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1.
G. Unden  A. Kröger 《BBA》1983,725(2):325-331
Incorporation of the electron-transport enzymes of Vibrio succinogenes into liposomes was used to investigate the question of whether, in this organism, a cytochrome b is involved in electron transport from formate to fumarate on the formate side of menaquinone. (1) Formate dehydrogenase lacking cytochrome b was prepared by splitting the cytochrome from the formate dehydrogenase complex. The enzyme consisted of two different subunits (Mr 110 000 and 20 000), catalyzed the reduction of 2,3-dimethyl-1,4-naphthoquinone by formate, and could be incorporated into liposomes. (2) The modified enzyme did not restore electron transport from formate to fumarate when incorporated into liposomes together with vitamin K-1 (instead of menaquinone) and fumarate reductase complex. In contrast, restoration was observed in liposomes that contained formate dehydrogenase with cytochrome b (Em = ?224 mV), in addition to the subunits mentioned above (formate dehydrogenase complex). (3) In the liposomes containing formate dehydrogenase complex and fumarate reductase complex, the response of the cytochrome b of the formate dehydrogenase complex was consistent with its interaction on the formate side of menaquinone in a linear sequence of the components. The low-potential cytochrome b associated with fumarate reductase complex was not reducible by formate under any condition. It is concluded that the low-potential cytochrome b of the formate dehydrogenase complex is an essential component in the electron transport from formate to menaquinone. The low-potential cytochrome b of the fumarate reductase complex could not replace the former cytochrome in restoring electron-transport activity.  相似文献   

2.
Hydrogenase and fumarate reductase isolated from Wolinella succinogenes were incorporated into liposomes containing menaquinone. The two enzymes were found to be oriented solely to the outside of the resulting proteoliposomes. The proteoliposomes catalyzed fumarate reduction by H2 which generated an electrical proton potential (Delta(psi) = 0.19 V, negative inside) in the same direction as that generated by fumarate respiration in cells of W. succinogenes. The H+/e ratio brought about by fumarate reduction with H2 in proteoliposomes in the presence of valinomycin and external K+ was approximately 1. The same Delta(psi) and H+/e ratio was associated with the reduction of 2,3-dimethyl-1,4-naphthoquinone (DMN) by H2 in proteoliposomes containing menaquinone and hydrogenase with or without fumarate reductase. Proteoliposomes containing menaquinone and fumarate reductase with or without hydrogenase catalyzed fumarate reduction by DMNH2 which did not generate a Delta(psi). Incorporation of formate dehydrogenase together with fumarate reductase and menaquinone resulted in proteoliposomes catalyzing the reduction of fumarate or DMN by formate. Both reactions generated a Delta(psi) of 0.13 V (negative inside). The H+/e ratio of formate oxidation by menaquinone or DMN was close to 1. The results demonstrate for the first time that coupled fumarate respiration can be restored in liposomes using the well characterized electron transport enzymes isolated from W. succinogenes. The results support the view that Delta(psi) generation is coupled to menaquinone reduction by H2 or formate, but not to menaquinol oxidation by fumarate. Delta(psi) generation is probably caused by proton uptake from the cytoplasmic side of the membrane during menaquinone reduction, and by the coupled release of protons from H2 or formate oxidation on the periplasmic side. This mechanism is supported by the properties of two hydrogenase mutants of W. succinogenes which indicate that the site of quinone reduction is close to the cytoplasmic surface of the membrane.  相似文献   

3.
G. Unden  A. Kröger 《BBA》1982,682(2):258-263
Fumarate reduction by formate in Vibrio succinogenes is catalyzed by a membrane-bound electron-transport chain, and is coupled with the phosphorylation of ADP. The electron-transport chain was reconstituted in liposomes from the isolated components. The formate dehydrogenase complex (three different peptides), the fumarate reductase complex (three different peptides) and vitamin K-1 were required for the electron transport. The pathway of the electrons from formate to fumarate in the reconstituted chain was identical with that in the bacterial membrane. Each of the active enzyme complexes in the liposomes participated in the electron transport. This was valid for proteoliposomes with ratios of the contents of the two enzyme complexes ranging between 0.1 and 10. This indicates that vitamin K-1 forms a diffusible pool within the liposomal membrane that allows every quinone molecule to react with each molecule of the two enzyme complexes.  相似文献   

