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1.
Bray RC  Adams B  Smith AT  Richards RL  Lowe DJ  Bailey S 《Biochemistry》2001,40(33):9810-9820
The bis-molybdopterin enzyme dimethylsulfoxide reductase (DMSOR) from Rhodobacter capsulatus catalyzes the conversion of dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) to dimethyl sulfide (DMS), reversibly, in the presence of suitable e(-)-donors or e(-)-acceptors. The catalytically significant intermediate formed by reaction of DMSOR with DMS ('the DMS species') and a damaged enzyme form derived by reaction of the latter with O(2) (DMS-modified enzyme, DMSOR(mod)D) have been investigated. Evidence is presented that Mo in the DMS species is not, as widely assumed, Mo(IV). Formation of the DMS species is reversed on removing DMS or by addition of an excess of DMSO. Equilibrium constants for the competing reactions of DMS and DMSO with the oxidized enzyme (K(d) = 0.07 +/- 0.01 and 21 +/- 5 mM, respectively) that control these processes indicate formation of the DMS species occurs at a redox potential that is 80 mV higher than that required, according to the literature, for reduction of Mo(VI) to Mo(IV) in the free enzyme. Specificity studies show that with dimethyl selenide, DMSOR yields a species analogous to the DMS species but with the 550 nm peak blue-shifted by 27 nm. It is concluded from published redox potential data that this band is due to metal-to-ligand charge transfer from Mo(V) to the chalcogenide. Since the DMS species gives no EPR signal in the normal or parallel mode, a free radical is presumed to be in close proximity to the metal, most likely on the S. The species is thus formulated as Mo(V)-O-S(*)Me(2). Existing X-ray crystallographic and Raman data are consistent with this structure. Furthermore, 1e(-) oxidation of the DMS species with phenazine ethosulfate yields a Mo(V) form without an -OH ligand, since its EPR signal shows no proton splittings. This form presumably arises via dissociation of DMSO. The structure of DMSOR(mod)D has been determined by X-ray crystallography. All four thiolate ligands and Ogamma of serine-147 remain coordinated to Mo, but there are no terminal oxygen ligands and Mo is Mo(VI). Thus, it is a dead-end species, neither oxo group acceptance nor e(-)-donation being possible. O(2)-dependent formation of DMSOR(mod)D represents noncatalytic breakdown of the DMS species by a pathway alternative to that in turnover, with oxidation to Mo(VI) presumably preceding product release. Steps in the forward and backward catalytic cycles are discussed in relation to earlier stopped-flow data. The finding that in the back-assay the Mo(IV) state may at least in part be by-passed via two successive 1e(-) reactions of the DMS species with the e(-)-acceptor, may have implications in relation to the existence of separate molybdopterin enzymes catalyzing DMSO reduction and DMS oxidation, respectively.  相似文献   

