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1.
A new ruthenium-cytochrome c derivative was designed to study electron transfer from cytochrome bc1 to cytochrome c (Cc). The single sulfhydryl on yeast H39C;C102T iso-1-Cc was labeled with Ru(2,2'-bipyrazine)2(4-bromomethyl-4'-methyl-2,2'-bipyridine) to form Ru(z)-39-Cc. The Ru(z)-39-Cc derivative has the same steady-state activity with yeast cytochrome bc1 as wild-type yeast iso-1-Cc, indicating that the ruthenium complex does not interfere in the binding interaction. Laser excitation of reduced Ru(z)-39-Cc results in electron transfer from heme c to the excited state of ruthenium with a rate constant of 1.5 x 10(6) x s(-1). The resulting Ru(I) is rapidly oxidized by atmospheric oxygen in the buffer. The yield of photooxidized heme c is 20% in a single flash. Flash photolysis of a 1:1 complex between reduced yeast cytochrome bc1 and Ru(z)-39-Cc at low ionic strength leads to rapid photooxidation of heme c, followed by intracomplex electron transfer from cytochrome c1 to heme c with a rate constant of 1.4 x 10(4) x s(-1). As the ionic strength is raised above 100 mM, the intracomplex phase disappears, and a new phase appears due to the bimolecular reaction between solution Ru-39-Cc and cytochrome bc1. The interaction of yeast Ru-39-Cc with yeast cytochrome bc1 is stronger than that of horse Ru-39-Cc with bovine cytochrome bc1, suggesting that nonpolar interactions are stronger in the yeast system.  相似文献   

2.
The reaction between cytochrome c (Cc) and Rhodobacter sphaeroides cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) was studied using a cytochrome c derivative labeled with ruthenium trisbipyridine at lysine 55 (Ru-55-Cc). Flash photolysis of a 1:1 complex between Ru-55-Cc and CcO at low ionic strength results in electron transfer from photoreduced heme c to Cu(A) with an intracomplex rate constant of k(a) = 4 x 10(4) s(-1), followed by electron transfer from Cu(A) to heme a with a rate constant of k(b) = 9 x 10(4) s(-1). The effects of CcO surface mutations on the kinetics follow the order D214N > E157Q > E148Q > D195N > D151N/E152Q approximately D188N/E189Q approximately wild type, indicating that the acidic residues Asp(214), Glu(157), Glu(148), and Asp(195) on subunit II interact electrostatically with the lysines surrounding the heme crevice of Cc. Mutating the highly conserved tryptophan residue, Trp(143), to Phe or Ala decreased the intracomplex electron transfer rate constant k(a) by 450- and 1200-fold, respectively, without affecting the dissociation constant K(D). It therefore appears that the indole ring of Trp(143) mediates electron transfer from the heme group of Cc to Cu(A). These results are consistent with steady-state kinetic results (Zhen, Y., Hoganson, C. W., Babcock, G. T., and Ferguson-Miller, S. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 38032-38041) and a computational docking analysis (Roberts, V. A., and Pique, M. E. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 38051-38060).  相似文献   

