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1.
Rieske dioxygenases catalyze the reductive activation of O2 for the formation of cis-dihydrodiols from unactivated aromatic compounds. It is known that O2 is activated at a mononuclear non-heme iron site utilizing electrons supplied by a nearby Rieske iron sulfur cluster. However, it is controversial whether the reactive species is an Fe(III)-(hydro)peroxo or an Fe(II)-(hydro)peroxo (or electronically equivalent species formed by breaking the O-O bond). Here it is shown that benzoate 1,2 dioxygenase oxygenase component (BZDO) prepared in a form with the Rieske cluster oxidized and the mononuclear iron in the Fe(III) state can utilize H2O2 as a source of reduced oxygen to form the correct cis-dihydrodiol product from benzoate. The reaction approaches stoichiometric yield relative to the mononuclear Fe(III) concentration, being limited to a single turnover by inefficient product release from the Fe(III)-product complex. EPR and M?ssbauer studies show that the iron remains ferric throughout this single turnover "peroxide shunt" reaction. These results strongly support Fe(III)-(hydro)peroxo (or Fe(V)-oxo-hydroxo) as the reactive species because there is no source of additional reducing equivalents to form the Fe(II)-(hydro)peroxo state. This conclusion could be further tested in the case of BZDO because the peroxide shunt occurs very slowly compared with normal turnover, allowing the reactive intermediate to be trapped for spectroscopic analysis. We attribute the slow reaction rate to a forced change in the normally strict order of the substrate binding and enzyme reduction steps that regulate the catalytic cycle. The reactive intermediate is a high-spin ferric species exhibiting an unusual negative zero field splitting and other EPR and M?ssbauer spectroscopic properties reminiscent of previously characterized side-on-bound peroxide adducts of Fe(III) model complexes. If the species in BZDO is a similar adduct, its isomer shift is most consistent with an Fe(III)-hydroperoxo reactive state.  相似文献   

2.
Naphthalene 1,2-dioxygenase (NDOS) is a three-component enzyme that catalyzes cis-(1R,2S)-dihydroxy-1,2-dihydronaphthalene formation from naphthalene, O2, and NADH. We have determined the conditions for a single turnover of NDOS for the first time and studied the regulation of catalysis. As isolated, the alpha3beta3 oxygenase component (NDO) has up to three catalytic pairs of metal centers (one mononuclear Fe2+ and one diferric Rieske iron-sulfur cluster). This form of NDO is unreactive with O2. However, upon reduction of the Rieske cluster and exposure to naphthalene and O2, approximately 0.85 cis-diol product per occupied mononuclear iron site rapidly forms. Substrate binding is required for oxygen reactivity. Stopped-flow and chemical quench analyses indicate that the rate constant of the single turnover product-forming reaction significantly exceeds the NDOS turnover number. UV-visible and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopies show that during catalysis, one mononuclear iron and one Rieske cluster are oxidized per product formed, satisfying the two-electron reaction stoichiometry. The addition of oxidized or reduced NDOS ferredoxin component (NDF) increases both the product yield and rate of oxidation of formerly unreactive Rieske clusters. The results show that NDO alone catalyzes dioxygenase chemistry, whereas NDF appears to serve only an electron transport role, in this case redistributing electrons to competent active sites.  相似文献   

