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1.
Chlorite dismutase (EC 1.13.11.49), an enzyme capable of reducing chlorite to chloride while producing molecular oxygen, has been characterized using EPR and optical spectroscopy. The EPR spectrum of GR-1 chlorite dismutase shows two different high-spin ferric heme species, which we have designated 'narrow' (gx,y,z = 6.24, 5.42, 2.00) and 'broad' (gz,y,x = 6.70, 5.02, 2.00). Spectroscopic evidence is presented for a proximal histidine co-ordinating the heme iron center of the enzyme. The UV/visible spectrum of the ferrous enzyme and EPR spectra of the ferric hydroxide and imidazole adducts are characteristic of a heme protein with an axial histidine co-ordinating the iron. Furthermore, the substrate analogs nitrite and hydrogen peroxide have been found to bind to ferric chlorite dismutase. EPR spectroscopy of the hydrogen peroxide adduct shows the loss of both high-spin and low-spin ferric signals and the appearance of a sharp radical signal. The NO adduct of the ferrous enzyme exhibits a low-spin EPR signal typical of a five-co-ordinate heme iron nitrosyl adduct. It seems that the bond between the proximal histidine and the iron is weak and can be broken upon binding of NO. The midpoint potential, Em(Fe3+/2+) = -23 mV, of chlorite dismutase is higher than for most heme enzymes. The spectroscopic features and redox properties of chlorite dismutase are more similar to the gas-sensing hemoproteins, such as guanylate cyclase and the globins, than to the heme enzymes.  相似文献   

2.
1.Upon addition of sulphide to oxidized cytochrome c oxidase, a low-spin heme sulphide compound is formed with an EPR signal at gx = 2.54, gy = 2.23 and gz = 1.87. Concomitantly with the formation of this signal the EPR-detectable low-spin heme signal at g = 3 and the copper signal near g = 2 decrease in intensity, pointing to a partial reduction of the enzyme by sulphide. 2. The addition of sulphide to cytochrome c oxidase, previously reduced in the presence of azide or cyanide, brings about a disappearance of the azido-cytochrome c oxidase signal at gx = 2.9, gy = 2.2, and gz = 1.67 and a decrease of the signal at g = 3.6 of cyano-cytochrome c oxidase. Concomitantly the sulphide-induced EPR signal is formed. 3. These observations demonstrate that azide, cyanide and sulphide are competitive for an oxidized binding site on cytochrome c oxidase. Moreover, it is shown that the affinity of cyanide and sulphide for this site is greater than that of azide.  相似文献   

3.
J A Tan  J A Cowan 《Biochemistry》1990,29(20):4886-4892
A high molecular weight multiheme c-type cytochrome from the sulfate-reducing bacterium Desulfovibrio vulgaris (Hildenborough) has been spectroscopically characterized and compared with the tetraheme cytochrome c3. The protein contains a pentacoordinate high-spin heme (gz 6.0) and two hexacoordinate low-spin hemes (gz 2.95, gy 2.27, gx 1.48). From analysis of the g values for the low-spin hemes by the procedure of Blumberg and Peisach (Palmer, 1983) and comparison with with the optical spectra from a variety of c-type cytochromes, it is likely that these low-spin hemes are bound by two histidine residues. The NO derivative displayed typical rhombic EPR features (gx 2.07, gz 2.02, gy 1.99). Addition of azide does not lead to coupling between heme chromophores, but the ligand is accessible to the high-spin heme. The use of a glassy-carbon electrode to perform direct (no promoter) electrochemistry on the cytochrome is illustrated. Differential pulse polarography of the native protein gave two waves with reduction potentials of -59 (5) and -400 (8) mV (versus NHE). The cyanide adduct gave two waves with reduction potentials of -263 (8) and -401 (8) mV. The cytochrome was found to catalyze the reduction of nitrite and hydroxylamine.  相似文献   

4.
1. EPR spectra of human granulocytes (4 - 10(8) cells per ml) show an intense high-spin ferric heme signal with rhombic symmetry (gx = 6.90 and gy = 5.07) for the heme group. These g-values are identical to those of partially purified myeloperoxidase and thus the signal is derived from ferric myeloperoxidase. In chicken granulocytes, which contain little or no myeloperoxidase, only an axial type of heme iron signal, weak in intensity, can be detected at g = 6.0. 2. Upon phagocytosis of latex particles by human granulocytes the high-spin heme signal with rhombic symmetry is slowly converted into a signal with axial symmetry (gx = gy = 6.0), showing that the EPR signals of myeloperoxidase in the intact cell can be used to study the involvement of the enzyme in metabolic changes during phagocytosis.  相似文献   

