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1.
The kinetics of decay in absorbance at 610 nm in the reaction of cysteine with ceruloplasmin was biphasic under anaerobic conditions. Admission of oxygen to the bleached ceruloplasmin restored the blue color to about 75 % of the original value. However, under aerobic or anaerobic conditions an initial bleaching corresponded to a 25 % decrease in blue color. This change was irreversible and remained after removal of excess cysteine from the reaction mixture by dialysis. There was no correlation between transient and steady-state kinetic parameters. Circular dichroism measurements showed a characteristic reduction in the negative band at 450 nm, which is specific for type 1b copper. Isolation and further studies on cysteine-modified ceruloplasmin with a lower A610/A280 ratio showed < 10% reduction in enzyme activity toward p-phenylenediamine and o-dianisidine. Evidence is also presented that ceruloplasmin catalyzes the oxidation of cysteine with a one-electron reduction of oxygen and the formation of superoxide ion, which is then converted to H2O2 by ceruloplasmin. The effect of superoxide dismutase and catalase also confirms the presence of superoxide and H2O2. In sum, these data show that a permanent reduction of type 1b copper occurred when cysteine was used as a substrate. We conclude that there is a single electron transfer from cysteine directly to oxygen using one specific copper of ceruloplasmin, type 1b.  相似文献   

2.
Kinetic studies of the Fe(II) oxidation with human serum ferroxidase-II   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A nonceruloplasmin ferroxidase (ferroxidase-II) has recently been identified and purified from whole human serum and from the Cohn IV-1 fraction of human plasma. Ferroxidase-II has been shown to differ greatly from ferroxidase-I (ceruloplasmin) in molecular weight, copper content, absorption spectra, inhibition by anions, Chromatographic behavior, and electrophoretic mobility.A cell designed for the simultaneous measurement of absorbance and oxygen concentration has permitted a detailed study of the kinetics of Fe(II) oxidation by highly purified ferroxidase-II and a comparison of these kinetic properties to those previously determined for ferroxidase-I. Ferroxidase-I has been shown to exhibit two Km values for Fe(II), and a mechanism based on substrate activation has recently been proposed to account for this finding. In contrast, ferroxidase-II has only one Km for Fe(II) and does not appear to be subject to substrate activation. The pH optimum of ferroxidase-II is 7.2 compared to 6.5 for ferroxidase-I. The low Km (4.1 μm) for oxygen for ferroxidase-II indicates that it would be capable of catalyzing the oxidation of Fe(II) at oxygen concentrations comparable to or far below those normally present in human blood. Even though the two ferroxidases differ considerably in molecular weight and copper content, the molar activities and activities per Cu atom of the two enzymes are quite similar. These kinetic studies suggest that ferroxidase-II would be capable of functioning as an alternative for ferroxidase-I in human serum and as the major ferroxidase in the sera of several species that contain low ferroxidase-I levels.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of CuSO4 and Cu(II)(Gly)2 has been compared with that of superoxide dismutase on the ferricytochrome c reduction and on the nitroblue tetrazolium reduction by an enzymic or chemical flux of superoxide anion radicals as well as on o-dianisidine photooxidation. Both CuSO4 and Cu(II)(Gly)2 have been found to inhibit ferricytochrome c reduction as well as the aerobic and anaerobic nitroblue tetrazolium reduction with approximately equal efficiency. Unlike superoxide dismutase they proved capable of inhibiting o-dianisdine photooxidation. The effect of copper either as CuSO4 or as Cu(II)(Cly)2 has been established as being due to its interference with the indirect assays for superoxide dismutase activity used. The reasons for this interference have been examined and it is concluded that copper can react with a component of the indirect assay system and depending on the method used it either mimics SOD or acts contrary to the enzyme.  相似文献   

