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1.
The production of cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP) from Pseudomonas ( Ps.) stutzeri (ATCC 11607) was optimized by adjusting the composition of the growth medium and aeration of the culture. The protein was isolated and characterized biochemically and spectroscopically in the oxidized and mixed valence forms. The activity of Ps. stutzeri CCP was studied using two different ferrocytochromes as electron donors: Ps. stutzeri cytochrome c(551) (the physiological electron donor) and horse heart cytochrome c. These electron donors interact differently with Ps. stutzeri CCP, exhibiting different ionic strength dependence. The CCP from Paracoccus ( Pa.) denitrificans was proposed to have two different Ca(2+) binding sites: one usually occupied (site I) and the other either empty or partially occupied in the oxidized enzyme (site II). The Ps. stutzeri enzyme was purified in a form with tightly bound Ca(2+). The affinity for Ca(2+) in the mixed valence enzyme is so high that Ca(2+) returns to it from the EGTA which was added to empty the site in the oxidized enzyme. Molecular mass determination by ultracentrifugation and behavior on gel filtration chromatography have revealed that this CCP is isolated as an active dimer, in contrast to the Pa. denitrificans CCP which requires added Ca(2+) for formation of the dimer and also for activation of the enzyme. This is consistent with the proposal that Ca(2+) in the bacterial peroxidases influences the monomer/dimer equilibrium and the transition to the active form of the enzyme. Additional Ca(2+)does affect both the kinetics of oxidation of horse heart cytochrome c (but not cytochrome c(551)) and higher aggregation states of the enzyme. This suggests the presence of a superficial Ca(2+)binding site of low affinity.  相似文献   

2.
According to the model proposed in previous papers [Pettigrew, G. W., Prazeres, S., Costa, C., Palma, N., Krippahl, L., and Moura, J. J. (1999) The structure of an electron-transfer complex containing a cytochrome c and a peroxidase, J. Biol. Chem. 274, 11383-11389; Pettigrew, G. W., Goodhew, C. F., Cooper, A., Nutley, M., Jumel, K., and Harding, S. E. (2003) Electron transfer complexes of cytochrome c peroxidase from Paracoccus denitrificans, Biochemistry 42, 2046-2055], cytochrome c peroxidase of Paracoccus denitrificans can accommodate horse cytochrome c and Paracoccus cytochrome c(550) at different sites on its molecular surface. Here we use (1)H NMR spectroscopy, analytical ultracentrifugation, molecular docking simulation, and microcalorimetry to investigate whether these small cytochromes can be accommodated simultaneously in the formation of a ternary complex. The pattern of perturbation of heme methyl and methionine methyl resonances in binary and ternary solutions shows that a ternary complex can be formed, and this is confirmed by the increase in the sedimentation coefficient upon addition of horse cytochrome c to a solution in which cytochrome c(550) fully occupies its binding site on cytochrome c peroxidase. Docking experiments in which favored binary solutions of cytochrome c(550) bound to cytochrome c peroxidase act as targets for horse cytochrome c and the reciprocal experiments in which favored binary solutions of horse cytochrome c bound to cytochrome c peroxidase act as targets for cytochrome c(550) show that the enzyme can accommodate both cytochromes at the same time on adjacent sites. Microcalorimetric titrations are difficult to interpret but are consistent with a weakened binding of horse cytochrome c to a binary complex of cytochrome c peroxidase and cytochrome c(550) and binding of cytochrome c(550) to the cytochrome c peroxidase that is affected little by the presence of horse cytochrome c in the other site. The presence of a substantial capture surface for small cytochromes on the cytochrome c peroxidase has implications for rate enhancement mechanisms which ensure that the two electrons required for re-reduction of the enzyme after reaction with hydrogen peroxide are delivered efficiently.  相似文献   

