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1.
Electron transfer reactions between Clostridum pasteurianum flavodoxin semiquinone and various oxidants [horse heart cytochrome c, ferricyanide, and ferric ethylenediaminetetraacetic [horse heart cytochrome c, ferricyanide, and ferric ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA)] have been studied as a function of ionic strength by using stopped-flow spectrophotometry. The cytochrome c reaction is complicated by the existence of two cytochrome species which react at different rates and whose relative concentrations are ionic strength dependent. Only the faster of these two reactions is considered here. At low ionic strength, complex formation between cytochrome c and flavodoxin is indicated by a leveling off of the pseudo-first-order rate constant at high cytochrome c concentration. This is not observed for either ferricyanide or ferric EDTA. For cytochrome c, the rate and association constants for complex formation were found to increase with decreasing ionic strength, consistent with negative charges on flavodoxin interacting with the positively charged cytochrome electron transfer site. Both ferricyanide and ferric EDTA are negatively charged oxidants, and the rate data respond to ionic strength changes as would be predicted for reactants of the same charge sign. These results demonstrate that electrostatic interactions involving negatively charged groups are important in orienting flavodoxin with respect to oxidants during electron transfer. We have also carried out computer modeling studies of putative complexes of flavodoxin with cytochrome c and ferricyanide, which relate their structural properties to both the observed kinetic behavior and some more general features of physiological electron transfer processes. The results of this study are consistent with the ionic strength behavior described above.  相似文献   

2.
The effect of ionic strength on the rate constant for electron transfer has been used to determine the magnitude and charge sign of the net electrostatic potential which exists in close proximity to the sites of electron transfer on various c-type cytochromes. The negatively charged ferricyanide ion preferentially reacts at the positively charged exposed heme edge region on the front side of horse cytochrome c and Paracoccus cytochrome c2. In contrast, at low ionic strength, the positively charged cobalt phenanthroline ion interacts with the negatively charged back side of cytochrome c2, and at high ionic strength at a positively charged site on the front side of the cytochrome. With horse cytochrome c, over the ionic strength range studied, cobalt phenanthroline reacts only at a positively charged site which is probably not at the heme edge. These inorganic oxidants do not react at the relatively uncharged exposed heme edge sites on Azotobacter cytochrome c5 and Pseudomonas cytochrome c-551, but rather at a negatively charged site which is away from the heme edge. The results demonstrate that at least two electron-transferring sites on a single cytochrome can be functional, depending on the redox reactant used and the ionic strength. Electrostatic interactions between charge distributions on the cytochrome surface and the other reactant, or interactions involving uncharged regions on the protein(s), are critical in determining the preferred sites of electron transfer and reaction rate constants. When unfavorable electrostatic effects occur at a site near the redox center, less optimal sites at a greater distance can become kinetically important.  相似文献   

3.
K L Kim  D S Kang  L B Vitello  J E Erman 《Biochemistry》1990,29(39):9150-9159
The steady-state kinetics of the cytochrome c peroxidase catalyzed oxidation of horse heart ferrocytochrome c by hydrogen peroxide have been studied at both pH 7.0 and pH 7.5 as a function of ionic strength. Plots of the initial velocity versus hydrogen peroxide concentration at fixed cytochrome c are hyperbolic. The limiting slope at low hydrogen peroxide give apparent bimolecular rate constants for the cytochrome c peroxidase-hydrogen peroxide reaction identical with those determined directly by stopped-flow techniques. Plots of the initial velocity versus cytochrome c concentration at saturating hydrogen peroxide (200 microM) are nonhyperbolic. The rate expression requires squared terms in cytochrome c concentration. The maximum turnover rate of the enzyme is independent of ionic strength, with values of 470 +/- 50 s-1 and 290 +/- 30 s-1 at pH 7.0 and 7.5, respectively. The limiting slope of velocity versus cytochrome c concentration plots provides a lower limit for the association rate constant between cytochrome c and the oxidized intermediates of cytochrome c peroxidase. The limiting slope varies from 10(6) M-1 s-1 at 300 mM ionic strength to 10(8) M-1 s-1 at 20 mM ionic strength and extrapolates to 5 x 10(8) M-1 s-1 at zero ionic strength. The data are discussed in terms of both a two-binding-site mechanism and a single-binding-site, multiple-pathway mechanism.  相似文献   

