首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 625 毫秒
1.
Two heme peroxidases of 35.2 and 36.5 kDa have been isolated from cucumber (Cucumis sativus) peelings and characterized through electronic and 1H NMR spectra in the pH range 3.5-10.5. Their spectroscopic and catalytic properties, which are closely similar, are characteristic of highly homologous isoenzymes. Both proteins, as isolated, exist as a mixture of two ferric forms containing a high-spin and a low-spin heme in an approximately 2:1 molar ratio. The latter form likely contains a hydroxide ion axially coordinated to the heme iron and is proposed to be the result of partial irreversible protein inactivation due to the purification procedure. Both proteins in the reduced form are fully high-spin. The high-spin ferric form is sensitive to two acid-base equilibria with apparent pKa values of approximately 5 and 8.5, which have been assigned to the distal histidine and the arginine adjacent to it, respectively. These equilibria also affect the catalytic activity and the interaction with inorganic anions such as azide and fluoride. The reactivity of both proteins is closely similar to that of other plant peroxidases, primarily horseradish peroxidase; however, they also show spectroscopic properties similar to those of cytosolic ascorbate peroxidase. Therefore, overall, these two species show molecular, spectroscopic and catalytic features which are rather peculiar among plant peroxidases.  相似文献   

2.
The novel class III ascorbate peroxidase isoenzyme II from tea leaves (TcAPXII), with an unusually high specific ascorbate peroxidase activity associated with stress response, has been characterized by resonance Raman (RR), electronic absorption, and Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) spectroscopies. Ferric and ferrous forms and the complexes with fluoride, cyanide, and CO have been studied at various pH values. The overall blue shift of the electronic absorption spectrum, the high RR frequencies of the core size marker bands, similar to those of 6-coordinate low-spin heme, and the complex RR spectrum in the low-frequency region of ferric TcAPXII indicate that this protein contains an unusual 5-coordinate quantum mechanically mixed-spin heme. The spectra of both the fluoride and the CO adducts suggest that these exogenous ligands are strongly hydrogen-bonded with a residue that appears to be unique to this peroxidase. Electronic absorption spectra also emphasize structural differences between the benzhydroxamic acid binding sites of TcAPXII and horseradish peroxidases (HRPC). It is concluded that TcAPXII is a paradigm peroxidase since it is the first example of a hybrid enzyme that combines spectroscopic signatures, structural elements, and substrate specificities previously reported only for distinct class I and class III peroxidases.  相似文献   

3.
In order to investigate the effect of the alpha beta subunit contacts on the subunit structure of human adult methemoglobin, the hyperfine shifted proton NMR spectra of several high spin complexes (water, cyanate, thiocyanate, formate, fluoride, and nitrite) and low spin complexes (imisazole, azide, and cyanide) of hemoglobin and its isolated subunits were characterized at 220 MHz and 22 degrees C. The spectra of ferric low spin derivatives of the isolated subunits were approximately superimposable on the corresponding hemoglobin spectra. On the other hand, the high spin spectra of the isolated subunits were greatly different from each other. The spectral anomaly in the ferric high spin complexes of the isolated beta subunit were interpreted to indicate other structural change than the hemichrome formation in the beta heme pocket. Difference in the subunit association effect between the high and low spin complexes of the isolated beta subunit was interpreted on the basis of a conformational change of the apoprotein dependent on the spin state of the beta heme iron.  相似文献   

4.
Cytochrome c1aa3 from Thermus thermophilus has optical and EPR properties similar to bovine cytochrome c oxidase. We have studied 87Fe-enriched samples with M?ssbauer spectroscopy in the fully oxidized and fully reduced states and in the oxidized state complexed with cyanide. The cytochromes a and c1 yielded spectra quite similar to those reported for the cytochromes c and b5; in the oxidized state the spectra reflect noninteracting, low spin ferric hemes, whereas the a- and c1-sites of the reduced enzyme are typical of low spin ferrous hemochromes. The spectra of the reduced enzyme show that reduced cytochrome a3 is high spin ferrous, with M?ssbauer parameters quite similar to those of deoxymyoglobin. Upon addition of cyanide to the oxidized enzyme, the a3-site exhibits in the absence of an applied magnetic field and at temperatures down to 1.3 K a quadrupole doublet with parameters typical of low spin ferric heme-CN complexes. The low temperature spectra taken in applied magnetic fields show that the electronic ground state of the a3-CN complex has integer electronic spin, suggesting ferromagnetic coupling of the low spin ferric heme (S = 1/2) to Cu2+ (S = 1/2) to yield as S = 1 ground state. We have examined the oxidized enzyme from two different preparations. Both had good activity and identical optical and EPR spectra. The M?ssbauer spectra, however, revealed that the a3-site had a substantially different electronic structure in the two preparations. Neither configuration had properties in accord with the widely accepted spin-coupling model proposed for the bovine enzyme.  相似文献   

