16.
The ligand-binding dynamics and the reaction with O(2) of the fully (five-electron) reduced cytochrome caa(3) from the thermohalophilic bacterium Rhodothermus (R.) marinus were investigated. The enzyme is a proton pump which has all the residues of the proton-transfer pathways found in the mitochondrial-like enzymes conserved, except for one of the key elements of the D-pathway, the helix-VI glutamate [Glu(I-286), R. sphaeroides numbering]. In contrast to what has been suggested previously as general characteristics of thermophilic enzymes, during formation of the R. marinus caa(3)-CO complex, CO binds weakly to Cu(B), and is rapidly (k(Ba) = 450 s(-1)) trapped by irreversible (K(Ba) = 4.5 x 10(3)) binding to heme a(3). Upon reaction of the fully reduced enzyme with O(2), four kinetic phases were resolved during the first 10 ms after initiation of the reaction. On the basis of a comparison to reactions observed with the bovine enzyme, these phases were attributed to the following transitions between intermediates (pH 7.8, 1 mM O(2)): R --> A (tau congruent with 8 micros), A --> P(r) (tau congruent with 35 micros), P(r) --> F (tau congruent with 240 micros), F --> O (tau congruent with 2.5 ms), where the last two phases were associated with proton uptake from the bulk solution. Oxidation of heme c was observed only during the last two reaction steps. The slower transition times as compared to those observed with the bovine enzyme most likely reflect the replacement of Glu(I-286) of the helix-VI motif -XGHPEV- by a tyrosine in the R. marinus enzyme in the motif -YSHPXV-. The presence of an additional, fifth electron in the enzyme was reflected by two additional kinetic phases with time constants of approximately 20 and approximately 720 ms during which the fifth electron reequilibrated within the enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
Cytochrome c oxidase (CytcO) is a redox-driven, membrane-bound proton pump. One of the proton transfer pathways of the enzyme, the D pathway, used for the transfer of both substrate and pumped protons, accommodates a network of hydrogen-bonded water molecules that span the distance between an aspartate (Asp(132)), near the protein surface, and glutamate Glu(286), which is an internal proton donor to the catalytic site. To investigate how changes in the environment around Glu(286) affect the mechanism of proton transfer through the pathway, we introduced a non-hydrogen-bonding (Ala) or an acidic residue (Asp) at position Ser(197) (S197A or S197D), located approximately 7 A from Glu(286). Although Ser(197) is hydrogen-bonded to a water molecule that is part of the D pathway "proton wire," replacement of the Ser by an Ala did not affect the proton transfer rate. In contrast, the S197D mutant CytcO displayed a turnover activity of approximately 35% of that of the wild-type CytcO, and the O(2) reduction reaction was not linked to proton pumping. Instead, a fraction of the substrate protons was taken from the positive ("incorrect") side of the membrane. Furthermore, the pH dependence of the proton transfer rate was altered in the mutant CytcO. The results indicate that there is plasticity in the water coordination of the proton pathway, but alteration of the electrostatic potential within the pathway results in uncoupling of the proton translocation machinery.  相似文献   

18.
Cytochrome c oxidase is the terminal electron acceptor in the respiratory chains of aerobic organisms and energetically couples the reduction of oxygen to water to proton pumping across the membrane. The mechanisms of proton uptake, gating, and pumping have yet to be completely elucidated at the molecular level for these enzymes. For Rhodobacter sphaeroides CytcO (cytochrome aa3), it appears as though the E286 side chain of subunit I is a branching point from which protons are shuttled either to the catalytic site for O2 reduction or to the acceptor site for pumped protons. Amide hydrogen-deuterium exchange mass spectrometry was used to investigate how mutation of this key branching residue to histidine (E286H) affects the structures and dynamics of four redox intermediate states. A functional characterization of this mutant reveals that E286H CytcO retains approximately 1% steady-state activity that is uncoupled from proton pumping and that proton transfer from H286 is significantly slowed. Backbone amide H-D exchange kinetics indicates that specific regions of CytcO, perturbed by the E286H mutation, are likely to be involved in proton gating and in the exit pathway for pumped protons. The results indicate that redox-dependent conformational changes around E286 are essential for internal proton transfer. E286H CytcO, however, is incapable of these specific conformational changes and therefore is insensitive to the redox state of the enzyme. These data support a model where the side chain conformation of E286 controls proton translocation in CytcO through its interactions with the proton gate, which directs the flow of protons either to the active site or to the exit pathway. In the E286H mutant, the proton gate does not function properly and the exit channel is unresponsive. These results provide new insight into the structure and mechanism of proton translocation by CytcO.  相似文献   

19.
Jünemann S  Meunier B  Fisher N  Rich PR 《Biochemistry》1999,38(16):5248-5255
We have studied the effects of mutations, E286Q and E286D, of the conserved glutamate in subunit I of cytochrome c oxidase from Rhodobacter sphaeroides with a view to evaluating the role of this residue in redox-linked proton translocation. The mutation E286D did not have any dramatic effects on enzyme properties and retained 50% of wild-type catalytic activity. For E286Q a fraction of the binuclear center was trapped in an unreactive, spectrally distinct form which is most likely due to misfolded protein, but the majority of E286Q reacted normally with formate and cyanide in the oxidized state, and with carbon monoxide and cyanide in the dithionite-reduced form. The mutation also had little effect on the pH-dependent redox properties of haem a in the reactive fraction. However, formation of the P state from oxidized enzyme with hydrogen peroxide or by aerobic incubation with carbon monoxide was inhibited. In particular, only an F-type product was obtained, at less than 25% yield, in the reaction with hydrogen peroxide. The aerobic steady state in the presence of ferrous cytochrome c was characterized by essentially fully reduced haem a and ferric haem a3, suggesting that the mutation hinders electron transfer from haem a to the binuclear center. Under these conditions or after reoxidation, on a seconds time scale, of haem a3 following anaerobiosis, there was no indication of accumulation of significant amounts of P state. We propose that the glutamate is implicated in several steps in the catalytic cycle, O --> R, P --> F, and, possibly, F --> O. The results are discussed in relation to the "glutamate trap" model for proton translocation.  相似文献   

20.
Heme-copper oxidases are membrane-bound proteins that catalyze the reduction of O(2) to H(2)O, a highly exergonic reaction. Part of the free energy of this reaction is used for pumping of protons across the membrane. The ba(3) oxidase from Thermus thermophilus presumably uses a single proton pathway for the transfer of substrate protons used during O(2) reduction as well as for the transfer of the protons that are pumped across the membrane. The pumping stoichiometry (0.5 H(+)/electron) is lower than that of most other (mitochondrial-like) oxidases characterized to date (1?H(+)/electron). We studied the pH dependence and deuterium isotope effect of the kinetics of electron and proton transfer reactions in the ba(3) oxidase. The results from these studies suggest that the movement of protons to the catalytic site and movement to a site located some distance from the catalytic site [proposed to be a "proton-loading site" (PLS) for pumped protons] are separated in time, which allows individual investigation of these reactions. A scenario in which the uptake and release of a pumped proton occurs upon every second transfer of an electron to the catalytic site would explain the decreased proton pumping stoichiometry compared to that of mitochondrial-like oxidases.  相似文献   

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