2.
B Adams  A T Smith  S Bailey  A G McEwan  R C Bray 《Biochemistry》1999,38(26):8501-8511
Improved assays for the molybdenum enzyme dimethylsulfoxide reductase (DMSOR) with dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) and with dimethyl sulfide (DMS) as substrates are described. Maximum activity was observed at pH 6.5 and below and at 8.3, respectively. Rapid-scan stopped-flow spectrophotometry has been used to investigate the reduction of the enzyme by DMS to a species previously characterized by its UV-visible spectrum [McAlpine, A. S., McEwan, A. G., and Bailey, S. (1998) J. Mol. Biol. 275, 613-623], and its subsequent reoxidation by DMSO. Both these two-electron reactions were faster than enzyme turnover under steady-state conditions, indicating that one-electron reactions with artificial dyes were rate-limiting. Second-order rate constants for the two-electron reduction and reoxidation reactions at pH 5.5 were (1.9 +/- 0.1) x 10(5) and (4.3 +/- 0.3) x 10(2) M-1 s-1, respectively, while at pH 8.0, the catalytic step was rate-limiting (62 s-1). Kinetically, for the two-electron reactions, the enzyme is more effective in DMS oxidation than in DMSO reduction. Reduction of DMSOR by DMS was incomplete below approximately 1 mM DMS but complete at higher concentrations, implying that the enzyme's redox potential is slightly higher than that of the DMS-DMSO couple. In contrast, reoxidation of the DMS-reduced state by DMSO was always incomplete, regardless of the DMSO concentration. Evidence for the existence of a spectroscopically indistinguishable reduced state, which could not be reoxidized by DMSO, was obtained. Brief reaction (less than approximately 15 min) of DMS with DMSOR was fully reversible on removal of the DMS. However, in the presence of excess DMS, a further slow reaction occurred aerobically, but not anaerobically, to yield a stable enzyme form having a lambdamax at 660 mn. This state (DMSORmod) retained full activity in steady-state assays with DMSO, but was inactive toward DMS. It could however be reconverted to the original resting state by reduction with methyl viologen radical and reoxidation with DMSO. We suggest that in this enzyme form two of the dithiolene ligands of the molybdenum have dissociated and formed a disulfide. The implications of this new species are discussed in relation both to conflicting published information for DMSOR from X-ray crystallography and to previous spectroscopic data for its reduced forms.  相似文献   

3.
Resonance Raman spectra were investigated for the sulfo and desulfo forms of cow's milk xanthine oxidase, with various visible excitation lines between 400 and 650 nm, and Mo(VI)-ligand vibrations were observed for the first time. The Mo(VI)=S stretch was identified at 474 and 462 cm(-1 )for the (32)S- and (34)S-sulfo forms, respectively, but was absent in the reduced state and in the desulfo form. The Mo(VI)=O stretch was weakly observed at 899 cm(-1 )for the sulfo form and shifted to 892 cm(-1) with very weak intensity for the dioxo desulfo form. In measurements of an excitation profile, the two bands at 474 and 899 cm(-1) showed maximum intensity at similar excitation wavelengths, suggesting that the Raman intensity of the metal-ligand modes is due to the Mo(VI)<--S charge transfer transition, and that this is the origin of the intrinsically weak features of the Mo(VI)-ligand Raman bands. When the sulfo form was regenerated from the desulfo form, the 899 cm(-1) band reappeared. However, the band at 899 cm(-1) showed no frequency shift when regeneration was conducted in H(2)(18)O, or after several turnovers in the presence of xanthine in H(2)(18)O. When the sulfo form was reduced and reoxidized in H(2)(18)O buffer, the 899 cm(-1) band reappeared without any frequency shift. These observations suggest that the oxo oxygen in the Mo center of xanthine oxidase is not labile. Low-frequency vibrations of the Mo center were observed together with those of the Fe(2)S(2) center with some overlaps, while FAD modes were observed clearly. The absence of dithiolene modes in XO is in contrast to the Mo(VI) centers of DMSO reductase and sulfite oxidase.  相似文献   

4.
The dimethylsulfoxide reductase (DMSOR) from Rhodobacter capsulatus is known to retain its three-dimensional structure and enzymatic activity upon substitution of molybdenum, the metal that occurs naturally at the active site, by tungsten. The redox properties of tungsten-substituted DMSOR (W-DMSOR) have been investigated by a dye-mediated reductive titration with the concentration of the W(V) state monitored by EPR spectroscopy. At pH 7.0, E(m)(W(VI)/W(V)) is -194 mV and E(m)(W(V)/W(IV)) is -134 mV. Each E(m) value of W-DMSOR is significantly lower (220 and 334 mV, respectively) than that of the corresponding couple of Mo-DMSOR. These redox potentials are consistent with the ability of Mo-DMSOR to catalyze both the reduction of DMSO to DMS and the back reaction, whereas W-DMSOR is very effective in catalyzing the forward reaction, but shows no ability to catalyze the oxidation of DMS to DMSO.  相似文献   

