Purification and characterization of plant cytochrome c oxidases have been impeded by the difficulty of obtaining enough plant mitochondria. We have found commercial wheat germ to be a rich and convenient source of mitochondrial membranes containing respiratory chain complexes in ratios and amounts similar to mitochondria prepared from etiolated seedlings. Cytochrome c oxidase was purified from these membranes by anion-exchange (MonoQ) fast protein liquid chromatography. The enzyme is highly active (turnover number up to 1000 s-1) and exhibits biphasic cytochrome c reaction kinetics similar to those of beef heart oxidase. As with other plant oxidases, the visible spectrum of wheat germ oxidase in the reduced form is blue-shifted compared to other eukaryotic cytochrome oxidases, with peaks at 441 and 602 nm. The electron paramagnetic resonance spectrum of CuA of the wheat germ enzyme is very similar to that of the maize and beef heart enzymes, suggesting that the copper environment is not altered. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels show a subunit composition in which subunits I-IV resemble those of the yeast enzyme in size and antigenicity, while three to four smaller peptides are dissimilar to yeast and other eukaryotic oxidases. A difference between the subunit composition of the wheat germ and wheat seedling enzymes suggests the existence of a developmental or tissue-specific form of cytochrome oxidase in plants.
The structures of hemes a and a3 of maize and wheat germ cytochrome c oxidase were investigated by resonance Raman spectroscopy. Comparison between the plant and mammalian cytochrome oxidases revealed that (i) the vinyl groups associated with hemes a and a3 vibrate at higher frequencies in the plant enzyme than in the mammalian enzyme, suggesting different degrees of interaction between the heme cores and their periphery; (ii) aside from the geometry of the vinyl group, the structure of heme a3 in plant cytochrome oxidase is essentially unchanged from that of its mammalian counterpart; (iii) the vibrational band associated with the formyl group of reduced heme a shows relatively weak enhancement in the Soret-excited resonance Raman spectra of maize and wheat germ cytochrome oxidase, suggesting that the formyl group of ferrous heme a in the plant enzymes is conjugated only slightly to the porphyrin ring; and (iv) for oxidized heme a, the formyl vibration is strongly enhanced, but its frequency indicates a weaker interaction with the protein milieu relative to the mammalian enzyme. These observations suggest that the local environment around the formyl position of the heme a chromophore differs in the plant and mammalian cytochrome oxidases. The implication of the latter feature in the mechanism of proton pumping by cytochrome oxidase is discussed.
The 60-kDa Ca2+-ATPase from Flavobacterium odoratum is kinetically and mechanistically similar to other P-type ATPases, suggesting its use as a model system for structure-function studies of ion transport. A portion of the gene was amplified by polymerase chain reaction of genomic DNA with degenerate oligonucleotide primers, one based on the N-terminal amino acid sequence of the purified protein and the other based on a consensus sequence for the phosphorylation site of P-type ATPases. This gene fragment was used to screen a lambda library of F. odoratum 29979 DNA. Clone "C" is 3.3 kilobases in length and contains one complete and part of a second open reading frame, the first of which encodes a 58-kDa protein containing the exact N-terminal amino acid sequence of the purified protein. We have named this gene cda, for calcium-dependent ATPase. Escherichia coli, transformed with clone C, demonstrates high levels of calcium-dependent and vanadate-sensitive ATP hydrolysis activity, forms a 60-kDa phosphointermediate, and cross-reacts with antibodies to the purified Ca2+-ATPase. The gene has almost no sequence homology to even the highly conserved regions characteristic of P-type ATPases but does possess significant homology to a protein with alkaline phosphatase activity (PhoD) from Zymomonas mobilis. The putative phosphorylation site is a Walker A (P-loop) ATP binding sequence and is modified relative to P-type ATPases, suggesting that the F. odoratum Ca2+-ATPase may represent an ancestral link between the F- and the P-type ATPases or perhaps a new class of ATPases.
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