3.
Electron transfer within complexes of cytochrome c (Cc) and cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) was studied to determine whether the reactions are gated by fluctuations in configuration. Electron transfer in the physiological complex of yeast Cc (yCc) and CcP was studied using the Ru-39-Cc derivative, in which the H39C/C102T variant of yeast iso-1-cytochrome c is labeled at the single cysteine residue on the back surface with trisbipyridylruthenium(II). Laser excitation of the 1:1 Ru-39-Cc-CcP compound I complex at low ionic strength results in rapid electron transfer from RuII to heme c FeIII, followed by electron transfer from heme c FeII to the Trp-191 indolyl radical cation with a rate constant keta of 2 x 10(6) s-1 at 20 degrees C. keta is not changed by increasing the viscosity up to 40 cP with glycerol and is independent of temperature. These results suggest that this reaction is not gated by fluctuations in the configuration of the complex, but may represent the elementary electron transfer step. The value of keta is consistent with the efficient pathway for electron transfer in the crystalline yCc-CcP complex, which has a distance of 16 A between the edge of heme c and the Trp-191 indole [Pelletier, H., and Kraut, J. (1992) Science 258, 1748-1755]. Electron transfer in the complex of horse Cc (hCc) and CcP was examined using Ru-27-Cc, in which hCc is labeled with trisbipyridylruthenium(II) at Lys-27. Laser excitation of the Ru-27-Cc-CcP complex results in electron transfer from RuII to heme c FeII with a rate constant k1 of 2.3 x 10(7) s-1, followed by oxidation of the Trp-191 indole to a radical cation by RuIII with a rate constant k3 of 7 x 10(6) s-1. The cycle is completed by electron transfer from heme c FeII to the Trp-191 radical cation with a rate constant k4 of 6.1 x 10(4) s-1. The rate constant k4 decreases to 3.4 x 10(3) s-1 as the viscosity is increased to 84 cP, but the rate constants k1 and k3 remain the same. The results are consistent with a gating mechanism in which the Ru-27-Cc-CcP complex undergoes fluctuations between a major state A with the configuration of the hCc-CcP crystalline complex and a minor state B with the configuration of the yCc-CcP complex. The hCc-CcP complex, state A, has an inefficient pathway for electron transfer from heme c to the Trp-191 indolyl radical cation with a distance of 20.5 A and a predicted value of 5 x 10(2) s-1 for k4A. The observed rate constant k4 is thus gated by the rate constant ka for conversion of state A to state B, where the rate of electron transfer k4B is expected to be 2 x 10(6) s-1. The temperature dependence of k4 provides activation parameters that are consistent with the proposed gating mechanism. These studies provide evidence that configurational gating does not control electron transfer in the physiological yCc-CcP complex, but is required in the nonphysiological hCc-CcP complex.  相似文献   

4.
The reagent 1-ethyl-3-(3-[14C]trimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide (ETC) was used to identify specific carboxyl groups on the cytochrome bc1 complex (ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase, EC 1.10.2.2) involved in binding cytochrome c. Treatment of the cytochrome bc1 complex with 2 mM ETC led to inhibition of the electron transfer activity with cytochrome c. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis indicated that both the cytochrome c1 heme peptide and the Mr = 9175 "hinge" peptide were radiolabeled by ETC. In addition, a new band appeared at a position consistent with a 1:1 cross-linked cytochrome c1-hinge peptide species. Treatment of a 1:1 cytochrome bc1-cytochrome c complex with ETC led to the same inhibition of electron transfer activity observed with the uncomplexed cytochrome bc1, but to decreased radiolabeling of the cytochrome c1 heme peptide. Two new cross-linked species corresponding to cytochrome c-hinge peptide and cytochrome c-cytochrome c1 were formed in place of the cytochrome c1-hinge peptide species. In order to identify the specific carboxyl groups labeled by ETC, a purified cytochrome c1 preparation containing both the heme peptide and the hinge peptide was dimethylated at all the lysines to prevent internal cross-linking. The methylated cytochrome c1 preparation was treated with ETC and digested with trypsin and chymotrypsin, and the resulting peptides were separated by high pressure liquid chromatography. ETC was found to label the cytochrome c1 peptides 63-81, 121-128, and 153-179 and the hinge peptides 1-17 and 48-65. All of these peptides are highly acidic and contain one or more regions of adjacent carboxyl groups. The only peptide consistently protected from labeling by cytochrome c binding was 63-81, demonstrating that the carboxyl groups at residues 66, 67, 76, and 77 are involved in binding cytochrome c. These residues are relatively close to the heme-binding cysteine residues 37 and 40 and indicate a possible site for electron transfer from cytochrome c1 to cytochrome c.  相似文献   

5.
The interaction of the Rhodospirillum rubrum cytochrome bc1 complex with R. rubrum cytochrome c2 and horse cytochrome c was studied using specific lysine modification and ionic strength dependence methods. In order to define the reaction domain on cytochrome c2, several fractions consisting of mixtures of singly labeled carboxydintrophenyl-cytochrome c2 derivatives were employed. Fraction A consisted of a mixture of derivatives modified at lysines 58, 81, and 109 on the back of cytochrome c2, while fractions C1, C2, C3, and C4 were mixtures of singly labeled derivatives modified at lysines 9, 13, 75, 86, and 88 on the front of cytochrome c2 surrounding the heme crevice. The rate of the reaction of fraction A was found to be nearly the same as that of native cytochrome c2. However, the rate constants of fractions C1-C4 were found to be more than 20-fold smaller than that of native cytochrome c2. These results indicate that lysine residues surrounding the heme crevice of cytochrome c2 are involved in electrostatic interactions with carboxylate groups at the binding site on the cytochrome bc1 complex. Since the same domain is involved in the reaction with the photosynthetic reaction center, cytochrome c2 must undergo some type of rotational or translational diffusion during electron transport in R. rubrum. The reaction rates of horse heart cytochrome c derivatives modified at single lysine amino groups with trifluoroacetyl or trifluoromethylphenylcarbamoyl were also measured. Modification of lysines 8, 13, 25, 27, 72, 79, and 87 surrounding the heme crevice was found to significantly lower the rate of the reaction, while modification of lysines in other regions had no effect. This indicates that the reaction of horse cytochrome c also involves the heme crevice domain.  相似文献   

