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1.
p-Cresol methylhydroxylase, a heterodimer consisting of one flavoprotein subunit and one cytochrome c subunit, may be resolved into its subunits, and the holoenzyme may then be fully reconstituted from the pure subunits. In the present study we have characterized the reduction kinetics of the intact enzyme and its subunits, by using exogenous 5-deazariboflavin semiquinone radical generated in the presence of EDTA by the laser-flash-photolysis technique. Under anaerobic conditions the 5-deazariboflavin semiquinone radical reacts rapidly with the native enzyme with a rate constant approaching that of a diffusion-controlled reaction (k = 2.8 X 10(9) M-1 X s-1). Time-resolved difference spectra at pH 7.6 indicate that both flavin and haem are reduced initially by the deazariboflavin semiquinone radical, followed by an additional slower intramolecular electron transfer (k = 220 s-1) from the endogenous neutral flavin semiquinone radical to the oxidized haem moiety of the native enzyme. During the steady-state photochemical titration of the native enzyme at pH 7.6 with deazariboflavin semiquinone radical generated by light-irradiation the haem appeared to be reduced before the protein-bound flavin and was followed by the formation of the protein-bound anionic flavin radical. This result suggests that the redox potential of the haem is higher than that of the flavin, and that deprotonation of the flavin neutral radical occurred during the photochemical titration. Reduction kinetics of the flavoprotein and cytochrome subunits were also investigated by laser-flash photolysis. The protein-bound flavin of the isolated flavin subunit was reduced rapidly by the deazariboflavin semiquinone radical (k = 2.2 X 10(9) M-1 X s-1), as was the haem of the pure cytochrome c subunit (k = 3.7 X 10(9) M-1 X s-1). Flash-induced difference spectra obtained for the flavoprotein and cytochrome subunits at pH 7.6 were consistent with the formation of neutral flavin semiquinone radical and reduced haem, respectively. Investigation of the kinetic properties of the neutral flavin semiquinone radical of the flavoprotein subunit at pH 7.6 and at longer times (up to 5s) were consistent with a slow first-order deprotonation reaction (k = 1 s-1) of the neutral radical to its anionic form.  相似文献   

2.
Reduction of aryl-nitroso compounds by pyridine and flavin coenzymes   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
1. A systematic kinetic investigation of the reduction of aryl-nitroso compounds by pyridine and flavin coenzymes and their analogs, in enzymatic and nonenzymatic systems, has been reported. 2. Two main groups of nitroso compounds have been investigated, representatives nitroso-benzene and 1-nitroso-2-naphthol; in all enzymatic and nonenzymatic systems, the former was always reduced to phenyl-hydroxyl-amine and the latter to 1-amino-2-naphthol. 3. Pyridine compounds included NADH, APAD-4H2 and DBNA-4H2 in nonenzymatic systems, and liver alcohol dehydrogenase. Flavin compounds included 1,5-dihydrolumiflavin and various forms of reduced 5-ethyl-lumiflavin, in nonenzymatic systems, and the flavoenzymes glucose-oxidase and NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase. 5. Pyridine coenzymes and their analogs reduced nitroso compounds by a direct hydride transfer, with a primary kinetic isotope of 9.5 +/- 2.2. 6. All flavin compounds (glucose-oxidase and its nonenzymatic analog 1,5-dihydrolumiflavin and NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase and its analog 5-ethyl-1,5-dihydrolumiflavin) reduced aryl-nitroso compounds with high efficiency (k2 greater than 10(5)M(-1) min(-1)). 7. The flavin compounds have been shown to be much more efficient reductans of nitroso compounds, compared to pyridine coenzymes, both in enzymatic and nonenzymatic systems; the only exception to this rule presented the extremely efficient reduction of p-substituted aryl-nitroso compounds by liver alcohol dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

3.
Highly purified preparations of cholesterol oxidase from Schizophyllum commune contain a covalently bound flavin component. A flavin peptide has been obtained by digestion with trypsin-chymotrypsin and purification on a column of phosphocellulose. Digestion with nucleotide pyrophosphatase results in increased fluorescence at pH 3.4 and release of 5'-adenylate, showing that the flavin is in the dinucleotide form. The absorption spectrum of the flavin peptide shows the hypsochromic shift of the second absorption band characteristic of 8 alpha-substituted flavins. The fluorescence at pH 7 is extensively quenched even in the mononucleotide form, with a pKa at pH 5.8 in the flavin peptide and at 5.05 following acid hydrolysis to the aminoacyl flavin level. This suggests that histidine is the amino acid substituted at the 8 alpha position of the flavin and that N(1) of the imidazole ring is the site of attachment. These data, the reduction of the flavin by borohydride, and comparison of the mobilities in high voltage electrophoresis at two pH values with N(1)- and N(3)-histidyl riboflavin and their 2',5'-anhydro forms shows that the prosthetic group of cholesterol oxidase is 8 alpha-[N(1)-histidyl]-FAD.  相似文献   

