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1.
2-Hydroxybiphenyl 3-monooxygenase (EC 1.14.13.44) from Pseudomonas azelaica HBP1 is an FAD-dependent aromatic hydroxylase that catalyzes the conversion of 2-hydroxybiphenyl to 2, 3-dihydroxybiphenyl in the presence of NADH and oxygen. The catalytic mechanism of this three-substrate reaction was investigated at 7 degrees C by stopped-flow absorption spectroscopy. Various individual steps associated with catalysis were readily observed at pH 7.5, the optimum pH for enzyme turnover. Anaerobic reduction of the free enzyme by NADH is a biphasic process, most likely reflecting the presence of two distinct enzyme forms. Binding of 2-hydroxybiphenyl stimulated the rate of enzyme reduction by NADH by 2 orders of magnitude. The anaerobic reduction of the enzyme-substrate complex involved the formation of a transient charge-transfer complex between the reduced flavin and NAD(+). A similar transient intermediate was formed when the enzyme was complexed with the substrate analog 2-sec-butylphenol or with the non-substrate effector 2,3-dihydroxybiphenyl. Excess NAD(+) strongly stabilized the charge-transfer complexes but did not give rise to the appearance of any intermediate during the reduction of uncomplexed enzyme. Free reduced 2-hydroxybiphenyl 3-monooxygenase reacted rapidly with oxygen to form oxidized enzyme with no appearance of intermediates during this reaction. In the presence of 2-hydroxybiphenyl, two consecutive spectral intermediates were observed which were assigned to the flavin C(4a)-hydroperoxide and the flavin C(4a)-hydroxide, respectively. No oxygenated flavin intermediates were observed when the enzyme was in complex with 2, 3-dihydroxybiphenyl. Monovalent anions retarded the dehydration of the flavin C(4a)-hydroxide without stabilization of additional intermediates. The kinetic data for 2-hydroxybiphenyl 3-monooxygenase are consistent with a ternary complex mechanism in which the aromatic substrate has strict control in both the reductive and oxidative half-reaction in a way that reactions leading to substrate hydroxylation are favored over those leading to the futile formation of hydrogen peroxide. NAD(+) release from the reduced enzyme-substrate complex is the slowest step in catalysis.  相似文献   

2.
The oxidative half-reaction of phenol hydroxylase has been studied by stopped-flow spectrophotometry. Three flavin-oxygen intermediates can be detected when the substrate is thiophenol, or m-NH2, m-OH, m-CH3, m-Cl, or p-OH phenol. Intermediate I, the flavin C(4a)-hydroperoxide, has an absorbance maximum at 380-390 nm and an extinction coefficient approximately 10,000 M-1 cm-1. Intermediate III, the flavin C(4a)-hydroxide, has an absorbance maximum at 365-375 nm and an extinction coefficient approximately 10,000 M-1 cm-1. Intermediate II has absorbance maxima of 350-390 nm and extinction coefficients of 10,000-16,000 M-1 cm-1 depending on the substrate. A Hammett plot of the logarithm of the rates of the oxygen transfer step, the conversion of intermediate I to intermediate II, gives a straight line with a slope -0.5. Fluoride ion is a product of the enzymatic reaction when 2,3,5,6-tetrafluorophenol is the substrate. These results are consistent with an electrophilic substitution mechanism for oxygen transfer. The conversions of I to II and II to III are acid-catalyzed. A kinetic isotope effect of 8 was measured for the conversion of II to III using deuterated resorcinol as substrate. The conversion of III to oxidized enzyme is base-catalyzed, suggesting that the reaction depends on the removal of the flavin N(5) proton. Product release occurs at the same time as the formation of intermediate III, or rapidly thereafter. The results are interpreted according to the ring-opened model of Entsch et al. (Entsch, B., Ballou, D. P., and Massey, V. (1976) J. Biol. Chem. 251, 2550-2563).  相似文献   

