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Query: UNIPROT:O14944 (EPR)
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A simple procedure for preparation of highly purified soluble succinate-ubiquinone reductase from bovine heart mitochondrial particles is described. The enzyme exhibits four major bands on sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis and contains (nmol per mg protein): covalently bound flavin, 6; non-heme iron, 53; acid-labile sulfur, 50; cytochrome b-560 heme, 1.2. The enzyme catalyzes thenoyltrifluoroacetone, or carboxin-sensitive (pure non-competitive with Q2) reduction of Q2 by succinate with a turnover number close to that in parent submitochondrial particles. The succinate reduced enzyme exhibits ferredoxin-type iron-sulfur center EPR-signal (g = 1.94 species) and a semiquinone signal (g = 2.00). An oxidized preparation shows a symmetric signal centered around g = 2.01. An unusual dissociation of the enzyme in the absence of a detergent is described. When added to the assay mixture from a concentrated protein-detergent solution, the enzyme does not reduce Q2 being highly reactive towards ferricyanide ('low Km ferricyanide reactive site'; Vinogradov, A.D., Gavrikova, E.V. and Goloveshkina, V.G. (1975) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 65, 1264-1269). The ubiquinone reductase, not the ferricyanide reductase was observed when the enzyme was added to the assay mixture from the diluted protein-detergent solutions. Thus the dissociation of succinate dehydrogenase from the complex occurs in the absence of a detergent dependent on the concentration of the protein-detergent complex in the stock preparation where the samples for the assay are taken from. An active antimycin-sensitive succinate-cytochrome c reductase was reconstituted by admixing of the soluble succinate-ubiquinone reductase and the cytochrome b-c1 complex, i.e., from the complexes which both contain the ubiquinone reactivity conferring protein (QPs). Cytochrome c reductase was also reconstituted from the succinate-ubiquinone reductase and succinate-cytochrome c reductase containing inactivated succinate dehydrogenase. The reconstitution experiments suggest that there exists a specific protein-protein (or lipid) interaction between QPs and a certain component(s) of the b-c1 complex.
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PMID:Studies on the succinate dehydrogenating system. Isolation and properties of the mitochondrial succinate-ubiquinone reductase. 299 19

A non-photosynthetic mutant (Ps-) of Rhodopseudomonas capsulata, designated R126, was analyzed for a defect in the cyclic electron transfer system. Compared to a Ps+ strain MR126, the mutant was shown to have a full complement of electron transfer components (reaction centers, ubiquinone-10, cytochromes b, c1, and c2, the Rieske 2-iron, 2-sulfur (Rieske FeS) center, and the antimycin-sensitive semiquinone). Functionally, mutant R126 failed to catalyze complete cytochrome c1 + c2 re-reduction or cytochrome b reduction following a short (10 microseconds) flash of actinic light. Evidence (from flash-induced carotenoid band shift) was characteristic of inhibition of electron transfer proximal to cytochrome c1 of the ubiquinol-cytochrome c2 oxidoreductase. Three lines of evidence indicate that the lesion of R126 disrupts electron transfer from quinol to Rieske FeS: 1) the degree of cytochrome c1 + c2 re-reduction following a flash is indicative of electron transfer from Rieske FeS to cytochrome c1 + c2 without redox equilibration with an additional electron from a quinol; 2) inhibitors that act at the Qz site and raise the Rieske FeS midpoint redox potential (Em), namely 5-undecyl-6-hydroxy-4,7-dioxobenzothiazole or 3-alkyl-2-hydroxy-1,4-napthoquinone, have no effect on cytochrome c1 + c2 oxidation in R126; 3) the Rieske FeS center, although it exhibits normal redox behavior, is unable to report the redox state of the quinone pool, as metered by its EPR line shape properties. Flash-induced proton binding in R126 is indicative of normal functional primary (QA) and secondary (QB) electron acceptor activity of the photosynthetic reaction center. The Qc functional site of cytochrome bc1 is intact in R126 as measured by the existence of antimycin-sensitive, flash-induced cytochrome b reduction.
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PMID:Discrete catalytic sites for quinone in the ubiquinol-cytochrome c2 oxidoreductase of Rhodopseudomonas capsulata. Evidence from a mutant defective in ubiquinol oxidation. 300 Oct 72