4.
1. Proteus mirabilis formed fumarate reductase under anaerobic growth conditions. The formation of this reductase was repressed under conditions of growth during which electron transport to oxygen or to nitrate is possible. In two of three tested chlorate-resistant mutant strains of the wild type, fumarate reductase appeared to be affected. 2. Cytoplasmic membrane suspensions isolated from anaerobically grown P. mirabilis oxidized formate and NADH with oxygen and with fumarate, too. 3. Spectral investigation of the cytoplasmic membrane preparation revealed the presence of (probably at least two types of) cytochrome b, cytochrome a1 and cytochrome d. Cytochrome b was reduced by NADH as well as by formate to approximately 80%. 4. 2-n-Heptyl-4-hydroxyquinilone-N-oxide and antimycin A inhibited oxidation of both formate and NADH by oxygen and fumarate. Both inhibitors increased the level of the formate/oxygen steady state and the formate/fumarate steady state. 5. The site of inhibition of the respiratory activity by both HQNO and antimycin A was located at the oxidation side of cytochrome b. 6. The effect of ultraviolet-irradiation of cytoplasmic membrane suspensions on oxidation/reduction phenomena suggested that the role of menaquinone is more exclusive in the formate/fumarate pathway than in the electron transport route to oxygen. 7. Finally, the conclusion has been drawn that the preferential route for electron transport from formate and from NADH to fumarate (and to oxygen) includes cytochrome b as a directly involved carrier. A hypothetical scheme for the electron transport in anaerobically grown P. mirabilis is presented.  相似文献   

5.
The electron-transport chain catalyzing fumarate reduction by formate has recently been reconstituted from the formate dehydrogenase complex and the fumarate reductase complex from Vibro succinogenes, in a liposomal preparation containing vitamin K-1 (Unden, G. and Kröger, A. (1982) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 682, 258–263). We have now investigated the structural properties of this preparation. The preparation was found to consist of a homogeneous population of unilamellar proteoliposomes with an average diameter of about 100 nm and an internal volume of 2–4 ml / g phospholipid. The buoyant density (1.07 g / ml) was consistent with the protein / phospholipid ratio (0.2 g / g) of the preparation. Leakage of glucose from the internal spaces of the proteoliposomes was negligibly slow. Proteoliposomes prepared with either of the enzyme complexes showed peripheral projections mainly on the outer surface, when examined by electron microscopy after negative staining. The size, orientation and surface density of the projections were consistent with those of the enzymes. Most of the substrate and dye-reactive sites (70–90%) of the enzymes in the proteoliposomes were accessible to external non-permeant substrates. The proteoliposomes catalyzing electron transport were formed by freeze-thawing a mixture of liposomes and protein-phospholipid complexes which did not perform electron transport from formate to fumarate. Nearly the entire amount of the enzymes supplied (0.2 g protein / g phospholipid) was incorporated into the liposomes by this procedure. The transformation of liposomes into proteoliposomes was accompanied by exchange of the internal solutes with the external medium.  相似文献   

6.
Various dehydrogenases, reductases, and electron transfer proteins involved in respiratory sulfate reduction by Desulfovibrio gigas have been localized with respect to the periplasmic space, membrane, and cytoplasm. This species was grown on a lactate-sulfate medium, and the distribution of enzyme activities and concentrations of electron transfer components were determined in intact cells, cell fractions prepared with a French press, and lysozyme spheroplasts. A significant fraction of formate dehydrogenase was demonstrated to be localized in the periplasmic space in addition to hydrogenase and some c-type cytochrome. Cytochrome b, menaquinone, fumarate reductase, and nitrite reductase were largely localized on the cytoplasmic membrane. Fumarate reductase was situated on the inner aspect on the membrane, and the nitrite reductase appeared to be transmembraneous. Adenylylsulfate reductase, bisulfite reductase (desulfoviridin), pyruvate dehydrogenase, and succinate dehydrogenase activities were localized in the cytoplasm. Significant amounts of hydrogenase and c-type cytochromes were also detected in the cytoplasm. Growth of D. gigas on a formate-sulfate medium containing acetate resulted in a 10-fold increase in membrane-bound formate dehydrogenase and a doubling of c-type cytochromes. Growth on fumarate with formate resulted in an additional increase in b-type cytochrome compared with lactate-sulfate-grown cells.  相似文献   