4.
The kinetics of reduction of Chromatium vinosum flavocytochrome c heme subunit by exogenous flavin neutral semiquinones generated by laser flash photolysis have been investigated. Unlike the holoprotein, the isolated heme subunit was appreciably reactive with lumiflavin neutral semiquinone. The measured rate constant for the reaction (2.7 X 10(7) M-1 S-1) was comparable to those of c-type cytochromes having similar redox potentials. The ionic strength dependence of the reaction with FMN neutral radical indicated that the heme subunit had a small negative charge at the site of reduction. Taken together, these results suggest that the active site of the heme subunit is buried on complexation with the flavin subunit in the holoprotein. Horse cytochrome c formed a strong complex with Chromatium, but not Chlorobium, flavocytochrome c. Possible physiological electron acceptors such as HiPIP, cytochrome c', and cytochrome c-555 apparently did not bind to the flavocytochromes c. The rate constant for reduction by lumiflavin radical of horse cytochrome c complexed to flavocytochrome c was about twofold smaller than for reduction of horse cytochrome c alone. Flavocytochrome c was itself unreactive with exogenous flavin semiquinones. The ionic strength dependence of the reduction of the complex by FMN radical was also smaller than for horse cytochrome c in the absence of flavocytochrome c. Sulfite, which forms an adduct with the protein-bound FAD (FAD is bound in an 8-alpha-S-cysteinyl linkage), did not affect the reduction of horse cytochrome c in its complex with flavocytochrome c. We conclude that horse cytochrome c is reduced directly by exogenous flavins in its complex with flavocytochrome c, although the kinetics are slightly modified. These results are not unlike observations made with complexes of mitochondrial cytochrome c with cytochrome oxidase or cytochrome b5.  相似文献   

5.
C S Raman  R Jemmerson  B T Nall  M J Allen 《Biochemistry》1992,31(42):10370-10379
The kinetic and spectroscopic changes accompanying the binding of two monoclonal antibodies to the oxidized form of horse heart cytochrome c have been investigated. The two epitopes recognized by the antibodies are distinct and noninteracting: antibody 2B5 binds to native cytochrome c near a type II turn (residue 44) while antibody 5F8 binds on the opposite face of the protein near the amino terminus of an alpha-helical segment (residue 60). Antibody-cytochrome c binding obeys a simple bimolecular reaction mechanism with second-order rate constants approaching those expected for diffusion-limited protein-protein interactions. The association rate constants have small activation enthalpies and are inversely dependent on solvent viscosity, as expected for diffusion-controlled reactions. There is a moderate ionic strength dependence of the rate of association between the 2B5 antibody and cytochrome c, with the rate constant increasing about 4-fold as the ionic strength is varied between 0.14 and 0 M. Comparison of the rates for antibody-cytochrome c complex formation for binding to the reduced-native, oxidized-native, and alkaline conformations shows that for MAb 2B5 the forward rate constant depends slightly on cytochrome c conformation. Investigation of the pH-induced transition between the native and alkaline conformational states for free cytochrome c and for antibody-cytochrome c complexes shows that antibody binding stabilizes the native form of the protein.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
The effect of Cl- and K+ ions on the apparent equilibrium constant of the reaction between horse ferricytochrome c and potassium ferrocyanide was studied. Unmodified cytochrome was compared with two lysine-modified derivatives. One, guanidinated, had all lysyl groups converted to homoarginine (but retained the same positive charge); the other was trinitrophenylated at one lysine (measured spectrophotometrically). Both modified derivatives had a somewhat larger equilibrium constant in the reaction of the reduced protein with ferricyanide, but, unlike trifluoroacetylated cytochrome c (which has a negative charge), the redox properties were not dramatically different. The native protein and the lysine-modified cytochromes showed differential K+ binding in Tris-cacodylate buffer at constant ionic strength (0.003-0.005 M). More K+ was bound to ferrocytochrome c. This redox-linked binding, however, was unaffected by modification of lysine. All three derivatives also showed redox-linked differential Cl- ion binding (more Cl- ion was bount to ferricytochrome); however, in this case, the binding was reduced in the lysine-modified molecules. This was interpreted as loss of a single anion site. This anion site critically depends on one or a few lysines which are more reactive with trinitrobenzene sulfonate.  相似文献   

