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1.
Time-resolved resonance Raman spectra have been recorded during the reaction of mixed valence (a3+ a2+(3)) cytochrome oxidase with dioxygen at room temperature. In the spectrum recorded at 10 microseconds subsequent to carbon monoxide photolysis, a mode is observed at 572 cm-1 that shifts to 548 cm-1 when the experiment is repeated with 18O2. The appearance of this mode is dependent upon the laser intensity used and disappears at higher incident energies. The high frequency data in conjunction with the mid-frequency data allow us to assign the 572 cm-1 mode to the Fe-O stretching vibration of the low-spin O2 adduct that forms in the mixed valence cytochrome oxidase/dioxygen reaction. The 572 cm-1 v(Fe2(+)-O2) frequency in the mixed valence enzyme/O2 adduct is essentially identical to the 571 cm-1 frequency we measured for this mode during the reduction of O2 by the fully reduced enzyme (Varotsis, C., Woodruff, W. H., and Babcock, G. T. (1989) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 111, 6439-6440; Varotsis, C., Woodruff, W. H., and Babcock, G. T. (1990) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 112, 1297), which indicates that the O2-bound cytochrome a3 site is independent of the redox state of the cytochrome a/CuA pair. The photolabile oxy intermediate is replaced by photostable low- or intermediate-spin cytochrome a3+(3), with t1/2 congruent to 200 microseconds.  相似文献   

2.
We report the first resonance Raman scattering studies of NO-bound cytochrome c oxidase. Resonance Raman scattering and optical absorption spectra have been obtained on the fully reduced enzyme (a2+, a2+(3) NO) and the mixed valence enzyme (a3+, a2+(3) NO). Clear vibrational frequency shifts are detected in the lines associated with cytochrome a in comparing the two redox states. With 441.6 nm excitation the fully reduced preparation yields a spectrum similar to that of carbon monoxide-bound cytochrome c oxidase and is dominated by the spectrum of reduced cytochrome a. In contrast, in the mixed valence preparation no contributions from reduced cytochrome a are evident in the spectrum, verifying that this heme is no longer in the Fe2+ state. In the mixed valence NO-bound samples, a line appears at approximately 545 cm-1, a frequency similar to that found in NO-bound hemoglobin and myoglobin and assigned as an Fe-N-O-bending mode in those proteins. We do not detect this line in the spectrum of the fully reduced NO-bound enzyme. The carbonyl line of the cytochrome a3 heme formyl group in the fully reduced NO-bound enzyme appears at approximately equal to 1666 cm-1 in the resonance Raman spectrum. In the mixed valence NO-bound preparation the frequency of the carbonyl line increases by 1.2 cm-1 to approximately equal to 1667 cm-1. Thus, modes in cytochrome a2+(3) NO are sensitive to the redox state of the cytochrome a and/or CuA centers. We propose that the redox sensitivity of the formyl mode and the Fe-N-O mode results from an interaction between cytochrome a2+(3) (NO) and the cytochrome a-CuA pair, and is linked to the cytochrome a3 (NO) by the coupling between CuB and the NO-bound cytochrome a3 heme.  相似文献   

3.
M.c.d. (magnetic-circular-dichroism) spectroscopy was used to study the magnetization properties of the haem centres in cytochrome c oxidase with magnetic fields of between 0 and 5.3 T over the temperature range 1.5--200 K. The oxidized, oxidized cyanide and partially reduced cyanide forms of the enzyme were studied. In the oxidized state only cytochrome a3+ is detectable by m.c.d. spectroscopy, and its magnetization characteristics show it to be a low-spin ferric haem. In the partially reduced cyanide form of the enzyme cytochrome a is in the diamagnetic low-spin ferrous form, whereas cytochrome a3--CN is e.p.r.-detectable and gives an m.c.d.-magnetization curve typical of a low-spin ferric haem. In the oxidized cyanide form of the enzyme both cytochrome a and cytochrome a3--CN are detectable by m.c.d. spectroscopy, although only cytochrome a gives an e.p.r. signal. The magnetization characteristics of haem a3--CN show clearly that its ground state is an electronic doublet and that another state, probably a spin singlet, lies greater than 10 cm-1 above this. These features are well accounted for by an electronic state of spin S = 1 with a predominantly axial distortion, which leaves the doublet, Ms = +/- 1, as the ground state and the component Ms = 0 as the excited state. This state would not give an e.p.r. signal. Such an electronic state could arise either from a ferromagnetic coupling between haem a3+(3)-CN and the cupric ion, Cua3, or form a haem in the Fe(IV) state.  相似文献   