3.
Tarasev M  Ballou DP 《Biochemistry》2005,44(16):6197-6207
The phthalate dioxygenase system, a Rieske non-heme iron dioxygenase, catalyzes the dihydroxylation of phthalate to form the 4,5-dihydro-cis-dihydrodiol of phthalate (DHD). It has two components: phthalate dioxygenase (PDO), a multimer with one Rieske-type [2Fe-2S] and one mononuclear Fe(II) center per monomer, and a reductase (PDR) that contains flavin mononucleotide (FMN) and a plant-type ferredoxin [2Fe-2S] center. This work shows that product formation in steady-state reactions is tightly coupled to electron delivery, with 1 dihydrodiol (DHD) of phthalate formed for every 2 electrons delivered from NADH. However, in reactions of reduced PDO with O(2), only about 0.5 DHD is formed per Rieske center that becomes oxidized. Although the product forms rapidly, its release from PDO is slow in these reactions with oxygen that do not include reductase and NADH. EPR data show that, at the completion of the oxidation, iron in the mononuclear center remains in the ferrous state. In contrast, naphthalene dioxygenase (NDO) [Wolfe, M. D., Parales, J. V., Gibson, D. T., and Lipscomb, J. D. (2001) J. Biol. Chem. 276, 1945-1953] and benzoate dioxygenase (BZDO) [Wolfe, M. D., Altier, D. J., Stubna, A., Popescu, C. V., Munck, E., and Lipscomb, J. D. (2002) Biochemistry, 41, 9611-9626], related Rieske non-heme iron dioxygenases, form 1 DHD per Rieske center oxidized, and the mononuclear center iron ends up ferric. Thus, both electrons from reduced NDO and BZDO monomers are used to form the product, whereas only the reduced Rieske centers in PDO become oxidized during production of DHD. This emphasizes the importance of PDO subunit interaction in catalysis. Electron redistribution was practically unaffected by the presence of oxidized PDR. A scheme is presented that emphasizes some of the differences in the mechanisms involved in substrate hydroxylation employed by PDO and either NDO or BZDO.  相似文献   

4.
Naphthalene 1,2-dioxygenase (NDOS) catalyzes the NAD(P)H and O(2)-dependent oxidation of naphthalene to (+)-cis-(1R,2S)-dihydroxy-1,2-dihydronaphthalene. NDOS consists of three protein components: a flavo-[2Fe-2S] reductase (NDR), a ferredoxin electron transfer protein (NDF), and an (alphabeta)(3) oxygenase (NDO) containing a mononuclear iron site and a Rieske-type [2Fe-2S] cluster in each alpha-subunit. The active site is built across a subunit-subunit boundary, and each subunit contributes one type of metal center. Our previous studies have shown that NDO with both metal centers reduced is capable of an O(2)-coupled single turnover to yield the correct cis-diol product in the absence of the NDR and NDF components (Wolfe, M. D., Parales, J. V., Gibson, D. T., and Lipscomb, J. D. (2001) J. Biol. Chem. 276, 1945-1953). It is shown here that addition of H(2)O(2) to NDO allows reaction with naphthalene to rapidly yield the correct product in a "peroxide shunt" reaction that does not require a reduced Rieske cluster. The mononuclear Fe(2+) center is oxidized during turnover, while the Rieske cluster remains in the oxidized state. Peroxide shunt turnover in the presence of (18)O-labeled H(2)O(2), H(2)O, or O(2) shows that both oxygen atoms in the product derive primarily from H(2)O(2). The peroxide shunt halts after one turnover despite the presence of excess H(2)O(2) and naphthalene, but this is not the result of enzyme inactivation. Rather, it appears that the product cannot be released when the mononuclear iron is in the Fe(3+) state, blocking a second turnover. This work supports the hypotheses that the cis-dihydroxylation activity of NDOS requires only the NDO component, that a peroxo intermediate is formed during normal catalysis, and that product release requires an additional reducing equivalent beyond those necessary for the first turnover.  相似文献   

