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1.
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and optical spectra are used as probes of the heme and its ligands in ferric and ferrous leghemoglobin. The proximal ligand to the heme iron atom of ferric soybean leghemoglobin is identified as imidazole by comparison of the EPR of leghemoglobin hydroxide, azide, and cyanide with the corresponding derivatives of human hemoglobin. Optical spectra show that ferric soybean leghemoglobin near room temperature is almost entirely in the high spin state. At 77 K the optical spectrum is that of a low spin compound, while at 1.6 K the EPR is that of a low spin form resembling bis-imidazole heme. Acetate binds to ferric leghemoglobin to form a high spin complex as judged from the optical spectrum. The EPR of this complex is that of high spin ferric heme in a nearly axial environment. The complexes of ferrous leghemoglobin with substituted pyridines exhibit optical absorption maxima near 685 nm, whose absorption maxima and extinctions are strongly dependent on the nature of the substitutents of the pyridine ring; electron withdrawing groups on the pyridine ring shift the absorption maxima to lower energy. A crystal field analysis of the EPR of nicotinate derivatives of ferric leghemoblobin demonstrates that the pyridine nitrogen is also bound to the heme iron in the ferric state. These findings lead us to picture leghemoglobin as a somewhat flexible molecule in which the transition region between the E and F helices may act as a hinge, opening a small amount at higher temperature to a stable configuration in which the protein is high spin and can accommodate exogenous ligand molecules and closing at low temperature to a second stable configuration in which the protein is low spin and in which close approach of the E helix permits the distal histidine to become the principal sixth ligand.  相似文献   

2.
Using radiolysis with (32)P enriched phosphate as an internal source of ionizing radiation, the formation of hydroperoxo-ferric complex from oxy-ferrous precursor with a high yield was monitored at 77 K in heme oxygenase (HO) by means of optical absorption spectroscopy. Well-resolved absorption spectra (maxima at 421 nm, 530 nm, 557 nm) of hydroperoxo-ferric intermediate of this heme enzyme were measured in 70% glycerol/buffer frozen glasses. After annealing at 210-215 K this complex converts to the product complex, alpha-meso hydroxyheme-HO. No heme degradation products were formed in control experiments with ferric HO or other heme proteins.  相似文献   

3.
A tryptic peptide of heme oxygenase obtained after solubilization of rat liver microsomes by mild trypsin treatment was purified. The purified peptide gave only a single protein band with a molecular mass of 28 kDa on SDS/PAGE. The tryptic peptide, like the native heme oxygenase, readily bound with substrate heme forming a hemeprotein transiently. The absorption spectra of the ferric, ferrous, ferrous-CO and ferrous-O2 forms of the resulting complex resembled those of the corresponding forms of the complex of heme and the native enzyme. Ferric heme bound to the tryptic peptide was quantitatively decomposed to biliverdin on incubation with a mixture of ascorbic acid and desferrioxamine, indicating that the tryptic peptide still retained catalytic activity. These observations suggest that heme oxygenase has two domains, a hydrophilic and a hydrophobic domain, and that the two domains are folded almost independently of each other. An NADPH-cytochrome-P-450 reductase system composed of NADPH and detergent-solubilized NADPH-cytochrome-P-450 reductase readily reduced the ferric heme bound to the tryptic peptide, but failed to transfer the second electron required for rapid heme degradation, suggesting that the hydrophobic domain of heme oxygenase is important for receiving the second electron from the reductase.  相似文献   

