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1.
EPR spectroscopic and chemical analyses of spinach nitrite reductase show that the enzyme contains one reducible iron-sulfur center, and one site for binding either cyanide or nitrite, per siroheme. The heme is nearly all in the high spin ferric state in the enzyme as isolated. The extinction coefficient of the enzyme has been revised to E386 = 7.6 X 10(4) cm-1 (M heme)-1. The iron-sulfur center is reduced with difficulty by agents such as reduced methyl viologen (equilibrated with 1 atm of H2 at pH 7.7 in the presence of hydrogenase) or dithionite. Complexation of the enzyme with CO (a known ligand for nitrite reductase heme) markedly increases the reducibility of the iron-sulfur center. New chemical analyses and reinterpretation of previous data show that the enzyme contains 6 mol of iron and 4 mol of acid-labile S2-/mol of siroheme. The EPR spectrum of reduced nitrite reductase in 80% dimethyl sulfoxide establishes clearly that the enzyme contains a tetranuclear iron-sulfur (Fe4S4) center. The ferriheme and Fe4S4 centers are reduced at similar rates (k = 3 to 4 s-1) by dithionite. The dithionite-reduced Fe4S4 center is rapidly (k = 100 s-1) reoxidized by nitrite. These results indicate a role for the Fe4S4 center in catalysis.  相似文献   

2.
Purified spinach nitrite reductase, a protein that contains siroheme, is characterized by absorption maxima in the visible region at 385 and 573 nm. On addition of the substrate nitrite, the bands shift to 360 and 570 nm. Dithionite also causes shifts in the maxima of the visible absorption region. Electron paramagnetic resonance studies show that the untreated enzyme contains a high-spin Fe3+ heme and that the addition of cyanide, an inhibitor that is competitive with nitrite, results in a spin-state change of the heme. Electron paramagnetic resonance analysis of the enzyme in the presence of dithionite or dithionite plus cyanide indicates the presence of a reduced iron-sulfur center with rhombic symmetry (g-values of 2.03, 1.94, and 1.91). In contrast, when the enzyme is treated with dithionite plus nitrite, the EPR spectrum of an NO-heme complex (g-values of 2.07 and 2.00) is observed. The presence of an iron-sulfur center has also been confirmed by chemical analyses of the nonheme iron and acid-labile sulfide in nitrite reductase. These results are discussed in terms of a mechanism for nitrite reduction that involves electron transfer between the iron-sulfur center and siroheme.  相似文献   

3.
Ferralterin, an iron-sulfur protein identified earlier in chloroplasts and cyanobacteria, was purified to homogeneity from spinach leaves and Nostoc muscorum cells. When isolated from both sources, ferralterin showed a molecular weight of about 28,000 and was comprised of three subunits: one of molecular weight 12,000 and two, apparently identical, of molecular weight 7000. Based on the Lowry method of protein estimation, ferralterin contained approximately 3 g atoms each of nonheme iron and acid-labile sulfide per mole. The iron-sulfur cluster of ferralterin showed unusual redox and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) properties. Ferralterin was EPR silent as isolated and did not show an EPR signal on addition of reductants such as sodium dithionite or on exposure to illuminated chloroplast membranes. These reducing conditions also had no significant effect on the absorption spectrum of isolated ferralterin. The ferralterin iron-sulfur cluster was oxidized selectively by ferricyanide and showed a midpoint redox potential of +410 mV. Ferricyanide-oxidized ferralterin was characterized by a low-temperature EPR signal with g values of 2.10, 2.05, and 2.00 (spinach) and 2.09, 2.04, and 1.98 (Nostoc). When oxidized by ferricyanide, the iron-sulfur cluster could be reduced by a variety of reductants, including illuminated chloroplast membranes. The results are consistent with the conclusion that, like several other iron-sulfur enzymes (aconitase, glutamine phospho-ribosylpyrophosphate amidotransferase, hydrogenase), ferralterin achieves its catalytic effect via an active group independently of a redox change in the iron-sulfur chromophore.  相似文献   

