6533b851fe1ef96bd12a9990

RESEARCH PRODUCT

The oxidation of ubiquinol by the isolated rieske iron-sulfur protein in solution

M. DegliespostiGiorgio LenazJoaquín TimonedaMassimo CrimiF. Ballester

subject

Iron-Sulfur ProteinsUbiquinolCytochromeUbiquinoneBiophysicsmacromolecular substancesPhotochemistryBiochemistryRedoxMitochondria HeartElectron Transport Complex IIIElectron transferchemistry.chemical_compoundCytochrome C1AnimalsMolecular BiologybiologyChemistryCytochrome cHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationSolutionsKineticsCoenzyme Q – cytochrome c reductaseRieske proteinbiology.proteinCytochromesCattleOxidation-Reduction

description

The pre-steady-state redox reactions of the Rieske iron-sulfur protein isolated from beef heart mitochondria have been characterized. The rates of oxidation by c-type cytochromes is much faster than the rate of reduction by ubiquinols. This enables the monitoring of the oxidation of ubiquinols by the Rieske protein through the steady-state electron transfer to cytochrome c in solution. The pH and ionic strength dependence of this reaction indicate that the ubiquinol anion is the direct reductant of the oxidized cluster of the iron-sulfur protein. The second electron from ubiquinol is diverted to oxygen by the isolated Rieske protein, and forms oxygen radicals that contribute to the steady-state reduction of cytochrome c. Under anaerobic conditions, however, the reduction of cytochrome c catalyzed by the protein becomes mechanicistically identical to the chemical reduction by ubiquinols. The present kinetic work outlines that: (i) the electron transfer between the ubiquinol anion and the Rieske cluster has a comparable rate when the protein is isolated or inserted into the parent cytochrome c reductase enzyme; (ii) the Rieske protein may be a relevant generator of oxygen radicals during mitochondrial respiration.

https://doi.org/10.1016/0003-9861(90)90640-k