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1.
A J Ramsey  M S Jorns 《Biochemistry》1992,31(36):8437-8441
DNA photolyase from Escherichia coli contains 1,5-dihydroFAD (FADH2) plus 5,10-methenyltetrahydropteroylpolyglutamate. The action spectrum observed for apoenzyme reconstituted with 5-deazaFADH2 (EdFADH2) matched its absorption spectrum after correction for the presence of a small amount of inactive 5-deazaFADox. The quantum yield for dimer repair with EdFADH2 (phi EdFADH2 = 0.110) was 6-fold lower than that observed with apoenzyme reconstituted with FADH2. Excited-state redox potential calculations indicate that 5-deazaFADH2 singlet is a better one-electron donor (E = -3.5 V) than FADH2 singlet (E = -2.7 V). Other studies indicate that the quantum yield for electron transfer from reduced flavin singlet to pyrimidine dimer (0.88) is unaffected when FADH2 is replaced by 5-deazaFADH2. Enhanced back electron transfer from pyrimidine dimer radical to flavin radical may account for the decreased quantum yield observed with EdFADH2 since, in the ground state, 5-deazaFADH. is a better oxidant than FADH.. The action spectrum observed for apoenzyme reconstituted with 5-deazaFADH2 plus 5,10-CH(+)-H4folate (EPtedFADH2) matched the absorption spectrum determined for enzyme-bound 5-deazaFADH2, indicating that the pterin chromophore was inactive as a sensitizer. This differs from results obtained with native enzyme, where pterin acts as a sensitizer via efficient singlet-singlet energy transfer to FADH2. The quantum yield for dimer repair by 5-deazaFADH2 bound to EPtedFADH2 (phi EPtedFADH2 = 0.0318) was 28.9% of that observed for EdFADH2. Spectroscopic studies indicate that singlet-singlet energy transfer in EPtedFADH2 is very efficient but only occurs in the "wrong" direction, i.e., from excited 5-deazaFADH2 to pterin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
Native DNA photolyase, as isolated from Escherichia coli, contains a neutral flavin radical (FADH.) plus a pterin chromophore (5,10-methenyltetrahydropteroylpolyglutamate) and can be converted to its physiologically significant form by reduction of FADH. to fully reduced flavin (FADH2) with dithionite or by photoreduction. Either FADH2 or the pterin chromophore in dithionite-reduced native enzyme can function as a sensitizer in catalysis. Various enzyme forms (EFADox, EFADH., EFADH2, EPteFADox, EPteFADH., EPteFADH2, EPte) containing stoichiometric amounts of FAD in either of its three oxidation states and/or 5,10-methenyltetrahydrofolate (Pte) have been prepared in reconstitution experiments. Studies with EFADox and EPte showed that these preparations retained the ability to bind the missing chromophore. The results suggest that there could be considerable flexibility in the biological assembly of holoenzyme since the order of binding of the enzyme's chromophores is apparently unimportant, the binding of FAD is unaffected by its redox state, and enzyme preparations containing only one chromophore are reasonably stable. The same catalytic properties are observed with dithionite-reduced native enzyme or EFADH2. These preparations do not exhibit a lag in catalytic assays whereas lags are observed with preparations containing FADox or FADH. in the presence or absence of pterin. Photochemical studies show that these lags can be attributed to enzyme activation under assay conditions in a reaction involving photoreduction of enzyme-bound FADox or FADH. to FADH2. EPte is catalytically inactive, but catalytic activity is restored upon reconstitution of EPte with FADox. The results show that pterin is not required for dimer repair when FADH2 acts as the sensitizer but that FADH2 is required when dimer repair is initiated by excitation of the pterin chromophore. The relative intensity of pterin fluorescence in EPte, EPteFADH., EPteFADox, or EPteFADH2 has been used to estimate the efficiency of pterin singlet quenching by FADH. (93%), FADox (90%), or FADH2 (58%). Energy transfer from the excited pterin to flavin is energetically feasible and may account for the observed quenching of pterin fluorescence and also explain why photoreduction of FADox or FADH. is accelerated by the pterin chromophore. An irreversible photobleaching of the pterin chromophore is accelerated by FADH2 in a reaction that is accompanied by a transient oxidation of FADH2 to FADH.. Both pterin bleaching and FADH2 oxidation are inhibited by substrate.  相似文献   

