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1.
The effect of pH and temperature on the reaction of fully reduced and mixed-valence cytochrome c oxidase with dioxygen 总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5
The reaction of fully reduced and mixed-valence cytochrome oxidase with O2 has been followed in flow-flash experiments, starting from the CO complexes, at 428, 445, 605 and 830 nm between pH 5.8b and 9.0 in the temperature range of 2-40 degrees C. With the fully reduced enzyme, four kinetic phase with rate constants at pH 7.4 and 25 degrees C of 9 x 10(4), 2.5 x 10(4), 1.0 x 10(4) and 800 s(-1), respectively, are observed. The rates of the three last phases display a very small temperature dependence, corresponding to activation energies in the range 13-54 kJ x mol(-1). The rates of the third and fourth phases decrease at high pH due to the deprotonation of groups with pKa values of 8.3 and 8.8, respectively, but also the second phase appears to have a small pH dependence. In the reaction of the mixed-valence enzyme, three kinetic phases with rate constants at pH 7.4 and 25 degrees C of 9 x 10(4), 6000 and 150 s(-1), respectively, are observed. The third phase only has a small temperature dependence, corresponding to an activation energy of 20 kJ x mol(-1). No pH dependence could be detected for any phase. Reaction schemes consistent with the experimental observations are presented. The pH dependencies of the rates of the two final phase in the reaction of the fully reduced enzyme are proposed to be related to the involvement of protons in the reduction of a peroxide intermediate. The temperature dependence data suggest that the reorganization energies and driving forces are closely matched in all electron transfer steps with both enzyme forms. It is suggested that the slowest step in the reaction of the mixed-valence enzyme is a conformation change involved in the reaction cycle of cytochrome oxidase as a proton pump. 相似文献
2.
《BBA》2013,1827(7):843-847
Cytochrome oxidase is one of the functionally most intriguing redox-driven proton pumps. During the last decade our increased understanding of the system has greatly benefited from theoretical calculations and modeling in the framework of three-dimensional structures of cytochrome c oxidases from different species. Because these studies are based on results from experiments, it is important that any ambiguities in the conclusions extracted from these experiments are discussed and elucidated. In a recent study Szundi et al. (Szundi et al. Biochemistry 2012, 51, 9302) investigated the reaction of the reduced Rhodobacter sphaeroides cytochrome c oxidase with O2 and arrived at conclusions different from those derived from earlier investigations. In this short communication we compare these very recent data to those obtained from earlier studies and discuss the origin of the differences. 相似文献
3.
Pulsed and oxygenated forms of cytochrome c oxidase are believed to be variants of the oxidized enzyme. They were produced as a consequence of one or more reduction-oxidation cycles of the resting form and are characterized by an increase of the alpha band intensity and a red-shift of the Soret absorption band to 428 nm. The rate of decay of these species back to the resting enzyme varies appreciably and appears to depend on the nature of the reductant and/or oxidant used in their preparation. Here we report that if resting oxidase is incubated with either reduced or oxidized cytochrome c and then exposed to dioxygen, an activated form is rapidly produced which appears to be more oxidized than the starting material. This finding suggest some degree of partial reduction of the resting enzyme, but this by itself cannot explain the extent of activation. Our results further question the significance of the optical spectral "signature" of the oxygenated (Okunuki, K., and Sekuzu, I. (1954) Seitaino Kagaka 5, 265-272), pulsed (Antonini, E., Brunori, M., Colosimo, A., Greenwood, C., and Wilson, M. T. (1977) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 74, 3128-3132), and "420 nm" species (Kumar, C., Naqui, A., and Chance, B. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 2073-2076, 11668-11671), which are thought to be activated forms of oxidized cytochrome c oxidase. 相似文献
4.
