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1.
The objective of this study was to clarify the mechanism of electron transfer in the human neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) flavin domain using the recombinant human nNOS flavin domains, the FAD/NADPH domain (contains FAD- and NADPH-binding sites), and the FAD/FMN domain (the flavin domain including a calmodulin-binding site). The reduction by NADPH of the two domains was studied by rapid-mixing, stopped-flow spectroscopy. For the FAD/NADPH domain, the results indicate that FAD is reduced by NADPH to generate the two-electron-reduced form (FADH(2)) and the reoxidation of the reduced FAD proceeds via a neutral (blue) semiquinone with molecular oxygen or ferricyanide, indicating that the reduced FAD is oxidized in two successive one-electron steps. The neutral (blue) semiquinone form, as an intermediate in the air-oxidation, was unstable in the presence of O(2). The purified FAD/NADPH domain prepared under our experimental conditions was activated by NADP(+) but not NAD(+). These results indicate that this domain exists in two states; an active state and a resting state, and the enzyme in the resting state can be activated by NADP(+). For the FAD/FMN domain, the reduction of the FAD-FMN pair of the oxidized enzyme with NADPH proceeded by both one-electron equivalent and two-electron equivalent mechanisms. The formation of semiquinones from the FAD-FMN pair was greatly increased in the presence of Ca(2+)/CaM. The air-stable semiquinone form, FAD-FMNH(.), was further rapidly reduced by NADPH with an increase at 520 nm, which is a characteristic peak of the FAD semiquinone. Results presented here indicate that intramolecular one-electron transfer from FAD to FMN is activated by the binding of Ca(2+)/CaM.  相似文献   

2.
Midpoint reduction potentials for the flavin cofactors in human NADPH-cytochrome P450 oxidoreductase were determined by anaerobic redox titration of the diflavin (FAD and FMN) enzyme and by separate titrations of its isolated FAD/NADPH and FMN domains. Flavin reduction potentials are similar in the isolated domains (FAD domain E(1) [oxidized/semiquinone] = -286 +/- 6 mV, E(2) [semiquinone/reduced] = -371 +/- 7 mV; FMN domain E(1) = -43 +/- 7 mV, E(2) = -280 +/- 8 mV) and the soluble diflavin reductase (E(1) [FMN] = -66 +/- 8 mV, E(2) [FMN] = -269 +/- 10 mV; E(1) [FAD] = -283 +/- 5 mV, E(2) [FAD] = -382 +/- 8 mV). The lack of perturbation of the individual flavin potentials in the FAD and FMN domains indicates that the flavins are located in discrete environments and that these environments are not significantly disrupted by genetic dissection of the domains. Each flavin titrates through a blue semiquinone state, with the FMN semiquinone being most intense due to larger separation (approximately 200 mV) of its two couples. Both the FMN domain and the soluble reductase are purified in partially reduced, colored form from the Escherichia coli expression system, either as a green reductase or a gray-blue FMN domain. In both cases, large amounts of the higher potential FMN are in the semiquinone form. The redox properties of human cytochrome P450 reductase (CPR) are similar to those reported for rabbit CPR and the reductase domain of neuronal nitric oxide synthase. However, they differ markedly from those of yeast and bacterial CPRs, pointing to an important evolutionary difference in electronic regulation of these enzymes.  相似文献   

3.
Escherichia coli general NAD(P)H:flavin oxidoreductase (Fre) does not have a bound flavin cofactor; its flavin substrates (riboflavin, FMN, and FAD) are believed to bind to it mainly through the isoalloxazine ring. This interaction was real for riboflavin and FMN, but not for FAD, which bound to Fre much tighter than FMN or riboflavin. Computer simulations of Fre.FAD and Fre.FMN complexes showed that FAD adopted an unusual bent conformation, allowing its ribityl side chain and ADP moiety to form an additional 3.28 H-bonds on average with amino acid residues located in the loop connecting Fbeta5 and Falpha1 of the flavin-binding domain and at the proposed NAD(P)H-binding site. Experimental data supported the overlapping binding sites of FAD and NAD(P)H. AMP, a known competitive inhibitor with respect to NAD(P)H, decreased the affinity of Fre for FAD. FAD behaved as a mixed-type inhibitor with respect to NADPH. The overlapped binding offers a plausible explanation for the large K(m) values of Fre for NADH and NADPH when FAD is the electron acceptor. Although Fre reduces FMN faster than it reduces FAD, it preferentially reduces FAD when both FMN and FAD are present. Our data suggest that FAD is a preferred substrate and an inhibitor, suppressing the activities of Fre at low NADH concentrations.  相似文献   