7.
1. The steady state kinetics for the oxidation of ferrocytochrome c by yeast cytochrome c peroxidase are biphasic under most conditions. The same biphasic kinetics were observed for yeast iso-1, yeast iso-2, horse, tuna, and cicada cytochromes c. On changing ionic strength, buffer anions, and pH, the apparent Km values for the initial phase (Km1) varied relatively little while the corresponding apparent maximal velocities varied over a much larger range. 2. The highest apparent Vmax1 for horse cytochrome c is attained at relatively low pH (congruent to 6.0) and low ionic strength (congruent to 0.05), while maximal activity for the yeast protein is at higher pH (congruent to 7.0) and higher ionic strength (congruent to 0.2), with some variations depending on the nature of the buffering ions. 3. Direct binding studies showed that cytochrome c binds to two sites on the peroxidase, under conditions that give biphasic kinetics. Under those ionic conditions that yield monophasic kinetics, binding occurred at only one site. At the optimal buffer concentrations for both yeast and horse cytochromes c, the KD1 and KD2 values approximate the Km1 and Km2 values. At ionic strengths below optimal, binding becomes too strong and above optimal, too weak. 4. Under ionic conditions that are optimal and give monophasic kinetics with horse cytochrome c but are suboptimal for the yeast protein, yeast cytochrome c strongly inhibits the reaction of horse cytochrome c with peroxidase, uncompetitively at one site and competitively at a second site. The appearance of the second site under monophasic conditions is interpreted as an allosteric effect of the inhibitor binding to the first site. 5. The simplest model accounting for these observations postulates two kinetically active sites on each molecule of peroxidase, a high affinity and a low affinity site, that may correspond to the free radical and the heme iron (IV) of the oxidized enzyme, respectively. Both oxidizing equivalents may be discharged at either site. Furthermore, the enzyme appears to exist as an equilibrium mixture of a high ionic strength form, EH and a low ionic strength form, EL, the former reacting optimally with yeast cytochrome c, and the latter with horse cytochrome c.  相似文献   

8.
S Loo  J E Erman 《Biochemistry》1975,14(15):3467-3470
The rate of the reaction between cytochrome c peroxidase and hydrogen peroxide was investigated using the stopped-flow technique. The apparent bimolecular rate constant was determined between pH 3.3 and pH 11 as a function of ionic strength. The pH dependence of the apparent bimolecular rate constant can be explained by assuming that two ionizable groups on the enzyme strongly influence the rate of the reaction. At 0.1 M ionic strength, a group with a pKa of 5.5 must be unprotonated and a group with a pKa of 9.8 must be protonated for the enzyme to react rapidly with hydrogen peroxide. The apparent acid dissociation constants depend upon the ionic strength. The true bimolecular rate constant has a value of (4.5 +/- 0.3) X 10(7) M-1 sec-1 and is independent of ionic strength.  相似文献   

9.
The aggregation state of two types of bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase preparations in the presence of laurylmaltoside was investigated by high performance liquid chromatography in two buffers of ionic strengths of 388 mM and 45 mM, respectively. At high ionic strength, it was found that the Fowler cytochrome c oxidase preparation was monomeric (Mr = 2 X 10(5)), while monomers and dimers (2 X aa3, Mr = 4 X 10(5)) could be isolated from the Yonetani preparation. Under these conditions there was no rapid equilibrium between the two forms. Covalent cytochrome c oxidase-cytochrome c complexes were largely dimeric, and addition of ascorbate and cytochrome c to the oxidase also promoted dimerization. At low ionic strength (I = 45 mM) in the presence of laurylmaltoside the oxidase and the covalent complex with cytochrome c were largely monomeric. In the steady-state oxidation of ferrous horse heart cytochrome c, the monomeric enzyme displayed biphasic kinetics at I = 45 mM. This suggests that the presence of high- and low-affinity reactions is an intrinsic property of the cytochrome c oxidase monomer.  相似文献   