4.
Oxidative cleavage of hematohemin IX in pyridine solution in the presence of ascorbic acid (coupled oxidation), followed by esterification of the products with boron trifluoride/methanol produced the four possible hematobiliverdin dimethyl esters in 11.1% overall yield. Transetherifications took place simultaneously with the esterification reaction and resulted in the formation of the dimethyl ester of hematobiliverdin IX gamma 8a,13a-dimethyl ether (1.8%), the dimethyl ester of hematobiliverdin IX beta 13a,18a-dimethyl ether (1.9%), the dimethyl ester of hematobiliverdin IX delta 8a-monomethyl ether (1.4%), and the dimethyl ester of hematobiliverdin IX alpha 18a-monomethyl ether (0.4%). The latter was the sole product obtained after the enzymatic oxidation of hematohemin with heme oxygenase, after esterification of the reaction product with boron trifluoride/methanol. When the esterification step was omitted hematobiliverdin IX alpha was obtained from the enzymatic oxidation. The structures of the hematobiliverdin derivatives were secured by their NMR and mass spectra data. Saponification of the dimethyl esters afforded the hematobiliverdin methyl ethers, which were excellent substrates of biliverdin reductase and were readily reduced to the corresponding bilirubins. Hematobiliverdin IX alpha was also a good substrate of biliverdin reductase. It is concluded that the enzymatic oxidation of hematohemin IX by heme oxygenase is alpha-selective, while biliverdin reductase shows no selectivity in the reduction of the four hematobiliverdin isomers.  相似文献   

5.
The absorption, circular dichroism (CD) and magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectra of valency hybrid hemoglobins and their constituents (alpha + and beta chains for alpha 2+beta 2, alpha and beta + chains for alpha 2 beta 2+: + denotes ferric heme) were measured in the Soret region for F-, H2O, N3- and CN- derivatives. Absorption and MCD spectra of valency hybrid hemoglobins were very similar to the arithmetic mean of respective spectra of their corresponding component chains in all derivatives. The Soret MCD intensity around 408 nm for various complexes of valency hybrid hemoglobins seems to reflect the spin state of ferric chains. Upon ferric and deoxy ferrous subunit association to make the deoxy valency hybrid hemoglobins, only the high-spin forms bound with F- and H2O of alpha 2+beta 2 displayed a blue shift in the peak position around 430 nm and those of alpha 2 beta 2+ an increase in intensity around 430 nm. The blue shift and the increase in intensity were considered to be caused by the structural changes in deoxy beta chains of alpha 2+beta 2 and deoxy alpha chains of alpha beta 2+, respectively. These spectral changes were interpreted on the basis of their oxygen-equilibrium properties. In contrast to absorption and MCD spectra, the CD spectra of valency hybrid hemoglobins were markedly different from the simple addition of those of their component chains in all derivatives examined. The large part of CD spectral changes upon subunit association were interpreted as changes in the heme vicinity accompanied by formation of the alpha 1 beta 1 subunit contact.  相似文献   

6.
There was approximately five times more hemoprotein (amine dehydrogenase) in crude extracts obtained from Pseudomonas putida grown on benzylamine than present in extracts from succinate-grown cells. The difference (reduced minus oxidized) spectrum of the purified enzyme possessed alpha,beta, and gamma bands at 550, 523, and 416 nm, respectively. The difference spectrum of the pyridine hemochrome derivative had absorption maxima at 416, 520, and 550 nm. These results, together with the fact that the heme group was covalently bound to the enzyme, indicated that the amine dehydrogenase from P. putida was a hemoprotein which contained heme c. The heme content was calculated at 2.01 mol/mol of enzyme. The enzyme was composed of two nonidentical subunits, but heme was present solely in the heavier unit. Carbon monoxide did not inhibit enzymatic activity, nor would it combine with the reduced or oxidized form of the enzyme. Amine dehydrogenase activity was inhibited by carbonyl agents with semicarbazide and cuprizone acting noncompetitively, whereas KCN and isoniazid inhibited by competitive and uncompetitive mechanisms, respectively. Spectral observations suggested that inhibition by these reagents was not due to an interaction with the heme moiety.  相似文献   

