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1.
Y Z Zhang  G Ewart  R A Capaldi 《Biochemistry》1991,30(15):3674-3681
The arrangement of three subunits of beef heart cytochrome c oxidase, subunits Va, VIa, and VIII, has been explored by chemical labeling and protease digestion studies. Subunit Va is an extrinsic protein located on the C side of the mitochondrial inner membrane. This subunit was found to label with N-(4-azido-2-nitrophenyl)-2-aminoethane[35S]sulfonate and sodium methyl 4-[3H]formylphenyl phosphate in reconstituted vesicles in which 90% of cytochrome c oxidase complexes were oriented with the C domain outermost. Subunit VIa was cleaved by trypsin both in these reconstituted vesicles and in submitochondrial particles, indicating a transmembrane orientation. The epitope for a monoclonal antibody (mAb) to subunit VIa was lost or destroyed when cleavage occurred in reconstituted vesicles. This epitope was localized to the C-terminal part of the subunit by antibody binding to a fusion protein consisting of glutathione S-transferase (G-ST) and the C-terminal amino acids 55-85 of subunit VIa. No antibody binding was obtained with a fusion protein containing G-ST and the N-terminal amino acids 1-55. The mAb reaction orients subunit VIa with its C-terminus in the C domain. Subunit VIII was cleaved by trypsin in submitochondrial particles but not in reconstituted vesicles. N-Terminal sequencing of the subunit VIII cleavage product from submitochondrial particles gave the same sequence as the untreated subunit, i.e., ITA, indicating that it is the C-terminus which is cleaved from the M side. Subunits Va and VIII each contain N-terminal extensions or leader sequences in the precursor polypeptides; subunit VIa is made without an N-terminal extension.  相似文献   

2.
Cytochrome caa3 from Bacillus subtilis is a member of the heme-copper oxidase family of integral membrane enzymes that includes mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase. Subunit II of cytochrome caa3 has an extra 100 amino acids at its C-terminus, relative to its mitochondrial counterpart, and this extension encodes a heme C binding domain. Cytochrome caa3 has many of the properties of the complex formed between mitochondrial cytochrome c and mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase. To examine more closely the interaction between cytochrome c and the oxidase we have cloned and expressed the Cu(A)-cytochrome c portion of subunit II from the cytochrome caa3 complex of B. subtilis. We are able to express about 2000 nmol, equivalent to 65 mg, of the Cu(A)-cytochrome c protein per litre of Escherichia coli culture. About 500 nmol is correctly targeted to the periplasmic space and we purify 50% of that by a combination of affinity chromatography and ammonium sulfate fractionation. The cytochrome c containing sub-domain is well-folded with a stable environment around the heme C center, as its mid-point potential and rates of reduction are indistinguishable from values for the cytochrome c domain of the holo-enzyme. However, the Cu(A) site lacks copper leading to an inherent instability in this sub-domain. Expression of B. subtilis cytochrome c, as exemplified by the Cu(A)-cytochrome c protein, can be achieved in E. coli, and we conclude that the cytochrome c and Cu(A) sub-domains behave independently despite their close physical and functional association.  相似文献   

3.
A full-length 515 base pairs cDNA for cytochrome c oxidase subunit V of D. discoideum was isolated from a lambda gt11 expression library. The encoded polypeptide, whose identity was confirmed by partial protein sequencing, is 119 amino acids long (Mr = 13,352) and does not contain a cleavable presequence. The protein, which is homologous to human subunit Vb and yeast subunit IV, exhibits the highest degree of sequence conservation found among nuclear-encoded subunits of cytochrome c oxidase from distantly related organisms. All the invariant residues are clustered in two regions of the C-terminus which include the putative amino acids involved in the coordination of the Zn ion tightly associated to eukaryotic oxidase.  相似文献   

