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1.
Crane EJ  Yeh JI  Luba J  Claiborne A 《Biochemistry》2000,39(34):10353-10364
The crystal structure of the flavoprotein NADH peroxidase shows that the Arg303 side chain forms a hydrogen bond with the active-site His10 imidazole and is therefore likely to influence the catalytic mechanism. Dithionite titration of an R303M mutant [E(FAD, Cys42-sulfenic acid)] yields a two-electron reduced intermediate (EH(2)) with enhanced flavin fluorescence and almost no charge-transfer absorbance at pH 7.0; the pK(a) for the nascent Cys42-SH is increased by over 3.5 units in comparison with the wild-type EH(2) pK(a) of Cys42-SOH. The crystal structure of the R303M peroxidase has been refined at 2.45 A resolution. In addition to eliminating the Arg303 interactions with His10 and Glu14, the mutant exhibits a significant change in the conformation of the Cys42-SOH side chain relative to FAD and His10 in particular. These and other results provide a detailed understanding of Arg303 and its role in the structure and mechanism of this unique flavoprotein peroxidase.  相似文献   

2.
Nidetzky B  Klimacek M  Mayr P 《Biochemistry》2001,40(34):10371-10381
Microbial xylose reductase, a representative aldo-keto reductase of primary sugar metabolism, catalyzes the NAD(P)H-dependent reduction of D-xylose with a turnover number approximately 100 times that of human aldose reductase for the same reaction. To determine the mechanistic basis for that physiologically relevant difference and pinpoint features that are unique to the microbial enzyme among other aldo/keto reductases, we carried out stopped-flow studies with wild-type xylose reductase from the yeast Candida tenuis. Analysis of transient kinetic data for binding of NAD(+) and NADH, and reduction of D-xylose and oxidation of xylitol at pH 7.0 and 25 degrees C provided estimates of rate constants for the following mechanism: E + NADH right arrow over left arrow E.NADH right arrow over left arrow E.NADH + D-xylose right arrow over left arrow E.NADH.D-xylose right arrow over left arrow E.NAD(+).xylitol right arrow over left arrow E.NAD(+) right arrow over left arrow E.NAD(+) right arrow over left arrow E + NAD(+). The net rate constant of dissociation of NAD(+) is approximately 90% rate limiting for k(cat) of D-xylose reduction. It is controlled by the conformational change which precedes nucleotide release and whose rate constant of 40 s(-)(1) is 200 times that of completely rate-limiting E.NADP(+) --> E.NADP(+) step in aldehyde reduction catalyzed by human aldose reductase [Grimshaw, C. E., et al. (1995) Biochemistry 34, 14356-14365]. Hydride transfer from NADH occurs with a rate constant of approximately 170 s(-1). In reverse reaction, the E.NADH --> E.NADH step takes place with a rate constant of 15 s(-1), and the rate constant of ternary-complex interconversion (3.8 s(-1)) largely determines xylitol turnover (0.9 s(-1)). The bound-state equilibrium constant for C. tenuis xylose reductase is estimated to be approximately 45 (=170/3.8), thus greatly favoring aldehyde reduction. Formation of productive complexes, E.NAD(+) and E.NADH, leads to a 7- and 9-fold decrease of dissociation constants of initial binary complexes, respectively, demonstrating that 12-fold differential binding of NADH (K(i) = 16 microM) vs NAD(+) (K(i) = 195 microM) chiefly reflects difference in stabilities of E.NADH and E.NAD(+). Primary deuterium isotope effects on k(cat) and k(cat)/K(xylose) were, respectively, 1.55 +/- 0.09 and 2.09 +/- 0.31 in H(2)O, and 1.26 +/- 0.06 and 1.58 +/- 0.17 in D(2)O. No deuterium solvent isotope effect on k(cat)/K(xylose) was observed. When deuteration of coenzyme selectively slowed the hydride transfer step, (D)()2(O)(k(cat)/K(xylose)) was inverse (0.89 +/- 0.14). The isotope effect data suggest a chemical mechanism of carbonyl reduction by xylose reductase in which transfer of hydride ion is a partially rate-limiting step and precedes the proton-transfer step.  相似文献   

