Abstract

Beef heart cytochrome c oxidase is dimeric in reconstituted membranes and in nonionic detergents at physiological pH [Henderson, R., Capaldi, R. A., & Leigh, J. (1977) J. Mol. Biol. 112, 631; Robinson, N.C., & Capaldi, R. A. (1977) Biochemistry 16, 375], raising the possibility that this aggregation state is a prerequisite for enzymatic activity. A procedure for dissociating the enzyme into monomers is presented. This involves treating the protein with high concentrations of Triton X-100 at pH 8.5. The electron transfer activity of the monomer is comparable to that of the dimer under identical assay conditions. The beef heart cytochrome c oxidase monomer was found to be heterogeneous in hydrodynamic studies, probably due to dissociation of associated polypeptides, including subunit III. Monomer molecular weights in the range 129 000-160 000 were obtained. Previous studies have indicated that shark heart cytochrome c oxidase is monomeric under physiological conditions. Sedimentation equilibrium studies reported here confirm this. The elasmobranch enzyme, with a similar polypeptide composition to that of beef enzyme, was determined to have a molecular weight of 158 000.

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