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1.
The application of atomic force microscopy (AFM) to the identification and visualization of individual molecules and their complexes in a reconstituted monooxygenase P450 2B4 system without the phospholipid was demonstrated. The method employed in this study distinguishes the monomeric proteins from their binary complexes and, also, the binary from the ternary complexes. The AFM images of the full-length P450 2B4 system's constituent components - cytochrome P450 2B4 (2B4), NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase and cytochrome b5 (b5), were obtained on highly-oriented pyrolitic graphite. The typical heights of the d-2B4, d-flavoprotein (Fp) and d-b5 molecules were measured and found to be 2.2 +/- 0.2, 2.3 +/- 0.2 and 1.8 +/- 0.1 nm, respectively. The measured heights of the binary d-Fp/d-2B4 and d-2B4/d-b5 complexes were estimated to be 3.4 +/- 0.2 and 2.8 +/- 0.2 nm, respectively. No formation of d-Fp/d-b5 complexes was registered. The ternary d-Fp/d-2B4/d-b5 complexes were visualized and their heights were found to be roughly equal to 4.3 +/- 0.3 nm and 6.2 +/- 0.3 nm.  相似文献   

2.
A real-time optical biosensor study on the interactions between putidaredoxin reductase (PdR), putidaredoxin (Pd), and cytochrome P450cam (P450cam) within the P450cam system was conducted. The binary Pd/P450cam and Pd/PdR complexes were revealed and kinetically characterized. The dominant role of electrostatic interactions in formation of productive electron transfer complexes was demonstrated. It was found that Pd/P450cam complex formation and decay obeys biphasic kinetics in contrast to the monophasic one for complexes formed by other redox partners within the system. Evidence for PdR/P450cam complex formation was obtained. It was found that, in contrast to Pd, which binds only to its redox partners, PdR and P450cam were able to form PdR/PdR and P450cam/P450cam complexes. A ternary PdR/Pd/P450cam complex was also registered. Its lifetime was sufficient to permit up to 60 turnovers to occur. The binding of Pd to P450cam and to PdR within the ternary complex occurred at distinct sites, with Pd serving as a bridge between the two proteins.  相似文献   

3.
Formation of binary and ternary complexes in the water-soluble cytochrome P450cam (P450cam)-containing as well as in the membrane P4502B4(2B4)- and the mixed P450scc-containing monooxygenase systems was investigated in real time by the 'resonant mirror' optical biosensor method. It was shown that the inter-protein electron transfer occurs not only during complex formation but also upon random collision--as was the case with the d-Fp/d-b5 pair (2B4 system). Binary complexes may be either facilitative to electron transfer (electron-transfer complexes) or prohibitive to it (non-productive complexes). Although the binary PdR/Pd and P450cam/Pd complex formation (within the P450cam-system) as well as the binary AdR/Ad and P450scc/Ad complex formation (within the P450scc-system) does occur, the lifetimes of these complexes formed are several orders of magnitude higher than the time required for realization of a complete hydroxylation cycle. At the same time, the lifetimes of the ternary PdR/Pd/P450cam and AdR/Ad/P450scc complexes are sufficient to permit the realization of a complete hydroxylation cycle in either of these systems. For the membrane P450 2B4 system, the formation of both the binary (Fp/2B4 and 2B4/b5) and ternary (Fp/2B4/b5) complexes was registered. The lifetimes of the binary Fp/2B4 and the ternary Fp/2B4/b5 complexes are sufficient for realization of a complete hydroxylation cycle in each of them.  相似文献   

4.
Cytochrome P450cam (CYP101) is a prokaryotic monooxygenase that requires two proteins, putidaredoxin reductase (PdR) and putidaredoxin (Pdx), to supply electrons from NADH. This study addresses the mechanism by which electrons are transported from PdR to P450cam through Pdx and used to activate O(2) at the heme of P450cam. It is shown that k(cat)/Km(O2) is independent of the PdR concentration and hyperbolically dependent on Pdx. The phenomenon of saturation of reaction rates with either P450cam or PdR at high ratios of one enzyme to the other is investigated and shown to be consistent with a change in the rate limiting step. Either the reduction of Pdx by PdR (high P450) or the reduction of P450 by Pdx (high PdR) determines the rate. These data support a mechanism where Pdx acts as a shuttle for transport of electrons from PdR to P450cam, effectively ruling out the formation of a kinetically significant PdR/Pdx/P450cam complex.  相似文献   