4.
Cytochrome oxidase is purified from rat liver and beef heart by affinity chromatography on a matrix of horse cytochrome c-Sepharose 4B. The success of this procedure, which employs a matrix previously found ineffective with beef or yeast oxidase, is attributed to thorough dispersion of the enzyme with nonionic detergent and a low density of cross-linking between the lysine residues of cytochrome c and the cyanogen bromide activated Sepharose. Beef heart oxidase is purified in one step from mitochondrial membranes solubilized with lauryl maltoside, yielding an enzyme of purity comparable to that obtained on a yeast cytochrome c matrix [Azzi, A., Bill, K., & Broger, C. (1982) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 79, 2447-2450]. Rat liver oxidase is prepared by hydroxyapatite and horse cytochrome c affinity chromatography in lauryl maltoside, yielding enzyme of high purity (12.5-13.5 nmol of heme a/mg of protein), high activity (TN = 270-400 s-1), and very low lipid content (1 mol of DPG and 1 mol of PI per mol of aa3). The activity of the enzyme is characterized by two kinetic phases, and electron transfer can be stimulated to maximal rates as high as 650 s-1 when supplemented with asolectin vesicles. The rat liver oxidase purified by this method does not contain the polypeptide designated as subunit III. Comparisons of the kinetic behavior of the enzyme in intact membranes, solubilized membranes, and the purified delipidated form reveal complex changes in kinetic parameters accompanying the changes in state and assay conditions, but do not support previous suggestions that subunit III is a critical factor in the binding of cytochrome c at the high-affinity site on oxidase or that cardiolipin is essential for the low-affinity interaction of cytochrome c. The purified rat liver oxidase retains the ability to exhibit respiratory control when reconstituted into phospholipid vesicles, providing definitive evidence that subunit III is not solely responsible for the ability of cytochrome oxidase to produce or respond to a membrane potential or proton gradient.  相似文献   

5.
C/57 black mice were immunized with beef heart cytochrome c oxidase, generating 48 hybrid cell lines that secrete antibodies against the different subunits of the enzyme. Immunoblot analysis showed reactions with 7 of the 13 subunits. Among the monoclonal antibodies produced, only those to subunit II gave significant inhibition; these inhibited the enzyme activity completely and prevented cytochrome c binding to the enzyme. Epitope mapping studies indicate that a peptide including residues 200-227 reacts with the antibody, suggesting that the C-terminus of the protein is essential for the binding of this antibody. The carboxyl modifying reagent 1-ethyl-3-[3-(trimethylammonio)propyl]carbodiimide (ETC) was chosen to investigate further the relationship between antibody and cytochrome c binding domains. ETC caused 50% inhibition of the enzyme activity with a first-order time during the first 20 min; a slower reaction over 3 h resulted in 90% inhibition. Cytochrome c binding to the oxidase was inhibited to a similar extent as cytochrome c oxidation, and protection against both effects was afforded by the presence of cytochrome c during ETC modification. Anion-exchange of FPLC of the modified forms of cytochrome oxidase revealed extensive inhomogeneity, indicating random derivatization of a number of different carboxyls even during the first-order reaction, and precluding identification of carboxyl residues related to a specific phase of the reaction. Cytochrome c and the subunit II-specific antibody protected against radioactive labeling of subunit II by ETC in the presence of [14C]glycine ethyl ester, demonstrating that the antibody and cytochrome c occupy significant and overlapping areas on the subunit II surface.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
We have investigated the covalent binding of dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD) to cytochrome c oxidase in relation to its inhibition of ferrocytochrome c-induced H+ translocation by the enzyme reconstituted in lipid vesicles. DCCD bound to the reconstituted oxidase in a time- and concentration-dependent manner which appeared to correlate with its inhibition of H+ translocation. In both reconstituted vesicles and intact beef heart mitochondria, the DCCD-binding site was located in subunit III of the oxidase. The apolar nature of DCCD and relatively minor effects of the hydrophilic carbodiimide, 1-ethyl-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)-carbodiimide, on H+ translocation by the oxidase indicate that the site of action of DCCD is hydrophobic. DCCD also bound to isolated cytochrome c oxidase, though in this case subunits III and IV were labeled. The maximal overall stoichiometries of DCCD molecules bound per cytochrome c oxidase molecule were 1 and 1.6 for the reconstituted and isolated enzymes, respectively. These findings point to subunit III of cytochrome c oxidase having an important role in H+ translocation by the enzyme and indicate that DCCD may prove a useful tool in elucidating the mechanism of H+ pumping.  相似文献   