3.
Xu D  Enroth C  Lindqvist Y  Ballou DP  Massey V 《Biochemistry》2002,41(46):13627-13636
An active site residue in phenol hydroxylase (PHHY), Pro364, was mutated to serine to investigate its role in enzymatic catalysis. In the presence of phenol, the reaction between the reduced flavin of P364S and oxygen is very fast, but only 13% of the flavin is utilized to hydroxylate the substrate, compared to nearly 100% for the wild-type enzyme. The oxidative half-reaction of PHHY using m-cresol as a substrate is similarly affected by the mutation. Pro364 was suggested to be important in stabilizing the transition state of the oxygen transfer step by forming a hydrogen bond between its carbonyl oxygen and the C4a-hydroperoxyflavin [Ridder, L., Mullholland, A. J., Rietjens, I. M. C. M., and Vervoort, J. (2000) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 122, 8728-8738]. The P364S mutation may weaken this interaction by increasing the flexibility of the peptide chain; hence, the transition state would be destabilized to result in a decreased level of hydroxylation of phenol. However, when the oxidative half-reaction was studied using resorcinol as a substrate, the P364S mutant form was not significantly different from the wild-type enzyme. The rate constants for all the reaction steps as well as the hydroxylation efficiency (coupling between NADPH oxidation and resorcinol consumption) are comparable to those of the wild-type enzyme. It is suggested that the function of Pro364 in catalysis, stabilization of the transition state, is not as important in the reaction with resorcinol, possibly because the position of hydroxylation is different with resorcinol than with phenol and m-cresol.  相似文献   

4.
Rüdiger Cerff 《Phytochemistry》1978,17(12):2061-2067
Substrate interaction and product inhibition kinetics of the forward reaction of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (NADP) (EC 1.2.1.13) from Sinapis alba suggest an Uni Uni Uni Bi Ping Pong mechanism (NAD(P)H on, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate off, 1,3-diphosphoglycerate on, phosphate off, NAD(P)+ off) with an apparent Theorell Chance displacement between 1,3-diphosphoglycerate and phosphate. The proposed mechanism predicts the existence of stable enzyme-NAD(P)+ and acyl-enzyme complexes as obligatory intermediates. A comparison of the present findings on the NADP-enzyme with an earlier kinetic analysis of the NAD-specific enzyme from plants (EC 1.2.1.12) by other authors shows that the kinetic mechanisms for the two enzymes, although similar in principle (both show Ping Pong kinetics), differ in some details.  相似文献   

5.
Frederick KK  Ballou DP  Palfey BA 《Biochemistry》2001,40(13):3891-3899
p-Hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase (PHBH) hydroxylates activated benzoates using NADPH as a reductant and O(2) as an oxygenating substrate. Because the flavin, when reduced, will quickly react with oxygen in either the presence or absence of a phenolic substrate, it is important to regulate flavin reduction to prevent the uncontrolled reaction of NADPH and oxygen to form H(2)O(2). Reduction is controlled by the protonation state of the aromatic substrate p-hydroxybenzoate (pOHB), which when ionized to the phenolate facilitates the movement of flavin between two conformations, termed "in" and "out". When the hydrogen bond network that provides communication between the substrate and solvent is disrupted by changing its terminal residue, His72, to Asn, protons from solution no longer equilibrate rapidly with pOHB bound to the active site [Palfey, B. A., Moran, G. R., Entsch, B., Ballou, D. P., and Massey, V. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 1153-1158]. Thus, one population of the His72Asn enzyme reduces rapidly and has the phenolate form of pOHB bound at the active site and the flavin in the out conformation. The remaining population of the His72Asn enzyme reduces slowly and has the phenolic form of pOHB bound and the flavin in the in conformation. We have investigated the mechanisms of proton transfer between solvent and pOHB bound to the His72Asn form of the enzyme by double-mixing and single-mixing stopped-flow experiments. We find that, depending on the initial ionization state of bound pOHB and the new pH of the solution, the ionization/protonation of pOHB proceeds through the direct reaction of hydronium or hydroxide with the enzyme-ligand complex and leads to the conversion of one flavin conformation to the other. Our kinetic data indicate that the enzyme with the flavin in the in conformation reacts in two steps. Inspection of crystal structures suggests that the hydroxide ion would react at the re-face of the flavin, and its reaction with pOHB is limited by the movement of Pro293, a conserved residue in similar flavoprotein hydroxylases. We hypothesize that this type of breathing mode by the protein may have been used to compensate for the lack of an efficient proton-transfer network in ancestral hydroxylases, permitting useful catalysis prior to the emergence of specialized proton-transfer mechanisms.  相似文献   

