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1.
Type II NADH dehydrogenase of Corynebacterium glutamicum (NDH-2) was purified from an ndh overexpressing strain. Purification conferred 6-fold higher specific activity of NADH:ubiquinone-1 oxidoreductase with a 3.5-fold higher recovery than that previously reported (K. Matsushita et al., 2000). UV-visible and fluorescence analyses of the purified enzyme showed that NDH-2 of C. glutamicum contained non-covalently bound FAD but not covalently bound FMN. This enzyme had an ability to catalyze electron transfer from NADH and NADPH to oxygen as well as various artificial quinone analogs at neutral and acidic pHs respectively. The reduction of native quinone of C. glutamicum, menaquinone-2, with this enzyme was observed only with NADH, whereas electron transfer to oxygen was observed more intensively with NADPH. This study provides evidence that C. glutamicum NDH-2 is a source of the reactive oxygen species, superoxide and hydrogen peroxide, concomitant with NADH and NADPH oxidation, but especially with NADPH oxidation. Together with this unique character of NADPH oxidation, phylogenetic analysis of NDH-2 from various organisms suggests that NDH-2 of C. glutamicum is more closely related to yeast or fungal enzymes than to other prokaryotic enzymes.  相似文献   

2.
The enzymatic properties of NADH:quinone oxidoreductase were examined in Triton X-100 extracts of Bacillus cereus membranes by using the artificial electron acceptors ubiquinone-1 and menadione. Membranes were prepared from B. cereus KCTC 3674 grown aerobically on a complex medium and oxidized with NADH exclusively, whereas deamino-NADH was determined to be poorly oxidized. The NADH oxidase activity was lost completely by solubilization of the membranes with Triton X-100. However, by using the artificial electron acceptors ubiquinone-1 and menadione, NADH oxidation could be observed. The activities of NADH:ubiquinone-1 and NADH:menadione oxidoreductase were enhanced approximately 8-fold and 4-fold, respectively, from the Triton X-100 extracted membranes. The maximum activity of FAD-dependent NADH:ubiquinone-1 oxidoreductase was obtained at about pH 6.0 in the presence of 0.1M NaCl, while the maximum activity of FAD-dependent NADH:menadione oxidoreductase was obtained at about pH 8.0 in the presence of 0.1 M NaCl. The activities of the NADH:ubiquinone-1 and NADH:menadione oxidoreductase were very resistant to such respiratory chain inhibitors as rotenone, capsaicin, and AgNO(3), whereas these activities were sensitive to 2-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide (HQNO). Based on these results, we suggest that the aerobic respiratory chain-linked NADH oxidase system of B. cereus KCTC 3674 possesses an HQNO-sensitive NADH:quinone oxidoreductase that lacks an energy coupling site containing FAD as a cofactor.  相似文献   

3.
Intracellular NADH:quinone reductase involved in degradation of aromatic compounds including lignin was purified and characterized from white rot fungus Trametes versicolor. The activity of quinone reductase was maximal after 3 days of incubation in fungal culture, and the enzyme was purified to homogeneity using ion-exchange, hydrophobic interaction, and gel filtration chromatographies. The purified enzyme has a molecular mass of 41 kDa as determined by SDS-PAGE, and exhibits a broad temperature optimum between 20-40 degrees C , with a pH optimum of 6.0. The enzyme preferred FAD as a cofactor and NADH rather than NADPH as an electron donor. Among quinone compounds tested as substrate, menadione showed the highest enzyme activity followed by 1,4-benzoquinone. The enzyme activity was inhibited by CuSO(4), HgCl(2), MgSO(4), MnSO(4), AgNO(3), dicumarol, KCN, NaN(3), and EDTA. Its Km and Vmax with NADH as an electron donor were 23 microM and 101 mM/mg per min, respectively, and showed a high substrate affinity. Purified quinone reductase could reduce 1,4-benzoquinone to hydroquinone, and induction of this enzyme was higher by 1,4-benzoquinone than those of other quinone compounds.  相似文献   