5.
The equilibrium dissociation constants KD, the complex association / dissociation rate constants (k on /k off) and lifetimes of the complexes of redox partners were measured for three cytochrome P450-containing monooxygenase systems (P450cam, P450scc, and P450 2B4) under hydroxylation conditions. The Q parameter representing the ratio of protein-protein complex lifetime (τ lT ) to time required for a single hydroxylation cycle (τturnover) was introduced for estimation of productivity of complexes formed within the systems studied. The Q parameter was insignificantly changed upon transition from the oxidation to hydroxylation conditions. Lifetimes (τ lT ) for the binary complexes formed within the P450cam and the P450scc systems obligatory requiring an intermediate electron transfer protein between the reductase and cytochrome P450 could not realize hydroxylation reactions for substrates with known τturnover and so they were non-productive while the binary complexes formed within the P450 2B4 system, not requiring such intermediate electron-transfer protein, appeared to be productive. Formation of ternary complexes was demonstrated under hydroxylation conditions in all three systems. Analysis of Q values led to the conclusion that the ternary complexes formed within the P450cam and the P450scc systems were productive. In the case of the P450 2B4 system, more than half (about 60%) ternary complexes were also found to be productive.  相似文献   

6.
Ordered water molecules are observed by crystallography and nuclear magnetic resonance to mediate protein-ligand interactions. Here, we examine the energetics of hydrating cavities formed at protein-ligand interfaces using molecular dynamics simulations. The free energies of hydrating two cavities in the active site of two liganded complexes of cytochrome P450cam were calculated by multiconfigurational thermodynamic integration. The complex of cytochrome P450cam with 2-phenyl-imidazole contains a crystallographically well defined water molecule mediating hydrogen bonds between the protein and the inhibitor. We calculate that this water molecule is stabilized by a binding free energy of -11.6 +/- kJ/mol. The complex of cytochrome P450cam with its natural substrate, camphor, contains a cavity that is empty in the crystal structure although a water molecule in it could make a hydrogen bond to camphor. Here, solvation of this cavity is calculated to be unfavorable by +15.8 +/- 5.0 kJ/mol. The molecular dynamics simulations can thus distinguish a hydrated interfacial cavity from an empty one. They also provide support for the notion that protein-ligand complexes can accommodate empty interfacial cavities and that such cavities are likely to be unhydrated unless more than one hydrogen bond can be made to a water molecule in the cavity.  相似文献   

7.
Lee DS  Park SY  Yamane K  Obayashi E  Hori H  Shiro Y 《Biochemistry》2001,40(9):2669-2677
Alkyl-isocyanides are able to bind to both ferric and ferrous iron of the heme in cytochrome P450, and the resulting complexes exhibit characteristic optical absorption spectra. While the ferric complex gives a single Soret band at 430 nm, the ferrous complex shows double Soret bands at 430 and 450 nm. The ratio of intensities of the double Soret bands in the ferrous isocyanide complex of P450 varies, as a function of pH, ionic strength, and the origin of the enzyme. To understand the structural origin of these characteristic spectral features, we examined the crystallographic and spectrophotometric properties of the isocyanide complexes of Pseudomonas putida cytochrome P450cam and Fusarium oxysporum cytochorme P450nor, since ferrous isocyanide complex of P450cam gives a single Soret band at 453 nm, while that of P450nor gives one at 427 nm. Corresponding to the optical spectra, we observed C-N stretching of a ferrous iron-bound isocyanide at 2145 and 2116 cm(-1) for P450nor and P450cam, respectively. The crystal structures of the ferric and ferrous n-butyl isocyanide complexes of P450cam and P450nor were determined. The coordination structure of the fifth Cys thiolate was indistinguishable for the two P450s, but the coordination geometry of the isocyanide was different for the case of P450cam [d(Fe-C) = 1.86 A, angleFe-C-N = 159 degrees ] versus P450nor [d(Fe-C) = 1.85 A, angleFe-C-N = 175 degrees ]. Another difference in the structures was the chemical environment of the heme pocket. In the case of P450cam, the iron-bound isocyanide is surrounded by some hydrophobic side chains, while, for P450nor, it is surrounded by polar groups including several water molecules. On the basis of these observations, we proposed that the steric factors and/or the polarity of the environment surrounding the iron-bound isocyanide significantly effect on the resonance structure of the heme(Fe)-isocyanide moiety and that differences in these two factors are responsible for the spectral characteristics for P450s.  相似文献   

