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1.
The electron transfer from ubiquinol-2 to ferricytochrome c mediated by ubiquinol:cytochrome c oxidoreductase [E.C. 1.10.2.2] purified from beef heart mitochondria, which contained one equivalent of ubiquinone-10 (Q10), was investigated under initial steady-state conditions. The Q10-depleted enzyme was as active as the Q10-containing one. Double reciprocal plots for the initial steady-state rate versus one of the two substrates at various fixed levels of the other substrate gave parallel straight lines in the absence of any product. Intersecting straight lines were obtained in the presence of a constant level of one of the products, ferrocytochrome c. The other product, ubiquinone-2, did not show any significant effect on the enzymic reaction. Ferrocytochrome c non-competitively inhibited the enzymic reaction against either ubiquinol-2 or ferricytochrome c. These results indicate a Hexa-Uni ping-pong mechanism with one ubiquinol-2 and two ferricytochrome c molecules as the substrates, which involves the irreversible release of ubiquinone-2 as the first product and the irreversible isomerization between the release of the first ferrocytochrome c and the binding of the second ferricytochrome c. Considering the cyclic electron transfer reaction mechanism, this scheme suggests that the binding of quinone or quinol to the enzyme and electron transfer between the iron-sulfur center and cytochrome c1 are rigorously controlled by the electron distribution within the enzyme.  相似文献   

2.
The reduction of horse and Candida krusei cytochromes c by ferrocyanide has been studied by 1H NMR spectroscopy and the reaction found to involve a precursor complex of ferrocyanide bound to ferricytochrome c (pH* 7.4, 2H2O, I = 0.12, and 25 degrees C). The electron transfer rate constants for the reduction of the two ferricytochromes by associated ferrocyanide were found to be the same at 780 +/- 80 sec-1 but the association constants for binding of ferrocyanide to ferricytochrome c were significantly different: horse, 90 +/- 20 M-1 and Candida, 285 +/- 30 M-1. The different association constants partly accounts for the previously observed reactivity difference between horse and Candida cytochromes c. Comparison of the NMR data with data obtained by other kinetic methods has allowed the electron transfer rate constant for the oxidation of ferrocytochrome c by associated ferricyanide to be determined. This was found to be 4.6 +/- 1 X 10(4) sec-1.  相似文献   

3.
We have studied the reaction of ferricytochrome c, methemoglobin and metmyoglobin with OH and alcohol radicals (methanol, ethanol, ethylene glycol and glycerol). These radicals can be divided into three groups: 1. The OH radicals which reduce the ferricytochrome c with a yield of (30 +/- 10)% and methemoglobin with a yield of (40 +/- 10)%. They do not reduce metmyoglobin. The reduction is not a normal bimolecular reaction but is most probably an intramolecular electron transfer of a protein radical. 2. Methanol and ethanol radicals which reduce all three hemoproteins with a yield of (100 +/- 5)%. This reduction is a normal bimolecular reaction. 3. Glycerol radicals which do not reduce the ferrihemoproteins under our experimental conditions. Ethylene glycol radicals do not reduce ferricytochrome c and metmyoglobin but they do reduce methemoglobin with a yield of (30 +/- 10)%.  相似文献   

4.
An analysis of the temperature factors of an abenzyme has been performed to gain information on the possible role of deterministic chaos in the catalytic mechanism of such artificial proteins. The H-chain displayed a regular attractor of the dimension 3.0 +/- 0.3, whereas the L-chain showed one of = 7.5 +/- 0.5. The abenzyme also displayed a stochastic attractor of the dimension ca. 0.9. The H-chain attractor has one dimension more than those of the native hydrolases chymotrypsin and lysozyme. The additional degree of freedom of the abenzyme offers a likely explanation of the low specific catalytic activities of these artificial enzymes. The dimension of the attractor in the L-chain falls in the range found for other antibodies. Hence, a clear dichotomy seems to rule in this abenzyme; the H-chain displays the vibrational properties of an enzyme and the L-chain those of an antibody. The new data supports the hypothesis of an important role of attractors in biochemical mechanisms by reduction of the number of degrees of freedom (entropy) of reaction partners. A hierarchy of attractors is associated with specific protein functions.  相似文献   