6.
Zhang H  Osyczka A  Moser CC  Dutton PL 《Biochemistry》2006,45(48):14247-14255
Typically, c hemes are bound to the protein through two thioether bonds to cysteines and two axial ligands to the heme iron. In high-potential class I c-type cytochromes, these axial ligands are commonly His-Met. A change in this methionine axial ligand is often correlated with a dramatic drop in the heme redox potential and loss of function. Here we describe a bacterial cytochrome c with an unusual tolerance to the alternations in the heme ligation pattern. Substitution of the heme ligating methionine (M185) in cytochrome c1 of the Rhodobacter sphaeroides cytochrome bc1 complex with Lys and Leu lowers the redox midpoint potential but not enough to prevent physiologically competent electron transfer in these fully functional variants. Only when Met-185 is replaced with His is the drop in the redox potential sufficiently large to cause cytochrome bc1 electron transfer chain failure. Functional mutants preserve the structural integrity of the heme crevice: only the nonfunctional His variant allows carbon monoxide to bind to reduced heme, indicating a significant opening of the heme environment. This range of cytochrome c1 ligand mutants exposes both the relative resilience to sixth axial ligand change and the ultimate thermodynamic limits of operation of the cofactor chains in cytochrome bc1.  相似文献   

7.
The isolated complexes of ferricytochrome c with cytochrome c oxidase, cytochrome c reductase (cytochrome bc1 or complex III), and cytochrome c1 (a subunit of cytochrome c reductase) were investigated by the method of differential chemical modification (Bosshard, H.R. (1979) Methods Biochem. Anal. 25, 273-301). By this method the chemical reactivity of each of the 19 lysyl side chains of horse cytochrome c was compared in free and in complexed cytochrome c and binding sites were deduced from altered chemical reactivities of particular lysyl side chains in complexed cytochrome c. The most important findings follow. 1. The binding sites on cytochrome c for cytochrome c oxidase and cytochrome c reductase, defined in terms of the involvement of particular lysyl residues, are indistinguishable. The two oxidation-reduction partners of cytochrome c interact at the front (exposed heme edge) and top left part of the molecule, shielding mainly lysyl residues 8, 13, 72 + 73, 86, and 87. The chemical reactivity of lysyl residues 22, 39, 53, 55, 60, 99, and 100 is unaffected by complex formation while the remaining lysyl residues in positions 5, 7, 25, 27, 79, and 88 are somewhat less reactive in the complexed molecule. 2. When bound to cytochrome c reductase or to the isolated cytochrome c1 subunit of the reductase the same lysyl side chains of cytochrome c are shielded. This indicates that cytochrome c binds to the c1 subunit of the reductase during the electron transfer process.  相似文献   