3.
DNA photolyase catalyzes the repair of pyrimidine dimers in UV-damaged DNA in a reaction which requires visible light. Class I photolyases (Escherichia coli, yeast) contain 1,5-dihydroFAD (FADH2) plus a pterin derivative (5,10-methenyltetrahydropteroylpolyglutamate). In class II photolyases (Streptomyces griseus, Scenedesmus acutus, Anacystis nidulans, Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum) the pterin chromophore is replaced by an 8-hydroxy-5-deazaflavin derivative. The two classes of enzymes exhibit a high degree of amino acid sequence homology, suggesting similarities in protein structure. Action spectra studies show that both chromophores in each enzyme tested act as sensitizers in catalysis. Studies with E. coli photolyase show that the pterin chromophore is not required when FADH2 acts as the sensitizer but that FADH2 is required when the pterin chromophore acts as sensitizer. FADH2 is probably the chromophore that directly interacts with substrate in a reaction which may be initiated by electron transfer from the excited singlet state (1FADH2*) to form a flavin radical plus an unstable pyrimidine dimer radical. Pterin, the major chromophore in E. coli photolyase, may act as an antenna to harvest light energy which is then transferred to FADH2.  相似文献   

4.
Xu L  Mu W  Ding Y  Luo Z  Han Q  Bi F  Wang Y  Song Q 《Biochemistry》2008,47(33):8736-8743
Escherichia coli DNA photolyase repairs cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer (CPD) in UV-damaged DNA through a photoinduced electron transfer mechanism. The catalytic activity of the enzyme requires fully reduced FAD (FADH (-)). After purification in vitro, the cofactor FADH (-) in photolyase is oxidized into the neutral radical form FADH (*) under aerobic conditions and the enzyme loses its repair function. We have constructed a mutant photolyase in which asparagine 378 (N378) is replaced with serine (S). In comparison with wild-type photolyase, we found N378S mutant photolyase containing oxidized FAD (FAD ox) but not FADH (*) after routine purification procedures, but evidence shows that the mutant protein contains FADH (-) in vivo as the wild type. Although N378S mutant photolyase is photoreducable and capable of binding CPD in DNA, the activity assays indicate the mutant protein is catalytically inert. We conclude that the Asn378 residue of E. coli photolyase is crucial both for stabilizing the neutral flavin radical cofactor and for catalysis.  相似文献   

5.
G Payne  M Wills  C Walsh  A Sancar 《Biochemistry》1990,29(24):5706-5711
Escherichia coli DNA photolyase contains two chromophore cofactors, 1,5-dihydroflavin adenine dinucleotide (FADH2) and (5,10-methenyltetrahydrofolyl)polyglutamate (5,10-MTHF). A procedure was developed for reversible resolution of apophotolyase and its chromophores. To investigate the structures important for the binding of FAD to apophotolyase and of photolyase to DNA, reconstitution experiments with FAD, FMN, riboflavin, 1-deazaFAD, 5-deazaFAD, and F420 were attempted. Only FAD and 5-deazaFAD showed high-affinity binding to apophotolyase. The apoenzyme had no affinity to DNA but did regain its specific binding to thymine dimer containing DNA upon binding stoichiometrically to FAD or 5-deazaFAD. Successful reduction of enzyme-bound FAD with dithionite resulted in complete recovery of photocatalytic activity.  相似文献   