3.
Anaerobic addition of 0.5 eq of NADH/FAD to the streptococcal NADH oxidase produces a redox form spectrally similar to that obtained with 0.5 eq of dithionite/FAD. The second phase of the titration, however, in addition to reducing the flavin with 1 eq of NADH/FAD, leads to the appearance of a long-wavelength absorbance band centered at 725 nm. Reductive titrations of the enzyme with 3-acetylpyridine-adenine dinucleotide, which has a redox potential 72 mV more positive than that of NADH, yield a similar reduced enzyme species. Dithionite reduction of the NADH oxidase followed by titration with NAD+ partially mimics the long-wavelength absorbance of the NADH-reduced enzyme but also leads to the oxidation of 1 FADH2/dimer. NADH is not formed, however, and a similar result is obtained when the dithionite-reduced oxidase is titrated with the nonreducible substrate analog 3-aminopyridine-adenine dinucleotide. These data indicate that the FADH2 oxidation observed is intramolecular and suggest that the active centers of the two apparently identical subunits/dimer are not equivalent. These results also demonstrate that bound pyridine nucleotides can modulate the redox manifold of the NADH oxidase and, when taken together with the effects of these ligands on pre-steady-state behavior, suggest an important regulatory aspect of the catalytic redox function of this unique flavoprotein.  相似文献   

4.
Recent studies [Mallett, T. C., and Claiborne, A. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 8790-8802] of the O2 reactivity of C42S NADH oxidase (O2 --> H2O2) revealed an asymmetric mechanism in which the two FADH2.NAD+ per reduced dimer display kinetic inequivalence. In this report we provide evidence indicating that the fully active, recombinant wild-type oxidase (O2 --> 2H2O) displays thermodynamic inequivalence between the two active sites per dimer. Using NADPH to generate the free reduced wild-type enzyme (EH2'/EH4), we have shown that NAD+ titrations lead to differential behavior as only one FADH2 per dimer binds NAD+ tightly to give the charge-transfer complex. The second FADH2, in contrast, transfers its electrons to the single Cys42-sulfenic acid (Cys42-SOH) redox center, which remains oxidized during the reductive titration. Titrations of the reduced NADH oxidase with oxidized 3-acetylpyridine and 3-aminopyridine adenine dinucleotides further support the conclusion that the two FADH2 per dimer in wild-type enzyme can be described as distinct "charge-transfer" and "electron-transfer" sites, with the latter site giving rise to either intramolecular (Cys42-SOH) or bimolecular (pyridine nucleotide) reduction. The reduced C42S mutant is not capable of intramolecular electron transfer on binding pyridine nucleotides, thus confirming that the Cys42-SOH center is in fact the source of the redox asymmetry observed with wild-type oxidase. These observations on the role of Cys42-SOH in the expression of thermodynamic inequivalence as observed in wild-type NADH oxidase complement the previously described kinetic inequivalence of the C42S mutant; taken together, these results provide the overlapping framework for an alternating sites cooperativity model of oxidase action.  相似文献   

5.
Stopped-flow experiments in which sheep liver cytoplasmic aldehyde dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.3) was rapidly mixed with NAD(+) and aldehyde showed a burst of NADH formation, followed by a slower steady-state turnover. The kinetic data obtained when the relative concentrations and orders of mixing of NAD(+) and propionaldehyde with the enzyme were varied were fitted to the following mechanism: [Formula: see text] where the release of NADH is slow. By monitoring the quenching of protein fluorescence on the binding of NAD(+), estimates of 2x10(5) litre.mol(-1).s(-1) and 2s(-1) were obtained for k(+1) and k(-1) respectively. Although k(+3) could be determined from the dependence of the burst rate constant on the concentration of propionaldehyde to be 11s(-1), k(+2) and k(-2) could not be determined uniquely, but could be related by the equation: (k(-2)+k(+3))/k(+2) =50x10(-6)mol.litre(-1). No significant isotope effect was observed when [1-(2)H]propionaldehyde was used as substrate. The burst rate constant was pH-dependent, with the greatest rate constants occurring at high pH. Similar data were obtained by using acetaldehyde, where for this substrate (k(-2)+k(+3))/k(+2)=2.3x10 (-3)mol.litre(-1) and k(+3) is 23s(-1). When [1,2,2,2-(2)H]acetaldehyde was used, no isotope effect was observed on k(+3), but there was a significant effect on k(+2) and k(-2). A burst of NADH production has also been observed with furfuraldehyde, trans-4-(NN-dimethylamino)cinnamaldehyde, formaldehyde, benzaldehyde, 4-(imidazol-2-ylazo)benzaldehyde, p-methoxybenzaldehyde and p-methylbenzaldehyde as substrates, but not with p-nitrobenzaldehyde.  相似文献   