4.
In order to utilize sulfate as the terminal electron acceptor, sulfate-reducing bacteria are equipped with a complex enzymatic system in which adenylylsulfate (AdoPSO4) reductase plays one of the major roles, reducing AdoPSO4 (the activated form of sulfate) to sulfite, with release of AMP. The enzyme has been purified to homogeneity from the anaerobic sulfate reducer Desulfovibrio gigas. The protein is composed of two non-identical subunits (70 kDa and 23 kDa) and is isolated in a multimeric form (approximately 400 kDa). It is an iron-sulfur, flavin-containing protein, with one FAD moiety, eight iron atoms and a minimum molecular mass of 93 kDa. Low-temperature EPR studies were performed to characterize its redox centers. In the native state, the enzyme showed an almost isotropic signal centered at g = 2.02 and only detectable below 20 K. This signal represented a minor species (0.10-0.25 spins/mol) and showed line broadening in the enzyme isolated from 57Fe-grown cells. Addition of sulfite had a minor effect on the EPR spectrum, but caused a major decrease in the visible region of the optical spectrum (around 392 nm). Further addition of AMP induced only a minor change in the visible spectrum whereas major changes were seen in the EPR spectrum; the appearance of a rhombic signal at g values 2.096, 1.940 and 1.890 (reduced Fe-S center I) observable below 30 K and a concomitant decrease in intensity of the g = 2.02 signal were detected. Effects of chemical reductants (ascorbate, H2/hydrogenase-reduced methyl viologen and dithionite) were also studied. A short time reduction with dithionite (15 s) or reduction with methyl viologen gave rise to the full reduction of center I (with slightly modified g values at 2.079, 1.939 and 1.897), and the complete disappearance of the g = 2.02 signal. Further reduction with dithionite produces a very complex EPR spectrum of a spin-spin-coupled nature (observable below 20 K), indicating the presence of at least two iron-sulfur centers, (centers I and II). M?ssbauer studies on 57Fe-enriched D. gigas AdoPSO4 reductase demonstrated unambiguously the presence of two 4Fe clusters. Center II has a redox potential less than or equal to 400 mV and exhibits spectroscopic properties that are characteristic of a ferredoxin-type [4Fe-4S] cluster. Center I exhibits spectra with atypical M?ssbauer parameters in its reduced state and has a midpoint potential around 0 mV, which is distinct from that of a ferredoxin-type [4Fe-4S] cluster, suggesting a different structure and/or a distinct cluster-ligand environment.  相似文献   

5.
Ferredoxin-dependent nitrite reductase of spinach has been further characterized and the relationship between this enzyme and methyl viologen-dependent nitrite reductase studied.

Purified ferredoxin nitrite reductase, having a molecular weight of 86,000, showed 2.5 times higher ferredoxin-dependent activity than methyl viologen-linked activity. Besides 4 mol of labile sulfide the enzyme contained about 2 mol of siroheme per mol. When dithionite, methyl viologen and nitrite were added, ESR signals of a heme nitrosyl complex at g = 2.14, 2.07 and 2.02 were observed. Moreover, hyperfine splitting of the signal due to 14N nuclear spin was also observed at 2.033, 2.023 and 2.013. The sole addition of hydroxylamine to the ferric enzyme also caused the same but much less intense signals with the hyperfine splitting.

On treatment of the ferredoxin nitrite reductase (native enzyme) with DEAE-Sephadex A-50 chromatography, a modified nitrite reductase having a molecular weight of 61,000 and a protein fraction having an apparent molecular weight of 24,000 were separated. The modified enzyme contained about one mol of siroheme and 4 mol of labile sulfide per mol and showed essentially the same heme ESR signals as the native enzyme. Contrary to the native enzyme, this modified enzyme accepted electrons more efficiently from methyl viologen than ferredoxin and the reduction of nitrite to ammonia catalyzed by the modified enzyme was not stoichiometric. The observed nitrite to ammonia ratio was 1 to less than 0.6. Cyanide at concentrations between 0.02 to 0.2 mm inhibited the activity of the native enzyme almost completely but the modified enzyme was inhibited only partially.