5.
The temperature and pH dependence of the reaction of the superoxide radical anion with ferricytochrome c have been measured using the pulse-radiolysis technique. The temperature dependence of the reaction at low ionic strength yields an activation energy of 31 +/- 5 kJ/mol as compared to 14 +/- 3 kJ/mol for the reaction of CO2.(-) under the same conditions. The pH dependence fits the single pK'a of ferricytochrome c of 9.1. The bimolecular rate constant for the reaction of the superoxide anion with ferricytochrome c at pH 7.8, 21 +/- 2 degrees C, in the presence of 50 mM phosphate and 0.1 mM EDTA is (2.6 +/- 0.1) X 10(5) M-1 s-1. Using this value, 1 unit of superoxide dismutase activity (McCord, J. M., and Fridovich, I. (1969) J. Biol. Chem. 244, 6049-6055) is calculated to be 3.6 +/- 0.3 pmol of enzyme if the assay is performed in a total volume of 3.0 ml. Copper ions reduce the yield of the reaction of ferricytochrome c with CO2.(-). The reactivities of native and singly modified 4-carboxy-2,4-dinitrophenyllysine cytochromes c towards the superoxide anion radical are in the order native greater than 4-carboxy-2,4-dinitrophenyllysine 60 greater than lysine 13 greater than lysine 87 greater than lysine 27 greater than lysine 86 greater than lysine 72, indicating that electron transfer takes place at or close to the solvent accessible heme edge. The mechanism of the reaction is discussed in terms of the approach of superoxide anion radicals to the heme edge and the available molecular orbitals of both heme and free radicals.  相似文献   

6.
Human cytochrome c oxidase was purified in a fully active form from heart and skeletal muscle. The enzyme was selectively solubilised with octylglucoside and KCl from submitochondrial particles followed by ammonium sulphate fractionation. The presteady-state and steady-state kinetic properties of the human cytochrome c oxidase preparations with either human cytochrome c or horse cytochrome c were studied spectrophotometrically and compared with those of bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase. The interaction between human cytochrome c and human cytochrome c oxidase proved to be highly specific. It is proposed that for efficient electron transfer to occur, a conformational change in the complex is required, thereby shifting the initially unfavourable redox equilibrium. The very slow presteady-state reaction between human cytochrome c oxidase and horse cytochrome c suggests that, in this case, the conformational change does not occur. The proposed model was also used to explain the steady-state kinetic parameters under various conditions. At high ionic strength (I = 200 mM, pH 7.4), the kcat was highly dependent on the type of oxidase and it is proposed that the internal electron transfer is the rate-limiting step. The kcat value of the 'high-affinity' phase, observed at low ionic strength (I = 18 mM, pH 7.4), was determined by the cytochrome c/cytochrome c oxidase combination applied, whereas the Km was highly dependent only on the type of cytochrome c used. Our results suggest that, depending on the cytochrome c/cytochrome c oxidase combination, either the dissociation of ferricytochrome c or the internal electron transfer is the rate-limiting step in the 'high-affinity' phase at low ionic strength. The 'low-affinity' kcat value was not only determined by the type of oxidase used, but also by the type of cytochrome c. It is proposed that the internal electron-transfer rate of the 'low-affinity' reaction is enhanced by the binding of a second molecule of cytochrome c.  相似文献   