8.
J Hall  X H Zha  L Yu  C A Yu  F Millett 《Biochemistry》1987,26(14):4501-4504
The interaction of the Rhodobacter sphaeroides cytochrome bc1 complex with Rb. sphaeroides cytochrome c2 and horse cytochrome c was studied by using specific lysine modification and ionic strength dependence methods. The rate of the reactions with both cytochrome c and cytochrome c2 decreased rapidly with increasing ionic strength above 0.2 M NaCl. The ionic strength dependence suggested that electrostatic interactions were equally important to the reactions of the two cytochromes, even though they have opposite net charges at pH 7.0. In order to define the interaction domain on horse cytochrome c, the reaction rates of derivatives modified at single lysine amino groups with trifluoroacetyl or trifluoromethylphenylcarbamoyl were measured. Modification of lysine-8, -13, -27, -72, -79, and -87 surrounding the heme crevice was found to significantly lower the rate of the reaction, while modification of lysines in other regions had no effect. This result indicates that lysines surrounding the heme crevice of horse cytochrome c are involved in electrostatic interactions with carboxylate groups at the binding site on the cytochrome bc1 complex. In order to define the reaction domain on cytochrome c2, a fraction consisting of a mixture of singly labeled 4-carboxy-2,6-dinitrophenylcytochrome c2 derivatives modified at lysine-35, -88, -95, -97, and -105 and several unidentified lysines was prepared. Although it was not possible to resolve these derivatives, all of the identified lysines are located on the front surface of cytochrome c2 near the heme crevice. The rate of reaction of this fraction was significantly smaller than that of native cytochrome c2, suggesting that the binding domain on cytochrome c2 is also located at the heme crevice.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
A covalent complex between purified rat liver microsomal NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase and horse cytochrome c was formed through cross-linking studies with 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide at low ionic strength. The purified cross-linked derivative shows that this product is a 1:1 complex containing one molecule each of the flavoprotein and cytochrome. The covalent complex had almost completely blocked the electron transfer from NADPH to exogenous cytochrome c or the rabbit liver microsomal cytochrome P-450 induced by phenobarbital, indicating that the cross-linked cytochrome c covers the electron-accepting site of the reductase. These results suggest that the covalently cross-linked derivative is a valid model of the noncovalent electron transfer complex. Although the exact number and site of the cross-linked location were not determinable, in cytochrome c the amide bond originates from Lys-13 and in reductase it might be at any one of six different side chain carboxyl groups in the two neighboring cluster acidic residues, Asp-207, -208, and -209, and Glu-213, Glu-214, and Asp-215. It is therefore proposed that the six clustered carboxyl groups on reductase are in an exposed location near the area where one heme edge comes close to the molecular surface.  相似文献   

10.
Structural analysis of the bc(1) complex suggests that the extra membrane domain of iron-sulfur protein (ISP) undergoes substantial movement during the catalytic cycle. Binding of Qo site inhibitors to this complex affects the mobility of ISP. Taking advantage of the difference in the pH dependence of the redox midpoint potentials of cytochrome c(1) and ISP, we have measured electron transfer between the [2Fe-2S] cluster and heme c(1) in native and inhibitor-treated partially reduced cytochrome bc(1) complexes. The rate of the pH-induced cytochrome c(1) reduction can be estimated by conventional stopped-flow techniques (t1/2, 1-2 ms), whereas the rate of cytochrome c(1) oxidation is too high for stopped-flow measurement. These results suggest that oxidized ISP has a higher mobility than reduced ISP and that the movement of reduced ISP may require an energy input from another component. In the 5-n-undecyl-6-hydroxy-4,7-dioxobenzothiazole (UHDBT)-inhibited complex, the rate of cytochrome c(1) reduction is greatly decreased to a t1/2 of approximately 2.8 s. An even lower rate is observed with the stigmatellin-treated complex. These results support the idea that UHDBT and stigmatellin arrest the [2Fe-2S] cluster at a fixed position, 31 A from heme c(1), making electron transfer very slow.  相似文献   

11.
A rapid and simple method which allowed for a parallel isolation of cytochrome c reductase (cytochrome bc(1) ) and cytochrome c oxidase from kinetoplast-mitochondria of Leishmania tarentolae was developed. The method involved the lysis of kinetoplasts with dodecyl maltoside in the presence of 260 mM NaCl, followed by purification of bc(1) complexes on DEAE-sepharose CL-6B. The oxidase which was found in the flow-through fractions of the first chromatographic step was diluted and then repurified on a similar DEAE-sepharose column. The investigated properties of the isolated cytochrome c oxidase and reductase, such as their absolute and difference spectrum absorption maxima, heme content, specific activity, and subunit composition, confirm the usefulness of this method for obtaining highly active preparations of the enzymes.  相似文献   

