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1.
Cu,Zn SOD is known to be inactivated by HO2 and to be protected against that inactivation by a number of small molecules including formate, imidazole, and urate. This inactivation has been shown to be due to oxidation of a ligand field histidine residue by a bound oxidant formed by reaction of the active site Cu(II) with HO2. We now report that protective actions of both formate and NADH increase as the pH was raised in the range 8.0–9.5. This is taken to indicate increased accessibility of the Cu site with rising pH and/or increased reactivity of the bound oxidant toward exogeneous substrates at high pH. Formate appears to act as a sacrificial substrate that protects by competing with the endogenous histidine residue for reaction with the bound oxidant, or that repairs the damage by reducing the histidyl radical intermediate. The same is likely also true of NADH.  相似文献   

2.
Bovine mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.37) was inactivated by the specific modifications of a single histidine residue upon reaction with iodoacetamide. NADH protected against this loss of activity and reaction with the histidine residue, suggesting that the histidine is at the NADH binding site. N-Ethylmaleimide also modified the enzyme by reacting with 1 sulfhydryl residue. The reaction rate with N-ethylmaleimide was increased by decreasing the pH from neutrality or by the addition of urea. NADH protected against the modification of the sulfhydryl group under all the conditions tested, again suggesting active site specificity for this inactivation. This enzyme has a subunit weight of 33,000 and is a dimer. The native malate dehydrogenase will bind only 1 mol of NADH and it is thus assumed that there is only a single active site per dimer.  相似文献   

3.
《Free radical research》2013,47(4):311-322
Catecholamines (CAs: epinephrine, norepinephrine, dopamine, L-DOPA, 6-hydroxydopamine) and o-diphenols (DOPAC and catechol) enhanced dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase (LADH) inactivation by Cu(II) /H2O2 (Cu-Fenton system). The inhibition of LADH activity correlated with Cu(II), H2O2 and CA concentrations. Similar inhibitions were obtained wit! the assayed CAs and o-diphenols. CAs enhanced HO radical production by Cu(II) /H2O2, as demonstrated by benzoate hydroxylation and deoxyribose oxidation; LADH counteracted the pro-oxidant effect of CAs by scavenging hydroxyl radicals. Captopril, dihydrolipo amide, dihydrolipoic acid, DL-dithiothreitol, GSSG, try-panothione and histidine effectively preserved LADH from oxidative damage, whereas N-acetylcysteine, N-(2-mercaptopropionylglycine) and lipoamide were less effective protectors. Catalase (though neither bovine serum albumin nor superoxide dismutase) protected LADH against the Cu(II)/H2O2/CAs systems. Dena tured catalase protected less than the native enzyme, its action possibly depending on Cu-binding. LADH in creased and Captopril inhibited epinephrine oxidation by Cu(II)/H2O2 and Cu(II). The summarized evidence supports the following steps for LADH inactivation: (1) reduction of LADH linked-Cu(II) to Cu(I) by CAs; (2) production of HO* from H2O2 by LADH-linked Cu(I) (Haber-Weiss reaction) and (3) oxidation of aminoacid residues at the: enzyme active site by site-specifically generated HO* radicals. Hydrogen peroxide formation from CAs autoxidation may contribute to LADH inactivation.  相似文献   

4.
Summary The -amylase ofBacillus caldovelox is inactivated by diethyl pyrocarbonate at pH 6.6 and 20°C by a monomolecular reaction with a second-order rate constant of 41.7 M–1·min–1. The rate of inactivation increases with decreasing pH, suggesting participation of an amino acid residue with a pK a of 6.6. The increase in absorbance at 240 nm, unchanged absorbance at 280 nm and reactivation in the presence of hydroxylamine suggest the participation of a histidine residue. Statistical analyses of inactivation suggest that only one histidine residue is essential for activity. Substrate afforded complete protection against inactivation, indicating the involvement of the histidine residue at the active site of the enzyme.  相似文献   