4.
p-Hydroxyphenylacetate (HPA) hydroxylase (HPAH) was purified from Acinetobacter baumannii and shown to be a two-protein component enzyme. The small component (C1) is the reductase enzyme with a subunit molecular mass of 32 kDa. C1 alone catalyses HPA-stimulated NADH oxidation without hydroxylation of HPA. C1 is a flavoprotein with FMN as a native cofactor but can also bind to FAD. The large component (C2) is the hydroxylase component that hydroxylates HPA in the presence of C1. C2 is a tetrameric enzyme with a subunit molecular mass of 50 kDa and apparently contains no redox centre. FMN, FAD, or riboflavin could be used as coenzymes for hydroxylase activity with FMN showing the highest activity. Our data demonstrated that C2 alone was capable of utilizing reduced FMN to form the product 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetate. Mixing reduced flavin with C2 also resulted in the formation of a flavin intermediate that resembled a C(4a)-substituted flavin species indicating that the reaction mechanism of the enzyme proceeded via C(4a)-substituted flavin intermediates. Based on the available evidence, we conclude that the reaction mechanism of HPAH from A. baumannii is similar to that of bacterial luciferase. The enzyme uses a luciferase-like mechanism and reduced flavin (FMNH2, FADH2, or reduced riboflavin) to catalyse the hydroxylation of aromatic compounds, which are usually catalysed by FAD-associated aromatic hydroxylases.  相似文献   

5.
The net photosynthetic efficiency in C3 plants (such asrice, wheat and other major crops) can be decreased by30% due to the metabolism of photorespiration [1], inwhich glycolate oxidase (GO) serves as a key enzyme. Itis known that GO, with flavin mononucleotide (FMN) asa cofactor, belongs to flavin oxidase [2]. But it differs fromother flavoproteins in that FMN is loosely bound to itsapoprotein and there exists a dissociation balance betweenthem, which indicates that FMN probably regulate…  相似文献   

6.
The individual flavin species of axenic Entamoeba histolytica were assayed: separated riboflavin was assayed by the lumiflavin method; flavin-adenine dinucleotide (FAD), by an enzymatic method; flavin mononucleotide (FMN) was calculated from the difference, total flavin minus FAD and riboflavin. The amount of flavin in micrograms per grams fresh cells follows: total flavin, 7.6 ± 0.9 calculated as riboflavin; riboflavin, 1.6 ± 0.7; FMN, 6.6 ± 0.5; and FAD, 1.2 ± 0.1. Recalculated to nanomoles per milligrams total amebal protein these values were: total flavin, 0.21; riboflavin, 0.04; FMN, 0.15; and FAD, 0.02. The identity of each flavin was confirmed by a paper chromatographic method. Analyses on Panmede, the main source of flavins in the TP-S-1 medium, indicate that it contains all three forms of flavin. Its contribution to growth medium in micrograms per milliliters: riboflavin, 2.1 ± 0.3; FMN, 0.6 ± 0.1; and FAD, 0.4 ± 0.1. The in vivo biosynthesis of FMN and FAD from riboflavin by E. histolytica is demonstrated. A new and convenient method was found to separate riboflavin from flavin nucleotides in tissue extracts.  相似文献   