4.
R Spencer  J Fisher  C Walsh 《Biochemistry》1976,15(5):1043-1053
In order to facilitate interpretation of the deazaisoalloxazine system as a valid mechanistic probe of flavoenzyme catalysis, we have examined some of the fundamental chemical properties of this system. The enzymatic synthesis, on a micromole scale, of the flavin coenzyme analogues 5-deazariboflavin 5'-phosphate (deazaFMN) and 5-deazariboflavin 5'-diphosphate, 5' leads to 5'adenosine ester (deazaFAD) has been achieved. This latter synthesis is accomplished with a partially purified FAD synthetase complex (from Brevibacterium ammoniagenes), containing both phosphorylating and adenylylating activities, allowing direct conversion of the riboflavin analogue to the flavin adenine dinucleotide level. The structure of the reduced deazaflavin resulting from enzymatic and chemical reduction is established as the 1,5-dihydrodeazaflavin by proton magnetic resonance. Similarly, the C-5 position of the deazaflavins is demonstrated to be the locus for hydrogen transfer in deazaflavin redox reactions. Preparation of 1,5-dihydrodeazaflavins by sodium borohydride reduction stabilized them to autoxidation (t 1/2 approximately 40 h, 22 degrees C) although dihydrodeazaflavins are rapidly oxidized by other electron acceptors, including riboflavin, phenazine methosulfate, methylene blue, and dichlorophenolindophenol. Mixtures of oxidized and reduced deazaflavins undergo a rapid two-electron disproportionation (k = 22 M-1 S-1 0 degrees C), and oxidized deazaflavins form transient covalent adducts with nitroalkane anions at pH less than 5. Generalized methods for the synthesis of isotopically labeled flavin and deazaflavin coenzymes and their purification by adsorptive chromatography are given.  相似文献   

5.
The alkanesulfonate monooxygenase system from Escherichia coli is involved in scavenging sulfur from alkanesulfonates under sulfur starvation. An FMN reductase (SsuE) catalyzes the reduction of FMN by NADPH, and the reduced flavin is transferred to the monooxygenase (SsuD). Rapid reaction kinetic analyses were performed to define the microscopic steps involved in SsuE catalyzed flavin reduction. Results from single-wavelength analyses at 450 and 550 nm showed that reduction of FMN occurs in three distinct phases. Following a possible rapid equilibrium binding of FMN and NADPH to SsuE (MC-1) that occurs before the first detectable step, an initial fast phase (241 s(-1)) corresponds to the interaction of NADPH with FMN (CT-1). The second phase is a slow conversion (11 s(-1)) to form a charge-transfer complex of reduced FMNH(2) with NADP(+) (CT-2), and represents electron transfer from the pyridine nucleotide to the flavin. The third step (19 s(-1)) is the decay of the charge-transfer complex to SsuE with bound products (MC-2) or product release from the CT-2 complex. Results from isotope studies with [(4R)-(2)H]NADPH demonstrates a rate-limiting step in electron transfer from NADPH to FMN, and may imply a partial rate-limiting step from CT-2 to MC-2 or the direct release of products from CT-2. While the utilization of flavin as a substrate by the alkanesulfonate monooxygenase system is novel, the mechanism for flavin reduction follows an analogous reaction path as standard flavoproteins.  相似文献   