5.
The interaction of cytochrome c with micelles of sodium dodecyl sulfate was studied by proton NMR spectroscopy. The protein/micelles ratio was found to be crucial in controlling the extent of the conformational changes in the heme crevice. Over a range of ratios between 1:30 and 1:60, the NMR spectra of the ferric form display no paramagnetic signals due to a moderately fast exchange between intermediate species on the NMR time scale. This is consistent with an interconversion of bis-histidine derivatives (His18-Fe-His26 and His18-Fe-His33). Further addition of micelles induces a high-spin species that is proposed to involve pentacoordinated iron. The resulting free binding site, also encountered in the ferrous form, is used to complex exogenous ligands such as cyanide or carbon monoxide. Attribution of the heme methyls was performed by means of exchange spectroscopy through ligand exchange or electron transfer. The heme methyl shift pattern of the micellar cyanocytochrome in the ferric low spin form is different from the pattern of both the native and the cyanide cytochrome c adduct, in the absence of micelles, reflecting a complete change of the heme electronic structure. Analysis of the electron self-exchange reaction between the two redox states of the micellar cyanocytochrome c yields a rate constant of 2.4 x 10(4) M(-1) s(-1) at 298 K, which is surprisingly close to the value observed in the native protein.  相似文献   

6.
Magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectra have been recorded for beef heart cytochrome oxidase and a number of its inhibitor complexes. The resting enzyme exhibits a derivate shape Faraday C term in the Soret region, characteristic of low spin ferric heme, which accounts for 50% of the total oxidase heme a. The remaining heme a (50%) is assigned to the high spin state. MCD temperature studies, comparison with the MCD spectra of heme a-imidazole model compounds, and ligand binding (cyanide, formate) studies are consistent with these spin state assignments in the oxidized enzyme. Furthermore, the ligand binding properties and correlations between optical and MCD parameters indicate that in the resting enzyme the low spin heme a is due solely to cytochrome a3+ and the high spin heme a to cytochrome a33+. The Soret MCD of the reduced protein is interpreted as th sum of two MCD curves: an intense, asymmetric MCD band very similar to that exhibited by deoxymyoglobin which we assign to paramagnetic high spin cytochrome a3(2+) and a weaker, more symmetric MCD contribution, which is attributed to diamagnetic low spin cytochrome a2+. Temperature studies of the Soret MCD intensity support this proposed spin state heterogeneity. Ligand binding (CO, CN-) to the reduced protein eliminates the intense MCD associated with high spin cytochrome a3(2+); however, the band associated with cytochrome a2+ is observed under these conditions as well as in a number of inhibitor complexes (cyanide, formate, sulfide, azide) of the partially reduced protein. The MCD spectra of oxidized, reduced, and inhibitor-complexed cytochrome oxidase show no evidence for heme-heme interaction via spectral parameters. This conclusion is used in conjunction with the fact that ferric, high spin heme exhibits weak MCD intensity to calculate the MCD spectra for the individual cytochromes of the oxidase as well as the spectra for some inhibitor complexes of cytochrome a3. The results are most simply interpreted using the model we have recently proposed to account for the electronic and magnetic properties of cytochrome (Palmer, G., Babcock, F.T., and Vcikery, L.E. (1976) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 73, 2206-2210).  相似文献   