6.
H A Schreuder  W G Hol  J Drenth 《Biochemistry》1990,29(12):3101-3108
The flavoprotein p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase has been studied extensively by biochemical techniques by others and in our laboratory by X-ray crystallography. As a result of the latter investigations, well-refined crystal structures are known of the enzyme complexed (i) with its substrate p-hydroxybenzoate and (ii) with its reaction product 3,4-dihydroxybenzoate and (iii) the enzyme with reduced FAD. Knowledge of these structures and the availability of the three-dimensional structure of a model compound for the reactive flavin 4a-hydroperoxide intermediate has allowed a detailed analysis of the reaction with oxygen. In the model of this reaction intermediate, fitted to the active site of p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase, all possible positions of the distal oxygen were surveyed by rotating this oxygen about the single bond between the C4a and the proximal oxygen. It was found that the distal oxygen is free to sweep an arc of about 180 degrees in the active site. The flavin 4a-peroxide anion, which is formed after reaction of molecular oxygen with reduced FAD, might accept a proton from an active-site water molecule or from the hydroxyl group of the substrate. The position of the oxygen to be transferred with respect to the substrate appears to be almost ideal for nucleophilic attack of the substrate onto this oxygen. The oxygen is situated above the 3-position of the substrate where the substitution takes place, at an angle of about 60 degrees with the aromatic plane, allowing strong interactions with the pi electrons of the substrate. Polarization of the peroxide oxygen-oxygen bond by the enzyme may enhance the reactivity of flavin 4a-peroxide.  相似文献   

7.
Sheng D  Ballou DP  Massey V 《Biochemistry》2001,40(37):11156-11167
Cyclohexanone monooxygenase (CHMO), a bacterial flavoenzyme, carries out an oxygen insertion reaction on cyclohexanone to form a seven-membered cyclic product, epsilon-caprolactone. The reaction catalyzed involves the four-electron reduction of O2 at the expense of a two-electron oxidation of NADPH and a two-electron oxidation of cyclohexanone to form epsilon-caprolactone. Previous studies suggested the participation of either a flavin C4a-hydroperoxide or a flavin C4a-peroxide intermediate during the enzymatic catalysis [Ryerson, C. C., Ballou, D. P., and Walsh, C. (1982) Biochemistry 21, 2644-2655]. However, there was no kinetic or spectral evidence to distinguish between these two possibilities. In the present work we used double-mixing stopped-flow techniques to show that the C4a-flavin-oxygen adduct, which is formed rapidly from the reaction of oxygen with reduced enzyme in the presence of NADP, can exist in two states. When the reaction is carried out at pH 7.2, the first intermediate is a flavin C4a-peroxide with maximum absorbance at 366 nm; this intermediate becomes protonated at about 3 s(-1) to form what is believed to be the flavin C4a-hydroperoxide with maximum absorbance at 383 nm. These two intermediates can be interconverted by altering the pH, with a pK(a) of 8.4. Thus, at pH 9.0 the flavin C4a-peroxide persists mainly in the deprotonated form. Further kinetic studies also demonstrated that only the flavin C4a-peroxide intermediate could oxygenate the substrate, cyclohexanone. The requirement in catalysis of the deprotonated flavin C4a-peroxide, a nucleophile, is consistent with a Baeyer-Villiger rearrangement mechanism for the enzymatic oxygenation of cyclohexanone. In the course of these studies, the Kd for cyclohexanone to the C4a-peroxyflavin form of CHMO was determined to be approximately 1 microM. The rate-determining step in catalysis was shown to be the release of NADP from the oxidized enzyme.  相似文献   

8.
A novel phenol hydroxylase (PheA) that catalyzes the first step in the degradation of phenol in Bacillus thermoglucosidasius A7 is described. The two-protein system, encoded by the pheA1 and pheA2 genes, consists of an oxygenase (PheA1) and a flavin reductase (PheA2) and is optimally active at 55 degrees C. PheA1 and PheA2 were separately expressed in recombinant Escherichia coli BL21(DE3) pLysS cells and purified to apparent homogeneity. The pheA1 gene codes for a protein of 504 amino acids with a predicted mass of 57.2 kDa. PheA1 exists as a homodimer in solution and has no enzyme activity on its own. PheA1 catalyzes the efficient ortho-hydroxylation of phenol to catechol when supplemented with PheA2 and FAD/NADH. The hydroxylase activity is strictly FAD-dependent, and neither FMN nor riboflavin can replace FAD in this reaction. The pheA2 gene codes for a protein of 161 amino acids with a predicted mass of 17.7 kDa. PheA2 is also a homodimer, with each subunit containing a highly fluorescent FAD prosthetic group. PheA2 catalyzes the NADH-dependent reduction of free flavins according to a Ping Pong Bi Bi mechanism. PheA2 is structurally related to ferric reductase, an NAD(P)H-dependent reductase from the hyperthermophilic Archaea Archaeoglobus fulgidus that catalyzes the flavin-mediated reduction of iron complexes. However, PheA2 displays no ferric reductase activity and is the first member of a newly recognized family of short-chain flavin reductases that use FAD both as a substrate and as a prosthetic group.  相似文献   

