Mechanism of Cytochrome c Oxidase-Catalyzed Reduction of
Dioxygen to Water: Evidence for Peroxy and Ferryl Intermediates at Room
Temperature
Artur Sucheta, Katy E. Georgiadis, and Olšf Einarsdottir
Biochemistry 36: 554-565, 1997
SUMMARY: The reaction between bovine heart cytochrome oxidase and
dioxygen was investigated at room temperature following photolysis of the
fully reduced CO-bound enzyme. Time-resolved optical absorption
difference spectra were collected by a gated multichannel analyzer in the
visible region (460Ð720 nm) from 59 ns to 50 ms after photolysis.
Singular value decomposition (SVD) analysis indicated the presence of at
least seven intermediates. Multiexponential fitting gave the following
apparent lifetimes: 1.2 us, 10 us, 25 us, 32 us, 86 us, and 1.3 ms. On
the basis of the SVD results and a double difference map, a sequential
kinetic mechanism is proposed from which the spectra and time-dependent
populations of the reaction intermediates were determined. The
ferrous-oxy complex (compound A), with a peak at 595 nm and a trough at
612 nm versus the reduced enzyme, reaches a maximum concentration ~30 us
after photolysis. It decays to a 1:6 mixture of peroxy species
(a33+-O--O-) in which cytochrome a is reduced and
oxidized. Cytochrome a3
in both species has a peak at 606 nm versus its oxidized form. The peroxy
species decay to a ferryl intermediate, with a peak at 578 nm versus the
oxidized enzyme, following by electron redistribution between CuA and
cytochrome a. The two ferryl species reach a maximum concentration ~310
us after photolysis. The excellent agreement between the experimental and
theoretical spectra of the intermediates provides unequivocal evidence for
the presence of peroxy and ferryl species during dioxygen reduction by
cytochrome oxidase at room temperature.