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Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1976

The kinetics of the reduction of cytochrome c by the superoxide anion radical.

Willem H. Koppenol; K.J.H. van Buuren; John Butler; R. Braams

1. At neutral pH ferricytochrome c is reduced by the superoxide anion radical (O2-), without loss of enzymatic activity, by a second order process in which no intermediates are observed. The yield of ferrocytochrome c (82-104%), as related to the amount of O2- produced, is slightly dependent on the concentration of sodium formate in the matrix solution. 2. The reaction (k1 equals (1.1+/-0.1) - 10(6) M-1 - s-1 at pH 7.2, I equals 4 mM and 21 degrees C) can be inhibited by superoxide dismutase and trace amounts of copper ions. The inhibition by copper ions is removed by EDTA without interference in the O2- reduction reaction. 3. The second-order rate constant for the reaction of O2- with ferricytochrome c depends on the pH of the matrix solution, decreasing rapidly at pH greater than 8. The dependence of the rate constant on the pH can be explained by assuming that only the neutral form of ferricytochrome c reacts with O2- and that the alkaline form of the hemoprotein is unreactive. From studies at pH 8.9, the rate for the transition from the alkaline to the neutral form of ferricytochrome c can be estimated to be 0.3 s-1 (at 21 degrees C and I equals 4 mM). 4. The second-order rate constant for the reaction of O2- with ferricytochrome c is also dependent on the ionic strength of the medium. From a plot of log k1 versus I1/2-(I + alphaI1/2)-1 we determined the effective charge on the ferricytochrome c molecule as +6.3 and the rate constant at I equals 0 as (3.1+/-0.1) - 10(6) M-1 - s-1 (pH 7.1, 21 degrees C). 5. The possibility that singlet oxygen is formed as a product of the reaction of O2- with ferricytochrome c can be ruled out on thermodynamic grounds.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1978

The electric potential field around cytochrome c and the effect of ionic strength on reaction rates of horse cytochrome c

Willem H. Koppenol; C.A.J. Vroonland; R. Braams

1. The electric potential fields around tuna ferri- and ferrocytochrome c were calculated assuming that (i) all of the lysines and arginines are protonated, (ii) all of the glutamic and aspartic acids and the terminal carboxylic acid are dissociated, and (iii) the haem has a net charge of +1e in the oxidized form. 2. Near the haem crevice high values for the potential (greater than +2.5 kT/e) are found. Consequently, electron transfer via the haem edge is favored if the oxidant or reductant is negatively charged. 3. The inhomogeneous distribution of charges leads to a dipole moment of 244 and 238 debye for oxidized and reduced tuna cytochrome c, respectively. Horse cytochrome c has dipole moments of 303 (oxidized) and 286 (reduced) debye. 4. A line through the positive and negative charge centres, the dipole axis, crosses the tuna cytochrome c surface at Ala 83 (positive part) and Lys 99 (negative part). The direction of the dipole axis of horse cytochrome c is very similar. Since the centre of the domain on the cytochrome c surface, which is involved in the binding to cytochrome c oxidase, is found at the beta-carbon of the Phe 82 in horse cytochrome c (Ferguson-Miller, S., Brautigan, D.L. and Margoliash, E. (1978) J. Biol. Chem. 253, 149--159) it is suggested that the direction of the dipole is of physiological importance. 5. The activity coefficients of horse ferri- and ferrocytochrome c were calculated as a function of ionic strength using a formula derived by Kirkwood (Kirkwood, J.G. (1934) J. Chem. Phys. 2, 351--361). 6. Due to the high net charge at pH 7.5 the influence of the dipole moments of horse ferri- and ferrocytochrome c on the respective activity coefficients can be neglected at I less than or equal to 50 mM. 7. Using the Brønsted relation the effect of ionic strength on reaction rates of horse cytochrome c was calculated. Good agreement is found between theory and experimental results reported in the literature.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1974

Biochemical and biophysical studies on cytochrome c oxidase XIV. The reaction with cytochrome c as studied by pulse radiolysis

K.J.H. Van Buuren; B.F. Van Gelder; Jaap Wilting; R. Braams

Abstract 1. The reduction of cytochrome c oxidase by hydrated electrons was studied in the absence and presence of cytochrome c . 2. Hydrated electrons do not readily reduce the heme of cytochrome c oxidase. This observation supports our previous conclusion that heme a is not directly exposed to the solvent. 3. In a mixture of cytochrome c and cytochrome c oxidase, cytochrome c is first reduced by hydrated electrons ( k = 4 · 10 10 M −1 · s −1 at 22 °C and pH 7.2) after which it transfers electrons to cytochrome c oxidase with a rate constant of 6 · 10 7 M −1 · s −1 at 22 °C and pH 7.2. 4. It was found that two equivalents of cytochrome c are oxidized initially per equivalent of heme a reduced, showing that one electron is accepted by a second electron acceptor, probably one of the copper atoms of cytochrome c oxidase. 5. After the initial reduction, redistribution of electrons takes place until an equilibrium is reached similar to that found in redox experiments of Tiesjema, R. H., Muijsers, A. O. and Van Gelder, B. F. (1973) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 305, 19–28.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1972

The reduction mechanism of ferricytochrome c

Jaap Wilting; R. Braams; Henk Nauta; Karel J.H. Van Buuren

The second-order rate constant of the reaction between the hydrated electron and ferrinitrocytochrome c exhibits a marked pH dependence that could not be fully ascribed to changes in geometrical parameters and in net charge of the protein molecule. The correlation between the pH dependence of the rate constant, the 695-nm absorbance and the ionization state of the nitrated tyrosyl-67 residue indicates that tyrosine-67 is of importance in maintaining the specific structure for the electron transfer mechanism in ferricytochrome c upon reduction.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1975