A ubiquinol-cytochrome c oxidoreductase (cytochrome bc1) complex has been purified from the plasma membrane of aerobically grown Paracoccus denitrificans by extraction with dodecyl maltoside and ion exchange chromatography of the extract. The purified complex contains two spectrally and thermodynamically distinct b cytochromes, cytochrome c1, and a Rieske-type iron-sulfur protein. Optical spectra indicate absorption peaks at 553 nm for cytochrome c1 and at 560 and 566 nm for the high and low potential hemes of cytochrome b. The spectrum of cytochrome b560 is shifted to longer wavelength by antimycin. The Paracoccus bc1 complex consists of only three polypeptide subunits. On the basis of their relative electrophoretic mobilities, these have apparent molecular masses of 62, 39, and 20 kDa. The 62- and 39-kDa subunits have been identified as cytochromes c1 and b, respectively. The 20-kDa subunit is assumed to be the Rieske-type iron-sulfur protein on the basis of its molecular weight and the presence of an EPR-detectable signal typical of this iron-sulfur protein in the three-subunit complex. The Paracoccus bc1 complex catalyzes reduction of cytochrome c by ubiquinol with a turnover of 470 s-1. This activity is inhibited by antimycin, myxothiazol, stigmatellin, and hydroxyquinone analogues of ubiquinone, all of which inhibit electron transfer in the cytochrome bc1 complex of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. The electron transfer functions of the Paracoccus complex thus appear to be similar, and possibly identical, to those of the bc1 complex of eukaryotic mitochondria. The Paracoccus bc1 complex has the simplest subunit composition and one of the highest turnover numbers of any bc1 complex isolated from any species to date. These properties suggest that the structural requirements for electron transfer from ubiquinol to cytochrome c are met by a small number of peptides and that the "extra" peptides occurring in the mitochondrial bc1 complexes serve some other function(s), possibly in biogenesis or insertion of the complex into that organelle.
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PMID:Purification of a three-subunit ubiquinol-cytochrome c oxidoreductase complex from Paracoccus denitrificans. 301 70

QP-S, a ubiquinone (Q) protein, accepts electrons from succinate through succinate dehydrogenase (SDH). A new method has produced a preparation of QP-S which has a different amino acid composition and SDS gel electrophoretic pattern from that of the old preparation (Biochemistry 19, 3579-3585 (1980)). The new preparation contains less than 1 nmol heme/mg protein; the activity of the preparation was not proportional to its heme content. A thenoyltrifluoroacetone sensitive free radical signal was detected by EPR spectroscopy in succinate-Q reductase reconstituted from this QP-S and SDH; the characteristics of this species identify it as ubisemiquinone. At pH 7.4, the Em of the two electron step was about 70 mV with E1 = 5 mV and E2 = 125 mV. The properties of the radical differed slightly from those of "Qs" radical in more intact preparations (e.g. submitochondrial particles). The present is the simplest system in which such a succinate reducible ubisemiquinone free radical has been demonstrated.
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PMID:Stabilized ubisemiquinone in reconstituted succinate ubiquinone reductase. 303 47

