Cytochrome b558/566 from the Archaeon Sulfolobus acidocaldarius
A NOVEL HIGHLY GLYCOSYLATED, MEMBRANE-BOUND B-TYPE HEMOPROTEIN*

Thomas HettmannDagger , Christian L. SchmidtDagger , Stefan AnemüllerDagger , Ulrich Zähringer§, Hermann Moll§, Arnd Petersen§, and Günter SchäferDagger

From the Dagger  Institut für Biochemie, Medizinische Universität zu Lübeck, Ratzeburger Allee 160, 23538 Lübeck, Germany and the § Forschungszentrum Borstel, Zentrum für Medizin und Biowissenschaften, Parkallee 1-40, 23845 Borstel, Germany

    ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Procedures
Results
Discussion
References

In this study we re-examined the inducible cytochrome b558/566 from the archaeon Sulfolobus acidocaldarius (DSM 639), formerly thought to be a component of a terminal oxidase (Becker, M., and Schäfer, G. (1991) FEBS Lett. 291, 331-335). An improved purification method increased the yield of the protein and allowed more detailed investigations. Its molecular mass and heme content have been found to be 64,210 Da and 1 mol of heme/mol of protein, respectively. It is only detectable in cells grown at low oxygen tensions. The composition of the growth medium also exerts significant influence on the cytochrome b558/566 content of S. acidocaldarius membranes. The cytochrome exhibits an extremely high redox potential of +400 mV and shows no CO reactivity; a ligation other than a His/His-coordination of axial ligands appears likely. It turned out to be highly glycosylated (more than 20% of its molecular mass are sugar residues) and is probably exposed to the outer surface of the plasma membrane. The sugar moiety consists of several O-glycosidically linked mannoses and at least one N-glycosidically linked hexasaccharide comprising two glucoses, two mannoses, and two N-acetyl-glucosamines. The gene of the cytochrome (cbsA) has been sequenced, revealing an interesting predicted secondary structure with two putative alpha -helical membrane anchors flanking the majority of a mainly beta -pleated sheet structure containing unusually high amounts of serine and threonine. A second gene (cbsB) was found to be cotranscribed. The latter displays extreme hydrophobicity and is thought to form a functional unit with cytochrome b558/566 in vivo, although it did not copurify with the latter. Sequence comparisons show no similarity to any entry in data banks indicating that this cytochrome is indeed a novel kind of b-type hemoprotein. A cytochrome c analogous function in the pseudoperiplasmic space of S. acidocaldarius is discussed.

    INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Procedures
Results
Discussion
References

Sulfolobus acidocaldarius has been described as an obligate aerobic, facultatively chemolithoautotrophic, hyperthermoacidophilic archaeon growing at 75-80 °C and pH 2-2.5 (1). However, it grows much faster under heterotrophic conditions. Its respiratory chain consists of at least one succinate dehydrogenase (2, 3), two Rieske proteins (4), and two terminal oxidases (5, 6). In S. acidocaldarius membranes, three different a-type and two different b-type but no c-type cytochromes can be detected. Most cytochromes can be attributed to either one of the two oxidase complexes. Cytochrome a587 (SoxC) and cytochrome aa3 (SoxB) are part of the SoxABCD quinol oxidase (7, 8), whereas a second cytochrome a587 (SoxG) and a cytochrome b562 (SoxM) are constituents of the SoxM terminal oxidase complex (9). However, a second b-type cytochrome cannot be attributed to any of these complexes. Previously (10), cytochrome b558/566, named after its absorption maxima in the redox difference spectrum, was thought to participate in terminal electron transport due to its positive redox potential of >300 mV, its putative heme and copper content, and the CO difference spectrum typical for an o-type cytochrome obtained with partially purified membrane solubilisates. Because the function of this membrane-residing cytochrome remained obscure and could not be attributed to redox systems of respiratory electron transport, a genetic approach toward its further characterization was taken.

In this report, we present an improved purification method providing high yields of this unusual cytochrome for a fundamentally revised spectroscopic and protein-chemical characterization. Cytochrome b558/566 is shown to be highly glycosylated, and the first results of its glycosylation pattern are reported. In addition, an operon has been identified and sequenced encoding this interesting and novel hemoprotein; the transcription pattern is described. From the primary sequence, we concluded that in contrast to previous speculations, this cytochrome has no function as part of a terminal oxidase. A function as an ectoenzyme participating in periplasmic metabolism is discussed on the basis of its significant up- and down-regulation by modifying the growth conditions of the Sulfolobus cells.

    EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Procedures
Results
Discussion
References

Bacterial Strains, Plasmids, and Culture Conditions

S. acidocaldarius cells (DSM 639) were grown heterotrophically in a mineral salt medium at 78 °C and at pH 2.5 in a 50-liter fermenter as described previously (11). To establish oxygen-limiting conditions throughout cell growth, aeration was started with a 12 liter/h airflow and was increased in a step-wise manner up to 35 liters/h in parallel to the increasing cell density.

Escherichia coli XL2-blue (Stratagene) was grown at 37 °C in LB medium (12) supplemented with 50 µg of ampicillin/ml. The plasmid pBluescript II SK- was purchased from Stratagene (Heidelberg, Germany), and pSP64 was purchased from Serva (Heidelberg, Germany).

Cell Harvest and Membrane Preparation

S. acidocaldarius cells were harvested in the late logarithmic phase at an optical density of 1.4-1.5 by continuous flow separation using a Westfalia separator. The cells were resuspended in 50 mM Mes,1 1 mM EDTA, pH 5.5; centrifuged at 7800 × g; resuspended in the same buffer; frozen in liquid nitrogen; and stored at -70 °C. Typical yields were 2.4-3 g of wet cell material per liter of culture medium. Cells were disrupted in a Manton-Gaulin press, and membranes were prepared as described previously (11).

