scholarly journals Angular dependence of electron paramagnetic resonances of an azide–NO complex of cytochrome c oxidase: orientation of the haem–copper axis in cytochrome aa3 from ox heart

1998 ◽  
Vol 1364 (1) ◽  
pp. 55-62 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dominic J.B Hunter ◽  
John C Salerno ◽  
W.John Ingledew
1982 ◽  
Vol 203 (3) ◽  
pp. 541-549 ◽  
Author(s):  
P Nicholls ◽  
G A Chanady

Titration of cyanide-incubated cytochrome c oxidase (ox heart cytochrome aa3) with ferrocytochrome c or with NNN'N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine initially introduces two reducing equivalents per mol of cytochrome aa3. The first equivalent reduces the cytochrome a haem iron; the second reducing equivalent is not associated with reduction of the 830 nm chromophores (e.p.r.-detectable copper) but is probably required for reduction of the e.p.r.-undetectable copper. Excess reductant introduces a third reducing equivalent into the cyanide complex of cytochrome aa3. During steady-state respiration in the presence of cytochrome c and ascorbate, the 830 nm chromophore is almost completely oxidized. It is reduced more slowly than cytochrome a on anaerobiosis. In the presence of formate or azide, some reduction at 830 nm can be seen in the steady state; in an oxygen-pulsed system, a decrease in steady-state reduction of cytochromes c and a is associated with ab increased reduction of the 830 nm species. In the formate-inhibited system the reduction of a3 on anaerobiosis shows a lag phase, the duration of which corresponds to the time taken for the 830 nm species to be reduced. It is concluded that the e.p.r.-undetectable copper (CuD) is reduced early in the reaction sequence, whereas the detectable copper (CUD) is reduced late. The latter species is probably that responsible for reduction of the cytochrome a3 haem. The magnetic association between undetectable copper and the a3 haem may not imply capability for electron transfer, which occurs more readily between cytochrome a3 and the 830 nm species.


1978 ◽  
Vol 173 (1) ◽  
pp. 65-72 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Nicholls ◽  
Virginia Hildebrandt

1. On addition of reductant (ascorbate plus NNN′N′-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine) to isolated cytochrome c oxidase (ox heart cytochrome aa3), in the presence of the inhibitors azide or cyanide, an initial partially reduced species is formed with absorption peaks at 415nm, 445nm and 605nm, which slowly gives rise to the final ‘half-reduced’ species in whose spectrum the 415nm peak has disappeared and a new absorption is seen at 430–435nm. 2. In the absence of reductant, cyanide forms an initial complex with the enzyme with a spectrum similar to that of the uncombined form, which slowly changes into the ‘low-spin’ cyanide form with a peak at 432nm. Azide, in absence of reductant, shifts the Soret peak slightly, but the resulting complex, which is probably thermally ‘mixed-spin’, undergoes no further changes. 3. The Soret-peak shift of oxidized cytochrome a3 which occurs on reduction of the enzyme in the presence of azide is accompanied by a concurrent blue shift of the ferrous cytochrome a peak from 605nm to 603nm. A partial blue shift of the α-peak occurs in the half-reduced sulphide-inhibited enzyme, and a complete blue shift is seen in the analogous complexes with alkyl sulphides [a2+a33+HSR compounds, where R=CH3, C2H5 or (CH3)2CH]. 4. Analogous, albeit less readily decipherable, spectroscopic effects with the ligands imidazole and alkyl isocyanides suggest that on reduction of cytochrome a an interaction occurs between the two haem groups involving (i) a high- to low-spin change in cytochrome a3, and after this, (ii) a change in the molecular environment of the cytochrome a. The latter effect, possibly a decrease in the hydrophobicity of the haem pocket, requires that the ligands on cytochrome a3 have a bulky and partially hydrophobic character.


1984 ◽  
Vol 224 (2) ◽  
pp. 591-600 ◽  
Author(s):  
B C Hill ◽  
T C Woon ◽  
P Nicholls ◽  
J Peterson ◽  
C Greenwood ◽  
...  

The effect of sulphide on resting oxidized cytochrome c oxidase was studied by both e.p.r. and optical-absorption spectroscopy. Excess sulphide causes some reduction of cytochrome a, CuA and CuB, and the formation of the cytochrome a3-SH complex after about 1 min. After several hours in the presence of excess sulphide only the e.p.r. signals due to low-spin ferricytochrome a3-SH persist, giving a partially reduced species. Re-oxidation of this partially reduced sulphide-bound enzyme by ferricyanide makes all of the metal centres except CuB detectable by e.p.r. We conclude that sulphide has reduced and binds to CuB as well as to ferricytochrome a3. Sulphide binding to cuprous CuB may raise its mid-point potential and make re-oxidation difficult. Addition of reductant (ascorbate + NNN'N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine) and sulphide together to the oxidized resting enzyme produces a species in which cytochrome a and CuA are nearly completely reduced and cytochrome a3 is e.p.r.-detectable as approx. 80% of one haem in the low-spin sulphide-bound complex. The g = 12 signal of this partially reduced derivative is almost unchanged in magnitude relative to that of the resting enzyme; this suggests that the g = 12 signal may arise from less than 20% of the enzyme and that it may be relatively unreactive to both ligation and reduction. Such a reactivity pattern of the g = 12 form of the oxidase is also demonstrated with the ligands F- and NO, which are thought to bind to cytochrome a3 and CuB respectively.


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