7.
1. Electron transport particles obtained from cell-free extracts of Propionibacterium shermanii by centrifugation at 105000 times g for 3 hrs oxidized NADH, D,L-lactate, L-glycerol-3-phosphate and succinate with oxygen and, except for succinate, with fumarate, too. 2. Spectral investigation of the electron transport particles revealed the presence of cytochromes b, d and o, and traces of cytochrome alpha1 and a c-type cytochrome. Cytochrome b was reduced by succinate to about 50%, and by NADH, lactate or glycerol-3-phosphate to 80--90%. 3. The inhibitory effects of amytal and rotenone on NADH oxidation, but not on the oxidation of the other substrates, indicated the presence of the NADH dehydrogenase complex, or "site I region", in the electron transport system of P. shermanii. 4. NQNO inhibited substrate oxidations by oxygen and fumarate, as well as equilibration of the flavoproteins of the substrate dehydrogenases by way of menaquinone. The inhibition occurred at low concentrations of the inhibitor and reached 80--100%, depending on the substrate tested. The site of inhibition of the respiratory activity was located between menaquinone and cytochrome b. In addition, inhibition of flavoprotein equilibration suggested that NQNO acted upon the electron transfer directed from menaquinol towards the acceptor to be reduced, either cytochrome b or the flavoproteins, which would include fumarate reductase. 5. In NQNO-inhibited particles, cytochrome b was not oxidized by oxygen-free fumarate, but readily oxidized by oxygen. It was concluded from this and the above evidence that the branching-point of the electron transport chain towards fumarate reductase was located at the menaquinone in P. shermanii. It was further concluded that all cytochromes were situated in the oxygen-linked branch of the chain, which formed a dead end of the system under anaerobic conditions. 6. Antimycin A inhibited only oxygen-linked reactions of the particles to about 50% at high concentrations of the inhibitor. Inhibitors of terminal oxidases were inactive, except for carbon monoxide.  相似文献   

8.
Wolinella succinogenes performs oxidative phosphorylation with fumarate instead of O2 as terminal electron acceptor and H2 or formate as electron donors. Fumarate reduction by these donors ('fumarate respiration') is catalyzed by an electron transport chain in the bacterial membrane, and is coupled to the generation of an electrochemical proton potential (Deltap) across the bacterial membrane. The experimental evidence concerning the electron transport and its coupling to Deltap generation is reviewed in this article. The electron transport chain consists of fumarate reductase, menaquinone (MK) and either hydrogenase or formate dehydrogenase. Measurements indicate that the Deltap is generated exclusively by MK reduction with H2 or formate; MKH2 oxidation by fumarate appears to be an electroneutral process. However, evidence derived from the crystal structure of fumarate reductase suggests an electrogenic mechanism for the latter process.  相似文献   

9.
Maximum growth of Campylobacter fetus subsp. jejuni, strain C-61, occurred when the cultures were incubated with shaking in atmospheres containing approximately 30% hydrogen, 5% oxygen, and 10% CO2. Suspensions of cells grown under these conditions consumed oxygen with formate as the substrate in the presence of 0.33 mM cyanide, which completely inhibited respiration with ascorbate-N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine and with lactate. Spectroscopic evidence with intact cells suggested that a form of cytochrome c, reducible with formate but not with lactate or ascorbate-N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine, can be reoxidized by a cyanide-insensitive system. Analysis of membranes from the cells showed high- and low-potential forms of cytochrome c, cytochrome b, and various enzymes, including hydrogenase, formate dehydrogenase, and fumarate reductase. The predominant carbon monoxide-binding pigment appeared to be a form of cytochrome c, but the spectra also showed evidence of cytochrome o. The membrane cytochromes were reduced by hydrogen in the presence of 2-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide at concentrations which prevented the reduction of cytochrome c with succinate as the electron donor. Reoxidation of the substrate-reduced cytochromes by oxygen was apparently mediated by cyanide-sensitive and cyanide-insensitive systems. The membranes also had hydrogen-fumarate oxidoreductase activity mediated by cytochrome b. We conclude that C. fetus jejuni has high- and low-potential forms of cytochrome which are associated with a complex terminal oxidase system.  相似文献   