5.
Bray RC  Adams B  Smith AT  Bennett B  Bailey S 《Biochemistry》2000,39(37):11258-11269
Much is unknown concerning the role of thiolate ligands of molybdenum in molybdopterin enzymes. It has been suggested that thiolate dissociation from molybdenum is part of the catalytic mechanism of bis-molybdopterin enzymes of the dimethyl sulfoxide reductase (DMSOR) family. For DMSOR from Rhodobacter capsulatus, thiolate dissociation has therefore been investigated crystallographically, by UV/visible spectroscopy, and by enzyme assays. When crystallized from sodium citrate, all four thiolates of DMSOR are within bonding distance of Mo, but after extended exposure to Na(+)-Hepes, a pair of thiolates dissociates, a mixture of structures being indicated after shorter exposures to this buffer. DMSOR is stable in sodium citrate and other buffers but unstable aerobically although not anaerobically in Na(+)-Hepes. Aerobically in Na(+)-Hepes, a first-order reaction (k = 0.032 hr(-)(1) at 37 degrees C) leads to loss of activity in the backward but not the forward (dimethyl sulfoxide reduction) assay and loss of absorption at lambda > approximately 450 nm. This reaction can be reversed by a cycle of reduction and reoxidation ("redox-cycling"). Slower irreversible loss of activity in the forward assay and cofactor dissociation follow. Spectral analogy with a mono-molybdopterin enzyme supports the conclusion that in the Hepes-modified DMSOR form, only two cofactor dithiolene sulfur atoms are coordinated to molybdenum. Loss of activity provides the first clear evidence that sulfur ligand dissociation is an artifact, not part of the catalytic cycle. Clearly, structural data on DMSOR samples extensively exposed to Hepes is not directly relevant to the native enzyme. The nature of the oxygen ligands detected crystallographically is discussed, as is the specificity of Hepes and the mechanism whereby its effects are achieved. DMSOR forms complexes with Na(+)-Hepes and other buffer ions. For DMSOR crystallized from Hepes, electron density in the substrate binding channel suggests that buffers bind in this site. Like the as-prepared enzyme, the modified form (DMSOR(mod)D), known to arise on extended aerobic exposure to dimethyl sulfide, is susceptible to a further degradative reaction, although this is not buffer-dependent. It involves loss of absorption at lambda > approximately 450 nm and, presumably, dissociation of thiolate ligands. Evidence is presented that, as a result of O(2) damage, DMSOR samples not submitted to redox-cycling may be contaminated with DMSOR(mod)D and with material absorbing in the region of 400 nm, analogous to the Hepes-modified enzyme. Since the latter lacks absorption at lambda > approximately 450 nm, its presence may escape detection.  相似文献   

6.
Resonance Raman spectroscopy has been used to define active site structures for oxidized Mo(VI) and reduced Mo(IV) forms of recombinant Rhodobacter sphaeroides biotin sulfoxide reductase expressed in Escherichia coli. On the basis of (18)O/(16)O labeling studies involving water and the alternative substrate dimethyl sulfoxide and the close correspondence to the resonance Raman spectra previously reported for dimethyl sulfoxide reductase (Garton, S. D., Hilton, J., Oku, H., Crouse, B. R., Rajagopalan, K. V., and Johnson, M. K. (1997) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 119, 12906-12916), vibrational modes associated with a terminal oxo ligand and the two molybdopterin dithiolene ligands have been assigned. The results indicate that the enzyme cycles between mono-oxo-Mo(VI) and des-oxo-Mo(IV) forms with both molybdopterin dithiolene ligands remaining coordinated in both redox states. Direct evidence for an oxygen atom transfer mechanism is provided by (18)O/(16)O labeling studies, which show that the terminal oxo group at the molybdenum center is exchangeable with water during redox cycling and originates from the substrate in substrate-oxidized samples. Biotin sulfoxide reductase is not reduced by biotin or the nonphysiological products, dimethyl sulfide and trimethylamine. However, product-induced changes in the Mo=O stretching frequency provide direct evidence for a product-associated mono-oxo-Mo(VI) catalytic intermediate. The results indicate that biotin sulfoxide reductase is thermodynamically tuned to catalyze the reductase reaction, and a detailed catalytic mechanism is proposed.  相似文献   