9.
Phenol hydroxylase, an FAD-containing monooxygenase, catalyzes the conversion of substituted phenols to the corresponding catechol. Use of metapyrocatechase, capable of dioxygenation of several catechols to give highly absorbing products, permitted determination of the time course of product release from phenol hydroxylase. Product dissociated prior to complete reoxidation of the enzyme, most likely concomitant with formation of the 4a-hydroxyflavin species (intermediate III). Deuterated phenol and thiophenol exhibited no kinetic isotope effect during the oxidative half-reaction. Isotope effects of 1.7 to 3.7 were found with resorcinol for the conversion of the second intermediate to intermediate III. These effects limited the possible models for phenol hydroxylation. An attempt was made to distinguish whether the spectrum of intermediate II is due entirely to that of the flavin moiety of phenol hydroxylase or whether some radical intermediate form involved in the formation of catechol makes a significant visible contribution. Reduced native and 6-hydroxy-FAD phenol hydroxylase were reacted with oxygen and resorcinol in order to provide evidence for the identity of intermediate II.  相似文献   

10.
Baeyer-Villiger monooxygenases catalyze the oxidation of carbonylic substrates to ester or lactone products using NADPH as electron donor and molecular oxygen as oxidative reactant. Using protein engineering, kinetics, microspectrophotometry, crystallography, and intermediate analogs, we have captured several snapshots along the catalytic cycle which highlight key features in enzyme catalysis. After acting as electron donor, the enzyme-bound NADP(H) forms an H-bond with the flavin cofactor. This interaction is critical for stabilizing the oxygen-activating flavin-peroxide intermediate that results from the reaction of the reduced cofactor with oxygen. An essential active-site arginine acts as anchoring element for proper binding of the ketone substrate. Its positively charged guanidinium group can enhance the propensity of the substrate to undergo a nucleophilic attack by the flavin-peroxide intermediate. Furthermore, the arginine side chain, together with the NADP(+) ribose group, forms the niche that hosts the negatively charged Criegee intermediate that is generated upon reaction of the substrate with the flavin-peroxide. The fascinating ability of Baeyer-Villiger monooxygenases to catalyze a complex multistep catalytic reaction originates from concerted action of this Arg-NADP(H) pair and the flavin subsequently to promote flavin reduction, oxygen activation, tetrahedral intermediate formation, and product synthesis and release. The emerging picture is that these enzymes are mainly oxygen-activating and "Criegee-stabilizing" catalysts that act on any chemically suitable substrate that can diffuse into the active site, emphasizing their potential value as toolboxes for biocatalytic applications.  相似文献   

11.
A FAD-containing monooxygenase isolated from pig liver microsomes migrates as a single band upon electrophoresis in polyacrylamide gels in the presence of dodecyl sulfate. The minimum molecular weight based on mass of amino acids per mole of flavin is 64,000. However, the catalytically active enzyme exists as aggregating units of the monomer. Neither oxygen nor organic substrates perturbed the spectrum of the oxidized flavoprotein and their binding to this form of the enzyme could not be detected. Anaerobically NADPH bleaches the flavoprotein, and in the presence of both NADPH and oxygen a remarkably stable intermediate form of the enzyme, with an absorption band at 375 nm, is observed. The spectrum of the intermediate resembles that of a peroxyflavin. The monooxygenase catalyzes NADPH- and oxygen-dependent oxygenations of nucleophilic nitrogen- or sulfur-containing compounds. Kinetic studies carried out with a model organic nitrogen substrate (trimethylamine) and a sulfur substrate (methimazole) gave similar patterns. The kinetic data are consistent with an ordered Ter-Bi mechanism with an irreversible step between the second and third substrate where NADPH is added first, followed by oxygen, and the oxidizable organic substrate is added last. If NADPH is the first substrate added, then NADP+ must be the last product released since NADP+ is competitive with NADPH.  相似文献   