4.
Electrons were discretely injected into oxidized cytochrome c oxidase in liposomes by laser flash excitation of bound ruthenium [II] bispyridyl, and the membrane potential was recorded by time-resolved electrometry. Membrane potential is generated in a fast phase when an electron is transferred from the excited dye, via the CuA center, to heme a at a relative dielectric depth d inside the membrane [Zaslavsky, D., Kaulen, A. D., Smirnova, I. A., Vygodina, T., and Konstantinov, A. A. (1993) FEBS Lett. 336, 389-393]. Subsequently, membrane potential may develop further in a slower event, which is due to proton transfer into the enzyme from the opposite side of the membrane [Ruitenberg, M., Kannt, A., Bamberg, E., Ludwig, B., Michel, H., and Fendler, K. (2000) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 97, 4632-4636]. Here, we confirm that injection of the first electron into the fully oxidized cytochrome c oxidase from Paracoccus denitrificans is associated with a fast electrogenic 11 micros phase, but there is no further electrogenic phase up to 100 milliseconds when special care is taken to ensure that only fully oxidized enzyme is present initially. A slower electrogenic 135 micros phase only becomes apparent and grows in amplitude upon increasing the number of light flashes. This occurs in parallel with a decrease in amplitude of the 11 micros phase and correlates with the number of enzyme molecules that are already reduced by one electron before the flash. The electrogenic 135 micros phase does not appear with increasing flash number in the K354M mutant enzyme, where electron and proton transfer into the binuclear center is delayed. We conclude that the 135 micros phase, and its associated proton uptake, take place on electron injection into enzyme molecules where the binuclear heme a3-CuB site is already reduced by one electron, and that it is accompanied by oxidation of heme a with a similar time constant. Reduction of heme a is not associated with electrogenic proton uptake into the enzyme, neither in the fully oxidized nor in the one-electron-reduced enzyme. The extent of the electrogenic 135 micrcos phase also rules out the possibility that reduction of the binuclear center by the second electron would be coupled to proton translocation in addition to the electrogenic uptake of a proton.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Oxidized bovine cytochrome c oxidase reacts with hydrogen peroxide to generate two electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) free radical signals (Fabian, M., and Palmer, G. (1995) Biochemistry 34, 13802-13810). These radicals are associated with the binuclear center and give rise to two overlapped EPR signals, one signal being narrower in line width (DeltaHptp = 12 G) than the other (DeltaHptp = 45 G). We have used electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectrometry to identify the two different chemical species giving rise to these two EPR signals. Comparison of the ENDOR spectrum associated with the narrow signal with that of compound I of horseradish peroxidase (formed by reaction of that enzyme with hydrogen peroxide) demonstrates that the two species are virtually identical. The chemical species giving rise to the narrow signal is therefore identified as an exchange-coupled porphyrin cation radical similar to that formed in horseradish peroxidase compound I. Comparison of the ENDOR spectrum of compound ES (formed by the reaction of hydrogen peroxide with cytochrome c peroxidase) with that of the broad signal indicates that the chemical species giving rise to the broad EPR signal in cytochrome c oxidase is probably an exchange coupled tryptophan cation radical. This is substantiated using H(2)O/D(2)O solvent exchange experiments where the ENDOR difference spectrum of the broad EPR signal of cytochrome c oxidase shows a feature consistent with hyperfine coupling to the exchangeable N(1) proton of a tryptophan cation radical.  相似文献   