The mechanism of reduction of cytochrome c as studied by pulse radiolysis

Jaap Wilting; Karel J.H. Van Buuren; R. Braams; Bob F. Van Gelder

1. The reaction of hydrated electrons with ferricytochrome c was studied using the pulse-radiolysis technique. 2. In 3.3 mM phosphate-buffer (pH 7.2), 100 mM methanol and at a concentration of cytochrome c of less than 20 muM the reduction kinetics of ferricytochrome c by hydrated electrons is a bimolecular process with a rate constant of 4.5-10-10 M-1-S-1 (21 degrees C). 3. At a concentration of cytochrome c of more than 20 muM the apparent order of the reaction of hydrated electrons with ferricytochrome c measured at 650 nm decreases due to the occurrence of a rate-determining first-order process with an estimated rate constant of 5-10-6s-1 (pH 7.2, 21 degrees C). 4. At high concentration of cytochrome c the reaction-time courses measured at 580 and 695 nm appear to be biphasic. A rapid initial phase (75% and 30% of total absorbance change at 580 and 695 nm, respectively), corresponding to the reduction reaction, is followed by a first-order change in absorbance with a rate constant of 1.3-10-5 S-1 (pH 7.2, 21 degrees C). 5. The results are interpreted in a scheme in which first a transient complex between cytochrome c and the hydrated electron is formed, after which the heme iron is reduced and followed by relaxation of the protein from its oxidized to its reduced conformation. 6. It is calculated that one of each three encounters of the hydrated electron and ferricytochrome c results in a reduction of the heme iron. This high reaction probability is discussed in terms of charge and solvent interactions. 7. A reduction mechanism for cytochrome c is favored in which the reduction equivalent from the hydrated electron is transmitted through a specific pathway from the surface of the molecule to the heme iron.


International Journal of Radiation Biology | 1961

The effect of electron radiation on the tensile strength of tendon.

R. Braams

SummaryMeasurements of tensile strength were carried out on electron-irradiated strips of tendon. For dry tendon the dose needed to reduce the tensile strength to 37 per cent of its original value was found at approximately 18 Mrad. For the hydrated tendon the 37 per cent dose is approximately 46 Mrad. The presence of water thus reduces the sensitivity; this effect seems in disagreement with the assumption that the contributions of the direct and the indirect effect are additive.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1977

The reduction of porphyrin cytochrome c by hydrated electrons and the subsequent electron transfer reaction from reduced porphyrin cytochrome c to ferricytochrome c

J. De Kok; John Butler; R. Braams; B.F. Van Gelder

1. Hydrated electrons, produced by pulse radiolysis react with porphyrin cytochrome c with a bimolecular rate constant of 3-10(10) M-1 S-1 at 21 degrees C and pH 7.4. 2. After the reduction step an absorbance change with a half-life of 5 microns is observed with the spectral range of 430-470 nm. A relatively stable intermediate then decays with a half-life of 15 s. 3. The spectrum of the intermediate observed 50 microns after the generation of hydrated electrons shows a broad absorption band between 600 and 700 nm and a peak at 408 nm. The spectrum is attributed to the protonated form of an initially produced porphyrin anion radical. 4. Reduced porphyrin cytochrome c reacts with ferricytochrome c with a bimolecular constant of 2-10(5) M-1- S-1 in 2 mM phosphate pH 7.4, at 21 degrees C and of 2 - 10(6) M-1-S-1 under the same conditions but at 1 M ionic strength. It is proposed that electron transfer in an analogous exchange reaction between ferrocytochrome c and ferricytochrome c occurs via the exposed part of the haem.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1977

Mechanism of the reaction of hydrated electrons with ferrocytochrome c

John Butler; J. De Kok; J.R. De Weille; Willem H. Koppenol; R. Braams

1. The hydrated electron reacts with ferrocytochrome c to form an unstable intermediate. This intermediate decays in a first-order manner to give, in the first instance, a product which has a similar absorption spectrum in the range 400-610 nm as normal ferricytochrome c. 2. At 21 degrees C the rate constant for the reaction of hydrated electrons with ferrocytochrome c at pH 7.4 (2 mM phosphate buffer) is (3.0 +/- 0.3) = 10(10) M-1 - S-1. As the pH is increased above pH 8.0 the rate constant steadily decreases. The dependence of the rate constant on pH can be explained if ferrocytochrome c has a pK of around 9.2. 3. At 21 degrees C and pH 7.4, the rate constant for the decay of the intermediate is (1.40 +/- 0.15) - 10(5) S-1. This reaction shows no pH dependence in the range 6-2-11.0. 4. A mechanism is proposed whereby the central metal atom of the ferrocytochrome c is oxidased and a thioether bond is reduced. The resulting ferricytochrome c species then slowly develops an absorbance at 606 nm due to the attack of the sulfhydryl group on the haem.


International Journal of Radiation Biology | 1963

Partially Damaged Molecules after Irradiation of Dry Invertase with Fast Electrons and Protons

R. Braams

Experiments with commercial yeast invertase showed that, in addition to a fraction of inactivated molecules, a fraction of heat-labile molecules was formed by irradiation with electrons or protons. The results demonstrate the possibility of partial damage due to the action of ionizing radiation on large molecules.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1974

Conformational Changes and Ligand Dissociation Kinetics following Rapid Reduction of Human Aquomethemoglobin and Horse Aquometmyoglobin by Hydrated Electrons

Jaap Wilting; Adriaan Raap; R. Braams; Simon H. de Bruin; Harry S. Rollema; Lambert H.M. Janssen

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