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1.
The ubihydroquinone-cytochrome c oxidoreductase (or the cytochrome bc1 complex) from Rhodobacter capsulatus is composed of the Fe-S protein, cytochrome b, and cytochrome c1 subunits encoded by petA(fbcF), petB(fbcB), and petC(fbcC) genes organized as an operon. In the work reported here, petB(fbcB) was split genetically into two cistrons, petB6 and petBIV, which encoded two polypeptides corresponding to the four amino-terminal and four carboxyl-terminal transmembrane helices of cytochrome b, respectively. These polypeptides resembled the cytochrome b6 and su IV subunits of chloroplast cytochrome b6f complexes, and together with the unmodified subunits of the cytochrome bc1 complex, they formed a novel enzyme, named cytochrome b6c1 complex. This membrane-bound multisubunit complex was functional, and despite its smaller amount, it was able to support the photosynthetic growth of R. capsulatus. Upon further mutagenesis, a mutant overproducing it, due to a C-to-T transition at the second base of the second codon of petBIV, was obtained. Biochemical analyses, including electron paramagnetic spectroscopy, with this mutant revealed that the properties of the cytochrome b6c1 complex were similar to those of the cytochrome bc1 complex. In particular, it was highly sensitive to inhibitors of the cytochrome bc1 complex, including antimycin A, and the redox properties of its b- and c-type heme prosthetic groups were unchanged. However, the optical absorption spectrum of its cytochrome bL heme was modified in a way reminiscent of that of a cytochrome b6f complex. Based on the work described here and that with Rhodobacter sphaeroides (R. Kuras, M. Guergova-Kuras, and A. R. Crofts, Biochemistry 37:16280-16288, 1998), it appears that neither the inhibitor resistance nor the redox potential differences observed between the bacterial (or mitochondrial) cytochrome bc1 complexes and the chloroplast cytochrome b6f complexes are direct consequences of splitting cytochrome b into two separate polypeptides. The overall findings also illustrate the possible evolutionary relationships among various cytochrome bc oxidoreductases.  相似文献   

2.
3.
Plasmids encoding the structural genes for the Rhodobacter capsulatus and Rhodobacter sphaeroides cytochrome (cyt) bc1 complexes were introduced into strains of R. capsulatus lacking the cyt bc1 complex, with and without cyt c2. The R. capsulatus merodiploids contained higher than wild-type levels of cyt bc1 complex, as evidenced by immunological and spectroscopic analyses. On the other hand, the R. sphaeroides-R. capsulatus hybrid merodiploids produced only barely detectable amounts of R. sphaeroides cyt bc1 complex in R. capsulatus. Nonetheless, when they contained cyt c2, they were capable of photosynthetic growth, as judged by the sensitivity of this growth to specific inhibitors of the photochemical reaction center and the cyt bc1 complex, such as atrazine, myxothiazol, and stigmatellin. Interestingly, in the absence of cyt c2, although the R. sphaeroides cyt bc1 complex was able to support the photosynthetic growth of a cyt bc1-less mutant of R. capsulatus in rich medium, it was unable to do so when C4 dicarboxylic acids, such as malate and succinate, were used as the sole carbon source. Even this conditional ability of R. sphaeroides cyt bc1 complex to replace that of R. capsulatus for photosynthetic growth suggests that in the latter species the cyt c2-independent rereduction of the reaction center is not due to a structural property unique to the R. capsulatus cyt bc1 complex. Similarly, the inability of R. sphaeroides to exhibit a similar pathway is not due to some inherent property of its cyt bc1 complex.  相似文献   

