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The use of intrinsic protein fluorescence to quantitate enzyme-bound persulfide and to measure equilibria between intermediates in rhodanese catalysis
Authors:P Horowitz  N L Criscimagna
Abstract:The intrinsic fluorescence of the enzyme rhodanese is quenched by as much as 30% when sulfur is transferred to the free enzyme form, E, giving the sulfur-substituted enzyme, ES. This fluorescence change (lambda ex = 295 nm and lambda em = 335 nm) has been used to quantitate the E and ES forms which are isolatable, obligatory intermediates in rhodanese catalysis. Fluorescence titration was performed using cyanide to irreversibly remove sulfur from ES. The results show a stoichiometry corresponding to 1 bound sulfur/molecule of the ES form of rhodanese (Mr = 33,000). The fluorescence changes were used to measure the concentrations of E and ES when these were in reversible equilibria induced by interactions with the substrates S2O3(2-) and SO3(2-). These results were compared with an equilibrium constant derived from published kinetic studies for the reaction (formula; see text) The very close agreement between the physical and kinetic methods indicate that there are no significant concentrations of intermediates other than E and ES. Overall, the results are compatible with the formation of a persulfide intermediate in rhodanese catalysis and are consistent with conclusions from x-ray crystallography and absorption spectroscopy. In addition, these procedures offer a facile method to measure equilibria between catalytic intermediates in the rhodanese reaction using functionally relevant concentrations.
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