6.
The flavin-containing NADH peroxidase of Streptococcus faecalis 10C1, which catalyzes the reaction: NADH + H+ + H2O2----NAD+ + 2H2O, has been purified to homogeneity in our laboratory for analyses of both its structure and redox behavior. Our findings indicate that the enzyme is a tetramer of four apparently identical subunits (Mr = 46,000/subunit), each containing one FAD coenzyme and a second non-flavin, nonmetal redox center. There is no evidence of nonequivalence among the flavins. Dithionite reduction of the enzyme occurs in two steps, with end points of 0.96 and 2.05 eq/FAD. The first step generates a two-electron reduced form of the enzyme (EH2) which is spectrally identical with that generated by aerobic addition of NADH. Our studies suggest that the long-wavelength absorbance band (lambda max approximately 540 nm) exhibited by this form results from charge-transfer interaction between the reduced non-flavin redox center and the oxidized flavin. A second type of long-wavelength charge-transfer absorbance band (lambda max approximately 770 nm) is generated on anaerobic addition of 1 eq of NADH to EH2 and results from interaction between oxidized FAD and the reduced pyridine nucleotide. Either the EH2 X NAD+ or the EH2 X NAD+ X NADH forms may be involved in the catalytic mechanism of the enzyme, as both are reactive with hydrogen peroxide.  相似文献   

7.
We measured changes in the intrinsic fluorescence (IF) of the neurosecretory terminals of the mouse neurohypophysis during brief (1-2 s) trains of stimuli. With fluorescence excitation at either 350 +/- 20 or 450 +/- 50 nm, and with emission measured, respectively, at 450 +/- 50 or > or = 520 nm, DeltaF/F(o) was approximately 5-8 % for a 2 s train of 30 action potentials. The IF changes lagged the onset of stimulation by approximately 100 ms and were eliminated by 1 microM tetrodotoxin (TTX). The signals were partially inhibited by 500 microM Cd(2+), by substitution of Mg(2+) for Ca(2+), by Ca(2+)-free Ringer's with 0.5 mM EGTA, and by 50 microM ouabain. The IF signals were also sensitive to the mitochondrial metabolic inhibitors CCCP (0.3 microM), FCCP (0.3 microM), and NaN(3) (0.3 mM), and their amplitude reflected the partial pressure of oxygen (pO(2)) in the bath. Resting fluorescence at both 350 nm and 450 nm exhibited significant bleaching. Flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) is fluorescent, while its reduced form FADH(2) is relatively non-fluorescent; conversely, NADH is fluorescent, while its oxidized form NAD is non-fluorescent. Thus, our experiments suggest that the stimulus-coupled rise in [Ca(2+)](i) triggers an increase in FAD and NAD as FADH(2) and NADH are oxidized, but that elevation of [Ca(2+)](i), alone cannot account for the totality of changes in intrinsic fluorescence.  相似文献   