7.
1. The reaction of hydrated electrons with ferricytochrome c was studied using the pulse-radiolysis technique. 2. In 3.3 mM phosphate-buffer (pH 7.2), 100 mM methanol and at a concentration of cytochrome c of less than 20 muM the reduction kinetics of ferricytochrome c by hydrated electrons is a bimolecular process with a rate constant of 4.5-10-10 M-1-S-1 (21 degrees C). 3. At a concentration of cytochrome c of more than 20 muM the apparent order of the reaction of hydrated electrons with ferricytochrome c measured at 650 nm decreases due to the occurrence of a rate-determining first-order process with an estimated rate constant of 5-10-6s-1 (pH 7.2, 21 degrees C). 4. At high concentration of cytochrome c the reaction-time courses measured at 580 and 695 nm appear to be biphasic. A rapid initial phase (75% and 30% of total absorbance change at 580 and 695 nm, respectively), corresponding to the reduction reaction, is followed by a first-order change in absorbance with a rate constant of 1.3-10-5 S-1 (pH 7.2, 21 degrees C). 5. The results are interpreted in a scheme in which first a transient complex between cytochrome c and the hydrated electron is formed, after which the heme iron is reduced and followed by relaxation of the protein from its oxidized to its reduced conformation. 6. It is calculated that one of each three encounters of the hydrated electron and ferricytochrome c results in a reduction of the heme iron. This high reaction probability is discussed in terms of charge and solvent interactions. 7. A reduction mechanism for cytochrome c is favored in which the reduction equivalent from the hydrated electron is transmitted through a specific pathway from the surface of the molecule to the heme iron.  相似文献   

8.
Kinetic studies of the reduction of Pseudomonas aeruginosa ferricytochrome c551 by Fe(EDTA)2- have been made. The reaction was found to follow a second-order rate law: k 4.2 x 10(3) M(-1) s(-1) [25 degrees, micro0.1 M, pH 7.0 (phosphate)]; deltaH+/+ 3.2 kcal/ mol; AS+/+ -30 cal/mol-deg. The electrostatics-corrected self-exchange rate constant (k11 corr) calculated for cytochrome c551 based on the Fe(EDTA)2- cross reaction is 2 M(-1) s(-1), as compared to a value of 6 M(-1) s(-1) for horse heart cytochrome c. The close correspondence of the two k11 corr values is taken as an indication that the two proteins employ very similar electron transfer mechanisms in their reactions with Fe(EDTA)(2-). It is proposed that this mechanism involves reagent contact, but little protein conformational change, at the partially exposed heme edge.  相似文献   

9.
The electron transfer system of the biphenyl dioxygenase BphA, which is derived from Acidovorax sp. (formally Pseudomonas sp.) strain KKS102, is composed of an FAD-containing NADH-ferredoxin reductase (BphA4) and a Rieske-type [2Fe-2S] ferredoxin (BphA3). Biochemical studies have suggested that the whole electron transfer process from NADH to BphA3 comprises three consecutive elementary electron-transfer reactions, in which BphA3 and BphA4 interact transiently in a redox-dependent manner. Initially, BphA4 receives two electrons from NADH. The reduced BphA4 then delivers one electron each to the [2Fe-2S] cluster of the two BphA3 molecules through redox-dependent transient interactions. The reduced BphA3 transports the electron to BphA1A2, a terminal oxygenase, to support the activation of dioxygen for biphenyl dihydroxylation. In order to elucidate the molecular mechanisms of the sequential reaction and the redox-dependent interaction between BphA3 and BphA4, we determined the crystal structures of the productive BphA3-BphA4 complex, and of free BphA3 and BphA4 in all the redox states occurring in the catalytic cycle. The crystal structures of these reaction intermediates demonstrated that each elementary electron transfer induces a series of redox-dependent conformational changes in BphA3 and BphA4, which regulate the interaction between them. In addition, the conformational changes induced by the preceding electron transfer seem to induce the next electron transfer. The interplay of electron transfer and induced conformational changes seems to be critical to the sequential electron-transfer reaction from NADH to BphA3.  相似文献   