8.
The early steps in dioxygen activation by the monooxygenase cytochrome P450cam (CYP101) include binding of O2 to ferrous P450cam to yield the ferric-superoxo form (oxyP450cam) followed by an irreversible, long-range electron transfer from putidaredoxin to reduce the oxyP450cam. The steady state kinetic parameter kcat/Km(O2) has been studied by a variety of probes that indicate a small D2O solvent isotope effect (1.21 +/- 0.08), a very small solvent viscosogen effect, and a 16O/18O isotope effect of 1.0147 +/- 0.0007. This latter value, which can be compared with the 16O/18O equilibrium isotope effect of 1.0048 +/- 0.0003 measured for oxyP450cam formation, is attributed to a primarily rate-limiting outer-sphere electron transfer from the heme iron center as O2 that has prebound to protein approaches the active site cofactor. The electron transfer from putidaredoxin to oxyP450cam was investigated by rapid mixing at 25 degrees C to complement previous lower-temperature measurements. A rate of 390 +/- 23 s-1 (and a near-unity solvent isotope effect) supports the view that the long-range electron transfer from reduced putidaredoxin to oxyP450cam is rapid relative to dissociation of O2 from the enzyme. P450cam represents the first enzymatic reaction of O2 in which both equilibrium and kinetic 16O/18O isotope effects have been measured.  相似文献   

9.
Reipa V  Holden MJ  Vilker VL 《Biochemistry》2007,46(45):13235-13244
Putidaredoxin reductase (PdR) is the flavin protein that carries out the first electron transfer involved in the cytochrome P450cam catalytic cycle. In PdR, the flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD/FADH2) redox center acts as a transformer by accepting two electrons from soluble nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+/NADH) and donating them in two separate, one-electron-transfer steps to the iron-sulfur protein putidaredoxin (Pdx). PdR, like the two more intensively studied monoflavin reductases, adrenodoxin reductase (AdR) and ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase (FNR), has no other active redox moieties (e.g., sulfhydryl groups) and can exist in three different oxidation states: (i) oxidized quinone, (ii) one-electron reduced semiquinone (stable neutral species (blue) or unstable radical anion (red)), and (iii) two-electron fully reduced hydroquinone. Here, we present reduction potential measurements for PdR in support of a thermodynamic model for the modulation of equilibria among the redox components in this initial electron-transfer step of the P450 cycle. A spectroelectrochemical technique was used to measure the midpoint oxidation-reduction potential of PdR that had been carefully purified of all residual NAD+, E0' = -369 +/- 10 mV at pH 7.6, which is more negative than previously reported and more negative than the pyridine nucleotide NADH/NAD+ (-330 mV). After addition of NAD+, the formation of the oxidized reductase-oxidized pyridine nucleotide complex was followed by the two-electron-transfer redox reaction, PdRox:NAD+ + 2e- --> PdRrd:NAD+, when the electrode potential was lowered. The midpoint potential was a hyperbolic function of increasing NAD+ concentration, such that at concentrations of pyridine nucleotide typically found in an intracellular environment, the midpoint potential would be E0' = -230 +/- 10 mV, thereby providing the thermodynamically favorable redox equilibria that enables electron transfer from NADH. This thermodynamic control of electron transfer is a shared mechanistic feature with the adrenodoxin P450 and photosynthetic electron-transfer systems but is different from the kinetic control mechanisms in the microsomal P450 systems where multiple reaction pathways draw on reducing power held by NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase. The redox measurements were combined with protein fluorescence quenching of NAD+ binding to oxidized PdR to establish that the PdRox:NAD+ complex (KD = 230 microM) is about 5 orders of magnitude weaker than PdRrd:NAD+ binding. These results are integrated with known structural and kinetic information for PdR, as well as for AdR and FNR, in support of a compulsory ordered pathway to describe the electron-transfer processes catalyzed by all three reductases.  相似文献   