5.
The heterodimeric hemoprotein SoxXA, essential for lithotrophic sulfur oxidation of the aerobic bacterium Paracoccus pantotrophus, was examined by a combination of spectroelectrochemistry and EPR spectroscopy. The EPR spectra for SoxXA showed contributions from three paramagnetic heme iron centers. One highly anisotropic low-spin (HALS) species (gmax = 3.45) and two "standard" cytochrome-like low-spin heme species with closely spaced g-tensor values were identified, LS1 (gz = 2.54, gy = 2.30, and gx = 1.87) and LS2 (gz = 2.43, gy = 2.26, and gx = 1.90). The crystal structure of SoxXA from P. pantotrophus confirmed the presence of three heme groups, one of which (heme 3) has a His/Met axial coordination and is located on the SoxX subunit [Dambe et al. (2005) J. Struct. Biol. 152, 229-234]. This heme was assigned to the HALS species in the EPR spectra of the isolated SoxX subunit. The LS1 and LS2 species were associated with heme 1 and heme 2 located on the SoxA subunit, both of which have EPR parameters characteristic for an axial His/thiolate coordination. Using thin-layer spectroelectrochemistry the midpoint potentials of heme 3 and heme 2 were determined: Em3 = +189 +/- 15 mV and Em2 = -432 +/- 15 mV (vs NHE, pH 7.0). Heme 1 was not reducible even with 20 mM titanium(III) citrate. The Em2 midpoint potential turned out to be pH dependent. It is proposed that heme 2 participates in the catalysis and that the cysteine persulfide ligation leads to the unusually low redox potential (-436 mV). The pH dependence of its redox potential may be due to (de)protonation of the Arg247 residue located in the active site.  相似文献   

6.
1. The reaction of myeloperoxidase with fluoride, chloride and azide has been studied by EPR. 2. Fluoride decreases the rhombicity of the high-spin heme signal of myeloperoxidase and the nuclear spin of the fluoride atom induces a splitting in g parallel of 35 G. This observation demonstrates that fluoride binds as an axial ligand to the heme iron of the enzyme. 3. Addition of chloride to the fluoride-treated enzyme increases the rhombicity of the high-spin heme signal and brings about a disappearance of the splitting at g parallel. The addition of azide to the fluoride-treated enzyme changes the spin state of the heme iron from a high-to a low-spin state (gx = 2.68, gy = 2.22 and gz = 1.80). 4. Upon addition of chloride or fluoride to low-spin azido-myeloperoxidase this compound is converted into the high-spin chlorido- or fluorido-myeloperoxidase. These observations demonstrate that these ligands compete for a binding site at or close to the heme iron of myeloperoxidase.  相似文献   

7.
The EPR absorption properties of the hemes of cytochrome oxidase and their liganded derivatives were examined in oriented multilayers from isolated oxidase, mitochondrial membranes and membrane fragments of a bacterium, Paracoccus denitrificans. The hemes of the oxidase in all the systems investigated were oriented normal to the plane of the multilayers. The directions of the g signals corresponding to the gx and gy axes of the g tensor were found to be different in low-spin ferric heme in fully oxidized oxidase and in half-reduced liganded oxidase. It is suggested that this different orientation of gx and gy in fully oxidized oxidase and half-reduced liganded oxidase arises because the respective EPR signals belong to two different hemes, those of cytochrome a and a3.  相似文献   

