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1.
The cytochrome aa3 (600 nm) complex, or menaquinol oxidase, from Bacillus subtilis is a member of the cytochrome oxidase superfamily of respiratory membrane protein complexes. We have characterized some spectral properties of this enzyme and its reaction with cyanide. The magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectrum of the oxidized enzyme has a single band at 1560 nm in the near-infrared region assigned to bis-histidine-ligated, low-spin ferricytochrome a. The other heme, cytochrome a3, is presumably high-spin in the oxidized enzyme, as isolated. The absence of a trough in the MCD spectrum at 790 nm, observed previously with mammalian cytochrome c oxidase and assigned to CuA (Greenwood et al., Biochem. J. 215, 303-316, 1983), is consistent with the absence of this center from the menaquinol oxidase. When the heme ligand cyanide is added to oxidized menaquinol oxidase, a new MCD band appears at 2010 nm, while the band at 1560 nm is unperturbed. The new band is assigned to low-spin ferricytochrome a3 bound with cyanide. The long-wavelength position of this cyanide-induced band is proposed to arise from the close interaction of cytochrome a3 with the copper atom, CuB. The kinetics of cyanide binding to oxidized cytochrome aa3(600 nm) reveal a spectrally simple, yet kinetically complex process. The reaction is biphasic with second-order rate constants of 45 and 0.61 M-1s-1 at 1 mM KCN, with each phase constituting about 50% of the overall reaction. When the enzyme is subjected to a cycle of anaerobic reduction and air oxidation, the subsequent reaction with cyanide occurs in a single phase at the faster rate. This behavior is ascribed to different conformations of the binuclear center exhibiting different reactivities with cyanide, and is in keeping with that previously established for the structurally more complex mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase. However, the electronic spectral characteristics of some of the species involved in these reactions are different in the present bacterial case from those of reported eukaryotic systems.  相似文献   

2.
Our previous studies in iron-loaded rat heart cells showed that in vitro iron loading results in peroxidative injury, manifested in a marked decrease in rate and amplitude of heart cell contractility and rhythmicity, which is correctable by treatment with deferoxamine (DF). In the present studies we explored the role of mitochondrial damage in myocardial iron toxicity. Iron loading by 24-hour incubation with 0.36 mmol/L ferric ammonium citrate resulted in a decrease in the activity of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH)-cytochrome c oxidoreductase (complex I+III) to 35.3%+/-11.2% of the value in untreated controls; of succinate-cytochrome c oxidoreductase (complex II+III) to 57.4%+/-3.1%; and of succinate dehydrogenase to 63.5%+/-12.6% (p < 0.001 in all cases). The decrease in activity of other mitochondrial enzymes, including NADH-ferricyanide reductase, succinate ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex II), cytochrome c oxidase (complex IV), and ubiquinol cytochrome c oxidoreductase (complex III), was less impressive and ranged from 71.5%+/-15.8% to 91.5%+/-14.6% of controls. That the observed loss of respiratory enzyme activity was a specific effect of iron toxicity was clearly demonstrated by the complete restoration of enzyme activities by in vitro iron chelation therapy. Sequential treatment with iron and doxorubicin caused a loss of complex I+III and complex II+III activity that was greater than that seen with either agent alone but was only partially correctable by DF treatment. Alterations in cellular adenosine triphosphate measurements paralleled very closely the changes observed in respiratory complex activity. These findings demonstrate for the first time the impairment of cardiac mitochondrial respiratory enzyme activity caused by iron loading at conditions formerly shown to produce severe abnormalities in contractility and rhythmicity.  相似文献   