7.
Cytochrome b-562.5 (Ulva pertusa) was extracted from a green alga, U. pertusa, by homogenization of the thalli in phosphate buffer solution. Purification was carried out by acrinol treatment, ammonium sulfate fractionation, DEAE-cellulose and DEAE-Sephadex column chromatographies, and Sephadex gel filtration. Cytochrome b-562.5 has absorption maxima at 562.5 (alpha), 530.5 (beta), 429 (gamma), and 326 nm (delta) in the reduced form and at 537, 415 (gamma), and 275 nm in the oxidized form. The alpha-band of the reduced form is asymmetric with a shoulder at 560 nm, at liquid nitrogen temperature this band splits into two distinct peaks at 562 and 556.5 nm. The absorption maxima of the pyridine ferrohemochrome appear at 556 (alpha), 523 (beta), and 418 nm (gamma). The cytochrome does not combine with carbon monoxide or cyanide. The preparation of the cytochrome shows little peroxidase activity. The cytochrome is oxidized by ferricyanide and reduced by cysteine, ascorbate, and hydrosulfite. Autoxidation of the cytochrome was found to be very slow. The midpoint potential (Em) of the cytochrome was determined by equilibration with the ferro- and ferri-EDTA system to be +0.20 V at pH7.0. The molecular weight of the cytochrome was estimated by Sephadex gel filtration to be 23x10(3).  相似文献   

8.
Diarylpropane oxygenase, an H2O2-dependent lignin-degrading enzyme from the basidiomycete fungus Phanerochaete chrysosporium, catalyzes the oxygenation of various lignin model compounds with incorporation of a single atom of dioxygen (O2). Diarylpropane oxygenase is also capable of oxidizing some alcohols to aldehydes and/or ketones. This enzyme (Mr = 41,000) contains a single iron protoporphyrin IX prosthetic group. Previous studies revealed that the Soret maximum of the ferrous-CO complex of diarylpropane oxygenase is at approximately 420 nm, as in ferrous-CO myoglobin (Mb), and not like the approximately 450 nm absorption of the CO complex of the ubiquitous heme monooxygenase, cytochrome P-450. This spectral difference between two functionally similar heme enzymes is of interest. To elucidate the structural requirements for heme iron-based oxygenase reactions, we have compared the electronic absorption, EPR, and resonance Raman (RR) spectral properties of diarylpropane oxygenase with those of other heme proteins and enzymes of known axial ligation. The absorption spectra of native (ferric), cyano, and ferrous diarylpropane oxygenase closely resemble those of the analogous myoglobin complexes. The EPR g values of native diarylpropane oxygenase, 5.83 and 1.99, also agree well with those of aquometMb. The RR spectra of ferric diarylpropane oxygenase have their spin- and oxidation-state marker bands at frequencies analogous to those of aquometMb and indicate a high-spin, hexacoordinate ferric iron. The RR spectra of ferrous diarylpropane oxygenase have frequencies analogous to those of deoxy-Mb that suggest a high-spin, pentacoordinate Fe(II) in the reduced form. The RR spectra of both ferric and ferrous diarylpropane oxygenase are less similar to those of horseradish peroxidase, catalase, or cytochrome c peroxidase and are clearly distinct from those of P-450. These observations suggest that the fifth ligand to the heme iron of diarylpropane oxygenase is a neutral histidine and that the iron environment must resemble that of the oxygen transport protein, myoglobin, rather than that of the peroxidases, catalase, or P-450. Given the functional similarity between diarylpropane oxygenase and P-450, this work implies that the mechanism of oxygen insertion for the two systems is different.  相似文献   

9.
Heme oxygenase catalyzes the regiospecific oxidation of hemin to biliverdin IXalpha with concomitant liberation of CO and iron by three sequential monooxygenase reactions. The alpha-regioselectivity of heme oxygenase has been thought to result from the regioselective oxygenation of the heme alpha-meso position at the first step, which leads to the reaction pathway via meso-hydroxyheme IXalpha and verdoheme IXalpha intermediates. However, recent reports concerning heme oxygenase forming biliverdin isomers other than biliverdin IXalpha raise a question whether heme oxygenase can degrade meso-hydroxyhemin and isomers other than the alpha-isomers. In this paper, we investigated the stereoselectivity of each of the two reaction steps from meso-hydroxyhemin to verdoheme and verdoheme to biliverdin by using a truncated form of rat heme oxygenase-1 and the chemically synthesized four isomers of meso-hydroxyhemin and verdoheme. Heme oxygenase-1 converted all four isomers of meso-hydroxyhemin to the corresponding isomers of verdoheme. In contrast, only verdoheme IXalpha was converted to the corresponding biliverdin IXalpha. We conclude that the third step, but not the second, is stereoselective for the alpha-isomer substrate. The present findings on regioselectivities of the second and the third steps have been discussed on the basis of the oxygen activation mechanisms of these steps.  相似文献   