3.
Pseudoazurin binds at a single site on cytochrome c peroxidase from Paracoccus pantotrophus with a K(d) of 16.4 microM at 25 degrees C, pH 6.0, in an endothermic reaction that is driven by a large entropy change. Sedimentation velocity experiments confirmed the presence of a single site, although results at higher pseudoazurin concentrations are complicated by the dimerization of the protein. Microcalorimetry, ultracentrifugation, and (1)H NMR spectroscopy studies in which cytochrome c550, pseudoazurin, and cytochrome c peroxidase were all present could be modeled using a competitive binding algorithm. Molecular docking simulation of the binding of pseudoazurin to the peroxidase in combination with the chemical shift perturbation pattern for pseudoazurin in the presence of the peroxidase revealed a group of solutions that were situated close to the electron-transferring heme with Cu-Fe distances of about 14 A. This is consistent with the results of (1)H NMR spectroscopy, which showed that pseudoazurin binds closely enough to the electron-transferring heme of the peroxidase to perturb its set of heme methyl resonances. We conclude that cytochrome c550 and pseudoazurin bind at the same site on the cytochrome c peroxidase and that the pair of electrons required to restore the enzyme to its active state after turnover are delivered one-by-one to the electron-transferring heme.  相似文献   

4.
The size, visible absorption spectra, nature of haem and haem content suggest that the cytochrome c peroxidase of Paracoccus denitrificans is related to that of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. However, the Paracoccus enzyme shows a preference for cytochrome c donors with a positively charged 'front surface' and in this respect resembles the cytochrome c peroxidase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Paracoccus cytochrome c-550 is the best electron donor tested and, in spite of an acidic isoelectric point, has a markedly asymmetric charge distribution with a strongly positive 'front face'. Mitochondrial cytochromes c have a much less pronounced charge asymmetry but are basic overall. This difference between cytochrome c-550 and mitochondrial cytochrome c may reflect subtle differences in their electron transport roles. A dendrogram of cytochrome c1 sequences shows that Rhodopseudomonas viridis is a closer relative of mitochondria than is Pa. denitrificans. Perhaps a mitochondrial-type cytochrome c peroxidase may be found in such an organism.  相似文献   

5.
The interaction between cytochrome c and cytochrome c peroxidase was investigated using sedimentation equilibrium at pH 6,20 degrees C, in a number of buffer systems varying in ionic strength between 1 and 100 mM. Between 10 and 100 mM ionic strengths, the sedimentation of the individual proteins was essentially ideal, and sedimentation equilibrium experiments on mixtures of the two proteins were analyzed assuming ideal solution behavior. Analysis of the distribution of mixtures of cytochrome c and cytochrome c peroxidase in the ultracentrifuge cell based on a model involving the formation of a 1:1 cytochrome c-cytochrome c peroxidase complex gave values of the equilibrium dissociation constant ranging from 2.3 +/- 2.7 microM at 10 mM ionic strength to infinity (no detectable interaction) at 100 mM ionic strength. Attempts to determine the presence of complexes involving two cytochrome c molecules bound to cytochrome c peroxidase were inconclusive.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
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   

8.
Wang X  Pielak GJ 《Biochemistry》1999,38(51):16876-16881
We used isothermal titration calorimetry to study the equilibrium thermodynamics for formation of the physiologically-relevant redox protein complex between yeast ferricytochrome c and yeast ferricytochrome c peroxidase. A 1:1 binding stoichiometry was observed, and the binding free energies agree with results from other techniques. The binding is either enthalpy- or entropy-driven depending on the conditions, and the heat capacity change upon binding is negative. Increasing the ionic strength destabilizes the complex, and both the binding enthalpy and entropy increase. Increasing the temperature stabilizes the complex, indicating a positive van't Hoff binding enthalpy, yet the calorimetric binding enthalpy is negative (-1.4 to -6.2 kcal mol(-)(1)). We suggest that this discrepancy is caused by solvent reorganization in an intermediate state. The measured enthalpy and heat capacity changes are in reasonable agreement with the values estimated from the surface area change upon complex formation. These results are compared to those for formation of the horse ferricytochrome c/yeast ferricytochrome c peroxidase complex. The results suggest that the crystal and solution structures for the yeast complex are the same, while the crystal and solution structures for horse cytochrome c/yeast cytochrome c peroxidase are different.  相似文献   