8.
The e.p.r. signals attributable to a cytochrome bd-type ubiquinol:O2 oxidoreductase (cytochrome b-558-b-595-d) were studied in a cytoplasmic membrane preparation of Escherichia coli that had been grown on glycerol with fumarate as respiratory-chain oxidant. Two major high-spin ferric haem signals were resolved on the basis of their potentiometric behaviour: a rhombic high-spin species (gx = 6.25, gy = 5.54) was assigned to haem b-595, and an axial high-spin (gx = 5.97, gy = 5.96) species was assigned to the haem d. These signals titrated with Em.7 values of 154 and 261 mV respectively, corresponding closely to optically determined values for haem b-595 and haem d. At high potentials (greater than 300 mV) the rhombic species attributable to haem b-595 underwent a partial transition to a second rhombic species with g-values of 6.24 (gx) and 5.67 (gy). The high-spin ferric haem spectra were affected by O2, CO, cyanide and pH. A low-spin ferric haem signal was observed at g = 3.3 (gz), which titrated with an Em.7 of 226 mV, and this was assigned to haem b-558. The data support a model for cytochrome bd with two ligand-binding sites, a single haem d and a single haem b-595.  相似文献   

9.
The EPR spectrum at 15 K of Pseudomonas cytochrome c peroxidase, which contains two hemes per molecule, is in the totally ferric form characteristic of low-spin heme giving two sets of g-values with gz 3.26 and 2.94. These values indicate an imidazole-nitrogen : heme-iron : methionine-sulfur and an imidazole-nitrogen : heme-iron : imidazole-nitrogen hemochrome structure, respectively. The spectrum is essentially identical at pH 6.0 and 4.6 and shows only a very small amount of high-spin heme iron (g 5--6) also at 77 K. Interaction between the two hemes is shown to exist by experiments in which one heme is reduced. This induces a change of the EPR signal of the other (to gz 2.83, gy 2.35 and gx 1.54), indicative of the removal of a histidine proton from that heme, which is axially coordinated to two histidine residues. If hydrogen peroxide is added to the partially reduced protein, its EPR signal is replaced by still other signals (gz 3.5 and 3.15). Only a very small free radical peak could be observed consistent with earlier mechanistic proposals. Contrary to the EPR spectra recorded at low temperature, the optical absorption spectra of both totally oxidized and partially reduced enzyme reveal the presence of high-spin heme at room temperature. It seems that a transition of one of the heme c moieties from an essentially high-spin to a low-spin form takes place on cooling the enzyme from 298 to 15 K.  相似文献   

10.
Two-subunit SoxB-type cytochrome c oxidase in Bacillus stearothermophilus was over-produced, purified, and examined for its active site structures by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and resonance Raman (RR) spectroscopies. This is cytochrome bo3 oxidase containing heme B at the low-spin heme site and heme O at the high-spin heme site of the binuclear center. EPR spectra of the enzyme in the oxidized form indicated that structures of the high-spin heme O and the low-spin heme B were similar to those of SoxM-type oxidases based on the signals at g=6.1, and g=3.04. However, the EPR signals from the CuA center and the integer spin system at the binuclear center showed slight differences. RR spectra of the oxidized form showed that heme O was in a 6-coordinated high-spin (nu3 = 1472 cm(-1)), and heme B was in a 6-coordinated low-spin (nu3 = 1500 cm(-1)) state. The Fe2+-His stretching mode was observed at 211 cm(-1), indicating that the Fe2+-His bond strength is not so much different from those of SoxM-type oxidases. On the contrary, both the Fe2+-CO stretching and Fe2+-C-O bending modes differed distinctly from those of SoxM-type enzymes, suggesting some differences in the coordination geometry and the protein structure in the proximity of bound CO in cytochrome bo3 from those of SoxM-type enzymes.  相似文献   

11.
M?ssbauer and EPR spectroscopy were used to characterize the heme prosthetic groups of the nitrite reductase isolated from Desulfovibrio desulfuricans (ATCC 27774), which is a membrane-bound multiheme cytochrome capable of catalyzing the 6-electron reduction of nitrite to ammonia. At pH 7.6, the as-isolated enzyme exhibited a complex EPR spectrum consisting of a low-spin ferric heme signal at g = 2.96, 2.28, and 1.50 plus several broad resonances indicative of spin-spin interactions among the heme groups. EPR redox titration studies revealed yet another low-spin ferric heme signal at g = 3.2 and 2.14 (the third g value was undetected) and the presence of a high-spin ferric heme. M?ssbauer measurements demonstrated further that this enzyme contained six distinct heme groups: one high-spin (S = 5/2) and five low-spin (S = 1/2) ferric hemes. Characteristic hyperfine parameters for all six hemes were obtained through a detailed analysis of the M?ssbauer spectra. D. desulfuricans nitrite reductase can be reduced by chemical reductants, such as dithionite or reduced methyl viologen, or by hydrogenase under hydrogen atmosphere. Addition of nitrite to the fully reduced enzyme reoxidized all five low-spin hemes to their ferric states. The high-spin heme, however, was found to complex NO, suggesting that the high-spin heme could be the substrate binding site and that NO could be an intermediate present in an enzyme-bound form.  相似文献   

