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1.
This is a study of the effects of temperature (in the range 273.3-307.7 K) and of ionic strength (in the range 2.5-100 mM) on the kinetics of photoinduced electron-transfer reaction 3Zncyt/pc(II)--> Zncyt+/pc(I) within the electrostatic complex of zinc cytochrome c and cupriplastocyanin at pH 7.0. In order to separate direct and indirect effects of temperature on the rate constants, viscosity of the solutions was fixed, at different values, by additions of sucrose. The activation parameters for the reaction within the preformed complex, at the low ionic strength, are delta H++ = 13 +/- 2 kJ/mol and delta S++ = -97 +/- 4 J/K mol. The activation parameters for the reaction within the encounter complex, at the higher ionic strength, are delta H++ = 13 +/- 1 kJ/mol and delta S++ = -96 +/- 3 J/K mol. Evidently, the two complexes are the same. The proteins associate similarly in the persistent and the transient complex, i.e., at different ionic strengths. In both complexes, however, electron transfer is gated by a rearrangement, as previous studies from this laboratory showed. Changes in the solution viscosity modulate this rearrangement by affecting delta H++, not delta S++. The activation parameters are analyzed by empirical methods. The thermodynamic parameters delta H and delta S for the formation of the complex Zncyt/pc(II) are determined and related to changes in hydrophilic and hydrophobic surfaces upon protein association in three configurations. A difference between the values of delta H for the configuration providing optimal electronic coupling between the redox sites and the configuration providing optimal docking equals the experimental value delta H++ = 13 kJ/mol for the rearrangement of the latter configuration into the former. Enthalpy of activation may reflect a change in the character of the exposed surface as the diprotein complex rearranges. Entropy of activation may reflect tightening of the contact between the associated proteins.  相似文献   

2.
We study, by flash kinetic spectrophotometry on the microsecond time scale, the effects of ionic strength and viscosity on the kinetics of oxidative quenching of the triplet state of zinc cytochrome c (3Zncyt) by the wild-type form and the following nine mutants of cupriplastocyanin: Leu12Glu, Leu12Asn, Phe35Tyr, Gln88Glu, Tyr83Phe, Tyr83His, Asp42Asn, Glu43Asn, and the double mutant Glu59Lys/Glu60Gln. The unimolecular rate constants for the quenching reactions within the persistent diprotein complex, which predominates at low ionic strengths, and within the transient diprotein complex, which is involved at higher ionic strengths, are equal irrespective of the mutation. Evidently, the two complexes are the same. In both reactions, the rate-limiting step is rearrangement of the diprotein complex from a configuration optimal for docking to the one optimal for the subsequent electron-transfer step, which is fast. We investigate the effects of plastocyanin mutations on this rearrangement, which gates the overall electron-transfer reaction. Conversion of the carboxylate anions into amide groups in the lower acidic cluster (residues 42 and 43), replacement of Tyr83 with other aromatic residues, and mutations in the hydrophobic patch in plastocyanin do not significantly affect the rearrangement. Conversion of a pair of carboxylate anions into a cationic and a neutral residue in the upper acidic cluster (residues 59 and 60) impedes the rearrangement. Creation of an anion at position 88, between the upper acidic cluster and the hydrophobic patch, facilitates the rearrangement. The rate constant for the rearrangement smoothly decreases as the solution viscosity increases, irrespective of the mutation. Fittings of this dependence to the modified Kramers's equation and to an empirical equation show that zinc cytochrome c follows the same trajectory on the surfaces of all the plastocyanin mutants but that the obstacles along the way vary as mutations alter the electrostatic potential. Mutations that affect protein association (i.e., change the binding constant) do not necessarily affect the reaction between the associated proteins (i.e., the rate constant) and vice versa. All of the kinetic and thermodynamic effects and noneffects of mutations consistently indicate that in the protein rearrangement the basic patch of zinc cytochrome c moves from a position between the two acidic clusters to a position at or near the upper acidic cluster.  相似文献   