7.
Two-subunit SoxB-type cytochrome c oxidase in Bacillus stearothermophilus was over-produced, purified, and examined for its active site structures by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and resonance Raman (RR) spectroscopies. This is cytochrome bo3 oxidase containing heme B at the low-spin heme site and heme O at the high-spin heme site of the binuclear center. EPR spectra of the enzyme in the oxidized form indicated that structures of the high-spin heme O and the low-spin heme B were similar to those of SoxM-type oxidases based on the signals at g=6.1, and g=3.04. However, the EPR signals from the CuA center and the integer spin system at the binuclear center showed slight differences. RR spectra of the oxidized form showed that heme O was in a 6-coordinated high-spin (nu3 = 1472 cm(-1)), and heme B was in a 6-coordinated low-spin (nu3 = 1500 cm(-1)) state. The Fe2+-His stretching mode was observed at 211 cm(-1), indicating that the Fe2+-His bond strength is not so much different from those of SoxM-type oxidases. On the contrary, both the Fe2+-CO stretching and Fe2+-C-O bending modes differed distinctly from those of SoxM-type enzymes, suggesting some differences in the coordination geometry and the protein structure in the proximity of bound CO in cytochrome bo3 from those of SoxM-type enzymes.  相似文献   

8.
Elucidating the properties of the heme Fe-Cu(B) binuclear center and the dynamics of the protein response in cytochrome c oxidase is crucial to understanding not only the dioxygen activation and bond cleavage by the enzyme but also the events related to the release of the produced water molecules. The time-resolved step-scan FTIR difference spectra show the ν(7a)(CO) of the protonated form of Tyr residues at 1247 cm(-1) and that of the deprotonated form at 1301 cm(-1). By monitoring the intensity changes of the 1247 and 1301 cm(-1) modes as a function of pH, we measured a pK(a) of 7.8 for the observed tyrosine. The FTIR spectral changes associated with the tyrosine do not belong to Tyr-237 but are attributed to the highly conserved in heme-copper oxidases Tyr-136 and/or Tyr-133 residue (Koutsoupakis, K., Stavrakis, S., Pinakoulaki, E., Soulimane, T., and Varotsis, C. (2002) J. Biol. Chem. 277, 32860-32866). The oxygenation of CO by the mixed-valence form of the enzyme revealed the formation of the ~607 nm P (Fe(IV)=O) species in the pH 6-9 range and the return to the oxidized form without the formation of the 580 nm F form. The data indicate that Tyr-237 is not involved in the proton transfer pathway in the oxygenation of CO by the mixed-valence form of the enzyme. The implication of these results with respect to the role of Tyr-136 and Tyr-133 in proton transfer/gating along with heme a(3) ring D propionate-H(2)O-ring A propionate-Asp-372 site to the exit/output proton channel (H(2)O pool) is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectra have been recorded for beef heart cytochrome oxidase and a number of its inhibitor complexes. The resting enzyme exhibits a derivate shape Faraday C term in the Soret region, characteristic of low spin ferric heme, which accounts for 50% of the total oxidase heme a. The remaining heme a (50%) is assigned to the high spin state. MCD temperature studies, comparison with the MCD spectra of heme a-imidazole model compounds, and ligand binding (cyanide, formate) studies are consistent with these spin state assignments in the oxidized enzyme. Furthermore, the ligand binding properties and correlations between optical and MCD parameters indicate that in the resting enzyme the low spin heme a is due solely to cytochrome a3+ and the high spin heme a to cytochrome a33+. The Soret MCD of the reduced protein is interpreted as th sum of two MCD curves: an intense, asymmetric MCD band very similar to that exhibited by deoxymyoglobin which we assign to paramagnetic high spin cytochrome a3(2+) and a weaker, more symmetric MCD contribution, which is attributed to diamagnetic low spin cytochrome a2+. Temperature studies of the Soret MCD intensity support this proposed spin state heterogeneity. Ligand binding (CO, CN-) to the reduced protein eliminates the intense MCD associated with high spin cytochrome a3(2+); however, the band associated with cytochrome a2+ is observed under these conditions as well as in a number of inhibitor complexes (cyanide, formate, sulfide, azide) of the partially reduced protein. The MCD spectra of oxidized, reduced, and inhibitor-complexed cytochrome oxidase show no evidence for heme-heme interaction via spectral parameters. This conclusion is used in conjunction with the fact that ferric, high spin heme exhibits weak MCD intensity to calculate the MCD spectra for the individual cytochromes of the oxidase as well as the spectra for some inhibitor complexes of cytochrome a3. The results are most simply interpreted using the model we have recently proposed to account for the electronic and magnetic properties of cytochrome (Palmer, G., Babcock, F.T., and Vcikery, L.E. (1976) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 73, 2206-2210).  相似文献   