6.
The reaction of 2-thioriboflavin (sulfur replacing the oxygen substituent at position 2 alpha) with hydrogen peroxide at pH approximately 10 leads to a blue flavin (lambda max = 565 nm) which was purified in stable, homogeneous form. Titrations of 2-thioflavins with m-chloroperoxybenzoic acid also yield the same blue flavins with consumption of 1 eq of peracid. Anaerobic reduction of the blue flavin by sodium dithionite requires 4e- eq, and leads to formation of 1,5-dihydro-2-thioflavin. Oxidation of the latter with O2 restores the original 2-thioflavin. pH titration of the blue flavin shows two pKa values of 2.4 and 6.6, with no apparent ionization in the pH range 8-11. These results suggest that the blue flavin is a flavin 2-S-oxide. The visible absorption spectra of flavin 2-S-oxides show a pronounced dependence on solvent polarity. This property suggests that these flavin analogs may be useful hydrophilic/hydrophobic probes of flavoprotein active sites. Flavin 2-S-oxides can be oxidized further to the 2-sulfinate and 2-sulfonate analogs, some properties of which are described.  相似文献   

7.
Kinetics of reduction of phototrophic bacterial flavocytochromes c by exogenous flavin semiquinones and fully reduced flavins generated by laser flash photolysis have been studied. The mechanisms of reduction of Chromatium and Chlorobium flavocytochromes c are more similar to one another than previously thought. Neither protein is very reactive with neutral flavin semiquinones (k less than 10(7) M-1 s-1), and the reactions with fully reduced flavins are slower than expected on the basis of comparison with other electron-transfer proteins of similar redox potentials. Deazaflavin radical is reactive with the flavocytochromes c by virtue of its low redox potential, but this reaction is also slower than expected on the basis of comparison with other electron-transfer proteins. These experiments indicate that the active site for reduction of flavocytochrome c is relatively buried and probably inaccessible to solvent. Fully reduced FMN does not show an ionic strength effect in its reaction with flavocytochrome c, which demonstrates that the active site is uncharged. Sulfite, which forms an adduct with protein-bound FAD, partially blocks heme reduction. This shows that heme is reduced via the FAD. The rate constant for intramolecular electron transfer between FAD and heme must be on the order of 10(4) s-1 or larger.  相似文献   

8.
Flavin reductase plays an important biological role in catalyzing the reduction of flavin by NAD(P)H oxidation. The gene that codes for flavin reductase from Citrobacter freundii A1 was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli BL21(DE3)pLysS. In this study, we aimed to characterize the purified recombinant flavin reductase of C. freundii A1. The recombinant enzyme was purified to homogeneity and the biochemical profiles, including the effect of pH, temperature, metal ions and anions on flavin reductase activity and stability, were determined. This enzyme exhibited optimum activity at 45 °C in a 10-min reaction at pH 7.5 and was stable at temperatures up to 30 °C. At 0.1 mM concentration of metal ions, flavin reductase activity was stimulated by divalent cations including Mn2+, Sr2+, Ni2+, Sn2+, Ba2+, Co2+, Mg2+, Ca2+ and Pb2+. Ag+ was noticeably the strongest inhibitor of recombinant flavin reductase of C. freundii A1. This enzyme should not be defined as a standard flavoprotein. This is the first attempt to characterize flavin reductase of C. freundii origin.  相似文献   

9.
An NADPH-dependent O2.- -generating oxidase was solubilized from phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate-activated pig neutrophils by using a mixture of detergents. Recovery of oxidase was approx. 40%. The extract contained cytochrome b-245 (331 pmol/mg of protein) and FAD (421 pmol/mg of protein); approx. 30% of each was reduced within 60s when NADPH was added to anaerobic incubations. Three different additives, quinacrine, p-chloromercuribenzoate and cetyltrimethylammonium bromide, strongly inhibited O2.- generation; they also inhibited the reduction by NADPH of cytochrome b at the same low concentrations. In the presence of p-chloromercuribenzoate cytochrome b reduction was strongly inhibited and flavin reduction was less inhibited. A detergent extract prepared from non-stimulated neutrophils also contained flavin and cytochrome b, but its rate of O2.- production was less than 1% of that from activated cells; its initial rate of cytochrome b and flavin reduction was low, although the state of reduction at equilibrium was similar to that of extracts of activated cells. Even in the non-activated cell extract the reduction of flavin and cytochrome was made fast and complete when Methyl Viologen was added to the anaerobic incubations. The oxidase was temperature-sensitive, with a sharp maximum at 25 degrees C; temperatures above this caused loss of O2.- generation, and this coincided with loss of the characteristic cytochrome b spectrum, indicate of denaturation of the cytochrome. The cytochrome b formed a complex with butyl isocyanide (close to 100% binding at 10mM); butyl isocyanide also inhibited the oxidase activity of stimulated whole neutrophils (22.5% inhibition at 10mM). Photoreduced FMN stimulated O2 uptake by the oxidase. The results support a scheme of electron transport within the oxidase complex involving NADPH, FAD, cytochrome b-245 and O2 in that sequence.  相似文献   