4.
A highly active, large-scale preparation of ubiquinol:cytochrome c2 oxidoreductase (EC 1.10.2.2; cytochrome bc1 complex) has been obtained from Rhodobacter sphaeroides. The enzyme was solubilized from chromatophores by using dodecyl maltoside in the presence of glycerol and was purified by anion-exchange and gel filtration chromatography. The procedure yields 35 mg of pure bc1 complex from 4.5 g of membrane protein, and its consistently results in an enzyme preparation that catalyzes the reduction of horse heart cytochrome c with a turnover of 250-350 (mumol of cyt c reduced).(mumol of cyt c1)-1.s-1. The turnover number is at least double that of the best preparation reported in the literature [Ljungdahl, P. O., Pennoyer, J. D., Robertson, D. C., & Trumpower, B. L. (1987) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 891, 227-241]. The scale is increased 25-fold, and the yield is markedly improved by using this protocol. Four polypeptide subunits were observed by SDS-PAGE, with Mr values of 40K, 34K, 24K, and 14K. N-Terminal amino acid sequences were obtained for cytochrome c1, the iron-sulfur protein subunit, and for cytochrome b and were identical with the expected protein sequences deduced from the DNA sequence of the fbc operon, with the exceptions that a 22-residue fragment is processed off of the N-terminus of cytochrome c1 and the N-terminal methionine residue is cleaved off both the b cytochrome and iron-sulfur protein subunits. Western blotting experiments indicate that subunit IV is not a contaminating light-harvesting complex polypeptide.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
Ubiquinol-cytochrome-c oxidoreductase has been isolated from potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) mitochondria by cytochrome-c affinity chromatography and gel-filtration chromatography. The procedure, which up to now only proved applicable to Neurospora, yields a highly pure and active protein complex in monodisperse state. The molecular mass of the purified complex is about 650 kDa, indicating that potato cytochrome c reductase occurs as a dimer. Upon reconstitution into phospholipid membranes, the dimeric enzyme catalyzes electron transfer from a synthetic ubiquinol to equine cytochrome c with a turnover number of 50 s-1. The activity is inhibited by antimycin A and myxothiazol. A myxothiazol-insensitive and antimycin-sensitive transhydrogenation reaction, with a turnover number of 16 s-1, can be demonstrated as well. The protein complex consists of ten subunits, most of which have molecular masses similar to those of the nine-subunit fungal enzyme. Individual subunits were identified immunologically and spectral properties of b and c cytochromes were monitored. Interestingly, an additional 'core' polypeptide which is not present in other cytochrome bc1 complexes forms part of the enzyme from potato. Antibodies raised against individual polypeptides reveal that the core proteins are clearly immuno-distinguishable. The additional subunit may perform a specific function and contribute to the high molecular mass which exceeds those reported for other cytochrome-c-reductase dimers.  相似文献   

6.
A detergent-solubilized, three-subunit-containing cytochrome bc1 complex, isolated from the photosynthetic bacterium R. rubrum, has been shown to be highly sensitive to stigmatellin, myxothiazol, antimycin A and UHDBT, four specific inhibitors of these complexes. Oxidation-reduction titrations have allowed the determination of Em values for all the electron-carrying prosthetic groups in the complex. Antimycin A has been shown to produce a red shift in the alpha-band absorbance maximum of one of the cytochrome b hemes in the complex and stigmatellin has been shown to alter both the Em and EPR g-values of the Rieske iron-sulfur protein in the complex. Western blots have revealed antigenic similarities between the cytochrome subunits of the R. rubrum complex and those of the related photosynthetic bacteria, Rb. capsulatus and Rb. sphaeroides. The R. rubrum complex has been incorporated into liposomes. These liposomes exhibit respiratory control and are able to couple electron transfer from quinol to cytochrome c to proton translocation across the liposome membrane in a manner consistent with a Q-cycle mechanism. It can thus be concluded that neither electron transport nor coupled proton translocation by the cytochrome bc1 complex requires more than three subunits in R. rubrum.  相似文献   