4.
The effects of transition metals on nonenzymatic and ceruloplasmin catalyzed epinephrine oxidation were investigated by studying rates of epinephrine oxidation in purified buffers and in the presence of metal chelating agents. We found that epinephrine does not “autoxidize” in sodium chloride solutions prepared with deionized water that was further purified by chromatography over Chelex 100 resin prior to use. Epinephrine was oxidized rapidly in sodium chloride prepared with tap water (1.20±0.12 nmoles/min) or in deionized water (0.40±0.80 nmoles/min), but this oxidation was prevented by the addition of Desferal, a potent metal chelating agent. Epinephrine oxidation was enhanced upon the addition of ceruloplasmin, and this oxidation rate could be slowed, but not eliminated, by the addition of Desferal. If epinephrine solutions were preincubated for 72 hours with Desferal prior to ceruloplasmin addition, however, no oxidation was observed. Epinephrine was shown to form colored complexes with both iron and copper at pH 7.0. The Fe(III)-epinephrine complex was much more stable than was the Cu(II)-epinephrine complex. Oxygen consumption studies of ceruloplasmin catalyzed epinephrine oxidation showed that copper was a better promoter of epinephrine oxidation than was iron, suggesting that ceruloplasmin-catalyzed epinephrine oxidation results from adventitious copper bound to the purified enzyme. In light of these results, the physiological relevance of ceruloplasmin catalyzed oxidation of biogenic amines may be minor.  相似文献   

5.
The SCO protein from the aerobic bacterium Bacillus subtilis (BsSCO) is involved in the assembly of the cytochrome c oxidase complex, and specifically with the CuA center. BsSCO has been proposed to play various roles in CuA assembly including, the direct delivery of copper ions to the CuA site, and/or maintaining the appropriate redox state of the cysteine ligands during formation of CuA. BsSCO binds copper in both Cu(II) and Cu(I) redox states, but has a million-fold higher affinity for Cu(II). As a prerequisite to kinetic studies, we measured equilibrium stability of oxidized, reduced and Cu(II)-bound BsSCO by chemical and thermal induced denaturation. Oxidized and reduced apo-BsSCO exhibit two-state behavior in both chemical- and thermal-induced unfolding. However, the Cu(II) complex of BsSCO is stable in up to nine molar urea. Thermal or guanidinium-induced unfolding of BsSCO-Cu(II) ensues only as the Cu(II) species is lost. The effect of copper (II) on the folding of BsSCO is complicated by a rapid redox reaction between copper and reduced, denatured BsSCO. When denatured apo-BsSCO is refolded in the presence of copper (II) some of the population is recovered as the BsSCO-Cu(II) complex and some is oxidized indicating that refolding and oxidation are competing processes. The proposed functional roles for BsSCO in vivo require that its cysteine residues are reduced and the presence of copper during folding may be detrimental to BsSCO attaining its functional state.  相似文献   

6.
A comprehensive survey of the interaction of the copper proteins and oxygen is presented including a correlation of structure, function, and other properties of the known copper oxidases and of hemocyanin. The origin of their blue color and the structure of copper complexes and copper proteins are related to the oxidation state of copper ion and relevant electronic transitions probably arising from the formation of charge transfer complexes. The oxygen reactions of hemocyanin, ceruloplasmin, and cytochrome oxidase show half-saturation values far below the other Cu enzymes. The formation of hydrogen peroxide as a reaction product is associated with the presence of one Cu atom per oxidase molecule or catalytic system. Water is the corresponding product of the other Cu oxidases with four or more Cu atoms per molecule, except for monoamine oxidase. Mechanisms for the oxidase action of the two and four electron transfer Cu oxidases and tyrosinase are proposed. These reactions account for the number, the oxidation-reduction potential, and the oxidation state of Cu in the resting enzyme, the cyclical change from Cu(II) to Cu(I), the diatomic nature of O2, the sequence of the oxidation and reduction reactions, and other salient features. The catalytic reactions involved in the oxidation of ascorbic acid by plant ascorbate oxidase, ceruloplasmin, and Cu(II) are compared. Finally the substrate specificity, inhibitory control, and the detailed mechanism of the oxidase activity of ceruloplasmin are summarized.  相似文献   

7.
Four anodic peroxidase isoenzymes from wheat leaves were purified by column chromatography and their kinetic behavior with common substrates were examined. One isoenzyme is more active in wheat resistant to stem rust fungi and differed from the others in carbohydrate content and also by a specific activity 2–4-fold higher with non-physiological electron donors. As a substrate, eugenol exhibited kinetic behavior different from p-phenylenediamine, guaiacol or o-dianisidine with all isoenzymes. All four isoenzymes showed similar pH and temperature optima and kinetic behavior and apparent Km values for both H2O2 and non-physiological electron donors.  相似文献   