12.
The reaction of molecular oxygen with the complex of reduced p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase and 2,4-dihydroxybenzoate has been followed by rapid reaction techniques. During the reaction, which produces stoichiometric amounts of oxidized enzyme and the hydroxylated product, 2,3,4-trihydroxybenzoate, three spectroscopically distinguishable intermediates have been detected and characterized.  相似文献   

13.
Pyruvate-dependent reduction of NADP has been demonstrated in cell extracts of the human gastric pathogen Helicobacter pylori. However, NADP is not a substrate of purified pyruvate:ferredoxin oxidoreductase (PFOR), suggesting that other redox active enzymes mediate this reaction. Here we show that fqrB (HP1164), which is essential and highly conserved among the epsilonproteobacteria, exhibits NADPH oxidoreductase activity. FqrB was purified by nickel interaction chromatography following overexpression in Escherichia coli. The protein contained flavin adenine dinucleotide and exhibited NADPH quinone reductase activity with menadione or benzoquinone and weak activity with cytochrome c, molecular oxygen, and 5,5'-dithio-bis-2-nitrobenzoic acid (DTNB). FqrB exhibited a ping-pong catalytic mechanism, a k(cat) of 122 s(-1), and an apparent K(m) of 14 muM for menadione and 26 muM for NADPH. FqrB also reduced flavodoxin (FldA), the electron carrier of PFOR. In coupled enzyme assays with purified PFOR and FldA, FqrB reduced NADP in a pyruvate- and reduced coenzyme A (CoA)-dependent manner. Moreover, in the presence of NADPH, CO(2), and acetyl-CoA, the PFOR:FldA:FqrB complex generated pyruvate via CO(2) fixation. PFOR was the rate-limiting enzyme in the complex, and nitazoxanide, a specific inhibitor of PFOR of H. pylori and Campylobacter jejuni, also inhibited NADP reduction in cell-free lysates. These capnophilic (CO(2)-requiring) organisms contain gaps in pathways of central metabolism that would benefit substantially from pyruvate formation via CO(2) fixation. Thus, FqrB provides a novel function in pyruvate metabolism and, together with production of superoxide anions via quinone reduction under high oxygen tensions, contributes to the unique microaerobic lifestyle that defines the epsilonproteobacterial group.  相似文献   

14.
The flavin prosthetic group (FAD) of p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase (EC 1.14.13.2) from Pseudomonas fluorescens, was replaced by 6-hydroxy-FAD (an extra hydroxyl group on the carbon at position 6 of the isoalloxazine ring of FAD). The catalytic cycle of this modified enzyme was analyzed and compared to the function of native (FAD) enzyme. Transient state kinetic analyses of the multiple changes in the chemical state of the flavin were the principal methods used to probe the mechanism. Four known substrates of the native enzyme were used to probe the reaction. With the natural substrate, p-hydroxybenzoate, the 6-hydroxy-FAD enzyme activity was 12-15% of native enzyme, due to a slower release of product from the enzyme, and less than one product molecule was formed per NADPH oxidized, due to an increased rate of nonproductive decomposition of the transient peroxyflavin essential to the catalytic pathway. More extensive changes in mechanism were observed with the substrates, 2,4-dihydroxybenzoate and p-aminobenzoate. The results suggest that, during catalysis, when the reduced state of FAD is ready for oxygen reaction, the substrate is located below and close to the C-4a/N-5 edge of the isoalloxazine ring. The nature of the high extinction, transient state of flavin, formed upon transfer of oxygen to substrate is discussed. It is not a flavin cation, and is unlikely to be an oxygen-substituted analogue of N-3/C-4 dihydroflavin.  相似文献   