7.
Aerobically grown Rhodobacter sphaeroides synthesizes a respiratory chain similar to that of eukaryotes. We describe the purification of the aa3-type cytochrome c oxidase of Rb. sphaeroides as a highly active (Vmax > or = 1800 s-1), three-subunit enzyme from isolated, washed cytoplasmic membranes by hydroxylapatite chromatography and anion exchange fast protein liquid chromatography. The purified oxidase exhibits biphasic kinetics of oxidation of mammalian cytochrome c, similar to mitochondrial oxidases, and pumps protons efficiently (H+/e- = 0.7) following reconstitution into phospholipid vesicles. A membrane-bound cytochrome c is associated with the aa3-type oxidase in situ, but is removed during purification. The EPR spectra of the Rb. sphaeroides enzyme suggest the presence of a strong hydrogen bond to one or both of the histidine ligands of heme a. In other respects, optical, EPR, and resonance Raman analyses of the metal centers and their protein environments demonstrate a close correspondence between the bacterial enzyme and the structurally more complex bovine cytochrome c oxidase. The results establish this bacterial oxidase as an excellent model system for the mammalian enzyme and provide the basis for site-directed mutational analysis of its energy transducing function.  相似文献   

8.
The ubiquinol-cytochrome c2 oxidoreductase (cytochrome bc1 complex) purified from chromatophores of Rhodobacter sphaeroides consists of four polypeptide subunits corresponding to cytochrome b, c1, and the Rieske iron-sulfur protein, as well as a 14-kDa polypeptide of unknown function, respectively. In contrast, the complex isolated from Rhodospirillum rubrum by the same procedure lacked a polypeptide corresponding to the 14-kDa subunit. Gel-permeation chromatography of the R. sphaeroides cytochrome bc1 complex in the presence of 200 mM NaCl removed the iron-sulfur protein, while the 14-kDa polypeptide remained tightly bound to the cytochromes; this is consistent with the possibility that the latter protein is an authentic component of the complex rather than an artifact of the isolation procedure. The individual polypeptides of the R. sphaeroides complex were purified to homogeneity by gel-permeation chromatography in the presence of 50% aqueous formic acid and their amino acid compositions determined. The 14-kDa polypeptide was found to be rich in charged and polar residues. Edman degradation analysis indicated that its N terminus is blocked and not rendered accessible by de-blocking procedures. Cyanogen bromide cleavage gave rise to a blocked N-terminal fragment as well as a C-terminal peptide comprising more than one-third of the protein. Gas-phase sequence analysis of this peptide established a sequence of 48 residues and identified a putative trans-membrane segment near the C terminus. The blocked N-terminal fragment was cleaved at tryptophan with BNPS-skatole. The resulting peptides, together with tryptic fragments derived from the intact protein, yielded additional sequence information; however, none of the sequences exhibited significant homologies to any known proteins. Tryptic fragments were also used to generate sequence information for cytochrome c1.  相似文献   

9.
An enzyme complex with ubiquinol-cytochrome c oxidoreductase, cytochrome c oxidase, and ubiquinol oxidase activities was purified from a detergent extract of the plasma membrane of aerobically grown Paracoccus denitrificans. This ubiquinol oxidase consists of seven polypeptides and contains two b cytochromes, cytochrome c1, cytochrome aa3, and a previously unreported c-type cytochrome. This c-type cytochrome has an apparent Mr of 22,000 and an alpha absorption maximum at 552 nm. Retention of this c cytochrome through purification presumably accounts for the independence of ubiquinol oxidase activity on added cytochrome c. Ubiquinol oxidase can be separated into a 3-subunit bc1 complex, a 3-subunit c-aa3 complex, and a 57-kDa polypeptide. This, together with detection of covalently bound heme and published molecular weights of cytochrome c1 and the subunits of cytochrome c oxidase, allows tentative identification of most of the subunits of ubiquinol oxidase with the prosthetic groups present. Ubiquinol oxidase contains cytochromes corresponding to those of the mitochondrial bc1 complex, cytochrome c oxidase complex, and a bound cytochrome c. Ubiquinol-cytochrome c oxidoreductase activity of the complex is inhibited by inhibitors of the mitochondrial bc1 complex. Thus it seems likely that the pathway of electron transfer through the bc1 complex of ubiquinol oxidase is similar to that through the mitochondrial bc1 complex. The number of polypeptides present is less than half the number in the corresponding mitochondrial complexes. This structural simplicity may make ubiquinol oxidase from P. denitrificans a useful system with which to study the mechanisms of electron transfer and energy transduction in the bc1 and cytochrome c oxidase sections of the respiratory chain.  相似文献   