10.
Neutral solvent systems were developed to isolate the alpha, beta, gamma, and delta isomers of biliverdin IX dimethyl ester by TLC. The individual free acids of biliverdin IX were obtained by saponification of the corresponding dimethyl esters. The bilirubin IX isomers were prepared by reducing the corresponding biliverdin IX isomers with NaBH3CN. Starting from a pure biliverdin IX dimethyl ester, the corresponding free acid of biliverdin IX or bilirubin IX was available within 3-4 h. Preparation of spectrally pure bile pigment required final TLC on acid-cleaned neutral TLC plates. The absorption spectra of the free acids and dimethyl esters of biliverdin IX in methanol showed a broad band at about 650 nm and a sharp band at about 375 nm. The long-wave-length band was extremely sensitive to the presence of strong acid. A 10-fold molar excess of HCl caused a 35- to 50-nm shift of the absorption maximum to longer wavelengths and near doubling of the maximum absorption. The molar absorption coefficients of biliverdins were identical for each free acid and dimethyl ester pair. In each case, Beer's law was followed in both methanol and acidified methanol. Methanol also proved to be a suitable solvent for spectroscopic determination of the non-alpha isomers of bilirubin IX. The wavelength of maximum absorption and molar absorption coefficient of each dipyrrolic ethyl anthranilate azo pigment derived from the various bilirubin IX isomers are also reported.  相似文献   

11.
Gorren AC  Bec N  Schrammel A  Werner ER  Lange R  Mayer B 《Biochemistry》2000,39(38):11763-11770
To investigate the role of tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) in the catalytic mechanism of nitric oxide synthase (NOS), we analyzed the spectral changes following addition of oxygen to the reduced oxygenase domain of endothelial nitric oxide synthase (NOS) in the presence of different pteridines at -30 degrees C. In the presence of N(G)-hydroxy-L-arginine (NOHLA) and BH4 or 5-methyl-BH4, both of which support NO synthesis, the first observable species were mixtures of high-spin ferric NOS (395 nm), ferric NO-heme (439 nm), and the oxyferrous complex (417 nm). With Arg, no clear intermediates could be observed under the same conditions. In the presence of the BH4-competitive inhibitor 7,8-dihydrobiopterin (BH2), intermediates with maxima at 417 and 425 nm were formed in the presence of Arg and NOHLA, respectively. In the presence of 4-amino-BH4, the maxima of the intermediates with Arg and NOHLA were at 431 and 423 nm, respectively. We ascribe all four spectra to oxyferrous heme complexes. The intermediates observed in this study slowly decayed to the high-spin ferric state at -30 degrees C, except for those formed in the presence of 4-amino-BH4, which required warming to room temperature for regeneration of high-spin ferric NOS; with Arg, regeneration remained incomplete. From these observations, we draw several conclusions. (1) BH4 is required for reductive oxygen activation, probably as a transient one-electron donor, not only in the reaction with Arg but also with NOHLA; (2) in the absence of redox-active pterins, reductive oxygen activation does not occur, which results in accumulation of the oxyferrous complex; (3) the spectral properties of the oxyferrous complex are affected by the presence and identity of the substrate; (4) the slow and incomplete formation of high-spin ferric heme with 4-amino-BH4 suggests a structural cause for inhibition of NOS activity by this pteridine.  相似文献   

