Biochemistry 1995, 34, 15504-15511
Reaction of Cytochrome bo3 with Oxygen: Extra Redox Center(s) are Present in the
Protein.
Jianling Wang, Jon Rumbley, Yuan-chin Ching, Satoshi Takahashi, Robert B. Gennis, and Denis
L. Rousseau. Biochemistry 1995,34, 15504-15511.
SUMMARY: The reaction of oxygen with cytochrome bo3, a quinol
oxidase from Escherichia coli, has been studied by resonance Raman scattering after
initiation of the reaction by CO photolysis in a continuous flow apparatus and by directly mixing
the enzyme with oxygen. The high-frequency region of the spectrum was monitored to
determine the time evolution of the spin, oxidation, and coordination states of heme O and the
oxidation state of heme B by using newly established marker lines for each heme. Three phases
of the reaction were detected. In phase I, complete in 75 µs, O2 reacted with heme
O and formed a low-spin ferric or ferryl adduct without significant oxidation of heme B. In
phase II, between 75 and 120 µs, a small fraction of heme B was oxidized. In phase III, at ~1 s,
the majority of heme B was oxidized and heme O reverted to a high-spin ferric state. The high
rate of oxygen reduction at heme O to the three- or four-electron reduced level, despite a very
low rate of heme B oxidation, indicates that there are electron donors active in the enzyme other
than the metal centers. Assays of our enzyme preparations rule out a quinol in the tight binding
(QII) site as a possible donor but instead suggest electron donation from the protein matrix, such
as from tryptophans or tyrosines. Three tryptophans (W280, W282, and W331) and one tyrosine
(Y288) are postulated as candidates for such a role, and their location near the binuclear center
suggests that the donor electrons follow a pathway directly to the heme OÐCuB binuclear center
without passing through heme B. The donors that participate in the catalytic mechanism in vitro
may also play a functional role under physiological conditions.