10.
This minireview summarizes our present view of the supramolecular organization of the photosynthetic apparatus of Rhodobacter sphaeroides and Rhodobacter capsulatus. These two species present a close association between two reaction centers (RCs), one cytochrome (cyt) bc(1) and one cyt c. In R. sphaeroides, the RCs are only partially surrounded by LH1 complexes. This open ring of LH1 complexes is required for an efficient photoinduced cyclic electron transfer only under conditions where the quinone pool totally reduced. When the quinone pool is partially oxidized, a closed ring of LH1 complexes around the RCs does not impair the exchange of quinone molecules between the RC and the cyt bc(1) complex. To explain the efficient photochemistry of the various species which possess a RC surrounded by a closed ring of LH, it is proposed that their quinone pool is partially oxidized even under anaerobic condition.  相似文献   

11.
We have recently established that the facultative phototrophic bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides, like the closely related Rhodobacter capsulatus species, contains both the previously characterized mobile electron carrier cytochrome c2 (cyt c2) and the more recently discovered membrane-anchored cyt cy. However, R. sphaeroides cyt cy, unlike that of R. capsulatus, is unable to function as an efficient electron carrier between the photochemical reaction center and the cyt bc1 complex during photosynthetic growth. Nonetheless, R. sphaeroides cyt cy can act at least in R. capsulatus as an electron carrier between the cyt bc1 complex and the cbb3-type cyt c oxidase (cbb3-Cox) to support respiratory growth. Since R. sphaeroides harbors both a cbb3-Cox and an aa3-type cyt c oxidase (aa3-Cox), we examined whether R. sphaeroides cyt cy can act as an electron carrier to either or both of these respiratory terminal oxidases. R. sphaeroides mutants which lacked either cyt c2 or cyt cy and either the aa3-Cox or the cbb3-Cox were obtained. These double mutants contained linear respiratory electron transport pathways between the cyt bc1 complex and the cyt c oxidases. They were characterized with respect to growth phenotypes, contents of a-, b-, and c-type cytochromes, cyt c oxidase activities, and kinetics of electron transfer mediated by cyt c2 or cyt cy. The findings demonstrated that both cyt c2 and cyt cy are able to carry electrons efficiently from the cyt bc1 complex to either the cbb3-Cox or the aa3-Cox. Thus, no dedicated electron carrier for either of the cyt c oxidases is present in R. sphaeroides. However, under semiaerobic growth conditions, a larger portion of the electron flow out of the cyt bc1 complex appears to be mediated via the cyt c2-to-cbb3-Cox and cyt cy-to-cbb3-Cox subbranches. The presence of multiple electron carriers and cyt c oxidases with different properties that can operate concurrently reveals that the respiratory electron transport pathways of R. sphaeroides are more complex than those of R. capsulatus.  相似文献   

12.
The ubiquinol:cytochrome c2 oxidoreductase (bc1 complex) of Rhodobacter sphaeroides consists of four subunits. One of these subunits, cytochrome c1, is the site of interaction with cytochrome c2, a periplasmic protein. In addition, the sequences of the fbcC gene and of the cytochrome c1 subunit that it encodes suggest that the protein should be located on the periplasmic side of the cytoplasmic membrane and that it is anchored to the membrane by a single membrane-spanning alpha-helix located at the carboxyl-terminal end of the polypeptide. Site-directed mutagenesis of the fbcC gene was used to alter the codon for Gln228 to a stop codon. This results in the production of a truncated version of the cytochrome c1 subunit that lacks the membrane anchor at the carboxyl terminus. The bc1 complex fails to assemble properly as a result of this mutation, but the Rb. sphaeroides cells expressing the altered gene contain a water-soluble form of cytochrome c1 in the periplasm. The water-soluble cytochrome c1 was purified and characterized. The amino-terminal sequence is identical with that of the membrane-bound subunit, indicating the signal sequence is properly processed. High pressure liquid chromatography gel filtration chromatography indicates it is monomeric (28 kDa). The heme content and electrochemical properties are similar to those of the intact subunit within the complex. Flash-induced electron transfer kinetics measured using whole cells demonstrated that the water-soluble cytochrome c1 is competent as a reductant for cytochrome c2 within the periplasmic space. These data show that the isolated water-soluble cytochrome c1 retains many of the properties of the membrane-bound subunit of the bc1 complex and, therefore, will be useful for further structural and functional characterization.  相似文献   