10.
The reactions of cytochromes P450101 (P450cam), P450108 (P450terp), and P450102 (P450BM-3) with phenyldiazene result in the formation of phenyl-iron complexes with absorption maxima at 474-478 nm. Treatment of the cytochrome P450 complexes with K3Fe(CN)6 decreases the 474-478 nm absorbance and shifts the phenyl group from the iron to the porphyrin nitrogens. Acidification and extraction of the prosthetic group from each of the ferricyanide-treated enzymes yields a different mixture of the four possible N-phenylprotoporphyrin IX regioisomers. The ratios of the regioisomers with the phenyl ring on pyrrole rings B, A, C, and D (in order of elution from the high performance liquid chromatography column) are, respectively: cytochrome P450cam, 0:0:1:4; P450terp, 0:0:0:1; and P450BM-3, 2:10:2:1. The isomer ratio for recombinant cytochrome P450BM-3 without the cytochrome P450 reductase domain (2:9:2:1) shows that the reductase domain does not detectably perturb the active site topology of cytochrome P450BM-3. Potassium ions modulate the intensity of the spectrum of the phenyl-iron complex of cytochrome P450cam, but do not alter the N-phenyl isomer ratio. Computer graphics analysis of the crystal structure of the cytochrome P450cam phenyl-iron complex indicates that the active site of cytochrome P450cam is open above pyrrole ring D and, to a small extent, pyrrole ring C, in complete agreement with the observed N-phenylprotoporphyrin IX regioisomer pattern. The regioisomer ratios indicate that the active site of cytochrome P450terp is only open above pyrrole ring D, whereas that of cytochrome P450BM-3 is open to some extent above all the pyrrole rings but particularly above pyrrole ring A. The bacterial enzymes thus have topologies distinct from each other and from those of the mammalian enzymes so far investigated, which have active sites that are open to a comparable extent above pyrrole rings A and D.  相似文献   

11.
During the monooxygenase reaction catalyzed by cytochrome P450cam (P450cam), a ternary complex of P450cam, reduced putidaredoxin, and d-camphor is formed as an obligatory reaction intermediate. When ligands such as CO, NO, and O2 bind to the heme iron of P450cam in the intermediate complex, the EPR spectrum of reduced putidaredoxin with a characteristic signal at 346 millitesla at 77 K changed into a spectrum having a new signal at 348 millitesla. The experiment with O2 was carried out by employing a mutant P450cam with Asp251 --> Asn or Gly where the rate of electron transfer from putidaredoxin to oxyferrous P450cam is considerably reduced. Such a ligand-induced EPR spectral change of putidaredoxin was also shown in situ in Pseudomonas putida. Mutations introduced into the neighborhood of the iron-sulfur cluster of putidaredoxin revealed that a Ser44 --> Gly mutation mimicked the ligand-induced spectral change of putidaredoxin. Arg109 and Arg112, which are in the putative putidaredoxin binding site of P450cam, were essential for the spectral changes of putidaredoxin in the complex. These results indicate that a change in the P450cam active site that is the consequence of an altered spin state is transmitted to putidaredoxin within the ternary complex and produces a conformational change of the 2Fe-2S active center.  相似文献   

