Plasmid pRC41, containing the cyf gene encoding cytochrome cSs3 from Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough, was transferred by conjugation from Escherichia coli to Desulfovibrio desulfuricans G200. The structural properties of the purified protein were studied by one-dimensional and twodimensional NMR. A heterogeneity in the folding of the cytochrome isolated from D. vulgaris Hildenborough and from D. desulfuricans G200 was observed for the oxidized form. Temperature, pH and salt-dependence studies indicated that the heterogeneity does not result from an intermediate in the protein unfolding process, but derives from two conformations which are not in dynamic equilibrium.Cytochrome c,,, is a small monoheme cytochrome (Mr 9000), which has a low oxido-reduction potential (20 mV [6]. The primary structure of cytochrome cSs3 seems to be evolutionarily homologous to more than a hundred sequences of bacterial cytochromes in the cytochrome c family. In this family the heme-binding site is found in a sequence motif Cys-Xaa-Xaa-Cys-His towards the N-terminus, and the sixth ligand is provided by a methionine residue present in the Cterminal part of the sequence. 'H-NMR studies of D. vulgaris Hildenborough and D. desulfuricans Norway cytochromes cSs3 have demonstrated that the coordination geometry at the heme iron differs depending on its oxido-reduction state. In the oxidized protein the heme iron has the same coordination geometry as in the eukaryotic cytochromes (R chirality), whereas in the reduced form a new coordination geometry was observed, similar to that in cytochrome css, from Pseudomonas or Rhodopseudomonas gelutinosa and cytochrome c5 from Pseudornonas mendocina (S chirality) [7]. This atyp-