3.
Sulfite ion (HSO3-) is one of the products when elemental sulfur is oxidized by the hydrogen sulfide:ferric ion oxidoreductase of Thiobacillus ferrooxidans AP19-3. Under the conditions in which HSO3- is accumulated in the cells, the iron oxidase of this bacterium was strongly inhibited by HSO3-. Since cytochrome c oxidase is one of the most important components of the iron oxidase enzyme system in T. ferrooxidans, effects of HSO3- on cytochrome c oxidase activity were studied with the plasma membranes of HSO3(-)-resistant and -sensitive strains of T. ferrooxidans, OK1-50 and AP19-3. The enzyme activity of AP19-3 compared with OK1-50 was strongly inhibited by HSO3-. To investigate the inhibition mechanism of HSO3- in T. ferrooxidans, cytochrome c oxidases were purified from both strains to an electrophoretically homogeneous state. Cytochrome c oxidase activity of a purified OK1-50 enzyme was not inhibited by 5 mM HSO3-. In contrast, the same concentration of HSO3- inhibited the enzyme activity of AP19-3 50%, indicating that the cytochrome c oxidase of OK1-50 was more resistant to HSO3- than that of AP19-3. Cytochrome c oxidases purified from both strains were composed of three subunits. However, the molecular weight of the largest subunit differed between OK1-50 and AP19-3. Apparent molecular weights of the three subunits of cytochrome c oxidases were 53,000, 24,000, and 19,000 for strain AP19-3 and 55,000, 24,000, and 19,000 for strain OK1-50, respectively.  相似文献   

4.
The final step of the catalytic cycle of cytochrome oxidase, the reduction of oxyferryl heme a3 in compound F, was investigated using a binuclear polypyridine ruthenium complex (Ru2C) as a photoactive reducing agent. The net charge of +4 on Ru2C allows it to bind electrostatically near CuA in subunit II of cytochrome oxidase. Photoexcitation of Ru2C with a laser flash results in formation of a metal-to-ligand charge-transfer excited state, Ru2C, which rapidly transfers an electron to CuA of cytochrome oxidase from either beef heart or Rhodobacter sphaeroides. This is followed by reversible electron transfer from CuA to heme a with forward and reverse rate constants of k1 = 9.3 x 10(4) s-1 and k-1 = 1.7 x 10(4) s-1 for R. sphaeroides cytochrome oxidase in the resting state. Compound F was prepared by treating the resting enzyme with excess hydrogen peroxide. The value of the rate constant k1 is the same in compound F where heme a3 is in the oxyferryl form as in the resting enzyme where heme a3 is ferric. Reduction of heme a in compound F is followed by electron transfer from heme a to oxyferryl heme a3 with a rate constant of 700 s-1, as indicated by transients at 605 and 580 nm. No delay between heme a reoxidation and oxyferryl heme a3 reduction is observed, showing that no electron-transfer intermediates, such as reduced CuB, accumulate in this process. The rate constant for electron transfer from heme a to oxyferryl heme a3 was measured in beef cytochrome oxidase from pH 7.0 to pH 9.5, and found to decrease upon titration of a group with a pKa of 9.0. The rate constant is slower in D2O than in H2O by a factor of 4.3, indicating that the electron-transfer reaction is rate-limited by a proton-transfer step. The pH dependence and deuterium isotope effect for reduction of isolated compound F are comparable to that observed during reaction of the reduced, CO-inhibited CcO with oxygen by the flow-flash technique. This result indicates that electron transfer from heme a to oxyferryl heme a3 is not controlled by conformational effects imposed by the initial redox state of the enzyme. The rate constant for electron transfer from heme a to oxyferryl heme a3 is the same in the R. sphaeroides K362M CcO mutant as in wild-type CcO, indicating that the K-channel is not involved in proton uptake during reduction of compound F.  相似文献   

5.
Helicobacter pylori is a microaerophilic Gram-negative spiral bacterium residing in human stomach. A cb-type cytochrome c oxidase that terminates the respiratory chain was purified to near homogeneity by solubilizing the membranes with Triton X-100 and applying anion exchange, Cu-chelating, and gel filtration chromatographies. Redox- and CO-difference spectra and pyridine ferrohaemochrome analysis showed the enzyme to contain three haems C, one low-spin protohaem, and one high-spin protohaem that probably forms a dioxygen-reducing bimetalic center with a copper atom. The enzyme actively oxidizes soluble cytochrome c from this bacterium (TNmax of about 250 s-1) with a Km of 0.9 microM. Yeast cytochrome c and N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl p-phenylenediamine (TMPD) are also oxidized at similar maximal velocities with larger Km's. Oxygen pulse experiments on resting cells in the presence of ascorbate plus TMPD or L-lactate indicated that this sole terminal oxidase pumps H+, although the H+ pumping activity by proteoliposomes reconstituted from the enzyme and P-lipids was low. Two main bands with haem C at 58 and 26 kDa were observed upon polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate and succeeding protein and haem staining. Sequencing of the operon encoding the subunits of the enzyme revealed the presence of ccoNOQP. N-terminal analysis of the 58 kDa band showed 15 or 13 amino acids coinciding with the amino acid sequences deduced from the DNA of ccoN and ccoO. CcoN, the largest subunit bearing two protohaems and copper, and ccoO, a mono-haem cytochrome subunit form a protein complex with an apparent molecular mass of 58 kDa, even in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate. The 26 kDa band is tentatively assumed to be ccoP with two haems C.  相似文献   