We describe a new method for studying rapid biological reactions involving dioxygen. This approach is based on the photolysis of a synthetic caged dioxygen carrier, which produces dioxygen on a fast time scale. The method was used to investigate the reduction of dioxygen to water by cytochrome c oxidase at room temperature following photolysis of a (mu-peroxo)(mu-hydroxo)bis[bis(bipyridyl)c obalt(III)] complex. The fact that dioxygen is generated in situ on a nanosecond or faster time scale avoids potential complications related to the fate of photodissociated CO in a conventional CO flow-flash experiment. The cobalt complex is stable at room temperature under anaerobic conditions and releases dioxygen upon irradiation at 355 nm with a quantum yield of 0.04. The complex does not react with reduced cytochrome oxidase or its reducing agents within the mixing time of the experiment, and its photoproducts do not interfere with the kinetics of the dioxygen reduction. The oxidation of the reduced cytochrome oxidase was monitored between 500 and 750 nm using a gated optical spectrometric multichannel analyzer following photodissociation of the cobalt complex. The data were analyzed using singular value decomposition and global exponential fitting, and two apparent lifetimes (380 +/- 50 micros and 1.7 +/- 0.2 ms) were resolved and compared to results from a conventional CO flow-flash experiment. The results show that approximately 90 microM dioxygen can be generated upon a single laser pulse and that this approach can be used to study other fast biological reactions involving O(2). 相似文献
5.
The pH dependence of proton uptake and electron transfers during the reaction between fully reduced cytochrome c oxidase and oxygen has been studied using the flow-flash method. Proton uptake was monitored using different pH indicators. We have also investigated the effect of D2O on the electron-transfer reactions. Proton uptake was biphasic throughout the pH range studied (6.3-9.3), and the decrease of the observed rate constants at increasing pH could be described by titration curves with pKa values of 8-8.5. Of the four phases resolved in the redox reaction, the rate constants for the first two were independent of pH, whereas that of the third decreased at increasing pH with a pKa of 7.9. All phases except the first were slower in D2O than in H2O. The values obtained for kH/kD were 1.0 for the first phase, 1.4 for the second and third phases, and 2.5 for the fourth phase. We suggest from these results that the fast phase of proton uptake is initiated by the second phase of the redox reaction and that this step includes a partially rate-limiting internal proton transfer. The third and fourth phases of the redox reaction are suggested to be rate limited by proton uptake from the medium. The pH dependencies of the proton uptake reactions are consistent with the participation of a titrable group in the protein in proton transfer from the medium to the oxygen-binding site. 相似文献
6.
Photolysis spectra of the CO and cyanide adducts of reduced bovine cytochrome c oxidase have been studied by FTIR difference spectroscopy. Bound CO is predominantly in a single 1963 cm(-1) form whereas cyanide is bound in at least two forms (2058/2045 cm(-1)). These forms are pH-independent between pH 6.5 and 8.5, indicating that there is no titratable protonatable group that influences significantly their binding in this pH range. Photolysis spectra of the cyanide adduct have a positive band around 2090 cm(-1) in H(2)O due at least in part to free HCN and at 1880 cm(-1) in D(2)O due to free DCN. The frequency of the positive band around 2090 cm(-1), and its persistence in D(2)O media, raises the possibility that a transient cyanide-Cu(B) adduct also contributes to this signal, equivalent to the CO-Cu(B) species that is formed when CO is photolyzed. Photolysis produces changes throughout the 1000-1800 cm(-1) region. Reduced minus (reduced + CO) photolysis spectra in H(2)O exhibit a pH-independent and symmetrical peak/trough at 1749/1741 cm(-1). A related feature in homologous oxidases has been suggested to arise from a conserved glutamic acid. However, only around one-third of the feature is shifted to lower frequencies by incubation in D(2)O media, and an additional fraction is shifted if catalytic turnover occurs in D(2)O. Reduced minus (reduced + cyanide) photolysis spectra exhibit multiple features in H(2)O in this region with peaks at 1752, 1725, and 1708 cm(-1) and troughs at 1740, 1715, and 1698 cm(-1). Again, only a part of these features shift in D(2)O, even with catalytic turnover. A variety of additional H/D-sensitive features in the 1700-1000 cm(-1) region of the spectra can be discerned, one of which in cyanide photolysis spectra is tentatively assigned to a conserved tyrosine, Y244. Data are discussed in relation to the structure of the binuclear center and protonatable groups in its vicinity. 相似文献
7.