8.
Pre-steady state, stopped flow analysis of Escherichia coli D-3-phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase was performed by following the fluorescence of protein tryptophan and the fluorescence resonance energy transfer from protein tryptophan to bound NADH. The results indicate that binding of substrates is ordered, with coenzyme, NADH, binding first. Furthermore, the analysis indicated that there are two sets of sites on the tetrameric enzyme that can be differentiated by their kinetic behavior. NADH binding was consistent with an initial binding event followed by a slow conformational change for each site. The slow conformational change is responsible for the apparent tight binding of NADH to the apoenzyme but is too slow to participate in the catalytic cycle when the enzyme is rapidly turning over. Subsequent binding of the substrate, alpha-ketoglutarate, was characterized by a rapid equilibrium binding event followed by a conformational change for each site. Catalysis in the direction of NAD(+) reduction showed a distinct burst of activity followed by a slow rate of turnover, indicating that the rate-limiting step is after hydride transfer. Catalysis in the direction of NADH oxidation did not display burst kinetics, indicating that the rate-limiting step is at or before the hydride transfer step. The burst data indicated that the rate of NAD(+) reduction (3.8 s(-1)) is similar to the k(cat) of the enzyme (2-3 s(-1)) in that direction. However, analysis of the reaction with deuterated NADH failed to show an effect on the velocity of the reaction with a V(H)/V(D)=1.07+/-0.06. None of the other rates determined by stopped flow analysis could account for the k(cat) of the enzyme in either direction (forward k(cat)=0.01 s(-1), reverse k(cat)=2-3 s(-1)), suggesting that the rate-limiting step in both directions is a conformational change in the enzyme that is not detected optically.  相似文献   

9.
S N Ali  H D Zeller  M K Calisto  M S Jorns 《Biochemistry》1991,30(45):10980-10986
Sarcosine oxidase contains 1 mol of covalently bound plus 1 mol of noncovalently bound FAD per active site. The first phase of the anaerobic reduction of the enzyme with sarcosine converts oxidized enzyme to an equilibrium mixture of two-electron-reduced forms (EH2) and occurs at a rate (2700 min-1, pH 8.0) similar to that determined for the maximum rate of aerobic turnover in steady-state kinetic studies (2600 min-1). The second phase of the anaerobic half-reaction converts EH2 to the four-electron-reduced enzyme (EH4) and occurs at a rate (k = 350 min-1) which is 7-fold slower than aerobic turnover. Reaction of EH2 with oxygen is 1.7-fold faster (k = 4480 min-1) than aerobic turnover and 13-fold faster than the anaerobic conversion of EH2 to EH4. The results suggest that the enzyme cycles between fully oxidized and two-electron-reduced forms during turnover with sarcosine. The long wavelength absorbance observed for EH2 is attributable to a flavin biradical (FADH.FAD.-) which is generated in about 50% yield at pH 8.0 and in nearly quantitative yield at pH 7.0. The rate of biradical formation is determined by the rate of electron transfer from sarcosine to the noncovalent flavin since electron equilibration between the two flavins (k = 750 s-1 or 45,000 min-1, pH 8.0) is nearly 20-fold faster, as determined in pH-jump experiments. Only two of the three possible isoelectronic forms of EH2 are likely to transfer electrons to oxygen since the reaction is known to occur at the covalent flavin. However, equilibration among EH2 forms is probably maintained during reoxidation, consistent with the observed monophasic kinetics, since interflavin electron transfer is 10-fold faster than electron transfer to oxygen.  相似文献   

10.
Threonine synthase (TS) catalyzes the hydrolysis of O-phospho-L-homoserine (OPHS) to produce L-threonine (L-Thr) and inorganic phosphate. Here, we report a simplified purification protocol for the OPHS substrate and a continuous, coupled-coupled, spectrophotometric TS assay. The sequential actions of threonine deaminase (TD) and hydroxyisocaproate dehydrogenase (HO-HxoDH) convert the L-Thr product of TS to α-ketobutyrate (α-KB) and then to 2-hydroxybutyrate, respectively, and are monitored as the decrease in absorbance at 340 nm resulting from the concomitant oxidation of β-nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) to NAD(+) by HO-HxoDH. The effect of pH on the activities of Escherichia coli TD and Lactobacillus delbrueckii HO-HxoDH was determined to establish this continuous assay as suitable for steady-state characterization and to facilitate the optimization of coupling enzyme concentrations under different assay conditions to enable studies of TS across phyla. To validate this assay, TS from E. coli was characterized. The kinetic parameters (k(cat)=4s(-1) and K(m)=0.34 mM) and the pH optimum of 8.7, determined using the continuous assay, are consistent with values reported for this enzyme based on the discontinuous malachite green assay. The k(cat)/K(m)(OPHS) versus pH profile of E. coli TS is bell-shaped, and the apparent pK(a) values for the acidic and basic limbs are 7.1 and 10.4, respectively.  相似文献   