13.
PufX, the protein encoded by the pufX gene of Rhodobacter capsulatus and Rhodobacter sphaeroides, has been further characterized. The mature forms of these proteins contain 9 and 12 fewer amino acids, respectively, at the C-terminal end of the protein than are encoded by their pufX genes. To identify the portion of PufX responsible for inhibition of LH1 formation in reconstitution experiments, different regions (N-terminus and several core regions containing different lengths of the C-terminus) of Rb. sphaeroides and Rb. capsulatus PufX were chemically synthesized. Neither the N- nor C-terminal polypeptides of Rb. sphaeroides were inhibitory to LH1 reconstitution. However, all core segments were active, causing 50% inhibition at a concentration ratio of between 3:1 and 6:1 relative to the LH1 alpha-polypeptides whose concentrations were 3-4 microM. CD measurements indicated that the core segment containing 39 amino acids of Rb. sphaeroides PufX exhibited 47% alpha-helix in trifluoroethanol while the core segment containing 43 amino acids of Rb. capsulatus PufX exhibited 59 and 55% alpha-helix in trifluoroethanol and in 0.80% octylglucoside in water, respectively. Approximately 50% alpha-helix was also indicated by a PHD (Burkhard-Rost) structure prediction. Binding of bacteriochlorophyll to these PufX core segments is implicated.  相似文献   

14.
The mitochondrial cytochrome bc1 complex is a multifunctional membrane protein complex. It catalyzes electron transfer, proton translocation, peptide processing, and superoxide generation. Crystal structure data at 2.9 A resolution not only establishes the location of the redox centers and inhibitor binding sites, but also suggests a movement of the head domain of the iron-sulfur protein (ISP) during bc1 catalysis and inhibition of peptide-processing activity during complex maturation. The functional importance of the movement of extramembrane (head) domain of ISP in the bc1 complex is confirmed by analysis of the Rhodobacter sphaeroides bc1 complex mutants with increased rigidity in the ISP neck and by the determination of rate constants for acid/base-induced intramolecular electron transfer between [2Fe-2S] and heme c1 in native and inhibitor-loaded beef complexes. The peptide-processing activity is activated in bovine heart mitochondrial bc1 complex by nonionic detergent at concentrations that inactivate electron transfer activity. This peptide-processing activity is shown to be associated with subunits I and II by cloning, overexpression and in vitro reconstitution. The superoxide-generation site of the cytochrome bc1 complex is located at reduced bL and Q*-. The reaction is membrane potential-, and cytochrome c-dependent.  相似文献   

