Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:1.11.1.7 (
peroxidase
)
65,474
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Staining of glutaraldehyde-fixed mammalian cells with peroxidatic enzymes (horseradish
peroxidase
or horse heart cytochrome c) greatly enhances resolution of their structure under phase microscopy. The topography of cell processes and regions of intercellular contact and overlapping is resolved precisely, even in dense cultures mounted in media which ordinarily do not permit clear demonstration of these areas. The technique is therefore a useful aid to the study of cultured cells with phase optics. Labeling depends on introducing free aldehydes into cells through the use of bifunctional fixatives such as glutaraldehyde. Acetone or formaldehyde fixation prevents staining, and labeling intensity is greatly diminished by pretreatment with spermine, a polyamine that reacts with glutaraldehyde. Electron microscopy reveals that
peroxidase
tags membranes preferentially; some areas are labeled smoothly, others in a punctate manner. Ribosomes are sharply contrasted, but nuclei remain unstained.
Cytochrome c
labels condensed nuclear chromatin intensely, and also stains ribosomes and portions of the cytoplasmic ground substance; membranes are mostly unmarked.
...
PMID:Use of peroxidatic-enzyme staining to enhance resolution of cultured mammalian cells under phase microscopy. 4 31
Cytochrome c
oxidase from baker's yeast contains three mitochondrially made subunits (I to III) which are relatively hydrophobic and four cytoplasmically made subunits (IV to VII) which are relatively hydrophilic (Mason, T. L., Poyton, R. O., Wharton, D.C., and Schatz, G. (1973) J. Biol. Chem. 248, 1346-1354 and Poyton, R. O., and Schatz, G. (1975) J. Biol. Chem. 250, 752-761). In order to explore the arrangement of these subunits in the holoenzyme, the reactivity of each subunit with a variety of "surface probes" was tested with isolated cytochrome c oxidase, with cytochrome c oxidase incorporated into liposomes, and with mitochondrially bound cytochrome c oxidase. The surface probes included iodination with
lactoperoxidase
and coupling with p-diazonium benzenesulfonate. In addition, external subunits were identified by linking them to bovine serum albumin carrying a covalently bound isocyanate group. In the membrane-bound enzyme, Subunit I was almost completely inaccessible and Subunit II was partly inaccessible to all surface probes. All of the other subunits were accessible. Similar results were obtained with the solubilized enzyme, except that the differences in reactivity between the individual subunits were less clear-cut. The results obtained with liposome-bound cytochrome c oxidase resembled those obtained with the mitochondrially bound enzyme. These data suggest that the two largest mitochondrially made subunits are localized in the interior of the enzyme and that they are genuine components of cytochrome c oxidase.
...
PMID:Cytochrome c oxidase from bakers' yeast. V. Arrangement of the subunits in the isolated and membrane-bound enzyme. 16 35
Cytochrome c
peroxidase
, a cytoplasmically made enzyme located between the inner and outer membrane of yeast mitochondria, is synthesized as larger precursor in a reticulocyte cell-free lysate as well as in pulsed yeast spheroplasts. When the pulsed spheroplasts are chased, the precursor is converted to the mature apoprotein. When the in vitro synthesized precursor is incubated with isolated yeast mitochondria in the absence of protein synthesis, it is cleaved to the mature form; the mature form co-sediments with the mitochondria and is resistant to externally added proteases. These results, in conjunction with those reported earlier (Maccecchini, M.-L., Rudin, Y., Blobel, G., and Schatz, G. (1979) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 76, 343-347) suggest that the mechanism of protein transport into the mitochondrial intermembrane space is quite similar to that of protein transport into the matrix or the inner membrane.
...