5.
Complete initial steady state kinetics of NADH-decylubiquinone (DQ) oxidoreductase reaction between pH 6.5 and 9.0 show an ordered sequential mechanism in which the order of substrate bindings and product releases is NADH-DQ–DQH2-NAD+. NADH binding to the free enzyme is accelerated by protonation of an amino acid (possibly a histidine) residue. The NADH release is negligibly slow under the turnover conditions. The rate of DQ binding to the NADH-bound enzyme and the maximal rate at the saturating concentrations of the two substrates, which is determined by the rates of DQH2 formation in the active site and releases of DQH2 and NAD+ from the enzyme, are insensitive to pH, in contrast to clear pH dependencies of the maximal rates of cytochrome c oxidase and cytochrome bc 1 complex. Physiological significances of these results are discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Light-induced interaction of Fe(II) cations with the donor side of Mn-depleted photosystem II (PS II(–Mn)) results in the binding of iron cations and blocking of the high-affinity (HAZ) Mn-binding site. The pH dependence of the blocking was measured using the diphenylcarbazide/2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol test. The curve of the pH dependence is bell-shaped with pK 1 = 5.8 and pK 2 = 8.0. The pH dependence of the O2-evolution mediated by PS II membranes is also bellshaped (pK 2 = 7.6). The pH dependence of the process of electron donation from exogenous donors in PS II(–Mn) was studied to determine the location of the alkaline pH sensitive site of the electron transport chain. The data of the study showed that the decrease in the iron cation binding efficiency at pH > 7.0 during blocking was determined by the donor side of the PS II(–Mn). Mössbauer spectroscopy revealed that incubation of PS II(–Mn) membranes in a buffer solution containing 57Fe(II) + 57Fe(III) was accompanied by binding only Fe(III) cations. The pH dependence of the nonspecific Fe(III) cation binding is also described by the same bell-shaped curve with pK 2 = 8.1. The treatment of the PS II(–Mn) membranes with the histidine modifier diethylpyrocarbonate resulted in an increase in the iron binding strength at alkaline pH. It is suggested that blocking efficiency at alkaline pH is determined by competition between OH and histidine ligand for Fe(III). Because the high-affinity Mn-binding site contains no histidine residue, this fact can be regarded as evidence that histidine is located at another (other than high-affinity) Fe(III) binding site. In other words, this means that the blockage of the high-affinity Mn-binding site is determined by at least two iron cations. We assume that inactivation of oxygen-evolving complex and inhibition of photoactivation in the alkaline pH region are also determined by competition between OH and a histidine residue involved in coordination of manganese cation outside the high-affinity site.  相似文献   

7.
E K Hodgson  I Fridovich 《Biochemistry》1975,14(24):5294-5299
Bovine erythrocyte superoxide dismutase was slowly and irreversibly inactivated by hydrogen peroxide. The rate of this inactivation was directly dependent upon the concentrations of both H2O2 and of enzyme, and its second-order rate constant at pH 10.0 and 25 degrees was 6.7 M-1 sec-1. Inactivation was preceded by a bleaching due to rapid reduction of Cu2+ on the enzyme, and following this there was a gradual reappearance of a new absorption in the visible region, which was coincident with the loss of catalytic activity. Inactivation of the enzyme was pH-dependent and indicated an essential ionization whose pKa was approximately 10.2. Replacement of H2O by D2O raised this pKa but did not diminish the catalytic activity of superoxide dismutase, measured at pH 10.0. Several compounds, including xanthine, urate, formate, and azide, protected the enzyme against inactivation by H2O2. Alcohols and benzoate, which scavenge hydroxyl radical, did not protect. Compounds with special affinity for singlet oxygen were similarly ineffective. The data were interpreted in terms of the reduction of the enzyme-bound Cu2+ to Cu+, by H2O2, followed by a Fenton's type reaction of the Cu+ with additional H2O2. This would generate Cu2+-OH- or its ionized equivalent, Cu2+-O--, which could then oxidatively attack an adjacent histidine and thus inactivate the enzyme. Compounds which protected the enzyme could have done so by reacting with the bound oxidant, in competition with the adjacent histidine.  相似文献   