12.
We have previously reported the scanning tunnelling microscopy (STM) imaging under buffer of the heme monooxygenase cytochrome P450(cam) from Pseudomonas putida [Faraday Discuss. 116 (2000) 1]. We describe here the adsorption and STM imaging under buffer of complexes of a mutant of cytochrome P450(cam), K344C, and wild-type putidaredoxin (Pdx) on gold(111). The images of Pdx on its own on gold(111) are not uniform, presumably due to multiple orientations of protein adsorption because of the presence of five or more cysteines on the protein surface. STM imaging of a 1:1 mixture of P450(cam)-K344C/Pdx showed a regular array of pairs of different-sized proteins 20-25 A apart arranged in rows across the gold(111) surface which we attribute to the P450(cam)/Pdx complex. The images of the pairs are more regular than those of Pdx on its own, probably as a result of complex formation with P450(cam) partly overcoming the heterogeneity of Pdx adsorption. As far as we are aware this is the first report of STM imaging of a protein/protein complex, and the first direct observation of P450(cam)/Pdx complex formation which is a key step in the catalytic cycle of P450(cam) catalysis. The redox centers of the two proteins are ca. 20 A apart, too far for rapid intracomplex electron transfer. Whether the observed complex is competent for electron transfer or physiologically relevant is not known, and further work is in progress to elucidate the protein-protein interaction.  相似文献   

13.
An approach to measure the activity of single oligomers of the heme-containing enzyme cytochrome P450 CYP102A1 (CYP102A1) by atomic force microscopy (AFM) has been developed. It was found that the amplitude of fluctuations of the height of single CYP102A1 molecules performing the catalytic cycle is twice as great as the amplitude of fluctuations of the height of the same enzymes in the inactive state. It was shown that the amplitude of height fluctuations of a CYP102A1 protein globule depends on temperature, the maximum of this dependence being observed at 22°C. The activity of a single CYP102A1 molecule in the unit amplitude of height fluctuations of a protein globule per unit time was 5 ± 2 protein molecule was measured from the deformation of this molecule by the action of an AFM probe. The use of AFM probes of different geometry made it possible to determine the integral and local Young’s modulus for the monomers of the protein putidaredoxin reductase from the cytochrome P450 CYP101 (P450cam)-containing monooxigenase system, which were 37 ± 117 and 1 ± 3 MPa, respectively.  相似文献   

14.
The catalytic turnover of cytochrome P450 cam from Pseudomonas putida requires two auxiliary reduction partners, putidaredoxin (Pd) and putidaredoxin reductase (PdR). We report the functional expression in Escherichia coli of tricistronic constructs consisting of P450 cam encoded by the first cistron and the auxiliary proteins, Pd and PdR by the second and the third. Transformed bacterial whole cells efficiently oxidized (1R)-(+)-camphor to 5-exo-hydroxycamphor and, interestingly, limonene to (−)-perillyl alcohol. These bioengineered E. coli cells possess a heterologous self-sufficient P450 catalytic system that may have advantages in terms of low cost and high yield for the production of fine chemicals. Electronic supplementary material  The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.  相似文献   

15.
Cytochrome P-450cam, the bacterial hemeprotein which catalyzes the 5-exo-hydroxylation of d-camphor, requires two electrons to activate molecular oxygen for this monooxygenase reaction. These two electrons are transferred to cytochrome P-450cam in two one-electron steps by the physiological reductant, putidaredoxin. The present study of the kinetics of reduction of cytochrome P-450cam by reduced putidaredoxin has shown that the reaction obeys first order kinetics with a rate constant of 33 s-1 at 25 degrees C with respect to: 1) the appearance of the carbon monoxide complex of Fe(II) cytochrome P-450cam; 2) the disappearance of the 645 nm absorbance band of high-spin Fe(III) cytochrome P-450cam; and 3) the disappearance of the g = 1.94 EPR signal of reduced putidaredoxin. This data was interpreted as indicative of the rapid formation of a bimolecular complex between reduced putidaredoxin Fe(III) cytochrome P-450cam. The existence of the complex was first shown indirectly by kinetic analysis and secondly directly by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopic analysis of samples which were freeze-quenched approximately 16 ms after mixing. The direct evidence for complex formation was the loss of the EPR signal of Fe(III) cytochrome P-450cam upon formation of the complex while the EPR signal of reduced putidaredoxin decays with the same kinetics as the appearance of Fe(II) cytochrome P-450. The mechanism of the loss of the EPR signal of cytochrome P-450 upon formation of the complex is not apparent at this time but may involve a conformational change of cytochrome P-450cam following complex formation.  相似文献   