15.
The oxidized cytochrome c(2) from the purple phototrophic bacteria, Rhodobacter sphaeroides and Rhodobacter capsulatus, bind the neutral species of imidazole (K(a) = 1440 +/- 40 M(-1)) 50 times more strongly than does horse mitochondrial cytochrome c (K(a) = 30 +/- 1 M(-1)). The kinetics of imidazole binding are consistent with a change in rate-limiting step at high ligand concentrations for all three proteins. This is attributed to a conformational change leading to breakage of the iron-methionine bond which precedes imidazole binding. The three-dimensional structure of the Rb. sphaeroides cytochrome c(2) imidazole complex (Axelrod et al., Acta Crystalogr. D50, 596-602) supports the view that the conformational changes are essentially localized to approximately seven residues on either side of the ligated methionine and there is a hydrogen bond between the Phe 102 carbonyl, an internal water, and the bound imidazole. Insertions and deletions in this region of cytochrome c(2), the presence of a proline near the methionine, and the smaller size of the dynamic region of horse cytochrome c suggest that the stabilizing hydrogen bond is not present in horse cytochrome c, hence, the dramatic difference in affinity for imidazole. The kinetics of ligand binding do not correlate with either the strength of the iron-methionine bond as measured by the pK of the 695-nm absorption band or the overall stability of the cytochromes studied. However, the very similar imidazole binding properties of the two cytochromes c(2) indicate that the Rb. sphaeroides cytochrome c(2)-imidazole complex structure is an excellent model for the corresponding Rb. capsulatus cytochrome c(2) complex. It is notable that the movement of the peptide chain in the vicinity of the ligated methionine has been preserved throughout evolution and suggests a role in the function of c-type cytochromes.  相似文献   

16.
The cytochrome bc(1) complex (bc(1)) is a major contributor to the proton motive force across the membrane by coupling electron transfer to proton translocation. The crystal structures of wild type and mutant bc(1) complexes from the photosynthetic purple bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides (Rsbc(1)), stabilized with the quinol oxidation (Q(P)) site inhibitor stigmatellin alone or in combination with the quinone reduction (Q(N)) site inhibitor antimycin, were determined. The high quality electron density permitted assignments of a new metal-binding site to the cytochrome c(1) subunit and a number of lipid and detergent molecules. Structural differences between Rsbc(1) and its mitochondrial counterparts are mostly extra membranous and provide a basis for understanding the function of the predominantly longer sequences in the bacterial subunits. Functional implications for the bc(1) complex are derived from analyses of 10 independent molecules in various crystal forms and from comparisons with mitochondrial complexes.  相似文献   

17.
A ubiquinol-cytochrome c oxidoreductase (cytochrome bc1) complex has been purified from the plasma membrane of aerobically grown Paracoccus denitrificans by extraction with dodecyl maltoside and ion exchange chromatography of the extract. The purified complex contains two spectrally and thermodynamically distinct b cytochromes, cytochrome c1, and a Rieske-type iron-sulfur protein. Optical spectra indicate absorption peaks at 553 nm for cytochrome c1 and at 560 and 566 nm for the high and low potential hemes of cytochrome b. The spectrum of cytochrome b560 is shifted to longer wavelength by antimycin. The Paracoccus bc1 complex consists of only three polypeptide subunits. On the basis of their relative electrophoretic mobilities, these have apparent molecular masses of 62, 39, and 20 kDa. The 62- and 39-kDa subunits have been identified as cytochromes c1 and b, respectively. The 20-kDa subunit is assumed to be the Rieske-type iron-sulfur protein on the basis of its molecular weight and the presence of an EPR-detectable signal typical of this iron-sulfur protein in the three-subunit complex. The Paracoccus bc1 complex catalyzes reduction of cytochrome c by ubiquinol with a turnover of 470 s-1. This activity is inhibited by antimycin, myxothiazol, stigmatellin, and hydroxyquinone analogues of ubiquinone, all of which inhibit electron transfer in the cytochrome bc1 complex of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. The electron transfer functions of the Paracoccus complex thus appear to be similar, and possibly identical, to those of the bc1 complex of eukaryotic mitochondria. The Paracoccus bc1 complex has the simplest subunit composition and one of the highest turnover numbers of any bc1 complex isolated from any species to date. These properties suggest that the structural requirements for electron transfer from ubiquinol to cytochrome c are met by a small number of peptides and that the "extra" peptides occurring in the mitochondrial bc1 complexes serve some other function(s), possibly in biogenesis or insertion of the complex into that organelle.  相似文献   

