1. The regulation of cytochrome c oxidase of Rhodobacter capsulatus by light and oxygen
- Author
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Hendrik Hüdig, G. Stark, and Gerhart Drews
- Subjects
Oxidase test ,Rhodobacter ,biology ,Cytochrome ,Chemistry ,Cytochrome c ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Biochemistry ,Microbiology ,Plastid terminal oxidase ,Oxygen tension ,Light intensity ,Genetics ,biology.protein ,Cytochrome c oxidase ,Molecular Biology - Abstract
In order to distinguish between the regulatory effects of oxygen tension and light intensity on cytochrome c oxidase protein and enzymatic activity cells of Rhodobacter capsulatus were shifted from phototrophic (anaerobic, light) growth to aerobic-light, aerobic-dark and to anaerobic-dark conditions, respectively. During shift-experiments the formation of oxidase protein and regulation of oxidase activity was followed by immunological and enzymatic means. The results support the idea, that the formation of oxidase protein is regulated by oxygen tension and light intensity changes, whereas the regulation of oxidase activity seems only to be correlated to the oxygen tension. A DNA sequence involved in the oxygen-dependent regulation of cytochrome oxidase could be identified in the regulation-deficient oxidase mutant H41 of R. capsulatus. Immunological investigations of cytochrome c2 from mutant H41 demonstrated at the same time the participation of the c2-polypeptide in the regulation of cytochrome c oxidase.
- Published
- 1987
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