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Biophys J, March 1998, p. 1346-1357, Vol. 74, No. 3
*Department of Chemistry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104, and #Bell Laboratories/Lucent Technologies, Murray Hill, New Jersey 07974 USA
Vectorially oriented monolayers of yeast cytochrome
c and its bimolecular complex with bovine heart
cytochrome c oxidase have been formed by self-assembly
from solution. Both quartz and Ge/Si multilayer substrates were
chemical vapor deposited with an amine-terminated alkylsiloxane
monolayer that was then reacted with a hetero-bifunctional cross-linking reagent, and the resulting maleimide endgroup surface then provided for covalent interactions with the naturally occurring single surface cysteine 102 of the yeast cytochrome c.
The bimolecular complex was formed by further incubating these
cytochrome c monolayers in detergent-solubilized
cytochrome oxidase. The sequential formation of such monolayers and the
vectorially oriented nature of the cytochrome oxidase was studied via
meridional x-ray diffraction, which directly provided electron density
profiles of the protein(s) along the axis normal to the substrate
plane. The nature of these profiles is consistent with previous work
performed on vectorially oriented monolayers of either cytochrome
c or cytochrome oxidase alone. Furthermore, optical
spectroscopy has indicated that the rate of binding of cytochrome
oxidase to the cytochrome c monolayer is an order of
magnitude faster than the binding of cytochrome oxidase to an
amine-terminated surface that was meant to mimic the ring of lysine
residues around the heme edge of cytochrome c, which are
known to be involved in the binding of this protein to cytochrome
oxidase.
Biophys J, March 1998, p. 1346-1357, Vol. 74, No. 3
© 1998 by the Biophysical Society 0006-3495/98/03/1346/12 $2.00
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