Paul D. Barker
University of Oxford
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Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003
James W. A. Allen; Paul D. Barker; Stuart J. Ferguson
Cytochrome b562 is a periplasmic Escherichia coli protein; previous work has shown that heme can be attached covalently in vivo as a consequence of introduction of one or two cysteines into the heme-binding pocket. A heterogeneous mixture of products was obtained, and it was not established whether the covalent bond formation was catalyzed or spontaneous. Here, we show that coexpression from plasmids of a variant of cytochrome b562 containing a CXXCH heme-binding motif with the E. coli cytochrome c maturation (Ccm) proteins results in an essentially homogeneous product that is a correctly matured c-type cytochrome. Formation of the holocytochrome was accompanied by substantial production of its apo form, in which, for the protein as isolated, there is a disulfide bond between the two cysteines in the CXXCH motif. Following addition of heme to reduced CXXCH apoprotein, spontaneous covalent addition of heme to polypeptide occurred in vitro. Strikingly, the spectral properties were very similar to those of the material obtained from cells in which presumed uncatalyzed addition of heme (i.e. in the absence of Ccm) had been observed. The major product from uncatalyzed heme attachment was an incorrectly matured cytochrome with the heme rotated by 180° relative to its normal orientation. The contrast between Ccm-dependent and Ccm-independent covalent attachment of heme indicates that the Ccm apparatus presents heme to the protein only in the orientation that results in formation of the correct product and also that heme does not become covalently attached to the apocytochrome b562 CXXCH variant without being handled by the Ccm system in the periplasm. The CXXCH variant of cytochrome b562 was also expressed in E. coli strains deficient in the periplasmic reductant DsbD or oxidant DsbA. In the DsbA- strain under aerobic conditions, c-type cytochromes were made abundantly and correctly when the Ccm proteins were expressed. This contrasts with previous reports indicating that DsbA is essential for cytochrome c biogenesis in E. coli.
Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry | 1989
Paul D. Barker; H. Allen O. Hill; Nicholas J. Walton
Abstract Chemical modification of metal surfaces by chemisorption provides a versatile method for the production of electrode interfaces which can be selective for the direct electrochemistry of one redox protein over another. The electrochemistry of a mixture of horse heart cytochrome c and spinach plastocyanin has been investigated at gold surfaces made selective for first one and then the other protein. The resulting cyclic voltammetry is quite unusual, containing pre-shoulders to both reduction current and reoxidation current peaks. The results have been interpreted in terms of fast second order electron transfer reactions taking place between the two proteins in homogeneous solution. This rationalisation has been corroborated by an explicit digital simulation of the proposed reaction scheme, using second order RKI. There are three independently variable parameters to the simulation: forward kinetic parameter, reverse kinetic parameter, and concentration ratio of non-electrode-active species to electrode-active species. The simulation has been used to explore a number of interesting trends in these parameters. Five such sequences of simulated cyclic voltammograms are reported, together with peak current and potential data in most cases. Attention is drawn to the possibility for further interesting experimental mixed redox protein electrochemistry at selective surfaces.
Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry | 1991
Paul D. Barker; Marcia R. Mauk; A. Grant Mauk
Two potentiometric methods have been used to study the pH-dependent changes in proton binding that accompany complex formation between cytochrome c and cytochrome b5. With one method, the number of protons bound or released upon addition of one cytochrome to the other has been measured as a function of pH. The results from these studies are correlated with the complexation-induced difference titration curve calculated from the titration curves of the preformed complex and of the individual proteins. Both methods demonstrate that complex formation at acid pH is accompanied by proton release, that complex formation at basic pH is accompanied by proton uptake, and that the change in proton binding at neutral pH, where stability of complex formation is maximal, is relatively small. Under all conditions studied, the stoichiometry of cytochrome c-cytochrome b5 complex formation is 1:1 with no evidence of higher order complex formation. Although the dependence of complex formation on pH for interaction between different species of cytochrome c and cytochrome b5 are qualitatively similar, they are quantitatively different. In particular, complex formation between yeast iso-1-cytochrome c and lipase-solubilized bovine cytochrome b5 occurs with a stability constant that is 10-fold greater than observed for the other two pairs of proteins under all conditions studied. Interaction between these two proteins is also significantly less dependent on ionic strength than observed for complexes formed by horse heart cytochrome c with either form of cytochrome b5.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Biochemistry | 1993
Scott H. Northrup; Kathryn A. Thomasson; Miller Cm; Paul D. Barker; Lindsay D. Eltis; Guillemette Jg; Inglis Sc; Mauk Ag
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 1992
Paul D. Barker; A. Grant Mauk
Biochemistry | 1990
S.P Rafferty; Pearce Ll; Paul D. Barker; J.G Guillemette; Kay Cm; Michael Smith; Mauk Ag
Biochemistry | 1991
Lindsay D. Eltis; R. G. Herbert; Paul D. Barker; Mauk Ag; S. H. Northrup
FEBS Journal | 1990
Paul D. Barker; Kati di Gleria; H. Allen O. Hill; Valerie J. Lowe
Biochemistry | 1990
S. Bagby; Paul D. Barker; Liang-Hong Guo; H. A. O. Hill
Biochemical Journal | 1991
S Bagby; Paul D. Barker; H. A. O. Hill; G S Sanghera; B Dunbar; G A Ashby; R R Eady; R N F Thorneley