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. 1982 Oct 1;207(1):161–165. doi: 10.1042/bj2070161

The autoreducible cytochromes c of the methylotrophs Methylophilus methylotrophus and Pseudomonas AM1.

M Beardmore-Gray, D T O'Keeffe, C Anthony
PMCID: PMC1153837  PMID: 6295363

Abstract

The two types of soluble cytochrome c (cytochrome cH and cytochrome cL) found in methylotrophs are completely distinct proteins; one type is not a dimer or degradation product of the other. Free thiol groups are probably not involved in the unusually rapid autoreduction of the cytochromes at high pH. The axial ligands to the haem iron, histidine and methionine, are the same as in other low-spin cytochromes c. The methionine ligand is displaced at high pH by an alternative strong-field ligand. This displacement does not occur on reduction of cytochrome cL by methanol dehydrogenase, but this does not rule out the possibility that the autoreduction mechanism is involved in the interaction of the dehydrogenase and cytochrome c.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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