3.
The molecular processes concomitant with the redox reactions of wild-type and mutant cytochrome c oxidase from Paracoccus denitrificans were analyzed by a combination of protein electrochemistry and Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) difference spectroscopy. Oxidized-minus-reduced FTIR difference spectra in the mid-infrared (4000-1000 cm-1) reflecting full or stepwise oxidation and reduction of the respective cofactor(s) were obtained. In the 1800-1000 cm-1 range, these FTIR difference spectra reflect changes of the polypeptide backbone geometry in the amide I (ca. 1620-1680 cm-1) and amide II (ca. 1560-1540 cm-1) region in response to the redox transition of the cofactor(s). In addition, several modes in the 1600-1200 cm-1 range can be tentatively attributed to heme modes. A peak at 1746 cm-1 associated with the oxidized form and a peak at 1734 cm-1 associated with the reduced form were previously discussed by us as proton transfer between Asp or Glu side chain modes in the course of the redox reaction of the enzyme [Hellwig, P., Rost, B., Kaiser, U., Ostermeier, C., Michel, H., and M?ntele, W. (1996) FEBS Lett. 385, 53-57]. These signals were resolved into several components associated with the oxidation of different cofactors. For a stepwise potential titration from the fully reduced state (-0.5 V) to the fully oxidized state (+0.5 V), a small component at 1738 cm-1 develops in the potential range of approximately +0.15 V and disappears at more positive potentials while the main component at 1746 cm-1 appears in the range of approximately +0.20 V (all potentials quoted vs Ag/AgCl/3 M KCl). This observation clearly indicates two different ionizable residues involved in redox-induced proton transfer. The major component at 1746 cm-1 is completely lost in the FTIR difference spectra of the Glu 278 Gln mutant enzyme. In the spectrum of the subunit I Glu 278 Asp mutant enzyme, the major component of the discussed difference band is lost. In contrast, the complete difference signal of the wild-type enzyme is preserved in the Asp 124 Asn, Asp 124 Ser, and Asp 399 Asn variants, which are critical residues in the discussed proton pump channel as suggested from structure and mutagenesis experiments. On the basis of these difference spectra of mutants, we present further evidence that glutamic acid 278 in subunit I is a crucial residue for the redox reaction. Potential titrations performed simultaneously for the IR and for the UV/VIS indicate that the signal related to Glu 278 is coupled to the electron transfer to/from heme a; however, additional involvement of CuB electron transfer cannot be excluded.  相似文献   

4.
Chloroplast material active in photosynthetic electron transport has been isolated from Scenedesmus acutus (strain 270/3a). During homogenization, part of cytochrome 553 was solubilized, and part of it remained firmly bound to the membrane. A direct correlation between membrane cytochrome 553 and electron transport rates could not be found. Sonification removes plastocyanin, but leaves bound cytochrome 553 in the membrane. Photooxidation of the latter is dependent on added plastocyanin. In contrast to higher plant chloroplasts, added soluble cytochrome 553 was photooxidized by 707 nm light without plastocyanin present. Reduced plastocyanin or cytochrome 553 stimulated electron transport by Photosystem I when supplied together or separately. These reactions and cytochrome 553 photooxidation were not sensitive to preincubation of chloroplasts with KCN, indicating that both redox proteins can donate their electrons directly to the Photosystem I reaction center. Scenedesmus cytochrome 553 was about as active as plastocyanin from the same alga, whereas the corresponding protein from the alga Bumilleriopsis was without effect on electron transport rates. It is suggested that besides the reaction sequence cytochrome 553 leads to plastocyanin leads to Photosystem I reaction center, a second pathway cytochrome 553 leads to Photosystem I reaction center may operate additionally.  相似文献   