4.
The pathogenicity of Vibrio cholerae is influenced by sodium ions which are actively extruded from the cell by the Na(+)-translocating NADH:quinone oxidoreductase (Na(+)-NQR). To study the function of the Na(+)-NQR in the respiratory chain of V. cholerae, we examined the formation of organic radicals and superoxide in a wild-type strain and a mutant strain lacking the Na(+)-NQR. Upon reduction with NADH, an organic radical was detected in native membranes by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy which was assigned to ubisemiquinones generated by the Na(+)-NQR. The radical concentration increased from 0.2 mM at 0.08 mM Na(+) to 0.4 mM at 14.7 mM Na(+), indicating that the concentration of the coupling cation influences the redox state of the quinone pool in V. cholerae membranes. During respiration, V. cholerae cells produced extracellular superoxide with a specific activity of 10.2 nmol min(-1) mg(-1) in the wild type compared to 3.1 nmol min(-1) mg(-1) in the NQR deletion strain. Raising the Na(+) concentration from 0.1 to 5 mM increased the rate of superoxide formation in the wild-type V. cholerae strain by at least 70%. Rates of respiratory H(2)O(2) formation by wild-type V. cholerae cells (30.9 nmol min(-1) mg(-1)) were threefold higher than rates observed with the mutant strain lacking the Na(+)-NQR (9.7 nmol min(-1) mg(-1)). Our study shows that environmental Na(+) could stimulate ubisemiquinone formation by the Na(+)-NQR and hereby enhance the production of reactive oxygen species formed during the autoxidation of reduced quinones.  相似文献   

5.
The sulfide-dependent reduction of exogenous ubiquinone by membranes of the hyperthermophilic chemotrophic bacterium Aquifex aeolicus (VF5), the sulfide-dependent consumption of oxygen and the reduction of cytochromes by sulfide in membranes were studied. Sulfide reduced decyl-ubiquinone with a maximal rate of up to 3.5 micromol (mg protein)(-1) min(-1) at 20 degrees C. Rates of 220 nmol (mg protein)(-1) min(-1)] for the sulfide-dependent consumption of oxygen and 480 nmol (mg protein)(-1) min(-1) for the oxidation of sulfide at 20 C were estimated. The reactions were sensitive towards 2-n-nonyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide, but insensitive towards cyanide. Both reduction of decyl-ubiquinone and consumption of oxygen by sulfide rapidly increased with increasing temperature. For the sulfide-dependent respiratory activity, a sulfide-to-oxygen ratio of 2.3+/-0.2 was measured. This indicates that sulfide was oxidized to the level of zero-valent sulfur. Reduction of cytochromes by sulfide was monitored with an LED-array spectrophotometer. Reduction of cytochrome b was stimulated by 2-n-nonyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide in the presence of excess sulfide under oxic conditions. This "oxidant-induced reduction" of cytochrome b suggests that electron transport from sulfide to oxygen in A. aeolicus employs the cytochrome bc complex via the quinone pool. Comparison of the amino acid sequence with the sequence of the sulfide:quinone oxidoreductase from Rhodobacter capsulatus and of the flavocytochrome c from Allochromatium vinosum revealed that the sulfide:quinone oxidoreductase from A. aeolicus belongs to the glutathione reductase family of flavoproteins.  相似文献   

6.
The Na+-translocating NADH:quinone oxidoreductase (Na+-NQR) from Vibrio alginolyticus was inactivated by reactive oxygen species. Highest Na+-NQR activity was observed in anaerobically prepared membranes that exhibited 1:1 coupling of NADH oxidation and Q reduction activities (1.6 U x mg(-1)). Optical and EPR spectroscopy documented the presence of b-type cytochromes, a [2Fe-2S] cluster and an organic radical signal in anaerobically prepared membranes from V. alginolyticus. It is shown that the [2Fe-2S] cluster previously assigned to the Na+-NQR originates from the succinate dehydrogenase or the related enzyme fumarate reductase.  相似文献   

