Nonparticipation of hydrogen peroxide in the cytochrome oxidase reaction

1965 ◽  
Vol 112 (1) ◽  
pp. 209-211 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alvin I. Krasna
Biochemistry ◽  
1991 ◽  
Vol 30 (23) ◽  
pp. 5727-5733 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lichun Weng ◽  
Gary M. Baker

1972 ◽  
Vol 27 (9) ◽  
pp. 1052-1053 ◽  
Author(s):  
David J. T. Porter ◽  
Judith G. Voet ◽  
Harold J. Bright

Nitroalkanes have been found to be general reductive substrates for D-amino acid oxidase, glucose oxidase and L-amino acid oxidase. These enzymes show different specificities for the structure of the nitroalkane substrate.The stoichiometry of the D-amino acid oxidase reaction is straightforward, consisting of the production of one mole each of aldehyde, nitrite and hydrogen peroxide for each mole of nitroalkane and oxygen consumed. The stoichiometry of the glucose oxidase reaction is more complex in that less than one mole of hydrogen peroxide and nitrite is produced and nitrate and traces of 1-dinitroalkane are formed.The kinetics of nitroalkane oxidation show that the nitroalkane anion is much more reactive in reducing the flavin than is the neutral substrate. The pH dependence of flavin reduction strongly suggests that proton abstraction is a necessary event in catalysis. A detailed kinetic mechanism is presented for the oxidation of nitroethane by glucose.It has been possible to trap a form of modified flavin in the reaction of D-amino acid oxidase with nitromethane from which oxidized FAD can be regenerated in aqueous solution in the presence of oxygen.


2006 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 568-578 ◽  
Author(s):  
Graham S. Banting ◽  
D. Moira Glerum

ABSTRACT Cox11p is an integral protein of the inner mitochondrial membrane that is essential for cytochrome c oxidase assembly. The bulk of the protein is located in the intermembrane space and displays high levels of evolutionary conservation. We have analyzed a collection of site-directed and random cox11 mutants in an effort to further define essential portions of the molecule. Of the alleles studied, more than half had no apparent effect on Cox11p function. Among the respiration deficiency-encoding alleles, we identified three distinct phenotypes, which included a set of mutants with a misassembled or partially assembled cytochrome oxidase, as indicated by a blue-shifted cytochrome aa 3 peak. In addition to the shifted spectral signal, these mutants also display a specific reduction in the levels of subunit 1 (Cox1p). Two of these mutations are likely to occlude a surface pocket behind the copper-binding domain in Cox11p, based on analogy with the Sinorhizobium meliloti Cox11 solution structure, thereby suggesting that this pocket is crucial for Cox11p function. Sequential deletions of the matrix portion of Cox11p suggest that this domain is not functional beyond the residues involved in mitochondrial targeting and membrane insertion. In addition, our studies indicate that Δcox11, like Δsco1, displays a specific hypersensitivity to hydrogen peroxide. Our studies provide the first evidence at the level of the cytochrome oxidase holoenzyme that Cox1p is the in vivo target for Cox11p and suggest that Cox11p may also have a role in the response to hydrogen peroxide exposure.


Development ◽  
1982 ◽  
Vol 71 (1) ◽  
pp. 75-82
Author(s):  
B. Ove Nilsson ◽  
Claes Magnusson ◽  
Sibylle Widéhn ◽  
Torbjörn Hillensjö

Delayed blastocysts had an oxygen consumption of 0·24 nl/h, while only 4 h after an oestrogen injection the respiration had increased nearly two fold, remaining at this level both 8 and 18 h after activation for implantation. The mitochondria of delayed blastocysts exhibited no positive cytochrome oxidase reaction, neither in the trophoblast nor in the embryoblasts. A few mitochondria at 8 h and most of those of blastocysts activated for 18 h were positive. It is suggested that the activation of blastocysts for implantation is initiated by a surge of substrates for glycolysis into the uterine secretion causing an increased energy production by glycolysis which in turn makes possible an increase of the cytochrome oxidase activity of the mitochondria thus getting oxidative phosphorylation into action.


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