15.
X Wu  B A Palfey  V V Mossine  V M Monnier 《Biochemistry》2001,40(43):12886-12895
Amadoriase is a flavoenzyme that catalyzes the oxidative deglycation of Amadori products (fructosyl amino acids or aliphatic amines) to yield free amine, glucosone, and hydrogen peroxide. The mechanism of action of amadoriase I from Aspergillus sp. has been investigated by stopped-flow kinetic studies using fructosyl propylamine and O(2) as substrates in 10 mM Tris HCl, pH 7.9, 4 degrees C. Using both substrate analogues and fast kinetic techniques, the active configuration of the substrate was found to be the beta-pyranose form. Stopped-flow studies showed that the reductive half-reaction is triphasic and generates intermediates that absorb at long wavelengths and is consistent either with (i) the reaction of the substrate with the flavin followed by iminium deprotonation or hydrolysis and then product release or with (ii) the formation of flavin reduction intermediates (carbanion equivalents or adducts), followed by product release. The rate of product release after flavin reduction is lower than the aerobic turnover rate, 14.4 s(-1), suggesting that it is not involved in the catalytic cycle and that reoxidation of the reduced enzyme occurs in the E(red)-product complex. In the oxidative half-reaction, the reduced flavin is oxidized by O(2) in a single phase. The observed rate constant has a linear dependence on oxygen concentration, giving a bimolecular rate constant of 4.9 x 10(4) M(-1) s(-1) in the absence of product, and 3.6 x 10(4) M(-1) s(-1) when the product is bound. The redox potentials of amadoriase have been measured at pH 7.0, 25 degrees, giving values of +48 and -52 mV for the oxidized enzyme/anionic semiquinone and anionic semiquinone/reduced enzyme couples, respectively.  相似文献   

16.
p-Hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase (EC 1.14.13.2) from Pseudomonas fluorescens is a NADPH-dependent, FAD-containing monooxygenase catalyzing the hydroxylation of p-hydroxybenzoate to form 3,4-dihydroxybenzoate in the presence of NADPH and molecular oxygen. The mechanism of this three-substrate reaction was investigated in detail at pH 6.6, 4 degrees C, by steady state kinetics, stopped flow spectrophotometry, and equilibrium binding experiments. The initial velocity patterns are consistent with a ping-pong type mechanism which involves two ternary complexes between the enzyme and substrates. The first ternary complex is formed by random addition of p-hydroxybenzoate and NADPH to the enzyme, followed by the release of the first product (NADP+). The reduced enzyme . p-hydroxybenzoate complex now reacts with oxygen, the third substrate, to form the second ternary complex. The enzyme-bound p-hydroxybenzoate then reacts with the activated oxygen to give 3,4-dihydroxybenzoate which is released regenerating the oxidized enzyme for the next cycle. The binding of p-hydroxybenzoate to the oxidized enzyme to form a 1:1 complex causes large, characteristic spectral perturbations and fluorescence quenching. The dissociation constant for the enzyme . substrate complex was obtained by titrations in which absorbance and/or fluorescence quenching was measured. The binding constants of NADPH to the enzyme with and without p-hydroxybenzoate were determined kinetically by measuring the rate of reduction of the enzyme at different concentrations of NADPH. The reduction of the enzyme proceeds extremely slowly in the absence of p-hydroxybenzoate. The presence of the substrate causes a dramatic stimulation (140,000-fold) in the rate of enzyme reduction. The anaerobic reduction of the enzyme by NADPH in the presence of p-hydroxybenzoate produces a transient charge-transfer intermediate. On the basis of the proposed mechanism, the dissociation constants for p-hydroxybenzoate and NADPH as well as the Michaelis constants for all the three substrates were calculated from the initial velocity data. The agreement obtained between various kinetic parameters from the initial rate measurements and those calculated from the individual rate constants determined in rapid reactions, strongly supports the proposed mechanism for the p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase reaction.  相似文献   

17.
Steady state and rapid reaction kinetics of the flavoprotein anthranilate hydroxylase (EC 1.14.12.2) have been examined with the nonhydroxylated substrate analogue, salicylate. Since the reaction with salicylate does not involve events in which aromatic substrate is oxygenated, it provides a simpler model for studying the hysteresis exhibited by this enzyme. It is shown that the first turnover of the enzyme is slower than subsequent turnovers owing in part to slow initial binding reactions of salicylate with the enzyme. The reductive half-reaction of the first turnover is also slow since rapid reduction of the enzyme flavin requires bound aromatic substrate. The oxidative half-reaction involves reaction of the reduced enzyme-salicylate complex with oxygen to form a flavin C4a-hydroperoxide, which then decays to oxidized flavoenzyme and H2O2. Several lines of evidence indicate that salicylate remains bound to the enzyme at the end of the catalytic cycle so that in turnovers subsequent to the first, the slow steps involving salicylate binding are avoided.  相似文献   