7.
The Na(+)-translocating NADH:quinone oxidoreductase (Na(+)-NQR) from the human pathogen Vibrio cholerae is a respiratory flavo-FeS complex composed of the six subunits NqrA-F. The Na(+)-NQR was produced as His(6)-tagged protein by homologous expression in V. cholerae. The isolated complex contained near-stoichiometric amounts of non-covalently bound FAD (0.78 mol/mol Na(+)-NQR) and riboflavin (0.70 mol/mol Na(+)-NQR), catalyzed NADH-driven Na(+) transport (40 nmol Na(+)min(-1) mg(-1)), and was inhibited by 2-n-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide. EPR spectroscopy showed that Na(+)-NQR as isolated contained very low amounts of a neutral flavosemiquinone (10(-3) mol/mol Na(+)-NQR). Reduction with NADH resulted in the formation of an anionic flavosemiquinone (0.10 mol/mol Na(+)-NQR). Subsequent oxidation of the Na(+)-NQR with ubiquinone-1 or O(2) led to the formation of a neutral flavosemiquinone (0.24 mol/mol Na(+)-NQR). We propose that the Na(+)-NQR is fully oxidized in its resting state, and discuss putative schemes of NADH-triggered redox transitions.  相似文献   

8.
H D Campbell  I G Young 《Biochemistry》1983,22(25):5754-5760
The respiratory NADH dehydrogenase of Escherichia coli has been further amplified in vivo by genetic methods. The enzyme, a single polypeptide of Mr 47 200 of known amino acid sequence [Young, I. G., Rogers, B. L., Campbell, H. D., Jaworowski, A., & Shaw, D. C. (1981) Eur. J. Biochem. 116, 165-170], constitutes 10-15% of the total protein in the amplified membranes. In situ in the membrane, the enzyme contains 1 mol of FAD/mol of subunit and has a specific NADH:ubiquinone-1 oxidoreductase activity of approximately 1100-1200 units mg-1 at 30 degrees C, pH 7.5. The purified enzyme contains phospholipid, which remains closely associated with it during gel filtration on Sephacryl S-300 in the presence of 0.1% (w/v) cholate at low ionic strength. Under these conditions the enzyme is extensively aggregated (apparent Mr greater than 10(6]. This procedure yielded enzyme with a specific activity of 980 units mg-1, similar to the value observed in the membrane. This preparation contained less than 0.1 mol of Fe/mol of enzyme, confirming that Fe is not involved in reduction of ubiquinone 1 catalyzed by the enzyme. Neutron activation analysis of purified enzyme has demonstrated the absence of 35 trace elements including Se, Zn, Mn, Co, W, Cu, and Fe. The enzyme polypeptide, prepared completely free of phospholipid, FAD, and ubiquinone by gel filtration in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate, has been reactivated. The results show that the only components necessary for catalysis of ubiquinone-1 reduction by NADH in this system are the enzyme polypeptide, FAD, and phospholipid.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Conditions for the reversible dissociation of flavin mononucleotide (FMN) from the membrane-bound mitochondrial NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) are described. The catalytic activities of the enzyme, i.e. rotenone-insensitive NADH:hexaammineruthenium III reductase and rotenone-sensitive NADH:quinone reductase decline when bovine heart submitochondrial particles are incubated with NADH in the presence of rotenone or cyanide at alkaline pH. FMN protects and fully restores the NADH-induced inactivation whereas riboflavin and flavin adenine dinucleotide do not. The data show that the reduction of complex I significantly weakens the binding of FMN to protein thus resulting in its dissociation when the concentration of holoenzyme is comparable with K(d ( approximately 10(-8)M at pH 10.0).  相似文献   

10.
A NAD(P)H:flavin oxidoreductase, which produces FMNH2, one of the substrates for the luciferase reaction in bioluminescent bacteria, has been purified with the aid of affinity chromatography on epsilon-aminohexanoyl-FMN-Sepharose. The purified enzyme, isolated from Beneckea harveyi, had a specific activity of 89 mumol of NADH oxidized/min/mg of protein at 23 degrees in the presence of saturating FMN and NADH and appeared homogeneous by several criteria on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. A molecular weight of 24,000 was estimated both by gel filtration and and sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis indicating that the enzyme is composed of a single polypeptide chain. Kinetic studies showed that the higher specificity of the enzyme for NADH than NADPH and for riboflavin and FMN than FAD was primarily due to variations in the Michaelis constants for the different substrates. Initial velocity studies with all pairs of substrates gave intersecting patterns supporting a sequential mechanism for the NAD(P)H:flavin oxidoreductase.  相似文献   