10.
The reaction between cytochrome c1 and cytochrome c   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The kinetics of electron transfer between the isolated enzymes of cytochrome c1 and cytochrome c have been investigated using the stopped-flow technique. The reaction between ferrocytochrome c1 and ferricytochrome c is fast; the second-order rate constant (k1) is 3.0 . 10(7) M-1 . s-1 at low ionic strength (I = 223 mM, 10 degrees C). The value of this rate constant decreases to 1.8 . 10(5) M-1 . s-1 upon increasing the ionic strength to 1.13 M. The ionic strength dependence of the electron transfer between cytochrome c1 and cytochrome c implies the involvement of electrostatic interactions in the reaction between both cytochromes. In addition to a general influence of ionic strength, specific anion effects are found for phosphate, chloride and morpholinosulphonate. These anions appear to inhibit the reaction between cytochrome c1 and cytochrome c by binding of these anions to the cytochrome c molecule. Such a phenomenon is not observed for cacodylate. At an ionic strength of 1.02 M, the second-order rate constants for the reaction between ferrocytochrome c1 and ferricytochrome c and the reverse reaction are k1 = 2.4 . 10(5) M-1 . s-1 and k-1 = 3.3 . 10(5) M-1 . s-1, respectively (450 mM potassium phosphate, pH 7.0, 1% Tween 20, 10 degrees C). The 'equilibrium' constant calculated from the rate constants (0.73) is equal to the constant determined from equilibrium studies. Moreover, it is shown that at this ionic strength, the concentrations of intermediary complexes are very low and that the value of the equilibrium constant is independent of ionic strength. These data can be fitted into the following simple reaction scheme: cytochrome c2+1 + cytochrome c3+ in equilibrium or formed from cytochrome c3+1 + cytochrome c2+.  相似文献   

11.
Lipoamide dehydrogenase, a component of the bovine adrenal ketoglutarate dehydrogenase complex, catalyzes the oxidation of NADH by p-quinones and ferricyanide. The kinetics of oxidation obey the ping-pong mechanism. At pH 7.0, the constants for the active center oxidation by quinones (kox) are equal to 1.1 X 10(4)-5.3 X 10(5) M-1s-1 and increase as the acceptor potential rises. The values of kox for quinones change insignificantly within the pH range of 7.7-5.0, whereas that for ferricyanide increases 10-fold with a decrease of pH from 7.0 to 5.0. The value of the catalytic constant for the enzyme (kcat) reaches its maximum at pH 5.5. The quinones interact with the thiol groups of lipoamide dehydrogenase by inhibiting the fluorescence of FAD and diaphorease activity. The reaction is catalyzed by a basic amino acid (pK 6.7) within the composition of the enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
Citrate and other polyanion binding to ferricytochrome c partially blocks reduction by ascorbate, but at constant ionic strength the citrate-cytochrome c complex remains reducible; reduction by TMPD is unaffected. At a constant high ionic strength citrate inhibits the cytochrome c oxidase reaction competitively with respect to cytochrome c, indicating that ferrocytochrome c also binds citrate, and that the citrate-ferrocytochrome c complex is rejected by the binding site at high ionic strength. At lower ionic strengths, citrate and other polyanions change the kinetic pattern of ferrocytochrome c oxidation from first-order towards zero-order, indicating preferential binding of the ferric species, followed by its exclusion from the binding site. The turnover at low cytochrome c concentrations is diminished by citrate but not the Km (apparent non-competitive inhibition) or the rate of cytochrome a reduction by bound cytochrome c. Small effects of anions are seen in direct measurements of binding to the primary site on the enzyme, and larger effects upon secondary site binding. It is concluded that anion-cytochrome c complexes may be catalytically competent but that the redox potentials and/or intramolecular behaviour of such complexes may be affected when enzyme-bound. Increasing ionic strength diminishes cytochrome c binding not only by decreasing the 'association' rate but also by increasing the 'dissociation' rate for bound cytochrome c converting the 'primary' (T) site at high salt concentrations into a site similar kinetically to the 'secondary' (L) site at low ionic strength. A finite Km of 170 microM at very high ionic strength indicates a ratio of K infinity m/K 0 M of about 5000. It is proposed that anions either modify the E10 of cytochrome C bound at the primary (T) site of that they perturb an equilibrium between two forms of bound c in favour of a less active form.  相似文献   