5.
The nucleotide sequences of the Acinetobacter calcoaceticus benABC genes encoding a multicomponent oxygenase for the conversion of benzoate to a nonaromatic cis-diol were determined. The enzyme, benzoate 1,2-dioxygenase, is composed of a hydroxylase component, encoded by benAB, and an electron transfer component, encoded by benC. Comparison of the deduced amino acid sequences of BenABC with related sequences, including those for the multicomponent toluate, toluene, benzene, and naphthalene 1,2-dioxygenases, indicated that the similarly sized subunits of the hydroxylase components were derived from a common ancestor. Conserved cysteine and histidine residues may bind a [2Fe-2S] Rieske-type cluster to the alpha-subunits of all the hydroxylases. Conserved histidines and tyrosines may coordinate a mononuclear Fe(II) ion. The less conserved beta-subunits of the hydroxylases may be responsible for determining substrate specificity. Each dioxygenase had either one or two electron transfer proteins. The electron transfer component of benzoate dioxygenase, encoded by benC, and the corresponding protein of the toluate 1,2-dioxygenase, encoded by xylZ, were each found to have an N-terminal region which resembled chloroplast-type ferredoxins and a C-terminal region which resembled several oxidoreductases. These BenC and XylZ proteins had regions similar to certain monooxygenase components but did not appear to be evolutionarily related to the two-protein electron transfer systems of the benzene, toluene, and naphthalene 1,2-dioxygenases. Regions of possible NAD and flavin adenine dinucleotide binding were identified.  相似文献   

6.
The metalloenzyme phthalate dioxygenase (PDO) contains two iron-based sites. A Rieske-type [2Fe-2S] cluster serves as an electron-transferring cofactor, and a mononuclear iron site is the putative site of substrate oxygenation. A reductase, which contains FMN and a plant-type [2Fe-2S] ferredoxin domain, transfers electrons from NADH to the Rieske center. Any of the metal ions, Fe(II), Cu(II), Co(II), Mn(II), and Zn(II), can be used to populate the mononuclear site, but only Fe(II) is competent for effecting hydroxylation. Nevertheless, studies of how these metal ions affect both the EPR spectra of the reduced Rieske site and the kinetics of electron transfer in the PDO system indicated that each of these metal ions binds tightly and affects the protein similarly. In this study, EPR spectra were obtained from samples in which iron of the mononuclear site was replaced with Cu(II). The use of (63)Cu(II), in combination with PDO obtained from cultures grown on media enriched in (15)N [using ((15)NH(4))(2)SO(4) as a sole nitrogen source], [delta,epsilon-(15)N]histidine, as well as natural abundance sources of nitrogen, enabled detailed spectral analysis of the superhyperfine structure of the Cu(II) EPR lines. These studies clearly show that two histidines are coordinated to the mononuclear site. Coupled with previous studies [Bertini, I., Luchinat, C., Mincione, G., Parigi, G., Gassner G. T., and Ballou, D. P. (1996) J. Bioinorg. Chem. 1, 468-475] that show the presence of one or two water molecules coordinated to the iron, it is suggested that the mononuclear site is similar to several other mononuclear nonheme iron proteins, including naphthalene dioxygenase, for which crystal structures are available. The lack of observable EPR interaction signals between Cu(II) in the mononuclear site and the reduced Rieske center of PDO suggest that the two sites are at least 12 A apart, which is similar to that found in the naphthalene dioxygenase crystal structure.  相似文献   

7.
The Rieske dioxygenase, anthranilate 1,2-dioxygenase, catalyzes the 1,2-dihydroxylation of anthranilate (2-aminobenzoate). As in all characterized Rieske dioxygenases, the catalytic conversion to the diol occurs within the dioxygenase component, AntAB, at a mononuclear iron site which accepts electrons from a proximal Rieske [2Fe-2S] center. In the related naphthalene dioxygenase (NDO), a conserved aspartate residue lies between the mononuclear and Rieske iron centers, and is hydrogen-bonded to a histidine ligand of the Rieske center. Engineered substitutions of this aspartate residue led to complete inactivation, which was proposed to arise from elimination of a productive intersite electron transfer pathway [Parales, R. E., Parales, J. V., and Gibson, D. T. (1999) J. Bacteriol. 181, 1831-1837]. Substitutions of the corresponding aspartate, D218, in AntAB with alanine, asparagine, or glutamate also resulted in enzymes that were completely inactive over a wide pH range despite retention of the hexameric quaternary structure and iron center occupancy. The Rieske center reduction potential of this variant was measured to be approximately 100 mV more negative than that for the wild-type enzyme at neutral pH. The wild-type AntAB became completely inactive at pH 9 and exhibited an altered Rieske center absorption spectrum which resembled that of the D218 variants at neutral pH. These results support a role for this aspartate in maintaining the protonated state and reduction potential of the Rieske center. Both the wild-type and D218A variant AntABs exhibited substrate-dependent rapid phases of Rieske center oxidations in stopped-flow time courses. This observation does not support a role for this aspartate in a facile intersite electron transfer pathway or in productive substrate gating of the Rieske center reduction potential. However, since the single turnovers resulted in anthranilate dihydroxylation by the wild-type enzyme but not by the D218A variant, this aspartate must also play a crucial role in substrate dihydroxylation at or near the mononuclear iron site.  相似文献   

