Abstract
The His-44 and Met-164 residues of yeast cytochrome c1 are evolutionally conserved and regarded as heme axial ligands bonding to the fifth and sixth coordination sites of the heme iron, which is directly involved in the electron transfer mechanism. Oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis was used to generate mutant forms of cytochrome c1 of yeast having amino acid replacements of the putative axial ligands of the heme iron. When a cytochrome c1-deficiency yeast strain was transformed with a gene encoding the Phe-44, Tyr-44, Leu-164, or Lys-164 protein, none of these transformants could grow on the non-fermentable carbon source. These results suggest that the His-44 and Met-164 residues have a critical role in the function of cytochrome c1 in vivo, most probably as axial ligands of the heme iron. Further analysis revealed that the mutant yeast cells with the Phe-44, Tyr-44, or Leu-164 protein lacked the characteristic difference spectroscopic signal of cytochrome c1. However, in the Lys-164 mutant cells, partial recovery of the cytochrome c1 signal was observed. Moreover, the Lys-164 protein retained a low but significant level of succinate-cytochrome c reductase activity in vitro. The possibility that the nitrogen of Lys-164 served as the sixth heme ligand is discussed in comparison with cytochrome f of a photosynthetic electron-transfer complex, in which lysine has been proposed to be the sixth ligand.
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