10.
Monomeric sarcosine oxidase (MSOX) is a prototypical member of a recently recognized family of amine-oxidizing enzymes that all contain covalently bound flavin. Mutation of the covalent flavin attachment site in MSOX produces a catalytically inactive apoprotein (apoCys315Ala) that forms an unstable complex with FAD (K(d) = 100 muM), similar to that observed with wild-type apoMSOX where the complex is formed as an intermediate during covalent flavin attachment. In situ reconstitution of sarcosine oxidase activity is achieved by assaying apoCys315Ala in the presence of FAD or 8-nor-8-chloroFAD, an analogue with an approximately 55 mV higher reduction potential. After correction for an estimated 65% reconstitutable apoprotein, the specific activity of apoCys315Ala in the presence of excess FAD or 8-nor-8-chloroFAD is 14% or 80%, respectively, of that observed with wild-type MSOX. Unlike oxidized flavin, apoCys315Ala exhibits a high affinity for reduced flavin, as judged by results obtained with reduced 5-deazaFAD (5-deazaFADH(2)) where the estimated binding stoichiometry is unaffected by dialysis. The Cys315Ala.5-deazaFADH(2) complex is also air-stable but is readily oxidized by sarcosine imine, a reaction accompanied by release of weakly bound oxidized 5-deazaFAD. The dramatic difference in the binding affinity of apoCys315Ala for oxidized and reduced flavin indicates that the protein environment must induce a sizable increase in the reduction potential of noncovalently bound flavin (DeltaE(m) approximately 120 mV). The covalent flavin linkage prevents loss of weakly bound oxidized FAD and also modulates the flavin reduction potential in conjunction with the protein environment.  相似文献   

11.
The kinetics of sulfite adduct formation with the bound flavin in flavocytochromes c from the purple phototrophic bacterium Chromatium vinosum and the green phototrophic bacterium Chlorobium thiosulfatophilum have been investigated as a function of pH. Both species of flavocytochrome c rapidly react with sulfite to form a flavin sulfite adduct (k = 10(3)-10(5) M-1 s-1) which is bleached at 450-475 nm and has associated charge-transfer absorbance at 660 nm. The rate constant for adduct formation in flavocytochrome c is 2-4 orders of magnitude faster than for model flavins of comparable redox potential and is likely to be due to a basic residue near the N-1 position of the flavin, which not only raises the redox potential but also stabilizes the negatively charged adduct. There is a pK for adduct formation at 6.5, which suggests that the order of magnitude larger rate constant at pH 5 as compared to pH 10 in flavocytochrome c is due the influence of another positive charge, possibly a protonated histidine residue. The adduct is indefinitely stable at pH 5 but decomposes (the flavin recolors) in a first-order process accelerating above pH 6 (at pH 10, k = 0.1 s-1). The pK for recoloring is 8.5, which is suggestive of a cysteine sulfhydryl. On the basis of the observed pK and available chemical information, we believe that recoloring is due to a secondary effect of the reaction of sulfite with a protein cystine disulfide, which is adjacent to the flavin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Cameron MD  Aust SD 《Biochemistry》2000,39(44):13595-13601
The flavin cofactor within cellobiose dehydrogenase (CDH) was found to be responsible for the reduction of all electron acceptors tested. This includes cytochrome c, the reduction of which has been reported to be by the reduced heme of CDH. The heme group was shown to affect the reactivity and activation energy with respect to individual electron acceptors, but the heme group was not involved in the direct transfer of electrons to substrate. A complicated interaction was found to exist between the flavin and heme of cellobiose dehydrogenase. The addition of electron acceptors was shown to increase the rate of flavin reduction and the electron transfer rate between the flavin and heme. All electron acceptors tested appeared to be reduced by the flavin domain. The addition of ferric iron eliminated the flavin radical present in reduced CDH, as detected by low temperature ESR spectroscopy, while it increased the flavin radical ESR signal in the independent flavin domain, more commonly referred to as cellobiose:quinone oxidoreductase (CBQR). Conversely, no radical was detected with either CDH or CBQR upon the addition of methyl-1,4-benzoquinone. Similar reaction rates and activation energies were determined for methyl-1,4-benzoquinone with both CDH and CBQR, whereas the rate of iron reduction by CDH was five times higher than by CBQR, and its activation energy was 38 kJ/mol lower than that of CBQR. Oxygen, which may be reduced by either one or two electrons, was found to behave like a two-electron acceptor. Superoxide production was found only upon the inclusion of iron. Additionally, information is presented indicating that the site of substrate reduction may be in the cleft between the flavin and heme domains.  相似文献   