11.
Marohnic CC  Bewley MC  Barber MJ 《Biochemistry》2003,42(38):11170-11182
Microsomal cytochrome b(5) reductase (EC 1.6.2.2) catalyzes the reduction of ferricytochrome b(5) using NADH as the physiological electron donor. Site-directed mutagenesis has been used to engineer the soluble rat cytochrome b(5) reductase diaphorase domain to utilize NADPH as the preferred electron donor. Single and double mutations at residues D239 and F251 were made in a recombinant expression system that corresponded to D239E, S and T, F251R, and Y, D239S/F251R, D239S/F251Y, and D239T/F251R, respectively. Steady-state turnover measurements indicated that D239S/F251Y was bispecific while D239T, D239S/F251R, and D239T/F251R were each NADPH-specific. Wild-type (WT) cytochrome b(5) reductase showed a 3700-fold preference for NADH whereas the mutant with the highest NADPH efficiency, D239T, showed an 11-fold preference for NADPH, a 39200-fold increase. Wild-type cytochrome b(5) reductase only formed a stable charge-transfer complex with NADH while D239T formed complexes with both NADH and NADPH. The rates of hydride ion transfer, determined by stopped-flow kinetics, were k(NADH-WT) = 130 s(-1), k(NADPH-WT) = 5 s(-1), k(NADH-D239T) = 180 s(-1), and k(NADPH-D239T) = 73 s(-1). K(s) determinations by differential spectroscopy demonstrated that D239T could bind nonreducing pyridine nucleotides with a phosphate or a hydroxyl substituent at the 2' position, whereas wild-type cytochrome b(5) reductase would only bind 2' hydroxylated molecules. Oxidation-reduction potentials (E degrees ', n = 2) for the flavin cofactor were WT = -268 mV, D239T = -272 mV, WT+NAD(+) = -190 mV, D239T+NAD(+) = -206 mV, WT+NADP(+) = -253 mV, and D239T+NADP(+) = -215 mV, which demonstrated the thermodynamic contribution of NADP(+) binding to D239T. The crystal structures of D239T and D239T in complex with NAD(+) indicated that the loss of the negative electrostatic surface that precluded 2' phosphate binding in the wild-type enzyme was primarily responsible for the observed improvement in the use of NADPH by the D239T mutant.  相似文献   

12.
Reaction of ozone with NADH eliminated the 340 nm absorbance. The 260 nm absorbance increased initially and then slowly declined. Equimolar amounts of NADH and ozone reacted. Products were separated by ion exchange chromatography and were shown to contain only traces of NAD. The products were not active in the alcohol dehydrogenase assay and did not form cyanide complexes. There was no reaction of NAD with ozone. NADPH and NADP showed the same reactivities as NADH and NAD. The reactions were not influenced by pH in the range 4.6–9.0. When NADH and tryptophan, or NADH and methionine, or NADH and glutathione (at low concentration) were competitors for available ozone, NADH was preferentially oxidized. Treatment of aqueous solutions of 1,4-dihydro-1-methyl nicotinamide with ozone caused changes in the absorbance spectrum consistent with ozonolysis of the 5,6 double bond. The product has been isolated after ozonolysis in methylene chloride and characterized by uv, ir, mass spectroscopy, and elemental analysis. Results were consistent with the reaction:
Further ozonolysis cleaved the 2,3 double bond. Reaction of NADH with ozone resulted in analogous reactions. The adenine moiety was resistant to ozonolysis, but this reaction was pH dependent, being greater at neutral and alkaline pH.  相似文献   

13.
Cell-free extracts of methanol-grown Nocardia sp. 239 only show significant dye-linked methanol-oxidizing activity when NAD+ is added to the assay mixture. This activity resides in a multienzyme complex which could be resolved into 3 components, namely the methanol dehydrogenase, NAD-dependent aldehyde dehydrogenase and NADH dehydrogenase. In its dissociated form, the methanol dehydrogenase no longer shows dye reduction and although rises in the absorbance values around 340 nm are seen on addition of methanol plus NAD+ to the enzyme, this is not due to NADH production. However, dye reduction (NAD dependent) could be restored on incubating methanol dehydrogenase with the corresponding NADH dehydrogenase, obtained from the enzyme complex. It is concluded that this novel methanol dehydrogenase transfers the reducing equivalents, derived from methanol, directly to its associated NADH dehydrogenase via a mechanism in which NAD+ and PQQ are involved.  相似文献   