6.
The cytochrome caa3 complex from Bacillus subtilis is a member of the cytochrome oxidase superfamily of respiratory enzyme complexes. The key difference in the cytochrome caa3 complex lies in the addition of a domain, homologous with mitochondrial cytochrome c, that is fused to the C-terminal end of its subunit II. Measurements of steady-state and transient reduction kinetics have been carried out on the cytochrome caa3 complex. Reduction of the cyanide-bound enzyme with ascorbate and N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine (TMPD) supports a sequence of electron transfer in which cytochromec is reduced initially, and this is followed by rapid internal electron transfer from cytochrome c to CuA and from CuA to cytochrome a. Steady-state kinetics with exogenous cytochrome c as the substrate demonstrates the capability of the cytochrome caa3 complex to act as a cytochrome c oxidase. The cytochrome c from B. subtilis is the most efficient cytochrome c of those tested. Steady-state kinetics with ascorbate-TMPD as the reductant, in the absence of exogenous cytochrome c, reveals a biphasic pattern even though only a single, covalent cytochrome c interaction site is present. The two-phase kinetics are characterized by a low activity phase associated with a high apparent affinity for TMPD and a high activity phase with a low affinity for TMPD. This pattern is observed over a wide range of ionic strengths and enzyme concentrations, and with both purified and membrane extract forms of cytochrome caa3. It is proposed that the biphasic steady-state kinetics of this oxidase, and other members of the cytochrome oxidase superfamily, do not result directly from different interactions with cytochrome c but are due to a change in the redox kinetics within the centers of the conventional oxidase unit itself. Our results will be related to models that account for the biphasic steady-state kinetics exhibited by cytochrome oxidase.  相似文献   

7.
Bradyrhizobium japonicum, a symbiotic nitrogen-fixing bacterium, has a complex respiratory electron-transport chain, capable of functioning throughout a wide range of oxygen tensions. It does so by synthesizing a number of terminal oxidases, each appropriate for different environmental conditions. We have previously described the cloning of the large catalytic subunit, coxX, from one of the terminal oxidases from B. japonicum [Surpin, M.A., Moshiri, F., Murphy, A.M. and Maier, R.J. (1994) Genetic evidence for a fourth terminal oxidase from Bradyrhizobium japonicum. Gene 143, 73-77]. In this work, we describe the remaining subunits of this terminal oxidase complex, which is encoded by the coxWXYZ operon. The polypeptide encoded by coxW does not contain any amino acid residues that are known to bind the CuA atom of cytochrome c terminal oxidases, but contains residues thought to be involved in ubiquinol binding. Terminal oxidase cyanide inhibition titration pattern comparisons of the wild type with a coxWXYZ insertion mutant indicated the new oxidase is expressed microaerobically. However analysis of hemes extracted from microaerobically incubated cells revealed the absence of heme O in this strain (from both the wild type and the mutant) of B. japonicum. Therefore, coxWXYZ most likely encodes a microaerobically-expressed bb3-type ubiquinol oxidase.  相似文献   