10.
Resonance Raman and visible absorption spectra were simultaneously observed for cytochrome oxidase reaction intermediates at 5 degrees C by using the artificial cardiovascular system (Ogura, T., Yoshikawa, S., and Kitagawa, T. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 8022-8027) and a device for Raman/absorption simultaneous measurements (Ogura, T., and Kitagawa, T. (1988) Rev. Sci. Instrum. 59, 1316-1320). The Fe4+ = O stretching (nu FeO) Raman band was observed at 788 cm-1 for compound B for the first time. This band showed the 16O/18O isotopic frequency shift (delta nu FeO) by 40 cm-1, in agreement with that for horseradish peroxidase compound II (nu FeO = 787 cm-1 and delta nu FeO = 34 cm-1). In the time region when the FeII-O2 stretching band for compound A and the nu FeO band for compound B were coexistent, a Raman band assignable to the Fe3+-O-O-Cu2+ linkage was not recognized.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
The EPR spectrum of copper in cytochrome c oxidase (EC 1.9.3.1) has been studied between 5 and 220 degreesK, and the spectral parameters have been determined for both forms of EPR-detectable copper by computer simulation methods. Numerical methods have been developed to separate the spectra of intrinsic copper and inactive copper. Evidence is presented to show that inactive copper is probably formed by denaturation. The EPR parameters for intrinsic copper were determined as gx = 1.99, gy = 2.03, gz = 2.185, / Ax(Cu) / = 0.0020 cm-1, / Ay(Cu) / = 0.0025 cm-1, / Az(Cu) / = 0.0030 cm-1. The principal values of the g tensor and the small value of /Az(Cu) / are interpreted in terms of mixing of 3d, 4s, and 4p metal orbitals. A flattened-tetrahedral stereochemistry about Cu2+ with an additional rhombic distrotion is in best agreement with all of the data. The peak-to-peak linewidth is found to be orientation dependent, and is described by a tensor with principal values deltaHx = 45G, deltaHy = 65 G, deltaHz = 85 G. A weak dipolar interaction with a low-spin ferric species stereochemistry for the copper ion is consistent with the electron transport function of the enzyme. Broad EPR signals with a very short spin-lattice relaxation time has been observed near g = 14 and g = 3 at 5 degrees K in oxidized cytochrome oxidase but not in the reduced or denatured enzyme. The possibility that these are due to the "EPR-undetectable" iron and copper is raised.  相似文献   

13.
The oxidized binuclear heme a3/CuB center of slow forms of bovine cytochrome oxidase exhibits a characteristic EPR signal at g' = 12. Following the (rapid) dithionite reduction of heme a and CuA, an additional EPR signal becomes apparent at g' = 2.95. As electrons enter the binuclear center this signal decays at the same slow rate as the g' = 12 signal. In the fully oxidized slow enzyme the small g' = 2.95 signal is usually masked by the g = 3 heme a signal, but it is readily detectable at low temperatures and high microwave powers. It is present in both the intrinsic and formate-ligated slow enzymes, but not in any form of fast preparation. The g' = 2.95 signal has similar temperature dependence and microwave power saturation characteristics to the g' = 12 signal. We conclude that the signal arises from the same population of binuclear centers responsible for the g' = 12 signal. The appearance of a signal at g' = 2.95 in X-band EPR is consistent with, but does not prove, the model of Hagen where the g' = 12 signal arises from a ferryl heme a3, with CuB cuprous and EPR-silent (Hagen, W. R. (1982) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 708, 82-98).  相似文献   

14.
O2-activated bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase has been examined by dual-mode EPR spectrometry. Resonances have been observed at g = 10 and 4.5 in the parallel mode and at g = 10, 5, 1.8 and 1.7 in the normal mode. The bulk of these signals are interpreted to come from a stoichiometric S = 2 system with magnitude of a = 0.17 cm-1, D = +2.1 cm-1, magnitude of E = 0.026 cm-1, g = 2. Exchange coupling between cytochrome a3 and CuB is not indicated.  相似文献   