7.
Dimethylsulfide (DMS) dehydrogenase is a complex heterotrimeric enzyme that catalyzes the oxidation of DMS to DMSO and allows Rhodovulum sulfidophilum to grow under photolithotrophic conditions with DMS as the electron donor. The enzyme is a 164 kDa heterotrimer composed of an alpha-subunit that binds a bis(molybdopterin guanine dinucleotide)Mo cofactor, a polyferredoxin beta-subunit, and a gamma-subunit that contains a b-type heme. In this study, we describe the thermodynamic characterization of the redox centers within DMS dehydrogenase using EPR- and UV-visible-monitored potentiometry. Our results are compared with those of other bacterial Mo enzymes such as NarGHI nitrate reductase, selenate reductase, and ethylbenzene dehydrogenase. A remarkable similarity in the redox potentials of all Fe-S clusters is apparent.  相似文献   

8.
Rhodobacter sphaeroides f. sp. denitrificans biotin sulfoxide reductase (BSOR) catalyzes the reduction of d-biotin d-sulfoxide to biotin and contains the molybdopterin guanine dinucleotide (MGD) cofactor as its sole prosthetic group. Comparison of the primary sequences of BSOR and the closely related enzyme dimethyl sulfoxide reductase (DMSOR) indicated a number of conserved residues, including an active-site tryptophan residue (W90), which has been suggested to be involved in hydrogen bonding to the oxo group on the Mo(VI) center in BSOR. Site-directed mutagenesis has been used to replace tryptophan 90 in BSOR with phenylalanine, tyrosine, and alanine residues to examine the role of this residue in catalysis. All three BSOR mutant proteins were purified to homogeneity and contained MGD. The mutant proteins retained very limited activity toward the oxidizing substrates tested, with W90F retaining the most activity (3.4% of wild type). All three W90 mutant proteins exhibited greatly reduced k(cat) values compared to that of the wild-type enzyme, which was accompanied by little change in K(mapp). In addition, the mutant proteins had perturbed visible absorption and circular dichroism spectra suggesting different oxidation states of the Mo center. Purified samples of wild-type BSOR did not exhibit electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) signals indicating a Mo(VI) center. After redox-cycling, partially reduced samples of wild-type BSOR revealed a proton-split S=1/2 Mo(V) resonance (g(1,2,3)=1.999, 1.981, 1.967; A(1,2,3)=1.40, 1.00, 1.05 mT) analogous to that observed in DMSOR. In contrast, EPR studies of the purified W90 mutant proteins revealed distinct S=1/2 Mo(V) resonances that were resistant to both oxidation and reduction, indicating that the Mo was trapped in the intermediate Mo(V) oxidation state. These results strongly suggest that W90 in BSOR plays a critical role in catalysis by serving as a hydrogen bond donor to the oxo group on the Mo(VI) center.  相似文献   

9.
 Recent studies of human sulfite oxidase and Rhodobacter sphaeroides DMSO reductase have demonstrated the ability of resonance Raman to probe in detail the coordination environment of the Mo active sites in oxotransferases via Mo=O, Mo-S(dithiolene), Mo-S(Cys) or Mo-O(Ser), dithiolene chelate ring and bound substrate vibrations. Furthermore, the ability to monitor the catalytically exchangeable oxo group via isotopic labeling affords direct mechanistic information and structures for the catalytically competent Mo(IV) and Mo(VI) species. The results clearly demonstrate that sulfite oxidase cycles between cis–di-oxo-Mo(VI) and mono-oxo-Mo(IV) states during catalytic turnover, whereas DMSO reductase cycles between mono-oxo-Mo(VI) and des-oxo-Mo(IV) states. In the case of DMSO reductase, 18O-labeling experiments have provided the first direct evidence for an oxygen atom transfer mechanism involving an Mo=O species. Of particular importance is that the active-site structures and detailed mechanism of DMSO reductase in solution, as determined by resonance Raman spectroscopy, are quite different to those reported or deduced in the three X-ray crystallographic studies of DMSO reductases from Rhodobacter species. Received: 16 June 1997 / Accepted: 20 August 1997  相似文献   