7.
Vesicles reconstituted with bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase and dioleoylphosphatidylcholine can be resolved into two populations by column chromatography in DEAE-Sephacryl (Madden, T.D. and Cullis, P.R. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 7655-7658). These two fractions (I and II) were treated with two proteases. These are trypsin, which has been found to cleave subunit IV in the M domain of the cytochrome c oxidase molecule, and chymotrypsin, which has been found to cleave subunit III in the C domain. These studies show that fraction I vesicles contain cytochrome c oxidase orientation with the M domain outside, i.e., in the same topology as in submitochondrial particles, while fraction II vesicles contain enzyme molecules with their C domain outside, and thus in the same orientation as in mitochondria.  相似文献   

8.
Reconstituted cytochrome oxidase systems in which the majority of the vesicles contain a single oxidase dimer can be prepared. It is shown that, when these are passed through a cytochrome c affinity column, only those vesicles oriented outwards (such that the active site is available to external cytochrome c) are bound to the support matrix. Protein-free vesicles and vesicles containing an inwardly oriented enzyme are eluted in the void volume. Subsequently, vesicles containing an outwardly oriented enzyme can be eluted from the column at high salt concentrations. This protocol has been used successfully to resolve vesicles of either oxidase orientation when the enzyme is reconstituted with a variety of lipid mixtures. The recovery of oxidase activity from the column ranged between 75 and 94%.  相似文献   

9.
The ionic-strength-dependences of the rate constants (log k plotted versus square root of 1) for oxidation of native and pyridoxal 5'-phosphate-modified cytochromes c by three different preparations of cytochrome c oxidase have complex non-linear character, which may be explained on the basis of present knowledge of the structure of the oxidase and the monomer-dimer equilibrium of the enzyme. The wave-type curve (with a minimum and a maximum) for oxidation of native cytochrome c by purified cytochrome c oxidase depleted of phospholipids may reflect consecutively inhibition of oxidase monomers (initial descending part), competition between this inhibition and dimer formation, resulting in increased activity (second part with positive slope), and finally inhibition of oxidase dimers (last descending part of the curve). The dependence of oxidation of native cytochrome c by cytochrome c oxidase reconstituted into phospholipid vesicles is a curve with a maximum, without the initial descending part described above. This may reflect the lack of pure monomers in the vesicles, where equilibrium is shifted to dimers even at low ionic strength. Subunit-III-depleted cytochrome c oxidase does not exhibit the maximum seen with the other two enzyme preparations. This may mean that removal of subunit III hinders dimer formation. The charge interactions of each of the cytochromes c (native or modified) with the three cytochrome c oxidase preparations are similar, as judged by the similar slopes of the linear dependences at I values above the optimal one. This shows that subunit III and the phospholipid membrane do not seem to be involved in the specific charge interaction of cytochrome c oxidase with cytochrome c.  相似文献   

10.
We constructed expression plasmids containing cbaAB, the structural genes for the two-subunit cytochrome bo(3)-type cytochrome c oxidase (SoxB type) recently isolated from a Gram-positive thermophile Bacillus stearothermophilus. B. stearothermophilus cells transformed with the plasmids over-expressed an enzymatically active bo(3)-type cytochrome c oxidase protein composed of the two subunits, while the transformed Escherichia coli cells produced an inactive protein composed of subunit I without subunit II. The oxidase over-expressed in B. stearothermophilus was solubilized and purified. The oxidase contained protoheme IX and heme O, as the main low-spin heme and the high-spin heme, respectively. Analysis of the substrate specificity indicated that the high-affinity site is very specific for cytochrome c-551, a cytochrome c that is a membrane-bound lipoprotein of thermophilic Bacillus. The purified enzyme reconstituted into liposomal vesicles with cytochrome c-551 showed H(+) pumping activity, although the efficiency was lower than those of cytochrome aa(3)-type oxidases belonging to the SoxM-type.  相似文献   