8.
Glutathione peroxidase (GSH-Px) is inactivated on exposure to peroxynitrite under physiologically relevant conditions. Stopped-flow kinetic studies show that the reaction between peroxynitrite and GSH-Px is first-order in each of the reactants, with an apparent second-order rate constant of 4.5 ± 0.2 × 104M−1s−1per monomer unit of enzyme. In good agreement with this value, GSH-Px inactivation experiments afford an apparent second-order rate constant of 1.8 ± 0.1 × 104M−1s−1per monomer unit of enzyme. The hydroxyl radical scavengers mannitol, DMSO, and benzoate (at 100 mM) afford only 8–12% protection of the enzyme, while addition of 25 mM bicarbonate results in 55% protection. The minimal protection by hydroxyl radical scavengers indicates, as expected, that hydroxyl radicals are not involved in the inactivation. Protection by bicarbonate occurs because peroxynitrite is rapidly trapped by CO2to form the adduct nitrosoperoxycarbonate (ONOOCO2), and/or other reactive species that preferentially decompose to nitrate rather than react with GSH-Px. The close agreement between the rate constants obtained from enzyme inactivation and from stopped-flow kinetics experiments suggests that the mechanism of the reaction between peroxynitrite and GSH-Px involves the oxidation of the ionized selenol of the selenocysteine residue in the enzyme's active site (E-Se) by peroxynitrite. This reaction does not simply involve formation of the selenenic acid, E-SeOH, because E-SeOH is an intermediate in the catalytic cycle of the enzyme, and thus its formation cannot explain the inactivation we observe. Thus, the ionized selenol in the active site is transformed into a form of selenium that cannot easily be reduced back to the selenol.  相似文献   

9.
The role of active site histidine residues in SCN oxidation by lacrimal gland peroxidase (LGP) has been probed after modification with diethylpyrocarbonate (DEPC). The enzyme is irreversibly inactivated following pseudo-first order kinetics with a second order rate constant of 0.26 M–1 sec–1 at 25°C. The pH dependent rate of inactivation shows an inflection point at 6.6 indicating histidine derivatization. The UV difference spectrum of the modified versus native enzyme shows a peak at 242 nm indicating formation of N-carbethoxyhistidine. Carbethoxyhistidine formation and associated inactivation are reversed by hydroxylamine indicating histidine modification. The stoichiometry of histidine modification and the extent of inactivation show that out of five histidine residues modified, modification of two residues inactivates the enzyme. Substrate protection with SCN during modification indicates that although one histidine is protected, it does not prevent inactivation. The spectroscopically detectable compound II formation is lost due to modification and is not evident after SCN protection. The data indicate that out of two histidines, one regulates compound I formation while the other one controls SCN binding. SCN protected enzyme is inactive due to loss of compound I formation. SCN binding studies by optical difference spectroscopy indicate that while the native enzyme binds SCN with the Kd of 15 mM, the modified enzyme shows very weak binding with the Kd of 660 mM. From the pH dependent binding of SCN, a plot of log Kd vs. pH shows a sigmoidal curve from which the involvement of an enzyme ionizable group of pKa 6.6 is ascertained and attributed to the histidine residue controlling SCN binding. LGP has thus two distinctly different essential histidine residues – one regulates compound I formation while the other one controls SCN binding.  相似文献   