Isolation of Cytochrome b558/566

Hydrophobic Interaction Chromatography-- For chaotropic preextraction, the membranes were diluted to a protein concentration of 10 mg/ml in 50 mM potassium phosphate, 30 mM sodium pyrophosphate, pH 7.5. After stirring for 1 h at room temperature, the suspension was centrifuged (120,000 × g for 1 h at 4 °C). The membrane pellets were resuspended in 50 mM Tris/HCl, pH 7.3, and AS was added to a final concentration of 500 mM. DM was added to a final concentration of 20 mM. After stirring for 1 h at room temperature, the solution was centrifuged (as above) to remove insoluble components. The following steps were performed at 4 °C. A saturated solution of AS was slowly added to the supernatant to achieve 50% saturation. This solution was applied to a propyl-agarose column (Sigma P-5268; 1.5 cm in diameter, 16 cm in length) equilibrated with 50% saturated AS, 1 mM DM, 25 mM Tris/HCl, pH 7.3, at 0.5 ml/min. Subsequently, the column was washed with 120 ml of the same buffer. Elution was performed by a step-wise decrease in AS concentration and by a change in detergent (step 1: 40% AS saturation, 0.2 mM DM, 150 ml; step 2: 40% AS saturation, 0.5% SB-12, 120 ml; step 3: 20% AS saturation, 0.2 mM DM, 120 ml; all solutions with 25 mM Tris/HCl, pH 7.3). A minor fraction of the cytochrome b558/566 eluted at step 1 with large amounts of contaminating proteins. The major part eluted at step 2 in a much purer form. Fractions from step 2 were collected and concentrated by ultrafiltration on a PM-30 membrane (Amicon, Beverly, MA) to 3-5 ml.

Gel Filtration-- The concentrated cytochrome fraction was further purified by gel filtration (50 mM Tris/HCl, 0.5 mM DM; flow, 1 ml/min; Highload Superdex 200, Amersham Pharmacia Biotech). Elution was monitored by the absorbance at 280 nm and 430 nm. Fractions containing the cytochrome b558/566 were pooled and concentrated by ultrafiltration (as above). Further contaminating proteins were removed by digestion with trypsin (about 1 mg of trypsin/10 mg of protein) and another gel filtration step (as above). If the cytochrome preparations were to be used for sugar analyses other than the chemical deglycosylation procedure (see below), both gel filtrations were carried out with 0.5% SB-12 instead of DM.

Protein and Heme b Determination

Protein concentrations were determined by the modified Lowry method in the presence of detergents (13) using bovine serum albumin as standard or with the Bio-Rad DC protein assay (Bio-Rad). Heme b concentrations were determined as pyridine hemochromogen according to standard methods (14), using a molar extinction coefficient of epsilon  = 22,100 M-1cm-1.

Spectroscopic Methods

Absorption spectra were recorded at room temperature using a HP 8453 diode array spectrophotometer or at liquid nitrogen temperature using a SIGMA ZWS-II dual wavelength spectrophotometer equipped with a laboratory-designed low temperature device as described in Ref. 15. Spectro-electrochemical determination of the redox potential was performed essentially according to Ref. 16 using a laboratory-designed multireflection titration cell in conjugation with the quartz fiber optics of a DW-2 spectrophotometer (15).

Electron paramagnetic resonance spectra were recorded with an X-band Bruker ER 200 D-SRC spectrometer equipped with an ESR 910 continuous flow helium cryostat from Oxford instruments. Copper content was determined using a Hitachi 180-80 Zeeman atomic absorption spectrophotometer set at 324.8 nm. For the measurement of the the iron content, the spectrophotometer was set at 248.3 nm.

Gas Liquid Chromatography and Mass Spectrometry (GLC-MS and MALDI-Time of Flight MS)

GLC was performed on a Varian 3700 chromatograph (Varian) equipped with a fused-silica gel SPB-5 column using a temperature gradient of 150 °C (3 min) right-arrow 320 °C at 5 °C/min. GLC-MS was performed on a HP 5989A instrument (Hewlett-Packard) equipped with an HP-5 column under the same chromatographic conditions as for GLC.

MALDI-MS was performed with a Bruker-Reflex II (Bruker-Franzen, Bremen, Germany) instrument in the positive linear time of flight mode at an acceleration voltage of 28.5 kV. Samples were dispersed in TA (0.1% CF3COOH-acetonitrile, 2:1 by volume) in a concentration of approximately 1 µg/ml. Part of this mixture (1 µl) was added to 15 µl of matrix solution (saturated sinapic acid (Aldrich) in TA). Aliquots of 0.5 µl were deposited on a metallic sample holder and analyzed immediately after drying in a stream of air.

Gel Electrophoreses and Western Blots

Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) was carried out in the presence of SDS (17) using a 15% acrylamide gel with 1% bisacrylamide as cross-linker. Cyanogen bromide-cleaved fragments (see below) of the cytochrome b558/566 were separated by electrophoresis according to the method described by Schägger and von Jagow (18) using a 16.5% separating gel, a 10% spacer gel, and a 4% stacking gel, all with 3% bisacrylamide as cross-linker. Proteins were visualized by staining with Coomassie Brilliant Blue R-250. Glycoprotein staining was performed as described in Ref. 19.

Polyacrylamide gels were blotted on polyvinylidene difluoride membranes at 40 mA for 1-2 h with an electroblot apparatus (Semi-Phor, Hoefer Scientific Instruments) using 50 mM sodium borate, 0.02% SDS, 10% methanol, pH 9.0, as a transfer buffer.

Isoelectric focusing was carried out using 8% acrylamide gels with 3% cross-linker containing 4% ampholytes and 17% glycerol. Ampholytes (Servalyt AG 3-10, Servalyt AG 4-6, and Servalyt T 2-4) were purchased from Serva.

Deglycosylation and Sugar Analysis

Chemical deglycosylation was performed using a commercially available kit (K-500, Oxford GlycoSystems, Abingdon, United Kingdom) that cleaves both O- and N-linked sugar residues by the use of trifluoromethane sulfonic acid.

For total sugar analysis, purified cytochrome b558/566 (1 mg) was hydrolysed in 1 ml of 2 M CF3COOH (100 °C for 4 h), reduced (NaBH4), per-O-acetylated (acetanhydride in pyridine, 1:1.5, v/v, 85 °C for 20 min), and analyzed by GLC and GLC-MS (20).

O-linked sugars were liberated by beta -elimination from cytochrome b558/566 (1 mg) with 2 M NaBH4 in 0.1 M NaOH (45 °C for 16 h) (21). The mixture was neutralized, per-O-acetylated, and analyzed by GLC-MS.