16.
We have performed resonance Raman and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) studies on the dioxygen bound state of the D251N mutant of cytochrome P450cam (oxy-P450cam) and its complex with reduced putidaredoxin (Pd). The D251N oxy-P450cam/Pd complex has a perturbed proton delivery mechanism and shows a significantly red-shifted UV-visible spectrum as observed in Benson et al. [Benson, D. E., Suslick, K. S., and Sligar, S. G. (1997) Biochemistry 36, 5104-5107]. The red shift has been interpreted to indicate a major perturbation of the electronic structure of the oxy-heme complex. However, we find no evidence that electron transfer has occurred from Pd to the heme active site of D251N oxy-P450cam. This suggests that both electron and proton transfer are perturbed by the D251N mutation and that these processes may be coupled. Three oxygen isotope sensitive Raman features are identified in the Pd complex, and occur at 1137, 536, and 399 cm(-1). These values are not significantly different from those for WT or D251N oxy-P450cam. However, a careful examination of the oxygen stretching feature near 1137 cm(-1) reveals the presence of three peaks at 1131, 1138, and 1146 cm(-1), which we attribute to the presence of conformational substates in oxy-P450cam. A significant change in the conformational substate population is observed for the D251N oxy-P450cam when the Pd complex is formed. We suggest that the conformational population redistribution of oxy-P450cam, along with the red-shifted electronic spectra, reflects a structural equilibrium of the oxy-heme that is perturbed upon Pd binding. We propose that this structural perturbation is connected to the effector function of Pd and may involve changes in the electron donation properties of the thiolate ligand.  相似文献   

17.
Oligomers and monomers of NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase and cytochrome P450 LM2 (2B4) isolated from the liver microsomes of phenobarbital-treated rabbits were examined for physicochemical properties and catalytic activities. As measured using laser correlation spectroscopy the particle sizes of NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase and cytochrome P450 LM2 oligomers were 14.8 +/- 1.7 and 19.2 +/- 1.4 nm, respectively. Twenty-four-hour incubation with Emulgen 913 at 4 degrees C at a molar ratio of 1:100 led to the monomerization of NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase and cytochrome P450 LM2 oligomers, the particle sizes diminishing to 6.1 +/- 1.3 and 5.2 +/- 0.4 nm, respectively. The thermal stability of NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase monomers was the same as that of oligomers, whereas cytochrome P450 LM2 monomers were less thermostable than oligomers and cytochrome P450 in microsomes. Similar to cytochrome P450 LM2 oligomers and the microsomal hemoprotein, cytochrome P450 LM2 monomers formed complexes with type I and II substrates, but with Kd values higher than those of microsomes and cytochrome P450 LM2 oligomers. Kinetic parameters (Vmax and Km) of H2O2- and cumene hydroperoxide-dependent oxidation of benzphetamine and aniline in the presence of cytochrome P450 LM2 oligomers, monomers, and microsomes were determined. Peroxidase activities of the oligomers and monomers were the same, but were lower than those of microsomes. Thus the substitution of protein-protein interactions in cytochrome P450 LM2 oligomers with protein-detergent interactions in the monomers did not influence the catalytic properties of the hemoprotein.  相似文献   