12.
In order to probe the reaction chemistry of respiratory quinol-oxidizing enzymes on a rapid time scale, a photoreleasable quinol substrate was synthesized by coupling decylubiquinol with the water-soluble protecting group 3',5'-bis(carboxymethoxy)benzoin (BCMB) through a carbonate linkage. The resulting compound, DQ-BCMB, was highly soluble in aqueous detergent solution, and showed no reactivity with quinol-oxidizing enzymes prior to photolysis. Upon photolysis in acetonitrile, 5, 7-bis(carboxymethoxy)-2-phenylbenzofuran, carbon dioxide, and decylubiquinol were formed. In aqueous media, free 3', 5'-bis(carboxymethoxy)benzoin was also produced. Photolysis of DQ-BCMB with a 308 nm excimer laser led to the release of the BCMB group in less than 10(-6) s. Decylubiquinol was released in the form of a carbonate monoester, which decarboxylated with an observed first-order rate constant of 195-990 s(-1), depending on the reaction medium. Yields of decylubiquinol as high as 35 microM per laser pulse were attained readily. In the presence of Escherichia coli cytochrome bo(3), photolysis of DQ-BCMB led to the oxidation of quinol by the enzyme with a rate that was limited by the rate of the decylubiquinol release. Mitochondrial cytochrome bc(1) reacted with photoreleased decylubiquinol with distinct kinetic phases corresponding to rapid b heme reduction and somewhat slower c heme reduction. Oxidation of photoreleased ubiquinol by this enzyme showed saturation kinetics with a K(m) of 3.6 microM and a k(cat) of 210 s(-1). The saturation behavior was a result of decylubiquinol being released as a carbonate monoester during the photolysis of DQ-BCMB and interacting with cytochrome bc(1) before decarboxylation of this intermediate yielded free decylubiquinol. The reaction of cytochrome bc(1) and photoreleased decylubiquinol in the presence of antimycin A led to monophasic b heme reduction, but also yielded slower quinol oxidation kinetics. The discrimination of kinetic phases in the reaction of cytochrome bc(1) with ubiquinol substrates has provided a means of exploring the bifurcation of electron transfer that is central to the operation of the Q-cycle in this enzyme.  相似文献   

13.
The interactions of cytochrome c1 and cytochrome c from bovine cardiac mitochondria were investigated. Cytochrome c1 and cytochrome c formed a 1:1 molecular complex in aqueous solutions of low ionic strength. The complex was stable to Sephadex G-75 chromatography. The formation and stability of the complex were independent of the oxidation state of the cytochrome components as far as those reactions studied were concerned. The complex was dissociated in solutions of ionic strength higher than 0.07 or pH exceeding 10 and only partially dissociated in 8 M urea. No complexation occurred when cytochrome c was acetylated on 64% of its lysine residues or photooxidized on its 2 methionine residues. Complexes with molecular ratios of less than 1:1 (i.e. more cytochrome c) were obtained when polymerized cytochrome c, or cytochrome c with all lysine residues guanidinated, or a "1-65 heme peptide" from cyanogen bromide cleavage of cytochrome c was used. These results were interpreted to imply that the complex was predominantly maintained by ionic interactions probably involving some of the lysine residues of cytochrome c but with major stabilization dependent on the native conformations of both cytochromes. The reduced complex was autooxidizable with biphasic kinetics with first order rate constants of 6 X 10(-5) and 5 X U0(-5) s-1 but did not react with carbon monoxide. The complex reacted with cyanide and was reduced by ascorbate at about 32% and 40% respectively, of the rates of reaction with cytochrome c alone. The complex was less photoreducible than cytochrome c1 alone. The complex exhibited remarkably different circular dichroic behavior from that of the summation of cytochrome c1 plus cytochrome c. We concluded that when cytochromes c1 and c interacted they underwent dramatic conformational changes resulting in weakening of their heme crevices. All results available would indicate that in the complex cytochrome c1 was bound at the entrance to the heme crevice of cytochrome c on the methionine-80 side of the heme crevice.  相似文献   

14.
K A Gray  E Davidson  F Daldal 《Biochemistry》1992,31(47):11864-11873
Site-directed mutagenesis was used to investigate which of the highly conserved methionine residues (M183 and M205) provides the sixth axial ligand to the heme Fe in the cyt c1 subunit of the bc1 complex from the bacterium Rhodobacter capsulatus. These residues were changed to leucine (cM183L) and valine (cM205V). Two additional mutants were constructed, 1 in which a stop codon was inserted at M205 (cM205*) and the second in which 127 amino acids were deleted between the signal sequence and the putative C-terminal transmembrane alpha-helix (c delta SfuI). Only cM205V grew photosynthetically, and membranes isolated from this strain catalyzed quinol-dependent reduction of cyt c in amounts similar to that in a wild-type strain. Even though cM183L could not grow photosynthetically, it contained all the appropriate polypeptides and cofactors of the bc1 complex, as shown by SDS-PAGE and optical difference spectroscopy of intact membrane particles. Neither of the two deletion mutants contained a stable complex. Flash absorption spectroscopy using chromatophores showed no cytochrome c rereduction after oxidation by the reaction center in cM183L. The bc1 complex from each strain was isolated and characterized. Oxidation reduction midpoint potential titrations revealed that cyt c1 from cM183L had a dramatically shifted Em value (delta Em = -390 mV) compared with wild type and cM205V. While the optical absorption spectrum of cyt c1 from cM183L suggested that the c-type heme was low-spin, nonetheless it was able to react with the exogenous ligand carbon monoxide. The overall data support that M183, and not M205, is the sixth ligand to the heme Fe of cyt c1 of the bc1 complex.  相似文献   