15.
Cytochrome c oxidase catalyzes the reduction of oxygen to water with a concomitant conservation of energy in the form of a transmembrane proton gradient. The enzyme has a catalytic site consisting of a binuclear center of a copper ion and a heme group. The spectroscopic parameters of this center are unusual. The origin of broad electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) signals in the oxidized state at rather low resonant field, the so-called g' = 12 signal, has been a matter of debate for over 30 years. We have studied the angular dependence of this resonance in both parallel and perpendicular mode X-band EPR in oriented multilayers containing cytochrome c oxidase to resolve the assignment. The "slow" form and compounds formed by the addition of formate and fluoride to the oxidized enzyme display these resonances, which result from transitions between states of an integer-spin multiplet arising from magnetic exchange coupling between the five unpaired electrons of high spin Fe(III) heme a(3) and the single unpaired electron of Cu(B). The first successful simulation of similar signals observed in both perpendicular and parallel mode X-band EPR spectra in frozen aqueous solution of the fluoride compound of the closely related enzyme, quinol oxidase or cytochrome bo(3), has been reported recently (Oganesyan et al., 1998, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 120:4232-4233). This suggested that the exchange interaction between the two metal ions of the binuclear center is very weak (|J| approximately 1 cm(-1)), with the axial zero-field splitting (D approximately 5 cm(-1)) of the high-spin heme dominating the form of the ground state. We show that this model accounts well for the angular dependences of the X-band EPR spectra in both perpendicular and parallel modes of oriented multilayers of cytochrome c oxidase derivatives and that the experimental results are inconsistent with earlier schemes that use exchange coupling parameters of several hundred wavenumbers.  相似文献   

16.
Bovine heart mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase (cytochrome aa3) (EC 1.9.3.1) has been demonstrated to occur in several forms when the redox centers in the protein are thought to be fully oxidized. We report here the results of extensive EPR studies at 3, 8.9, 9.2, 9.4, 15 and 34 GHz on the resting state, the alternative resting state (with g = 12 at 9 GHz) and pulsed state (with g = 5 signal at 9 GHz). Theoretical consideration is given to all binary spin-coupling possibilities under the constraint that the iron atoms are either ferric or ferrous and the copper atoms are either cupric or cuprous. We conclude that the g = 12 signal can arise from any spin system with S greater than 1 and D = 0.15 cm-1. The g = 5 signals originate from an excited, integer-spin system with D = 0.035 cm-1, which is approximately 7 cm-1 above the ground state (not observed in EPR). It is pointed out that in interpretations of data and elaboration of suitable models in this field, the implications of spin-coupling should be considered in a comprehensive and not in a selective way. At 3 GHz, EPR spectra of CuA in the resting, pulsed and anaerobically oxidized states show that this center is identical in its EPR for all three states.  相似文献   

17.
An interaction between cytochrome a in oxidized cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) and anions has been characterized by EPR spectroscopy. Those anions that affect the EPR g = 3 signal of cytochrome a can be divided into two groups. One group consists of halides (Cl-, Br-, and I-) and induces an upfield shift of the g = 3 signal. Nitrogen-containing anions (CN-, NO2-, N3-, NO3-) are in the second group and shift the g = 3 signal downfield. The shifts in the EPR spectrum of CcO are unrelated to ligand binding to the binuclear center. The binding properties of one representative from each group, azide and chloride, were characterized in detail. The dependence of the shift on chloride concentration is consistent with a single binding site in the isolated oxidized enzyme with a Kd of approximately 3 mm. In mitochondria, the apparent Kd was found to be about four times larger than that of the isolated enzyme. The data indicate it is the chloride anion that is bound to CcO, and there is a hydrophilic size-selective access channel to this site from the cytosolic side of the mitochondrial membrane. An observed competition between azide and chloride is interpreted by azide binding to three sites: two that are apparent in the x-ray structure plus the chloride-binding site. It is suggested that either Mg2+ or Arg-438/Arg-439 is the chloride-binding site, and a mechanism for the ligand-induced shift of the g = 3 signal is proposed.  相似文献   