8.
In Sphingomonas CHY-1, a single ring-hydroxylating dioxygenase is responsible for the initial attack of a range of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) composed of up to five rings. The components of this enzyme were separately purified and characterized. The oxygenase component (ht-PhnI) was shown to contain one Rieske-type [2Fe-2S] cluster and one mononuclear Fe center per alpha subunit, based on EPR measurements and iron assay. Steady-state kinetic measurements revealed that the enzyme had a relatively low apparent Michaelis constant for naphthalene (K(m) = 0.92 +/- 0.15 microM) and an apparent specificity constant of 2.0 +/- 0.3 mM(-)(1) s(-)(1). Naphthalene was converted to the corresponding 1,2-dihydrodiol with stoichiometric oxidation of NADH. On the other hand, the oxidation of eight other PAHs occurred at slower rates and with coupling efficiencies that decreased with the enzyme reaction rate. Uncoupling was associated with hydrogen peroxide formation, which is potentially deleterious to cells and might inhibit PAH degradation. In single turnover reactions, ht-PhnI alone catalyzed PAH hydroxylation at a faster rate in the presence of organic solvent, suggesting that the transfer of substrate to the active site is a limiting factor. The four-ring PAHs chrysene and benz[a]anthracene were subjected to a double ring-dihydroxylation, giving rise to the formation of a significant proportion of bis-cis-dihydrodiols. In addition, the dihydroxylation of benz[a]anthracene yielded three dihydrodiols, the enzyme showing a preference for carbons in positions 1,2 and 10,11. This is the first characterization of a dioxygenase able to dihydroxylate PAHs made up of four and five rings.  相似文献   

9.
Pinto A  Tarasev M  Ballou DP 《Biochemistry》2006,45(30):9032-9041
Phthalate dioxygenase (PDO) and its reductase (PDR) are parts of a two-component Rieske oxygenase system that initiates the aerobic breakdown of phthalate by forming cis-4,5-dihydro-4,5-dihydroxyphthalate. Aspartate D178 in PDO, which lies between the Rieske [2Fe-2S] center of one subunit and the mononuclear center of the adjacent subunit, is highly conserved among the Rieske dioxygenases. The analogous aspartate has been implicated in electron transfer in naphthalene dioxygenase and in substrate binding and oxygen reactivity in anthranilate dioxygenase. Substitution of D178 with alanine or asparagine in PDO resulted in proteins with significantly increased Fe(II) dissociation constants. The rates of oxidation of the reduced Rieske centers in D178A and D178N were decreased by more than 10(4)-fold; only part of the loss of activity can be attributed to depletion of iron from the mononuclear centers. Reduction of PDO by reduced PDR was also slower in the D178A and D178N variants. Observed decreases in turnover rates of D178A and D178N compared to that of wild-type (WT) PDO (>10(2)-fold) can be ascribed to the cumulative effect of the low intrinsic iron content of the D178A and D178N mutants and the combination of the decreased rates of Rieske center reduction and oxidation. The coupling of dihydrodiol formation approached 100% in WT PDO but was only approximately 16% in D178A and approximately 7% in D178N. In single-turnover experiments, very small amounts of DHD were produced by D178A and D178N "as purified". The presence of saturating amounts of ferrous ion improved coupling to nearly 100% for the D178N variant but only slightly improved coupling for D178A. Thus, although hydroxylation is still possible in the variants, the reactions are largely uncoupled due to slow intramolecular electron transfer rates and the apparent weak binding of iron at the mononuclear centers.  相似文献   

