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Volume 270,
Number 35,
Issue of September 01, pp. 20345-20358, 1995
©1995 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
Molecular Genetic
and Protein Chemical Characterization of the Cytochrome ba from Thermus thermophilus HB8
(Received for publication, November 21,
1994; and in revised form, June 13, 1995)
J. Andrew
Keightley
, <WBR>
Barbara H.
Zimmermann
, <WBR>
Michael W.
Mather
, <WBR>
Penelope
Springer
, <WBR>
Andrzej
Pastuszyn
, <WBR>
David
M.
Lawrence
, <WBR>
James
A.
Fee
Thermus thermophilus HB8 cells grown under reduced
dioxygen tensions contain a substantially increased amount of heme A,
much of which appears to be due to the presence of the terminal
oxidase, cytochrome ba . We describe a purification
procedure for this enzyme that yields 100 mg of pure protein from
2 kg of wet mass of cells grown in 50 µM O . Examination of the protein by SDS-polyacrylamide
gel electrophoresis followed by staining with Coomassie Blue reveals
one strongly staining band at 35 kDa and one very weakly staining
band at 18 kDa as reported earlier (Zimmermann, B. H., Nitsche, C.
I., Fee, J. A., Rusnak, F., and Münck, E. (1988) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 85, 5779-5783). By
contrast, treatment of the gels with AgNO reveals that the
larger polypeptide stains quite weakly while the smaller polypeptide
stains very strongly. These results suggested the presence of two
polypeptides in this protein. Using partial amino acid sequences from
both proteins to obtain DNA sequence information, we isolated and
sequenced a portion of the Thermus chromosome containing the
genes encoding the larger protein, subunit I (cbaA), and the
smaller protein, subunit II (cbaB). The two polypeptides were
isolated using reversed phase liquid chromatography, and their mole
percent amino acid compositions are consistent with the proposed
translation of their respective genes. The two genes appear to be part
of a larger operon, but we have not extended the sequencing to identify
initiation and termination sequences. The deduced amino acid sequence
of subunit I includes the six canonical histidine residues involved in
binding the low spin heme B and the binuclear center
Cu /heme A. These and other conserved amino acids are placed
along the polypeptide among alternating hydrophobic and hydrophilic
segments in a pattern that shows clear homology to other members of the
heme- and copper-requiring terminal oxidases. The deduced amino acid
sequence of the subunit II contains the Cu binding motif,
including two cysteines, two histidines, and a methionine, but, in
contrast to most other subunits II, it has only one region of
hydrophobic sequence near its N terminus. Alignment of these two
polypeptides with other cytochrome c and quinol oxidases,
combined with secondary structure analysis and previous spectral
studies, clearly establish cytochrome ba as a bona fide member of the superfamily of heme- and
copper-requiring oxidases. The alignments further indicate that
cytochrome ba is phylogenetically distant from
other cytochrome c and quinol oxidases, and they substantially
decrease the number of conserved amino acid residues.

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Copyright © 1995 by the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.
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