10.
The growth of the syntrophic propionate-oxidizing bacterium strain MPOB in pure culture by fumarate disproportionation into carbon dioxide and succinate and by fumarate reduction with propionate, formate or hydrogen as electron donor was studied. The highest growth yield, 12.2 g dry cells/mol fumarate, was observed for growth by fumarate disproportionation. In the presence of hydrogen, formate or propionate, the growth yield was more than twice as low: 4.8, 4.6, and 5.2 g dry cells/mol fumarate, respectively. The location of enzymes that are involved in the electron transport chain during fumarate reduction in strain MPOB was analyzed. Fumarate reductase, succinate dehydrogenase, and ATPase were membrane-bound, while formate dehydrogenase and hydrogenase were loosely attached to the periplasmic side of the membrane. The cells contained cytochrome c, cytochrome b, menaquinone-6 and menaquinone-7 as possible electron carriers. Fumarate reduction with hydrogen in membranes of strain MPOB was inhibited by 2-(heptyl)-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide (HOQNO). This inhibition, together with the activity of fumarate reductase with reduced 2,3-dimethyl-1,4-naphtoquinone (DMNH2) and the observation that cytochrome b of strain MPOB was oxidized by fumarate, suggested that menequinone and cytochrome b are involved in the electron transport during fumarate reduction in strain MPOB. The growth yields of fumarate reduction with hydrogen or formate as electron donor were similar to the growth yield of Wolinella succinogenes. Therefore, it can be assumed that strain MPOB gains the same amount of ATP from fumarate reduction as W. succinogenes, i.e. 0.7 mol ATP/mol fumarate. This value supports the hypothesis that syntrophic propionate-oxidizing bacteria have to invest two-thirds of an ATP via reversed electron transport in the succinate oxidation step during the oxidation of propionate. The same electron transport chain that is involved in fumarate reduction may operate in the reversed direction to drive the energetically unfavourable oxidation of succinate during syntrophic propionate oxidation since (1) cytochrome b was reduced by succinate and (2) succinate oxidation was similarly inhibited by HOQNO as fumarate reduction. Received: 18 March 1997 / Accepted: 10 November 1997  相似文献   

11.
The majority of bacterial membrane-bound NiFe-hydrogenases and formate dehydrogenases have homologous membrane-integral cytochrome b subunits. The prototypic NiFe-hydrogenase of Wolinella succinogenes (HydABC complex) catalyzes H2 oxidation by menaquinone during anaerobic respiration and contains a membrane-integral cytochrome b subunit (HydC) that carries the menaquinone reduction site. Using the crystal structure of the homologous FdnI subunit of Escherichia coli formate dehydrogenase-N as a model, the HydC protein was modified to examine residues thought to be involved in menaquinone binding. Variant HydABC complexes were produced in W. succinogenes, and several conserved HydC residues were identified that are essential for growth with H2 as electron donor and for quinone reduction by H2. Modification of HydC with a C-terminal Strep-tag II enabled one-step purification of the HydABC complex by Strep-Tactin affinity chromatography. The tagged HydC, separated from HydAB by isoelectric focusing, was shown to contain 1.9 mol of heme b/mol of HydC demonstrating that HydC ligates both heme b groups. The four histidine residues predicted as axial heme b ligands were individually replaced by alanine in Strep-tagged HydC. Replacement of either histidine ligand of the heme b group proximal to HydAB led to HydABC preparations that contained only one heme b group. This remaining heme b could be completely reduced by quinone supporting the view that the menaquinone reduction site is located near the distal heme b group. The results indicate that both heme b groups are involved in electron transport and that the architecture of the menaquinone reduction site near the cytoplasmic side of the membrane is similar to that proposed for E. coli FdnI.  相似文献   