8.
9.
Time-resolved spectroscopic studies in our laboratory of bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase dynamics are summarized. Intramolecular electron transfer was investigated upon photolysis of CO from the mixed-valence enzyme, by pulse radiolysis, and upon light-induced electron injection into the cytochrome c/cytochrome oxidase complex from a novel photoactivatable dye. The reduction of dioxygen to water was monitored by a gated multichannel analyzer using the CO flow-flash method or a synthetic caged dioxygen carrier. The pH dependence of the intermediate spectra suggests a mechanism of dioxygen reduction more complex than the conventional unidirectional sequential scheme. A branched model is proposed, in which one branch produces the P form and the other branch the F form. The rate of exchange between the two branches is pH-dependent. A cross-linked histidine-phenol was synthesized and characterized to explore the role of the cross-linked His-Tyr cofactor in the function of the enzyme. Time-resolved optical absorption spectra, EPR and FTIR spectra of the compound generated after UV photolysis indicated the presence of a radical residing primarily on the phenoxyl ring. The relevance of these results to cytochrome oxidase function is discussed. 相似文献
10.
The reactions of the fully reduced, three-electron-reduced, and mixed-valence cytochrome oxidase with molecular oxygen have been followed in flow-flash experiments, starting from the CO complexes, at 445 and 830 nm at pH 7.4 and 25 degrees C. With the fully reduced and the three-electron-reduced enzyme, four kinetic phases with rate constants in the range from 1 x 10(5) to 10(3) s-1 can be observed. The initial fast phase is associated with an absorbance increase at 830 nm. This is followed by an absorbance decrease (2.8 x 10(4) s-1), the amplitude of which increases with the degree of reduction of the oxidase. The third phase (6 x 10(3) s-1) displays the largest absorbance change at both wavelengths in the fully reduced enzyme and is not seen in the mixed-valence oxidase at 830 nm; a change with opposite sign but with a similar rate constant is found at 445 nm in this enzyme form. The slowest phase (10(3) s-1) is also largest in the fully reduced oxidase and not seen in the mixed-valence enzyme. It is suggested that O2 initially binds to reduced CuB and is then transferred to cytochrome a3 before electron transfer from cytochrome a/CuA takes place. The fast oxidation of cytochrome a seen with the fully reduced enzyme is suggested not to occur during natural turnover. A reaction cycle for the complete turnover of the enzyme is presented. In this cycle, the oxidase oscillates between electron input and output states of the proton pump, characterized by cytochrome a having a high and a low reduction potential, respectively. 相似文献
11.
CO photolysis from fully reduced Paracoccus denitrificans aa(3)-type cytochrome c oxidase in the absence of O(2) was studied by time-resolved potential electrometry. Surprisingly, photo dissociation of the uncharged carbon monoxide results in generation of a small-amplitude electric potential with the same sign as the physiological charge separation during activity. The number of electrogenic events after CO photolysis depends on the state of the enzyme. CO photolysis following immediately after activation by an enzymatic turnover, showed a two-component potential development. A fast (~1.5μs) phase was followed by slower potential generation with a time constant varying from 8μs at pH 7 to 250μs at pH 10. The amplitude of the fast phase was independent of the time of incubation after enzyme activation, whereas the slower phase vanished with a time constant of ~25min. CO photolysis from enzyme that had not undergone a prior single turnover showed the fast phase, but the amplitude of the slow phase was reduced to 10-30%. The amplitude of the fast phase corresponds to charge movement of 0.83? perpendicular to the membrane dielectric, and is independent of the time after enzyme activation. Thus it can be used as an internal ruler for normalization of the electrogenic responses of CcO. The slow phase was absent in the K354M mutant with a blocked proton-conducting K channel. We propose that CO photolysis increases the pK of the K354 residue, which results in its partial protonation, and generation of electric potential. 相似文献
12.