7.
EPR spectra of intestinal peroxidase are reported for the first time. The resting state of intestinal peroxidase exhibits only a high spin EPR spectrum with pH-dependent rhombicity. Addition of chloride shifts the equilibrium between an acidic and a neutral form of the enzyme. In contrast, resting lactoperoxidase shows EPR spectra of both low spin and high spin species, indicating a different heme environment between these two peroxidases. The high spin signal of lactoperoxidase consists of multiple components; the major component exhibits pH-dependent rhombicity similar to intestinal peroxidase and the equilibrium between the acidic and the neutral forms is also shifted by chloride ion. EPR features of the low spin cyanide complex of intestinal peroxidase and lactoperoxidase are compared with those of other hemeproteins, whose proximal axial ligands are known to be histidine residues. The g-values of the cyanide adducts of the mammalian peroxidases are similar. The relationship between the g-value anisotropy and imidazolate character of the proximal histidine is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
 A novel C 2-symmetric ring-fluorinated hemin, 13,17-bis(2-carboxyethyl)-2,8,12,18-tetramethyl-3,7-difluoroporphyrinatoiron(III), has been synthesized and was incorporated into sperm whale apomyoglobin to investigate protein-induced rhombic perturbations on the electronic structure of the active site of myoglobin (Mb) using 19F NMR spectroscopy. NMR signals for 19F atoms introduced as substituents on the present heme in ferrous low-spin and high-spin and ferric low-spin complexes have been observed and their shifts sharply reflect not only the electronic nature of the heme iron, but also in-plane asymmetry of the heme electronic structure. The two-fold symmetric electronic structure of the ring-fluorinated hemin is clearly manifested in the 19F and 1H NMR spectra of its dicyano complex. The chemical equivalence of the two fluorine atoms of the heme is removed in the active site of myoglobin and the splitting of the two 19F NMR signals provides a quantitative probe for characterizing the rhombic perturbation of the heme electronic structure induced by the heme-protein interaction. The in-plane asymmetry of heme electronic structures in carbonmonoxy and deoxy Mbs have been analyzed for the first time on the basis of the shift difference between the two 19F NMR signals of the heme and is interpreted in terms of iron-ligand binding and/or the orbital ground state of the heme. A potential utility of 19F NMR, combined with the use of a symmetric fluorinated hemin, in characterizing the heme electronic structure of myoglobin in a variety of iron oxidation, spin, and ligation states, is presented. Received: 23 December 1999 / Accepted: 3 April 2000  相似文献   

9.
Four isoperoxidases of turnip root and isoperoxidase C of horseradish root were digested with trypsin, and their peptide maps, prepared by high-voltage paper electrophoresis, were compared. All five tryptic digests were completely soluble at pH 8. The maps were developed with a variety of general and specific reagents: ninhydrin, histidine, tyrosine, tryptophan and arginine reagents. Cystine peptides and cysteic acid derivatives have also been characterized. All detected half-cystine residues seemed engaged in disulfide bridges. For each individual peroxidase the number of specifically staining peptides agreed very well with the amino acid composition. The two most acidic peroxidases of turnip, P1 and P2, only differ significantly in one peptide. The P2 gene is tentatively proposed to have developed from the P1 gene by a single base mutation, changing an asparagine residue to alysine residue. A less acidic turnip peroxidase, P3, is distinct, although related to peroxidases P1 and P2. Horseradish isoperoxidase C also belongs to this group which appears to be closely related in the amino acid sequences around four disulfide bridges. Peroxidase P7 differs from this group, at least around two of its disulfide bridges, and therefore, may differ from the other four in parts of its three dimensional structure. Sequences of particular importance to peroxidase function must be present in all peroxidases. From the peptide mapping studies we only find two highly homologous sequences present in all five examined peroxidases. Both contain histidine. This finding corroborates previous suggestions of two histidine sequences near the peroxidase heme prosthetic group. The rules applied in relating peptides of different proteins are outlined, and the sources of errors in mapping of glycoproteins of high carbohydrate content (about 20%) are discussed in detail.  相似文献   

10.
The endogenous cation in peroxidases may contribute to the type of heme coordination. Here a series of ferric and ferrous derivatives of wild-type Leishmania major peroxidase (LmP) and of engineered K(+) site mutants of LmP, lacking potassium cation binding site, has been examined by electronic absorption spectroscopy at 25°C. Using UV-visible spectrophotometry, we show that the removal of K(+) binding site causes substantial changes in spin states of both the ferric and ferrous forms. The spectral changes are interpreted to be, most likely, due to the formation of a bis-histidine coordination structure in both the ferric and ferrous oxidation states at neutral pH 7.0. Stopped flow spectrophotometric techniques revealed that characteristics of Compound I were not observed in the K(+) site double mutants in the presence of H(2)O(2). Similarly electron donor oxidation rate was two orders less for the K(+) site double mutants compared to the wild type. These data show that K(+) functions in preserving the protein structure in the heme surroundings as well as the spin state of the heme iron, in favor of the enzymatically active form of LmP.  相似文献   