5.
Site-directed mutagenesis has been used to produce variants of a tryptic fragment of bovine liver cytochrome b5 in which Glu44 and Glu56 are mutated to alanine. The reduction potentials measured by spectroelectrochemical titration (in the presence of 1 mM (Ru(NH3)6)3+, pH 7.0 and I=0.1 M) are 4.5, 6.0, 6.0 and 7.5 mV versus the standard hydrogen electrode (SHE) for the wild-type and E44A, E56A and E44/56A mutants of cytochrome b5, respectively. A comparative two-dimensional NMR study of cytochrome b5 and its E44/56A mutant in water solution has been achieved. Resonance assignments of side-chains have been completed successfully. The NMR results suggest that the secondary structures and global folding of the E44/56A mutant remain unchanged, but the mutation of both Glu44 and Glu56 to hydrophobic alanine may lead to the two helices containing mutated residues contracting towards the heme center. The inner mobility of the Gly42 approximately Glu44 segment in cytochrome b5 may be responsible for the difference of the binding mode between Glu44 and Glu56 with cytochrome c. The binding between cytochrome c and cytochrome b5 was studied by optical difference spectra of cytochrome c and variants of cytochrome b5. The association constants (KA) for the wild-type, E44A, E56A, and E44/56A mutants of cytochrome b5 with cytochrome c, are 4.70(+/-0. 10)x10(6) M-1, 1.88(+/-0.03)x10(6) M-1, 2.70(+/-0.13)x10(6) M-1, and 1.14(+/-0.05)x10(6) M-1, respectively. This is indicative that both Glu44 and Glu56 are involved in the complex formation between cytochrome b5 and cytochrome c. The reduction of horse heart ferricytochrome c by recombinant ferrocytochrome b5 and its mutants has been studied. The rate constant of the electron transfer reaction between ferricytochrome c and wild-type ferrocytochrome b5 (1.074(+/-0.49)x10(7) M-1 s-1) is higher than those of the mutant protein E44A (8.98(+/-0.20)x10(6) M-1 s-1), E56A (8.76(+/-0. 39)x10(6) M-1 s-1), and E44/56A (8.02(+/-0.38)x10(6) M-1 s-1) at 15 degreesC, pH 7.0, I=0.35 M. The rate constants are strongly dependent on ionic strength and temperature. These studies, by means of a series of techniques, provide conclusive results that the interaction between cytochrome b5 and cytochrome c is electrostatically guided, and, more importantly, that both Glu44 and Glu56 participate in the electron transfer reaction.  相似文献   

6.
In the catalytic mechanism of nucleotide reduction, ribonucleoside triphosphate reductase (RTPR) from Lactobacillus leichmannii catalyzes the homolytic cleavage of the carbon-cobalt bond of adenosylcobalamin (AdoCbl) at a rate approximately 10(11)-fold faster than the uncatalyzed reaction. Model systems have suggested hypotheses for the thermodynamic basis of this reaction, but relevant measurements of the enzymatic reaction have been lacking. To address this question in a system for which the microscopic rate constants can be measured as a function of temperature, we examined the RTPR-catalyzed exchange reaction. RTPR, in the presence of allosteric effector dGTP and in the absence of substrate, catalyzes carbon-cobalt bond homolysis and formation of a thiyl radical from an active-site cysteine in a concerted fashion [Licht, S., Booker, S. , Stubbe, J. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 1221-1233]. Both the kinetics of cob(II)alamin formation and the amounts of cob(II)alamin formed have been studied as a function of AdoCbl concentration and temperature. Analysis of these data has allowed calculation of a DeltaH of 20 kcal/mol, a DeltaS of 70 cal mol-1 K-1, a DeltaH of 46 kcal/mol, and a DeltaS of 96 cal mol-1 K-1 for carbon-cobalt bond homolysis/thiyl radical formation. The results further show that the enzyme perturbs the equilibrium between the reactant (AdoCbl-bound) state and the product (cob(II)alamin/5'-deoxyadenosine (5'-dA)/thiyl radical state, making them approximately equal in energy. The thermodynamic perturbation, in addition to transition-state stabilization, is required for the large rate acceleration observed. Entropic, rather than enthalpic, factors make the largest contribution in both cases.  相似文献   

7.
French bean plastocyanin is stoichiometrically and specifically labeled upon reduction by Cr(II)aq ions, yielding a substitution-inert (Cr(III) adduct at the protein surface. The effect of the modification on the activity of plastocyanin in electron transfer between photosystems II and I has been investigated. The photoreduction and photooxidation by chloroplasts or by photosystem I reaction centers, respectively, chloroplasts or by photosystem I reaction centers, respectively, of native and Cr(III)-labeled plastocyanin have been compared. It was found that whereas the photoreduction rates of native and Cr-labeled plastocyanin were indistinguishable, the rates of photooxidation of the modified protein were markedly attenuated relative to those of the native one. This difference in reactivity clearly reflects the perturbation of the electron transfer pathway to P700. These findings, in conjunction with the structure of plastocyanin and the locus of CR(III) binding on its surface, lead to the following interpretation: (a) There are most probably two physiologically significant, electron transfer sites on plastocyanin. (b) The site involved in the electron transfer to P700 is most likely in the region of tyrosine-83 and the negatively charged patch proximal to it. By elimination we assume that the second site is centered at the hydrophobic region of histidine-87.  相似文献   