10.
The 3-hydroxybenzoate inducible gentisate 1,2-dioxygenases have been purified to homogeneity from P. acidovorans and P. testosteroni, the two divergent species of the acidovorans group of Pseudomonas. Both enzymes exhibit a 40-fold higher specific activity than previous preparations and have an (alpha Fe)4 quaternary structure (holoenzyme Mr = 164,000 and 158,000, respectively). The enzymes have different amino terminal sequences, amino acid contents, and isoelectric points. Each enzyme contains essential active site iron that is EPR silent but binds nitric oxide quantitatively to give an EPR active complex (S = 3/2), showing that the iron is Fe2+ with coordination sites for exogenous ligands. The EPR spectra of these complexes are altered uniquely for each enzyme when gentisate is bound. This suggests that substrate binds to or near the iron and shows that the substrate-iron interactions of each enzyme are subtly different. The kinetic parameters for turnover of gentisate by the enzymes are nearly identical (kcat/Km = 4.3 x 10(6) s-1 M-1). Both enzymes cleave a wide range of gentisate analogs substituted in the 3 or 4 ring position, although at reduced rates relative to gentisate. Of the two enzymes, P. testosteroni gentisate 1,2-dioxygenase exhibits substantially lower kcat/Km values for the turnover of these compounds. Evidence for both steric and electronic substituent effects is obtained. In accord with the results of Wheelis et al. (Wheelis, M. L., Palleroni, N. J., and Stanier, R. Y. (1967) Arch. Mikrobiol. 59, 302-314), 3-hydroxybenzoate is shown to be metabolized by P. acidovorans through the gentisate pathway, and gentisate 1,2-dioxygenase is the only ring cleavage dioxygenase induced. In contrast, 3-hydroxybenzoate is metabolized by P. testosteroni exclusively through the protocatechuate pathway utilizing protocatechuate 4,5-dioxygenase, although gentisate 1,2-dioxygenase is coinduced. Growth of P. testosteroni on 3-O-methylbenzoate or 5-O-methylsalicylate is shown to result in a approximately 10-fold increase in the amount of gentisate 1,2-dioxygenase relative to protocatechuate 4,5-dioxygenase. Together, these results suggest that induction of gentisate 1,2-dioxygenase by 3-hydroxybenzoate in P. testosteroni may be adventitious and that this enzyme may function in fundamentally different metabolic pathways in the two related Pseudomonas species.  相似文献   

11.
Rieske non-heme iron oxygenases (RO) catalyze stereo- and regiospecific reactions. Recently, an explosion of structural information on this class of enzymes has occurred in the literature. ROs are two/three component systems: a reductase component that obtains electrons from NAD(P)H, often a Rieske ferredoxin component that shuttles the electrons and an oxygenase component that performs catalysis. The oxygenase component structures have all shown to be of the alpha3 or alpha3beta3 types. The transfer of electrons happens from the Rieske center to the mononuclear iron of the neighboring subunit via a conserved aspartate, which is shown to be involved in gating electron transport. Molecular oxygen has been shown to bind side-on in naphthalene dioxygenase and a concerted mechanism of oxygen activation and hydroxylation of the ring has been proposed. The orientation of binding of the substrate to the enzyme is hypothesized to control the substrate selectivity and regio-specificity of product formation.  相似文献   

12.
2-Oxoquinoline 8-monooxygenase is a Rieske non-heme iron oxygenase that catalyzes the NADH-dependent oxidation of the N-heterocyclic aromatic compound 2-oxoquinoline to 8-hydroxy-2-oxoquinoline in the soil bacterium Pseudomonas putida 86. The crystal structure of the oxygenase component of 2-oxoquinoline 8-monooxygenase shows a ring-shaped, C3-symmetric arrangement in which the mononuclear Fe(II) ion active site of one monomer is at a distance of 13 A from the Rieske-[2Fe-2S] center of a second monomer. Structural analyses of oxidized, reduced, and substrate bound states reveal the molecular bases for a new function of Fe-S clusters. Reduction of the Rieske center modulates the mononuclear Fe through a chain of conformational changes across the subunit interface, resulting in the displacement of Fe and its histidine ligand away from the substrate binding site. This creates an additional coordination site at the mononuclear Fe(II) ion and can open a pathway for dioxygen to bind in the substrate-containing active site.  相似文献   