18.
Real-time measurements of the cytochrome c oxidase reaction with oxygen were performed by ATR-FTIR spectroscopy, using a mutant with a blocked D-pathway of proton transfer (D124N, Paracoccus denitrificans numbering). The complex spectrum of the ferryl-->oxidized transition together with other bands showed protonation of Glu 278 with a peak position at 1743 cm-1. Since our time resolution was not sufficient to follow the earlier reaction steps, the FTIR spectrum of the CO-inhibited fully reduced-->ferryl transition was obtained as a difference between the spectrum before the laser flash and the first spectrum after it. A trough at 1735 cm-1 due to deprotonation of Glu 278 was detected in this spectrum. These observations confirm the proposal [Smirnova I.A., et al. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 6826-6833] that the proton required for chemistry at the binuclear site is taken from Glu 278 in the perroxy-->ferryl step, and that the rate of the next step (ferryl-->oxidized) is limited by reprotonation of Glu 278 from the N-side of the membrane in the D124N mutant enzyme. The blockage of the D-pathway in this mutant for the first time allowed direct detection of deprotonation of Glu 278 and its reprotonation during oxidation of cytochrome oxidase by O2.  相似文献   

19.
The first discernible intermediate when fully reduced cytochrome c oxidase reacts with O2 is a dioxygen adduct (compound A) of the binuclear heme iron-copper center. The subsequent decay of compound A is associated with transfer of an electron from the low-spin heme a to this center. This reaction eventually produces the ferryl state (F) of this center, but whether an intermediate state may be observed between A and F has been the subject of some controversy. Here we show, using both optical and EPR spectroscopy, that such an intermediate (P(R)) indeed exists and that it exhibits spectroscopic properties quite distinct from F. The optical spectrum of P(R) is similar or identical to the spectrum of the P(M) intermediate that is formed after compound A when two-electron-reduced enzyme reacts with O2. An unusual EPR spectrum with features of a CuB(II) ion that interacts magnetically with a nearby paramagnet [cf. Hansson, O., Karlsson, B., Aasa, R., V?nng?rd, T., and Malmstr?m, B.G (1982) EMBO J. 1, 1295-1297; Blair, D. F., Witt, S. N., and Chan, S. I. (1985) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 107, 7389-7399] can be uniquely assigned to the P(R) intermediate, not being found in either the P(M) or F intermediate. The binuclear center in the P(R) state may be assigned as having an Fe(a3)(IV)=O CuB(II) structure, as in both the P(M) and F states. The spectroscopic differences between these three intermediates are evaluated. The P(R) state has a key role as an initiator of proton translocation by the enzyme, and the thermodynamic and electrostatic bases for this are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Amino acid sequence data have revealed that the bo-type ubiquinol oxidase from Escherichia coli is closely related to the eukaryotic aa3-type cytochrome c oxidases. In the cytochrome c oxidases, the reduction of oxygen to water occurs at a binuclear center comprised of heme a3 and Cu(B). In this paper, Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy of CO bound to the enzyme is used to directly demonstrate that the E. coli bo-type ubiquinol oxidase also contains a heme-copper binuclear center. Photolysis of CO ligated to heme o at low temperatures (e.g., 30 K) results in formation of a CO-Cu complex, showing that there is a heme-Cu(B) binuclear center similar to that formed by heme a3 and Cu(B) in the eukaryotic oxidase. It is further demonstrated that the cyoE gene product is required for the correct assembly of this binuclear center, although this polypeptide is not required as a component of the active enzyme in vitro. The cyoE gene product is homologous to COX10, a nuclear gene product from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which is required for the assembly of yeast cytochrome c oxidase. Deletion of the cyoE gene results in an inactive quinol oxidase that is, however, assembled in the membrane. FTIR analysis of bound CO shows that Cu(B) is present in this mutant but that the heme-Cu(B) binuclear center is abnormal. Analysis of the heme content of the membrane suggests that the cyoE deletion results in the insertion of heme B (protoheme IX) in the binuclear center, rather than heme O.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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