10.
The one-electron transfer reaction from reduced flavocytochrome b2 (fully reduced by three electron equivalents) to ferricytochrome c, both purified from the yeast Hansenula anomala, has been studied using stopped-flow spectrophotometry in the course of a single turnover, for reactants initially mixed in a heme molar ratio equal to one. The cytochrome c reduction proceeded to completion through an apparently first-order process. Depending on the experimental conditions (concentrations and or ionic strength), the reduction is of second-order or first-order character. To interpret these kinetic results computer simulation studies have been performed based on a kinetic scheme involving, besides the formation of a complex before the electron transfer step, intramolecular electron transfer steps within flavocytochrome b2 to maintain the concentration of the specific electron donor center, the reduced cytochrome b2. As far as the cytochrome c reduction rate constant, ka, and its variations were concerned the simulated data showed that this complicated scheme could approximate a mechanism which is by far the simplest, involving only the two former steps. Such a scheme accounts firstly for the hyperbolic dependence of the rate of reduction of cytochrome c, ka, upon reductant concentrations which had provided clear evidence for the kinetic existence of a complex in the reaction pathway. At 5 degrees C the rate constant for the electron transfer is 380 s-1 with an activation energy of 13.8kJ mol-1 (3.3 kcal mol-1). Secondly it predicts the observed variations of ka with ionic strength and provides estimates of the rate constants of the binding step.  相似文献   

11.
J S Vincent  H Kon  I W Levin 《Biochemistry》1987,26(8):2312-2314
The electron paramagnetic resonance spectrum of the ferricytochrome c complex with cardiolipin was observed at temperatures below 20 K. For the low-spin iron(III) heme system complexed with the negatively charged lipid, the tetragonal and rhombic ligand field parameters (delta/lambda = 3.58, V/lambda = 1.82) differ significantly from those (delta/lambda = 2.53, V/lambda = 1.49) of the free ferricytochrome c sample. The g values of the complex (gx = 1.54 +/- 0.02, gy = 2.26 +/- 0.01, gz = 3.02 +/- 0.01) are compared to the values for free ferricytochrome c (gx = 1.25 +/- 0.02, gy = 2.25 +/- 0.01, gz = 3.04 +/- 0.01). Spectral alterations are interpreted in terms of the ligand field changes induced within the heme group by association with the negatively charged phosphoglyceride.  相似文献   

12.
The catalytic mechanism of O2 reduction by cytochrome oxidase was studied in isolated mitochondria and mitoplasts by partial reversal of the reaction. At a high redox potential (Eh) of cytochrome c, high pH, and a high electrochemical proton gradient (delta mu H+) across the inner mitochondrial membrane, the initial ferriccupric state (O) of the oxidized enzyme's bimetallic oxygen reaction center is converted to ferryl (F) and peroxy (P) intermediates, the optical spectroscopic properties of which are reported in detail. This is associated with reversed electron transfer from the bimetallic center to ferricytochrome c. The kinetics of reduction of ferricytochrome c by the reversed electron transfer process are compared with the kinetics of formation of F and P. The results are consistent with transfer of one electron from the ferric-cupric bimetallic center (O) to cytochrome c, yielding the F intermediate, followed by transfer of one electron from the latter to cytochrome c, yielding the P state. In the absence of an effective redox buffer, poising cytochrome c highly oxidized, these primary events are immediately followed by reoxidation of cytochrome c, which is ascribed to forward electron transfer to enzyme molecules still in the O state. This forward reaction also results in accumulation of the P intermediate. Kinetic stimulations of the data predict equilibrium constants for the reversed electron transfer steps, and Em,7 values of approximately 1.1 and 1.2 V may be calculated for the F/O and P/F redox couples, respectively, at delta mu H+ and delta psi equal to zero. Taken together with previously measured Em,7 values, these data indicate that it is the two-electron reduction of bound dioxygen to bound peroxide that is responsible for the irreversibility of the catalytic dioxygen cycle of cell respiration.  相似文献   

13.
Cysteine alone reduces horse heart cytochrome c very slowly (k approximately or equal too 1.0 M-1s-1) with a rate constant virtually identical in high and low ionic strength buffers. Copper catalyzes this reaction increasing the rate by a factor of 10(5) in 50 mM phosphate and by a factor of 10(6) in 10mM Tris buffers. When ferricytochrome c and cysteine are mixed in an oxygen electrode a "burst" of oxygen uptake is seen, the decline in which parallels the reduction of cytochrome c. When cytochrome oxidase is added to such a mixture two routes of electron transfer to oxygen exist: enzymatic and ferricytochrome c dependent nonenzymatic. Both processes are sensitive to cyanide, but azide inhibits only the authentic cytochrome c oxidase catalyzed process and BCS the ferricytochrome c stimulated reaction.  相似文献   