13.
Human cytochrome c oxidase was purified in a fully active form from heart and skeletal muscle. The enzyme was selectively solubilised with octylglucoside and KCl from submitochondrial particles followed by ammonium sulphate fractionation. The presteady-state and steady-state kinetic properties of the human cytochrome c oxidase preparations with either human cytochrome c or horse cytochrome c were studied spectrophotometrically and compared with those of bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase. The interaction between human cytochrome c and human cytochrome c oxidase proved to be highly specific. It is proposed that for efficient electron transfer to occur, a conformational change in the complex is required, thereby shifting the initially unfavourable redox equilibrium. The very slow presteady-state reaction between human cytochrome c oxidase and horse cytochrome c suggests that, in this case, the conformational change does not occur. The proposed model was also used to explain the steady-state kinetic parameters under various conditions. At high ionic strength (I = 200 mM, pH 7.4), the kcat was highly dependent on the type of oxidase and it is proposed that the internal electron transfer is the rate-limiting step. The kcat value of the 'high-affinity' phase, observed at low ionic strength (I = 18 mM, pH 7.4), was determined by the cytochrome c/cytochrome c oxidase combination applied, whereas the Km was highly dependent only on the type of cytochrome c used. Our results suggest that, depending on the cytochrome c/cytochrome c oxidase combination, either the dissociation of ferricytochrome c or the internal electron transfer is the rate-limiting step in the 'high-affinity' phase at low ionic strength. The 'low-affinity' kcat value was not only determined by the type of oxidase used, but also by the type of cytochrome c. It is proposed that the internal electron-transfer rate of the 'low-affinity' reaction is enhanced by the binding of a second molecule of cytochrome c.  相似文献   

14.
Stopped-flow kinetics were made of the reaction between ascorbate-reduced Pseudomonas cytochrome oxidase and potassium ferricyanide under both N2 and CO atmospheres. Under N2 three kinetic processes were observed, two being dependent on ferricyanide concentration, with second-order rate constants of 9.6 X 10(4)M-1.s-1 and 1.5 X 10(4)M-1.s-1, whereas the other was concentration-independent, with a first-order rate constant of 0.17 +/- 0.03s-1. Measurements of their kinetic difference spectra have allowed the fastest and second-fastest phases of the reaction to be assigned to direct bimolecular reactions of ferricyanide with the haem c and haem d, moieties of the enzyme respectively. Under CO, the second-order rate constant for the reaction of the haem c was, at 1.3 X 10(5)M-1.s-1, slightly enhanced over the rate in a N2 atmosphere, but the reaction velocity of the haem d1 component was greatly decreased, being apparently limited to that of the rates of CO dissociation from the molecule (0.15s-1 and 0.03s-1). The results are compared with those obtained during a previous study of the reaction of reduced Pseudomonas cytochrome oxidase with oxidized azurin.  相似文献   