13.
Tarasev M  Pinto A  Kim D  Elliott SJ  Ballou DP 《Biochemistry》2006,45(34):10208-10216
Phthalate dioxygenase (PDO) and its reductase are parts of a two-component Rieske dioxygenase system that initiates the aerobic breakdown of phthalate by forming cis-4,5-dihydro-4,5-dihydroxyphthalate (DHD). Aspartate D178 in PDO, located near its ferrous mononuclear center, is highly conserved among Rieske dioxygenases. The analogous aspartate has been implicated in electron transfer between the mononuclear iron and Rieske center in naphthalene dioxygenase [Parales et al. (1999) J. Bacteriol. 181, 1831-1837] and in substrate binding and oxygen reactivity in anthranilate dioxygenase [Beharry et al. (2003) Biochemistry 42, 13625-13636]. The effects of substituting D178 in PDO with alanine or asparagine on the reactivity of the Rieske centers, phthalate hydroxylation, and coupling of Rieske center oxidation to DHD formation were studied previously [Pinto et al. (2006) Biochemistry 45, 9032-9041]. This work describes effects that D178N and D178A substitutions have on the interactions between the Rieske and mononuclear centers in PDO. The mutations affected protonation of the Rieske center histidine and conformation of subunits within the PDO multimer to create a more open structure with more solvent-accessible Rieske centers. When the Rieske centers in PDO were oxidized, D178N and D178A substitutions disrupted communication between the Rieske and Fe-mononuclear centers. This was shown by the lack of perturbations of the UV-vis spectra on phthalate binding to the D178N and D178A variants, as opposed to that observed in WT PDO. However, when the Rieske center was in the reduced state, communication between the centers was not disrupted. Phthalate binding similarly affected the rates of oxidation of the reduced Rieske center in both WT and mutant PDO. Nitric oxide binding at the Fe(II)-mononuclear center, as detected by EPR spectrometry of the Fe(II) nitrosyl complex, was regulated by the redox state of the Rieske center. When the Rieske center was oxidized in either WT or D178N PDO, NO bound to the mononuclear iron in the presence or absence of phthalate. However, when the Rieske center was reduced, NO bound only when phthalate was present. These findings are discussed in terms of the "communication functions" performed by the bridging Asp-178.  相似文献   

14.
We have employed X-ray absorption spectroscopy to obtain structural information about the Rieske Fe/S center in the phthalate dioxygenase (PDO) from Pseudomonas cepacia. Native PDO contains a dinuclear Rieske Fe/S center and an additional mononuclear Fe site. In order to study selectively the Fe/S cluster, we measured data for samples in which the mononuclear site was either depleted of metal or reconstituted with Co or Zn. Our results demonstrate that the iron environment in the Rieske cluster is structurally indistinguishable from that found in other Fe/S clusters, thus strongly supporting the suggestion that the unusually high reduction potentials for Rieske clusters are due to electrostatic rather than structural effects. The average Fe-Fe distance is 2.68 (3) A for both oxidized and reduced Rieske clusters. The average Fe-S distance is 2.24 (2) A in the oxidized cluster and 2.28 (2) A in the reduced cluster. Careful analysis of the EXAFS Debye-Waller factors suggests that the bridging and terminal Fe-S distances for the oxidized cluster are 2.20 and 2.31 A, respectively. Taken together with recent ENDOR results, these studies provide a detailed structural model for the Rieske [2Fe-2S] centers.  相似文献   