10.
A. Martínez 《Amino acids》1995,9(3):285-292
Summary Recombinant human tyrosine hydroxylase isozyme 1 (hTH1) shows a time- and concentration-dependent loss of catalytic activity when incubated with diethylpyrocarbonate (DEP) after reconstitution with Fe(II). The inactivation follows pseudo-first order kinetics with a second order rate constant of 300 M–1 min–1 at pH 6.8 and 20°C and is partially reversed by hydroxylamine. The difference absorption spectrum of the DEP-modified vs native enzyme shows a peak at 244 nm, characteristic of mono-N-carbethoxy-histidine. Up to five histidine residues are modified per enzyme subunit by a five-fold excess of the reagent, and two of them are protected from inactivation by the active site inhibitor dopamine. However, derivatization of only one residue appears to be responsible for the inactivation. Thus, no inactivation by DEP was found when the apoenzyme was preincubated with this reagent prior to its reconstitution with Fe(II), modifying four histidine residues.Abbreviations BH4 (6R)-l-erythro-tetrahydrobiopterin - DEP diethylpyrocarbonate - DOPA 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine - hTH1 human tyrosine hydroxylase isoenzyme 1 - apo-hTH1 apoenzyme of hTH1 - Fe(II)-hTH1 holoenzyme (iron reconstituted) of hTH1 - dopamine-Fe(III)-hTH1 holoenzyme of hTH1 with dopamine bound - TH tyrosine hydroxylase  相似文献   

11.
The milk-clotting activity of Mucor-rennin obtained from Mucor pusillus Lindt, was not changed by the addition of DFP in the reaction mixture. This finding suggested the probable absence of a serine residue at the active center of the enzyme. Sulfhydryl reagents such as Nekelgon, N-ethyl maleimide, PCMB failed to influence the milk-clotting reaction, indicating that a. reactive sulfhydryl group is not required for the enzymatic activity. The activity was inhibited when Mucor-rennin was treated with iodine at pH higher than 5.0. It was shown that 131I2 was incorporated into the enzyme. When Mucor-rennin was photooxidized in the presence of methylene blue, the milk-clotting activity was inactivated. In this case, tyrosine, tryptophan, and histidine residues in the enzyme were oxidized. Among these amino acids, the histidine residue was more rapidly oxidized than other amino acids. A parallel relation was observed between the decrease of the amount of histidine residue and the inactivation of the enzyme. From these results, it is concluded that the histidine residue present in Mucor-rennin has a relation to the active center of this enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
Arginase from the gills of the bivalveSemele solida was inactivated by diethyl pyrocarbonate (DEPC) in a pseudo-first-order reaction with a bimolecular rate constant of 160 M−1 min−1. The reaction order with respect to DEPC concentration was 1, the inactivation followed a titration curve for a residue with a pKa of 6.4 at 25°C and the enzymatic activity was restored by hydroxylamine. It is concluded that inactivation results from the modification of a single histidine residue. Borate, a noncompetitive inhibitor with respect to arginine, protected the enzyme from inactivation by DEPC.  相似文献   

13.
The heme iron of the β chains of mammalian hemoglobins are rapidly and selectively oxidized in the presence of excess Cu(II) ions in a reaction that requires the presence of a free -SH groups on the β globin chain. The presence of freely reactive -SH groups on the α chains of cat and sheep hemoglobins does not alter the course of this reaction: only the β hemes are oxidized rapidly by Cu(II) in these hemoglobins. Two equivalents of copper are required for the rapid oxidation of the two β chain hemes per mole of cat hemoglobin, in contrast with the four equivalents that are required for reaction with human hemoglobin. The human-cat hybrid hemoglobins, α2Humanβ2Cat and α2Catβ2Human, required two and four equivalents of copper/mol, respectively, for the reaction. Thus, the kinetics and stoichimetry of the reaction are determined by the nature of the β subunit. Analysis of the esr spectra of the products of the reaction of Cu(II) with these hemoglobins indicate that human hemoglobin and the hybrid α2Catβ2Human contain tight binding sites for two equivalents of Cu(II) that are not involved in the oxidation reaction and are not present in cat hemoglobin or α2Humanβ2Cat. Cat β globin like others (sheep, bovine) that lack the tight binding site, has no histidine residue at 2β. It has phenylalanine in this position. These results support the suggestion of Rifkind et al. (Biochemistry 15,5337[1976]) that the tight binding site is near the amino terminal region of the β chain and is associated with histidine 2β.  相似文献   