15.
Gerencsér L  Laczkó G  Maróti P 《Biochemistry》1999,38(51):16866-16875
To understand the details of rate limitation of turnover of the photosynthetic reaction center, photooxidation of horse heart cytochrome c by reaction center from Rhodobacter spheroides in detergent dispersion has been examined by intense continuous illumination under a wide variety of conditions of cytochrome concentration, ionic strength, viscosity, temperature, light intensity, and pH. The observed steady-state turnover rate of the cytochrome was not light intensity limited. In accordance with recent findings [Larson, J. W., Wells, T. A., and Wraight, C. A. (1998) Biophys. J. 74 (2), A76], the turnover rate increased with increasing bulk ionic strength in the range of 0-40 mM NaCl from 1000 up to 2300 s(-)(1) and then decreased at high ionic strength under conditions of excess cytochrome and ubiquinone and a photochemical rate constant of 4500 s(-)(1). Furthermore, we found the following: (i) The contribution of donor (cytochrome c) and acceptor (ubiquinone) sides as well as the binding of reduced and the release of oxidized cytochrome c could be separated in the observed kinetics. At neutral and acidic pH (when the proton transfer is not rate limiting) and at low or moderate ionic strength, the turnover rate of the reaction center was limited primarily by the low release rate of the photooxidized cytochrome c (product inhibition). At high ionic strength, however, the binding rate of the reduced cytochrome c decreased dramatically and became the bottleneck. The observed activation energy of the steady-state turnover rate reflected the changes in limiting mechanisms: 1.5 kcal/mol at 4 mM and 5.7 kcal/mol at 100 mM ionic strength. A similar distinction was observed in the viscosity dependence of the turnover rate: the decrease was steep (eta(-)(1)) at 40 and 100 mM ionic strengths and moderate (eta(-)(0.2)) under low-salt (4 mM) conditions. (ii) The rate of quinone exchange at the acceptor side with excess ubiquinone-30 or ubiquinone-50 was higher than the cytochrome exchange at the donor side and did not limit the observed rate of cytochrome turnover. (iii) Multivalent cations exerted effects not only through ionic strength (screening) but also by direct interaction with surface charge groups (ion-pair production). Heavy metal ion Cd(2+) bound to the RC with apparent dissociation constant of 14 microM. (iv) A two-state model of collisional interaction between reaction center and cytochrome c together with simple electrostatic considerations in the calculation of rate constants was generally sufficient to describe the kinetics of photooxidation of dimer and cytochrome c. (v) The pH dependence of cytochrome turnover rate indicated that the steady-state turnover rate of the cytochrome under high light conditions was not determined by the isoelectric point of the reaction center (pI = 6. 1) but by the carboxyl residues near the docking site.  相似文献   

16.
The oxidation of cytochrome c2 by the photooxidized reaction center bacteriochlorophyll, P+-870, in chromatophores of Rhodospirillum rubrum can be described using second-order kinetics at all ionic strengths. In a system consisting of isolated R. rubrum reaction centers and purified R. rubrum cytochrome c2, the oxidation of cytochrome c2 also follows second-order kinetics. In both cases, the reaction rates at low ionic strength are weakly dependent on the ionic strength. The data suggest that the cytochrome remains mobile at very low ionic strength, since the observed kinetics can be easily explained assuming no significant tight binding of cytochrome c2 to the reaction center. In a system consisting of equine cytochrome c and reaction centers of either R. rubrum or Rhodobacter sphaeroides, the cytochrome c oxidation rate depends more strongly on the ionic strength. The high reaction rates at low ionic strength suggest that a significant portion of the cytochrome is bound. Using equine cytochrome c derivatives modified at specific lysine residues, it was shown that both R. rubrum and Rb. sphaeroides reaction centers react with equine cytochrome c through its exposed heme edge.  相似文献   

17.
The kinetics of the oxidation-reduction reactions between horse heart cytochrome c, Euglena gracilis cytochrome c552, and ions (ascorbate, ferricyanide, and ferrocyanide) was investigated as a function of ionic strength at pH 7, 25 degrees C. The ionic strength was varied between 0.002 and 0.02 M. Data were analyzed according to four different functions of ionic strength. Results showed that the Kirkwood-Tanford smeared charge model holds well for the calculation of the activity coefficients and that the whole charges of these proteins are reflected in the rates of their reactions. Chemical modifications or changes in the pH that altered the charge of the proteins affected the primary salt effects as predicted by the smeared charge model.  相似文献   