12.
The cytochromes of membranes of the cydA mutant Escherichia coli GR19N grown on a proline-amino acid medium were examined. Reduced minus oxidized difference spectra (including fourth-order finite difference spectra) showed that cytochromes with absorption maxima at 554-555, 556-557, 560-561.5 and 563.5-564.5 nm were present. In addition, there were two components with absorption maxima at 548.5 and 551.5 nm which made a minor contribution to the alpha-band absorbance. These were not examined further. Two pools within the cytochromes were detected. One pool, which was reduced rapidly by the substrates NADH, formate and succinate, consisted of cytochromes of the cytochrome o complex. These cytochromes had absorption maxima at 555, 557 and 563.5 nm. In addition, the low-potential cytochrome associated with formate dehydrogenase was reduced rapidly by formate, and a component absorbing at 560-561.5 nm was also present in this pool. The second pool of cytochromes was reduced more slowly by substrate, although the rate was accelerated greatly in the presence of the electron mediator phenazine methosulfate. These cytochromes absorbed maximally at about 556.5 nm. A portion of the cytochrome in this pool was reoxidized by fumarate. This cytochrome may be a component of the fumarate reductase pathway, since the membranes showed high NADH-fumarate reductase activity. The respiratory chain inhibitor 2-n-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline N-oxide appeared to act at two sites. One site of inhibition was between the dehydrogenases and the cytochromes. A second site of inhibition was located in the cytochrome o complex between cytochrome b-564 and oxygen.  相似文献   

13.
The membrane fraction of Bacillus subtilis catalyzes the reduction of fumarate to succinate by NADH. The activity is inhibited by low concentrations of 2-(heptyl)-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide (HOQNO), an inhibitor of succinate: quinone reductase. In sdh or aro mutant strains, which lack succinate dehydrogenase or menaquinone, respectively, the activity of fumarate reduction by NADH was missing. In resting cells fumarate reduction required glycerol or glucose as the electron donor, which presumably supply NADH for fumarate reduction. Thus in the bacteria, fumarate reduction by NADH is catalyzed by an electron transport chain consisting of NADH dehydrogenase (NADH:menaquinone reductase), menaquinone, and succinate dehydrogenase operating in the reverse direction (menaquinol:fumarate reductase). Poor anaerobic growth of B. subtilis was observed when fumarate was present. The fumarate reduction catalyzed by the bacteria in the presence of glycerol or glucose was not inhibited by the protonophore carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenyl hydrazone (CCCP) or by membrane disruption, in contrast to succinate oxidation by O2. Fumarate reduction caused the uptake by the bacteria of the tetraphenyphosphonium cation (TPP+) which was released after fumarate had been consumed. TPP+ uptake was prevented by the presence of CCCP or HOQNO, but not by N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide, an inhibitor of ATP synthase. From the TPP+ uptake the electrochemical potential generated by fumarate reduction was calculated (Deltapsi = -132 mV) which was comparable to that generated by glucose oxidation with O2 (Deltapsi = -120 mV). The Deltapsi generated by fumarate reduction is suggested to stem from menaquinol:fumarate reductase functioning in a redox half-loop.  相似文献   