11.
Studies were undertaken to assess the postulated involvement of subunit III in the proton-linked functions of cytochrome c oxidase. The effect of pH on the steady-state kinetic [corrected] parameters of subunit III containing and subunit III depleted cytochrome oxidase was determined by using beef heart and rat liver enzymes reconstituted into phospholipid vesicles. The TNmax and Km values for the III-containing enzyme increase with decreasing pH in a manner quantitatively similar to that reported by Thornstrom et al. [(1984) Chem. Scr. 24, 230-235], giving three apparent pKa values of less than 5.0, 6.2, and 7.8. The maximal activities of the subunit III depleted enzymes (beef heart and rat liver) show a similar dependence on pH, but the Km values are consistently higher than those of the III-containing enzyme, an effect that is accentuated at low pH. The pH dependence of TNmax/Km for both forms of the enzyme (+/- subunit III) indicates that protonation of a group with an apparent pKa of 5.7 lowers the affinity for substrate (cytochrome c) independently of a continued increase in maximal velocity. N,N'-Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD) decreases the pH responsiveness of the electron-transfer activity to the same extent in both III-containing and III-depleted enzymes, indicating that this effect is mediated by a peptide other than subunit III. Control of intramolecular electron transfer by a transmembrane pH gradient (or alkaline intravesicular pH) is shown to occur in cytochrome oxidase vesicles with cytochrome c as the electron donor, in agreement with results of Moroney et al. [(1984) Biochemistry 23, 4991-4997] using hexaammineruthenium(II) as the reductant.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Cytochrome caa3, a cytochrome c oxidase from Thermus thermophilus, is a two-subunit enzyme containing the four canonical metal centers of cytochrome c oxidases (cytochromes a and a3; copper centers CuA and CuB) and an additional cytochrome c. The smaller subunit contains heme C and was termed the C-protein. We have cloned the genes encoding the subunits of the oxidase and determined the nucleotide sequence of the C-protein gene. The gene and deduced primary amino acid sequences establish that both the gene and the protein are fusions with a typical subunit II sequence and a characteristic cytochrome c sequence; we now call this subunit IIc. The protein thus appears to represent a covalent joining of substrate (cytochrome c) to its enzyme (cytochrome c oxidase). In common with other subunits II, subunit IIc contains two hydrophobic segments of amino acids near the amino terminus that probably form transmembrane helices. Variability analysis of the Thermus and other subunit II sequences suggests that the two putative transmembrane helices in subunit II may be located on the surface of the hydrophobic portion of the intact cytochrome oxidase protein complex. Also in common with other subunits II is a relatively hydrophilic intermembrane domain containing a set of conserved amino acids (2 cysteines and 2 histidines) which have previously been proposed by others to serve as ligands to the CuA center. We compared the subunit IIc sequence with that of related proteins. N2O reductase of Pseudomonas stutzeri, a multi-copper protein that appears to contain a CuA site (Scott, R.A., Zumft, W.G., Coyle, C.L., and Dooley, D.M. (1989) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 86, 4082-4086), contains a 59-residue sequence element that is homologous to the "CuA sequence motif" found in cytochrome oxidase subunits II, including all four putative copper ligands. By contrast, subunit II of the Escherichia coli quinol oxidase, cytochrome bo, also contains a region homologous to the CuA motif, but it lacks the proposed metal binding histidine and cysteine residues; this is consistent with the apparent absence of CuA from cytochrome bo.  相似文献   

13.
The amino acid sequence of polypeptide II from beef heart cytochrome c oxidase is described. Comparision of this primary structure with those of azurins, plastocyanins and stellacyanins reveals clear homologies among them. Thus subunit II of the oxidase is a member of this copper protein family. The sequence homology indicates a copper binding site consisting of two invariant histidines and two sulfur-containing amino acids. Thus subunit II is like a blue copper protein with type I copper.  相似文献   

