Catalase Activity of Cytochrome c Oxidase Assayed with Hydrogen Peroxide-Sensitive Electrode Microsensor

被引:0
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作者
I. A. Bolshakov
T. V. Vygodina
R. Gennis
A. A. Karyakin
A. A. Konstantinov
机构
[1] Lomonosov Moscow State University,Chemistry Faculty
[2] Lomonosov Moscow State University,Belozersky Institute of Physico
[3] University of Illinois,Chemical Biology
来源
Biochemistry (Moscow) | 2010年 / 75卷
关键词
microsensor electrode; Prussian blue; respiratory chain; cytochrome ; oxidase; oxygen intermediates; catalase activity;
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摘要
An iron-hexacyanide-covered microelectrode sensor has been used to continuously monitor the kinetics of hydrogen peroxide decomposition catalyzed by oxidized cytochrome oxidase. At cytochrome oxidase concentration ≈1 μM, the catalase activity behaves as a first order process with respect to peroxide at concentrations up to ≈300–400 μM and is fully blocked by heat inactivation of the enzyme. The catalase (or, rather, pseudocatalase) activity of bovine cytochrome oxi- dase is characterized by a second order rate constant of ≈2•102 M-1•sec-1 at pH 7.0 and room temperature, which, when divided by the number of H2O2 molecules disappearing in one catalytic turnover (between 2 and 3), agrees reasonably well with the second order rate constant for H2O2-dependent conversion of the oxidase intermediate FI-607 to FII-580. Accordingly, the catalase activity of bovine oxidase may be explained by H2O2 procession in the oxygen-reducing center of the enzyme yielding superoxide radicals. Much higher specific rates of H2O2 decomposition are observed with preparations of the bacterial cytochrome c oxidase from Rhodobacter sphaeroides. The observed second order rate constants (up to ≈3000 M-1•sec-1) exceed the rate constant of peroxide binding with the oxygen-reducing center of the oxidized enzyme (≈500 M-1•sec-1) several-fold and therefore cannot be explained by catalytic reaction in the a3/CuB site of the enzyme. It is proposed that in the bacterial oxidase, H2O2 can be decomposed by reacting with the adventitious transition metal ions bound by the polyhistidine-tag present in the enzyme, or by virtue of reaction with the tightly-bound Mn2+, which in the bacterial enzyme substitutes for Mg2+ present in the mitochondrial oxidase.
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页码:1352 / 1360
页数:8
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