15.
The two-component anthranilate 1,2-dioxygenase of the bacterium Acinetobacter sp. strain ADP1 was expressed in Escherichia coli and purified to homogeneity. This enzyme converts anthranilate (2-aminobenzoate) to catechol with insertion of both atoms of O(2) and consumption of one NADH. The terminal oxygenase component formed an alpha(3)beta(3) hexamer of 54- and 19-kDa subunits. Biochemical analyses demonstrated one Rieske-type [2Fe-2S] center and one mononuclear nonheme iron center in each large oxygenase subunit. The reductase component, which transfers electrons from NADH to the oxygenase component, was found to contain approximately one flavin adenine dinucleotide and one ferredoxin-type [2Fe-2S] center per 39-kDa monomer. Activities of the combined components were measured as rates and quantities of NADH oxidation, substrate disappearance, product appearance, and O(2) consumption. Anthranilate conversion to catechol was stoichiometrically coupled to NADH oxidation and O(2) consumption. The substrate analog benzoate was converted to a nonaromatic benzoate 1,2-diol with similarly tight coupling. This latter activity is identical to that of the related benzoate 1, 2-dioxygenase. A variant anthranilate 1,2-dioxygenase, previously found to convey temperature sensitivity in vivo because of a methionine-to-lysine change in the large oxygenase subunit, was purified and characterized. The purified M43K variant, however, did not hydroxylate anthranilate or benzoate at either the permissive (23 degrees C) or nonpermissive (39 degrees C) growth temperatures. The wild-type anthranilate 1,2-dioxygenase did not efficiently hydroxylate methylated or halogenated benzoates, despite its sequence similarity to broad-substrate specific dioxygenases that do. Phylogenetic trees of the alpha and beta subunits of these terminal dioxygenases that act on natural and xenobiotic substrates indicated that the subunits of each terminal oxygenase evolved from a common ancestral two-subunit component.  相似文献   

16.
The terephthalate 1,2-dioxygenase system (TERDOS) was found in cell extracts of Delftia tsuruhatensis strain T7 (=IFO16741) grown in terephthalate-salt medium. The cell extract was separated by anion exchange chromatography to yield two fractions (R and Z) that were necessary for oxygenation of terephthalate with NADH and Fe(2+). The oxygenase component of TERDOS (TerZ) was purified from fraction Z by gel filtration chromatography to near homogeneity. An alpha(3)beta(3) subunit structure was deduced from the molecular masses of 235, 46 and 17 kDa of the native complex and the alpha- and beta-subunits, respectively. The N-terminal amino acid sequences of the two subunits of TerZ allowed polymerase chain reaction primers to be deduced and the DNA sequence of the alpha-subunit was determined. The amino acid sequence of the alpha-subunit (TerZalpha) showed significant similarities to the large subunits of multicomponent ring-hydroxylating oxygenases. Two motifs in the deduced amino acid sequence, a Rieske [2Fe-2S] center and a mononuclear Fe(II) binding site, were observed. Phylogenetic analyses indicated that TerZalpha and the large oxygenase component subunits ortho-halobenzoate 1,2-dioxygenase and salicylate-5-hydroxylase form a cluster that is distant from the rest of the large oxygenase subunits of multicomponent ring-hydroxylating oxygenases.  相似文献   