14.
Inhibition of cytochrome c oxidase function by dicyclohexylcarbodiimide   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD) reacted with beef heart cytochrome c oxidase in inhibit the proton-pumping function of this enzyme and to a lesser extent to inhibit electron transfer. The modification of cytochrome c oxidase in detergent dispersion or in vesicular membranes was in subunits II-IV. Labelling followed by fragmentation studies showed that there is one major site of modification in subunit III. DCCD was also incorporated into several sites in subunit II and at least one site of subunit IV. The major site in subunit III has a specificity for DCCD at least one order of magnitude greater than that of other sites (in subunits II and IV). Its modification could account for all of the observed effects of the reagent, at least for low concentrations of DCCD. Labelling of subunit II by DCCD was blocked by prior covalent attachment of arylazidocytochrome c, a cytochrome c derivative which binds to the high-affinity binding site for the substrate. The major site of DCCD binding in subunit III was sequenced. The label was found in glutamic acid 90 which is in a sequence of eight amino acids remarkably similar to the DCCD-binding site within the proteolipid protein of the mitochondrial ATP synthetase.  相似文献   

15.
Prutsch A  Lohaus C  Green B  Meyer HE  Lübben M 《Biochemistry》2000,39(21):6554-6563
The heme-copper cytochrome oxidase of Escherichia coli (cytochrome bo(3)) was tagged with oligohistidine at the C-terminus of the small noncatalytic subunit IV. After detergent solubilization, the enzyme was purified by a one-step procedure with immobilized metal affinity chromatography. Using different cytochrome bo(3) constructs as reference, the products were investigated by mass spectroscopical and immunological methods. Several posttranslational modifications of subunits II, III, and IV were observed: (1) N-terminal methionines of subunits III and IV are split off. (2) Fifty percent of subunit III polypeptides are acetylated, presumably at the N-terminal alanine. (3) Lipoprotein processing of subunit II involves cleavage of the signal peptide. (4) Maturation of subunit II [Ma, J., Katsonouri, A., and Gennis, R. B. (1997) Biochemistry 36, 11298-11303] alters the structure of the N-terminal cysteine by N-palmitoylation and S-glyceryldipalmitoylation. (5) A hexapeptide is split off from the C-terminus of subunit II. This happens subsequently to the N-terminal lipoprotein processing step and is dependent on the growth state of cells.  相似文献   

16.
Thirteen of the first fifteen amino acids from the NH2-terminus of the primary sequence of human cytochrome c oxidase subunit I and eleven of the first twelve amino acids of subunit II have been identified by microsequencing procedures. These sequences have been compared with the recently determined 5'-end proximal sequences of the HeLa cell mitochondrial mRNAs and unambiguously aligned with two of them. This alignment has allowed the identification of the putative mRNA for subunit I, and has shown that the initiator codon for this subunit is only three nucleotides away from the 5'-end of its mRNA; furthermore, the results have substantiated the idea that the translation of human cytochrome c oxidase subunit II starts directly at the 5'-end of its putative mRNA, as had been previously inferred on the basis of the sequence homology of human mitochondrial DNA with the primary sequences of the bovine subunit.  相似文献   

17.
Bacillus subtilis expresses a cytochrome c-550nm that participates in respiratory electron transfer and is an integral membrane protein. Analysis of the B. subtilis cytochrome c-550nm amino acid sequence predicts a single N-terminal transmembrane helix attached to a water-soluble heme binding domain [C. von Wachenfeldt and L. Hederstedt (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 13939-13948]. We have purified cytochrome c-550nm from wild-type B. subtilis and B. subtilis transformed with the shuttle vector pHP13 containing the gene for B. subtilis cytochrome c-550nm (cccA). In B. subtilis transformed with pHP13/cccA there is better than eightfold more membrane-bound cytochrome c-550nm than in wild-type B. subtilis. The overexpressed cytochrome c-550nm can be purified by chromatography on hydroxylapatite and Q-Sepharose media. A six-histidine tag has been added to the C-terminus of cytochrome c-550nm from B. subtilis as a further aid for purification. This strain produces cytochrome c-550nm to a level fourfold greater than wild type and allows for one-step purification using metal affinity chromatography. UV-Vis spectroscopy detects no change in the heme C spectrum due to the addition of six histidines. Neither form of B. subtilis cytochrome c-550nm is stable in its reduced state in aerated buffer, unless EDTA is added. The two forms, wild-type and his-tagged, of cytochromes c have similar midpoint redox potentials of 195 and 185 mV, respectively, and are equally good substrates for B. subtilis cytochrome c oxidase. We conclude that the addition of the histidine tag eases the purification of cytochrome c-550nm from B. subtilis plasma membranes and that the additional metal binding site does not compromise the stability or functional properties of the protein.  相似文献   