14.
The inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase (IMPDH)/guanosine monophosphate reductase (GMPR) family of (β/α)(8) enzymes presents an excellent opportunity to investigate how subtle changes in enzyme structure change reaction specificity. IMPDH and GMPR bind the same ligands with similar affinities and share a common set of catalytic residues. Both enzymes catalyze a hydride transfer reaction involving a nicotinamide cofactor hydride, and both reactions proceed via the same covalent intermediate. In the case of IMPDH, this intermediate reacts with water, while in GMPR it reacts with ammonia. In both cases, the two chemical transformations are separated by a conformational change. In IMPDH, the conformational change involves a mobile protein flap while in GMPR, the cofactor moves. Thus reaction specificity is controlled by differences in dynamics, which in turn are controlled by residues outside the active site. These findings have some intriguing implications for the evolution of the IMPDH/GMPR family.  相似文献   

15.
In this minireview an overview is presented of the kinetics of electron transfer within the cytochrome bc (1) complex, as well as from cytochrome bc (1) to cytochrome c. The cytochrome bc (1) complex (ubiquinone:cytochrome c oxidoreductase) is an integral membrane protein found in the mitochondrial respiratory chain as well as the electron transfer chains of many respiratory and photosynthetic bacteria. Experiments on both mitochondrial and bacterial cyatochrome bc (1) have provided detailed kinetic information supporting a Q-cycle mechanism for electron transfer within the complex. On the basis of X-ray crystallographic studies of cytochrome bc (1), it has been proposed that the Rieske iron-sulfur protein undergoes large conformational changes as it transports electrons from ubiquinol to cytochrome c (1). A new method was developed to study electron transfer within cytochrome bc (1) using a binuclear ruthenium complex to rapidly photooxidize cytochrome c (1). The rate constant for electron transfer from the iron-sulfur center to cytochrome c (1) was found to be 80,000 s(-1), and is controlled by the dynamics of conformational changes in the iron-sulfur protein. Moreover, a linkage between the conformation of the ubiquinol binding site and the conformational dynamics of the iron-sulfur protein has been discovered which could play a role in the bifurcated oxidation of ubiquinol. A ruthenium photoexcitation method has also been developed to measure electron transfer from cytochrome c (1) to cytochrome c. The kinetics of electron transfer are interpreted in light of a new X-ray crystal structure for the complex between cytochrome bc (1) and cytochrome c.  相似文献   

16.
The kinetics of the reaction of OH radicals with ferricytochrome c was studied in the time range 1 microsecond to 1 s by means of pulse radiolysis. The OH radicals reduce ferricytochrome c by 40% +/- 10%. The time course of the reduction is explained by a mechanism whereby a radical formed after hydrogen has been abstracted from the outer surface of the protein reduces the iron by electron tunnelling. We have calculated that the reducing electron in the radical is bound with an energy of at least 1.75 eV and that the frequency factor of the tunnelling process is v=10(11.5)s-1. This model accounts for the observed absorbance change in time range 5 . 10(-6)--10(-1)s. The time course of the reduction of ferricytochrome c by H radicals (Lichtin, N.N., Shafferman A. and Stein, G. (1974) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 357, 386--398) is explained by the same model.  相似文献   