7.
Midpoint reduction potentials for the flavin cofactors in the reductase domain of rat neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) in calmodulin (CaM)-free and -bound forms have been determined by direct anaerobic titration. In the CaM-free form, the FMN potentials are -49 +/- 5 mV (oxidized/semiquinone) -274 +/- 5 mV (semiquinone/reduced). The corresponding FAD potentials are -232 +/- 7, and -280 +/- 6 mV. The data indicate that each flavin can exist as a blue (neutral) semiquinone. The accumulation of blue semiquinone on the FMN is considerably higher than seen on the FAD due to the much larger separation (225 mV) of its two potentials (cf. 48 mV for FAD). For the CaM-bound form of the protein, the midpoint potentials are essentially identical: there is a small alteration in the FMN oxidized/semiquinone potential (-30 +/- 4 mV); the other three potentials are unaffected. The heme midpoint potentials for nNOS [-239 mV, L-Arg-free; -220 mV, L-Arg-bound; Presta, A., Weber-Main, A. M., Stankovich, M. T., and Stuehr, D. J. (1998) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 120, 9460-9465] are poised such that electron transfer from flavin domain is thermodynamically feasible. Clearly, CaM binding is necessary in eliciting conformational changes that enhance flavin to flavin and flavin to heme electron transfers rather than causing a change in the driving force.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Russell TR  Demeler B  Tu SC 《Biochemistry》2004,43(6):1580-1590
The homodimeric NADH:flavin oxidoreductase from Aminobacter aminovorans is an NADH-specific flavin reductase herein designated FRD(Aa). FRD(Aa) was characterized with respect to purification yields, thermal stability, isoelectric point, molar absorption coefficient, and effects of phosphate buffer strength and pH on activity. Evidence from this work favors the classification of FRD(Aa) as a flavin cofactor-utilizing class I flavin reductase. The isolated native FRD(Aa) contained about 0.5 bound riboflavin-5'-phosphate (FMN) per enzyme monomer, but one bound flavin cofactor per monomer was obtainable in the presence of excess FMN or riboflavin. In addition, FRD(Aa) holoenzyme also utilized FMN, riboflavin, or FAD as a substrate. Steady-state kinetic results of substrate titrations, dead-end inhibition by AMP and lumichrome, and product inhibition by NAD(+) indicated an ordered sequential mechanism with NADH as the first binding substrate and reduced FMN as the first leaving product. This is contrary to the ping-pong mechanism shown by other class I flavin reductases. The FMN bound to the native FRD(Aa) can be fully reduced by NADH and subsequently reoxidized by oxygen. No NADH binding was detected using 90 microM FRD(Aa) apoenzyme and 300 microM NADH. All results favor the interpretation that the bound FMN was a cofactor rather than a substrate. It is highly unusual that a flavin reductase using a sequential mechanism would require a flavin cofactor to facilitate redox exchange between NADH and a flavin substrate. FRD(Aa) exhibited a monomer-dimer equilibrium with a K(d) of 2.7 microM. Similarities and differences between FRD(Aa) and certain flavin reductases are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Apoenzyme of the major NAD(P)H-utilizing flavin reductase FRG/FRase I from Vibrio fischeri was prepared. The apoenzyme bound one FMN cofactor per enzyme monomer to yield fully active holoenzyme. The FMN cofactor binding resulted in substantial quenching of both the flavin and the protein fluorescence intensities without any significant shifts in the emission peaks. In addition to FMN binding (K(d) 0.5 microM at 23 degrees C), the apoenzyme also bound 2-thioFMN, FAD and riboflavin as a cofactor with K(d) values of 1, 12, and 37 microM, respectively, at 23 degrees C. The 2-thioFMN containing holoenzyme was about 40% active in specific activity as compared to the FMN-containing holoenzyme. The FAD- and riboflavin-reconstituted holoenzymes were also catalytically active but their specific activities were not determined. FRG/FRase I followed a ping-pong kinetic mechanism. It is proposed that the enzyme-bound FMN cofactor shuttles between the oxidized and the reduced form during catalysis. For both the FMN- and 2-thioFMN-containing holoenzymes, 2-thioFMN was about 30% active as compared to FMN as a substrate. FAD and riboflavin were also active substrates. FRG/FRase I was shown by ultracentrifugation at 4 degrees C to undergo a monomer-dimer equilibrium, with K(d) values of 18.0 and 13.4 microM for the apo- and holoenzymes, respectively. All the spectral, ligand equilibrium binding, and kinetic properties described above are most likely associated with the monomeric species of FRG/FRase I. Many aspects of these properties are compared with a structurally and functionally related Vibrio harveyi NADPH-specific flavin reductase FRP.  相似文献   