A third aliquot (1 mg) was used to determine N-linked sugars by heating with hydrazine (1 ml) in a sealed tube (100 °C for 12 h). After the reagent was evaporated under reduced pressure, sugars were N-acetylated (1 ml of saturated aqueous NaHCO3 and 15 µl of acetic acid anhydride for 30 min). The N-acetylation was repeated twice. After neutralization with ion exchanger (IR 120, H+ form), the crude oligosaccharide preparation was purified using a gel permeation chromatography column (2 × 112 cm, Sephadex G-10) in water monitoring the eluate at 206 nm (Uvicord, Amersham Pharmacia Biotech). Oligosaccharide fractions were combined and lyophilized. One aliquot (<FR><NU>1</NU><DE>10</DE></FR>) of the oligosaccharide was analyzed for its components by GLC-MS analysis described above.

Chemical Cleavage and Amino Acid Sequencing

Purified samples of either intact cytochrome b558/566 or of deglycosylated cytochrome (about 20-50 µg) were cleaved by 0.75 M cyanogen bromide in 75% formic acid in a final volume of 400 µl. The reaction mixture was incubated for 1 h at 37 °C, diluted by addition of 400 µl of distilled water, frozen at -70 °C, and dried in a Speed Vac concentrator. The dried samples were resuspended in distilled water, and the evaporation was repeated. Finally, samples were resuspended in 20 µl of water.

The fragments were separated by SDS-PAGE, blotted on polyvinylidene difluoride membranes, and stained with Coomassie Brilliant Blue R-250. Bands were cut out, and the amino acid sequence was determined by automated microscale Edman degradation.

DNA Techniques

All general cloning procedures were performed according to standard methods (12). Genomic DNA of S. acidocaldarius was prepared according to the method of Marmur (22), and plasmid DNA was isolated from E. coli cells on a small scale by lysis with lysozym and Triton X-100 (23) or on a large scale by anion exchange chromatography (Jetstar, Genomed, Bad Oeynhausen, Germany).

All nonradioactive labeling, blotting, hybridization, and chemiluminescence detection techniques were performed as described in detail in Ref. 24.

Cloning Procedure

The longest amino acid sequence obtained (MYEVDTAGIYYTPVAA) was chosen to derive two oligonucleotide probes (probe 1, 5'-CCWGCWGT-RTCWACYTCRTACAT-3'; probe 2, 5'-ATATAYTAYACWCCWGTWGC-WGC-3'). The oligonucleotides were 3'-end-labeled with digoxygenin-11-ddUTP (24).

S. acidocaldarius genomic DNA was digested with various restriction enzymes, separated on agarose gels, and blotted by vacuum onto nylon membrane (Hybond-N, Amersham Pharmacia Biotech). A 2.8-kb PstI/XbaI fragment positive with probe 1 was chosen for insertion into pSP64 and cloning in E. coli XL2-blue (plasmid pCBS1). Transformation into E. coli cells was performed as described in Ref. 25. A 0.9-kb SspI fragment out of the larger 2.8 kb fragment also positive with probe 1 was subcloned into pBluescript II SK- (plasmid pCBS2). Sequencing of the fragments was performed nonradioactively with Thermo Sequenase kit (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) using a GATC 1500 direct blotting electrophoresis device (GATC) and the DIG system from Boehringer Mannheim as described in Ref. 26.

Isolation of RNA and Northern Blot Hybridization

Total RNA was extracted from S. acidocaldarius cells with guanidium isothiocyanate and phenol using a commercially available kit (Roti-Quick-Kit, Carl Roth, Karlsruhe, Germany). Northern blotting and hybridization was performed as in Ref. 24.

Two RNA probes were produced by in vitro transcription of linearized DNA template (plasmid pCBS2 cut with XbaI or with BglII) with T7 polymerase and the DIG RNA labeling kit (Boehringer Mannheim) as described in Refs. 27 and 24. Hybridization and chemiluminescence detection was also performed as in Ref. 27.

Influence of Growth Medium on Cytochrome b558/566 Content of Membranes

To examine the influence of different growth media, S. acidocaldarius cells were grown on a small scale in a 1-liter fermenter under oxygen-limiting conditions. Select yeast extract was purchased from Life Technologies, Inc.; neutralized bacteriological peptone was from Oxoid (Basingstoke, United Kingdom); casein (enzymatic hydrolysate), L-leucine, and L-isoleucine were from Sigma; and 2-oxoglutaric acid was from Fluka (Deisenhofen, Germany).

Cells were harvested by centrifugation at 7800 × g. Cells were disrupted for 5 min by ultrasonification, and membranes were prepared by down-scaling the procedure described previously (11). The cytochrome b558/566 content of the membranes was calculated based on the ascorbate-reduced minus ferricyanide-oxidized difference spectrum using an extinction coefficient of epsilon 566-590 = 11,200 M-1cm-1, determined by pyridine hemochromogen. The protein concentration of the membranes was determined as described above.

    RESULTS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Procedures
Results
Discussion
References

Preparation of Cytochrome b558/566-- The cytochrome composition of the membranes changes according to the oxygen level at which the cells are grown (7). Under low oxygenation, the expression of cytochrome b558/566 strongly increases, whereas high oxygen levels (maximum air flow) suppress the production of this cytochrome nearly completely (15).

To isolate the protein, purified membranes were subjected to chaotropic pre-extraction with sodium pyrophosphate, which removed loosely bound proteins from the membrane. DM was used for solubilization as this detergent does not induce spectral changes of a- or b-type cytochromes (7). High ionic strength, achieved by addition of 500 mM AS during the solubilization step, improved the efficiency of the subsequent chromatographic preparation steps.

The following hydrophobic interaction chromatography and gel filtration (see "Experimental Procedures") separates the cytochrome b558/566 from other cytochromes. Fig. 1 documents the process of purification resulting in a single protein band (right lane), susceptible to Coomassie Blue staining but not to silver staining. This unusual behavior led us to suspect that cytochrome b558/566 might be a glycoprotein. Staining for sugar residues (not shown) confirmed this assumption. It was further corroborated by the observation that alkali treatment caused a considerable decrease of apparent molecular mass (not shown). This unexpected result also explains the observation that cytochrome b558/566 is resistant to protease degradation (trypsin or V8; data not shown), a feature that was then included in the purification procedure. A tryptic digestion cleaved remaining contaminating proteins, and the final gel filtration removed these cleaved proteins as well as the added trypsin (Fig. 1, lane 5). The use of SB-12 instead of DM did not induce any spectral changes of cytochrome b558/566 but led to a minor decrease in long-term stability and a slight increase in susceptibility to proteolytic digestion.