14.
Geobacter sulfurreducens strain PCA oxidized acetate to CO2 via citric acid cycle reactions during growth with acetate plus fumarate in pure culture, and with acetate plus nitrate in coculture with Wolinella succinogenes. Acetate was activated by succinyl-CoA:acetate CoA-transferase and also via acetate kinase plus phosphotransacetylase. Citrate was formed by citrate synthase. Soluble isocitrate and malate dehydrogenases NADP+ and NAD+, respectively. Oxidation of 2-oxoglutarate was measured as benzyl viologen reduction and strictly CoA-dependent; a low activity was also observed with NADP+. Succinate dehydrogenase and fumarate ductase both were membrane-bound. Succinate oxidation was coupled to NADP+ reduction whereas fumarate reduction was coupled to NADPH and NADH Coupling of succinate oxidation to NADP+ or cytochrome(s) reduction required an ATP-dependent reversed electron transport. Net ATP synthesis proceeded exclusively through electron transport phosphorylation. During fumarate reduction, both NADPH and NADH delivered reducing equivalents into the electron transport chain, which contained a menaquinone. Overall, acetate oxidation with fumarate proceeded through an open loop of citric acid cycle reactions, excluding succinate dehydrogenase, with fumarate reductase as the key reaction for electron delivery, whereas acetate oxidation in the syntrophic coculture required the complete citric acid cycle.  相似文献   

15.
The electron-transport chain that catalyzes nitrite respiration with formate in Wolinella succinogenes consists of formate dehydrogenase, menaquinone and the nitrite reductase complex. The latter catalyzes nitrite reduction by menaquinol and is made up of NrfA and NrfH, two c-type cytochromes. NrfA is the catalytic subunit; its crystal structure is known. NrfH belongs to the NapC/NirT family of membrane-bound c-type cytochromes and mediates electron transport between menaquinol and NrfA. It is demonstrated here by MALDI MS that four heme groups are attached to NrfH. A Delta nrfH deletion mutant of W. succinogenes was constructed by replacing the nrfH gene with a kanamycin-resistance gene cartridge. This mutant did not form the NrfA protein, probably because of a polar effect of the mutation on nrfA expression. The nrfHAIJ gene cluster was restored by integration of an nrfH-containing plasmid into the genome of the Delta nrfH mutant. The resulting strain had wild-type properties with respect to growth by nitrite respiration and nitrite reductase activity. A mutant (stopH) that contained the nrfHAIJ locus with nrfH modified by two artificial stop codons near its 5' end produced wild-type amounts of NrfA in the absence of the NrfH protein. NrfA was located exclusively in the soluble cell fraction of the stopH mutant, indicating that NrfH acts as the membrane anchor of the NrfHA complex in wild-type bacteria. The stopH mutant did not grow by nitrite respiration and did not catalyze nitrite reduction by formate, indicating that the electron transport is strictly dependent on NrfH. The NrfH protein seems to be an unusual member of the NapC/NirT family as it forms a stable complex with its redox partner protein NrfA.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Wolinella succinogenes can grow at the expense of sulphur reduction by formate. The enzymes involved in the catalysis of this catabolic reaction have been investigated. From the results the following conclusions are drawn: 1. The enzyme isolated as a sulphide dehydrogenase from the cytoplasmic membrane of W. succinogenes is the functional sulphur reductase that operates in the electron transport from formate to sulphur. 2. The enzyme (Mr 200,000) consists essentially of one type of subunit with the Mr 85,000 and contains equal amounts of free iron and sulphide (120 mol/g protein), but no heme. It represents the first functional sulphur reductase ever isolated. 3. The electron transport chain catalyzing sulphur reduction by formate consists merely of formate dehydrogenase and sulphur reductase. A lipophilic quinone which mediates the transfer of electrons between enzymes in other chains, is apparently not involved. This is the first known example of a phosphorylative electron transport chain that operates without a quinone. 4. The same formate dehydrogenase appears to operate in the electron transport both with sulphur and with fumarate as the terminal electron acceptor in W. succinogenes.Abbreviations DMN 2,3-Dimethyl-1,4-naphthoquinone - DTT dithiothreitol - MK menaquinone (vitamin K2) - PMSF phenylmethane sulfonylfluoride - Tricine N-[2-hydroxy-1,1-bis(hydroxymethyl)ethyl]-glycine - Tea triethanolamine - Hepes 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethane sulfonate Dedicated to Professor F. Schneider (Philipps-Universität Marburg) on the occasion of his 60th birthday  相似文献   