The pre-steady-state kinetics of the reduction of the prosthetic groups of QH2:cytochrome c oxidoreductase in bovine heart submitochondrial particles were studied in relation to the kinetics of the Q-10 reduction, using duroquinol as substrate. The prosthetic groups, including semiquinone, were measured with EPR and low-temperature-diffuse reflectance spectroscopy, the samples being prepared with the rapid-freeze quench technique. For the determination of the redox state of ubiquinone in the pre-steady state the rapid chemical quench technique was used as an extension of the rapid-freeze quench technique, and Q-10 and QH2-10 were measured with reversed-phase HPLC after extraction with petroleum ether. Ubiquinone was reduced biphasically, 8% of total Q-10 (equal to 1 mol Q-10/mol cytochrome c1), being reduced within 5 ms, and the rest, the Q-pool, at a much lower rate. The initial rapid reduction of this special Q-10 was accompanied by rapid formation of Qi and rapid reduction of a large part of the cytochrome b-562. Both semiquinone formation and reduction of b-562 showed transient kinetics due to a contribution of the reaction pathway via centre o when the iron-sulphur cluster and cytochrome c1 were oxidised. The majority of the special quinol was located at centre i, probably bound, but also at centre o some bound quinol was formed. This was visible when antimycin was present, the antimycin-insensitive bound quinol being totally sensitive to myxothiazol. Myxothiazol alone accelerated the reduction of the Q-pool via centre i, but also the equilibration of cytochrome b-562 with the Q-pool. Antimycin drastically lowered the rate of reduction of the Q-pool and additionally seemed to block the rapid electron transfer from part of the Rieske iron-sulphur cluster to cytochrome c1. It is concluded that, during the pre-steady-state, cytochrome b-562 is not in equilibrium with the Q-pool and that the rate of equilibration is probably determined by the rate of dissociation of the special bound quinol from centre i.
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PMID:Pre-steady-state reduction kinetics of QH2:cytochrome c oxidoreductase and the Q-pool: evidence for a special quinone not in rapid equilibrium with the Q-pool. 303 26

The ubiquinol-cytochrome c oxidoreductase (cytochrome bc1) complex from Paracoccus denitrificans exhibits a thermodynamically stable ubisemiquinone radical detectable by EPR spectroscopy. The radical is centered at g = 2.004, is sensitive to antimycin, and has a midpoint potential at pH 8.5 of +42 mV. These properties are very similar to those of the stable ubisemiquinone (Qi) previously characterized in the cytochrome bc1 complexes of mitochondria. The micro-environment of the Rieske iron-sulfur cluster in the Paracoccus cytochrome bc1 complex changes in parallel with the redox state of the ubiquinone pool. This change is manifested as shifts in the gx, gy, and gz values of the iron-sulfur cluster EPR signal from 1.80, 1.89, and 2.02 to 1.76, 1.90, and 2.03, respectively, as ubiquinone is reduced to ubiquinol. The spectral shift is accompanied by a broadening of the signal and follows a two electron reduction curve, with a midpoint potential at pH 8.5 of +30 mV. A hydroxy analogue of ubiquinone, UHDBT, which inhibits respiration in the cytochrome bc1 complex, shifts the gx, gy, and gz values of the iron-sulfur cluster EPR signal to 1.78, 1.89, and 2.03, respectively, and raises the midpoint potential of the iron-sulfur cluster at pH 7.5 from +265 to +320 mV. These changes in the micro-environment of the Paracoccus Rieske iron-sulfur cluster are like those elicited in mitochondria. These results indicate that the cytochrome bc1 complex of P. denitrificans has a binding site for ubisemiquinone and that this site confers properties on the bound ubisemiquinone similar to those in mitochondria. In addition, the line shape of the Rieske iron-sulfur cluster changes in response to the oxidation-reduction status of ubiquinone, and the midpoint of the iron-sulfur cluster increases in the presence of a hydroxyquinone analogue of ubiquinone. The latter results are also similar to those observed in the mitochondrial cytochrome bc1 complex. However, unlike the mitochondrial complexes, which contain eight to 11 polypeptides and are thought to contain distinct quinone binding proteins, the Paracoccus cytochrome bc1 complex contains only three polypeptide subunits, cytochromes b, c1, and iron-sulfur protein. The ubisemiquinone binding site and the site at which ubiquinone and/or ubiquinol bind to affect the Rieske iron-sulfur cluster in Paracoccus thus exist in the absence of any distinct quinone binding proteins and must be composed of domains contributed by the cytochromes and/or iron-sulfur protein.
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PMID:Identification of a stable ubisemiquinone and characterization of the effects of ubiquinone oxidation-reduction status on the Rieske iron-sulfur protein in the three-subunit ubiquinol-cytochrome c oxidoreductase complex of Paracoccus denitrificans. 303 22