View larger version (147K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 1.   SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of cytochrome b558/566 at different stages of purification. Left lane, molecular mass markers (from top to bottom): 97.4, 66.2, 45.0, 31.0, 21.5, and 14.4 kDa. Second lane from left, membranes. Middle lane, protein eluted from the propyl agarose column. Second lane from right, protein eluted from first gel filtration column. Right lane, protein eluted from second gel filtration column. The gel was stained with Coomassie.

Spectral Characterization-- In native membranes, cytochrome b558/566 is the only cytochrome present in significant amounts that is readily reducible by ascorbate (6, 15). Difference spectra (reduced minus oxidized) of the purified cytochrome b558/566 resembled the spectral features of ascorbate-reduced S. acidocaldarius membranes, exhibiting maxima at 566 and 558 nm and a minimum at 561 nm in the alpha -band region and lower maxima at 530 and 538 nm in the beta -region of the visible spectrum (Fig. 2). The Soret band in the reduced minus oxidized difference spectrum was located at 430 nm. In the reduced spectrum it was found at 430 nm as well, whereas it shifted to 419 nm in the oxidized spectrum. The differential extinction coefficients are epsilon 566-575 = 10,800 M-1cm-1, epsilon 566-590 = 11,200, and epsilon 430-439 = 65,900 M-1cm-1 based on the heme b content determined as pyridine hemochromogen. At liquid nitrogen temperature, the alpha -bands clearly resolved into two distinct and narrow peaks at 563 and 553 nm, whereas the beta -bands moved to 527 and 534 nm (data not shown). The pyridine hemochrome spectrum (Fig. 2) with a maximum at 556 nm indicates that the purified compound contained only heme b. In the above spectral region, neither the isolated cytochrome, prepared according to the described procedure, nor native membranes displayed a CO-inducible difference spectrum in the reduced state, thus indicating a hexa-coordinated heme center without exchangeable ligand positions. This is in sharp contrast to former observations, in which the cytochrome had been extracted from membranes immersed in an imidazole buffer during detergent extraction (10). Actually, prolonged exposure of membranes or detergent extracts to imidazole (0.1-0.6 M) causes the appearance of a confluent alpha -peak at 560-562 nm (28) with a high absorption coefficient, a behavior that we were able to reproduce with the purified cytochrome. Under the latter conditions, a reduced minus oxidized difference spectrum resulted, which upon addition of CO clearly indicated the formation of a carbon monoxide compound yielding a sharp trough at 560 nm (556 nm at liquid nitrogen temperature) in the difference spectrum (reduced plus CO, minus reduced) (Fig. 2).


View larger version (15K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 2.   Difference spectra of cytochrome b558/566 preparations. Top curve, difference spectrum (dithionite-reduced minus K3[Fe(CN)6]-oxidized) of cytochrome b558/566 in 25 mM Tris/HCl, 0.5% SB-12, pH 7.3, at room temperature. Protein concentration was 0.35 mg/ml. Middle curve, pyridine hemochrome difference spectrum of the respective preparation. Bottom curve, CO difference spectrum ((dithionite reduced with CO) minus (dithionite reduced)) of cytochrome b558/566 in imidazole buffer (0.1 M imidazole, pH 7.0, 0.5% SB-12, 30% glycerol). Protein concentration was 0.67 mg/ml.

Obviously, imidazole promotes a ligand exchange and conformational distortion of the protein, facilitating the binding of CO to the heme center. This process is reversible, however, as demonstrated in independent experiments. Removal of imidazole, for example, by buffer exchange during chromatography restored the native situation with respect to spectal properties and eliminated any CO reactivity. This lack of CO reactivity and the fact that direct reoxidation of the easily reducible cytochrome by molecular oxygen could not be observed exclude a function as part of a terminal oxidase complex. The cytochrome is most stable when kept in the reduced form. If it is oxidized with K3[Fe(CN)6] and kept in the oxidized state at neutral pH for a prolonged time, the cytochrome is damaged irreversibly, as can be seen directly from a shift of the Soret band from 419 to 405 nm (data not shown). To minimize oxidative damage, the samples used for the EPR measurements were frozen shortly after oxidization with cerium(IV) salts.

The most important feature of the EPR spectrum (Fig. 3) is a highly anisotropic low spin heme signal with a gz value of 3.13 and a gy value of 2.09 (tentatively), due to a hexa-coordinated heme iron. The gy value is superimposed by another signal, possibly caused by loosely bound copper.


View larger version (14K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 3.   EPR spectrum of oxidized cytochrome b558/566. To oxidize the cytochrome b558/566, about 40 nmol of it was incubated with 120 nmol of cerium(IV)-ammonium nitrate in a final volume of 150 µl for 5 min on ice. Subsequently, the sample was transferred into an EPR tube and frozen in liquid nitrogen.

Although the most prominent feature of the spectrum is a sharp high-spin signal at g = 6.05, this is most likely a preparation-induced property. As mentioned above, isolated cytochrome b558/566 undergoes decay when kept in the oxidized state. Even if only a minor amount of the cytochrome is damaged, it will be enough to cause an apparently strong high spin resonance signal around g = 6. Due to the intense gz-resonance of the low spin heme, the high spin signal can be estimated to account for only 10-15% of the amount of the low spin signal.

Molecular Properties-- When using a pH 2-6 polyacrylamide gel, the pI was found to be in the range of 4-4.5 (data not shown). The apparent molecular mass (SDS-PAGE) was about 66 kDa (Fig. 1). This is in good agreement with the molecular mass determined by mass spectrometry: the positive ion MALDI-time of flight mass spectrum of cytochrome b558/566 recorded in the linear mode is shown in Fig. 4. The spectrum comprises two prominent mass peaks representing the single- and double-charged quasimolecular ions at m/z = 64,210 and 32,091, respectively.


View larger version (13K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 4.   Positive ion MALDI mass spectrum of the cytochrome b558/566 recorded in the linear mode. Peaks at m/z approx  64,210 and m/z approx  32,091 represent single- and double-charged quasimolecular ions, respectively. a.i., arbitrary intensity.