12.
Gohya T  Zhang X  Yoshida T  Migita CT 《The FEBS journal》2006,273(23):5384-5399
Heme oxygenase converts heme into biliverdin, CO, and free iron. In plants, as well as in cyanobacteria, heme oxygenase plays a particular role in the biosynthesis of photoreceptive pigments, such as phytochromobilins and phycobilins, supplying biliverdin IX(alpha) as a direct synthetic resource. In this study, a higher plant heme oxygenase, GmHO-1, of Glycine max (soybean), was prepared to evaluate the molecular features of its heme complex, the enzymatic activity, and the mechanism of heme conversion. The similarity in the amino acid sequence between GmHO-1 and heme oxygenases from other biological species is low, and GmHO-1 binds heme with 1 : 1 stoichiometry at His30; this position does not correspond to the proximal histidine of other heme oxygenases in their sequence alignments. The heme bound to GmHO-1, in the ferric high-spin state, exhibits an acid-base transition and is converted to biliverdin IX(alpha) in the presence of NADPH/ferredoxin reductase/ferredoxin, or ascorbate. During the heme conversion, an intermediate with an absorption maximum different from that of typical verdoheme-heme oxygenase or CO-verdoheme-heme oxygenase complexes was observed and was extracted as a bis-imidazole complex; it was identified as verdoheme. A myoglobin mutant, H64L, with high CO affinity trapped CO produced during the heme degradation. Thus, the mechanism of heme degradation by GmHO-1 appears to be similar to that of known heme oxygenases, despite the low sequence homology. The heme conversion by GmHO-1 is as fast as that by SynHO-1 in the presence of NADPH/ferredoxin reductase/ferredoxin, thereby suggesting that the latter is the physiologic electron-donating system.  相似文献   

13.
An efficient bacterial expression system of cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 heme oxygenase gene, ho-1, has been constructed, using a synthetic gene. A soluble protein was expressed at high levels and was highly purified, for the first time. The protein binds equimolar free hemin to catabolize the bound hemin to ferric-biliverdin IX alpha in the presence of oxygen and reducing equivalents, showing the heme oxygenase activity. During the reaction, verdoheme intermediate is formed with the evolution of carbon monoxide. Though both ascorbate and NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase serve as an electron donor, the heme catabolism assisted by ascorbate is considerably slow and the reaction with NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase is greatly retarded after the oxy-heme complex formation. The optical absorption spectra of the heme-enzyme complexes are similar to those of the known heme oxygenase complexes but have some distinct features, exhibiting the Soret band slightly blue-shifted and relatively strong CT bands of the high-spin component in the ferric form spectrum. The heme-enzyme complex shows the acid-base transition, where two alkaline species are generated. EPR of the nitrosyl heme complex has established the nitrogenous proximal ligand, presumably histidine 17 and the obtained EPR parameters are discriminated from those of the rat heme oxygenase-1 complex. The spectroscopic characters as well as the catabolic activities strongly suggest that, in spite of very high conservation of the primary structure, the heme pocket structure of Synechocystis heme oxygenase isoform-1 is different from that of rat heme oxygenase isoform-1, rather resembling that of bacterial heme oxygenase, H mu O.  相似文献   

14.
We demonstrate that photoexcitation of NAD(P)H reduces heme iron of Mycobacterium tuberculosis P450s CYP121 and CYP51B1 on the microsecond time scale. Rates of formation for the ferrous-carbonmonoxy (Fe(II)-CO) complex were determined across a range of coenzyme/CO concentrations. CYP121 reaction transients were biphasic. A hyperbolic dependence on CO concentration was observed, consistent with the presence of a CO binding site in ferric CYP121. CYP51B1 absorption transients for Fe(II)-CO complex formation were monophasic. The reaction rate was second order with respect to [CO], suggesting the absence of a CO-binding site in ferric CYP51B1. In the absence of CO, heme iron reduction by photoexcited NAD(P)H is fast ( approximately 10,000-11,000 s(-1)) with both P450s. For CYP121, transients revealed initial production of the thiolate-coordinated (P450) complex (absorbance maximum at 448 nm), followed by a slower phase reporting partial conversion to the thiol-coordinated P420 species (at 420 nm). The slow phase amplitude increased at lower pH values, consistent with heme cysteinate protonation underlying the transition. Thus, CO binding occurs to the thiolate-coordinated ferrous form prior to cysteinate protonation. For CYP51B1, slow conversions of both the ferrous/Fe(II)-CO forms to species with spectral maxima at 423/421.5 nm occurred following photoexcitation in the absence/presence of CO. This reflected conversion from ferrous thiolate- to thiol-coordinated forms in both cases, indicating instability of the thiolate-coordinated ferrous CYP51B1. CYP121 Fe(II)-CO complex pH titrations revealed reversible spectral transitions between P450 and P420 forms. Our data provide strong evidence for P420 formation linked to reversible heme thiolate protonation, and demonstrate key differences in heme chemistry and CO binding for CYP121 and CYP51B1.  相似文献   