9.
Next to their natural electron transport capacities, c-type cytochromes possess low peroxidase and cytochrome P-450 activities in the presence of hydrogen peroxide. These catalytic properties, in combination with their structural robustness and covalently bound cofactor make cytochromes c potentially useful peroxidase mimics. This study reports on the peroxidase activity of cytochrome c-550 from Paracoccus versutus and the loss of this activity in presence of H2O2. The rate-determining step in the peroxidase reaction of cytochrome c-550 is the formation of a reactive intermediate, following binding of peroxide to the haem iron. The reaction rate is very low compared to horseradish peroxidase (approximately one millionth), because of the poor accessibility of the haem iron for H2O2, and the lack of a base catalyst such as the distal His of the peroxidases. This is corroborated by the linear dependence of the reaction rate on the peroxide concentration up to at least 1 M H2O2. Steady-state conversion of a reducing substrate, guaiacol, is preceded by an activation phase, which is ascribed to the build-up of amino-acid radicals on the protein. The inactivation kinetics in the absence of reducing substrate are mono-exponential and shown to be concurrent with haem degradation up to 25 mM H2O2 (pH 8.0). At still higher peroxide concentrations, inactivation kinetics are biphasic, as a result of a remarkable protective effect of H2O2, involving the formation of superoxide and ferrocytochrome c-550.  相似文献   

10.
Cytochrome c (horse heart) was covalently linked to yeast cytochrome c peroxidase by using the cleavable bifunctional reagent dithiobis-succinimidyl propionate in 5 mM-sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.0. A cross-linked complex of molecular weight 48 000 was purified in approx. 10% yield from the reaction mixture, which contained 1 mol of cytochrome c and 1 mol of cytochrome c peroxidase/mol. Of the total 40 lysine residues, four to six were blocked by the cross-linking agent. Dithiobis-succinimidylpropionate can also cross-link cytochrome c to ovalbumin, but cytochrome c peroxidase is the preferred partner for cytochrome c in a mixture of the three proteins. The cytochrome c cross-linked to the peroxidase can be rapidly reduced by free cytochrome c-557 from Crithidia oncopelti, and the equilibrium obtained can be used to calculate a mid-point oxidation-reduction potential for the cross-linked cytochrome of 243 mV. Mitochondrial NADH-cytochrome c reductase will reduce the bound cytochrome only very slowly, but the rate of reduction by ascorbate at high ionic strength approaches that for free cytochrome c. Bound cytochrome c reduced by ascorbate can be re-oxidized within 10s by the associated peroxidase in the presence of equimolar H2O2. In the standard peroxidase assay the cross-linked complex shows 40% of the activity of the free peroxidase. Thus the intrinsic ability of each partner in the complex to take part in electron transfer is retained, but the stable association of the two proteins affects access of reductants.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
Substitution of Fe2+ for the Zn2+ ion in Hansenula anomala cytochrome c provides a luminescent derivative suitable as a probe for the determination of the interaction of cytochrome c with H. anomala flavocytochrome b2; its light absorption and fluorescence properties have been characterized. H. anomala Zn-cytochrome c appears to be in the form of a stable though non-covalent dimer from molecular weight determinations performed using gel filtration, polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under denaturing conditions, and ultracentrifugation methods. By contrast, metal-free porphyrin-cytochrome c, the precursor of Zn-cytochrome c obtained upon removal of iron from cytochrome c in cold anhydrous fluorhydric acid, had the same partition coefficient as native cytochrome c through conventional gel filtration. Significant conformational perturbations of H. anomala cytochrome c should therefore follow from Zn2+ incorporation into the porphyrin c moiety. Titrations at low ionic strength with native, tetrameric H. anomala flavocytochrome b2 in the lactate-reduced state showed a simple binding equilibrium (Kd = 0.1 microM at I = 0.03 M, 10 degrees C) with a stoichiometry of one Zn-cytochrome c dimer per protomer of flavocytochrome b2. Quenching of the Zn-porphyrin c fluorescence within this complex was much larger (43%) than reported by other authors using cytochrome c and flavocytochrome b2 from different sources.  相似文献   

