Oxidation-reduction potentials and absorption spectra of two b-type cytochromes from the halophilic archaebacterium, Halobacterium halobium. 1987

C H Gradin, and A Colmsjö

The oxidation-reduction midpoint potentials were determined for two b-type cytochromes, which had been solubilized from the membrane of Halobacterium halobium and partially purified. The two b-type cytochromes have oxidation-reduction midpoint potentials of 175 and 7 mV, respectively. These b-type cytochromes could also be resolved by difference absorption spectroscopy, which revealed one b-type cytochrome with absorption maximum (alpha-peak) at 558 nm, reducible by ascorbate-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine, and the other with absorption maximum (alpha-peak) at 560 nm, reducible by dithionite. Different substrates such as succinate, NADH, and alpha-glycerophosphate were used to study the b-type cytochromes in situ when bound to the membrane in a functional state. Reducing equivalents from succinate and alpha-glycerophosphate appear to enter the respiratory chain at the 175 mV b-type cytochrome. Cytochrome a3 is spectrophotometrically shown to be present in the membrane of H. halobium.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D007202 Indicators and Reagents Substances used for the detection, identification, analysis, etc. of chemical, biological, or pathologic processes or conditions. Indicators are substances that change in physical appearance, e.g., color, at or approaching the endpoint of a chemical titration, e.g., on the passage between acidity and alkalinity. Reagents are substances used for the detection or determination of another substance by chemical or microscopical means, especially analysis. Types of reagents are precipitants, solvents, oxidizers, reducers, fluxes, and colorimetric reagents. (From Grant & Hackh's Chemical Dictionary, 5th ed, p301, p499) Indicator,Reagent,Reagents,Indicators,Reagents and Indicators
D007700 Kinetics The rate dynamics in chemical or physical systems.
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
D003573 Cytochrome b Group Cytochromes (electron-transporting proteins) with protoheme (HEME B) as the prosthetic group. Cytochromes Type b,Cytochromes, Heme b,Group, Cytochrome b,Heme b Cytochromes,Type b, Cytochromes,b Cytochromes, Heme,b Group, Cytochrome
D006217 Halobacterium A genus of HALOBACTERIACEAE whose growth requires a high concentration of salt. Binary fission is by constriction.
D013053 Spectrophotometry The art or process of comparing photometrically the relative intensities of the light in different parts of the spectrum.

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