From the results obtained, it is suggested that the native ferredoxin-linked nitrite reductase consists of two components (or subunits) and removal of the light component results in formation of a modified enzyme with increased relative affinity to methyl viologen.  相似文献   

6.
A nas gene region from Rhodobacter capsulatus E1F1 containing the putative nasB gene for nitrite reductase was previously cloned. The recombinant His6-NasB protein overproduced in E. coli showed nitrite reductase activity in vitro with both reduced methyl viologen and NADH as electron donors. The apparent K m values for nitrite and NADH were 0.5 mM and 20 μM, respectively, at the pH and temperature optima (pH 9 and 30°C). The optical spectrum showed features that indicate the presence of FAD, iron-sulfur cluster and siroheme as prosthetic groups, and nitrite reductase activity was inhibited by sulfide and iron reagents. These results indicate that the phototrophic bacterium R. capsulatus E1F1 possesses an assimilatory NADH-nitrite reductase similar to that described in non-phototrophic organisms.  相似文献   

7.
The oxidation of reduced methyl viologen by Clostridium pasteurianum or Chromatium hydrogenases as a function of the redox potential of the reaction mixture has been studied spectrophotometrically. The same results were obtained effecting the reduction of methyl viologen either with dithionite or with metallic zinc. With C. pasteurianum hydrogenase a gaussian pattern was obtained. This is indicative of a process involving two one-electron steps, which suggests that [4Fe-4S]2+ is the catalytically active species. On the contrary, in the case of Chromatium hydrogenase the data follow a sigmoidal pattern corresponding to a two-electron reduction process, which demonstrates that the redox site must be totally reduced to be active. This finding is at variance with the previously reported electron paramagnetic resonance spectra, which suggest that the single [4Fe-4S] cluster of this enzyme transfers or accepts only one electron.  相似文献   

8.
A soluble nitrate reductase from the bacterium Acinetobacter calcoaceticus grown on nitrate has been characterized. The reduction of nitrate to nitrite is mediated by an enzyme of 96000 molecular weight that can use as electron donors either viologen dyes chemically reduced with dithionite or enzymatically reduced with NAD(P)H, through specific diaphorases which utilize viologens as electron acceptors. Nitrate reductase activity is molybdenum-dependent as shown by tungstate antagonistic experiments and is sensitive to -SH reagents and metal chelators such as KCN.The enzyme synthesis is repressed by ammonia. Moreover, nitrate reductase activity undergoes a quick inactivation either by dithionite and temperature or by dithionite in the presence of small amounts of nitrate. Cyanate prevents this inactivating process and can restore the activity once the inactivation had occurred, thus suggesting that an interconversion mechanism may participate in the regulation of Acinetobacter nitrate reductase.Abbreviations EDTA ethylenediaminetetraacetate - BV benzyl viologen - MV methyl viologen - MW molecular weight - NEM N-ethylmaleimide - p-HMB p-hydroxymercuribenzoate - DCPIP 2,6-dichlorophenol-indophenol - FMN flavin mononucleotide - FAD flavin adenine dinucleotide - KCNO potassium cyanate  相似文献   