Zaslavsky D Smirnova IA Brzezinski P Shinzawa-Itoh K Yoshikawa S Gennis RB 《Biochemistry》1999,38(48):16016-16023
The reaction of cytochrome c oxidase with hydrogen peroxide has been of great value in generating and characterizing oxygenated species of the enzyme that are identical or similar to those formed during turnover of the enzyme with dioxygen. Most previous studies have utilized relatively low peroxide concentrations (millimolar range). In the current work, these studies have been extended to the examination of the kinetics of the single turnover of the fully reduced enzyme using much higher concentrations of peroxide to avoid limitations by the bimolecular reaction. The flow-flash method is used, in which laser photolysis of the CO adduct of the fully reduced enzyme initiates the reaction following rapid mixing of the enzyme with peroxide, and the reaction is monitored by observing the absorbance changes due to the heme components of the enzyme. The following reaction sequence is deduced from the data. (1) The initial product of the reaction appears to be heme a(3) oxoferryl (Fe(4+)=O(2)(-) + H(2)O). Since the conversion of ferrous to ferryl heme a(3) (Fe(2+) to Fe(4+)) is sufficient for this reaction, presumably Cu(B) remains reduced in the product, along with Cu(A) and heme a. (2) The second phase of the reaction is an internal rearrangement of electrons and protons in which the heme a(3) oxoferryl is reduced to ferric hydroxide (Fe(3+)OH(-)). In about 40% of the population, the electron comes from heme a, and in the remaining 60% of the population, Cu(B) is oxidized. This step has a time constant of about 65 micros. (3) The third apparent phase of the reaction includes two parallel reactions. The population of the enzyme with an electron in the binuclear center reacts with a second molecule of peroxide, forming compound F. The population of the enzyme with the two electrons on heme a and Cu(A) must first transfer an electron to the binuclear center, followed by reaction with a second molecule of peroxide, also yielding compound F. In each of these reaction pathways, the reaction time is 100-200 micros, i.e., much faster than the rate of reaction of peroxide with the fully oxidized enzyme. Thus, hydrogen peroxide is an efficient trap for a single electron in the binuclear center. (4) Compound F is then reduced by the final available electron, again from heme a, at the same rate as observed for the reduction of compound F formed during the reaction of the fully reduced oxidase with dioxygen. The product is the fully oxidized enzyme (heme a(3) Fe(3+)OH(-)), which reacts with a third molecule of hydrogen peroxide, forming compound P. The rate of this final reaction step saturates at high concentrations of peroxide (V(max) = 250 s(-)(1), K(m) = 350 mM). The data indicate a reaction mechanism for the steady-state peroxidase activity of the enzyme which, at pH 7.5, proceeds via the single-electron reduction of the binuclear center followed by reaction with peroxide to form compound F directly, without forming compound P. Peroxide is an efficient trap for the one-electron-reduced state of the binuclear center. The results also suggest that the reaction of hydrogen peroxide to the fully oxidized enzyme may be limited by the presence of hydroxide associated with the heme a(3) ferric species. The reaction of hydrogen peroxide with heme a(3) is very substantially accelerated by the availability of an electron on heme a, which is presumably transferred to the binuclear center concomitant with a proton that can convert the hydroxide to water, which is readily displaced. 相似文献
13.