6.
Native DNA photolyase from Escherichia coli contains 1,5-dihydroFAD (FADH2) plus 5,10-methenyltetrahydropteroylpolyglutamate. Quantum yield and action spectral data for thymine dimer repair were obtained by using a novel multiple turnover approach under aerobic conditions. This method assumes that catalysis proceeds via a (rapid-equilibrium) ordered mechanism with light as the second substrate, as verified in steady state kinetic studies. The action spectrum observed with native enzyme matched its absorption spectrum and an action spectrum simulated based on an energy transfer mechanism where dimer repair is initiated either by direct excitation of FADH2 or by pterin excitation followed by singlet-singlet energy transfer to FADH2. The quantum yield observed for dimer repair with native enzyme (phi Native = 0.722 +/- 0.0414) is similar to that observed with enzyme containing only FADH2 (phi EFADH2 = 0.655 +/- 0.0256), as expected owing to the high efficiency of energy transfer from the natural pterin to FADH2 [EET = 0.92]. The quantum yield observed for dimer repair decreased (2.1-fold) when the natural pterin was partially (68.8%) replaced with 5,10-CH(+)-H4folate (phi obs = 0.342 +/- 0.0149). This is consistent with the energy transfer mechanism (phi calc = 0.411 +/- 0.0118) since a 2-fold lower energy transfer efficiency is observed when the natural pterin is replaced with 5,10-CH(+)-H4folate (EET = 0.46) (Lipman & Jorns, 1992). The action spectrum observed for 5,10-CH(+)-H4folate-supplemented enzyme matched a simulated action spectrum which exhibited a small (5 nm) hypsochromic shift as compared with the absorption spectrum (lambda max = 385 nm).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
DNA photolyase from the cyanobacterium Anacystis nidulans contains two chromophores, flavin adenine dinucleotide (FADH2) and 8-hydroxy-5-deazaflavin (8-HDF) (Eker, A. P. M., Kooiman, P., Hessels, J. K. C., and Yasui, A. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 8009-8015). While evidence exists that the flavin chromophore (in FADH2 form) can catalyze photorepair directly and that the 8-HDF chromophore is the major photosensitizer in photoreactivation it was not known whether 8-HDF splits pyrimidine dimer directly or indirectly through energy transfer to FADH2 at the catalytic center. We constructed a plasmid which over-produces the A. nidulans photolyase in Escherichia coli and purified the enzyme from this organism. Apoenzyme was prepared and enzyme containing stoichiometric amounts of either or both chromophores was reconstituted. The substrate binding and catalytic activities of the apoenzyme (apoE), E-FADH2, E-8-HDF, E-FAD(ox)-8-HDF, and E-FADH2-8-HDF were investigated. We found that FAD is required for substrate binding and catalysis and that 8-HDF is not essential for binding DNA, and participates in catalysis only through energy transfer to FADH2. The quantum yields of energy transfer from 8-HDF to FADH2 and of electron transfer from FADH2 to thymine dimer are near unity.  相似文献   

8.
Glyoxalate carboligase (EC 4.1.1.47) has been purified to electrophoretic homogeneity from Escherichia coli. The enzyme was found to be a dimer of subunits of identical molecular weight of 68,000. Resolution of the holoenzyme into apoenzyme and FAD led to a dissociation of the dimer into monomers. The apoenzyme could be reconsitituted to full catalytic activity with FAD or the flavin coenzyme analogue 5-deazaFAD. Reconstitution of the apoenzyme with the reduced flavin analogue 1,5-dihydro-5-deazaFADH2 led to the recovery of 50% of enzymatic activity. The reconstitution of apoglyoxalate carboligase with all three coenzymes followed Michaelis-Menten kinetics with Km values of 0.25, 0.74, and 0.72 muM for FAD deazaFAD, and deazaFADH2, respectively.  相似文献   

9.
Monomeric sarcosine oxidase (MSOX) is a prototypical member of a recently recognized family of amine-oxidizing enzymes that all contain covalently bound flavin. Mutation of the covalent flavin attachment site in MSOX produces a catalytically inactive apoprotein (apoCys315Ala) that forms an unstable complex with FAD (K(d) = 100 muM), similar to that observed with wild-type apoMSOX where the complex is formed as an intermediate during covalent flavin attachment. In situ reconstitution of sarcosine oxidase activity is achieved by assaying apoCys315Ala in the presence of FAD or 8-nor-8-chloroFAD, an analogue with an approximately 55 mV higher reduction potential. After correction for an estimated 65% reconstitutable apoprotein, the specific activity of apoCys315Ala in the presence of excess FAD or 8-nor-8-chloroFAD is 14% or 80%, respectively, of that observed with wild-type MSOX. Unlike oxidized flavin, apoCys315Ala exhibits a high affinity for reduced flavin, as judged by results obtained with reduced 5-deazaFAD (5-deazaFADH(2)) where the estimated binding stoichiometry is unaffected by dialysis. The Cys315Ala.5-deazaFADH(2) complex is also air-stable but is readily oxidized by sarcosine imine, a reaction accompanied by release of weakly bound oxidized 5-deazaFAD. The dramatic difference in the binding affinity of apoCys315Ala for oxidized and reduced flavin indicates that the protein environment must induce a sizable increase in the reduction potential of noncovalently bound flavin (DeltaE(m) approximately 120 mV). The covalent flavin linkage prevents loss of weakly bound oxidized FAD and also modulates the flavin reduction potential in conjunction with the protein environment.  相似文献   