8.
A novel, improved method for purification of nitric oxide reductase (NOR) from membranes of Paracoccus denitrificans has been developed. The purified enzyme is a cytochrome bc complex which, according to protein chemical and hydrodynamic data, contains two subunits in a 1:1 stoichiometry. The purified NorBC complex binds 0.87 g of dodecyl maltoside/g of protein and forms a dimer in solution. Similarly, it is dimeric in two-dimensional crystals. Images of these crystals have been processed at 8 A resolution in projection to the membrane. The NorB subunit is homologous to the main catalytic subunit of cytochrome oxidase and is predicted to contain the active bimetallic center in which two NO molecules are turned over to N2O. Metal analysis and heme composition implies that it binds two B-type hemes and a nonheme iron but no copper. NorC is a membrane-anchored cytochrome c. Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy shows that carbon monoxide dissociates from the reduced heme in light and associates with another metal center which is distinct from the copper site of heme/copper oxidases. Electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy reveals that NO binds to the reduced enzyme under turnover conditions giving rise to signals near g = 2 and g = 4. The former represents a typical nitrosyl-ferroheme signal whereas the latter is a fingerprint of a nonheme iron/NO adduct. We conclude that the active site of NOR is a dinuclear iron center.  相似文献   

9.
Variable temperature magnetic circular dichroism spectra have been measured on oxidised Clostridium pasteurianum rubredoxin. Evidence has been obtained for the presence of two one-electron charge-transfer transitions, sulphur to ferric ion, in the region 15 000 to 28 000 cm-1. The first moment of the lower energy band is consistent with it being the orbital transition t1 non-bonding sulphur orbital, to the 2 e ferric d-orbital. The magnitude of the spin-orbit coupling constant in the lower excited state has been determined and shown to be small compared with the axial distortion. The splitting of the low energy band observed in the absorption spectrum can therefore be equated directly with the axial distortion of the lowest excited charge-transfer state. Finally, the potential utility of making saturation experiments at very low temperatures has been examined.  相似文献   

10.
Organic hydroperoxides are believed to be primarily detoxified in cells by the GSH peroxidase/GSSG reductase system and activated to cytotoxic radical species by non-heme iron. However, organic hydroperoxides seem to be bioactivated by cytochrome P450 (P450) in isolated hepatocytes as various P450 (particularly P450 2E1) inhibitors inhibited cumene hydroperoxide (CumOOH) metabolism and attenuated subsequent cytotoxic effects including antimycin A-resistant respiration, lipid peroxidation, iron mobilization, ATP depletion, and cell membrane disruption. CumOOH metabolism was also faster in P450 1A-induced hepatocytes and was inhibited by the P450 1A inhibitor alpha-naphthoflavone. The ferric chelator deferoxamine also prevented cytotoxicity even after CumOOH had been metabolized but had no effect on CumOOH metabolism. This emphasizes the toxicological significance of the iron released following hydroperoxide metabolic activation by cytochrome P450. The radical trap, 4-hydroxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-N-oxyl (TEMPO), had no effect on CumOOH metabolism but prevented CumOOH-induced antimycin A-resistant respiration, lipid peroxidation, iron mobilization, and loss of membrane integrity. These results suggest that CumOOH is metabolically activated by some P450 enzymes (e.g., P450 2E1) in hepatocytes to form reactive radical metabolites or oxidants that cause lipid peroxidation and cytotoxicity.  相似文献   

11.
The main chain protons and the majority of side chain protons have been assigned for the ferric form of Pseudomonas stutzeri substrain ZoBell (American Type Culture Collection 14405) cytochrome c-551. The chemical shifts were compared to those for the ferrous protein to determine the pseudocontact shift contribution. These observed values were compared to contributions calculated from the atomic coordinates of the ferrous cytochrome and an optimized effective room temperature g-tensor centered on the paramagnetic ferric iron. The agreement between observed and calculated values indicates that the conformations of the two forms are highly similar.  相似文献   