9.
Photosynthetic reaction center of green sulfur bacteria studied by EPR   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Membrane preparations of two species of the green sulfur bacteria Chlorobium have been studied by EPR. Three signals were detected which were attributed to iron-sulfur centers acting as electron acceptors in the photosynthetic reaction center. (1) A signal from a center designated FB, (gz = 2.07, gy = 1.91, gx = 1.86) was photoinduced at 4 K. (2) A similar signal, FA (gz = 2.05, gy = 1.94, gx = 1.88), was photoinduced in addition to the FB signal upon a short period of illumination at 200 K. (3) Further illumination at 200 K resulted in the appearance of a broad feature at g = 1.78. This is attributed to the gx component of an iron-sulfur center designated FX. The designations of these signals as FB, FA, and FX are based on their spectroscopic similarities to signals in photosystem I (PS I). The orientation dependence of these EPR signals in ordered Chlorobium membrane multilayers is remarkably similar to that of their PS I homologues. A magnetic interaction between the reduced forms of FB and FA occurs, which is also very similar to that seen in PS I. However, in contrast to the situation in PS I, FA and FB cannot be chemically reduced by sodium dithionite at pH 11. This indicates redox potentials for FA and FB which are lower by at least 150 mV than their PS I counterparts. The triplet state of P840, the primary electron donor, could be photoinduced at 4 K in samples which had been preincubated with sodium dithionite and methyl viologen and then preilluminated at 200 K.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Sixty-five Nicotiana plumbaginifolia mutants affected in the nitrate reductase structural gene (nia mutants) have been analyzed and classified. The properties evaluated were: (a) enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (two-site ELISA) using a monoclonal antibody as coating reagent and (b) presence of partial catalytic activities, namely nitrate reduction with artificial electron donors (reduced methyl viologen, reduced flavin mononucleotide, or reduced bromphenol blue), and cytochrome c (Cyt c) reduction with NADH. Four classes have been defined: 40 mutants fall within class 1 which includes all mutants that have no protein detectable in ELISA and no partial activities; mutants of classes 2 and 3 exhibit an ELISA-detectable nitrate reductase protein and lack either Cyt c reductase activity (class 2: fourteen mutants) or the terminal nitrate reductase activities (class 3: eight mutants) of the enzyme. Three mutants (class 4) are negative in the ELISA test, lack Cyt c reductase activity, and lack or have a very low level of reduced methyl viologen or reduced flavin mononucleotide-nitrate reductase activities; however, they retain the reduced bromphenol blue nitrate reductase activity. Variations in the degrees of terminal nitrate reductase activities among the mutants indicated that the flavin mononucleotide and methyl viologen-dependent activities were linked while the bromphenol blue-dependent activity was independent of the other two. The putative positions of the lesions in the mutant proteins and the nature of structural domains of nitrate reductase involved in each partial activity are discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Evaluation of Nitrate Reductase Activity in Rhizobium japonicum   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Nitrate reductase activity was evaluated by four approaches, using four strains of Rhizobium japonicum and 11 chlorate-resistant mutants of the four strains. It was concluded that in vitro assays with bacteria or bacteroids provide the most simple and reliable assessment of the presence or absence of nitrate reductase. Nitrite reductase activity with methyl viologen and dithionite was found, but the enzyme activity does not confound the assay of nitrate reductase.  相似文献   

12.
The redox properties of the iron-sulfur centers of the two nitrate reductases from Escherichia coli have been investigated by EPR spectroscopy. A detailed study of nitrate reductase A performed in the range +200 mV to -500 mV shows that the four iron-sulfur centers of the enzyme belong to two classes with markedly different redox potentials. The high-potential group comprises a [3Fe-4S] and a [4Fe-4S] cluster whose midpoint potentials are +60 mV and +80 mV, respectively. Although these centers are magnetically isolated, they are coupled by a significant anticooperative redox interaction of about 50 mV. The [4Fe-4S]1+ center occurs in two different conformations as shown by its composite EPR spectrum. The low-potential group contains two [4Fe-4S] clusters with more typical redox potentials (-200 mV and -400 mV). In the fully reduced state, the three [4Fe-4S]1+ centers are magnetically coupled, leading to a broad featureless spectrum. The redox behaviour of the high-pH EPR signal given by the molybdenum cofactor was also studied. The iron-sulfur centers of the second nitrate reductase of E. coli, nitrate reductase Z, exhibit essentially the same characteristics than those of nitrate reductase A, except that the midpoint potentials of the high-potential centers appear negatively shifted by about 100 mV. From the comparison between the redox centers of nitrate reductase and of dimethylsulfoxide reductase, a correspondence between the high-potential iron-sulfur clusters of the two enzymes can be proposed.  相似文献   

13.
Paracoccus halodenitrificans, grown anaerobically in the presence of nitrite, contained membrane and cytoplasmic nitrite reductases. When assayed in the presence of phenazine methosulfate and ascorbate, the membranebound enzyme produced nitrous oxide whereas the cytoplasmic enzyme produced nitric oxide. When both enzymes were assayed in the presence of methyl viologen and dithionite, the cytoplasmic enzyme produced ammonia. Following solubilization, the membrane-bound enzyme behaved like the cytoplasmic enzyme, producing nitric oxide in the presence of phenazine methosulfate and ascorbate, and ammonia when assayed in the presence of methyl viologen and dithionite. The cytoplasmic and membranebound enzymes were purified to essentially the same specific activity. Only a single nitrite-reductase activity was detected on electrophoretic gels and the electrophoretic behavior of both enzymes suggested they were identical. The spectral properties of both enzymes suggested they were cd-type cytochromes. These data suggest that the products of nitrite reduction by the cd-cytochrome nitrite reductase are determined by the location of the enzyme and the redox potential of the electron donor.Abbreviations PMS phenazine methosulfate - MV methyl viologen - HEPES N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazine-N-2-ethane-sulfonic acid - CHAPSO [3-(3-cholamidopropyldimethylammonia)-1-(2-hydroxy-1-propanesulfonate)] National Research Council Research Fellow  相似文献   