11.
NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) was purified from bovine heart mitochondria by solubilization with n-dodecyl beta-D-maltoside (lauryl maltoside), ammonium sulfate fractionation, and chromatography on Mono Q in the presence of the detergent. Its subunit composition was very similar to complex I purified by conventional means. Complex I was dissociated in the presence of N,N-dimethyldodecylamine N-oxide and beta-mercaptoethanol, and two subcomplexes, I alpha and I beta, were isolated by chromatography. Subcomplex I alpha catalyzes electron transfer from NADH to ubiquinone-1. It is composed of about 22 different and mostly hydrophilic subunits and contains 2.0 nmol of FMN/mg of protein. Among its subunits is the 51-kDa subunit, which binds FMN and NADH and probably contains a [4Fe-4S] cluster also. Three other potential Fe-S proteins, the 75- and 24-kDa subunits and a 23-kDa subunit (N-terminal sequence TYKY), are also present. All of the Fe-S clusters detectable by EPR in complex I, including cluster 2, are found in subcomplex I alpha. The line shapes of the EPR spectra of the Fe-S clusters are slightly broadened relative to spectra measured on complex I purified by conventional means, and the quinone reductase activity is insensitive to rotenone. Similar changes were found in samples of the intact chromatographically purified complex I, or in complex I prepared by the conventional method and then subjected to chromatography in the presence of lauryl maltoside. Subcomplex I beta contains about 15 different subunits. The sequences of many of them contain hydrophobic segments that could be membrane spanning, including at least two mitochondrial gene products, ND4 and ND5. The role of subcomplex I beta in the intact complex remains to be elucidated.  相似文献   

12.
Scheide D  Huber R  Friedrich T 《FEBS letters》2002,512(1-3):80-84
The proton-pumping NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase, also called complex I, is the first energy-transducing complex of many respiratory chains. Homologues of complex I are present in the three domains of life. Here, we report the properties of complex I in membranes of the hyperthermophilic bacterium Aquifex aeolicus. The complex reacted with NADH but not with NADPH and F(420)H(2) as electron donors. Short-chain analogues of ubiquinone like decyl-ubiquinone and ubiquinone-2 were suitable electron acceptors. The affinities towards NADH and ubiquinone-2 were comparable to the ones obtained with the Escherichia coli complex I. The reaction was inhibited by piericidin A at the same concentration as in E. coli. The complex showed an unusual pH optimum at pH 9 and a maximal rate at 80 degrees C. We found no evidence for the presence of an alternative, single subunit NADH dehydrogenase in A. aeolicus membranes. The NADH:ferricyanide reductase activity of detergent extracts of A. aeolicus membranes sedimented as a protein with a molecular mass of approximately 550 kDa. From the data we concluded that A. aeolicus contains a NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase resembling complex I of mesophilic bacteria.  相似文献   

13.
An NADH dehydrogenase possessing a specific activity 3-5 times that of membrane-bound enzyme was obtained by extraction of Acholeplasma laidlawii membranes with 9.0% ethanol at 43 degrees C. This dehydrogenase contained only trace amounts of iron (suggesting an uncoupled respiration), a flavin ratio of 1:2 FAD to FMN and 30-40% lipid. Its resistance to sedimentation is probably due to the high flotation density of the lipids. It efficiently utilized ferricyanide, menadione and dichlorophenol indophenol as electron acceptors, but not O2, ubiquinone Q10 or cytochrome c. Lineweaver-Burk plots of the dehydrogenase were altered to linear functions upon extraction with 9.0% ethanol. A secondary site of ferricyanide reduction could not be explained by the presence of cytochromes, which these membranes lack. In comparison to other respiratory chain-linked NADH dehydrogenases in cytochrome-containing respiratory chains, this dehydrogenase was characterized by similar Km's with ferricyanide, dichlorophenol indophenol, menadione as electron acceptors, but considerably smaller V's with ferricyanide, dichlorophenol indophenol, menadione as electron acceptors, and smaller specific activities. It was not stimulated or reactivated by the addition of FAD, FMN, Mg2+, cysteine or membrane lipids, and was less sensitive to respiratory inhibitors than unextracted enzyme. The ineffectiveness of ADP stimulation on O2 uptake, the insensitivity to oligomycin and the very low iron content of A. laidlawii membranes were considered in relation to conservation of energy by these cells. Some kinetic properties of the dehydrogenation, the uniquely high glycolipid content and apparently uncoupled respiration at Site I were noteworthy characteristics of this NADH dehydrogenase from the truncated respiratory chain of A. laidlawii.  相似文献   