12.
A soluble monoheme c-type cytochrome (cytochrome c6) has been isolated from the green alga Monoraphidium braunii. It has a molecular mass of 9.3 kDa, an isoelectric point of 3.6 and a reduction potential of 358 mV at pH 7. The determined amino acid sequence allows its classification as a class-I c-type cytochrome. The ferric and ferrous cytochrome forms and their pH equilibria have been studied using 1H-NMR, ultraviolet/visible, EPR and M?ssbauer spectroscopies. The pH equilibria are complex, several pKa values and pH-dependent forms being observed. The amino acid sequence, the reduction-potential value and the visible and NMR spectroscopies data in the pH range 4-9 indicate that the heme iron has a methionine-histidine axial coordination. However, the EPR and M?ssbauer data obtained for the ferricytochrome show that in this pH range two distinct forms are present: form I, gz = 3.27, gy = 2.05 and gx = 1.05; form II, gz = 2.95, gy = 2.29 and gx = 1.43. While form I has crystal-field parameters typical of a methionine-histidine coordination, those associated with form II would suggest a histidine-histidine axial ligation. This possibility was extensively analyzed by spectroscopic methods and by chemical modification of a histidine residue. It was concluded that form II actually corresponds to an unusual type of methionine-histidine axial coordination. Straightforward examples of this type of coordination have recently been found in other c-type hemeproteins [Teixeira, M., Campos, A. P., Aguiar, A. P., Costa, H. S., Santos, H., Turner, D. L. & Xavier, A. V. (1993) FEBS Lett. 317, 233-236], corroborating our proposal. Since both forms, with very distinct crystal-field parameters, are shown to have the same reduction potential, it may be concluded that the axial and rhombic distortions of the heme-iron ligand field cannot be directly correlated with the heme-reduction potential. The pH-dependence studies have also shown that the form I and form II are interconvertible, with pKa approximately 5. To establish a possible physiological significance for this process, in particular for the interaction of the cytochrome with the membrane-bound electron-transfer complexes b6f and photosystem I, the effect of surfactants on the spectroscopic characteristics of cytochrome c6 has been studied.  相似文献   

13.
Like neutrophils, Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-immortalized B lymphocytes express all constituents of the NADPH oxidase complex necessary to generate superoxide anion O2-. The NADPH oxidase activity in EBV-B lymphocytes is only 5% of that measured in neutrophils upon PMA stimulation. Cytochrome b558 is the sole redox membrane component of NADPH oxidase; it is the protein core around which cytosolic factors assemble in order to mediate oxidase activity. In the present study, we have compared the structural and functional properties of cytochrome b558 from EBV-B lymphocytes and neutrophils. Cytochrome b558 from EBV-B lymphocyte plasma membrane, like that from neutrophils, is characterized by a heterodimeric structure with a highly glycosylated beta subunit, known as gp91-phox. While the amount of cytochrome b558 recovered after purification from EBV-B lymphocytes (approximately 0.24 nmol from 1010 cells) was low compared to that recovered from neutrophils (approximately 10 nmol), the biochemical properties of purified cytochrome b558 from both EBV-B lymphocytes and neutrophils were quite similar with respect to their differential spectra, redox potential, and FAD binding site. Once cytochrome b558 was extracted from the EBV-B lymphocyte membrane, it was able to mediate, in a reconstituted system of O2- production the same oxidase turnover as that found for cytochrome b558 extracted from neutrophils. A comparison between membrane bound and soluble cytochrome b558 suggested that the weak oxidase activity measured in intact EBV-B cells might be the result not only of the small amount of expressed cytochrome b558, but also of a defect of the activation process in lymphocyte membrane.  相似文献   

14.
Nitric oxide (NO) readily makes corresponding complexes not only with ferrous iron but also with ferric iron. However, NO-ferric complexes of many heme proteins were unstable, while horseradish peroxidase formed the very stable NO-ferric porphyrin complex with a shift of the Soret band of the absorption wavelength from 396.5 nm to 420.0 nm. The concentration of NO in aqueous media could be monitored by measuring the absorption changes, and the detection limit was 10 nM. The simple procedure is convenient for concentration determination of NO solution.  相似文献   