10.
DMSO reductase (DMSOR) from Rhodobacter capsulatus, well-characterised as a molybdoenzyme, will bind tungsten. Protein crystallography has shown that tungsten in W-DMSOR is ligated by the dithiolene group of the two pyranopterins, the oxygen atom of Ser147 plus another oxygen atom, and is located in a very similar site to that of molybdenum in Mo-DMSOR. These conclusions are consistent with W L(III)-edge X-ray absorption, EPR and UV/visible spectroscopic data. W-DMSOR is significantly more active than Mo-DMSOR in catalysing the reduction of DMSO but, in contrast to the latter, shows no significant ability to catalyse the oxidation of DMS.  相似文献   

11.
The 1.82-Å X-ray crystal structure of the oxidised (Mo(VI)) form of the enzyme dimethylsulfoxide reductase (DMSOR) isolated from Rhodobacter capsulatus is presented. The structure has been determined by building a partial model into a multiple isomorphous replacement map and fitting the crystal structure of DMSOR from Rhodobacter sphaeroides to the partial model. The enzyme structure has been refined, at 1.82-Å resolution, to an R factor of 14.8% (R free?=?18.4%). The molybdenum is coordinated by seven ligands: four dithiolene sulfurs, Oγ of Ser147 and two oxo groups. The four sulfur ligands, at a metal-sulfur distance of 2.4?Å or 2.5?Å, are contributed by the two molybdopterin guanine dinucleotide (MGD) cofactors. The coordination sphere of the molybdenum is different from that in previously reported structures of DMSOR from R. sphaeroides and R. capsulatus. The 2.8-Å structure of DMSOR, reduced by addition of sodium dithionite, is also described and differs from the structure of the oxidised enzyme by the removal of a single oxo ligand from the molybdenum coordination sphere. A structure, at 2.5-Å resolution, has also been obtained from crystals soaked in mother liquor buffered at pH?7.0. No differences are observed in the structure at pH?7 when compared with the native crystal structure at pH?5.5.  相似文献   

12.
The molybdenum cofactor (Moco)-containing enzymes are divided into three classes that are named after prototypical members of each family, viz. sulfite oxidase, DMSO reductase and xanthine oxidase. Functional or structural models have been prepared for these three prototypical enzymes: (i) The complex [MoO2(mnt)2]2- (mnt2- = 1,2-dicyanoethylenedithiolate) has been found to be able to oxidize hydrogen sulfite to HSO4- and is thus a functional model of sulfite oxidase. Kinetic and computational studies indicate that the reaction proceeds via attack of the substrate at one of the oxo ligands of the complex, rather than at the metal. (ii) The coordination geometries of the mono-oxo [Mo(VI)(O-Ser)(S2)2] entity (S2 = dithiolene moiety of molybdopterin) found in the crystal structure of R. sphaeroides DMSO reductase and the corresponding des-oxo Mo(IV) unit have been reproduced in the complexes [M(VI)O(OSiR3)(bdt)2] and [M(VI)O(OSiR3)(bdt)2] (M = Mo,W; bdt = benzene dithiolate). (iii) A facile route has been developed for the preparation of complexes containing a cis-Mo(VI)OS molybdenum oxo, sulfido moiety similar to that detected in the oxidized form of xanthine oxidase.  相似文献   