12.
1. Ferricytochrome c3 from D. gigas exhibits two low-spin ferric heme EPR resonances with gz-values at 2.959 and 2.853. Ferrocytochrome c3 is diamagnetic based on the absence of any EPR signals. 2. EPR potentiometric titrations result in the resolution of the two low-spin ferric heme resonances into two additional heme components representing in total the four hemes of the cytochrome, with EM values of -235 mV and -315 mV at heme resonance I and EM values of -235 mV and -306 mV at heme resonance II. 3. EPR spectroscopy has detected a significant diminution of intensity (approx. 60 p. 100) in the gx amplitude of ferricytochrome c3 in the presence of D. gigas ferredoxin II. The presence of ferredoxin II also causes a more negative shift in the EM of the second components of the signals at heme resonances I and II of cytochrome C3. Both observations suggest that an interaction has occurred between cytochrome C3 and ferredoxin II. 4. The results presented suggest that the heme ligand environment of ferricytochrome c3 from D. gigas is less perturbed and/or less asymmetric than environment for ferricytochrome c3 from D. vulgaris whose EPR behavior indicates the non-equivalence of all four hemes.  相似文献   

13.
Bacterial nitric oxide reductases are integral membrane proteins that catalyze the reduction of two molecules of nitric oxide to nitrous oxide and water. They are diverged members of the superfamily of heme/copper oxidases. The enzyme from Paracoccus denitrificans (NorBC) contains two subunits; NorB comprises the membrane-integrated active site, which harbors a heme iron/non-heme iron dinuclear center. NorC is a membrane-anchored c-type cytochrome and presumably the site of electron uptake. A DNA construct encoding the water-soluble domain of NorC (NorC(sol)) was coexpressed with the cytochrome c maturation genes in Escherichia coli. Using redox potentiometry, electronic absorption, circular dichroism (CD), magnetic CD (MCD), nuclear magnetic resonance, and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy the following observations were made: (i) NorC(sol) was folded into a alpha-helical structure. (ii) The low-spin heme iron was coordinated by histidine and methionine in both redox states. (iii) The midpoint redox potential of the NorC(sol) heme was 183 mV, much lower than the corresponding value of 275 mV in the NorBC complex. This points to an increased solvent exposure of the NorC(sol) heme compared to in the native NorBC complex and shows that the electronic properties of NorC are modulated by NorB in the complex. (iv) The EPR and MCD spectra of NorC(sol) were considered alongside the spectra of NorBC, which has helped to resolve the contribution that different redox centers make in the holo-enzyme complex.  相似文献   

14.
1. A rapid isolation procedure with a high yield for pure myeloperoxidase (donor:H2O2 oxidoreductase, EC 1.11.1.7) from normal human leucocytes is described. The enzyme was solubilized from leucocytes with the detergent, cetyltrimethylammonium bromide, and purified to apparent homogeneity. The yield of the enzyme was 17% with an absorbance ratio A430nm/A280nm = 0.85. 2. The purified enzyme showed three isoenzyme bands after polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis; ultracentrifuge studies indicated one homogeneous band with a molecular weight of 144 000. After reduction of myeloperoxidase, sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis resolved an intense band (63 000 daltons) and a weak band (81 000 daltons). 3. The carbohydrate content of the enzyme was at least 2.5%. Mannose, glucose and N-acetylglucosamine were present. The amino acid composition is reported. 4. The EPR spectrum exhibited a high-spin heme signal with rhombic symmetry (gx = 6.92, gy = 5.07 and gz = 1.95). Upon acidification this signal was converted into a signal with more axial symmetry (g perpendicular = 5.89). At high pH (9.5) the EPR spectrum of the enzyme only shows low-spin ferric heme resonances. The circular dichroism spectra of ferric and ferrous myeloperoxidase in the visible and ultraviolet region show maxima and minima in ellipticity.  相似文献   