8.
The P4-P6 domain RNA from the Tetrahymena self-splicing group I intron is an independent unit of tertiary structure that, in the kinetic folding pathway, folds before the rest of the intron and then stabilizes the remainder of the intron's tertiary structure. We have employed temperature gradient gel electrophoresis (TGGE) to examine the unfolding of the tertiary structure of P4-P6. In 0.9 mM Mg2+, the global tertiary fold of the molecule has a melting temperature of approximately 40 degreesC and is completely unfolded by 60 degreesC. Calculated thermodynamic parameters for folding of P4-P6 are DeltaH degrees' = -28 +/- 3 kcal/mol and DeltaS degrees' = -91 +/- 8 eu under these conditions. Chemical probing of the P4-P6 tertiary structure using dimethyl sulfate and CMCT confirms that these TGGE experiments monitor the unfolding of the global tertiary fold of the domain and that the secondary structure is largely unaffected over this temperature range. Thus, unlike the entropically driven P1 docking and guanosine binding steps of Tetrahymenagroup I intron self-splicing, which have positive or zero DeltaH terms, P4-P6 tertiary structure formation is stabilized by a negative DeltaH term. This implies that enthalpically favorable hydrogen bond formation, nucleotide base stacking, and/or binding of Mg2+ within the folded structure are responsible for stabilizing the P4-P6 domain.  相似文献   

9.
BACKGROUND: Electron transfer between cytochrome f and photosystem I (PSI) can be accomplished by the heme-containing protein cytochrome c6 or by the copper-containing protein plastocyanin. Higher plants use plastocyanin as the only electron donor to PSI, whereas most green algae and cyanobacteria can use either, with similar kinetics, depending on the copper concentration in the culture medium. RESULTS: We report here the determination of the structure of cytochrome c6 from the green alga Monoraphidium braunii. Synchrotron X-ray data with an effective resolution of 1.2 A and the presence of one iron and three sulfur atoms enabled, possibly for the first time, the determination of an unknown protein structure by ab initio methods. Anisotropic refinement was accompanied by a decrease in the 'free' R value of over 7% the anisotropic motion is concentrated at the termini and between residues 38 and 53. The heme geometry is in very good agreement with a new set of heme distances derived from the structures of small molecules. This is probably the most precise structure of a heme protein to date. CONCLUSIONS: On the basis of this cytochrome c6 structure, we have calculated potential electron transfer pathways and made comparisons with similar analyses for plastocyanin. Electron transfer between the copper redox center of plastocyanin to PSI and from cytochrome f is believed to involve two sites on the protein. In contrast, cytochrome c6 may well use just one electron transfer site, close to the heme unit, in its corresponding reactions with the same two redox partners.  相似文献   

10.
In cytochrome c oxidase, a requirement for proton pumping is a tight coupling between electron and proton transfer, which could be accomplished if internal electron-transfer rates were controlled by uptake of protons. During reaction of the fully reduced enzyme with oxygen, concomitant with the "peroxy" to "oxoferryl" transition, internal transfer of the fourth electron from CuA to heme a has the same rate as proton uptake from the bulk solution (8,000 s-1). The question was therefore raised whether the proton uptake controls electron transfer or vice versa. To resolve this question, we have studied a site-specific mutant of the Rhodobacter sphaeroides enzyme in which methionine 263 (SU II), a CuA ligand, was replaced by leucine, which resulted in an increased redox potential of CuA. During reaction of the reduced mutant enzyme with O2, a proton was taken up at the same rate as in the wild-type enzyme (8,000 s-1), whereas electron transfer from CuA to heme a was impaired. Together with results from studies of the EQ(I-286) mutant enzyme, in which both proton uptake and electron transfer from CuA to heme a were blocked, the results from this study show that the CuA --> heme a electron transfer is controlled by the proton uptake and not vice versa. This mechanism prevents further electron transfer to heme a3-CuB before a proton is taken up, which assures a tight coupling of electron transfer to proton pumping.  相似文献   

