Proteins that oxidize extracellular substrates in Gram-positive bacteria are poorly understood. is an actinobacterium that respires aerobically on extracellular ferrous ions at pH 1.5. absorbance measurements were conducted on turbid suspensions of intact using an integrating cavity absorption meter designed for that purpose. Initial velocity kinetic studies monitored the appearance of product ferric ions in the presence of catalytic quantities of cells. Cell-catalyzed iron oxidation obeyed the Michaelis-Menten equation with and values of 71 μM and 0.29 fmol/min/cell, respectively. Limited-turnover kinetic studies were conducted with higher concentrations of cells to detect and monitor changes in the absorbance properties of cellular redox proteins when the cells were exposed to limited quantities of soluble reduced iron. A single -type cytochrome with reduced absorbance peaks at 448 and 605 nm was the only redox-active chromophore that was visible as the cells respired aerobically on iron. The reduced cytochrome 605 exhibited mathematical and correlational properties that were consistent with the hypothesis that oxidation of the cytochrome constituted the rate-limiting step in the aerobic respiratory process, with a turnover number of 35 ± 2 s Genomic and proteomic analyses showed that could and did express only two -type heme copper terminal oxidases. Cytochrome 605 was associated with the terminal oxidase gene that is located between nucleotides 31,090 and 33,039, inclusive, in the annotated circular genome of this bacterium. The identities and functions of proteins involved in aerobic respiration on extracellular ferrous ions at acidic pH are poorly understood in the four phyla of Gram-positive eukaryotes and archaea where such activities occur. absorbance measurements were conducted on as it respired on extracellular iron using an integrating cavity absorption meter that permitted accurate optical measurements in turbid suspensions of the intact bacterium under physiological conditions. The significance of these measurements is that they permitted a direct spectrophotometric examination of the extents and rates of biological electron transfer events under noninvasive physiological conditions without disrupting the complexity of the live cellular environment. One thing is certain: one way to understand how a protein functions in an intact organism is to actually observe that protein as it functions in the intact organism. This paper provides an example of just such an observation.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7642076PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AEM.01906-20DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

cytochrome 605
12
oxidation cytochrome
8
rate-limiting step
8
respires aerobically
8
extracellular ferrous
8
ferrous ions
8
absorbance measurements
8
measurements conducted
8
turbid suspensions
8
suspensions intact
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!