11.
Involvement of flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) and flavin mononucleotide (FMN) in cellular homeostasis has been well established for tissues other than the retina. Here, we present an optimized method to effectively extract and quantify FAD and FMN from a single neural retina and its corresponding retinal pigment epithelium (RPE). Optimizations led to detection efficiency of 0.1 pmol for FAD and FMN while 0.01 pmol for riboflavin. Interestingly, levels of FAD and FMN in the RPE were found to be 1.7- and 12.5-fold higher than their levels in the retina, respectively. Both FAD and FMN levels in the RPE and retina gradually decline with age and preceded the age-dependent drop in the functional competence of the retina as measured by electroretinography. Further, quantifications of retinal levels of FAD and FMN in different mouse models of retinal degeneration revealed differential metabolic requirements of these two factors in relation to the rate and degree of photoreceptor degeneration. We also found twofold reductions in retinal levels of FAD and FMN in two mouse models of diabetic retinopathy. Altogether, our results suggest that retinal levels of FAD and FMN can be used as potential markers to determine state of health of the retina in general and more specifically the photoreceptors.  相似文献   

12.
31P-nuclear-magnetic-resonance spectroscopy has been employed to probe the structure of the detergent-solubilized form of liver microsomal NADPH--cytochrome-P-450 reductase. In addition to the resonances due to the FMN and FAD coenzymes, additional phosphorus resonances are observed and are assigned to the tightly bound adenosine 2'-phosphate (2'-AMP) and to phospholipids. The phospholipid content was found to vary with the preparation; however, the 2'-AMP resonance was observed in all preparations tested. In agreement with published results [Otvos et al. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 7220-7228] for the protease-solubilized enzyme, the addition of Mn(II) to the oxidized enzyme did not result in any observable line-broadening of the FMN and FAD phosphorus resonances. The phospholipid resonances, however, were extensively broadened and the line width of the phosphorus resonance assigned to the bound 2'-AMP was broadened by approximately 70 Hz. The data show that only the phosphorus moieties of the phospholipids and the 2'-AMP, but not the flavin coenzymes are exposed to the bulk solvent. Removal of the FMN moiety from the enzyme substantially alters the 31P-NMR spectrum as compared with the native enzyme. The 2'-AMP is removed from the enzyme during the FMN-depletion procedure and the pyrophosphate resonances of the bound FAD are significantly altered. Reconstitution of the FMN-depleted protein with FMN results in the restoration of the coenzyme spectral properties. Reduction of FMN to its air-stable paramagnetic semiquinone form results in broadening of the FMN and 2'-AMP resonances in the detergent-solubilized enzyme. In agreement with previous results. FMN semiquinone formation had little or no effect on the line width of the FMN phosphorus resonance for the proteolytically solubilized enzyme. 31P-NMR experiments with Azotobacter flavodoxin semiquinone, both in its free form and in a complex with spinach ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase, mimic the differential paramagnetic effects of the flavin semiquinone on the line width of the FMN phosphorus resonance, observed by comparison of the detergent-solubilized and protease-solubilized forms of the reductase. The data demonstrate that assignment of the site of flavin semiquinone formation to a particular flavin coenzyme may not always be possible by 31P-NMR experiments in multi-flavin containing enzymes.  相似文献   