18.
Membrane-impermeant redox compounds ferricyanide and horse heart ferrocytochrome c acted as electron acceptor and donor, respectively, for intact cells or spheroplasts of Anacystis nidulans (Synechococcus ATCC 27144) in the dark. The anaerobic reduction of ferricyanide was faster than aerobic reduction. KCN significantly enhanced the reaction under aerobic conditions. Light did not influence ferricyanide reduction. The oxidation of exogenous ferrocytochrome c was oxygen-dependent and inhibited by KCN. Either type of redox reaction was accompanied by vectorial proton translocation out of the cells. Arrhenius plots for the temperature dependence of both ferricyanide reduction and cytochrome c oxidation gave one distinct break point reflecting the lipid phase transition temperature of the plasma membrane. The results are presented as evidence for a respiratory chain in the plasma membrane of A. nidulans.  相似文献   

19.
The binding of horse heart cytochrome c to yeast cytochrome c peroxidase in which the heme group was replaced by protoporphyrin IX was determined by a fluorescence quenching technique. The association between ferricytochrome c and cytochrome c peroxidase was investigated at pH 6.0 in cacodylate/KNO3 buffers. Ionic strength was varied between 3.5 mM and 1.0 M. No binding occurs at 1.0 M ionic strength although there was a substantial decrease in fluorescence intensity due to the inner filter effect. After correcting for the inner filter effect, significant quenching of porphyrin cytochrome c peroxidase fluorescence by ferricytochrome c was observed at 0.1 M ionic strength and below. The quenching could be described by 1:1 complex formation between the two proteins. Values of the equilibrium dissociation constant determined from the fluorescence quenching data are in excellent agreement with those determined previously for the native enzyme-ferricytochrome c complex at pH 6.0 by difference spectrophotometry (J. E. Erman and L. B. Vitello (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 225, 6224-6227). The binding of both ferri- and ferrocytochrome c to cytochrome c peroxidase was investigated at pH 7.5 as functions of ionic strength in phosphate/KNO3 buffers using the fluorescence quenching technique. The binding in independent of the redox state of cytochrome c between 10 and 20 mM ionic strength, but ferricytochrome c binds with greater affinity at 30 mM ionic strength and above.  相似文献   

20.
Characterization of the steady state kinetics of reduction of horse ferricytochrome c by purified beef ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase, employing 2,3-dimethoxy-5-methyl-6-decylbenzoquinol as reductant, has shown that: 1) the dependence of the reaction on quinol and on ferricytochrome c concentration is consistent with a ping-pong mechanism; 2) the pH optimum of the reaction is near 8.0; 3) the effect of ionic strength on the apparent Km and the TNmax of the reaction for the native cytochrome c is small, and at higher cytochrome c concentrations substrate inhibition is observed; 4) the effect of ionic strength on the kinetic parameters for the reaction of 4-carboxy-2,6-dinitrophenyllysine 27 horse cytochrome c is much larger than for the native protein; and 5) competitive product inhibition is also observed with a Ki consistent with the binding affinity of ferrocytochrome c for Complex III, as determined by gel filtration. In addition, direct binding measurements demonstrated that ferricytochrome c binds more tightly than the reduced protein to Complex III under low ionic strength conditions and that under these conditions more than one molecule of cytochrome c is bound per molecule of Complex III. Exchange of Complex III into a nonionic detergent decreases this excess nonspecific binding. Measurement of the rates of dissociation of the oxidized and reduced 1:1 complexes of cytochrome c and Complex III by stopped flow was consistent with the disparity of binding affinities, the dissociation rate constant for ferrocytochrome c being about 5-fold higher than that for the ferric protein. A model which accounts for the properties of this system is described, assuming that cytochrome c bound to noncatalytic sites on the respiratory complex decreases the catalytic site binding constant for the substrate.  相似文献   

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