11.
In a complex of two electron-transfer proteins, their redox potentials can be shifted due to changes in the dielectric surroundings and the electrostatic potentials at each center caused by the charged residues of the partner. These effects are dependent on the geometry of the complex. Three different docking configurations (DCs) for intracomplex electron transfer between cytochrome f and plastocyanin were studied, defined by 1) close contact of the positively charged region of cytochrome f and the negatively charged regions of plastocyanin (DC1) and by (2, 3) close contact of the surface regions adjacent to the Fe and Cu redox centers (DC2 and DC3). The equilibrium energetics for electron transfer in DC1-DC3 are the same within approximately +/-0.1 kT. The lower reorganization energy for DC2 results in a slightly lower activation energy for this complex compared with DC1 and DC3. The long heme-copper distance (approximately 24 A) in the DC1 complex drastically decreases electronic coupling and makes this complex much less favorable for electron transfer than DC2 or DC3. DC1-like complexes can only serve as docking intermediates in the pathway toward formation of an electron-transfer-competent complex. Elimination of the four positive charges arising from the lysine residues in the positive patch of cytochrome f, as accomplished by mutagenesis, exerts a negligible effect (approximately 3 mV) on the redox potential difference between cyt f and PC.  相似文献   

12.
Rhodothermus marinus, a thermohalophilic bacterium, has a unique electron-transfer chain, containing, besides a cbb3 and a caa3 terminal oxidases, a novel cytochrome bc complex [Pereira, M. M., Carita, J. N., and Teixeira, M. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 1268-1275]. The membrane-bound iron-sulfur centers of this bacterium were studied by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy, leading to the identification of its main electron-transfer complexes. The resonances typical for the Rieske-type centers are not detected. Clusters S1 and S3 from succinate dehydrogenase were identified; interestingly, center S3 is shown to be present in two different conformations, with g values at 2.035, 2.009, and 2.001 and at 2.025, 2.002, and 2.000. Upon addition of NADH and dithionite, EPR signals assigned to resonances characteristic of binuclear and tetranuclear clusters develop and are attributed to the iron-sulfur centers of complexes I and II. A high-potential iron-sulfur protein- (HiPIP-) type center previously detected in the membranes of this bacterium [Pereira et al. (1994) FEBS Lett. 352, 327-330] is shown to belong indeed to a canonical HiPIP. This protein was purified and extensively characterized. It is a small water-soluble protein of approximately 10 kDa, containing a single [4Fe-4S]3+/2+ cluster. The reduction potential, determined by EPR redox titrations in intact and detergent-solubilized membranes as well as by cyclic voltammetry in solution, has a pH-independent value of 260 +/- 20 mV, in the range 6-9. In vitro reconstitution of the R. marinus electron-transfer chain shows that the HiPIP plays a fundamental role in the chain, as the electron shuttle between R. marinus cytochrome bc complex and the caa3 terminal oxidase, being thus simultaneously identified a HiPIP reductase and a HiPIP oxidase.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
The interaction of diflunisal ion (DF) with beta-cyclodextrin (betaCD), gamma-cyclodextrin (gammaCD), and hydroxypropyl-beta-cyclodextrin (HPbetaCD) was studied in phosphate buffer, pH 7.4, at 5-37 degrees C and various CD concentrations using a home-made diflunisal ion-selective electrode. Typical direct binding plots and Scatchard plots were obtained with HPbetaCD. The Scatchard model for one class of binding sites was used for the estimation of binding parameters for the DF/HPbetaCD interaction. The estimates for n (number of binding sites per CD molecule) were in all cases very close to unity, indicating 1:1 complexation. The association constant (K) estimates decrease with increasing temperature. Sigmoidal direct binding plots and concave-downwards Scatchard plots were obtained with various betaCD or gammaCD concentrations. The Hill model was used for the estimation of the binding parameters for the DF/betaCD and DF/gammaCD interactions. Both the Hill coefficients and the binding constants were markedly dependent on the CD concentration. These findings indicate the cooperative character of DF/betaCD and DF/gammaCD interactions. The free energy change, DeltaG, and the thermodynamic parameters, DeltaH and DeltaS, were estimated for each of the interactions studied using the Van't Hoff equation.  相似文献   