14.
Escherichia coli NADPH-sulfite reductase is a complex hemoflavoprotein with an alpha 8 beta 4 subunit structure. The beta-subunits each contain one siroheme and a tetranuclear iron-sulfur center (Fe4S4). Isolated beta-monomers can catalyze the 6-electron reduction of sulfite to sulfide. We have studied the beta-monomers with M?ssbauer and EPR spectroscopy. The data show conclusively that the siroheme and the Fe4S4 cluster are strongly exchange-coupled. This is proven by the observations that (a) the two chromophores share a single electronic spin and (b) the addition of 1 electron to oxidized sulfite reductase changes the environments of 5 iron atoms. Spin-sharing is demonstrated in oxidized and 2-electron-reduced sulfite reductase and strongly implicated in 1-electron-reduced material. Thus, sulfite reductase provides the first example of an active site where a heme and an iron-sulfur cluster are closely linked as a functional unit, probably via a common bridging ligand.  相似文献   

15.
Bacon Ke  Helmut Beinert 《BBA》1973,305(3):689-693
The EPR spectrum of Photosystem-I subchloroplast particles, which had been pre-illuminated in the presence of methyl viologen, showed a large P700+ signal whereas bound iron-sulfur proteins were not detected. This observation is consistent with a “one-way” electron discharge by the primary electron acceptor, P430, subsequent to the primary photochemical charge separation, and an accumulation of photooxidized P700+. Subsequent illumination of the same sample at 77 °K did not change the EPR spectrum. However, if the pre-illuminated subchloroplast particles were allowed to recover at room temperature by standing in the dark for 10 min or by addition of a chemical reductant, subsequent illumination of the sample at 77 °K yielded an EPR spectrum consisting of signals due to both P700+ and reduced iron-sulfur protein.  相似文献   

16.
Karim A. Walters  John H. Golbeck 《BBA》2018,1859(10):1096-1107
Recently developed molecular wire technology takes advantage of [4Fe-4S] clusters that are ligated by at least one surface exposed Cys residue. Mutagenesis of this Cys residue to a Gly opens an exchangeable coordination site to a corner iron atom that can be chemically rescued by an external thiolate ligand. This ligand can be subsequently displaced by mass action using a dithiol molecular wire to tether two redox active proteins. We intend to apply this technique to tethering Photosystem I to ferredoxin sulfite reductase (FdSiR), an enzyme that catalyzes the six-electron reduction of sulfite to hydrogen sulfite and nitrite to ammonia. The enzyme contains a [4Fe-4S]2+/1+ cluster and a siroheme active site. FdSiRWT and an FdSiRC491G variant were cloned from Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942 and expressed along with the cysG gene from Salmonella typhimurium using the pCDFDuet plasmid. UV/Vis absorbance spectra of both FdSiRWT and the FdSiRC491G variant displayed characteristic peaks at 278, 392 (Soret), 585 (α) and 714?nm (charge transfer band), and 278, 394 (Soret), 587 (α) and 714?nm (charge transfer band) respectively. Both enzymes in their as-isolated forms displayed an EPR spectrum characteristic of an S?=?5/2 high spin heme. When reduced, both enzymes exhibited the signal of a low spin S?=?1/2 [4Fe-4S]1+ cluster. The FdSiRWT and FdSiRC491G variant both showed activity using reduced methyl viologen and Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942 ferredoxin 1 (Fd1) as electron donors. Based on these results, the FdSIRC491G variant should be a suitable candidate for wiring to Photosystem I.  相似文献   