17.
G J Harnadek  E A Ries  D Njus 《Biochemistry》1985,24(11):2640-2644
The chromaffin vesicle of the adrenal medulla contains a transmembrane electron carrier that may provide reducing equivalents for dopamine beta-hydroxylase in vivo. This electron-transfer system can be assayed by trapping ascorbic acid inside resealed membrane vesicles (ghosts), adding an external electron acceptor such as ferricytochrome c or ferricyanide, and following the reduction of these acceptors spectrophotometrically. Cytochrome c reduction is more rapid at high pH and is proportional to the amount of chromaffin-vesicle ghosts, at least at low ghost concentrations. At pH 7.0, ghosts loaded with 100 mM ascorbic acid reduce 60 microM cytochrome c at a rate of 0.035 +/- 0.010 mu equiv min-1 (mg of protein)-1 and 200 microM ferricyanide at a rate of 2.3 +/- 0.3 mu equiv min-1 (mg of protein)-1. The rate of cytochrome c reduction is accelerated to 0.105 +/- 0.021 mu equiv min-1 (mg of protein)-1 when cytochrome c is pretreated with equimolar ferrocyanide. Pretreatment of cytochrome c with ferricyanide also causes a rapid rate of reduction, but only after an initial delay. The ferrocyanide-stimulated rate of cytochrome c reduction is further accelerated by the protonophore carbonyl cyanide p-(trifluoromethoxy)phenylhydrazone (FCCP), probably because FCCP dissipates the membrane potential generated by electron transfer. These rates of electron transfer are sufficient to account for electron transfer to dopamine beta-hydroxylase in vivo and are consistent with the mediation of electron transfer by cytochrome b-561.  相似文献   

18.
Electron transfer from the Rieske iron-sulfur protein to cytochrome c(1) (cyt c(1)) in the Rhodobacter sphaeroides cytochrome bc(1) complex was studied using a ruthenium dimer complex, Ru(2)D. Laser flash photolysis of a solution containing reduced cyt bc(1), Ru(2)D, and a sacrificial electron acceptor results in oxidation of cyt c(1) within 1 micros, followed by electron transfer from the iron-sulfur center (2Fe-2S) to cyt c(1) with a rate constant of 80,000 s(-1). Experiments were carried out to evaluate whether the reaction was rate-limited by true electron transfer, proton gating, or conformational gating. The temperature dependence of the reaction yielded an enthalpy of activation of +17.6 kJ/mol, which is consistent with either rate-limiting conformational gating or electron transfer. The rate constant was nearly independent of pH over the range pH 7 to 9.5 where the redox potential of 2Fe-2S decreases significantly due to deprotonation of His-161. The rate constant was also not greatly affected by the Rieske iron-sulfur protein mutations Y156W, S154A, or S154A/Y156F, which decrease the redox potential of 2Fe-2S by 62, 109, and 159 mV, respectively. It is concluded that the electron transfer reaction from 2Fe-2S to cyt c(1) is controlled by conformational gating.  相似文献   

19.
The reductant of ferricytochrome c2 in Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides is a component, Z, which has an equilibrium oxidation-reduction reaction involving two electrons and two protons with a midpoint potential of 155 mV at pH 7. Under energy coupled conditions, the reduction of ferricytochrome c2 by ZH2 is obligatorily coupled to an apparently electrogenic reaction which is monitored by a red shift of the endogeneous carotenoids. Both ferricytochrome c2 reduction and the associated carotenoid bandshift are similarly affected by the concentrations of ZH2 and ferricytochrome c2, pH, temperature the inhibitors diphenylamine and antimycin, and the presence of ubiquinone. The second-order rate constant for ferricytochrome c2 reduction at pH 7.0 and at 24 degrees C was 2 - 10(9) M-1 - s-1, but this varied with pH, being 5.1 - 10(8) M-1 = s-1 at pH 5.2 and 4.3 - 10(9) M-1 - s-1 at pH 9.3. At pH 7 the reaction had an activation energy of 10.3 kcal/mol.  相似文献   

20.
The electrochemical behaviour of ferricytochrome c, metmyoglobin and methemoglobin was studied using d.c., a.c. and differential pulse polarography, and controlled potential electrolysis. 1. The three hemoproteins yield d.c. polarographic steps, and peaks in differential pulse polarograms, the height of which is proportional to concentration. The charge transfer is influenced by strong adsorption. 2. The concentration dependence of the a.c. polarograms indicates structural changes in the adsorbed molecules. 3. The reduction products of controlled potential electrolysis of metmyoglobin and methemoglobin have absorption spectra identical with the native control samples. The affinity for oxygen and the cooperativity in hemoglobin are not affected by the reaction at the electrode. 4. The charge transfer proceeds via adsorbed, already reduced, molecules to freely diffusible proteins.  相似文献   

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