14.
We have copurified human placental 3 beta-hydroxy-5-ene-steroid dehydrogenase and steroid 5----4-ene-isomerase, which synthesize progesterone from pregnenolone and androstenedione from fetal dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate, from microsomes as a homogeneous protein based on electrophoretic and NH2-terminal sequencing data. The affinity alkylator, 2 alpha-bromoacetoxyprogesterone, simultaneously inactivates the pregnene and androstene dehydrogenase activities as well as the C21 and C19 isomerase activities in a time-dependent, irreversible manner following first order kinetics. At four concentrations (50/1-20/1 steroid/enzyme M ratios), the alkylator inactivates the dehydrogenase activity (t1/2 = 1.5-3.7 min) 2-fold faster than the isomerase activity. Pregnenolone and dehydroepiandrosterone protect the dehydrogenase activity, while 5-pregnene-3,20-dione, progesterone, and androstenedione protect isomerase activity from inactivation. The protection studies and competitive kinetics of inhibition demonstrate that the affinity alkylator is active site-directed. Kitz and Wilson analyses show that 2 alpha-bromoacetoxyprogesterone inactivates the dehydrogenase activity by a bimolecular mechanism (k3' = 160.9 l/mol.s), while the alkylator inactivates isomerase by a unimolecular mechanism (Ki = 0.14 mM, k3 = 0.013 s-1). Pregnenolone completely protects the dehydrogenase activity but does not slow the rate of isomerase inactivation by 2 alpha-bromoacetoxyprogesterone at all. NADH completely protects both activities from inactivation by the alkylator, while NAD+ protects neither. From Dixon analysis, NADH competitively inhibits NAD+ reduction by dehydrogenase activity. Mixed cofactor studies show that isomerase binds NAD+ and NADH at a common site. Therefore, NADH must not protect either activity by simply binding at the cofactor site. We postulate that NADH binding as an allosteric activator of isomerase protects both the dehydrogenase and isomerase activities from affinity alkylation by inducing a conformational change in the enzyme protein. The human placental enzyme appears to express the pregnene and androstene dehydrogenase activities at one site and the C21 and C19 isomerase activities at a second site on the same protein.  相似文献   

15.
The heat of the reaction NAD(+)+propan-2-ol=NADH+acetone+H(+) was determined to be 42.5+/-0.6kJ/mol (10.17+/-0.15kcal/mol) from equilibrium measurements at 9-42 degrees C catalysed by yeast alcohol dehydrogenase. With the aid of thermochemical data for acetone and propan-2-ol the values of DeltaH=-29.2kJ/mol (-6.99kcal/mol) and DeltaG(0)=22.1kJ/mol (5.28kcal/mol) are derived for the reduction of NAD (NAD(+)+H(2)=NADH+H(+)). These values are consistent with analogous but less accurate data for the ethanol-acetaldehyde reaction. Thermodynamic data for the reduction of NAD and NADP are summarized.  相似文献   