13.
Garnaud PE  Koetsier M  Ost TW  Daff S 《Biochemistry》2004,43(34):11035-11044
Electron transfer through neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) is regulated by the reversible binding of calmodulin (CaM) to the reductase domain of the enzyme, the conformation of which has been shown to be dependent on the presence of substrate, NADPH. Here we report the preparation of the isolated flavin mononucleotide (FMN)-binding domain of nNOS with bound CaM and the electrochemical analysis of this and the isolated flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD)-binding domain in the presence and absence of NADP(+) and ADP (an inhibitor). The FMN-binding domain was found to be stable only in the presence of bound CaM/Ca(2+), removal of which resulted in precipitation of the protein. The FMN formed a kinetically stabilized blue semiquinone with an oxidized/semiquinone reduction potential of -179 mV. This is 80 mV more negative than the potential of the FMN in the isolated reductase domain, that is, in the presence of the FAD-binding domain. The FMN semiquinone/hydroquinone redox couple was found to be similar in both constructs. The isolated FAD-binding domain, generated by controlled proteolysis of the reductase domain, was found to have similar FAD reduction potentials to the isolated reductase domain. Both formed a FAD-hydroquinone/NADP(+) charge-transfer complex with a long-wavelength absorption band centered at 780 nm. Formation of this complex resulted in thermodynamic destabilization of the FAD semiquinone relative to the hydroquinone and a 30 mV increase in the FAD semiquinone/hydroquinone reduction potential. Binding of ADP, however, had little effect. The possible role of the nicotinamide/FADH(2) stacking interaction in controlling electron transfer and its likely dependence on protein conformation are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
ActVB is the NADH:flavin oxidoreductase participating in the last step of actinorhodin synthesis in Streptomyces coelicolor. It is the prototype of a whole class of flavin reductases with both sequence and functional similarities. The mechanism of reduction of free flavins by ActVB has been studied. Although ActVB was isolated with FMN bound, we have demonstrated that it is not a flavoprotein. Instead, ActVB contains only one flavin binding site, suitable for the flavin reductase activity and with a high affinity for FMN. In addition, ActVB proceeds by an ordered sequential mechanism, where NADH is the first substrate. Whereas ActVB is highly specific for NADH, it is able to catalyze the reduction of a great variety of natural and synthetic flavins, but with K(m) values ranging from 1 microm (FMN) to 69 microm (lumiflavin). We show that both the ribitol-phosphate chain and the isoalloxazine ring contribute to the protein-flavin interaction. Such properties are unique and set the ActVB family apart from the well characterized Fre flavin reductase family.  相似文献   

15.
The neuronal NO synthase (nNOS) flavin domain, which has similar redox properties to those of NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase (P450R), contains binding sites for calmodulin, FAD, FMN, and NADPH. The aim of this study is to elucidate the mechanism of activation of the flavin domain by calcium/calmodulin (Ca(2+)/CaM). In this study, we used the recombinant nNOS flavin domains, which include or delete the calmodulin (CaM)-binding site. The air-stable semiquinone of the nNOS flavin domains showed similar redox properties to the corresponding FAD-FMNH(&z.ccirf;) of P450R. In the absence or presence of Ca(2+)/CaM, the rates of reduction of an FAD-FMN pair by NADPH have been investigated at different wavelengths, 457, 504 and 590 nm by using a stopped-flow technique and a rapid scan spectrophotometry. The reduction of the oxidized enzyme (FAD-FMN) by NADPH proceeds by both one-electron equivalent and two-electron equivalent mechanisms, and the formation of semiquinone (increase of absorbance at 590 nm) was significantly increased in the presence of Ca(2+)/CaM. The air-stable semiquinone form of the enzyme was also rapidly reduced by NADPH. The results suggest that an intramolecular one-electron transfer between the two flavins is activated by the binding of Ca(2+)/CaM. The F(1)H(2), which is the fully reduced form of the air-stable semiquinone, can donate one electron to the electron acceptor, cytochrome c. The proposed mechanism of activation by Ca(2+)/CaM complex is discussed on the basis of that provided by P450R.  相似文献   