We have investigated in detail the effects of dibromothymoquinone (2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone, DBMIB) on the ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase (cytochrome bc1 complex) from bovine heart mitochondria. The inhibitory action of DBMIB on the steady-state activity of the bc1 complex is related to the specific binding of the quinone to the purified enzymatic complex. At concentrations higher than 10 mol per mol of the enzyme, DBMIB is able to stimulate an antimycin-insensitive reduction of cytochrome c catalyzed by the bc1 complex. In accordance with kinetic data showing a competition by endogenous ubiquinone in the inhibitory action, DBMIB can be considered as a product-like inhibitor of the ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase activity. The site of specific binding of dibromothymoquinone in the bc1 complex enables it to interact with the iron-sulphur center of the enzyme, as indicated by changes induced in the EPR spectrum of the center. However, the inhibitor also directly interacts with cytochrome b, promoting a fast chemical oxidation of the reduced heme center. In spite of these effects, DBMIB has been found not to exert significant effects on the first turnover of the fully oxidized bc1 complex, as monitored by the rapid reduction of both cytochromes b and c1 by ubiquinol-1. In the presence of antimycin, only a stimulation of cytochrome c1 reduction, in parallel to an enhanced cytochrome b reoxidation, is observed. Moreover, DBMIB does not affect the oxidant-induced extra cytochrome b reduction in the presence of antimycin. On the basis of the evidences suggesting a competition with the endogenous ubiquinone in the redox cycle of the bc1 complex, a model is proposed for the mechanism of DBMIB inhibition. Such model can also explain at the molecular level the redox bypass induced by dibromothymoquinone in the whole respiratory chain (Degli Esposti, M., Rugolo, M. and Lenaz, G. (1983) FEBS Lett. 156, 15-19).
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PMID:Effects of dibromothymoquinone on the structure and function of the mitochondrial bc1 complex. 609 48

The Rieske iron-sulfur center in the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides appears to be the direct electron donor to ferricytochrome c2, reducing the cytochrome on a submillisecond timescale which is slower than the rapid phase of cytochrome oxidation (t 1/2 3-5 microseconds). The reduction of the ferricytochrome by the Rieske center is inhibited by 5-n-undecyl-6-hydroxy-4,7-dioxobenzothiazole (UHDBT) but not by antimycin. The slower (102 ms) antimycin-sensitive phase of ferricytochrome c2 reduction, attributed to a specific ubiquinone-10 molecule (Qz), and the associated carotenoid spectral response to membrane potential formation are also inhibited by UHDBT. Since the light-induced oxidation of the Rieske center is only observed in the presence of antimycin, it seems likely that the reduced form of Qz (QzH2) reduces the Rieske Center in an antimycin-sensitive reaction. From the extent of the UHDBT-sensitive ferricytochrome c2 reduction we estimate that there are 0.7 Rieske iron-sulfur centers per reaction center. UHDBT shifts the EPR derivative absorption spectrum of the Rieske center from gy 1.90 to gy 1.89, and shifts the Em,7 from 280 to 350 mV. While this latter shift may account for the subsequent failure of the iron-sulfur center to reduce ferricytochrome c2, it is not clear how this can explain the other effects of the inhibitor, such as the prevention of cytochrome b reduction and the elimination of the uptake of HII(+); these may reflect additional sites of action of the inhibitor.
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PMID:The role of the Rieske iron-sulfur center as the electron donor to ferricytochrome c2 in Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides. 625 67