Chemical deglycosylation led to a single band of about 55 kDa (Fig. 5, lane 5, cytochrome b558/566 as prepared; lane 6, after deglycosylation), which is in fair agreement with the molecular mass of 50,736 Da according to the gene-derived sequence (see below). The cytochrome b558/566 precipitated almost completely during the neutralization step of the protocol, so that the soluble fraction of the deglycosylation procedure contains no protein (Fig. 5, lane 7). Bovine serum albumin used as a negative control (Fig. 5, lane 8) showed no decrease in molecular mass (lane 9), whereas the deglycosylation of the positive control alpha 1-glycoprotein (lane 2) led to the expected decrease in molecular mass (lanes 3 and 4). The deglycosylation of the cytochrome worked best with samples prepared in buffer containing DM as detergent. Preparations with SB-12 as detergent did not show a decrease in molecular mass when the same procedure was applied (data not shown). On the other hand, cytochrome preparations containing SDS (samples cut out and eluted from an SDS-polyacrylamide gel) could be deglycosylated, but only at the cost of great losses of protein (data not shown).


View larger version (106K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 5.   SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of deglycosylated cytochrome b558/566. Lanes 1 and 10, molecular mass markers (from top to bottom): 97.4, 66.2, 45.0, 25.0, and 12.3 kDa. Lanes 2-4, alpha 1-glycoprotein as positive control of deglycosylation, before deglycosylation (lane 2), insoluble fraction after deglycosylation (lane 3), and soluble fraction after deglycosylation (lane 4). Lanes 5-7: cytochrome b558/566, before deglycosylation (lane 5), insoluble fraction after deglycosylation (lane 6), and soluble fraction after deglycosylation (lane 7). Lanes 8 and 9, bovine serum albumin as negative control of deglycosylation, before deglycosylation (lane 8) and soluble fraction after deglycosylation (lane 9). The gel was stained with Coomassie.

Total sugars analysis of purified cytochrome b558/566 resulted in mannose, glucose, and 2-deoxy-2-N-acetylamino-D-glucose (GlcNAc) in relative proportions of approximately 7:2:2. Upon analysis of O-linked sugars, only mannose was detected. N-linked sugars were analyzed after hydrazinolysis and found to be exclusively present in a hexasaccharide fraction obtained after gel permeation chromatography. This oligosaccharide consisted of Man, Glc, and GlcNAc in a 1:1:1 ratio. Further analysis of this oligosaccharide is presently under way in our laboratory.

The heme content was found to be in the range of 0.6-0.8 mol of heme/mol of protein. This is in good agreement with the iron content of 0.8 mol/mol of protein. Although variable copper contents of 0.2 to 0.5 mol of copper/mol of protein could be found in the cytochrome preparations, this amount was totally removable by dialysis and is considered as unspecifically bound metal ion.

Redox titrations of S. acidocaldarius membranes had already suggested a b-type cytochrome with a potential >300 mV. By multiple titrations of the purified cytochrome b558/566, an exact value of +400 ± 5 mV at pH 6.5 could be established; in accord with a single-heme cytochrome, the slope of the Nernst plots was 60 mV. Also, in these experiments, an increasing instability during prolonged exposure to strong oxidants (ferricyanide) was observed.

Isolation and Sequencing of the Gene-- Direct N-terminal amino acid sequence analysis of purified cytochrome b558/566 after SDS-PAGE and electroblotting onto polyvinylidene difluoride membrane failed, irrespective whether or not the sample was deglycosylated. Only CNBr cleavage of a deglycosylated sample of cytochrome b558/566 produced a peptide fragment sufficient for synthesis of oligonucleotide probes, suitable for Southern blot hybridization. Restriction enzyme-digested chromosomal DNA from S. acidocaldarius gave positive signals only with probe 1. Probe 2 did not give any signal due to two protein sequencing errors, detected after the gene had been sequenced. The gene, including its flanking regions, was cloned and sequenced from a 2.8-kb PstI/XbaI-fragment and from a 0.9-kb SspI/SspI-fragment subclone as described under "Experimental Procedures."

Gene Organization and Transcription Analysis-- Fig. 6 demonstrates the organization of the cytochrome b558/566 operon. Three open reading frames could be found within the sequenced DNA region: an open reading frame from nucleotide 179 to 1564 encoding cbsA (cytochrome b558/566 from Sulfolobus), a second open reading frame from nucleotide 1564 to 2490 encoding cbsB, and a third open reading frame (orf1) starting at nucleotide 2568 and extending beyond the end of the sequenced clone at nucleotide 2769. Fig. 7 shows both the gene and the protein sequences of cytochrome b558/566 and of an extremely hydrophobic protein (CbsB) not identified by protein chemistry so far. Some characteristic features are emphasized, such as, for example, a putative Box A and a possible terminating structure following the cbsB gene; possible transmembrane sections are underlined, and the only three histidines that are candidates for heme b coordination are circled.


View larger version (9K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 6.   Restriction map of S. acidocaldarius genomic cbs region. The two arrows indicate the probes used in Northern blot hybridization.


View larger version (41K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 7.   Gene and amino acid sequence of CbsA and CbsB. Candidates for a Box A (position 130-138 of sequenced fragment (49 to 41 bp upstream of starting methionine)) and a putative terminating structure (2501-2506) are boxed. The N-terminal sequences obtained from CNBr-cleaved fragments are set in boldface. Putative membrane spanning regions of CbsA are underlined, and the three histidines found in CbsA are circled.

Northern blot analysis using a homologous probe derived by in vitro transcription of a region comprising the cbsA and cbsB sequences revealed a single mRNA transcript of 2.5 kb (data not shown). A second probe specific only for cbsB hybridized to a single mRNA transcript of the same size (data not shown; location of probes is shown in Fig. 6). The length of this transcript corresponds well with the full length of the cbsAB genes (2312 bp). It might also include orf1, leading to a transcript of at least 2591 bases. However, that would imply that the stop codon of orf1 is located immediately after the end of the sequenced clone. In addition, the above-mentioned terminator suggests that orf1 is transcribed independently.

Amino Acid Sequence and Composition of Cytochrome b558/566 and CbsB-- The cbsA gene product contains 462 amino acids and has a predicted molecular mass of 50,736 Da. However, sequence comparisons with protein data bases revealed no significant similarity to any other cytochrome or known hemoprotein.

In accordance with the high degree of glycosylation of the protein (>20%), the amino acid composition displays a high content of serine and threonine (>9% each, Table 1 and Fig. 6). In addition, 16 amino acid triplet sequences of NXS or NXT denote possible N-glycosylation sites.