PMID:Transport of proteins across the mitochondrial outer membrane. A precursor form of the cytoplasmically made intermembrane enzyme cytochrome c peroxidase. 22 28
Cytochrome c
peroxidase
(CCP) is a nuclearly encoded hemoprotein located in the intermembrane space (IMS) of Saccharomyces cerevisiae mitochondria. Wild-type preCCP synthesized in rabbit reticulocyte lysates, however, was inefficiently translocated into isolated mitochondria and was inherently resistant to externally added proteases. To test whether premature heme addition to the apoprecursor was responsible for the protease resistance and the inability to import preCCP, site-directed mutagenesis was used to replace the axial heme ligand (His175) involved in forming a pseudo-covalent link between the heme iron and CCP. Mutant proteins containing Leu, Arg, Met, or Pro at residue 175 of mature CCP were sensitive to proteolysis and were imported into isolated mitochondria as judged by proteolytic processing of the precursor. The inhibition of wild-type CCP translocation across the outer membrane may result from the inability of the heme-containing protein to unfold during the translocation process. Although the protease responsible for cleaving preCCP to its mature form is believed to be located in the IMS, most of the processed CCP was located in the supernatant rather than the mitochondrial pellet. Since the outer membranes were shown to be intact, the anomalous localization indicated that preCCP may not have been completely translocated into the IMS before proteolytic processing or that conformationally labile proteins may not be retained by the outer membrane. Proteolytic maturation of preCCP also occurred in the presence of valinomycin, suggesting that the precursor may be completely or partially translocated across the outer mitochondrial membrane independent of a potential across the inner mitochondrial membrane.
...
PMID:In vitro import of cytochrome c peroxidase into the intermembrane space: release of the processed form by intact mitochondria. 254 24
Cytochrome c
peroxidase
, freshly prepared, contains a penta-coordinated heme iron and is fully reactive with hydroperoxides. On the other hand, the enzyme normally stored in frozen states invariably contains different amounts of an altered, aged species whose heme iron is hexa-coordinated. The aged enzyme reacts with hydroperoxides only after a slow conformation change leading to the formation of a reactive penta-coordinated state. Thus, the reactivity of cytochrome c peroxidase with hydroperoxides is strongly controlled by the coordination state of the heme iron. A penta-coordinated heme iron may be a prerequisite for rapid reactions of hydroperoxidases with hydroperoxides.
...
PMID:The coordination and spin states of yeast cytochrome c peroxidase and their implication to peroxidase mechanism. 284 76
The site of superoxide production in spinach thylakoids was found to be the aprotic interior of the thylakoid membranes near the P700 chlorophyll a protein at the reaction center of photosystem I complexes. This conclusion was drawn from the following findings. (i)
Cytochrome c
reduction by illuminated thylakoids, which was confirmed to be superoxide dependent by the failure of this reaction to occur in anaerobiosis, was completely inhibited by a dibutyl catechol, but partially inhibited by a hydrophilic disulfonated derivative. (ii) P700 chlorophyll a proteins were preferentially iodinated by
lactoperoxidase
by the use of hydrogen peroxide that was derived from the disproportionation of superoxides in illuminated thylakoids. (iii) Hydrogen peroxide production and oxygen uptake were induced by ammonium chloride, a proton conductor that can permeate through thylakoid membranes, but whole superoxide in the bulk solution was oxidized back to molecular oxygen by cytochrome c. The effective concentration of ammonium chloride decreased to one-sixtieth of the original, when an ammonium ion ionophore, nonactin, was added. Thus, the weak acid allowed superoxide to yield hydrogen peroxide disproportionately in the thylakoid membrane interior.
...
PMID:Superoxide production in aprotic interior of chloroplast thylakoids. 285 Jul 70
Cytochrome c
peroxidase
undergoes a complex series of transitions between pH 8 and 14. Seven distinct spectral transitions occur between 4 ms and 24 h after exposure to alkaline pH. The fastest transition occurs within the mixing time of a stopped-flow instrument and converts the native high-spin ferric form of the enzyme to a low-spin form which may be the hydroxy complex of the enzyme. An apparent pKa of 9.7 +/- 0.2 relates the native and initial alkaline form of the enzyme. Three other low-spin enzyme forms are evident from the experimental data prior to denaturation of the enzyme and complete exposure of the heme to the solvent. The final denaturation process occurs with an apparent pKa of 10.3 +/- 0.3.