15.
Chlorophyll fluorescence, thermoluminescence, and EPR spectroscopy have been used to investigate the functional properties of the monomeric and dimeric forms of the photosystem II CP47-reaction center (CP47-RC) subcore complex that was isolated (Zheleva, D., Sharma, J., Panico, M., Morris, H. R., and Barber, J. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 16122-16127). Chlorophyll fluorescence yield changes induced either by the initiation of continuous actinic light or by repetitive light flashes indicated that the dimeric, but not the monomeric, form of the CP47-RC complex showed secondary electron transport properties indicative of QA reduction. Thermoluminescence measurements also clearly distinguished the monomer from the dimer in that the latter showed a ZV band, which appeared at -55 degreesC, following illumination at -80 degreesC. This band has been determined to be an indicator of the photoaccumulation of QA-. The ability of the dimeric CP47-RC to show secondary electron transport properties was clearly demonstrated by EPR studies. The dimer was characterized by organic radical signals at about g = 2 induced either by illumination or by the addition of dithionite. The dithionite-induced signal was attributed to QA-, but there was no indication of any interaction with non-heme iron. The signal induced by light was more complex, being composed not only of the QA- radical but also of radicals generated on the donor side. Difference analyses indicated that one of these radicals is likely to be due to a D1 tyrosine 161 or D2 tyrosine 161. In contrast, the monomeric CP47-RC complex did not show similar EPR-detectable radicals and instead was dominated by a high yield of the spin-polarized triplet signal generated by recombination reactions between the oxidized primary reductant, pheophytin, and the primary donor, P680. It is also concluded from EPR analyses that both the monomeric and dimeric forms of the CP47-RC subcore complex contain one cytochrome b559 per reaction center. Overall the results suggest that photosystem II normally functions as a dimer complex and that monomerization at the level of the CP47-RC subcore complex leads to destabilization of the bound plastoquinone, which functions as QA.  相似文献   

16.
The role of the conserved acidic residues of subunit III of cytochrome c oxidase (COIII) in energy transduction was investigated. Using a COIII deletion mutant of Paracoccus denitrificans, complemented with a plasmid expressing either the wild type (wt) COIII gene or site-directed mutants of the COIII gene, we measured cytochrome c oxidase-dependent ATP synthesis, respiration, and membrane potential. Cytochrome c oxidase-dependent ATP synthesis was attenuated in nonacidic mutants of either Glu98 (E98A and E98Q), or Asp259 (D259A) but not in the acidic mutant E98D. The rates of respiration in the energy conversion-defective mutants were as high as or higher than that in the wt. The cytochrome c oxidase-induced increment of membrane potential in the nonacidic mutants was similar to or higher than that in the wt. In contrast, when succinate-driven ATP synthesis was mediated solely by ubiquinol oxidase (e.g., in the presence of myxothiazol), the rates of ATP synthesis in the nonacidic mutants were higher than that in the wt. Moreover, myxothiazol, which inhibited succinate respiration as well as ATP synthesis in wt and E98D, stimulated ATP synthesis, while inhibiting succinate respiration, in the nonacidic mutants. These results indicate that the attenuation of energy conversion in these mutants is limited to cytochrome c oxidase and thus suggest that subunit III plays a role in energy conversion by cytochrome c oxidase.  相似文献   

17.
Vectorially oriented monolayers of yeast cytochrome c and its bimolecular complex with bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase have been formed by self-assembly from solution. Both quartz and Ge/Si multilayer substrates were chemical vapor deposited with an amine-terminated alkylsiloxane monolayer that was then reacted with a hetero-bifunctional cross-linking reagent, and the resulting maleimide endgroup surface then provided for covalent interactions with the naturally occurring single surface cysteine 102 of the yeast cytochrome c. The bimolecular complex was formed by further incubating these cytochrome c monolayers in detergent-solubilized cytochrome oxidase. The sequential formation of such monolayers and the vectorially oriented nature of the cytochrome oxidase was studied via meridional x-ray diffraction, which directly provided electron density profiles of the protein(s) along the axis normal to the substrate plane. The nature of these profiles is consistent with previous work performed on vectorially oriented monolayers of either cytochrome c or cytochrome oxidase alone. Furthermore, optical spectroscopy has indicated that the rate of binding of cytochrome oxidase to the cytochrome c monolayer is an order of magnitude faster than the binding of cytochrome oxidase to an amine-terminated surface that was meant to mimic the ring of lysine residues around the heme edge of cytochrome c, which are known to be involved in the binding of this protein to cytochrome oxidase.  相似文献   