13.
Mo K-edge X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) has been used to probe the environment of Mo in dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) reductase from Rhodobacter capsulatus in concert with protein crystallographic studies. The oxidised (MoVI) protein has been investigated in solution at 77?K; the Mo K-edge position (20006.4?eV) is consistent with the presence of MoVI and, in agreement with the protein crystallographic results, the extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) is also consistent with a seven-coordinate site. The site is composed of one oxo-group (Mo=O 1.71?Å), four S atoms (considered to arise from the dithiolene groups of the two molybdopterins, two at 2.32?Å and two at 2.47?Å, and two O atoms, one at 1.92?Å (considered to be H-bonded to Trp 116) and one at 2.27?Å (considered to arise from Ser 147). The Mo K-edge XAS recorded for single crystals of oxidised (MoVI) DMSO reductase at 77?K showed a close correspondence to the data for the frozen solution but had an inferior signal:noise ratio. The dithionite-reduced form of the enzyme and a unique form of the enzyme produced by the addition of dimethylsulfide (DMS) to the oxidised (MoVI) enzyme have essentially identical energies for the Mo K-edge, at 20004.4?eV and 20004.5?eV, respectively; these values, together with the lack of a significant presence of MoV in the samples as monitored by EPR spectroscopy, are taken to indicate the presence of MoIV. For the dithionite-reduced sample, the Mo K-edge EXAFS indicates a coordination environment for Mo of two O atoms, one at 2.05?Å and one at 2.51?Å, and four S atoms at 2.36?Å. The coordination environment of the Mo in the DMS-reduced form of the enzyme involves three O atoms, one at 1.69?Å, one at 1.91?Å and one at 2.11?Å, plus four S atoms, two at 2.28?Å and two at 2.37?Å. The EXAFS and the protein crystallographic results for the DMS-reduced form of the enzyme are consistent with the formation of the substrate, DMSO, bound to MoIV with an Mo-O bond of length 1.92?Å.  相似文献   

14.
Conditions for heterologous expression of Rhodobacter sphaeroides biotin sulfoxide reductase in Escherichia coli were modified, resulting in a significant improvement in the yield of recombinant enzyme and enabling structural studies of the molybdenum center. Quantitation of the guanine and the molybdenum as compared to that found in R. sphaeroides DMSO reductase demonstrated the presence of the bis(MGD)molybdenum cofactor. UV-visible absorption spectra were obtained for the oxidized, NADPH-reduced, and dithionite-reduced enzyme. EPR spectra were obtained for the Mo(V) state of the enzyme. X-ray absorption spectroscopy at the molybdenum K-edge has been used to probe the molybdenum coordination of the enzyme. The molybdenum site of the oxidized protein possesses a Mo(VI) mono-oxo site (Mo=O at 1.70 A) with additional coordination by approximately four thiolate ligands at 2.41 A and probably one oxygen or nitrogen at 1.95 A. The NADPH- and dithionite-reduced Mo(IV) forms of the enzyme are des-oxo molybdenum sites with approximately four thiolates at 2.33 A and two different Mo-O/N ligands at 2.19 and 1.94 A.  相似文献   

15.
The nucleotide sequence of a 6.5 kilobasepair chromosomal DNA fragment encoding the anaerobic dimethylsulphoxide (DMSO) reductase operon of Escherichia coli has been determined. The DMSO reductase structural operon was shown to consist of three open reading frames, namely dmsABC, encoding polypeptides with predicted molecular weights of 87,350, 23,070, and 30,789 Daltons, respectively. The DMS A polypeptide displayed a high degree of amino acid sequence homology with the single-subunit enzyme, biotin sulphoxide reductase (bisC) and with formate dehydrogenase (fdhF), suggesting that the active site and molybdopterin cofactor binding site that is common to these enzymes is located in the DMS A subunit. A comparison of the predicted N-terminal amino acids of the dmsA gene product to those of the 82,600 subunit of purified DMSO reductase indicated that post-translational processing of a 16 amino acid peptide at the amino terminus of DMS A had occurred. The DMS B polypeptide contains 16 cysteine residues organized in four clusters, two of which are typical of 4Fe-4S binding domains. The DMS C polypeptide is composed of eight segments of hydrophobic amino acids of appropriate length to cross the cytoplasmic membrane, suggesting that this subunit functions to anchor the enzyme to the membrane.  相似文献   