13.
Systematic thermodynamic studies have been conducted for flavin (FMN, FAD) binding to purified riboflavin-binding proteins from hen egg white and egg yolk. These studies were conducted under a variety of temperature (14, 26, and 38 °C), pH (4.5, 5.5, 6.5, 7.4, and 9.0), and buffer conditions, and an extensive thermodynamic profile was constructed. Enthalpies of binding FMN to white riboflavin-binding protein and yolk riboflavin-binding protein were ?19.3 and ?14.4 kcal/mol, respectively, at pH 7.4 and 38 °C. FAD bound to white and yolk riboflavin-binding proteins under the same conditions with ΔH values of ?11.7 and ?6.0, respectively. Binding constants of about 105 and 104 were obtained for FMN and FAD, respectively, and were the same for both proteins under all conditions studied. Using established thermodynamic relationships, we were able to calculate entropy and free energy changes. Entropies indicated a large degree of ordering in the system upon flavin binding with FMN (about ?40 cal/mol/ °C) twice as large as FAD (about ?15 to ?25 cal/mol/ °C), which may indicate a structured solvent interaction with the charged phosphate group, or steric limitations placed on the ribityl side chain in the bound state. Our thermodynamic data support the idea that flavin binding is a mixture of forces, with no one predominant. Analysis of the data suggests that the nucleotide may bind both as the mono- or dianion, that flavin binding occurs with no significant change in the pK of any functional group in the system, except at low pH for FAD binding, and that the temperature variation of the enthalpy change is quite small. These findings are combined with other published data to outline a general scheme of flavin binding with a histidine residue implicated in hydrogen bonding to the adenine portion of FAD, which may be in the unstacked form.  相似文献   

14.
The resonance Raman (RR) spectra of FMN, FAD, FAD in D2O, and 7,8-dimethyl-1, 10-ethyleneisoalloxazinium perchlorate have been obtained by employing KI as a collisional fluorescence-quenching agent. The spectra are very similar to those obtained recently by using the CARS technique to eliminate fluorescence. Spectra have also been obtained for several species in which flavin is known to fluoresce only weakly. We report RR spectra of protonated FMN, FMN semiquinone cation, the general fatty acyl-CoA dehydrogenase, and two "charge-transfer" complexes of fatty acyl-CoA dehydrogenase. Tentative assignment of several vibrational bands can be made on the basis of our flavin spectra. RR spectra of fatty acyl-CoA and its complexes are consistent with the previous hypothesis that visible spectral shifts observed during formation of acetoacetyl-CoA and crotonyl-CoA complexes of fatty acyl-CoA dehydrogenase result from charge-transfer interactions in which the ground state is essentially nonbonding as opposed to interactions in which complete electron transfer occurs to form FAD semiquinone. The only significant change in the RR spectrum of FAD on binding to enzyme occurs in the 1250-cm-1 region of the spectrum, a region associated with delta N--H of N-3. The position of this band in fatty acyl-CoA dehydrogenase and the other flavoproteins studied to date is discussed in terms of hydrogen bonding between flavin and protein.  相似文献   

15.
The NADPH cytochrome P450 reductase (CPR), a diflavin enzyme, catalyzes the electron transfer (ET) from NADPH to the substrate P450. The crystal structures of mammalian and yeast CPRs show a compact organization for the two domains containing FMN (flavin mononucleotide) and FAD (flavin adenine dinucleotide), with a short interflavin distance consistent with fast ET from the NADPH-reduced FAD to the second flavin FMN. This conformation, referred as "closed", contrasts with the alternative opened or extended domain arrangements recently described for partially reduced or mutant CPR. Internal domain flexibility in this enzyme is indeed necessary to account for the apparently conflicting requirements of having FMN flavin accessible to both the FAD and the substrate P450 at the same interface. However, how interdomain dynamics influence internal and external ETs in CPR is still largely unknown. Here, we used NMR techniques to explore the global, domain-specific and residue-specific structural and dynamic properties of the nucleotide-free human CPR in solution in its oxidized state. Based on the backbone resonance assignment of this 70-kDa protein, we collected residue-specific (15)N relaxation and (1)H-(15)N residual dipolar couplings. Surprisingly and in contrast with previous studies, the analysis of these NMR data revealed that the CPR exists in a unique and predominant conformation that highly resembles the closed conformation observed in the crystalline state. Based on our findings and the previous observations of conformational equilibria of the CPR in partially reduced states, we propose that the large-scale conformational transitions of the CPR during the catalytic cycle are tightly controlled to ensure optimal electron delivery.  相似文献   