18.
The succinate dehydrogenase isolated from Bacillus subtilis was found to catalyze the oxidation of succinate with hydrophilic quinones. Either naphthoquinones or benzoquinones served as acceptors. The enzyme activity increased with the redox potential of the quinone. The highest turnover number was commensurate with that of the bacterial succinate respiration in vivo. The succinate dehydrogenase was similarly active in fumarate reduction with quinols. The highest activity was obtained with the most electronegative quinol. The fumarate reductase isolated from Wolinella succinogenes catalyzed succinate oxidation with quinones and fumarate reduction with the corresponding quinols at activities similar to those of the B. subtilis enzyme. Succinate oxidation by the lipophilic quinones, ubiquinone or vitamin K-1, was monitored as cytochrome c reduction using proteoliposomes containing succinate dehydrogenase together with the cytochrome bc1 complex. The activity with ubiquinone or vitamin K-1 was commensurate with the succinate respiratory activity of bacteria or of the bacterial membrane fraction. The results suggest that menaquinone is involved in the succinate respiration of B. subtilis, although its redox potential is unfavorable.  相似文献   

19.
A succinate-coenzyme Q reductase (complex II) was isolated in highly purified form from Ascaris muscle mitochondria by detergent solubilization, ammonium sulfate fractionation and gel filtration on a Sephadex G-200 column. The enzyme preparation catalyzes electron transfer from succinate to coenzyme Q1 with a specific activity of 1.2 mumol coenzyme Q1 reduced per min per mg protein at 25 degrees C. The isolated complex II is essentially free of NADH-ferricyanide reductase, reduced CoQ2-cytochrome c reductase and cytochrome c oxidase and consists of four major polypeptides with apparent molecular weights of 66 000, 27 000, 12 000 and 11 000 and two minor ones with Mr of 36 000 and 16 000. The complex II contained cytochrome b-558, a major constituent cytochrome of Ascaris mitochondria, at a concentration of 3.6 nmol per mg protein, but neither other cytochromes nor quinone. The cytochrome b-558 in the complex II was reduced with succinate. In the presence of Ascaris NADH-cytochrome c reductase (complex I-III) (Takamiya, S., Furushima, R. and Oya, H. (1984) Mol. Biochem. Parasitol. 13, 121-134), the cytochrome b-558 in complex II was also reduced with NADH and reoxidized with fumarate. These results suggest the cytochrome b-558 to function as an electron carrier between NADH dehydrogenase and succinate dehydrogenase in the Ascaris NADH-fumarate reductase system.  相似文献   

20.
Desulfitobacterium dehalogenans is able to grow by organohalide respiration using 3-chloro-4-hydroxyphenyl acetate (Cl-OHPA) as an electron acceptor. We used a combination of genome sequencing, biochemical analysis of redox active components, and shotgun proteomics to study elements of the organohalide respiratory electron transport chain. The genome of Desulfitobacterium dehalogenans JW/IU-DC1T consists of a single circular chromosome of 4,321,753 bp with a GC content of 44.97%. The genome contains 4,252 genes, including six rRNA operons and six predicted reductive dehalogenases. One of the reductive dehalogenases, CprA, is encoded by a well-characterized cprTKZEBACD gene cluster. Redox active components were identified in concentrated suspensions of cells grown on formate and Cl-OHPA or formate and fumarate, using electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), visible spectroscopy, and high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) analysis of membrane extracts. In cell suspensions, these components were reduced upon addition of formate and oxidized after addition of Cl-OHPA, indicating involvement in organohalide respiration. Genome analysis revealed genes that likely encode the identified components of the electron transport chain from formate to fumarate or Cl-OHPA. Data presented here suggest that the first part of the electron transport chain from formate to fumarate or Cl-OHPA is shared. Electrons are channeled from an outward-facing formate dehydrogenase via menaquinones to a fumarate reductase located at the cytoplasmic face of the membrane. When Cl-OHPA is the terminal electron acceptor, electrons are transferred from menaquinones to outward-facing CprA, via an as-yet-unidentified membrane complex, and potentially an extracellular flavoprotein acting as an electron shuttle between the quinol dehydrogenase membrane complex and CprA.  相似文献   

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