Abstract: | (1) Cells of Thiobacillus A2 grown chemoautotrophically on thiosulfate or heterotrophically on succinate with oxygen contained b-, c-, o-, a- and a3-type cytochromes. The amount of cytochrome per mg of cell protein was much greater in thiosulfate-grown cells and differences in the relative concentrations of cytochromes were observed for the different growth conditions. (2) The half-reduction potentials at pH 7.0 (Em,7.0) and spectral maxima of c-, b-, a- and a3-type cytochromes were similar in cells grown aerobically with thiosulfate or with succinate as the growth substrate. (3) The half-reduction potential of the 'invisible', or high-potential copper, as determined from the potentiometric behavior of the carbon monoxide-reduced cytochrome a3 complex at pH 8.0, was 365 mV. (4) Reducing equivalents from thiosulfate appear to enter the respiratory chain at the cytochrome c level; however, studies in cell-free extracts were limited due to a loss in respiratory activity with thiosulfate as a substrate upon cell disruption. |