A synthetic quinone, 5-n-undecyl-6-hydroxy-4,7-dioxobenzothiazole (UHDBT), inhibits electron transfer reactions in the cytochrome b-c1 segment of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. Addition of UHDBT to isolated succinate-cytochrome c reductase complex has effects on reduction of the cytochromes b and c1 by succinate similar to those which result from removal of the iron-sulfur protein from the b-c1 complex. Thus, UHDBT inhibits reduction of cytochrome c1 by succinate and, if antimycin is added before succinate, UHDBT inhibits reduction of cytochrome b in addition to c1. UHDBT increases the midpoint potential of the iron-sulfur protein of the b-c1 complex from +280 to +350 mV at pH 7.2. The inhibitor also shifts the gx peak in the EPR spectrum of the iron-sulfur protein from g = 1.80 to 1.76 and shifts the gz peak from g = 2.02 to 2.03. It causes only a slight shift in the central gy = 1.90 signal. The efficacy of inhibition of cytochrome c reductase activity of isolated reductase complex by UHDBT appears to depend on the oxidation-reduction poise of some component(s) in the b-c1 complex. Inhibition is decreased and there is an extensive lag in the onset of inhibition under conditions favoring oxidation of the b-c1 complex; inhibition increases and the lag is eliminated under conditions favoring reduction of the b-c1 complex. The titer for inhibition of cytochrome c reductase activity of isolated reductase complex is one UHDBT per b-c1 complex. With reductase complex from which the iron-sulfur protein of the b-c1 complex is reversibly resolved, the titer for inhibition is proportional to the amount of iron-sulfur protein reconstituted to the complex. These results suggest that UHDBT inhibits mitochondrial respiration by binding to the iron-sulfur protein of the b-c1 complex, possibly at a site which is otherwise involved in binding ubiquinone, and that this binding is enhanced when the iron-sulfur protein is reduced.
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PMID:An analogue of ubiquinone which inhibits respiration by binding to the iron-sulfur protein of the cytochrome b-c1 segment of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. 628 79

The kinetic behaviour of the prosthetic groups and the semiquinones in in QH2:cytochrome c oxidoreductase has been studied using a combination of the freeze-quench technique, low-temperature diffuse-reflectance spectroscopy, EPR and stopped flow. (2) In the absence of antimycin, cytochrome b-562 is reduced in two phases separated by a lag time. The initial very rapid reduction phase, that coincides with the formation of the antimycin-sensitive Qin, is ascribed to high-potential cytochrome b-562 and the slow phase to low-potential cytochrome b-562. the two cytochromes are present in a 1:1 molar ratio. The lag time between the two reduction phases decreases with increasing pH. Both the [2 Fe-2S] clusters and cytochrome c1 are reduced monophasically under these conditions, but at a rate lower than that of the initial rapid reduction of cytochrome b-562. (3) In the presence of antimycin and absence of oxidant, cytochrome b-562 is still reduced biphasically, but there is no lag between the two phases. No Qin is formed and both the Fe-S clusters and cytochrome c1 are reduced biphasically, one-half being reduced at the same rate as in the absence of antimycin and the other half 10-times slower. (4) In the presence of antimycin and oxidant, the recently described antimycin-insensitive species of semiquinone anion, Qout (De Vries, S., Albracht, S.P.J., Berden, J.A. and Slater, E.C. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 11996-11998) is formed at the same rate as that of the reduction of all species of cytochrome b. In this case cytochrome b is reduced in a single phase. (5) The reversible change of the line shape of the EPR spectrum of the [2Fe-2S] cluster 1 is caused by ubiquinone bound in the vicinity of this cluster. (6) The experimental results are consistent with the basic principles of the Q cycle. Because of the multiplicity, stoicheiometry and heterogeneous kinetics of the prosthetic groups, a Q cycle model describing the pathway of electrons through a dimeric QH2:cytochrome c oxidoreductase is proposed.
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PMID:The pathway of electrons through OH2:cytochrome c oxidoreductase studied by pre-steady -state kinetics. 628 82


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