Proshlyakov DA 《Biochimica et biophysica acta》2004,1655(1-3):282-289
The UV properties of key oxygen intermediates of cytochrome c oxidase have been investigated by transient absorption spectroscopy. The temporal behavior of P(m) species upon aerobic incubation with CO or in the reaction with H(2)O(2) is closely concurred by a new optical shift at 290/260 nm. In the acid-induced conversion of P(m) to F(*), it is replaced by another shift at 323/288 nm. The wavelength and intensity of the UV signal observed in F(*) match closely the properties of model Trp? in agreement with results of ENDOR studies on this species. The UV spectrum of Tyr* gives the closest match with the 290/260 nm signal observed in P(m). On the basis of analysis of possible UV chromophores in CcO and similarity to Tyr*, the 290/260 nm signal is proposed to originate from the H(240)-Y(244)* site. Possible effects of local environment on UV properties of this site are discussed. 相似文献
14.
Characterization of the low-temperature intermediates of the reaction of fully reduced soluble cytochrome oxidase with oxygen by electron-paramagnetic-resonance and optical spectroscopy. 总被引:8,自引:2,他引:8 下载免费PDF全文
G M Clore L E Andréasson B Karlsson R Aasa B G Malmstr?m 《The Biochemical journal》1980,185(1):139-154
The reaction of fully reduced soluble bovine heart cytochrome oxidase with O2 at 173K was investigated by low-temperature optical and e.p.r. spectroscopy, and the kinetics of the reaction were analysed by non-linear optimization techniques. The only e.p.r. signals seen during the course of the reaction are those attributable to low-spin cytochrome a3+ and CuA2+. Quantitative analysis of e.p.r. signals shows that, at the end point of the reaction at 173K, nearly 100% of CuA is in the cupric state but only about 40% of cytochrome a is in the ferric low-spin state. The optical spectra recorded at this stage of the reaction show incomplete oxidation of haem and the absence of a 655 nm absorption band. The only reaction scheme that accounts for both the e.p.r. and optical data is a four-intermediate mechanism involving a branching pathway. The reaction is initiated when fully reduced cytochrome oxidase reacts with O2 to form intermediate I. This is then converted into either intermediate IIA or intermediate IIB. Of these, intermediate IIB is a stable end product at 173 K, but intermediate IIA is converted into intermediate III, which is the stable state at 173 K in this branch of the mechanism. The kinetic analysis of the e.p.r. data allows the unambiguous assignments of the valence states of cytochrome a and CuA in the intermediates. Intermediate I contains cytochrome a2+ and CuA+, intermediate IIA contains low-spin cytochroma a3+ and CuA+, intermediate IIB contains cytochrome a2+ and CuA2+, and intermediate III contains low-spin cytochrome a3+ and CuA2+. The electronic state of the O2-binding CuBa3 couple during the reoxidation of cytochrome oxidase is discussed in terms of an integrated structure containing CuB, cytochrome a3 and O2. 相似文献
15.
The formation and disappearance of a photosensitive species during the reaction of reduced cytochrome c oxidase (putatively a3II.O2), EC 1.9.3.1, has been followed by (a) mixing a3II.CO with O2 in a stopped flow apparatus; (b) initiating the oxygen-oxidase reaction by removing CO with a laser flash; (c) probing the reaction mixture for photosensitivity with a second laser flash. Photosensitivity appears in the reaction mixture after the first laser flash, reaches a maximum after 50-60 microseconds ([O2] greater than 100 microM), and disappears in a further 50-100 microseconds. The kinetics can be represented by the scheme [formula: see text]. In species B, O2 is associated with the protein, possibly CuB, but not with the heme. Species C is the photosensitive a3II.O2 complex, and in D, a3 iron has been oxidized. The formation of species C is responsible for the rapid phase of absorbance change in the oxidase-oxygen reaction. The rate of reaction with oxygen approaches the limit of 35,000 s-1 at high oxygen. Nitric oxide, however, reacts with FeII oxidase with a rate of 1 x 10(8) M-1 s-1, which is accurately maintained up to an observed rate of 10(5) s-1. In flash photolysis experiments, approximately half of the photodissociated nitric oxidase recombines in a biphasic geminate reaction with rates of 1 x 10(8) s-1 and 1 x 10(7) s-1. 相似文献
16.