13.
The reactions of Rhodopseudomonas viridis cytochrome c2 and horse cytochrome c with Rps. viridis photosynthetic reaction centers were studied by using both single- and double-flash excitation. Single-flash excitation of the reaction centers resulted in rapid photooxidation of cytochrome c-556 in the cytochrome subunit of the reaction center. The photooxidized cytochrome c-556 was subsequently reduced by electron transfer from ferrocytochrome c2 present in the solution. The rate constant for this reaction had a hyperbolic dependence on the concentration of cytochrome c2, consistent with the formation of a complex between cytochrome c2 and the reaction center. The dissociation constant of the complex was estimated to be 30 microM, and the rate of electron transfer within the 1:1 complex was 270 s-1. Double-flash experiments revealed that ferricytochrome c2 dissociated from the reaction center with a rate constant of greater than 100 s-1 and allowed another molecule of ferrocytochrome c2 to react. When both cytochrome c-556 and cytochrome c-559 were photooxidized with a double flash, the rate constant for reduction of both components was the same as that observed for cytochrome c-556 alone. The observed rate constant decreased by a factor of 14 as the ionic strength was increased from 5 mM to 1 M, indicating that electrostatic interactions contributed to binding. Molecular modeling studies revealed a possible cytochrome c2 binding site on the cytochrome subunit of the reaction center involving the negatively charged residues Glu-93, Glu-85, Glu-79, and Glu-67 which surround the heme crevice of cytochrome c-554.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
Efficient biological electron transfer may require a fluid association of redox partners. Two noncrystallographic methods (a new molecular docking program and 1H NMR spectroscopy) have been used to study the electron transfer complex formed between the cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP) of Paracoccus denitrificans and cytochromes c. For the natural redox partner, cytochrome c550, the results are consistent with a complex in which the heme of a single cytochrome lies above the exposed electron-transferring heme of the peroxidase. In contrast, two molecules of the nonphysiological but kinetically competent horse cytochrome bind between the two hemes of the peroxidase. These dramatically different patterns are consistent with a redox active surface on the peroxidase that may accommodate more than one cytochrome and allow lateral mobility.  相似文献   

15.
V L Davidson  M A Kumar 《FEBS letters》1989,245(1-2):271-273
Electron transfer from periplasmic cytochromes c to the membrane-bound respiratory chain has been studied with the isolated cytochromes and membrane preparations from Paracoccus denitrificans. When reduced cytochromes were incubated with spheroplasts only the constitutive cytochrome c-550 was rapidly oxidized. The inducible cytochromes c-551i and c-553i were not oxidized at appreciable rates. Cytochrome c-550 was able to mediate the transfer of electrons from either cytochrome c-551i or cytochrome c-553i to the membrane preparation.  相似文献   