16.
The conserved sequence motif "RxY(T)(S)xx(S)(N)" coordinates flavin binding in NADH:cytochrome b(5) reductase (cb(5)r) and other members of the flavin transhydrogenase superfamily of oxidoreductases. To investigate the roles of Y93, the third and only aromatic residue of the "RxY(T)(S)xx(S)(N)" motif, that stacks against the si-face of the flavin isoalloxazine ring, and P92, the second residue in the motif that is also in close proximity to the FAD moiety, a series of rat cb(5)r variants were produced with substitutions at either P92 or Y93, respectively. The proline mutants P92A, G, and S together with the tyrosine mutants Y93A, D, F, H, S, and W were recombinantly expressed in E. coli and purified to homogeneity. Each mutant protein was found to bind FAD in a 1:1 cofactor:protein stoichiometry while UV CD spectra suggested similar secondary structure organization among all nine variants. The tyrosine variants Y93A, D, F, H, and S exhibited varying degrees of blue-shift in the flavin visible absorption maxima while visible CD spectra of the Y93A, D, H, S, and W mutants exhibited similar blue-shifted maxima together with changes in absorption intensity. Intrinsic flavin fluorescence was quenched in the wild type, P92S and A, and Y93H and W mutants while Y93A, D, F, and S mutants exhibited increased fluorescence when compared to free FAD. The tyrosine variants Y93A, D, F, and S also exhibited greater thermolability of FAD binding. The specificity constant (k(cat)/K(m)(NADH)) for NADH:FR activity decreased in the order wild type > P92S > P92A > P92G > Y93F > Y93S > Y93A > Y93D > Y93H > Y93W with the Y93W variant retaining only 0.5% of wild-type efficiency. Both K(s)(H4NAD) and K(s)(NAD+) values suggested that Y93A, F, and W mutants had compromised NADH and NAD(+) binding. Thermodynamic measurements of the midpoint potential (E degrees ', n = 2) of the FAD/FADH(2) redox couple revealed that the potentials of the Y93A and S variants were approximately 30 mV more positive than that of wild-type cb(5)r (E degrees ' = -268 mV) while that of Y93H was approximately 30 mV more negative. These results indicate that neither P92 nor Y93 are critical for flavin incorporation in cb(5)r and that an aromatic side chain is not essential at position 93, but they demonstrate that Y93 forms contacts with the FAD that effectively modulate the spectroscopic, catalytic, and thermodynamic properties of the bound cofactor.  相似文献   

17.
Affinity labeling of the NAD-binding site of chicken liver xanthine dehydrogenase by 5'-p-fluorosulfonylbenzoyladenosine (5'-FSBA) caused spectral perturbation around 450 nm in the same way as NAD. Reductive titration with xanthine of native xanthine dehydrogenase in the presence of NAD showed that redox potentials of the FAD/FADH. and FADH./FADH2 couples were shifted positive by NAD binding to the enzyme. The redox potentials of these couples were also shifted to some extent by modification of the NAD-binding site with 5'-FSBA. These results provide further evidence that binding of NAD to chicken liver xanthine dehydrogenase modulates the reactivity of the enzyme by shifting the redox potential of FAD. Proteolytic cleavage of the [14C]-5'-FSBA-modified enzyme yielded several domain peptides, only one of which contained radioactivity. The isolated radioactive peptide was further digested with Staphylococcus aureus protease and the 14C-labeled peptide was purified by two steps of high performance liquid chromatography. The amino acid sequence of the peptide was determined, and a reactive tyrosine residue was identified.  相似文献   

18.
M Slatner  B Nidetzky  K D Kulbe 《Biochemistry》1999,38(32):10489-10498
To characterize catalysis by NAD-dependent long-chain mannitol 2-dehydrogenases (MDHs), the recombinant wild-type MDH from Pseudomonas fluorescens was overexpressed in Escherichia coli and purified. The enzyme is a functional monomer of 54 kDa, which does not contain Zn(2+) and has B-type stereospecificity with respect to hydride transfer from NADH. Analysis of initial velocity patterns together with product and substrate inhibition patterns and comparison of primary deuterium isotope effects on the apparent kinetic parameters, (D)k(cat), (D)(k(cat)/K(NADH)), and (D)(k(cat)/K(fructose)), show that MDH has an ordered kinetic mechanism at pH 8.2 in which NADH adds before D-fructose, and D-mannitol and NAD are released in that order. Isomerization of E-NAD to a form which interacts with D-mannitol nonproductively or dissociation of NAD from the binary complex after isomerization is the slowest step (>/=110 s(-)(1)) in D-fructose reduction at pH 8.2. Release of NADH from E-NADH (32 s(-)(1)) is the major rate-limiting step in mannitol oxidation at this pH. At the pH optimum for D-fructose reduction (pH 7.0), the rate of hydride transfer contributes significantly to rate limitation of the catalytic cascade and the overall reaction. (D)(k(cat)/K(fructose)) decreases from 2.57 at pH 7.0 to a value of 相似文献   