                              
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Table I
Amino acid composition of CbsA and CbsB

CbsA contains three histidines (residues 82, 190, and 307) and nine methionines in addition to the starting methionine. One of the former serves as ligand for the heme group. As discussed below, the other ligand of the heme might be either His or Met.

A hydrophobicity plot (Fig. 8) of CbsA reveals a hydrophobic stretch at the N terminus and a second one at the C terminus; both of these may serve as membrane anchors, with the hydrophilic bulk of the hemoprotein reaching out into the aqueous phase.


View larger version (24K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 8.   Hydropathy profiles of CbsA and CbsB. Profiles were calculated with the program MacMolly® Tetra (Soft Gene GmbH) using the algorithm of Kyte and Doolittle. The two putative transmembrane helices (tmh) of CbsA are marked.

The cbsB gene product contains 310 amino acids and has a predicted molecular mass of 35,155 Da. The hydrophobicity profile of CbsB displays an extreme hydrophobicity, suggesting at least 9 transmembrane helices (Fig. 8), with only short intervening sequences. Remarkable is its enormous content of leucine and other apolar amino acids (approx  53%); however, other typical sequence signatures could not be detected. Although it was cotranscribed with the cbsA gene, the respective protein band was not detected in any of the cytochrome b558/566 preparations.

Influence of Growth Medium on Cytochrome b558/566 Content of Membranes-- Previous experiments showed that even under oxygen-limiting conditions, S. acidocaldarius membranes contain only barely detectable amounts of cytochrome b558/566 when the cells had been grown in a medium largely deprived of nitrogen sources, i.e. yeast extract and L-glutamate were omitted and ammonium sulfate was reduced from 10 to 1.5 mM.2 This was the basis for experiments to grow S. acidocaldarius in media containing different carbon and nitrogen sources. The standard medium contained sucrose (0.2%), ammonium sulfate (10 mM), glutamate (5.8 mM), and 0.1% yeast extract. The most significant effects were perceived by replacement of the yeast extract. Under oxygen-limiting conditions, when the yeast extract was substituted for by peptone (data not shown), the content of cytochrome b558/566 doubled; when it was substituted for by casein hydrolysate, the content more than tripled (Fig. 9, column 4). Because the main component of peptone and casein are enzymatically digested proteins, a few selected amino acids were tested as to whether they could produce the same effect when they replaced the yeast extract. A mixture of L-leucine and L-isoleucine (each 1.25 mM in the growth medium) also caused a doubling in cytochrome b558/566 content (data not shown), whereas L-isoleucine alone (2.5 mM) caused more than a tripling of the content (Fig. 9, column 5). The content of the other cytochromes did not change significantly under any of these conditions. When the yeast extract was replaced by L-tryptophan, no growth occurred.


View larger version (22K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 9.   Cytochrome b558/566 content of S. acidocaldarius membranes under various growth conditions. Column 1, minimal medium (0.2% sucrose, 10 mM ammonium sulfate); column 2, glutamate medium (minimal medium + 5.8 mM L-glutamate); column 3, standard growth medium (minimal medium + 5.8 mM L-glutamate + 0.1% yeast extract); column 4, casein replacing yeast extract (glutamate medium + 0.1% casein); column 5, isoleucine replacing yeast extract (glutamate medium + 2.5 mM L-isoleucine); column 6, casein replacing glutamate (minimal medium + 0.1% casein); column 7, isoleucine replacing glutamate (minimal medium + 1.5 mM L-isoleucine).

Because all above growth media contained L-glutamic acid as a second amino acid source, the effect of omitting both yeast extract and L-glutamic acid from the standard growth medium was checked. In cells grown on sucrose as sole carbon source and ammonium sulfate as sole nitrogen source (minimal medium) the cytochrome b558/566 content decreased to about 10% of the standard growth medium (Fig. 9, column 1), whereas the other cytochromes remained in the normal range. When casein hydrolysate was added to this minimal medium, the cytochrome b558/566 content more than doubled compared with the standard medium (Fig. 9, column 6), whereas it dropped to a level of about 60% when replaced by L-isoleucine (column 7). However, it should be noted that in absence of L-glutamate, it was possible to adapt the cells only to 1.5 mM L-isoleucine but not to 2.5 mM, as in its presence. Thus, it is a synergistic effect of L-glutamic acid and casein hydrolysate or of L-glutamic acid and L-isoleucine that causes the tremendous increase in the cytochrome b558/566 content. Experiments to examine whether the carbon or the nitrogen moiety of glutamic acid is responsible for its positive effect on the cytochrome content failed; it was not possible to grow cells in a medium containing 2-oxoglutaric acid instead of glutamic acid.

    DISCUSSION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Procedures
Results
Discussion
References

The purification method by hydrophobic interaction chromatography previously described in Ref. 29 and further improved here led to a significant increase in the yield of cytochrome b558/566 preparations, unexpectedly revealing its character as a membrane-residing glycoprotein. Most likely due to its high glycosylation, the protein does not stain with silver, a property that in previous studies (10) caused the erroneous attribution of the spectrum to a well-staining 30-kDa band that in reality represented a copurifying contaminant polypeptide. The correct assignment to a 66-kDa Coomassie-staining band was now confirmed by mass spectrometry, which gave a single signal at 64.2 kDa for the molecular ion, thus simultaneously illustrating the homogeneity of the preparation. Consequently, the revised estimate of its heme content amounts to 1 heme b/mol, adjusting the actual values of 0.6-0.8 to the next integer stoichiometry. No tightly bound copper was associated with these preparations.

Structure and Localization-- Cytochrome b558/566 is an integral membrane protein and can only be solubilized by strong detergents. It is only the fourth glycoprotein found in the genus Sulfolobus. From S. acidocaldarius, the S-layer protein has been described as a glycoprotein (30). Thermopsin, an acidic protease partially associated with the cells, partially found in the medium, is thought to be a glycoprotein as well, because it contains 11 potential N-glycosylation sites (31). In S. shibatae, two flagellin proteins with identical N-terminal sequences have been found that stained positively for glycoproteins (32). To our knowledge, the composition and the structure of the sugar moiety has not been elucidated in these examples. Hence, this study is the first time that the sugar part of a glycoprotein from the genus Sulfolobus has undergone close examination.