15.
1. The major EPR signals from native and cytochrome c-reduced beef heart cytochrome c oxidase (EC 1.9.3.1) are characterized with respect to resonance parameters, number of components and total integrated intensity. A mistake in all earlier integrations and simulations of very anisotropic EPR signals is pointed out. 2. The so-called Cu2+ signal is found to contain at least three components, one "inactive" form and two nearly similar active forms. One of the latter forms, corresponding to about 20% of the total EPR detectable Cu, has not been observed earlier and can only be resolved in 35 GHz spectra. It is not reduced by cytochrome c and is thought to reflect some kind of inhomogeneity in the enzyme preparation. The 35 GHz spectrum of the cytochrome c reducible component shows a rhombic splitting and can be well simulated with g-values 2.18, 2.03 and 1.99. The origin of such a unique type of Cu2+ spectrum is discussed. 3. The low-spin heme signal in the oxidized enzyme (g = 3.03, 2.21, 1.45) is found to correspond closely to one heme and shows no signs of interaction with other paramagnetic centres. 4. The high-spin heme signals appearing in partly reduced oxidase are found to consist of at least three species, one axial and two rhombic types. An integration procedure is described that allows the determination of the total integral intensity of high-spin heme EPR signals only by considering the g = 6 part of the signals. In a titration with ascorbate and cytochrome c the maximum intensity of the g = 6 species corresponds to 23% of the enzyme concentration.  相似文献   

16.
The effect of CO on the optical absorbance spectrum of partially reduced cytochrome c oxidase has been studied. The changes at 432 and 590 nm suggest that the cytochrome alpha2/3+ - CO compound is formed preferentially and that concomitantly a second electron is taken up by the enzyme. From the CO-induced changes at 830 nm it is concluded that in the partially reduced enzyme addition of CO causes reoxidation of the copper component of cytochrome c oxidase. Addition of CO to partially reduced enzyme (2 electrons per 4 metal ions) also brings about a decrease in the intensities of electron paramagnetic resonance signals of high-spin heme iron near g = 6 and of the low-spin heme at g = 2.6. Concomitantly both the low-spin heme a signal at g = 3 and the copper signal at g = 2 increase in intensity. These results demonstrate that formation of the reduced diamagnetic cytochrome a3 - CO compound is accompanied by reoxidation of both the copper component detectable by electron paramagnetic resonance and possibly also by cytochrome a.  相似文献   

17.
EPR characteristics of cytochrome c1, cytochromes b-565 and b-562, the iron-sulfur cluster, and an antimycin-sensitive ubisemiquinone radical of purified cytochrome b-c1 complex of Rhodobacter sphaeroides have been studied. The EPR specra of cytochrome c1 shows a signal at g = 3.36 flanked with shoulders. The oxidized form of cytochrome b-562 shows a broad EPR signal at g = 3.49, while oxidized cytochrome b-565 shows a signal at g = 3.76, similar to those of two b cytochromes in the mitochondrial complex. The distribution of cytochromes b-565 and b-562 in the isolated complex is 44 and 56%, respectively. Antimycin and 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-1,4-benzoquinone (DBMIB) have little effect on the g = 3.76 signal, but they cause a slight downfield and upfield shifts of the g = 3.49 signal, respectively. 5-Undecyl-6-hydroxyl-4,7-dioxobenzothiazole (UHDBT) shifts the g = 3.49 signal downfield to g = 3.56 and sharpens the g = 3.76 signal slightly. Myxothiazol causes an upfield shift of both g = 3.49 and g = 3.76 signals. EPR characteristics of the reduced iron-sulfur cluster in bacterial cytochrome b-c1 complex are: gx = 1.8 with a small shoulder at g = 1.76, gy = 1.89 and gz = 2.02, similar to those observed with the mitochondrial enzyme. The gx = 1.8 signal decreased and the shoulder increased concurrently as the redox potential decreased, indicating that the environment of the iron-sulfur cluster is sensitive to the redox state of the complex. UHDBT sharpens the gz and and shifts it downfield from g = 2.02 to 2.03, and shifts gx upfield from g = 1.80 to 1.78. UHDBT also causes an upfield shift of gy but to a much lesser extent compared to the other two signals. Addition of DBMIB causes a downfield shift of the gy from 1.89 to 1.94 and broadens the gx signal with an upfield to g = 1.75. Myxothiazol and antimycin show little effect on the gy and gz signals, but they broaden and shift the gx signal upfield to g = 1.74. However, the myxothiazol effect is partially reversed by UHDBT. An antimycin-sensitive ubisemiquinone radical was detected in the cytochrome b-c1 complex. At pH 8.4, the antimycin-sensitive ubisemiquinone radical has a maximal concentration of 0.66 mol per mol complex at 100 mV.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Eosinophil peroxidase (donor:hydrogen peroxide oxidoreductase, EC 1.11.1.7) was isolated from outdated human white blood cells. The purified enzyme has a molecular weight of 71000 +/- 1000. The enzyme is composed of two subunits, of Mr 58000 and 14000, in a 1:1 stoichiometry. Amino-acid analyses showed that eosinophil peroxidase has a high content of the amino acids arginine, leucine and aspartic acid. The millimolar absorbance coefficient of the Soret band at 412 nm of eosinophil peroxidase was determined. Three independent methods yield a value for epsilon 412nm of 110 +/- 4 mm-1 X cm-1. Purified eosinophil peroxidase showed a homogeneous high-spin EPR signal with rhombic symmetry (gx = 6.50; gy = 5.40; gz = 1.982) for the haem group. EPR spectroscopy of low-spin cyanide and azide derivatives of eosinophil peroxidase, lactoperoxidase, myeloperoxidase and catalase revealed that the haem-ligand structure of eosinophil peroxidase is closely related to lactoperoxidase, whereas that of myeloperoxidase shows great resemblance to catalase.  相似文献   

