Ubiquinol-Cytochrome c Oxidoreductase THE REDOX REACTIONS OF THE BIS-HEME CYTOCHROME b IN UBIQUINONE-SUFFICIENT AND UBIQUINONE-DEFICIENT SYSTEMS*

Antimycin and myxothiazol are stoichiometric inhibitors of complex III (ubiquinol-cytochrome c oxidoreductase), exerting their highest degree of inhibition at 1 mol each/mol of complex III monomer. Phenomenologically, however, they each inhibit three steps in the redox reaction of the bis-heme cytochrome b in submitochondrial particles (SMP), and all three inhibitions are incomplete to various extents. (i) In SMP, reduction of hemes bH and bL by NADH or succinate is inhibited when the particles are treated with both antimycin and myxothiazol. Each inhibitor alone allows reduced bH and bL to accumulate, indicating that each inhibits the reoxidation of these hemes. (E)-Methyl-3-methoxy-2-(4*trans-stilbenyl)acrylate in combination with antimycin or 2-n-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide in combination with myxothiazol causes less inhibition of b reduction than the combination of antimycin and myxothiazol. (ii) Reoxidation of reduced bL is inhibited by either antimycin or myxothiazol (or 2-n-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide, (E)-methyl-3-methoxy-2-(4*-trans-stilbenyl)acrylate, or stigmatellin). (iii) Reoxidation of reduced bH is also inhibited by any one of these reagents. These inhibitions are also incomplete, and reduced bL is oxidized through the leaks allowed by these inhibitors at least 10 times faster than reduced bH. Heme bH can be reduced in SMP via cytochrome c1 and the Rieske ironsulfur protein by ascorbate and faster by ascorbate 1 TMPD (N,N,N*,N*-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine). Energization of SMP by the addition of ATP affords reduction of bL as well. Reverse electron transfer to bH and bL is inhibited partially by myxothiazol, much more by antimycin. Ascorbate 1 TMPD also reduce bH in ubiquinone-extracted SMP in which the molar ratio of ubiquinone to cytochrome b has been reduced 200-fold from 12.5 to ;0.06. Reconstitution of the extracted particles with ubiquinone-10 restores substrate oxidation but does not improve the rate or the extent of bH reduction by ascorbate 1 TMPD. These reagents also partially reduce cytochrome b in SMP from a ubiquinone-deficient yeast mutant. The above results are discussed in relation to the Q-cycle hypothesis.