14.
CO2 electrochemical reduction (CO2RR) can mitigate environmental issues while providing valuable products, yet challenging in activity, selectivity, and stability. Here, a CuS-Bi2S3 heterojunction precursor is reported that can in situ reconstruct to Cu-doped Bismuth (CDB) electrocatalyst during CO2RR. The CDB exhibits an industrial-compatible current density of −1.1 A cm−2 and a record-high formate formation rate of 21.0 mmol h−1 cm−2 at −0.86 V versus the reversible hydrogen electrode toward CO2RR to formate, dramatically outperforming currently reported catalysts. Importantly, the ultrawide potential region of 1050 mV with high formate Faradaic efficiency of over 90% and superior long-term stability for more than 100 h at −400 mA cm−2 can also be realized. Experimental and theoretical studies reveal that the remarkable CO2RR performance of CDB results from the doping effect of Cu which optimizes adsorption of the *OCHO and boosts the structural stability of metallic bismuth catalyst. This study provides valuable inspiration for the design of element-doping electrocatalysts to enhance catalytic activity and durability.  相似文献   

15.
Reaction ofKlebsiella aerogenes urease with diethylpyrocarbonate (DEP) led to a pseudo-first-order loss of enzyme activity by a reaction that exhibited saturation kinetics. The rate of urease inactivation by DEP decreased in the presence of active site ligands (urea, phosphate, and boric acid), consistent with the essential reactive residue being located proximal to the catalytic center. ThepH dependence for the rate of inactivation indicated that the reactive residue possessed apK a of 6.5, identical to that of a group that must be deprotonated for catalysis. Full activity was restored when the inactivated enzyme was treated with hydroxylamine, compatible with histidinyl or tyrosinyl reactivity. Spectrophotometric studies were consistent with DEP derivatization of 12 mol of histidine/mol of native enzyme. In the presence of active site ligands, however, approximately 4 mol of histidine/mol of protein were protected from reaction. Each protein molecule is known to possess two catalytic units; hence, we propose that urease possesses at least one essential histidine per catalytic unit.  相似文献   

16.
Reaction ofKlebsiella aerogenes urease with diethylpyrocarbonate (DEP) led to a pseudo-first-order loss of enzyme activity by a reaction that exhibited saturation kinetics. The rate of urease inactivation by DEP decreased in the presence of active site ligands (urea, phosphate, and boric acid), consistent with the essential reactive residue being located proximal to the catalytic center. ThepH dependence for the rate of inactivation indicated that the reactive residue possessed apK a of 6.5, identical to that of a group that must be deprotonated for catalysis. Full activity was restored when the inactivated enzyme was treated with hydroxylamine, compatible with histidinyl or tyrosinyl reactivity. Spectrophotometric studies were consistent with DEP derivatization of 12 mol of histidine/mol of native enzyme. In the presence of active site ligands, however, approximately 4 mol of histidine/mol of protein were protected from reaction. Each protein molecule is known to possess two catalytic units; hence, we propose that urease possesses at least one essential histidine per catalytic unit.  相似文献   

17.
The C2H resonance of the active site histidine residue designated AS-2, which has the lower pKa of the two active site histidines, has been correlated in both RNase A and RNase S by comparing the pH 3 to 5.5 regions of the chemical shift titration curves, the effect of the inhibitor CMP-3′ on the chemical shifts at pH 4.0, and the effect of Cu II on the line widths at pH 3.6. It has been demonstrated that resonance AS-2 is absent in the spectrum of RNase S′ reconstituted using S-peptide deuterated at the C2 of His 12, and in that of the RNase S′-CMP-3′ complex. We thus demonstrate that histidine AS-2 is in fact His 12 in both enzymes. This finding is in agreement with out previous assignment of the exchangeable NH proton in RNase A to His 12, but reverses the assignments of the active site histidine C2H resonances made earlier by other authors.  相似文献   