11.
Coral allene oxide synthase (AOS), a hemoprotein with weak sequence homology to catalase, is the N-terminal domain of a naturally occurring fusion protein with an 8R-lipoxygenase. AOS converts 8R-hydroperoxyeicosatetraenoic acid to the corresponding allene oxide. The UV--visible absorption and magnetic circular dichroism spectra of ferric AOS and of its cyanide and azide complexes, and the electron paramagnetic resonance spectra of native AOS (high-spin, g = 6.56, 5.22, 2.00) and of its cyanide adduct (low-spin, g = 2.86, 2.24, 1.60) closely resemble the corresponding spectra of bovine liver catalase (BLC). These results provide strong evidence for tyrosinate ligation to the heme iron of AOS as has been established for catalases. On the other hand, the positive circular dichroism bands in the Soret region for all three derivatives of ferric AOS are almost the mirror image of those in catalase. In addition, the cyanide affinity of native AOS (K(d) = 10 mM at pH 7) is about 3 orders of magnitude lower than that of BLC. Thus, while these results conclusively support a common tyrosinate-ligated heme in AOS as in catalase, significant differences exist in the interaction between their respective heme prosthetic groups and protein environments, and in the access of small molecules to the heme iron.  相似文献   

12.
One- and two-dimensional 1H NMR spectroscopy has been used to probe the active site of the high spin ferric resting state and the low spin, cyanide-inhibited derivative of isozyme H2 of the lignin peroxidase, LiP, from Phanerochaete chrysosporium strain BKM 1767. One-dimensional NMR revealed a resting state LiP that is five coordinate at 25 degrees C with an electronic structure similar to that of horseradish peroxidase, HRP. Differential paramagnetic relaxivity was used to identify the C beta H signals of the axial His177. A combination of bond correlation spectroscopy and nuclear Overhauser effect spectroscopy of cyanide-inhibited LiP (LiP-CN) has allowed the assignment of all resolved heme resonances without recourse to isotope labeling, as well as those of the proximal His177 and the distal His48. The surprising effectiveness of the two dimensional NMR methods on such a large and paramagnetic protein indicates that such two dimensional experiments can be expected to have major impact on solution structure determination of diverse classes of heme peroxidases. The two dimensional NMR data of LiP-CN reveal a heme contact shift pattern that reflects a close similarity to that of HRP-CN, including the unusual in-plane trans and cis orientation of the 2- and 4-vinyls. The axial His177 also exhibits the same orientation relative to the heme as in HRP-CN. The proximal His177 contact shifted resonances of both the low spin LiP-CN and high spin LiP are shown to reflect significantly reduced hydrogen bond donation by, or imidazolate character for, the axial histidine in LiP relative to HRP, which may explain the higher redox potential of LiP. The signals are identified for a distal residue that originates from the protonated His48 with disposition relative to the heme similar to that found for the distal His42 in HRP-CN. In contrast, the absence of any resolved signals attributable to an Arg44 in LiP-CN suggest that this distal residue has an altered orientation relative to the heme compared with that of the conserved Arg38 in HRP-CN (Thanabal, V., de Ropp, J. S., and La Mar, G. N. (1987) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 109, 7516-7525).  相似文献   

13.
L B Dugad  X Wang  C C Wang  G S Lukat  H M Goff 《Biochemistry》1992,31(6):1651-1655
Chloroperoxidase, a glycoprotein from the mold Caldariomyces fumago, has been investigated in its ferric low-spin cyanide-ligated form through use of nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) spectroscopy to provide information on the heme pocket electronic/molecular structure. Spin-lattice relaxation times for the hyperfine-shifted heme resonances were found to be three times less than those in horseradish peroxidase. This must reflect a slower electronic relaxation rate for chloroperoxidase than for horseradish peroxidase as a consequence of axial ligation of cysteine in the former versus histidine in the latter enzyme. Isoenzymes A1 and A2 of chloroperoxidase show the largest chemical shift differences near the heme propionate on the basis of NOE measurements. This suggests that the primary structure differences for the two isoenzymes are communicated to the heme group through the ring propionate substituents. A downfield peak has been detected in chloroperoxidase with chemical shift, T1, and line width characteristics similar to those of the C epsilon-H proton of the distal histidine residue. The NOE pattern and T1's of the peaks in the 0.0 to -5.0 ppm upfield region are consistent with the presence of an arginine amino acid residue in the heme pocket near either the 1-CH3 or 3-CH3 group. Existence of catalytically important distal histidine and arginine amino acid residues in chloroperoxidase shows it to be structurally similar to peroxidases rather than to the often compared monooxygenase, cytochrome P-450. This result supports the earlier conclusions of Sono et al. [Sono, M., Dawson, J.H., Hall, K., & Hager, L.P. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 347-356].  相似文献   