Assignment and charge translocation stoichiometries of the major electrogenic phases in the reaction of cytochrome c oxidase with dioxygen 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
The reaction of cytochrome c oxidase with dioxygen has been studied by means of time-resolved measurements of electrical membrane potential (DeltaPsi). Microsecond time resolution was achieved by starting with the CO-inhibited enzyme, which was photolyzed after addition of oxygen. The time course of the reaction could be fitted by using a five-step sequential reaction as a model. The first two phases of the reaction, which correspond in time to binding of oxygen followed by formation of the P (peroxy) intermediate, as observed spectroscopically, are not associated with net charge displacement across the membrane. After this lag, DeltaPsi develops in three phases, which correspond in time to the conversion of P to the F (ferryl) intermediate, in a single phase, and conversion of F to O (the fully oxidized enzyme), in two phases. The amplitude of DeltaPsi was approximately equal for the P --> F and F --> O portions of the reaction. When the oxygen reaction is started with incompletely reduced enzyme, it will halt at the P or F state. When the reaction was allowed to proceed to the F state, but no further, only the fast phase of DeltaPsi formation was observed, whereas no DeltaPsi was generated if the reaction was halted at P. This finding places the assignments of phases in the electrometric data on a firmer basis-they are no longer based solely on temporal correspondence with phases in the spectroscopic data. To define the number of charges transferred across the membrane during the reaction, some kind of calibration is needed. For this purpose, another type of reaction-electron transfer following CO photolysis in the absence of oxygen ("backflow")-was studied. Parallel spectroscopic and electrometric measurements showed that the fast electron transfer from the low-spin heme to CuA in the backflow process results in approximately 11 times smaller amplitude of DeltaPsi as compared with DeltaPsi generated in the reaction of the reduced enzyme with oxygen (the polarity is also reversed). If it is assumed that transfer of an electron from the low-spin heme to CuA amounts to movement of a unit charge across half of the membrane dielectric, charge translocation in the reaction of the reduced enzyme with oxygen amounts to approximately 5.5 unit charges-the value predicted if all four protons pumped during the catalytic cycle are translocated during the oxidative part of the reaction. 相似文献
17.
In stopped-flow experiments in which oxidized cytochrome c oxidase was mixed with ferrocytochrome c in the presence of a range of oxygen concentrations and in the absence and presence of cyanide, a fast phase, reflecting a rapid approach to an equilibrium, was observed. Within this phase, one or two molecules of ferrocytochrome were oxidized per haem group of cytochrome a, depending on the concentration of ferrocytochrome c used. The reasons for this are discussed in terms of a mechanism in which all electrons enter through cytochrome a, which, in turn, is in rapid equilibrium with a second site, identified with 'visible' copper (830 nm-absorbing) Cud (Beinert et al., 1971). The value of the bimolecular rate constant for the reaction between cytochromes c2+ and a3+ was between 10(6) and 10(7) M(-1)-S(-1); some variability from preparation to preparation was observed. At high ferrocytochrome c concentrations, the initial reaction of cytochrome c2+ with cytochrome a3+ could be isolated from the reaction involving the 'visible' copper and the stoicheiometry was found to approach one molecule of cytochrome c2+ oxidized for each molecule of cytochrome a3+ reduced. At low ferrocytochrome c concentrations, however, both sites (i.e. cytochrome a and Cud) were reduced simultaneously and the stoicheiometry of the initial reaction was closer to two molecules of cytochrome c2+ oxidized per molecule of cytochrome a reduced. The bleaching of the 830 nm band lagged behind or was simultaneous with the formation of the 605 nm band and does not depend on the cytochrome c concentration, whereas the extinction at the steady-state does. The time-course of the return of the 830 nm-absorbing species is much faster than the bleaching of the 605 nm-absorbing component, and parallels that of the turnover phase of cytochrome c2+ oxidation. Additions of cyanide to the oxidase preparations had no effect on the observed stoicheiometry or kinetics of the reduction of cytochrome a and 'visible' copper, but inhibited electron transfer to the other two sites, cytochrome a3 and the undetectable copper, Cuu. 相似文献
18.