18.
Genetic manipulation of the aa(3)-type cytochrome c oxidase of Rhodobacter sphaeroides was used to determine the minimal structural subunit associations required for the assembly of the heme A and copper centers of subunit I. In the absence of the genes for subunits II and III, expression of the gene for subunit I in Rb. sphaeroides allowed purification of a form of free subunit I (subunit I(a)()) that contained a single heme A. No copper was present in this protein, indicating that the heme a(3)-Cu(B) active site was not assembled. In cells expressing the genes for subunits I and II, but not subunit III, two oxidase forms were synthesized that were copurified by histidine affinity chromatography and separated by anion-exchange chromatography. One form was a highly active subunit I-II oxidase containing a full complement of structurally normal metal centers. This shows that association of subunit II with subunit I is required for stable formation of the active site in subunit I. In contrast, subunit III is not required for the formation of any of the metal centers or for the production of an oxidase with wild-type activity. The second product of the cells lacking subunit III was a large amount of a free form of subunit I that appeared identical to subunit I(a)(). Since significant amounts of subunit I(a)() were also isolated from wild-type cells, it is likely that subunit I(a)() will be present in any preparation of the aa(3)-type oxidase isolated via an affinity tag on subunit I.  相似文献   

19.
The studies described here were performed to characterize further the plasma membrane associated protein BsSco, which is the product of the gene ypmQ, in Bacillus subtilis. BsSco is a member of the Sco family of proteins found in the inner mitochondrial membrane of yeast and humans and implicated as an accessory protein in the assembly of the Cu(A) site of cytochrome c oxidase. We have cloned the gene expressing BsSco, placed a six-histidine tag on its C-terminus, and over-expressed this protein in B. subtilis. Recombinant BsSco with the his-tag has been purified from Triton X-100-solubilized plasma membranes by nickel metal affinity chromatography. Mass spectral analysis of the purified protein is consistent with processing of BsSco by signal peptidase II removing an N-terminal putative transmembrane sequence to leave an acyl-glyceryl moiety at cysteine residue 19. Antibodies, raised against purified, recombinant BsSco, were used to characterize the timing of the level of native BsSco in batch cultures of wild-type B. subtilis. There is a marked lag in the level of native BsSco, but it does appear prior to cytochrome c oxidase, which is expressed in late stage growth. This work supports a role for BsSco in the assembly of the Cu(A) site of cytochrome c oxidase and its functional relationship to the Sco proteins found in eukaryotic cells.  相似文献   

20.
Drosou V  Reincke B  Schneider M  Ludwig B 《Biochemistry》2002,41(34):10629-10634
Under in vitro conditions, bacterial cytochrome c oxidases may accept several nonhomologous c-type electron donors, including the evolutionarily related mitochondrial cytochrome c. Several lines of evidence suggest that in intact membranes the heme aa(3) oxidase from Paracoccus denitrificans receives its electrons from the membrane-bound cytochrome c(552). Both the structures of the oxidase and of a heterologously expressed, soluble fragment of the c(552) have been determined recently, but no direct structural information about a static cocomplex is available. Here, we analyze the kinetic properties of the isolated oxidase with the full-size c(552), with two truncated soluble forms, and with a set of site-specific mutants within the presumed docking site of the cytochrome, all heterologously expressed in Escherichia coli. Our data indicate that all three forms, the wild type and both truncations, are fully competent kinetically and exhibit biphasic kinetic behavior, however, under widely different ionic strength conditions. When mutations in lysine residues clustered around the interaction domain were introduced into the smallest fragment of c(552), both kinetic parameters, K(M) and k(cat), were drastically influenced. On the other hand, when the nonmutated truncated form was used to donate electrons to a set of oxidase mutants with replacements clustered along the docking site on subunit II, we observe distinct differences when comparing the kinetic properties of the widely used horse heart cytochrome c with those of the bacterial c(552). We conclude that the specific docking sites for the two types of cytochromes differ to some extent.  相似文献   

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