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JBC, Vol. 250, Issue 18, 7114-7119, Sep, 1975

Mechanism of the reductive activation of succinate dehydrogenase

B. A. Ackrell, E. B. Kearney and D. Edmondson

When succinate dehydrogenase contains oxalacetate in firmly bound form, activity cannof the enzyme results in dissociation of oxalacetate and activation of the enzyme. The course of reductive titrations appears the same whether or not the enzyme contains oxalacetate, and complete reduction as monitored by bleaching of chromophoric groups requires the incorporation of 6 to 7 reducing equivalents in either case. The stoichiometry is that expected from the non-heme iron and flavin content of the enzyme. Activation of the enzyme during reductive titrations occurs predominantly with the incorporation of the second pair of electrons, while determination of activation levels at various poised potentials shows that the group involved is reduced with the uptake of 2 H+ and 2 e-. These characteristics are consistent with titration of the flavin moiety rather than non-heme iron groups. Thus it appears that activation is concurrent with the reduction of flavin to the hydroquinone form. From the measured half-reduction potential for activation, that of the flavin in an oxalacetate-free enzyme has been estimated at -90 to -60 mv at pH 7.
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