15.
Xiao K  Liu X  Yu CA  Yu L 《Biochemistry》2004,43(6):1488-1495
Sequence alignment of the Rieske iron-sulfur protein (ISP) of cytochrome bc(1) complex from various sources reveals that bacterial ISPs contain an extra fragment. To study the role of this fragment in bacterial cytochrome bc(1) complex, Rhodobacter sphaeroides mutants expressing His-tagged cytochrome bc(1) complexes with deletion or single- or multiple-alanine substitution at various positions of this fragment (residues 96-107) were generated and characterized. The ISPDelta(96-107), ISP(96-107)A, and ISP(104-107)A mutant cells, in which residues 96-107 of ISP are deleted, and residues 96-107 and 104-107 are substituted with alanine, respectively, do not grow photosynthetically and show no bc(1) complex activity in intracytoplasmic membranes prepared from these mutant cells. The ISP(96-99)A, in which residues 96-99 are substituted with alanine, grows photosynthetically at a rate comparable to that of the complement cells, whereas ISP(100-103)A, in which residues 100-103 are substituted with alanine, has a longer lag period prior to photosynthetic growth. Chromatophores prepared from these two mutant cells have 48% and 9% of the bc(1) activity found in the complement chromatophores. The loss (or decrease) of bc(1) activity in these mutant membranes results from a lack (or decrease) of ISP in the membrane due to ISP protein instability and not from mutations affecting the assembly of cytochromes b and c(1) into the membrane, the binding affinity of cytochrome b to cytochrome c(1), or the ability of these two cytochromes to interact with ISP or subunit IV. The order of essentiality of residues in this fragment is residues 104-107 > residues 100-103 > residues 96-99.  相似文献   

16.
Oxidized cytochrome c(1) in photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter capsulatus cytochrome bc(1) reversibly binds cyanide with surprisingly high, micromolar affinity. The binding dramatically lowers the redox midpoint potential of heme c(1) and inhibits steady-state turnover activity of the enzyme. As cytochrome c(1), an auxiliary redox center of the high-potential chain of cytochrome bc(1), does not interact directly with the catalytic quinone/quinol binding sites Q(o) and Q(i), cyanide introduces a novel, Q-site independent locus of inhibition. This is the first report of a reversible inhibitor that manipulates the energetics and electron transfers of the high-potential redox chain of cytochrome bc(1), while maintaining quinone substrate catalytic sites in an intact form.  相似文献   

17.
J Hall  X H Zha  L Yu  C A Yu  F Millett 《Biochemistry》1989,28(6):2568-2571
The reaction of Rhodobacter sphaeroides cytochrome c2 with the Rb. sphaeroides cytochrome bc1 complex was studied by using singly labeled cytochrome c2 derivatives. Cytochrome c2 was treated with chlorodinitrobenzoic acid to modify lysine amino groups to negatively charged carboxydinitrophenyllysines and separated into eight different fractions by ion-exchange chromatography on a Whatman SE 53 (sulfoxyethyl)cellulose column. Peptide mapping studies indicated that six of these fractions were modified at single lysine amino groups. Each of the derivatives had the same Vmax value as native cytochrome c2 in the steady-state reaction with the Rb. sphaeroides cytochrome bc1 complex. However, the Km values of the cytochrome c2 derivatives modified at lysines 10, 55, 95, 97, 99, and 106 were found to be larger than that of native cytochrome c2 by factors of 6, 2, 3, 32, 13, and 8, respectively. These results indicate that lysines located in the sequence 97-106 on the left side of the heme crevice have the greatest involvement in binding the cytochrome bc1 complex. The involvement of lysine 97 is especially significant because it is located in an extra loop comprising residues 89-98 that is not present in eukaryotic cytochrome c.  相似文献   

