Abstract

Gram-positive thermophilic Bacillus species contain cytochrome caa3-type cytochrome c oxidase as their main terminal oxidase in the respiratory chain. To identify alternative oxidases, we isolated several mutants from B. stearothermophilus defective in the caa3-type oxidase activity [Sakamoto, J. et al (1996) FEMS Microbiol. Lett. 143, 151-158]. A novel oxidase was isolated from membrane preparations of one of the mutants, K17. The oxidase was composed of two subunits with molecular masses of 56 and 19 kDa, and contained protoheme IX, heme O, heme A, and Cu in a ratio of 1:0.7:0.2:3. CO difference spectra indicate that the high-spin heme is mainly heme O. These results suggest that the enzyme belongs to the heme-copper oxidase family and is a cytochrome b(o/a)3-type oxidase, whose high-spin heme is mainly heme O and partly heme A. The enzyme oxidized cytochrome c-551, which is a membrane-bound lipoprotein of thermophilic Bacillus. The turnover rate of the activity (Vmax = 190 s[-1]) and its affinity for cytochrome c-551 (Km = 0.15 microM) were much higher than those for yeast and equine heart cytochromes c. The oxidase activity was enhanced by the presence of salts and inhibited by sodium cyanide with a Ki value of 19 microM. The enzyme kinetics suggests that cytochrome c-551 is the natural substrate to this oxidase. Furthermore, the oxidase had similarity to cytochrome ba3-type oxidase from Thermus thermophilus in the subunit composition, partial amino acid sequence, and prosthetic groups, and therefore is suggested to belong to a unique subgroup of the heme-copper oxidase family together with the Thermus enzyme and archaeal oxidases such as Sulfolobus SoxABCD.

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