The kinetic properties of the ba3 oxidase from Thermus thermophilus were investigated by stopped-flow spectroscopy in the temperature range of 5- 70 °C. Peculiar behavior in the reaction with physiological substrates and classical ligands (CO and CN-) was observed. In the O2 reaction, the decay of the F intermediate is significantly slower (k' = 100 s-1 at 5 °C) than in the mitochondrial enzyme, with an activation energy E(*) of 10.1 ± 0.9 kcal mol-1. The cyanide-inhibited ba3 oxidizes cyt c522 quickly (k ? 5 x 106 M-1 s-1 at 25 °C) and selectively, with an activation energy E(*) of 10.9 ± 0.9 kcal mol-1, but slowly oxidizes ruthenium hexamine, a fast electron donor for the mitochondrial enzyme. Cyt c552 oxidase activity is enhanced up to 60 °C and is maximal at extremely low ionic strengths, excluding formation of a high-affinity cyt c522-ba3 electrostatic complex. The thermophilic oxidase is less sensitive to cyanide inhibition, although cyanide binding under turnover is much quicker (seconds) than in the fully oxidized state (days). Finally, the affinity of reduced ba3 for CO at 20 °C (K(eq) = 1 x 105 M-1) was found to be smaller than that of beef heart aa3 (K(eq) = 4 x 106 M-1), partly because of an unusually fast, strongly temperature-dependent CO dissociation from cyt a3 2+ of ba3 (k' = 0.8 s-1 vs k' = 0.02 s-1 for beef heart aa3 at 20 °C). The relevance of these results to adaptation of respiratory activity to high temperatures and low environmental O2 tensions is discussed.

Kinetic properties of ba3 oxidase from Thermus thermophilus: Effect of temperature

Giuffrè A;
1999

Abstract

The kinetic properties of the ba3 oxidase from Thermus thermophilus were investigated by stopped-flow spectroscopy in the temperature range of 5- 70 °C. Peculiar behavior in the reaction with physiological substrates and classical ligands (CO and CN-) was observed. In the O2 reaction, the decay of the F intermediate is significantly slower (k' = 100 s-1 at 5 °C) than in the mitochondrial enzyme, with an activation energy E(*) of 10.1 ± 0.9 kcal mol-1. The cyanide-inhibited ba3 oxidizes cyt c522 quickly (k ? 5 x 106 M-1 s-1 at 25 °C) and selectively, with an activation energy E(*) of 10.9 ± 0.9 kcal mol-1, but slowly oxidizes ruthenium hexamine, a fast electron donor for the mitochondrial enzyme. Cyt c552 oxidase activity is enhanced up to 60 °C and is maximal at extremely low ionic strengths, excluding formation of a high-affinity cyt c522-ba3 electrostatic complex. The thermophilic oxidase is less sensitive to cyanide inhibition, although cyanide binding under turnover is much quicker (seconds) than in the fully oxidized state (days). Finally, the affinity of reduced ba3 for CO at 20 °C (K(eq) = 1 x 105 M-1) was found to be smaller than that of beef heart aa3 (K(eq) = 4 x 106 M-1), partly because of an unusually fast, strongly temperature-dependent CO dissociation from cyt a3 2+ of ba3 (k' = 0.8 s-1 vs k' = 0.02 s-1 for beef heart aa3 at 20 °C). The relevance of these results to adaptation of respiratory activity to high temperatures and low environmental O2 tensions is discussed.
1999
Istituto di Biologia e Patologia Molecolari - IBPM
carbon monoxide
cyanide
cytochrome c oxidase
ruthenium derivative
cytochrome b
cytochrome ba3
cytochrome c oxidase
enzyme inhibitor
oxygen
sodium cyanide
article
dissociation
enzyme inhibition
enzyme kinetics
ionic strength
nonhuman
oxidation
priority journal
temperature sensitivity
thermus thermophilus
binding site
chemistry
drug antagonism
electron transport
enzyme activation
enzymology
kinetics
osmolarity
polarogr
spectrophotometry
spectroscopy
temperature
Thermus thermophilus
Binding Sites
Carbon Monoxide
Cytochrome b Group
Electron Transport
Electron Transport Complex IV
Enzyme Activation
Enzyme Inhibitors
Kinetics
Osmolar Concentration
Oxygen
Polarography
Sodium Cyanide
Spectrophotometry
Spectrum Analysis
Temperature
Thermus thermophilus
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/241601
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