18.
The reduction of plastocyanin by cytochromes c and f has been investigated with mutants of spinach plastocyanin in which individual, highly conserved surface residues have been modified. These include Leu-12 and Phe-35 in the 'northern' hydrophobic patch and Tyr-83 and Asp-42 in the 'eastern' acidic patch. The differences observed all involved binding rather than the intrinsic rates of electron transfer. The Glu-12 and Ala-12 mutants showed small but significant decreases in binding constant with cytochrome c, even though the cytochrome is not expected to make contact with the northern face of plastocyanin. These results, and small changes in the EPR parameters, suggested that these mutations cause small conformational changes in surface residues on the eastern face of plastocyanin, transmitted through the copper centre. In the case of cytochrome f, the Glu-12 and Ala-12 mutants also bound less strongly, but Leu12Asn showed a marked increase in binding constant, suggesting that cytochrome f can hydrogen bond directly to Asn-12 in the reaction complex. A surprising result was that the kinetics of reduction of Asp42Asn were not significantly different from wild type, despite the loss of a negative charge.  相似文献   

19.
E Darrouzet  S Mandaci  J Li  H Qin  D B Knaff  F Daldal 《Biochemistry》1999,38(25):7908-7917
The cytochrome (cyt) c1 heme of the ubihydroquinone:cytochrome c oxidoreductase (bc1 complex) is covalently attached to two cysteine residues of the cyt c1 polypeptide chain via two thioether bonds, and the fifth and sixth axial ligands of its iron atom are histidine (H) and methionine (M), respectively. The latter residue is M183 in Rhodobacter capsulatus cyt c1, and previous mutagenesis studies revealed its critical role for the physicochemical properties of cyt c1 [Gray, K. A., Davidson, E., and Daldal, F. (1992) Biochemistry 31, 11864-11873]. In the homologous chloroplast b6f complex, the sixth axial ligand is provided by the amino group of the amino terminal tyrosine residue. To further pursue our investigation on the role played by the sixth axial ligand in heme-protein interactions, novel cyt c1 variants with histidine-lysine (K) and histidine-histidine axial coordination were sought. Using a R. capsulatus genetic system, the cyt c1 mutants M183K and M183H were constructed by site-directed mutagenesis, and chromatophore membranes as well as purified bc1 complexes obtained from these mutants were characterized in detail. The studies revealed that these mutants incorporated the heme group into the mature cyt c1 polypeptides, but yielded nonfunctional bc1 complexes with unusual spectroscopic and thermodynamic properties, including shifted optical absorption maxima (lambdamax) and decreased redox midpoint potential values (Em7). The availability and future detailed studies of these stable cyt c1 mutants should contribute to our understanding of how different factors influence the physicochemical and folding properties of membrane-bound c-type cytochromes in general.  相似文献   

20.
Steady-state kinetics for the reaction of Rhodobacter capsulatus bacterial cytochrome c peroxidase (BCCP) with its substrate cytochrome c(2) were investigated. The Rb. capsulatus BCCP is dependent on calcium for activation as previously shown for the Pseudomonas aeruginosa BCCP and Paracoccus denitrificans enzymes. Furthermore, the activity shows a bell-shaped pH dependence with optimum at pH 7.0. Enzyme activity is greatest at low ionic strength and drops off steeply as ionic strength increases, resulting in an apparent interaction domain charge product of -13. All cytochromes c(2) show an asymmetric distribution of surface charge, with a concentration of 14 positive charges near the exposed heme edge of Rb. capsulatus c(2) which potentially may interact with approximately 6 negative charges, localized near the edge of the high-potential heme of the Rb. capsulatus BCCP. To test this proposal, we constructed charge reversal mutants of the 14 positively charged residues located on the front face of Rb. capsulatus cytochrome c(2) and examined their effect on steady-state kinetics with BCCP. Mutated residues in Rb. capsulatus cytochrome c(2) that showed the greatest effects on binding and enzyme activity are K12E, K14E, K54E, K84E, K93E, and K99E, which is consistent with the site of electron transfer being located at the heme edge. We conclude that a combination of long-range, nonspecific electrostatic interactions as well as localized salt bridges between, e.g., cytochrome c(2) K12, K14, K54, and K99 with BCCP D194, D241, and D6, account for the observed kinetics.  相似文献   

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