16.
A NADPH-dehydrogenase of human erythrocytes was exhaustively purified to a homogeneous protein judging from the electrophoresis on a polyacrylamide gel in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate. Studies on the specificity for the electron acceptor of this enzyme suggest that flavins serve as the natural and direct electron acceptor. The enzyme showed a broad specificty for flavins and the Michaelis constants for flavins were estimated to be 5 × 10?5 M for both FMN and riboflavin. Rapid reduction of methemoglobin by the enzyme in the presence of flavin was demonstrated, and the reduction was explained by the reduction of flavin by the enzyme, and subsequent non-enzymatic reduction of methemoglobin by the reduced flavin. The therapeutic significance of flavins was discussed with reference to the flavin reductase activity in hereditary methemoglobinemia.  相似文献   

17.
Argyrou A  Blanchard JS  Palfey BA 《Biochemistry》2002,41(49):14580-14590
Lipoamide dehydrogenase catalyses the NAD(+)-dependent oxidation of the dihydrolipoyl cofactors that are covalently attached to the acyltransferase components of the pyruvate dehydrogenase, alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase, and glycine reductase multienzyme complexes. It contains a tightly, but noncovalently, bound FAD and a redox-active disulfide, which cycle between the oxidized and reduced forms during catalysis. The mechanism of reduction of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis lipoamide dehydrogenase by NADH and [4S-(2)H]-NADH was studied anaerobically at 4 degrees C and pH 7.5 by stopped-flow spectrophotometry. Three phases of enzyme reduction were observed. The first phase, characterized by a decrease in absorbance at 400-500 nm and an increase in absorbance at 550-700 nm, was fast (k(for) = 1260 s(-)(1), k(rev) = 590 s(-)(1)) and represents the formation of FADH(2).NAD(+), an intermediate that has never been observed before in any wild-type lipoamide dehydrogenase. A primary deuterium kinetic isotope effect [(D)(k(for) + k(rev)) approximately 4.2] was observed on this phase. The second phase, characterized by regain of the absorbance at 400-500 nm, loss of the 550-700 nm absorbance, and gain of 500-550 nm absorbance, was slower (k(obs) = 200 s(-)(1)). This phase represents the intramolecular transfer of electrons from FADH(2) to the redox-active disulfide to generate the anaerobically stable two-electron reduced enzyme, EH(2). The third phase, characterized by a decrease in absorbance at 400-550 nm, represents the formation of the four-electron reduced form of the enzyme, EH(4). The observed rate constant for this phase showed a decreasing NADH concentration dependence, and results from the slow (k(for) = 57 s(-)(1), k(rev) = 128 s(-)(1)) isomerization of EH(2) or slow release of NAD(+) before rapid NADH binding and reaction to form EH(4). The mechanism of oxidation of EH(2) by NAD(+) was also investigated under the same conditions. The 530 nm charge-transfer absorbance of EH(2) shifted to 600 nm upon NAD(+) binding in the dead time of mixing of the stopped-flow instrument and represents formation of the EH(2).NAD(+) complex. This was followed by two phases. The first phase (k(obs) = 750 s(-)(1)), characterized by a small decrease in absorbance at 435 and 458 nm, probably represents limited accumulation of FADH(2).NAD(+). The second phase was characterized by an increase in absorbance at 435 and 458 nm and a decrease in absorbance at 530 and 670 nm. The observed rate constant that describes this phase of approximately 115 s(-)(1) probably represents the overall rate of formation of E(ox) and NADH from EH(2) and NAD(+), and is largely determined by the slower rates of the coupled sequence of reactions preceding flavin oxidation.  相似文献   

