Redox titration of all electron carriers of cytochrome c oxidase by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. 2006

Elena A Gorbikova, and Kai Vuorilehto, and Mårten Wikström, and Michael I Verkhovsky
Program for Structural Biology and Biophysics, Institute of Biotechnology, University of Helsinki, PB 65 (Viikinkaari 1), FIN-00014 Helsinki, Finland.

Electrochemical redox titrations of cytochrome c oxidase from Paraccocus denitrificans were performed by attenuated total reflectance Fourier transform infrared (ATR-FTIR) spectroscopy. The majority of the differential infrared absorption features may be divided into four groups, which correlate with the redox transitions of the four redox centers of the enzyme. Infrared spectroscopy has the advantage of allowing one to measure independent alterations in redox centers, which are not well separated, or even observed, by other spectroscopic techniques. We found 12 infrared bands that titrated with the highest observed midpoint redox potential (E(m) = 412 mV at pH 6.5) and which had a pH dependence of 52 mV per pH unit in the alkaline region. These bands were assigned to be linked to the Cu(B) center. We assigned bands to the Cu(A) center that showed a pH-independent E(m) of 250 mV. Two other groups of infrared differential bands reflected redox transitions of the two heme groups and showed a more complex behavior. Each of them included two parts, corresponding to high- and low-potential redox transitions. For the bands representing heme a, the ratio of high- to low-potential components was ca. 3:2; for heme a(3) this ratio was ca. 2:3. Taking into account the redox interactions between the hemes, these ratios yielded a difference in E(m) of 9 mV between the hemes (359 mV for heme a; 350 mV for heme a(3) at pH 8.0). The extent of the redox interaction between the hemes (-115 mV at pH 8.0) was found to be pH-dependent. The pH dependence of the E(m) values for the two hemes was the same and about two times smaller than the theoretical one, suggesting that an acid/base group binds a proton upon reduction of either heme. The applied approach allowed assignment of infrared bands in each of the four groups to vibrations of the hemes, ligands of the redox centers, amino acid residues, and/or protein backbone. For example, the well-known band shift at 1737/1746 cm(-)(1) corresponding to the protonated glutamic acid E278 correlated with oxidoreduction of heme a.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D010084 Oxidation-Reduction A chemical reaction in which an electron is transferred from one molecule to another. The electron-donating molecule is the reducing agent or reductant; the electron-accepting molecule is the oxidizing agent or oxidant. Reducing and oxidizing agents function as conjugate reductant-oxidant pairs or redox pairs (Lehninger, Principles of Biochemistry, 1982, p471). Redox,Oxidation Reduction
D010231 Paracoccus denitrificans A species of bacteria isolated from soil. Micrococcus denitrificans
D003300 Copper A heavy metal trace element with the atomic symbol Cu, atomic number 29, and atomic weight 63.55. Copper-63,Copper 63
D003576 Electron Transport Complex IV A multisubunit enzyme complex containing CYTOCHROME A GROUP; CYTOCHROME A3; two copper atoms; and 13 different protein subunits. It is the terminal oxidase complex of the RESPIRATORY CHAIN and collects electrons that are transferred from the reduced CYTOCHROME C GROUP and donates them to molecular OXYGEN, which is then reduced to water. The redox reaction is simultaneously coupled to the transport of PROTONS across the inner mitochondrial membrane. Cytochrome Oxidase,Cytochrome aa3,Cytochrome-c Oxidase,Cytochrome Oxidase Subunit III,Cytochrome a,a3,Cytochrome c Oxidase Subunit VIa,Cytochrome-c Oxidase (Complex IV),Cytochrome-c Oxidase Subunit III,Cytochrome-c Oxidase Subunit IV,Ferrocytochrome c Oxygen Oxidoreductase,Heme aa3 Cytochrome Oxidase,Pre-CTOX p25,Signal Peptide p25-Subunit IV Cytochrome Oxidase,Subunit III, Cytochrome Oxidase,p25 Presequence Peptide-Cytochrome Oxidase,Cytochrome c Oxidase,Cytochrome c Oxidase Subunit III,Cytochrome c Oxidase Subunit IV,Oxidase, Cytochrome,Oxidase, Cytochrome-c,Signal Peptide p25 Subunit IV Cytochrome Oxidase,p25 Presequence Peptide Cytochrome Oxidase
D004563 Electrochemistry The study of chemical changes resulting from electrical action and electrical activity resulting from chemical changes. Electrochemistries
D006418 Heme The color-furnishing portion of hemoglobin. It is found free in tissues and as the prosthetic group in many hemeproteins. Ferroprotoporphyrin,Protoheme,Haem,Heme b,Protoheme IX
D006863 Hydrogen-Ion Concentration The normality of a solution with respect to HYDROGEN ions; H+. It is related to acidity measurements in most cases by pH pH,Concentration, Hydrogen-Ion,Concentrations, Hydrogen-Ion,Hydrogen Ion Concentration,Hydrogen-Ion Concentrations
D017186 Titrimetry The determination of the concentration of a given component in solution (the analyte) by addition of a liquid reagent of known strength (the titrant) until an equivalence point is reached (when the reactants are present in stoichiometric proportions). Often an indicator is added to make the equivalence point visible (e.g., a change in color).
D017550 Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared A spectroscopic technique in which a range of wavelengths is presented simultaneously with an interferometer and the spectrum is mathematically derived from the pattern thus obtained. FTIR,Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy,Spectroscopy, Infrared, Fourier Transform

Related Publications

Elena A Gorbikova, and Kai Vuorilehto, and Mårten Wikström, and Michael I Verkhovsky
April 2004, Biophysical journal,
Elena A Gorbikova, and Kai Vuorilehto, and Mårten Wikström, and Michael I Verkhovsky
July 2020, Molecules (Basel, Switzerland),
Elena A Gorbikova, and Kai Vuorilehto, and Mårten Wikström, and Michael I Verkhovsky
February 1989, Biochemistry,
Elena A Gorbikova, and Kai Vuorilehto, and Mårten Wikström, and Michael I Verkhovsky
August 1996, Biophysical journal,
Elena A Gorbikova, and Kai Vuorilehto, and Mårten Wikström, and Michael I Verkhovsky
October 1986, The Journal of biological chemistry,
Elena A Gorbikova, and Kai Vuorilehto, and Mårten Wikström, and Michael I Verkhovsky
January 1976, Science (New York, N.Y.),
Elena A Gorbikova, and Kai Vuorilehto, and Mårten Wikström, and Michael I Verkhovsky
January 1993, Methods in enzymology,
Elena A Gorbikova, and Kai Vuorilehto, and Mårten Wikström, and Michael I Verkhovsky
January 1997, Advances in experimental medicine and biology,
Elena A Gorbikova, and Kai Vuorilehto, and Mårten Wikström, and Michael I Verkhovsky
January 1981, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America,
Copied contents to your clipboard!