18.
Although a single binary functional complex between cytochrome P450 (P450 or CYP for a specific isoform) and cytochrome P450 reductase (CPR) has been generally accepted in the literature, this simple model failed to explain the experimentally observed catalytic activity of recombinant CYP2E1 in dependence on the total concentration of the added CPR-K56Q mutant. Our rejection of the simplest 1:1 binding model was based on two independent lines of experimental evidence. First, under the assumption of the 1:1 binding model, separate analyses of titration curves obtained while varying either P450 or CPR concentrations individually produced contradictory results. Second, an asymmetric Job plot suggested the existence of higher order molecular complexes. To identify the most probable complexation mechanism, we generated a comprehensive data set where the concentrations of both P450 and P450 were varied simultaneously, rather than one at a time. The resulting two-dimensional data were globally fit to 32 candidate mechanistic models, involving the formation of binary, ternary, and quaternary P450.CPR complexes, in the absence or presence or P450 and CPR homodimers. Of the 32 candidate models (mechanisms), two models were approximately equally successful in explaining our experimental data. The first plausible model involves the binary complex P450.CPR, the quaternary complex (P450)2.(CPR)2, and the homodimer (P450)2. The second plausible model additionally involves a weakly bound ternary complex (P450)2.CPR. Importantly, only the binary complex P450.CPR seems catalytically active in either of the two most probable mechanisms.  相似文献   

19.
Prasad S  Mitra S 《Biochemistry》2002,41(49):14499-14508
The role of protein structural flexibility and substrate dynamics in catalysis by cytochrome P450 enzymes is an area of current interest. We have addressed these in cytochrome P450(cam) (P450(cam)) and its Y96A mutant with camphor and its related compounds using fluorescence spectroscopy. Previously [Prasad et al. (2000) FEBS Lett. 477, 157-160], we provided experimental support to dynamic fluctuations in P450(cam), and substrate access into the active site region via the channel next to the flexible F-G helix-loop-helix segment. In the investigation described here, we show that the dynamic fluctuations in the enzyme are substrate dependent as reflected by tryptophan fluorescence quenching experiments. The orientation of tryptophan relative to heme (kappa(2)) for W42 obtained from time-resolved tryptophan fluorescence measurements show variation with type of substrate bound to P450(cam) suggesting regions distant from heme-binding site are affected by physicochemical and steric characteristics/protein-substrate interactions of P450(cam) active site. We monitored substrate dynamics in the active site region of P450(cam) by time-resolved substrate anisotropy measurements. The anisotropy decay of substrates bound to P450(cam) indicate that mobility of substrates is modulated by physicochemical and steric characteristics/protein-substrate interactions of local active site structure, and provides an understanding of factors controlling observed hydroxylated products for substrate bound P450(cam) complexes. The present study shows that P450(cam) local and peripheral structural flexibility and heterogeneity along with substrate mobility play an important role in regulating substrate binding orientation during catalysis and accommodating diverse range of substrates within P450(cam) heme pocket.  相似文献   

20.
In a previous study (M. Sasaki, J. Maki, K. Oshiman, Y. Matsumura, and T. Tsuchido, Biodegradation 16:449-459, 2005), the cytochrome P450 monooxygenase system was shown to be involved in bisphenol A (BPA) degradation by Sphingomonas sp. strain AO1. In the present investigation, we purified the components of this monooxygenase, cytochrome P450 (P450bisd), ferredoxin (Fd(bisd)), and ferredoxin reductase (Red(bisd)). We demonstrated that P450bisd and Fd(bisd) are homodimeric proteins with molecular masses of 102.3 and 19.1 kDa, respectively, by gel filtration chromatography analysis. Spectroscopic analysis of Fd(bisd) revealed the presence of a putidaredoxin-type [2Fe-2S] cluster. P450(bisd), in the presence of Fd(bisd), Red(bisd), and NADH, was able to convert BPA. The K(m) and kcat values for BPA degradation were 85 +/- 4.7 microM and 3.9 +/- 0.04 min(-1), respectively. NADPH, spinach ferredoxin, and spinach ferredoxin reductase resulted in weak monooxygenase activity. These results indicated that the electron transport system of P450bisd might exhibit strict specificity. Two BPA degradation products of the P450(bisd) system were detected by high-performance liquid chromatography analysis and were thought to be 1,2-bis(4-hydroxyphenyl)-2-propanol and 2,2-bis(4-hydroxyphenyl)-1-propanol based on mass spectrometry-mass spectrometry analysis. This is the first report demonstrating that the cytochrome P450 monooxygenase system in bacteria is involved in BPA degradation.  相似文献   

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