Abstract

The pH dependence of the conformation of cytochrome a in bovine cytochrome c oxidase has been studied by second derivative absorption spectroscopy. At neutral pH, the second derivative spectra of the cyanide-inhibited fully reduced and mixed valence enzyme display two Soret electronic transitions, at 443 and 451 nm, associated with cytochrome a. As the pH is lowered these two bands collapse into a single transition at approximately 444 nm. pH titration of the cyanide-inhibited mixed valence enzyme suggests that the transition from the two-band to one-band spectrum obeys the Henderson Hasselbalch relationship for a single protonation event with a transition pKa of 6.6 +/- 0.1. No pH dependence is observed for the spectra of the fully reduced unliganded or CO-inhibited enzyme. Tryptophan fluorescence spectra of the enzyme indicate that no major disruption of protein structure occurs in the pH range 5.5-8.5 used in this study. Resonance Raman spectroscopy indicates that the cytochrome a3 chromophore remains in its ferric, cyanide-bound form in the mixed valence enzyme throughout the pH range used here. These data indicate that the transition observed by second derivative spectroscopy is not due simply to pH-induced protein denaturation or disruption of the cytochrome a3 iron-CN bond. The pH dependence observed here is in good agreement with those observed earlier for the midpoint reduction potential of cytochrome a and for the conformational transition associated with energy transduction in the proton pumping model of Malmström (Malmström, B. G. (1990) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 280, 233-241). These results are discussed in terms of a model for allosteric communication between cytochrome a and the binuclear ligand binding center of the enzyme that is mediated by ionization of a single group within the protein.

Highlights

  • The couplingof electron transfer reactions to theformation of transmembrane electrochemical gradients is the fundamental mechanism by which respiratory energy transduction occurs in mitochondria and aerobic bacteria (1).One of the primary sites of this coupling is cytochrome c oxidase, a metallocofactors of cytochrome c oxidase, our group has recently introduced the use of second derivative absorption spectroscopy (9)

  • We find that the individual electronic transitions of cytochrome a and cytochrome a3 can be resolved by this method

  • We have further shown that this conformational switching at cytochrome a occurs during steady state turnover of the bovine enzyme, suggesting that it is part of the normal catalytic mechanism of cytochrome c oxidase (10)

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Summary

The pH Dependence of Cytochrome a Conformation in Cytochrome c Oxidase*

Mophore remains in its ferric, cyanide-bound form in While the identity of the site of energy transduction rethe mixed valence enzyme throughout the pH range mains unresolved, theoretical studies have suggested certain used here. These data indicate that the transitionob- properties for the site of coupling in cytochrome c oxidase. It served by second derivative spectroscopy is not due is generally agreed that the energy-transducing metal center to pH-induced protein denaturation or disrup- must have two conformations available to it in bothits tion of the cytochrome a3 iron-CN bond. Some pH dependence of the reduction potential of the energy transducing metal is expected

To better follow thestructuraltransitions of the heme
MATERIALS ANDMETHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
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