14.
High-resolution proton NMR spectra are reported for the paramagnetic ferric native and cyano complexes of the five major horseradish root peroxidase (HRP) isoenzymes (A1, A2, A3, B, and C). Axial imidazole resonances are observed in the native and cyano-complex spectra of all the isoenzymes, thus indicating the presence of a common axial histidine ligand. Proton NMR spectra outside the usual diamagnetic region are identical for sets of A1 and A2 isoenzymes and for the B and C isoenzyme set. Variation in heme residue chemical shift positions may be controlled in part by porphyrin vinyl side chain-protein interactions. Diverse upfield spectra among the isoenzymes reflect amino acid substitutions and/or conformational differences near the prosthetic group, as signals in this region must result from amino acid residues in proximity to the heme center. Acid-base dependence studies reveal an "alkaline" transition that converts the native high-spin iron (III) porphyrin to the low-spin state. The transition occurs at pH 9.3, 9.4, 9.8, and 10.9 for respective HRP A1, A2, A3, and C isoenzymes, respectively. Significantly, this ordering also reflects specific activities for the isoenzymes in the order A1 = A2 greater than A3 greater than B = C. Identical proton NMR spectra for A1/A2 and B/C isoenzyme sets parallel equivalent specific activities for members of a particular set. Proton NMR spectra thus appear to be highly sensitive to protein modifications that affect catalytic activity.  相似文献   

15.
The native ferric and cyanide-bound ferric forms of nine vertebrate and two yeast cytochromes c have been investigated by high-resolution proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Spectral comparisons have been made among the cytochromes with emphasis on the signal positions for heme and amino acid ligand protons. Consistent with earlier more limited studies of native ferric cytochromes c, the paramagnetically shifted proton NMR signals show little variation among species with up to 50% substitution of amino acids. Proton NMR spectra for the cyanide complexes also show little variation among species. The nitrogen-15 signal for the coordinated cyanide ion is known to be highly variable among other hemoproteins, but the signal covers a range of only 855 to 865 ppm (nitrate ion reference) for vertebrate cytochromes c and 884 to 886 ppm for yeast cytochromes c. The cyanide ligand probe thus reports an amazing conservation of the heme and proximal ligand environment among the cytochromes. Comparative proton and nitrogen-15 chemical shift values are consistent with a slightly stronger proximal histidine imidazole hydrogen bond to an amino acid carbonyl function than is the case for hemoglobin and myoglobin.  相似文献   

16.
The nitrosyl complex of ferric myoglobin is EPR-silent. Upon photolysis at low temperatures, the photoinduced intermediates trapped in the distal heme cavity exhibit new EPR spectra due to the interaction between the photodissociated NO (S=1/2) and the ferric high spin heme (S=5/2). In order to elucidate the effect of distal E7 (His64) and E11 (Val68) mutations upon the electronic structure of the metal center, its immediate environment, and its interaction with the photodissociated NO, EPR spectra of the photoproducts of the NO complexes of recombinant ferric Mb mutants were measured at 5 K. EPR spectra of the photoproducts were closely related to the size and/or the polarity of the distal pocket residues. The distal pocket of the E7 mutants seemed to be sterically crowded, even decreasing the side chain volume or changing its hydrophobicity by replacing amino acid at position 64. We have found that the mobility of the photodissociated NO molecule in the distal heme pocket was strongly governed by the nature of the amino acid residue at E11 position.  相似文献   