15.
A hypothetical model for electron transfer complex between cytochrome c3 and the flavodoxin from the sulfate-reducing bacteria Desulfovibrio vulgaris has been proposed, based on electrostatic potential field calculations and NMR data [Stewart, D. E., LeGall, J. , Moura, I., Moura, J. J. G., Peck, H. D., Jr., Xavier, A. V., Weiner, P. K., & Wampler, J. E. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 2444-2450]. This modeled complex relies primarily on the formation of five ion pairs between lysine residues of the cytochrome and acidic residues surrounding the flavin mononucleotide cofactor of the flavodoxin. In this study, the role of several acidic residues of the flavodoxin in the formation of this complex and in electron transfer between these two proteins was evaluated. A total of 17 flavodoxin mutants were studied in which 10 acidic amino acids--Asp62, Asp63, Glu66, Asp69, Asp70, Asp95, Glu99, Asp106, Asp127, and Asp129--had been permanently neutralized either individually or in various combinations by substitution with their amide amino acid equivalent (i.e., asparate to asparagine, glutamate to glutamine) through site-directed mutagenesis. The kinetic data for the transfer of electrons from reduced cytochrome c3 to the various flavodoxin mutants do not conform well to a simple bimolecular mechanism involving the formation of an intermediate electron transfer complex. Instead, a minimal electron transfer mechanism is proposed in which an initial complex is formed that is stabilized by intermolecular electrostatic interactions but is relatively inefficient in terms of electron transfer. This step is followed by a rate-limiting reorganization of that complex leading to efficient electron transfer. The apparent rate of this reorganization step was enhanced by the disruption of the initial electrostatic interactions through the neutralization of certain acidic amino acid residues leading to faster overall observed electron transfer rates at low ionic strengths. Of the five acidic residues involved in ion pairing in the modeled complex proposed by Stewart et al. (1988), the kinetic data strongly implicate Asp62, Glu66, and Asp95 in the formation of the electrostatic interactions that control electron transfer. Less certainty is provided by this study for the involvement of Asp69 and Asp129, although the data do not exclude their participation. It was not possible to determine whether the modeled complex represents the optimal configuration for electron transfer obtained after the reorganization step or actually represents the initial complex. The data do provide evidence for the importance of electrostatic interactions in electron transfer between these two proteins and for the existence of alternative binding modes involving acidic residues on the surface of the flavodoxin other than those proposed in that model.  相似文献   

16.
The kinetics of electron transfer from cytochrome c2 to the primary donor (P) of the reaction center from the photosynthetic purple bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides have been investigated by time-resolved absorption spectroscopy. Rereduction of P+ induced by a laser pulse has been measured at temperatures from 300 K to 220 K in a series of specifically mutated reaction centers characterized by altered midpoint redox potentials of P+/P varying from 410 mV to 765 mV (as compared to 505 mV for wild type). Rate constants for first-order electron donation within preformed reaction center-cytochrome c2 complexes and for the bimolecular oxidation of free cytochrome c2 have been obtained by multiexponential deconvolution of the kinetics. At all temperatures the rate of the fastest intracomplex electron transfer increases by more than two orders of magnitude as the driving force -deltaGo is varied over a range of 350 meV. The temperature and deltaGo dependences of the rate constant fit the Marcus equation well. Global analysis yields a reorganization energy lambda = 0.96 +/- 0.07 eV and a set of electronic matrix elements, specific for each mutant, ranging from 1.2 10(-4) eV to 2.5 10(-4) eV. Analysis in terms of the Jortner equation indicates that the best fit is obtained in the classical limit and restricts the range of coupled vibrational modes to frequencies lower than approximately 200 cm(-1). An additional slower kinetic component of P+ reduction, attributed to electron transfer from cyt c2 docked in a nonoptimal configuration of the complex, displays a Marcus type dependence of the rate constant upon deltaGo, characterized by a similar value of lambda (0.8 +/- 0.1 eV) and by an average electronic matrix element smaller by more than one order of magnitude. In all of the mutants, as the temperature is decreased below 260 K, both intracomplex reactions are abruptly inhibited, their rate being negligible at 220 K. The free energy dependence of the second-order rate constant for oxidation of cyt c2 in solution suggests that the collisional reaction is partially diffusion controlled, reaching the diffusion limit at exothermicities between 150 and 250 meV over the temperature range investigated.  相似文献   