18.
Frederick KK  Palfey BA 《Biochemistry》2005,44(40):13304-13314
p-Hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase (PHBH) is an FAD-dependent monooxygenase that catalyzes the hydroxylation of p-hydroxybenzoate (pOHB) to 3,4-dihydroxybenzoate in an NADPH-dependent reaction. Two structural features are coupled to control the reactivity of PHBH with NADPH: a proton-transfer network that allows protons to be passed between the sequestered active site and solvent and a flavin that adopts two positions: "in", where the flavin is near pOHB, and "out", where the flavin is near NADPH. PHBH uses the proton-transfer network to test for the presence of a suitable aromatic substrate before allowing the flavin to adopt the NADPH-accessible conformation. In this work, kinetic analysis of the His72Asn mutant, with a disrupted proton-transfer network, showed that flavin movement could occur in the presence or absence of NADPH but that NADPH stimulated movement to the reactive conformation required for hydride transfer. Substrate and solvent isotope effects on the transient kinetics of reduction of the His72Asn mutant showed that proton transfer was linked to flavin movement and that the conformational change occurred in a step separate from that of hydride transfer. Proton transfers during the reductive half-reaction were observed directly in the wild-type enzyme by performing experiments in the presence of a fluorescent pH-indicator dye in unbuffered solutions. NADPH binding caused rapid proton release from the enzyme, followed by proton uptake after flavin reduction. Solvent and substrate kinetic isotope effects showed that proton-coupled flavin movement and reduction also occurred in different steps in wild-type PHBH. These results allow a detailed kinetic scheme to be proposed for the reductive half-reaction of the wild-type enzyme. Three kinetic models considered for substrate-induced isomerization are analyzed in the Appendix.  相似文献   

19.
Cavelier G  Amzel LM 《Proteins》2001,43(4):420-432
NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase type 1 (QR1, NQO1, formerly DT-diaphorase; EC 1.6.99.2) is an FAD-containing enzyme that catalyzes the nicotinamide nucleotide-dependent reduction of quinones, quinoneimines, azo dyes, and nitro groups. Animal cells are protected by QR1 from the toxic and neoplastic effects of quinones and other electrophiles. Alternatively, in tumor cells QR can activate a number of cancer chemotherapeutic agents such as mitomycins and aziridylbenzoquinones. Thus, the same enzyme that protects the organism from the deleterious effects of quinones can activate cytotoxic chemotherapeutic prodrugs and cause cancer cell death. The catalytic mechanism of QR includes an important initial step in which FAD is reduced by NAD(P)H. The unfavorable charge separation that results must be stabilized by the protein. The details of this charge stabilization step are inaccessible to easy experimental verification but can be studied by quantum chemistry methods. Here we report ab initio quantum mechanical calculations in and around the active site of the enzyme that provide information about the fine details of the contribution of the protein to the stabilization of the reduced flavin. The results show that (1) protein interactions provide approximately 2 kcal/mol to stabilize the planar conformation of the reduced flavin isoalloxazine ring observed in the X-ray structure; (2) the charge separation present in the reduced planar form of the flavin is stabilized by interactions with groups of the protein; (3) even after stabilization, the reduction potential of the cofactor remains more negative than that of the free flavin, making it a better reductant for a larger variety of quinones; and (4) the more negative reduction potential may also result in faster kinetics for the quinone reduction step.  相似文献   

20.
The covalently bound FAD in native monomeric sarcosine oxidase (MSOX) is attached to the protein by a thioether bond between the 8alpha-methyl group of the flavin and Cys315. Large amounts of soluble apoenzyme are produced by controlled expression in a riboflavin-dependent Escherichia coli strain. A time-dependent increase in catalytic activity is observed upon incubation of apoMSOX with FAD, accompanied by the covalent incorporation of FAD to approximately 80% of the level observed with the native enzyme. The spectral and catalytic properties of the reconstituted enzyme are otherwise indistinguishable from those of native MSOX. The reconstitution reaction exhibits apparent second-order kinetics (k = 139 M(-)(1) min(-)(1) at 23 degrees C) and is accompanied by the formation of a stoichiometric amount of hydrogen peroxide. A time-dependent reduction of FAD is observed when the reconstitution reaction is conducted under anaerobic conditions. The results provide definitive evidence for autoflavinylation in a reaction that proceeds via a reduced flavin intermediate and requires only apoMSOX and FAD. Flavinylation of apoMSOX is not observed with 5-deazaFAD or 1-deazaFAD, an outcome attributed to a decrease in the acidity of the 8alpha-methyl group protons. Covalent flavin attachment is observed with 8-nor-8-chloroFAD in an aromatic nucleophilic displacement reaction that proceeds via a quininoid intermediate but not a reduced flavin intermediate. The reconstituted enzyme contains a modified cysteine-flavin linkage (8-nor-8-S-cysteinyl) as compared with native MSOX (8alpha-S-cysteinyl), a difference that may account for its approximately 10-fold lower catalytic activity.  相似文献   

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