Conversion of CuA to a type II copper in cytochrome c oxidase

Abstract
When cytochrome c oxidase is incubated at 43.degree.C for .apprx.75 min in a solution containing the zwitterionic detergent sulfobetaine 12, the CuA site is converted into a type II copper as judged by changes in the 830-nm absorption band and the EPR spectrum of the enzymes. SDS-PAGE and sucrose gradient ultracentrifugation indicate concomitant loss of subunit III and monomerization of the enzyme during the heat treatment. Comparison of the optical and resonance Raman spectra of the heat-treated and native protein shows that the heme chromophores are not significantly perturbed; the resonance Raman data indicate that the small heme perturbations observed are limited to the cytochrome .alpha.3 site. Proton pumping measurements, conducted on the modified enzyme reconsituted into phospholipid vesicles, indicate that these vesicles are unusually permeable toward protons during turnover, as previously reported for the p-(hydroxymercuri)benzoate-modified oxidase and the modified enzyme obtained by heat treatment in lauryl maltoside. The sulfobetaine 12 modified enzyme is no longer capable of undergoing the recently reported conformational transitions in which the tryptophan fluorescence changes upon reduction of the low-potential metal centers. Control studies on the monomeric and subunit III dissociated enzymes suggests that the disruption of this conformational change in the heat-treated oxidase is most likely associated with perturbation of the CuA site. These results lend support to the suggestion that the fluorescence-monitored conformational change of the native enzyme is initiated by reduction of the CuA site [Copeland et al. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 7311].