Sequencing of the cbs operon provides interesting insights into the primary structure of this novel hemoprotein. The two hydrophobic stretches at the N and C termini (Fig. 8) are thought to serve as membrane anchors, whereas the hydrophilic major part of the protein is highly glycosylated and therefore is supposed to be exposed to the outer surface of the plasma membrane. Notably, secondary structure predictions for this middle part suggest mainly loop regions and beta -strands, with less than 10% alpha -helix contribution. Possible glycosylation sites are mainly found in the predicted loop regions. High glycosylation of this middle part probably serves as a stabilizing element within acidic environments and, more important, as a protection against proteolytic attack. In fact, only after deglycosylation was the cytochrome accessible to proteolytic digestion in vitro.

Because the N terminus of cytochrome b558/566 was not accessible to chemical amino acid sequencing, the actual N terminus in the native protein is still matter of debate. Because the sequence after the second methionine (Met74) in the DNA-derived protein sequence could be obtained from a CNBr-cleaved fragment, the real N terminus must be located somewhere between Met1 and Met74. It appears possible that part of the first amino acids might form a leader sequence targeting the cytochrome to the membrane and/or causing its glycosylation. If a leader sequence is cleaved from the protein, the relative sugar content of the glycoprotein would even increase in order to account for the molecular mass determined by mass spectrometry. In addition, only the C-terminal alpha -helix would then function as a membrane anchor in the mature protein.

The extremely hydrophobic protein encoded by cbsB probably enhances the linkage of the cytochrome to the membrane. It could also establish a link to an additional protein complex of yet unknown function. CbsB could not be identified on the protein level so far. Nevertheless, the common transcript of cbsA and cbsB strongly suggests that both proteins form a functional unit. Due to the great difference in hydrophobicity, the two proteins are probably dissociated during the purification procedure.

Properties and Function-- An important alteration in the purification procedure was to avoid imidazole in any buffer. Imidazole presumably is able to alter the ligation of the heme-iron, replacing a weaker ligand provided by the amino acid side chains of the protein. As such, 9 out of 10 methionines located in the central hydrophilic core of the protein may be envisaged. Thus, imidazole treatment appears likely to pave the way for a further ligand exchange against CO. Cytochrome b558/566 prepared according to the described protocol does not form a CO compound, but it was shown to reversibly assume this property after exposure to 0.1 M imidazole. Whether a bis-His or a His/Met ligation is present in the cytochrome cannot be decided from the EPR spectra, because the only unambiguously detected gz value falls into the overlap region for both types of ligands. In analogy to c-type cytochromes with His/Met ligation, the novel cytochrome b558/566 exhibits a reduction potential >+350 mV, whereas species with bis-His ligation have reduction potentials in the range of 0 to -400 mV (33). Furthermore, c-type cytochromes with His/Met ligation distorted by, for example, imidazole treatment also become capable of binding CO, whereas integral c-type cytochromes are not (34). In this context, the observed CO binding behavior of cytochrome b558/566 can be sufficiently explained. But also, even more unusual types of ligation cannot definitely be excluded. For example, cytochrome f of the chloroplast cytochrome b6f complex from Brassica rapa binds heme with the N terminus of the polypeptide chain as secondary ligand (35). However, the gz value of 3.13 in the EPR spectrum of cytochrome b558/566 is not in accord with this type of ligation. Regardless how the heme group is coordinated, it is certainly not embedded within the membrane-spanning regions of the protein, because all three histidines providing at least the primary axial ligand to the heme iron are also located in the large hydrophilic core of the protein.

Although data bank searches did not disclose any sequence similarities to known hemoproteins, the properties of the cytochrome b558/566 may give a hint to a possible physiological function. Due to the likely pseudoperiplasmic location and the above-mentioned characteristics of the heme center, we propose a cytochrome c-like function analogous to the situation in Paracoccus denitrificans (36) linking pseudoperiplasmic redox metabolism to membrane-residing electron transport systems. Nothing is known in detail about pseudoperiplasmic metabolism of Sulfolobus as yet; however, this hypothesis fits with the observation that cytochrome b558/566 is significantly up-regulated under certain organotrophic growth conditions (Fig. 9) in combination with low oxygen tension. Because these essentially involve the supply of specific amino acids or protein hydrolysates, future experiments have to prove whether or not such pseudoperiplasmic redox reactions occur in their metabolism. The prominent effect of L-isoleucine on the abundance of cytochrome b558/566 may additionally be due to the fact that CbsB contains an unusual large number of isoleucine residues. If its synthesis is limited by the availability of this amino acid, then that of CbsA, which is cotranscribed, would also be affected. Whether or not the synthesis of cytochrome b558/566 (CbsA) is regulated solely on the level of transcription remains to be investigated.

The unusual properties of cytochrome b558/566 could possibly define a novel class of hemoproteins. First, the molecular mass is unexpectedly high for a monoheme cytochrome. Second, the visible spectrum comprising two distinct alpha -band peaks (563 and 553 nm at liquid nitrogen temperature) is surprisingly complicated for a hexa-coordinated, monoheme cytochrome. Third, cytochrome b558/566 is glycosylated. Very few glycosylated and membrane-bound cytochromes are known. Probably the best examined is flavocytochrome b558, formerly named cytochrome b-245, being part of a NADPH oxidase that generates superoxide in phagocytic cells (respiratory burst oxidase) (37, 38). Although it is tempting to assume a similarity to cytochrome b558/566, the difference in redox potentials (+400 compared with -245 mV) clearly shows that these two cytochromes share no common function. Another example is the ferrireductase system from Saccharomyces cerevisiae (39), which exhibits striking similarities to the same NADPH oxidase. Further examples include a member of the P-450 system (40) and porcine thyroid peroxidase (41). All of these examples have been found in the domain of eukarya. In the domain of archaea, cytochrome b558/566 is the first protein displaying this combination of properties. This provides strong evidence that this protein does not belong to any known cytochrome family but is indeed a novel kind of prokaryotic hemoprotein, the physiological function of which has to be elucidated.

    ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

We thank Dr. Werner G. Purschke for general advice on DNA and RNA techniques and Walter Verheyen for skillful technical assistance. We thank Simone Kardinahl for performing the atomic absorption spectroscopy. We are indebted to Dr. Buko Lindner and Helga Lüthje for the MALDI-time of flight MS analysis.

    FOOTNOTES

* This work was supported by a grant from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Scha 125/17-3).The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

The nucleotide sequence(s) reported in this paper has been submitted to the GenBankTM/EMBL Data Bank with accession number(s) Y10108.