17.
Günter A. Peschek 《BBA》1979,548(2):187-202
1. Anaerobic hydrogenase activity in whole cells and cell-free preparations of H2-induced Anacystis was studied both manometrically and spectrophotometrically in presence of physiological and artificial electron acceptors.2. Up to 90% of the activity measured in crude extracts were recovered in the chlorophyll-containing membrane fraction after centrifugation (144 000 × g, 3 h).3. Reduction of methyl viologen, diquat, ferredoxin, nitrite and NADP by the membranes was light dependent while oxidants of more positive redox potential were reduced also in the dark.4. Evolution of H2 by the membranes was obtained with dithionite and with reduced methyl viologen; the reaction was stimulated by detergents.5. Both uptake and evolution of H2 were sensitive to O2, CO, and thiol-blocking agents. The H2-dependent reductions were inhibited also by the plastoquinone antagonist dibromothymoquinone, while the ferredoxin inhibitor disalicylidenepropanediamine affected the photoreduction of nitrite and NADP only. 3-(3,4-Dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea did not inhibit any one of the H2-dependent reactions.6. The results present evidence for a membrane-bound ‘photoreduction’ hydrogenase in H2-induced Anacystis. The enzyme apparently initiates a light-driven electron flow from H2 to various low-potential acceptors including endogenous ferredoxin.  相似文献   

18.
Nitrite reductase was purified about 40-fold from the blue-greenalga Anabaena cylindrica by acetone precipitation and chromatographyon DEAE-cellulose columns. The nitrite reductase had its pHoptima at about 7.6 with Tris-HCl and at about 7.4 with phosphatewhen reduced methyl viologen was used as an electron donor.The Km's for nitrite, methyl viologen and ferredoxin were 510–55,210–4 and 510–6M, respectively. A stoichiometryof one molecule of ammonia formation per one molecule of nitritedisappearance was confirmed. Ferredoxin which had been reducedeither chemically with dithionite or enzymatically with NADPHin the presence of diaphorase was active as an electron donor.Dithionite-reduced FAD and FMN were inactive. NADPH could notgive electrons directly to nitrite reductase. Hydroxylaminereductase was segregated from nitrite reductase by DEAE-cellulosecolumn chromatography. Purified nitrite reductase showed noactivity for sulfite reduction. A molecular weight of 68,000was estimated for nitrite reductase using a calibrated SephadexG-200 column. 1This work was supported by grants 4090 and 955008 from theMinistry of Education. 2This work was supported by grants 4090 and 955008 from theMinistry of Education. 2 Present address: Department of Botany,Faculty of Science, University of Tokyo, Tokyo.  相似文献   

19.
Hydrogen production by cell-free extracts of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is stimulated by anions when methyl viologen, reduced by dithionite, is used as the electron donor to hydrogenase. The increasing effectiveness of various anions closely follows their position in the Hofmeister chaotropic sequence. The most stimulatory anion tested, I?, gives a six-fold increase in activity at a concentration of 0.5 n. The Km of the enzyme for methyl viologen is not affected by anions, while the V is greatly increased. H2 oxidation coupled to methyl viologen reduction is also greatly stimulated by anions. However, when reduced ferredoxin is used as the electron donor to hydrogenase, there is a very strong inhibition of H2 production by salts. In this case, the V of the enzyme is unaffected, but there is a large increase in the Km of the enzyme for ferredoxin. The most inhibitory salt tested, KI, decreases hydrogenase activity by 93% at a concentration of 0.2 n.  相似文献   

20.
Chromatophores from the photosynthetic bacterium, Chromatium vinosum, have been prepared which photoreduce NAD+ with either succinate or reduced dichlorophenolindophenol as electron donors. NAD+ reduction is inhibited by uncouplers as well as inhibitors of cyclic photophosphorylation. These chromatophores contain several bound iron-sulfur centers which have been detected by low-temperature EPR spectroscopy. One center, having a g 2.01 EPR signal in the oxidized state, has Em7.5 = +50 mV and is partially reduced by succinate in the dark. Three iron-sulfur centers having g 1.93 EPR signals have been resolved by redox titration, and the Em7.5 values of these centers are ?50, ?175 and ?250 mV, respectively. Studies of the involvement of these centers in electron transfer from donors to NAD+ have indicated that the center with Em = ?50 mV is succinate reducible in the dark and appears to be analogous to center S-1 of succinic dehydrogenase in other systems. An additional g 1.93 iron-sulfur center can be photoreduced in the presence of electron donors and this reduction is inhibited by uncouplers. The possible role of the two low-potential iron-sulfur centers in relation to the dehydrogenases functioning in NAD+ reduction is considered.  相似文献   

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