S Rosén 《Biochimica et biophysica acta》1978,503(2):389-397
1. Kinetic studies have been performed with beef-heart cytochrome c oxidase, with the enzyme either in its oxidized, resting state or pretreated anaerobically with different amounts of reduced cytochrome c. The techniques used for the study have been stopped-flow spectrophotometry and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. 2. The results show that the one-electron equivalent-reduced enzyme rapidly oxidizes one further equivalent of aerobically or anaerobically added ferrocytochrome c, with a rate constant of 5 . 10(6) M-1 . s-1. 3. When an excess of ferrocytochrome c in the presence of oxygen is added to the one-electron-reduced enzyme, the same turnover rate is obtained as in experiments with the resting enzyme. 4. The one-electron equivalent-enzyme reacts with CO with a rate constant of 4 . 10(4) M-1 . s-1 to yield approx. 35% of the CO compound as compared with the reaction between the fully reduced enzyme and CO. 5. It is shown that on reduction the enzyme is converted into an active form, but it is concluded that the enzyme does not have to be fully reduced before it is catalytically active. 相似文献
19.
Kitagawa T 《Journal of inorganic biochemistry》2000,82(1-4):9-18
Structures of reaction intermediates of bovine cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) in the reactions of its fully reduced form with O2 and fully oxidized form with H2O2 were investigated with time-resolved resonance Raman (RR) and infrared spectroscopy. Six oxygen-associated RR bands were observed for the reaction of CcO with O2. The isotope shifts for an asymmetrically labeled dioxygen, (16)O(18)O, has established that the primary intermediate of cytochrome a3 is an end-on type dioxygen adduct and the subsequent intermediate (P) is an oxoiron species with Fe=O stretch (nu(Fe=O)) at 804/764 cm(-1) for (16)O2/(18)O2 derivatives, although it had been long postulated to be a peroxy species. The P intermediate is converted to the F intermediate with nu(Fe=O) at 785/751 cm(-1) and then to a ferric hydroxy species with nu(Fe-OH) at 450/425 cm(-1) (443/417 cm(-1) in D2O). The rate of reaction from P to F intermediates is significantly slower in D2O than in H2O. The reaction of oxidized CcO with H2O2 yields the same oxygen isotope-sensitive bands as those of P and F, indicating the identity of intermediates. Time-resolved infrared spectroscopy revealed that deprotonation of carboxylic acid side chain takes place upon deligation of a ligand from heme a3. UV RR spectrum gave a prominent band due to cis C=C stretch of phospholipids tightly bound to purified CcO. 相似文献
20.
The mechanism of reaction of fully reduced membrane-bound cytochrome oxidase with oxygen at 176K. 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2 下载免费PDF全文
1. The results of non-linear optimization studies on the mechanism of reaction of fully reduced cytochrome oxidase with O2 at 176K are presented. The analysis is carried out on data obtained by means of dual-wavelength multi-channel spectroscopy at three wavelength pairs (604-630, 608-630 and 830-940 nm) and at three O2 concentrations (60, 200 and 1180 micron). The only model that satisfies the triple requirement of a standard deviation within the standard error of the experimental data, good determination of the optimized parameters and a random distribution of residuals is a three-species sequential mechanism. 2. On the basis of the optimized values of the relative absorption coefficients of the intermediates at each wavelength obtained from the present paper together with data from low-temperature trapping, e.p.r. and magnetic-susceptibility studies, the possible valence states of the metal centres in each of the intermediates are discussed. 相似文献