16.
The FAD1 gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been selected from a genomic library on the basis of its ability to partially correct the respiratory defect of pet mutants previously assigned to complementation group G178. Mutants in this group display a reduced level of flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) and an increased level of flavin mononucleotide (FMN) in mitochondria. The restoration of respiratory capability by FAD1 is shown to be due to extragenic suppression. FAD1 codes for an essential yeast protein, since disruption of the gene induces a lethal phenotype. The FAD1 product has been inferred to be yeast FAD synthetase, an enzyme that adenylates FMN to FAD. This conclusion is based on the following evidence. S. cerevisiae transformed with FAD1 on a multicopy plasmid displays an increase in FAD synthetase activity. This is also true when the gene is expressed in Escherichia coli. Lastly, the FAD1 product exhibits low but significant primary sequence similarity to sulfate adenyltransferase, which catalyzes a transfer reaction analogous to that of FAD synthetase. The lower mitochondrial concentration of FAD in G178 mutants is proposed to be caused by an inefficient exchange of external FAD for internal FMN. This is supported by the absence of FAD synthetase activity in yeast mitochondria and the presence of both extramitochondrial and mitochondrial riboflavin kinase, the preceding enzyme in the biosynthetic pathway. A lesion in mitochondrial import of FAD would account for the higher concentration of mitochondrial FMN in the mutant if the transport is catalyzed by an exchange carrier. The ability of FAD1 to suppress impaired transport of FAD is explained by mislocalization of the synthetase in cells harboring multiple copies of the gene. This mechanism of suppression is supported by the presence of mitochondrial FAD synthetase activity in S. cerevisiae transformed with FAD1 on a high-copy-number plasmid but not in mitochondrial of a wild-type strain.  相似文献   

17.
The bifunctional flavin adenine dinucleotide synthetase (FADS) synthesizes the flavin mononucleotide (FMN) and flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) co-factors essential for the function of flavoproteins. The Staphylococcus aureus FADS (SaFADS) produces FMN from riboflavin (RF) by ATP:riboflavin kinase (RFK) activity at its C-terminal domain. The N-terminal domain converts FMN to FAD under a reducing environment by FMN:ATP adenylyltransferase (FMNAT) activity which is reversible (FAD pyrophosphorylase activity). Herein, we investigated the role of F26 residue of the 24-GFFD-28 motif of SaFADS FMNAT domain, mostly conserved in the reducing agent-dependent FADSs. The steady-state kinetics studies showed changes in the KmATP values for mutants, indicating that the F26 residue is crucial for the FMNAT activity. Further, the FMNAT activity of the F26S mutant was observed to be higher than that of the wild-type SaFADS and its other variants at lower reducing agent concentration. In addition, the FADpp activity was inhibited by an excess of FAD substrate, which was more potent in the mutants. The altered orientation of the F26 side-chain observed in the molecular dynamics analysis suggested its plausible involvement in stabilizing FMN and ATP substrates in their respective binding pockets. Also, the SaFADS ternary complex formed with reduced FMN exhibited significant structural changes in the β4n-β5n and L3n regions compared to the oxidised FMN bound and apo forms of SaFADS. Overall, our data suggests the functional role of F26 residue in the FMNAT domain of SaFADS.  相似文献   