19.
M Tsubaki  Y Ichikawa  Y Fujimoto  N T Yu  H Hori 《Biochemistry》1990,29(37):8805-8812
Cytochrome P-45011 beta was purified as the 11-deoxycorticosterone-bound form from bovine adrenocortical mitochondria and its active site was investigated by resonance Raman and EPR spectroscopies. Resonance Raman spectra of the purified sample revealed that the heme iron adopts the pure pentacoordinated ferric high-spin state on the basis of the nu 10 (1629cm-1) and nu 3 (1490 cm-1) mode frequencies, which are higher than those of the hexacoordinated ferric high-spin cytochrome P-450scc-substrate complexes. In the ferrous-CO state, a Fe2(+)-CO stretching mode was identified at 481.5 cm-1 on the basis of an isotopic substitution technique; this frequency is very close to that of cytochrome P-450scc in the cholesterol-complexed state (483 cm-1). The EPR spectra of the purified sample at 4.2 K showed ferric high-spin signals (at g = 7.98, 3.65, and 1.71) that were clearly distinct from the cytochrome P-450scc ferric high-spin signals (g = 8.06, 3.55, and 1.68) and confirmed previous assignments of ferric high-spin signals in adrenocortical mitochondria. The EPR spectra of the nitric oxide (NO) complex of ferrous cytochrome P-45011 beta showed EPR signals with rhombic symmetry (gx = 2.068, gz = 2.001, and gy = 1.961) very similar to those of the ferrous cytochrome P-450scc-NO complex in the presence of 22(S)-hydroxycholesterol and 20(R),22-(R)-dihydroxycholesterol at 77 K.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
The cytochrome bo quinol oxidase of Escherichia coli is one of two respiratory O2 reductases which the bacterium synthesizes. The enzyme complex contains copper and 2 mol of b-type heme. Electron paramagnetic resonance (epr) spectroscopy of membranes from a strain having amplified levels of this enzyme complex reveals signals from low- and high-spin b-type hemes, but the copper, now established as a component of the oxidase, is not directly detectable by epr. The high-spin signal from the cytochrome bo complex, which we attribute to cytochrome o, when titrated potentiometrically, gives a bell-shaped curve. The low potential side of this curve is biphasic (Em7 approximately 180 and 280 mV) and corresponds to the reduction/oxidation of the cytochrome(s). The high potential side of the bell-shaped curve is monophasic (Em7 approximately 370 mV) and is proposed to be due to reduction/oxidation of a copper center which, when in the Cu(II) form, is tightly spin-coupled to a heme, probably cytochrome o, resulting in a net even spin system and loss of the epr spectrum. The low-spin cytochrome b titrates biphasically with Em7 values of approximately 180 and 280 mV, similar to the high-spin component but without the loss of signal at high potentials.  相似文献   

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