18.
Brush border membrane vesicles isolated from Caco-2 cells were used to examine whether there is an apical membrane-associated ferric reductase activity in small intestinal enterocytes. A ferric reductase activity which was dependent on NADH or NADPH as reductants was shown. Reduction of Fe(III) was quantified by the formation of a stable Fe(II)/ferrozine complex. The ferric reductase revealed saturation kinetics with a K(m) of 4.12 +/- 0.65 micromol/L and a Vmax of 3.11 +/- 0.043 nmol/(min.mg protein) for NADH. About 25% of the electrons for the NADH-dependent ferric iron reduction were transferred indirectly from the superoxide anion as verified by the superoxide dismutase inhibitable ferric iron reduction rate. However, the main part of Fe(III) reduction occurs directly by catalyzed electron transfer from NADH to ferric iron through (an) enzyme(s) located in the brush border membrane. The ferric reductase activity was inhibited by Pt(II) and especially p-chloromercuribenzoate. Ferricyanide, which is also reduced by the enzyme, is a competitive inhibitor of the Fe(III)/nitrilotriacetate (NTA) complex with a Ki of 43 micromol/L. These results suggest that brush border membranes of enterocytes possess a ferric reductase that reduces ferric to ferrous iron before the iron is transported through the microvillous membrane.  相似文献   

19.
This article describes the first detailed analysis of mitochondrial electron transfer and oxidative phosphorylation in the pathogenic filamentous fungus, Gaeumannomyces graminis var. tritici. While oxygen consumption was cyanide insensitive, inhibition occurred following treatment with complex III inhibitors and the alternative oxidase inhibitor, salicylhydroxamic acid (SHAM). Similarly, maintenance of a Deltapsi across the mitochondrial inner membrane was unaffected by cyanide but sensitive to antimycin A and SHAM when succinate was added as the respiratory substrate. As a result, ATP synthesis through complex V was demonstrated to be sensitive to these two inhibitors but not to cyanide. Analysis of the cytochrome content of mitochondria indicated the presence of those cytochromes normally associated with electron transport in eukaryotic mitochondria together with a third, b-type heme, exhibiting a dithionite-reduced absorbance maxima at 560 nm and not associated with complex III. Antibodies raised to plant alternative oxidase detected the presence of both the monomeric and dimeric forms of this oxidase. Overall this study demonstrates that a novel respiratory chain utilizing the terminal oxidases, cytochrome c oxidase and alternative oxidase, are present and constitutively active in electron transfer in G. graminis tritici. These results are discussed in relation to current understanding of fungal electron transfer and to the possible contribution of alternative redox centers in ATP synthesis.  相似文献   

20.
A ruthenium-labeled cytochrome c derivative was prepared to meet two design criteria: the ruthenium group must transfer an electron rapidly to the heme group, but not alter the interaction with cytochrome c oxidase. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to replace His39 on the backside of yeast C102T iso-1-cytochrome c with a cysteine residue, and the single sulfhydryl group was labeled with (4-bromomethyl-4' methylbipyridine) (bis-bipyridine)ruthenium(II) to form Ru-39-cytochrome c (cyt c). There is an efficient pathway for electron transfer from the ruthenium group to the heme group of Ru-39-cyt c comprising 13 covalent bonds and one hydrogen bond. Electron transfer from the excited state Ru(II*) to ferric heme c occurred with a rate constant of (6.0 +/- 2.0) x 10(5) s-1, followed by electron transfer from ferrous heme c to Ru(III) with a rate constant of (1.0 +/- 0.2) x 10(6) s-1. Laser excitation of a complex between Ru-39-cyt c and beef cytochrome c oxidase in low ionic strength buffer (5 mM phosphate, pH7) resulted in electron transfer from photoreduced heme c to CuA with a rate constant of (6 +/- 2) x 10(4) s-1, followed by electron transfer from CuA to heme a with a rate constant of (1.8 +/- 0.3) x 10(4) s-1. Increasing the ionic strength to 100 mM leads to bimolecular kinetics as the complex is dissociated. The second-order rate constant is (2.5 +/- 0.4) x 10(7) M-1s-1 at 230 mM ionic strength, nearly the same as that of wild-type iso-1-cytochrome c.  相似文献   

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