Cytochrome c-551 is a lipoprotein of about 10500 Da, found in thermophilic Bacillus PS3 grown under air-limited conditions. An expression vector was constructed from a structural gene of PS3 cytochrome c-551, synthetic oligonucleotide as a promoter for Bacillus stearothermophilus and a shuttle vector for Escherichia coli and B. stearothermophilus. The transformed cells of B. stearothermophilus K1041 expressed cytochrome c-551 as much as 5 nmol/mg membrane protein. The effects of over-expression on the host cells are analyzed; a slightly slower growth rate and an increased synthesis of cytochrome oxidase (about twofold) occurred. Over-expressed (4-10-fold) cytochrome c-551 were purified and its properties were examined to know whether the protein is processed as in PS3 cells grown under air-limited conditions. The molecular mass determination and treatment with Rhizopus lipase suggested that the same processes, cleavage of signal peptidase, blocking of the N-terminal group and acylation of glycerol residue by two fatty acids, took place in the over-expression system. Fatty acylation seems useful for the cytochrome c to be effectively oxidized.