8.
Reactions of peroxidase oxidation of triftazine and thioproperazine have been investigated in the presence of horseradish peroxidase using steady state kinetic methods. It has been shown that phenothiazines are slowly oxidizable substrates for horseradish peroxidase. k cat and K m values have been determined in the range of pH from 4.5 to 7.5. The study of co-oxidation of phenothiazines and o-dianisidine (ODN) revealed that in the presence of aminazine and ODN in the reaction medium both substances follow sequential oxidation. ODN oxidation was not observed until full conversion of aminazine. At pH 4.5–5.5 thioproperazine bound to the enzyme-substrate complex and caused anticompetitive inhibition of peroxidase. At pH > 5.5 sequential substrate oxidation with preferential thioproperazine conversion occurred. In the range of pH from 4.5 to 7.5 triftazine did not influence ODN oxidation.  相似文献   

9.
The reactions of copper(II)-ahphatic polyamine complexes with cysteine, cysteine methyl ester, penicillamine. and glutathione have been investigated, with the goal of understanding the relationship between RS?-Cu(II) adduct structure and preferred redox decay pathway. Considerable mechanistic flexibility exists within this class of mercapto ammo acid oxidations, as changes in the rate law could be induced by modest variations in reductant concentration (at fixed [Cu(II)]o), pH, and the structure of the redox partners. With excess cysteine present at 25°C, pH 5 0, I = 0 2 M (NaOAc), decay of 1:1 cys-S?-Cu(II) transient adducts was found to be first order in both cys-SH and transient. Second-order rate constants characteristic of Cu(dien)2+ (6 1 × 103M?1sec?1), Cu(Me5dien)2+ (2.7 × 103M?1 sec?1), Cu(en)22+ (2.1 × 103M?1 sec?1), and Cu(dien)22+ (4.7 × 103 M?1 sec ?1) are remarkably similar, considering substantial differences in the composition and geometry of the oxidant first coordination sphere. A mechanism involving attack of cysteine on the coordinated sulfur atom of the transient, giving a disulfide anion radical intermediate, is proposed to account for these results Moderate reactivity decreases in the cysteine-Cu(dien)2+, Cu(Me5dien)2+ reactions with increasing [H+] (pH 4–6) reflect partial protonation of the polyamine ligands. A very different rate law, second order in the RS?-Cu(II) transient and approximately zeroth order in mercaptan, applies in the pH 5.0 oxidations of cysteine methyl ester, penicillamine, and glutathione by Cu(dien)2+ and Cu(Me5dien)2+. This behavior suggests the mtermediacy of di-μ-mercapto-bridged binuclear Cu(II) species, in which a concerted two-electron change yields the disulfide and Cu(I) products. Similar hydroxo-bridged intermediates are proposed to account for the transition from first- to second-order transient dependence in cysteine oxidations by Cu(dien)2+ and Cu(Me5dien)2+ as the pH is increased from 5 to 7. Yet another rate law, second order in transient and first order in cysteine, applies in the pH 5.0 oxidation of cysteine by Cu(Me6tren)2+ (k(25°C) 7.5 × 107 M?2 sec?1, I = 0.2 M). Steric rigidity of this trigonal bipyramidal oxidant evidently protects the coordinated sulfur atom from attack in a RSSR?-forming pathway. Formation of a coordinated disulfide in the rate-determining step is purposed, coupled with attack of a noncoordinated cysteine molecule on a vacated coordination position to stabilize the (Me6(tren)Cu(I) product.  相似文献   

10.
This study has analyzed the role of several serum constituents, that have been proposed to effect the following reactionin situ: {fx1-1} {fx1-2} These reactions were monitored by measuring the rate of Fe(II) oxidation in the presence of apo-transferrin (reaction A) and Fe(III)-transferrin formation (reaction B) at 465 nm. Reactions A and B were found to be kinetically equivalent. The results show that, singly or in combination, bicarbonate, orthophosphate, citrate, apo-transferrin, and/or albumin have less than one-tenth of the ability to enhance the oxidation of Fe(II) compared to the serum enzyme, ceruloplasmin. It was also found that the rate of Fe(II) oxidation by serum Fe-ligands was influenced by the efficiency of oxygen utilization. Whereas ceruloplasmin produces a 4∶1 ratio of Fe(II) oxidized to oxygen utilized, the non-enzymic components yield a 2∶1 or 3.09∶1 ratio. These data support the role of ceruloplasmin as an antioxidant that prevents the formation of the intermediate active oxygen species O 2 · and H2O 2 · through the Fe(II) auto-oxidation reaction. A hitherto unrecognized factor in the control of nonenzymic oxidation of Fe(II) was serum albumin. This protein, at >25 μM, was found to sharply dampen the rate of Fe(II) oxidation in the presence of a physiological concentration of bicarbonate, citrate, and transferrin Albumin did not appear to affect the ceruloplasmin catalyzed oxidation of Fe(II) at pH 7.0. The addition of ceruloplasmin effected up to a 44 × increase in the rate of Fe(II) oxidation and Fe(III)-transferrin formation even in the presence of 0.60 mM albumin.  相似文献   