15.
Heme oxygenase was purified to apparent homogeneity from liver microsomes of rats which had been treated with either cobaltous chloride or hemin to induce heme oxygenase in the liver and the purified preparations from either rats showed an apparent molecular weight of about 200,000 when estimated by gel filtration on a column of Sephadex G-200, and gave a minimum molecular weight of about 32,000 on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The hepatic heme oxygenase could bind heme to form a heme . heme oxygenase complex showing an absorption peak at 405 nm, and the extinction coefficient at 405 nm of the heme . heme oxygenase complex was 140 mM-1 cm-1. The heme bound to the hepatic heme oxygenase protein was easily converted to biliverdin when the complex was incubated with the NADPH-cytochrome c reductase system in air. The hepatic heme oxygenase appears to have characteristics essentially similar to those of the splenic heme oxygenase (Yoshida, T., and Kikuchi, G. (1978) J. Biol. Chem. 253, 4224 and 4230). The heme oxygenase preparation which was purified from the cobalt-treated rats contained a small amount of cobaltic protoporphyrin, indicating that cobalt protoporphyrin was synthesized in these rats.  相似文献   

16.
Mesoheme bound to heme oxygenase protein was easily degraded to mesobiliverdin by incubation with NADPH-cytochrome c reductase and NADPH. The features of mesoheme degradation were very similar to those of protoheme degradation catalyzed by the heme oxygenase system; an intermediate compound having its absorption maximum at 660 nm appeared in the couse of mesoheme degradation and this compound is presumably equivalent to the 688 nm compound which appears in the course of protoheme degradation. Hydroxymesoheme was chemically prepared and a complex of hydroxymesoheme and heme oxygenase was prepared. The complex was fairly stable in air, but when the complex was incubated with the NADPH-cytochrome c reductase system, the hydroxymesoheme bound to heme oxygenase was readily converted to mesobiliverdin through the 660 nm compound as an intermediate. It is evident that hydroxyheme is a real intermediate of heme degradation in the heme oxygenase reaction and that the 688 nm compound (or the 660 nm compound in the mesoheme system) is located between hydroxyheme and the biliverdin-iron chelate. The ferrous state of heme-iron may also be necessary for the onset of further oxidation of hydroxyheme.  相似文献   

17.
Extracts of the phycocyanin-containing unicellular red alga, Cyanidium caldarium, catalyzed enzymatic cleavage of the heme macrocycle to form the linear tetrapyrrole bilin structure. This is the key first step in the branch of the tetrapyrrole biosynthetic pathway leading to phycobilin photosynthetic accessory pigments. A mixed-function oxidase mechanism, similar to the biliverdin-forming reaction catalyzed by animal cell-derived microsomal heme oxygenase, was indicated by requirements for O2 and a reduced pyridine nucleotide. To avoid enzymatic conversion of the bilin product to phycocyanobilins and subsequent degradation during incubation, mesoheme IX was substituted for the normal physiological substrate, protoheme IX. Mesobiliverdin IX alpha was identified as the primary incubation product by comparative reverse-phase high-pressure liquid chromatography and absorption spectrophotometry. The enzymatic nature of the reaction was indicated by the requirement for cell extract, absence of activity in boiled cell extract, high specificity for NADPH as cosubstrate, formation of the physiologically relevant IX alpha bilin isomer, and over 75% inhibition by 1 microM Sn-protoporphyrin, which has been reported to be a competitive inhibitor of animal microsomal heme oxygenase. On the other hand, coupled oxidation of mesoheme, catalyzed by ascorbate plus pyridine or myoglobin, yielded a mixture of ring-opening mesobiliverdin IX isomers, was not inhibited by Sn-protoporphyrin, and could not use NADPH as the reductant. Unlike the animal microsomal heme oxygenase, the algal reaction appeared to be catalyzed by a soluble enzyme that was not sedimentable by centrifugation for 1 h at 200,000g. Although NADPH was the preferred reductant, small amounts of activity were obtained with NADH or ascorbate. A portion of the activity was retained after gel filtration of the cell extract to remove low-molecular-weight components. Considerable stimulation of activity, particularly in preparations that had been subjected to gel filtration, was obtained by addition of ascorbate to the incubation mixture containing NADPH. The results indicate that C. caldarium possesses a true heme oxygenase system, with properties somewhat different from that catalyzing heme degradation in animals. Taken together with previous results indicating that biliverdin is a precursor to phycocyanobilin, the results suggest that algal heme oxygenase is a component of the phycobilin biosynthetic pathway.  相似文献   