17.
Chlorocatechol 1,2-dioxygenase from Pseudomonas putida (Pp 1,2-CCD) is a dioxygenase responsible for ring cleavage during the degradation of recalcitrant aromatic compounds. We determined the zero-field splitting of the Fe(III) cofactor (|D| = 1.3 +/- 0.2 cm(-1)) by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) experiments that along with other structural data allowed us to infer the Fe(III) coordination environment. The EPR spectrum of the ion shows a significantly decrease of the g = 4.3 resonance upon substrate binding. This result is rationalized in terms of a mechanism previously proposed, where catechol substrate is activated by Fe(III), yielding an exchange-coupled Fe(II)-semiquinone (pair). The Pp 1,2-CCD capacity of binding amphipatic molecules and the effects of such binding on protein activity are also investigated. EPR spectra of spin labels show a protein-bound component, which was characterized by means of spectral simulations. Our results indicate that Pp 1,2-CCD is able to bind amphipatic molecules in a channel with the headgroup pointing outwards into the solvent, whereas the carbon chain is held inside the tunnel. Protein assays show that the enzyme activity is significantly lowered in the presence of stearic-acid molecules. The role of the binding of those molecules as an enzyme activity modulator is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
4-Nitrocatechol is examined as an active site probe for non-heme iron dioxygenases and found to be of value, particularly with those containing iron in the Fe(II) oxidation state. 4-Nitrocatechol is astrong competitive inhibitor of substrate oxygenation by protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase, forming a reversible complex with this enzyme, and by pyrocatechase. The number of binding sites per enzyme molecule titrated spectrophotometrically with 4-nitrocatechol agrees with results from previous studies with either the principal substrate or other analogues, as expected of an effective probe. Despite these facts and the observation that both enzymes cleave the same substrates at the same carbon-carbon bond, the optical and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra of their 4-nitrocatechol complexes are remarkably different. The 4-nitocatechol-protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase optical spectra resemble that of the 4-nitrocatecholate ion shifted 20 to 30 nm to longer wavelength. Concomitant with this change the EPR signal centered at g equal 4.28 shows increased rhombicity (g values at 4.74, 4.28, and 3.74).In contrast, the spectrum of the 4-nitrocatechol-pyrocatechase complex has a maximum at the same wavelength as that of a 1:1 solution of free Fe(II) and 4-nitrocatechol in the absence of enzyme after titration of the catecholic protons with base and the g equal 4.28 EPR signal is not resolved at liquid N-2 temperature. These changes are interpreted as resulting in part from a pronounced change in the ligand fields about the irons at the active sites which in the case of protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase leads to enzyme inactivation. The results also are the first indication that substrate analogues change their ionization form upon complexation with Fe (III) dioxygenases. The interaction of the probe with metapyrocatechase, an Fe(III) containing dioxygenase, and with several additional oxygenases and hydroperoxidases is also briefly examined. The probe is not specific for any particular class of non-heme iron dioxygenases.  相似文献   

19.
We show here that purified chlorocatechol dioxygenase from Pseudomonas putida is able to oxygenate a wide range of substituted catechols with turnover numbers ranging from 2 to 29 s-1. This enzyme efficiently cleaves substituted catechols bearing electron-donating or multiple electron-withdrawing groups in an intradiol manner with kcat/KM values between 0.2 x 10(7) and 1.4 x 10(7) M-1 s-1. These unique catalytic properties prompted a comparison with the related but highly specific enzymes catechol 1,2-dioxygenase and protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase. The chlorocatechol dioxygenase gene (clcA) from the Pseudomonas plasmid pAC27 was subcloned into the expression vector pKK223-3, allowing production of chlorocatechol dioxygenase to approximately 7-8% of total cellular protein. An average of 4 mg of purified enzyme has been obtained per gram of wet cells. Protein and iron analyses indicate an iron stoichiometry of 1 iron/57.5-kDa homodimer, alpha 2Fe. The electronic absorption spectrum contains a broad tyrosinate to iron charge transfer transition centered at 430 nm (epsilon = 3095 M-1 cm-1 based on iron concentration) which shifts to 490 nm (epsilon = 3380 M-1 cm-1) upon catechol binding. The resonance Raman spectrum of the native enzyme exhibits characteristic tyrosine ring vibrations. Electron paramagnetic resonance data for the resting enzyme (g = 4.25, 9.83) is consistent with high-spin iron (III) in a rhombic environment. This similarity between the spectroscopic properties of the Fe(III) centers in chlorocatechol dioxygenase and the more specific dioxygenases suggests a highly conserved catalytic site. We infer that the unique catalytic properties of chlorocatechol dioxygenase are due to other characteristics of its substrate binding pocket.  相似文献   

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