11.
Here, the role of bitter gourd peroxidase has been investigated for the treatment of water contaminated with aromatic amines. Most of the aromatic amines were recalcitrant to the action of bitter gourd peroxidase. However, these aromatic amines were oxidized by bitter gourd peroxidase in the presence of a redox mediator, o-dianisidine HCl. The maximum oxidation of aniline was found to be in the buffer of pH 5.0 at 40 °C in the presence of 0.5 mM H2O2 and 0.15 mM o-dianisidine HCl. Aromatic amines oxidized and removed from wastewater were 65% aniline, 50% m-toluidine, 86% m-chloroaniline, 54% p-aminobenzoic acid, 61% diphenylamine and 95% N,N-dimethylaniline. Benzidine and p-nitroaniline were recalcitrant to the action of this enzyme even in the presence of o-dianisidine HCl. Complex mixtures of aromatic amines were treated by bitter gourd peroxidase. These mixtures were removed to varying extent, mixtures A, B and C were oxidized to 59%, 56% and 62%, respectively. Mixtures D, E and F were marginally oxidized to 30%, 14% and 16%, respectively.  相似文献   

12.
Leukocytes incubated with Cu(II) showed a decrease in both glutathione reductase activity and reduced glutathione content. The glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity under the same conditions was not affected. Serum albumin added to mixtures prevented the loss of enzyme activity, whiled-penicillamine andl-histidine had little effect. Prior oxidation of the cell-reduced glutathione did not diminish the enzyme inhibitory action of Cu(II). The amount of regeneration of reduced glutathione in leukocytes previously treated with diamide to oxidize their reduced glutathione was a function of Cu(II) concentration in the media. No evidence was obtained that elevated serum ceruloplasmin levels in rabbits, nor incubation of leukocytes in vitro with ceruloplasmin, affect leukocyte glutathione reductase activity. It was proposed that the major mechanism by which copper affects glutathione metabolism in leukocytes is by inhibition of glutathione reductase.  相似文献   

13.
Galactose oxidase is a radical copper oxidase, an enzyme making use of a covalently modified tyrosine residue as a free radical redox cofactor in alcohol oxidation catalysis. We report here a combination of spectroscopic and magnetochemical studies developing insight into the interactions between the active site Cu(II) and two distinct tyrosine ligands in the biological complex. One of the tyrosine ligands (Y495) is coordinated to the Cu(II) metal center as a phenolate in the resting enzyme and serves as a general base to abstract a proton from the coordinated substrate, thus activating it for oxidation. The structure of the resting enzyme is temperature-dependent as a consequence of an internal proton equilibrium associated with this tyrosine that mimics this catalytic proton transfer step. The other tyrosine ligand (Y272) is covalently crosslinked to a cysteine residue forming a tyrosine–cysteine dimer free radical redox site that is required for hydrogen atom abstraction from the activated substrate alkoxide. The presence of the free radical in the oxidized active enzyme results in formation of an EPR-silent Cu(II) complex shown by multifield magnetic saturation experiments to be a diamagnetic singlet arising from antiferromagnetic exchange coupling between the metal and radical spins. A paramagnetic contribution observed at higher temperature may be associated with thermal population of the triplet state, thus permitting an estimate of the magnitude of the isotropic exchange coupling (J>200 cm−1, JS1·S2) in this complex. Structural correlations and the possible mechanistic significance of metal–radical coupling in the active enzyme are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Transition metals are known to cause toxic effects through their interaction with oxygen, but toxicity under anoxic conditions is poorly understood. Here we investigated the effects of iron (Fe) and copper (Cu) on the anaerobic growth and gene expression of the purple phototrophic bacterium Rhodopseudomonas palustris TIE-1. We found that Fe(II) and Cu(II) act synergistically to delay anaerobic growth at environmentally relevant metal concentrations. Cu(I) and Cu(II) had similar effects both alone and in the presence of ascorbate, a Cu(II) reductant, indicating that reduction of Cu(II) to Cu(I) by Fe(II) is not sufficient to explain the growth inhibition. Addition of Cu(II) increased the toxicity of Co(II) and Ni(II); in contrast, Ni(II) toxicity was diminished in the presence of Fe(II). The synergistic anaerobic toxicity of Fe(II) and Cu(II) was also observed for Escherichia coli MG1655, Shewanella oneidensis MR-1, and Rhodobacter capsulatus SB1003. Gene expression analyses for R. palustris identified three regulatory genes that respond to Cu(II) and not to Fe(II): homologs of cueR and cusR, two known proteobacterial copper homeostasis regulators, and csoR, a copper regulator recently identified in Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Two P-type ATPase efflux pumps, along with an FoF1 ATP synthase, were also upregulated by Cu(II) but not by Fe(II). An Escherichia coli mutant deficient in copA, cus, and cueO showed a smaller synergistic effect, indicating that iron might interfere with one or more of the copper homeostasis systems. Our results suggest that interactive effects of transition metals on microbial physiology may be widespread under anoxic conditions, although the molecular mechanisms remain to be more fully elucidated.  相似文献   