16.
In dimethylsulfoxide reductase of Rhodobacter capsulatus tryptophan-116 forms a hydrogen bond with a single oxo ligand bound to the molybdenum ion. Mutation of this residue to phenylalanine affected the UV/visible spectrum of the purified Mo(VI) form of dimethylsulfoxide reductase resulting in the loss of the characteristic transition at 720 nm. Results of steady-state kinetic analysis and electrochemical studies suggest that tryptophan 116 plays a critical role in stabilizing the hexacoordinate monooxo Mo(VI) form of the enzyme and prevents the formation of a dioxo pentacoordinate Mo(VI) species, generated as a consequence of the dissociation of one of the dithiolene ligands of the molybdopterin cofactor from the Mo ion.  相似文献   

17.
Dimethyl sulfide dehydrogenase from the purple phototrophic bacterium Rhodovulum sulfidophilum catalyzes the oxidation of dimethyl sulfide to dimethyl sulfoxide. Recent DNA sequence analysis of the ddh operon, encoding dimethyl sulfide dehydrogenase (ddhABC), and biochemical analysis (1) have revealed that it is a member of the DMSO reductase family of molybdenum enzymes and is closely related to respiratory nitrate reductase (NarGHI). Variable temperature X-band EPR spectra (120-122 K) of purified heterotrimeric dimethyl sulfide dehydrogenase showed resonances arising from multiple redox centers, Mo(V), [3Fe-4S](+), [4Fe-4S](+), and a b-type heme. A pH-dependent EPR study of the Mo(V) center in (1)H(2)O and (2)H(2)O revealed the presence of three Mo(V) species in equilibrium, Mo(V)-OH(2), Mo(V)-anion, and Mo(V)-OH. Above pH 8.2 the dominant species was Mo(V)-OH. The maximum specific activity occurred at pH 9.27. Comparison of the rhombicity and anisotropy parameters for the Mo(V) species in DMS dehydrogenase with other molybdenum enzymes of the DMSO reductase family showed that it was most similar to the low-pH nitrite spectrum of Escherichia coli nitrate reductase (NarGHI), consistent with previous sequence analysis of DdhA and NarG. A sequence comparison of DdhB and NarH has predicted the presence of four [Fe-S] clusters in DdhB. A [3Fe-4S](+) cluster was identified in dimethyl sulfide dehydrogenase whose properties resembled those of center 2 of NarH. A [4Fe-4S](+) cluster was also identified with unusual spin Hamiltonian parameters, suggesting that one of the iron atoms may have a fifth non-sulfur ligand. The g matrix for this cluster is very similar to that found for the minor conformation of center 1 in NarH [Guigliarelli, B., Asso, M., More, C., Augher, V., Blasco, F., Pommier, J., Giodano, G., and Bertrand, P. (1992) Eur. J. Biochem. 307, 63-68]. Analysis of a ddhC mutant showed that this gene encodes the b-type cytochrome in dimethyl sulfide dehydrogenase. Magnetic circular dichroism studies revealed that the axial ligands to the iron in this cytochrome are a histidine and methionine, consistent with predictions from protein sequence analysis. Redox potentiometry showed that the b-type cytochrome has a high midpoint redox potential (E degrees = +315 mV, pH 8).  相似文献   