18.
The objective of the present study is to delineate the role of active site arginine and histidine residues of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) in controlling iodide oxidation using chemical modification technique. The arginine specific reagent, phenylglyoxal (PGO) irreversibly blocks iodide oxidation following pseudofirst order kinetics with second order rate constant of 25.12 min-1 M-1. Radiolabelled PGO incorporation studies indicate an essential role of a single arginine residue in enzyme inactivation. The enzyme can be protected both by iodide and an aromatic donor such as guaiacol. Moreover, guaiacol-protected enzyme can oxidise iodide and iodide-protected enzyme can oxidise guaiacol suggesting the regulatory role of the same active site arginine residue in both iodide and guaiacol binding. The protection constant (Kp) for iodide and guaiacol are 500 and 10 M respectively indicating higher affinity of guaiacol than iodide at this site. Donor binding studies indicate that guaiacol competitively inhibits iodide binding suggesting their interaction at the same binding site. Arginine-modified enzyme shows significant loss of iodide binding as shown by increased Kd value to 571 mM from the native enzyme (Kd = 150 mM). Although arginine-modified enzyme reacts with H2O2 to form compound II presumably at a slow rate, the latter is not reduced by iodide presumably due to low affinity binding.The role of the active site histidine residue in iodide oxidation was also studied after disubstitution reaction of the histidine imidazole nitrogens with diethylpyrocarbonate (DEPC), a histidine specific reagent. DEPC blocks iodide oxidation following pseudofirst order kinetics with second order rate constant of 0.66 min-1 M-1. Both the nitrogens (, ) of histidine imidazole were modified as evidenced by the characteristic peak at 222 nm. The enzyme is not protected by iodide suggesting that imidazolium ion is not involved in iodide binding. Moreover, DEPC-modified enzyme binds iodide similar to the native enzyme. However, the modified enzyme does not form compound II but forms compound I only with higher concentration of H2O2 suggesting the catalytic role of this histidine in the formation and autoreduction of compound I. Interestingly, compound I thus formed is not reduced by iodide indicating block of electron transport from the donor to the compound I. We suggest that an active site arginine residue regulates iodide binding while the histidine residue controls the electron transfer to the heme ferryl group during oxidation.  相似文献   

19.
In the absence of added Fe2+, the ATPase activity of isolatedSchizosaccharomyces pombe plasma membranes (5–7 μmolP i per mg protein per min) is moderately inhibited by H2O2 in a concentration-dependent manner. Sizable inactivation occurs only at 50–80 mmol/L H2O2. The process, probably a direct oxidative action of H2O2 on the enzyme, is not induced by the indigenous membrane-bound iron (19.3 nmol/mg membrane protein), is not affected by the radical scavengers mannitol and Tris, and involves a decrease of both theK m of the enzyme for ATP and theV of ATP splitting. On exposing the membranes to the Fenton reagent (50 μmol/L Fe2+ +20 mmol/L H2O2), which causes a fast production of HO radicals, the ATPase is 50–60% inactivated and 90% of added Fe2+ is oxidized to Fe3+ within 1 min. The inactivation occurs only when Fe2+ is added before H2O2 and can thus bind to the membranes. The lack of effect of radical scavengers (mannitol, Tris) indicates that HO radicals produced in the bulk phase play no role in inactivation. Blockage of the inactivation by the iron chelator deferrioxamine implies that the process requires the presence of Fe2+ ions bound to binding sites on the enzyme molecules. Added catalase, which competes with Fe2+ for H2O2, slows down the inactivation but in some cases increases its total extent, probably due to the formation of the superoxide radical that gives rise to delayed HO production.  相似文献   

20.
The electronic spectra of NCS? and I? adducts of cobalt(II) human carbonic anhydrase I are pH dependent at pH values below 7. The pKa of such equilibrium is dependent on the anion concentration and varies between 4.6 and 6.6. The 1H NMR spectra show that the three histidine residues are bound to the metal ion over the entire pH range investigated. It is supposed that a Glu residue triggers the change in stereochemistry around the metal ion. It is possible that such a Glu residue is Glu 106 present in the active cavity.  相似文献   

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