19.
Pig heart lactate dehydrogenase was studied in the direction of pyruvate and NADH formation by recording rapid changes in extinction, proton concentration, nucleotide fluorescence and protein fluorescence. Experiments measuring extinction changes show that there is a very rapid formation of NADH within the first millisecond and that the amplitude of this phase (phase 1) increases threefold over the pH range 6-8. A second transient rate (phase 2) can also be distinguished (whose rate is pH-dependent), followed by a steady-state rate (phase 3) of NADH production. The sum of the amplitudes of the first two phases corresponds to 1mol of NADH produced/mol of active sites of lactate dehydrogenase. Experiments that measured the liberation of protons by using Phenol Red as an indicator show that no proton release occurs during the initial very rapid formation of NADH (phase 1), but protons are released during subsequent phases of NADH production. Fluorescence experiments help to characterize these phases, and show that the very rapid phase 1 corresponds to the establishment of an equilibrium between E(NAD) (Lactate) right harpoon over left harpoon H(+)E(NADH) (Pyruvate). This equilibrium can be altered by changing lactate concentration or pH, and the H(+)E(NADH) (Pyruvate) species formed has very low nucleotide fluorescence and quenched protein fluorescence. Phase 2 corresponds to the dissociation of pyruvate and a proton from the complex with a rate constant of 1150s(-1). The observed rate constant is slower than this and is proportional to the position of the preceding equilibrium. The E(NADH) formed has high nucleotide fluorescence and quenched protein fluorescence. The reaction, which is rate-limiting during steady-state turnover, must then follow this step and be involved with dissociation of NADH from the enzyme or some conformational change immediately preceding dissociation. Several inhibitory complexes have also been studied including E(NAD+) (Oxamate) and E(NADH) (Oxamate') and the abortive ternary complex E(NADH) (Lactate). The rate of NADH dissociation from the enzyme was measured and found to be the same whether measured by ligand displacement or by relaxation experiments. These results are discussed in relation to the overall mechanism of lactate dehydrogenase turnover and the independence of the four binding sites in the active tetramer.  相似文献   

20.
The completion of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae genome project in 1996 showed that almost 60% of the potential open reading frames of the genome had no experimentally determined function. Using a conserved sequence motif present in the zinc-containing medium-chain alcohol dehydrogenases, we found several potential alcohol dehydrogenase genes with no defined function. One of these, YAL060W, was overexpressed using a multicopy inducible vector, and its protein product was purified to homogeneity. The enzyme was found to be a homodimer that, in the presence of NAD(+), but not of NADP, could catalyze the stereospecific oxidation of (2R,3R)-2, 3-butanediol (K(m) = 14 mm, k(cat) = 78,000 min(-)(1)) and meso-butanediol (K(m) = 65 mm, k(cat) = 46,000 min(-)(1)) to (3R)-acetoin and (3S)-acetoin, respectively. It was unable, however, to further oxidize these acetoins to diacetyl. In the presence of NADH, it could catalyze the stereospecific reduction of racemic acetoin ((3R/3S)- acetoin; K(m) = 4.5 mm, k(cat) = 98,000 min(-)(1)) to (2R,3R)-2,3-butanediol and meso-butanediol, respectively. The substrate stereospecificity was determined by analysis of products by gas-liquid chromatography. The YAL060W gene product can therefore be classified as an NAD-dependent (2R,3R)-2,3-butanediol dehydrogenase (BDH). S. cerevisiae could grow on 2,3-butanediol as the sole carbon and energy source. Under these conditions, a 3. 5-fold increase in (2R,3R)-2,3-butanediol dehydrogenase activity was observed in the total cell extracts. The isoelectric focusing pattern of the induced enzyme coincided with that of the pure BDH (pI 6.9). The disruption of the YAL060W gene was not lethal for the yeast under laboratory conditions. The disrupted strain could also grow on 2,3-butanediol, although attaining a lesser cell density than the wild-type strain. Taking into consideration the substrate specificity of the YAL060W gene product, we propose the name of BDH for this gene. The corresponding enzyme is the first eukaryotic (2R, 3R)-2,3-butanediol dehydrogenase characterized of the medium-chain dehydrogenase/reductase family.  相似文献   

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