15.
《Inorganica chimica acta》1988,151(4):261-263
The model process of oxidation of reduced glutathione through chelate copper complexes has been studied, the former being structural analogues of the active centers of ‘blue’ copper proteins. Glutathione forms the relatively stable intermediate CuLSG+ with copper complexes in acetonitrile. The intramolecular electron transfer S(glutathione)→Cu(II) is the rate-determining step of the substrate oxidation. On the basis of rate constant (kobs) values as well as activation energy (E3) values, we have concluded that there is a possibility of functional modelling of active centers of type 1 Cu by copper complexes with thioaza ligands.  相似文献   

16.
The Synthesis of Cytochrome Oxidase protein, or SCO protein, is required for the assembly of cytochrome c oxidase in many mitochondrial and bacterial respiratory chains. SCOs have been proposed to deliver copper to the CuA site of cytochrome c oxidase. We have reported that Bacillus subtilis SCO (i.e., BsSCO) binds Cu(II) with high-affinity via a two-step process mediated by three conserved residues (i.e., two cysteines and one histidine, or the CCH motif). A remarkable feature in the reaction of reduced (i.e., di-thiol) BsSCO with copper is that it does not generate any of the disulfide form of BsSCO. This molecular aversion is proposed to be a consequence of a binding mechanism in which the initial copper complex of BsSCO does not involve cysteine, but instead involves nitrogen ligands. We test this proposal here by constructing two isomers of BsSCO in which the conserved copper binding residues (i.e., the CCH-motif) are retained, but their positions are altered. In these variants the two cysteines are exchanged with histidine, and both react transiently with copper (II) with distinct kinetic profiles. The reaction generates Cu(I) and the protein is oxidized to its disulfide form. EPR analysis supports a copper binding model in which cysteine, which is at the “histidine position” in the mutant, is part of an initial encounter complex with copper. When cysteine is the initial ligating residue an oxidation reaction ensues. In contrast initial binding to native BsSCO uses nitrogen-based ligands, and thereby avoids the opportunity for thiol oxidation.  相似文献   

17.
Copper(II) complexes of a new bis benzimidazole diamide ligand N-picolyl-N,N′-bis(2-methylbenzimidazolyl)hexanediamide [Pic-GBHA = L2] have been synthesized and characterized. One of the compound [Cu(L2)(NO3)2] has been structurally characterized. The copper atom is bound to two benzimidazolyl nitrogen atoms, two amide carbonyl oxygen atoms and a bidentate nitrate ion, resulting in a distorted octahedral geometry. EPR spectra obtained at low temperature indicate a tetragonal geometry in the solution state. Complexes display a quasi-reversible redox wave due to the Cu(II)/Cu(I) reduction process having fairly cathodic E1/2. These Cu(II) complexes were utilized to carry out oxidation of ditertbutylcatechol (DTBC) in methanol using molecular oxygen as the oxidant in. Low temperature EPR study of the oxidation reaction implicates the formation of an active copper species with fairly low A value. The presence of picolyl groups on the ligand also serve as a proton sponge giving 2-3 times higher rates of reaction in comparison to the non-picolylated ligand, implying a role of free basic groups in the pH control of enzymatic oxidation of catechols by catechol oxidase and tyrosinase.  相似文献   