18.
Periplasmic nitrate reductase catalyzes the reduction of nitrate into nitrite using a mononuclear molybdenum cofactor that has nearly the same structure in all enzymes of the DMSO reductase family. In previous electrochemical investigations, we found that the enzyme exists in several inactive states, some of which may have been previously isolated and mistaken for catalytic intermediates. In particular, the enzyme slowly and reversibly inactivates when exposed to high concentrations of nitrate. Here, we study the kinetics of substrate inhibition and its dependence on electrode potential and substrate concentration to learn about the properties of the active and inactive forms of the enzyme. We conclude that the substrate-inhibited enzyme never significantly accumulates in the EPR-active Mo(+ V) state. This conclusion is relevant to spectroscopic investigations where attempts are made to trap a Mo(+ V) catalytic intermediate using high concentrations of nitrate.  相似文献   

19.
The mechanisms of folding of a periplasmic protein was studiedin vitro using dimethyl sulfoxide reductase (DMSOR), a periplasmicenzyme of Rhodobacter sphaeroides f. sp. denitrificans. WhenDMSOR was denatured by acidification to pH 2 at 30°C, themolybdenum cofactor was immediately released and unfolded formsof DMSOR appeared within 2 min. When the acid-unfolded DMSORhas been incubated in refolding buffer (pH 8.0) at 20°Cfor 2 h, it became almost undetectable after electrophoresison a non-denaturing gel. This result suggests that the acid-unfoldedDMSOR might have aggregated after incubation. The aggregationwas suppressed by incubation in the presence of commercial GroEL,a molecular chaperone. When reduced dithiothreitol (DTT) wasadded to the acid-unfolded forms in the presence of GroEL, someof the DMSOR was converted to the native form, which had thesame mobility on a non-denaturing gel as the active emzyme.Non-reducing SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the acid-unfoldedforms of DMSOR indicated that the unfolded forms were a mixtureof heterogeneously folded or misfolded forms and that theirforms were converted by DTT to the fully reduced form. The periplasmicfraction of the phototroph was also able to suppress the aggregationof the acid-unfolded DMSOR, and a protein(s) with a molecularmass of about 40 kDa in the periplasm was revealed to have stabilizingactivity. It appears that there exists a mechanism whereby theunfolded DMSOR that is secreted into the periplasm is maintainedin a non-aggregated and reduced form during folding to the nativeform. (Received November 4, 1995; Accepted February 8, 1996)  相似文献   

20.
Previous e.p.r. work [George, Bray, Morpeth & Boxer (1985) Biochem. J. 227, 925-931] has provided evidence for a pH- and anion-dependent transition in the structure of the Mo(V) centre of Escherichia coli nitrate reductase, with the low-pH form bearing both an anion and probably a hydroxy-group ligand. Initial e.x.a.f.s. measurements [Cramer, Solomonson, Adams & Mortenson (1984) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 106, 1467-1471] demonstrated the presence of sulphur (or chloride) ligands in the Mo(IV) and Mo(VI) oxidation states, as well as a variable number of terminal oxo (Mo = O) groups. To synthesize the e.p.r. and e.x.a.f.s. results better, we have conducted new e.p.r. experiments and complementary e.x.a.f.s. measurements under redox and buffer conditions designed to give homogeneous molybdenum species. In contrast with results on other molybdoenzymes, attempts to substitute the enzyme with 17O by dissolving in isotopically enriched water revealed only very weak hyperfine coupling to 17O. The significance of this finding is discussed. Experiments with different buffers indicated that buffer ions (e.g. Hepes) could replace the Cl- ligand in the low-pH Mo(V) enzyme form, with only a small change in e.p.r. parameters. E.x.a.f.s. studies of the oxidized and the fully reduced enzyme were consistent with the e.p.r. work in indicating a pH- and anion-dependent change in structure. However, in certain cases non-stoichiometric numbers of Mo = O interactions were determined, complicating the interpretation of the e.x.a.f.s. Uniquely for a molybdenum cofactor enzyme, a substantial proportion of the molecules in a number of enzyme samples appeared to contain no oxo groups. No evidence was found in our samples for the distant 'heavy' ligand atom reported in the previous e.x.a.f.s. study. The nature of the high-pH-low-pH transition is briefly discussed.  相似文献   

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