18.
Murataliev MB  Feyereisen R 《Biochemistry》2000,39(41):12699-12707
NADP(H) binding is essential for fast electron transfer through the flavoprotein domain of the fusion protein P450BM3. Here we characterize the interaction of NADP(H) with the oxidized and partially reduced enzyme and the effect of this interaction on the redox properties of flavin cofactors and electron transfer. Measurements by three different approaches demonstrated a relatively low affinity of oxidized P450BM3 for NADP(+), with a K(d) of about 10 microM. NADPH binding is also relatively weak (K(d) approximately 10 microM), but the affinity increases manyfold upon hydride ion transfer so that the active 2-electron reduced enzyme binds NADP(+) with a K(d) in the submicromolar range. NADP(H) binding induces conformational changes of the protein as demonstrated by tryptophan fluorescence quenching. Fluorescence quenching indicated preferential binding of NADPH by oxidized P450BM3, while no catalytically competent binding with reduced P450BM3 could be detected. The hydride ion transfer step, as well as the interflavin electron transfer steps, is readily reversible, as demonstrated by a hydride ion exchange (transhydrogenase) reaction between NADPH and NADP(+) or their analogues. Experiments with FMN-free mutants demonstrated that FAD is the only flavin cofactor required for the transhydrogenase activity. The equilibrium constants of each electron transfer step of the flavoprotein domain during catalytic turnover have been calculated. The values obtained differ from those calculated from equilibrium redox potentials by as much as 2 orders of magnitude. The differences result from the enzyme's interaction with NADP(H).  相似文献   

19.
Properties and reaction mechanism of C4 leaf pyruvate,Pi dikinase   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The properties and reaction mechanism of maize leaf pyruvate,Pi dikinase are described. Km values were determined for the forward reaction substrates, pyruvate, ATP, and Pi, at pH 7.4 and 8.0 and for reverse reaction substrates at pH 7.4. Enzyme activity was almost totally dependent on added monovalent cations in both directions. NH+4 was most effective, with Ka values of about 0.38 mM for the forward reaction and 2 mM for the reverse reaction. K+ also completely activated the enzyme in the forward direction (Ka = 8 mM) but only partially activated in the reverse direction. Na+ had little effect on either reaction. The pH optimum for the forward reaction was about 8.2; the reverse reaction optimum was about 6.9. Maximum activity for the reverse direction was about twice the maximum forward direction rate. From data on the requirements for the ATP-AMP exchange reaction, on the mechanism of inhibition of the forward reaction by PEP, AMP, and PPi, and from the kinetics of the interaction of varying certain substrate pairs, it was concluded that the maize leaf pyruvate,Pi dikinase reaction proceeded by the two-step Bi Bi Uni Uni mechanism. This differs from the mechanism of catalysis by the bacterial enzyme.  相似文献   

20.
The flavin prosthetic group (FAD) of p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase from Pseudomonas fluorescens was replaced by a stereochemical analog, which is spontaneously formed from natural FAD in alcohol oxidases from methylotrophic yeasts. Reconstitution of p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase from apoprotein and modified FAD is a rapid process complete within seconds. Crystals of the enzyme-substrate complex of modified FAD-containing p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase diffract to 2.1 A resolution. The crystal structure provides direct evidence for the presence of an arabityl sugar chain in the modified form of FAD. The isoalloxazine ring of the arabinoflavin adenine dinucleotide (a-FAD) is located in a cleft outside the active site as recently observed in several other p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase complexes. Like the native enzyme, a-FAD-containing p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase preferentially binds the phenolate form of the substrate (pKo = 7.2). The substrate acts as an effector highly stimulating the rate of enzyme reduction by NADPH (kred > 500 s-1). The oxidative part of the catalytic cycle of a-FAD-containing p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase differs from native enzyme. Partial uncoupling of hydroxylation results in the formation of about 0.3 mol of 3,4-dihydroxybenzoate and 0.7 mol of hydrogen peroxide per mol NADPH oxidized. It is proposed that flavin motion in p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase is important for efficient reduction and that the flavin "out" conformation is associated with the oxidase activity.  相似文献   

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