18.
  • 1.1. The oxidation of 3,4-dihydroxyphenylethylamine (dopamine) by O2 catalyzed by tyrosinase yields 4-(2-aminoethyl)-1,2-benzoquinone, with its amino group protonated (o-dopaminequinone-H+, which evolves non-enzymatically through two branches or sequences of reactions, whose respective operations are determined by the pH of the medium.
  • 2.2. The cyclization branch of o-dopaminequinone-H+ takes place in the entire range of pH and is the only significant branch at pH ⩾ 6.
  • 3.3. The hydroxylation branch of o-dopaminequinone-H+ only operates significantly at pH < 6, and involves the accumulation of 2,4,5-trihydroxyphenylethylamine (6-hydroxydopamine), identified by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC).
  • 4.4. 6-hydroxydopamine is also a substrate of tyrosinase. The identification and evolution of the oxidation products of 6-hydroxydopamine has been carried out by spectrophotometry and HPLC assays.
  相似文献   

19.
The Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase (Cu,ZnSOD) isolated from Haemophilus ducreyi possesses a His-rich N-terminal metal binding domain, which has been previously proposed to play a copper(II) chaperoning role. To analyze the metal binding ability and selectivity of the histidine-rich domain we have carried out thermodynamic and solution structural analysis of the copper(II) and zinc(II) complexes of a peptide corresponding to the first 11 amino acids of the enzyme (H2N-HGDHMHNHDTK-OH, L). This peptide has highly versatile metal binding ability and provides one and three high affinity binding sites for zinc(II) and copper(II), respectively. In equimolar solutions the MHL complexes are dominant in the neutral pH-range with protonated lysine ε-amino group. As a consequence of its multidentate nature, L binds zinc and copper with extraordinary high affinity (KD,Zn = 1.6 × 10−9 M and KD,Cu = 5.0 × 10−12 M at pH 7.4) and appears as the strongest zinc(II) and copper(II) chelator between the His-rich peptides so far investigated. These KD values support the already proposed role of the N-terminal His-rich region of H. ducreyi Cu,ZnSOD in copper recruitment under metal starvation, and indicate a similar function in the zinc(II) uptake, too. The kinetics of copper(II) transfer from L to the active site of Cu-free N-deleted H. ducreyi Cu,ZnSOD showed significant pH and copper-to-peptide ratio dependence, indicating specific structural requirements during the metal ion transfer to the active site. Interestingly, the complex CuHL has significant superoxide dismutase like activity, which may suggest multifunctional role of the copper(II)-bound N-terminal His-rich domain of H. ducreyi Cu,ZnSOD.  相似文献   

20.
《BBA》1987,893(2):138-148
Four representative inhibitors of Photosystem II (PS II) QA to QB electron transfer were shown to bind, at high concentrations, to PS II reaction centers having the acceptor-side non-heme iron in the Fe(III) state. Three of the inhibitors studied, DCMU, o-phenanthroline and dinoseb, modified the EPR spectrum of the Fe(III) relative to that obtained by ferricyanide oxidation in the absence of inhibitor. o-Phenanthroline gave particularly axial symmetry, while DCMU and dinoseb gave more rhombic configurations. The herbicide inhibitor, atrazine and its analogue, terbutryn, had no effect. The dissociation constants for inhibitor binding to reaction centers in the Fe(III) state were measured directly and also estimated from shifts in the midpoint potential of the Fe(III)/Fe(II) couple and were shown to increase by factors of approx. 100, approx. 10 and 10–15 for DCMU (pH 7.5), atrazine (pH 7.0) and o-phenanthroline (pH 7.0), respectively, upon oxidation of the iron. Atrazine and o-phenanthroline, which induce the smallest changes in the midpoint potential of the Fe(III)/Fe(II) couple, were shown to inhibit light-induced oxidation of the Fe(II) by phenyl-p-BQ, described in the preceding paper (Petrouleas, V. and Diner, B.A. (1987) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 893, 126–137). The extent of inhibition was much greater than would be predicted from a simple shift in the midpoint potential for Fe(III)/Fe(II) and we conclude that phenyl-p-BQ and the other quinones, which show light-induced oxidation, act through the QB binding site. It is also argued that reduction and oxidation of the iron by ferro- and ferricyanide, respectively, occur through this site. The effects of these inhibitors and of various quinones on the Fe(III) environment are discussed with reference to the known contact points between the protein and o-phenanthroline and terbutryn in the QB binding pocket of Rhodopseudomonas viridis reaction centers (Michel, H., Epp, O. and Deisenhofer, J. (1986) EMBO J. 5, 2445–2451). The Fe(III) EPR spectrum is thus a new and sensitive probe of the contact points at which molecules bind to the QB binding site.  相似文献   

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