18.
E Darrouzet  S Mandaci  J Li  H Qin  D B Knaff  F Daldal 《Biochemistry》1999,38(25):7908-7917
The cytochrome (cyt) c1 heme of the ubihydroquinone:cytochrome c oxidoreductase (bc1 complex) is covalently attached to two cysteine residues of the cyt c1 polypeptide chain via two thioether bonds, and the fifth and sixth axial ligands of its iron atom are histidine (H) and methionine (M), respectively. The latter residue is M183 in Rhodobacter capsulatus cyt c1, and previous mutagenesis studies revealed its critical role for the physicochemical properties of cyt c1 [Gray, K. A., Davidson, E., and Daldal, F. (1992) Biochemistry 31, 11864-11873]. In the homologous chloroplast b6f complex, the sixth axial ligand is provided by the amino group of the amino terminal tyrosine residue. To further pursue our investigation on the role played by the sixth axial ligand in heme-protein interactions, novel cyt c1 variants with histidine-lysine (K) and histidine-histidine axial coordination were sought. Using a R. capsulatus genetic system, the cyt c1 mutants M183K and M183H were constructed by site-directed mutagenesis, and chromatophore membranes as well as purified bc1 complexes obtained from these mutants were characterized in detail. The studies revealed that these mutants incorporated the heme group into the mature cyt c1 polypeptides, but yielded nonfunctional bc1 complexes with unusual spectroscopic and thermodynamic properties, including shifted optical absorption maxima (lambdamax) and decreased redox midpoint potential values (Em7). The availability and future detailed studies of these stable cyt c1 mutants should contribute to our understanding of how different factors influence the physicochemical and folding properties of membrane-bound c-type cytochromes in general.  相似文献   

19.
Cytochrome bc(1) complex catalyzes the reaction of electron transfer from ubiquinol to cytochrome c (or cytochrome c(2)) and couples this reaction to proton translocation across the membrane. Crystallization of the Rhodobacter sphaeroides bc(1) complex resulted in crystals containing only three core subunits. To mitigate the problem of subunit IV being dissociated from the three-subunit core complex during crystallization, we recently engineered an R. sphaeroides mutant in which the N-terminus of subunit IV was fused to the C-terminus of cytochrome c(1) with a 14-glycine linker between the two fusing subunits, and a 6-histidine tag at the C-terminus of subunit IV (c(1)-14Gly-IV-6His). The purified fusion mutant complex shows higher electron transfer activity, more structural stability, and less superoxide generation as compared to the wild-type enzyme. Preliminary crystallization attempts with this mutant complex yielded crystals containing four subunits and diffracting X-rays to 5.5? resolution.  相似文献   

20.
Li J  Osyczka A  Conover RC  Johnson MK  Qin H  Daldal F  Knaff DB 《Biochemistry》2003,42(29):8818-8830
The roles of two evolutionarily conserved aromatic residues in the cytochrome c(1) component of the Rhodobacter capsulatus cytochrome bc(1) complex, phenylalanine 138 and tyrosine 194, were analyzed by site-directed mutagenesis, in combination with biophysical and biochemical measurements. Changing Phe138 to either alanine or valine, but not to tyrosine, results in redox heterogeneity of cytochrome c(1). Replacement of Phe138 by an aliphatic amino acid also caused changes in the EPR spectrum of the cytochrome and resulted in decreases in the steady-state V(max) for the hydroquinone/cytochrome c oxidoreductase activity of cytochrome bc(1) complexes containing the mutated cytochrome c(1). These findings indicate that the presence of an aromatic residue at position 138 is essential for maintaining the native environment of the cytochrome c(1) heme. In contrast, replacement of Tyr194 by aliphatic amino acids had no significant effect on either the E(m) of cytochrome c(1) or the steady-state activity parameters. Site-directed mutagenesis of glutamate and aspartate residues in a conserved acidic patch (region 2) on Rb. capsulatus cytochrome c(1) suggests that these negatively charged residues do not play a role in the docking of cytochrome c(2) with the cytochrome bc(1) complex.  相似文献   

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