Abstract
The blue copper protein rusticyanin isolated from the acidophilic proteobacterium Thiobacillus ferrooxidans displays a pH-dependent redox midpoint potential with a pK value of 7 on the oxidized form of the protein. The nature of the alterations of optical and EPR spectra observed above the pK value indicated that the redox-linked deprotonation occurs on the ε- nitrogen of the histidine ligands to the copper ion. Complex formation between rusticyanin and its probable electron transfer partner, cytochrome c4, induced a decrease of rusticyanin's redox midpoint potential by more than 100 mV together with spectral changes similar to those observed above the pK value of the free form. Complex formation thus substantially modifies the pK value of the surface-exposed histidine ligand to the copper ion and thereby tunes the redox midpoint potential of the copper site. Comparisons with reports on other blue copper proteins suggest that the surface-exposed histidine ligand is employed as a redox tuning device by many members of this group of soluble electron carriers.
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CITATION STYLE
Giudici-Orticoni, M. T., Guerlesquin, F., Bruschi, M., & Nitschke, W. (1999). Interaction-induced redox switch in the electron transfer complex rusticyanin-cytochrome c4. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 274(43), 30365–30369. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.274.43.30365
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