16.
The long-known biphasic response of cytochrome c oxidase to the concentration of cytochrome c has been explained, alternatively, by the presence of a catalytic and a regulatory site on the oxidase, by negative cooperativity between adjacent active sites in dimeric oxidase, or by a transition of the enzyme molecule between different conformational states. The three mechanistic hypotheses allow testable predictions about the relationship between substrate binding and steady-state kinetics catalyzed by the monomeric and dimeric (or oligomeric) enzyme. We have tested these predictions on monomeric, dimeric, and oligomeric beef heart oxidase and on monomeric oxidase from Paracoccus denitrificans. The aggregation state of the oxidase was evaluated from the sedimentation equilibrium in the ultracentrifuge and by gel chromatography. The binding of cytochrome c to cytochrome c oxidase was measured by spectrophotometric titration of cytochrome c oxidase with cytochrome c. The procedure makes use of a small perturbation in the Soret band of the absorption spectrum of the cytochrome c-cytochrome c oxidase complex. The steady-state oxidation of cytochrome c was followed spectroscopically by an automated assay procedure, and the kinetic parameters were deduced by numerical analysis of several hundred initial rate assays in the substrate concentration range 0.15-30 microM. The following results were obtained: (1) The kinetics of cytochrome c oxidation are always biphasic at low ionic strength, independent of the aggregation state of the enzyme. (2) The kinetics become apparently monophasic at ionic strengths above 100 mM or at slightly acidic pH values.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
During the past few years, three-dimensional crystal structures of many of the important integral membrane proteins responsible for the bioenergetic processes of photosynthesis and respiration have been determined. Moreover, a few crystal structures of protein-protein complexes have become available that characterize the interaction between those membrane proteins and the electron carrier protein cytochrome c. Here, we address the association kinetics for binding of cytochrome c to cytochrome c oxidase (COX) from Paracoccus denitrificans by Brownian dynamics simulations. The effects of ionic strength and protein mutations were studied for two different cytochrome c species: the positively charged, dipolar horse heart cytochrome c and the negatively charged physiological electron transfer partner cytochrome c(552). We studied association toward "naked" COX and toward membrane-embedded COX where the membrane is represented as an uncharged DPPC bilayer modeled in atomistic detail. For the nonnatural association toward "naked" COX, the association rates are >100 times larger for horse heart cytochrome c than for cytochrome c(552). Interestingly, the presence of the lipid bilayer leads to a dramatic decrease of the association rate of horse heart cytochrome c, but slightly enhances association of cytochrome c(552), leading to very similar association rates of both proteins to membrane-embedded COX. This finding from computational modeling studies may reflect the optimization of surface patches and of the total net charge on electron transfer pairs in nature.  相似文献   

19.
Bhaskar B  Bonagura CA  Li H  Poulos TL 《Biochemistry》2002,41(8):2684-2693
We have previously shown that the K(+) site found in the proximal heme pocket of ascorbate peroxidase (APX) could be successfully engineered into the closely homologous cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) [Bonagura et al., (1996) Biochemistry 35, 6107-6115; Bonagura et al. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 5538-5545]. In addition, specificity could be switched to binding Ca(2+) as found in other peroxidases [Bonagura et al. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 37827-37833]. The introduction of a proximal cation-binding site also promotes conversion of the Trp191 containing cation-binding loop from a "closed" to an "open" conformer. In the present study we have changed a crucial hinge residue of the cation-binding loop, Asn195, to Pro which stabilizes the loop, albeit, only in the presence of bound K(+). The crystal structure of this mutant, N195PK2, has been refined to 1.9 A. As predicted, introduction of this crucial hinge residue stabilizes the cation-binding loop in the presence of the bound K(+). As in earlier work, the characteristic EPR signal of Trp191 cation radical becomes progressively weaker with increasing [K(+)] and the lifetime of the Trp191 radical also has been considerably shortened in this mutant. This mutant CcP exhibits reduced enzyme activity, which could be titrated to lower levels with increasing [K(+)] when horse heart cytochrome c is the substrate. However, with yeast cytochrome c as the substrate, the mutant was as active as wild-type at low ionic strength, but 40-fold lower at high ionic strength. We attribute this difference to a change in the rate-limiting step as a function of ionic strength when yeast cytochrome c is the substrate.  相似文献   

20.
The alkaline denaturation of cytochrome c peroxidase and apocytochrome c peroxidase was investigated by analytical ultracentrifugation, gel-filtration chromatography, and circular dichroism. The results indicate that both cytochrome c peroxidase and the apoenzyme undergo extensive structural modifications upon exposure to alkaline pH, including dimer formation. The midpoint of the transition for dimer formation in the native enzyme occurs at pH 9.6 +/- 0.1, while loss of tertiary and secondary structure occurs with transition midpoints at pH 10.3 +/- 0.1 and pH 11.3 +/- 0.1, respectively. Studies performed in the presence of dithiothreitol and with carboxymethylated cytochrome c peroxidase indicate that dimer formation occurs via a disulfide crosslink involving the single cysteine residue in the enzyme. Denaturation of cytochrome c peroxidase in the presence of guanidine hydrochloride gave results similar to those obtained for the alkaline denaturation.  相似文献   

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