17.
A basic heme peroxidase has been isolated from cucumber (Cucumis sativus) peelings and characterized through electronic and (1)H NMR spectra from pH 3 to 11. The protein, as isolated, contains a high-spin ferriheme which in the low pH region is sensitive to two acid-base equilibria with apparent pK(a) values of approximately 5 and 3.6, assigned to the distal histidine and to a heme propionate, respectively. At high pH, a new low-spin species develops with an apparent pK(a) of 11, likely due to the binding of an hydroxide ion to the sixth (axial) coordination position of the Fe(III). A number of acid-base equilibria involving heme propionates and residues in the distal cavity also affect the binding of inorganic anions such as cyanide, azide, and fluoride to the ferriheme, as well as the catalytic activity. The reduction potentials of the native protein and of its cyanide derivative, determined through UV-Vis spectroelectrochemistry, result to be -0.320+/-0.015 and -0.412+/-0.010V, respectively. Overall, the reactivity of this protein parallels those of other plant peroxidases, especially horseradish peroxidase. However, some differences exist in the acid-base equilibria affecting its reactivity and in the reduction potential, likely as a result of small structural differences in the heme distal and proximal cavities.  相似文献   

18.
The proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectra of several chloroperoxidase-inhibitor complexes have been investigated. Titrations of chloroperoxidase with azide, thiocyanate, cyanate, or nitrite ions indicate that only the chloroperoxidase-thiocyanate complex exhibits slow ligand exchange on the 360-MHz NMR time scale. The temperature dependence of the proton NMR spectra of the complexes suggests that, although the complexes are predominantly low-spin ferric heme iron, a spin equilibrium is present presumably between S = 1/2 and S = 5/2 states. The pH dependence of the proton NMR spectra of the psuedo-halide-chloroperoxidase complexes was examined at 360 and 90 MHz. Chloroperoxidase complexes with azide and cyanate show similar behavior; 360-MHz proton spectra are readily observed at low pH (less than 5.0) but not at high pH. At high pH, the ligand exchange rate falls in an intermediate time range. When the complexes are examined at 90 MHz, however, spectra consisting of averaged signals are observed. The chloroperoxidase-thiocyanate complex does not form at high pH values; the proton NMR spectrum observed is that of native chloroperoxidase. The pKa for the chloroperoxidase-thiocyanate heme-linked ionizable amino acid residue falls between 4.2 and 5.0. Only an averaged azide signal was observed in the nitrogen-15 NMR spectra for solutions that contained the azide complex of chloroperoxidase, horseradish peroxidase, and myoglobin.  相似文献   

19.
Examination of the peroxidase isolated from the inkcap Basidiomycete Coprinus cinereus shows that the 42,000-dalton enzyme contains a protoheme IX prosthetic group. Reactivity assays and the electronic absorption spectra of native Coprinus peroxidase and several of its ligand complexes indicate that this enzyme has characteristics similar to those reported for horseradish peroxidase. In this paper, we characterize the H2O2-oxidized forms of Coprinus peroxidase compounds I, II, and III by electronic absorption and magnetic resonance spectroscopies. Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) studies of this Coprinus peroxidase indicate the presence of high-spin Fe(III) in the native protein and a number of differences between the heme site of Coprinus peroxidase and horseradish peroxidase. Carbon-13 (of the ferrous CO adduct) and nitrogen-15 (of the cyanide complex) NMR studies together with proton NMR studies of the native and cyanide-complexed Coprinus peroxidase are consistent with coordination of a proximal histidine ligand. The EPR spectrum of the ferrous NO complex is also reported. Protein reconstitution with deuterated hemin has facilitated the assignment of the heme methyl resonances in the proton NMR spectrum.  相似文献   

20.
The endogenous calcium ion (Ca2+) in horseradish peroxidase (HRP) was removed to cause substantial changes in the proton NMR spectra of the enzyme in various oxidation/spin states. The spectral changes were interpreted as arising from the substantial alterations in the heme environments, most likely the heme proximal and distal sides. The comparative kinetic and redox studies revealed that these conformational changes affect the reduction process of compound II, resulting in the decrease of the enzymatic activity of HRP. It is also revealed from the ESR spectrum and the temperature dependences of the NMR and optical absorption spectra of the Ca2+-free enzyme that the heme iron atom of the Ca2+-free enzyme is in a thermal spin mixing between ferric high and low spin states, in contrast to that of the native enzyme. These results show that Ca2+ functions in maintaining the protein structure in the heme environments as well as the spin state of the heme iron, in favor of the enzymatic activity of HRP.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号