18.
A pair of proteins involved in electron transfer, trimethylamine dehydrogenase (TMAD) and electron-transferring flavoprotein (ETF) from the bacterium Methylophilius methylotrophus, were studied in vitro. It was demonstrated by fluorescence spectroscopy that flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) can slowly and spontaneously be released from ETF. This release is followed by increase in flavin fluorescence. At a rather high ionic strength (0.1 M NaCl or 50 mM phosphate), the FAD release is dramatically activated by TMAD preparations that induce a local conformational transition in ETF. It was shown on the basis of the values of tryptophan polarization and lifetime with the use of the Levshin–Perrin equation that the sizes of protein particles were not changed after mixing of TMAD and ETF; i.e., these proteins by themselves did not form a stable complex with each other. The release of flavin from ETF did not occur in the presence of trimethylamine and formaldehyde in the protein mixture. In this case, a stable complex between the proteins is probably formed with the participation of formaldehyde. FAD is hydrolyzed to flavin mononucleotide (FMN) and AMP after a short-term incubation of ETF with ferricyanide. This fact explains the previous detection of AMP in ETF preparations by other researches. A fluorescence method for distinguishing FAD from FMN in solution with the use ethylene glycol is proposed.  相似文献   

19.
NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase releases FAD upon dilution into slightly acidic potassium bromide. Chromatography on high performance hydroxylapatite resolved the FAD-dependent reductase from holoreductase. The FAD dependence was matched by a low FAD content, with the ratio of FAD to FMN as low as 0.015. The aporeductase had negligible activity toward cytochrome c, ferricyanide, menadione, dichlorophenolindophenol, nitro blue tetrazolium, and an analogue of NADP, acetylpyridine adenine dinucleotide phosphate. A 4-min incubation in FAD reconstituted from one-half to all of the enzyme activity, as compared to the untreated reductase, depending upon the substrate. After a 2-h reconstitution, the reductase eluted from hydroxylapatite at the same location in the elution profile as did the untreated holoreductase. The reconstituted reductase had little flavin dependence, was nearly equimolar in FMN and FAD, and had close to the specific activity, per mol of flavin, of untreated reductase. The dependence upon FAD implies that FMN is not a competent electron acceptor from NADPH. Thus, the FAD site must be the only point of electron uptake from NADPH.  相似文献   

20.
Cholesterol oxidase [EC 1.1.3.6] from Schizophyllum commune was purified by an affinity chromatography using 3-O-succinylcholesterol-ethylenediamine (3-cholesteryl-3-[2-aminoethylamido]propionate) Sepharose gels. The resulting preparation was homogeneous as judged by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The molecular weight of the enzyme was estimated to be 53,000 by SDS-gel electrophoresis and 46,000 by sedimentation equilibrium. The enzyme contained 483 amino acid residues as calculated on the basis of the molecular weight of 53,000. The enzyme consumed 60 mumol of O2/min per mg of protein with 1.3 mM cholesterol at 37 degrees C. The enzyme showed the highest activity with cholesterol; 3 beta-hydroxysteroids, such as dehydroepiandrosterone, pregnenolone, and lanosterol, were also oxidized at slower rates. Ergosterol was not oxidized by the enzyme. The Km for cholesterol was 0.33 mM and the optimal pH was 5.0. The enzyme is a flavoprotein which shows a visible absorption spectrum having peaks at 353 nm and 455 nm in 0.1 M acetate buffer, pH 4.0. The spectrum was characterized by the hypsochromic shift of the second absorption peak of the bound flavin. The bound flavin was reduced on anaerobic addition of a model substrate, dehydroepiandrosterone. Neither acid not heat treatment released the flavin coenzyme from the enzyme protein. The flavin of the enzyme could be easily released from the enzyme protein in acid-soluble form as flavin peptides when the enzyme protein was digested with trypsin plus chymotrypsin. The mobilities of the aminoacyl flavin after hydrolysis of the flavin peptides on thin layer chromatography and high voltage electrophoresis differed from those of free FAD, FMN, and riboflavin. A pKa value of 5.1 was obtained from pH-dependent fluorescence quenching process of the aminoacyl flavin. AMP was detected by hydrolysis of the flavin peptides with nucleotide pyrophosphatase. The results indicate strongly that cholesterol oxidase from Schizophyllum commune contains FAD as the prothetic group, which is covalently linked to the enzyme protein. The properties of the bound FAD were comparable to those of N (1)-histidyl FAD.  相似文献   

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