The cytochrome bc1 and related complexes are essential energyconserving components of mitochondrial and bacterial electron transport chains. They orchestrate a complex sequence of electron and proton transfer reactions resulting in the oxidation of quinol, the reduction of a mobile electron carrier, and the translocation of protons across the membrane to store energy in an electrochemical proton gradient. The enzyme can also catalyze substantial rates of superoxide production, with deleterious physiological consequences. Progress on understanding these processes has been hindered by the lack of observable enzymatic intermediates. We report the first direct detection of a semiquinone radical generated by the Q o site using continuous wave and pulsed EPR spectroscopy. The radical is a ubisemiquinone anion and is sensitive to both specific inhibitors and mutations within the Qo site as well as O2, suggesting that it is the elusive intermediate responsible for superoxide production. Paramagnetic interactions show that the new semiquinone species is buried in the protein, probably in or near the Qo site but not strongly interacting with the 2Fe2S cluster. The semiquinone is substoichiometric, even with conditions optimized for its accumulation, consistent with recently proposed models where the semiquinone is destabilized to limit superoxide production. The discovery of this intermediate provides a critical tool to directly probe the elusive chemistry that takes place within the Qo site.electron transfer ͉ free radical ͉ photosynthesis ͉ reactive oxygen species ͉ respiration T he cytochrome (cyt) bc 1 , b 6 f, and related complexes, collectively termed cyt bc complexes, are essential components of the respiratory and photosynthetic electron transport chains in mitochondria, many bacteria, and chloroplasts (1-3). These complexes oxidize quinol and reduce one-electron redox carriers while generating an electrochemical gradient of protons, termed the proton motive force (pmf ), which drives the synthesis of ATP and other bioenergetic processes. The natural substrate is ubiquinol (UQH 2 ) in the case of the mitochondrial and bacterial cyt bc 1 complexes, and the mobile carrier is cyt c in mitochondria or photosynthetic bacteria. The general mechanistic framework for the cyt bc complexes is the Q-cycle, first proposed by Mitchell (4-6) and modified by many others (e.g., refs. 7-14).In ''standard'' versions of the Q-cycle (2, 9, 15) a unique bifurcated oxidation of QH 2 occurs in the Q o site, located on the positively charged side (p-side) of the membrane. An initial single electron transfer to the ''Rieske'' 2Fe2S cluster produces a free radical semiquinone (SQ) intermediate (the anionic form or the neutral form, depending on the exact sequence of electron and proton transfers). The Rieske 2Fe2S cluster is the first in a series of carriers, termed the ''high potential chain,'' which in mitochondria and certain bacteria includes cyt c 1 followed by a soluble (or mobile) cyt c. Under normal conditions, the SQ intermediate ...