To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel.: 49-451-500-4060; Fax: 49-451-500-4068; E-mail: schaefer{at}physik.mu-luebeck.de.

1 The abbreviations used are: Mes, 2-(N-morpholino)ethanesulfonic acid; AS, ammonium sulfate; DM, n-dodecyl-beta -maltoside; MALDI, matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization; MS, mass spectrometry; SB-12, N-dodecyl-N,N-dimethyl-ammonio-3-propane-sulfonate; GLC, gas liquid chromatography; PAGE, polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis; kb, kilobase(s).

2 Christian L. Schmidt, unpublished results.

    REFERENCES
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Procedures
Results
Discussion
References

  1. Brock, T. D., Brock, K. M., Belly, R. T., and Weiss, R. L. (1972) Arch. Microbiol. 84, 54-68
  2. Janssen, S., Schäfer, G., Anemüller, S., and Moll, R. (1997) J. Bacteriol. 179, 5560-5569[Abstract]
  3. Moll, R., and Schäfer, G. (1991) Eur. J. Biochem. 201, 593-600[Abstract]
  4. Schmidt, C. L., Anemüller, S., and Schäfer, G. (1996) FEBS Lett. 388, 43-46[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  5. Lübben, M., Arnaud, S., Castresana, J., Warne, A., Albracht, S. P., and Saraste, M. (1994) Eur. J. Biochem. 224, 151-159[Abstract]
  6. Schäfer, G. (1996) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1277, 163-200[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  7. Gleißner, M., Kaiser, U., Antonopoulos, E., and Schäfer, G. (1997) J. Biol. Chem. 272, 8417-8426[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  8. Lübben, M., Kolmerer, B., and Saraste, M. (1992) EMBO J. 11, 805-812[Abstract]
  9. Castresana, J., Lübben, M., and Saraste, M. (1995) J. Mol. Biol. 250, 202-210[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  10. Becker, M., and Schäfer, G. (1991) FEBS Lett. 291, 331-335[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  11. Anemüller, S., and Schäfer, G. (1990) Eur. J. Biochem. 191, 297-305[Abstract]
  12. Sambrook, S., Fritsch, E. F., and Maniatis, T. (1989) Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual, 2nd Ed., Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, NY
  13. Peterson, G. L. (1977) Anal. Biochem. 83, 346-356[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  14. Williams, J. N. (1964) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 107, 537-543
  15. Schäfer, G., Anemüller, S., Moll, R., Gleißner, M., and Schmidt, C. L. (1994) Syst. Appl. Microbiol. 16, 544-555
  16. Dutton, P. L. (1978) Methods Enzymol. 54, 411-435[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  17. Laemmli, U. K. (1970) Nature 227, 680-685[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  18. Schägger, H., and von Jagow, G. (1987) Anal. Biochem. 166, 368-379[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  19. Wardi, A. H., and Michos, G. A. (1972) Anal. Biochem. 49, 607-609[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  20. Sawardeker, J. S., Sloneker, J. H., and Jeanes, A. (1965) Anal. Chem. 37, 1602-1603
  21. Lee, Y. C., and Rice, K. G. (1993) in Glycobiology (Fukuda, M., and Kobata, A., eds), pp. 127-163, IRL Press, Oxford
  22. Marmur, J. (1961) J. Mol. Biol. 3, 208-218
  23. Holmes, D. S., and Quigley, M. (1981) Anal. Biochem. 114, 193-197[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  24. Purschke, W. G., Schmidt, C. L., Petersen, A., and Schäfer, G. (1996) J. Bacteriol. 179, 1344-1353[Abstract]
  25. Inoue, H., Nojiama, H., and Okajama, H. (1990) Gene 6, 23-28[CrossRef]
  26. Purschke, W. G., and Schäfer, G. (1996) Anal. Biochem. 238, 98-100[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  27. Boehringer Mannheim. (1993) The DIG System User's Guide for Filter Hybridization, Boehringer Mannheim GmbH, Mannheim, Germany
  28. Becker, M. (1992) Isolierung und Charakterisierung eines b-typ Cytochroms aus Sulfolobus acidocaldarius. Ph.D. Thesis, Medizinische Universität zu Lübeck, Lübeck, Geremany
  29. Moll, R., Schmidt, C. L., Gleibeta ner, M., Becker, M., and Schäfer, G. (1993) Biol. Chem. Hoppe-Seyler 374, 746
  30. Michel, H., Neugebauer, D.-C., and Oesterhelt, D. (1980) in Electron Microscopy at Molecular Dimension (Baumeister, W., and Vogell, W., eds), pp. 27-35, Springer-Verlag, Berlin
  31. Lin, X. L., and Tang, J. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 1490-1495[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  32. Faguy, D. M., Bayley, D. P., Kostyukova, A. S., Thomas, N. A., and Jarrel, K. F. (1996) J. Bacteriol. 178, 902-905[Abstract]
  33. Mathews, F. S. (1985) Prog. Biophys. Mol. Biol. 45, 1-56[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  34. Lemberg, R., and Barrett, J. (1973) Cytochromes, pp. 122-216, Academic Press, London
  35. Martinez, S. E., Huang, D., Szczepaniak, A., Cramer, W. A., and Smith, J. L. (1994) Structure 2, 95-105[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  36. van Spanning, R. J. M., de Boer, A. P. N., Reijnders, W. N. M., De Gier, J.-W. L., Delorme, C. O., Stouthamer, A. H., Westerhoff, H. V., Harms, N., and van der Oost, J. (1995) J. Bioenerg. Biomembr. 27, 499-512[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  37. Chanock, S. J., El Benna, J., Smith, R. M., and Babior, B. M. (1994) J. Biol. Chem. 269, 24519-24522[Free Full Text]
  38. Wallach, T. M., and Segal, A. W. (1997) Biochem. J. 321, 583-585[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  39. Lesuisse, E., Casteras-Simon, M., and Labbe, P. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271, 13578-13583[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  40. Shimozawa, O., Sakaguchi, M., Ogawa, H., Harada, N., Mihara, K., and Omura, T. (1993) J. Biol. Chem. 268, 21399-21402[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  41. Moura, E. G., Pazos-Moura, C. C., Yokoyama, N., Dorris, M. L., and Taurog, A. (1991) Acta Endocrinol. 124, 107-114[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]


Copyright © 1998 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.