...
PMID:A kinetic study of the alkaline transitions in cytochrome c peroxidase. 298 57
Cytochrome c
peroxidase
(CcP) and
horseradish peroxidase (HRP)
, when combined with a stoichiometric amount of H2O2, form stable compounds I which are known as FeIV Ro and FeIV o pi + structures, respectively. These compounds were assayed in the catalysis of thyroid hormone synthesis and the iodination reaction. As previously shown for the
lactoperoxidase
FeIV Ro compound, the CcP FeIV Ro compound was involved in the coupling and not in the iodination reactions. In contrast, the HRP FeIV o pi + compound catalyzed both iodination and hormone formation. The possible role of the different
peroxidase
-H2O2 compounds in the two sequential reactions, thyroglobulin iodination and thyroid hormone formation, is discussed.
...
PMID:Thyroid hormone synthesis and thyroglobulin iodination related to the peroxidase localization of oxidizing equivalents: studies with cytochrome c peroxidase and horseradish peroxidase. 298 16
Cytochrome c
peroxidase
and cytochrome c form a noncovalent electron transfer complex in the course of the
peroxidase
-catalyzed reduction of H2O2. The two hemoproteins were cross-linked in 40% yield to a covalent 1:1 complex with the aid of 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide. The covalent complex was found to be a valid model of the noncovalent electron transfer complex for the following reasons. The covalent complex had only 5% residual
peroxidase
activity toward exogeneous ferrocytochrome c indicating that the cross-linked cytochrome c covers the electron-accepting site of cytochrome c peroxidase. The residual
peroxidase
activity was almost independent of ionic strength indicating that the electron-accepting site is much less accessible even when ionic bonds between the two cross-linked hemoproteins are severed. The rate of reduction of heme c by ascorbate is 15 times slower in the covalent complex than in free cytochrome c and is independent of ionic strength. Although the covalent complex may not have been entirely pure with respect to the number and location of the cross-links, two major cross-links could be localized to within a few residues. One is from Lys 13 of cytochrome c to an acidic residue in positions 32, 33, 34, 35, or 37 of cytochrome c peroxidase, the other from Lys 86 of cytochrome c to a carboxyl group in the same cluster of acidic residues. The result stresses the importance of a peculiar stretch of acidic residues of cytochrome c peroxidase and of Lys 13 and 86 of cytochrome c.
...
PMID:Structure of an electron transfer complex. I. Covalent cross-linking of cytochrome c peroxidase and cytochrome c. 298 78
Cytochrome c
peroxidase
forms an electron transfer complex with cytochrome c. The complex is governed by ionic bonds between side chain amino groups of cytochrome c and carboxyl groups of
peroxidase
. To localize the binding site for cytochrome c on the
peroxidase
, we have used the method of differential chemical modification. By this method the chemical reactivity of carboxyl groups (toward carbodiimide/aminoethane sulfonate) was compared in free and in complexed
peroxidase
. When ferricytochrome c was bound to cytochrome c peroxidase, acidic residues 33, 34, 35, 37, 221, 224, and 1 to 3 carboxyls at the C terminus became less reactive by a factor of approximately 4, relative to the remaining 39 carboxylates of
peroxidase
. Of the less reactive residues those in the 30-40 region and the 221/224 pair are on opposite sides of the surface area which contains the heme propionates. We, therefore, propose that the binding site for cytochrome c on cytochrome c peroxidase spans the area where one heme edge comes close to the molecular surface. The results are in very good agreement with chemical cross-linking studies (Waldmeyer, B., and Bosshard, H.R. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 5184-5190); they also support a hypothetical model predicted on the basis of the known crystal structures of cytochrome c and
peroxidase
(Poulos, T.L., and Kraut, J. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 10322-10330).
...
PMID:Structure of an electron transfer complex. II. Chemical modification of carboxyl groups of cytochrome c peroxidase in presence and absence of cytochrome c. 298 79
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>