14.
The thermoacidophilic archaeon Acidianus ambivalens contains a monomeric 47 kDa type-II NADH dehydrogenase (NDH), which contains a covalently bound flavin. In this work, by a combination of several methods, namely (31)P-nuclear magnetic resonance and fluorescence spectroscopies, it is proven that this enzyme contains covalent FMN, a novelty among this family of enzymes, which were so far thought to mainly have the flavin dinucleotide form. Discrimination between several possible covalent flavin linkages was achieved by spectral and fluorescence experiments, which identified an 8alpha-N(1)-histidylflavin-type of linkage. Analysis of the gene-deduced amino acid sequence of type-II NDH showed no transmembranar helices and allowed the definition of putative dinucleotide and quinone binding motifs. Further, it is suggested that membrane anchoring can be achieved via amphipatic helices.  相似文献   

15.
The Na(+)-translocating NADH:quinone oxidoreductase from Vibrio cholerae is a six subunit enzyme containing four flavins and a single motif for the binding of a Fe-S cluster on its NqrF subunit. This study reports the production of a soluble variant of NqrF (NqrF') and its individual flavin and Fe-S-carrying domains using V. cholerae or Escherichia coli as expression hosts. NqrF' and the flavin domain each contain 1 mol of FAD/mol of enzyme and exhibit high NADH oxidation activity (20,000 micromol min(-1) mg(-1)). EPR, visible absorption, and circular dichroism spectroscopy indicate that the Fe-S cluster in NqrF' and its Fe-S domain is related to 2Fe ferredoxins of the vertebrate-type. The addition of NADH to NqrF' results in the formation of a neutral flavosemiquinone and a partial reduction of the Fe-S cluster. The NqrF subunit harbors the active site of NADH oxidation and acts as a converter between the hydride donor NADH and subsequent one-electron reaction steps in the Na(+)-translocating NADH:quinone oxidoreductase complex. The observed electron transfer NADH --> FAD --> [2Fe-2S] in NqrF requires positioning of the FAD and the Fe-S cluster in close proximity in accordance with a structural model of the subunit.  相似文献   

16.
The NADH:ubiquinone reductase (NDH-2) of Escherichia coli was expressed as a His-tagged protein, extracted from the membrane fraction using detergent and purified by chromatography. The His-tagged NDH-2 was highly active and catalyzed NADH oxidation by ubiquinone-1 at rates over two orders of magnitude higher than previously reported. The purified, His-tagged NDH-2, like native NDH-2, did not oxidize deamino-NADH. Steady-state kinetics were used to analyze the enzyme's activity in the presence of different electron acceptors. High V(max) and low K(m) values were only found for hydrophobic ubiquinone analogues, particularly ubiquinone-2. These findings strongly support the notion that NDH-2 is a membrane bound enzyme, despite the absence of predicted transmembrane segments in its primary structure. The latter observation is in agreement with possible evolutionary relation between NDH-2 and water-soluble enzymes such as dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase. There is currently no clear indication of how NDH-2 binds to biological membranes.  相似文献   

17.
A new type-II NADH dehydrogenase (NDH-II) was isolated from the hyperthermoacidophilic archaeon Acidianus ambivalens. This enzyme is a monomer with an apparent molecular mass of 47 kDa, containing a covalently bound flavin, and no iron–sulfur clusters. Upon isolation, NDH-II loses activity, which can, nevertheless, be restored by incubation with phospholipids. Catalytically, it is a proficient NADH:caldariella quinone oxidoreductase (130 mmol NADH oxidized/mg protein-1/min-1) but it can also donate electrons to synthetic quinones, strongly suggesting its involvement in the respiratory chain. The apparent Km for NADH was found to be 6 M, both for the purified and membrane-integrated enzyme, thus showing that detergent solubilization and purification did not affect the substrate binding site. Further, it is the first example of a type-II NADH dehydrogenase that contains the flavin covalently attached, which may be related to the need to stabilize the otherwise labile cofactor in a thermophilic environment. A fully operative minimal version of Acidianus ambivalens respiratory system was successfully reconstituted into artificial liposomes, using three basic components isolated from the organism: the type-II NADH dehydrogenase, caldariella quinone, the organism-specific quinone, and the aa3 type quinol oxidase. This system, which mimics the in vivo chain, is efficiently energized by NADH, driving oxygen consumption by means of the terminal oxidase.  相似文献   