18.
A new cobalt-containing nitrile hydratase was purified from extracts of urea-induced cells from Rhodococcus rhodochrous J1 in seven steps. At the last step, the enzyme was crystallized by adding ammonium sulfate. Nitrile hydratase was a 500-530-kDa protein composed of two different subunits (alpha subunit 26 kDa, beta subunit 29 kDa). The enzyme contained approximately 11-12 mol cobalt/mol enzyme. A concentrated solution of highly purified nitrile hydratase exhibited a broad absorption spectrum in the visible range, with an absorption maxima at 410 nm. The enzyme had a wide substrate specificity. Aliphatic saturated or unsaturated nitriles as well as aromatic nitriles, were substrates for the enzyme. The optimum pH of the hydratase was pH 6.5-6.8. The enzyme was more stable than ferric nitrile hydratases. The amino-terminal sequence of each subunit of R. rhodochrous J1 enzyme was determined and compared with that of ferric nitrile hydratases. Prominent similarities were observed with the beta subunit. However, the amino acid sequence of the alpha subunit from R. rhodochrous J1 was quite different from that of the ferric enzymes.  相似文献   

19.
A c3 type cytochrome has been purified from the thermophilic, non-spore-forming, sulfate-reducing bacterium Thermodesulfobacterium commune. The purified protein was homogeneous as judged by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, gel filtration, and isoelectric focusing. A pI of 6.83 was observed. The molecular weight of the cytochrome was estimated to be ca. 13,000 from both gel filtration and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The hemoprotein exhibited absorption maxima at 530, 408.5, and 351 nm in the oxidized form and 551.5 (alpha band), 522.5 (beta band), and 418.5 nm (gamma band) in the reduced form. The extinction coefficients of T. commune cytochrome c3 were 130,000, 74,120, and 975,000 M-1 cm-1 at 551.5, 522.5, and 418.5 nm, respectively. It contains four hemes per molecule, on the basis of both the iron estimation and the extinction coefficient value of its pyridine hemochrome. The amino acid composition showed the presence of eight cysteine residues involved in heme binding. T. commune cytochrome c3 had low threonine, serine, and glycine contents and high glutamic acid and hydrophobic residue contents. The electrochemical study of T. commune cytochrome c3 by cyclic voltammetry and differential pulse polarography has shown that the cytochrome system behaves like a reversible system. Four redox potential values at Eh1 = -0.140 +/- 0.010 V, Eh2 = Eh3 = Eh4 = -0.280 +/- 0.010 V have been determined. T. commune cytochrome c3, which acts as the physiological electron carrier of hydrogenase, is similar in most respects to the multiheme low-potential cytochrome c3 which is characteristic of the genus Desulfovibrio.  相似文献   

20.
We investigated whether or not hydroxylamine (HA) and hydrazine (HZ) interact with heme bound to heme oxygenase-1. Anaerobic addition of either HA or HZ to the ferric heme-enzyme complex produced a low-spin heme species. Titration studies at different pHs revealed that the neutral form of each of HA and HZ selectively binds to the heme with dissociation constants of 9.8 and 1.8 mM, respectively. Electron spin resonance analysis suggested that the nitrogen atom of each amine is coordinated to the ferric heme iron. With a concentrated solution of the heme-enzyme complex, however, another species of HA binding appeared, in which the oxygen atom of HA is coordinated to the iron. This species showed an unusual low-spin signal which is similar to that of the ferric hydroperoxide species in the heme oxygenase reaction.  相似文献   

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