17.
Cytochrome b-559 is an integral component of photosystem II complexes from both plants and cyanobacteria. However, the number of cytochrome b-559 associated with the photosystem II reaction center has been the subject of controversy. Some studies have concluded that there is one heme equivalent of cytochrome b-559 per reaction center, some studies have found two, and some studies have reported intermediate values. Most of the previous experiments have used only one method to quantitate the antenna size of the preparation. In this study, we compare the cytochrome b-559 content in a cyanobacterial and a plant photosystem II preparation. The plant preparation is derived from spinach, and previous work has shown that it has an antenna size of approximately 100 chlorophylls [MacDonald, G. M., & Barry, B. A. (1992) Biochemistry 31, 9848-9856]. The cyanobacterial preparation is from Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, and previous work has shown that it has an antenna size of approximately 60 chlorophylls [Noren, G. H., Boerner, R. J., & Barry, B. A. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 3943-3950]. Both preparations are isolated through the use of ion-exchange chromatography, and both preparations are monodisperse in the same nonionic detergent. In our comparative study, we quantitate antenna size by three different methods. Our work shows that, depending on the method used to estimate antenna size, the oxygen-evolving spinach photosystem II preparation contains 0.82-1.0 cytochrome b-559 per reaction center, while the oxygen-evolving cyanobacterial preparation contains 1.5-2.1 cytochrome b-559 per reaction center.  相似文献   

18.
Photosystem II is a multisubunit enzyme complex involved in plant photosynthesis. It uses solar energy to catalyse the breakdown of water to reducing equivalents and molecular oxygen. Native photosystem II comprises more than 25 different subunits, and has a relative molecular mass of more than 600K. Here we report the three-dimensional structure of a photosystem II subcomplex, containing the proteins D1, D2, CP47 and cytochrome b-559, determined by electron crystallography. This CP47 reaction centre, which has a relative molecular mass of 160K, can perform light-mediated energy and electron-transfer reactions but is unable to oxidize water. The complex contains 23 transmembrane alpha-helices, of which 16 have been assigned to the D1, D2 and CP47 proteins. The arrangement of these helices is remarkably similar to that of the helices in the reaction centres of purple bacteria and of plant photosystem I, indicating a common evolutionary origin for these assemblies. The map suggests that redox cofactors in the D1-D2 complex are located in positions analogous to those in the bacterial reaction centre, but the distance between the chlorophylls corresponding to the bacterial 'special pair' is significantly larger.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
The crystal structure of Anabaena PCC 7119 ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase (FNR) suggests that the carboxylate group of Glu301 may be directly involved in the catalytic process of electron and proton transfer between the isoalloxazine moiety of FAD and FNR substrates (NADPH, ferredoxin, and flavodoxin). To assess this possibility, the carboxylate of Glu301 was removed by mutating the residue to an alanine. Various spectroscopic techniques (UV-vis absorption, fluorescence, and CD) indicate that the mutant protein folded properly and that significant protein structural rearrangements did not occur. Additionally, complex formation of the mutant FNR with its substrates was almost unaltered. Nevertheless, no semiquinone formation was seen during photoreduction of Glu301Ala FNR. Furthermore, steady-state activities in which FNR semiquinone formation was required during the electron-transfer processes to ferredoxin were appreciably affected by the mutation. Fast transient kinetic studies corroborated that removal of the carboxylate at position 301 decreases the rate constant approximately 40-fold for the electron transfer process with ferredoxin without appreciably affecting complex formation, and thus interferes with the stabilization of the transition state during electron-transfer between the FAD and the iron-sulfur cluster. Moreover, the mutation also altered the nonspecific reaction of FNR with 5'-deazariboflavin semiquinone, the electron-transfer reactions with flavodoxin, and the reoxidation properties of the enzyme. These results clearly establish Glu301 as a critical residue for electron transfer in FNR.  相似文献   

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