18.
Na(+) is the second major coupling ion at membranes after protons, and many pathogenic bacteria use the sodium-motive force to their advantage. A prominent example is Vibrio cholerae, which relies on the Na(+)-pumping NADH:quinone oxidoreductase (Na(+)-NQR) as the first complex in its respiratory chain. The Na(+)-NQR is a multisubunit, membrane-embedded NADH dehydrogenase that oxidizes NADH and reduces quinone to quinol. Existing models describing redox-driven Na(+) translocation by the Na(+)-NQR are based on the assumption that the pump contains four flavins and one FeS cluster. Here we show that the large, peripheral NqrA subunit of the Na(+)-NQR binds one molecule of ubiquinone-8. Investigations of the dynamic interaction of NqrA with quinones by surface plasmon resonance and saturation transfer difference NMR reveal a high affinity, which is determined by the methoxy groups at the C-2 and C-3 positions of the quinone headgroup. Using photoactivatable quinone derivatives, it is demonstrated that ubiquinone-8 bound to NqrA occupies a functional site. A novel scheme of electron transfer in Na(+)-NQR is proposed that is initiated by NADH oxidation on subunit NqrF and leads to quinol formation on subunit NqrA.  相似文献   

19.
Membranes of Klebsiella pneumoniae, grown anaerobically on citrate, contain a NADH oxidase activity that is activated specifically by Na+ or Li+ ions and effectively inhibited by 2-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide (HQNO). Cytochromes b and d were present in the membranes, and the steady state reduction level of cytochrome b increased on NaCl addition. Inverted bacterial membrane vesicles accumulated Na+ ions upon NADH oxidation. Na+ uptake was completely inhibited by monensin and by HQNO and slightly stimulated by carbonylcyanide-p-trifluoromethoxy phenylhydrazone (FCCP), thus indicating the operation of a primary Na+ pump. A Triton extract of the bacterial membranes did not catalyze NADH oxidation by O2, but by ferricyanide or menadione in a Na+-independent manner. The Na+-dependent NADH oxidation by O2 was restored by adding ubiquinone-1 in micromolar concentrations. After inhibition of the terminal oxidase with KCN, ubiquinol was formed from ubiquinone-1 and NADH. The reaction was stimulated about 6-fold by 10 mM NaCl and was severely inhibited by low amounts of HQNO. Superoxide radicals were formed during electron transfer from NADH to ubiquinone-1. These radicals disappeared by adding NaCl, but not with NaCl and HQNO. It is suggested that the superoxide radicals arise from semiquinone radicals which are formed by one electron reduction of quinone in a Na+-independent reaction sequence and then dismutate in a Na+ and HQNO sensitive reaction to quinone and quinol. The mechanism of the respiratory Na+ pump of K. pneumoniae appears to be quite similar to that of Vibrio alginolyticus.  相似文献   

20.
The Na+-translocating NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (Na+-NQR) from Vibrio harveyi was purified and studied by EPR and visible spectroscopy. Two EPR signals in the NADH-reduced enzyme were detected: one, a radical signal, and the other a line around g = 1.94, which is typical for a [2Fe-2S] cluster. An E(m) of -267 mV was found for the Fe-S cluster (n = 1), independent of sodium concentration. The spin concentration of the radical in the enzyme was approximately the same under a variety of redox conditions. The time course of Na+-NQR reduction by NADH indicated the presence of at least two different flavin species. Reduction of the first species (most likely, a FAD near the NADH dehydrogenase site) was very rapid in both the presence and absence of sodium. Reduction of the second flavin species (presumably, covalently bound FMN) was slower and strongly dependent on sodium concentration, with an apparent activation constant for Na+ of approximately 3.4 mM. This is very similar to the Km for Na+ in the steady-state quinone reductase reaction catalyzed by this enzyme. These data led us to conclude that the sodium-dependent step within the Na+-NQR is located between the noncovalently bound FAD and the covalently bound FMN.  相似文献   

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