10.
R S Lipman  M S Jorns 《Biochemistry》1992,31(3):786-791
The active form of native Escherichia coli DNA photolyase contains 1,5-dihydro-FAD (FADH2) plus 5,10-methenyltetrahydropteroylpolyglutamate [5,10-CH(+)-H4Pte(Glu)n]. Enzyme containing FADH2 and/or 5,10-methyltetrahydrofolate (5,10-CH(+)-H4folate) can be prepared in reconstitution experiments. Fluorescence quantum yield measurements at various wavelengths with native or reconstituted enzyme provide a simple method for detecting singlet-singlet energy transfer from pterin to FADH2, a key step in the proposed catalytic mechanism. The data satisfy the following criteria: (1) Wavelength-independent quantum yield values are observed for 5,10-CH(+)-H4folate in the absence (0.434) or presence (3.57 X 10(-2)) of FADH2, for 5,10-CH(+)-H4Pte(Glu)n in the presence of FADH2 (5.58 X 10(-2)) and for FADH2 in the absence of pterin (5.34 X 10(-3)); (2) The observed decrease in pterin fluorescence quantum yield in the presence of FADH2 can be used to estimate the efficiency of pterin fluorescence quenching (EQ = 0.918 or 0.871 with 5,10-CH(+)-H4folate or 5,10-CH(+)-H4Pte(Glu)n, respectively); (3) The fluorescence quantum yield of FADH2 is increased in the presence of pterin and varies depending on the excitation wavelength, in agreement with the predicted effect of energy transfer on acceptor fluorescence quantum yield [phi acceptor (+ donor)/phi acceptor (alone) = 1 + EET(epsilon donor/epsilon acceptor), where EET is the efficiency of the energy transfer process]. With 5,10-CH(+)-H4Pte(Glu)n in native enzyme the value obtained for EET (0.92) is similar to EQ, whereas with 5,10-CH(+)-H4folate in reconstituted enzyme the value obtained for EET (0.46) is 2-fold smaller than EQ.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Cryptochrome (Cry) photoreceptors share high sequence and structural similarity with DNA repair enzyme DNA-photolyase and carry the same flavin cofactor. Accordingly, DNA-photolyase was considered a model system for the light activation process of cryptochromes. In line with this view were recent spectroscopic studies on cryptochromes of the CryDASH subfamily that showed photoreduction of the flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) cofactor to its fully reduced form. However, CryDASH members were recently shown to have photolyase activity for cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers in single-stranded DNA, which is absent for other members of the cryptochrome/photolyase family. Thus, CryDASH may have functions different from cryptochromes. The photocycle of other members of the cryptochrome family, such as Arabidopsis Cry1 and Cry2, which lack DNA repair activity but control photomorphogenesis and flowering time, remained elusive. Here we have shown that Arabidopsis Cry2 undergoes a photocycle in which semireduced flavin (FADH(.)) accumulates upon blue light irradiation. Green light irradiation of Cry2 causes a change in the equilibrium of flavin oxidation states and attenuates Cry2-controlled responses such as flowering. These results demonstrate that the active form of Cry2 contains FADH(.) (whereas catalytically active photolyase requires fully reduced flavin (FADH(-))) and suggest that cryptochromes could represent photoreceptors using flavin redox states for signaling differently from DNA-photolyase for photorepair.  相似文献   

12.
Byrdin M  Villette S  Eker AP  Brettel K 《Biochemistry》2007,46(35):10072-10077
DNA photolyases repair UV-induced cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers in DNA by photoinduced electron transfer. The redox-active cofactor is FAD in its doubly reduced state FADH-. Typically, during enzyme purification, the flavin is oxidized to its singly reduced semiquinone state FADH degrees . The catalytically potent state FADH- can be reestablished by so-called photoactivation. Upon photoexcitation, the FADH degrees is reduced by an intrinsic amino acid, the tryptophan W306 in Escherichia coli photolyase, which is 15 A distant. Initially, it has been believed that the electron passes directly from W306 to excited FADH degrees , in line with a report that replacement of W306 with redox-inactive phenylalanine (W306F mutant) suppressed the electron transfer to the flavin [Li, Y. F., et al. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 6322-6329]. Later it was realized that two more tryptophans (W382 and W359) are located between the flavin and W306; they may mediate the electron transfer from W306 to the flavin either by the superexchange mechanism (where they would enhance the electronic coupling between the flavin and W306 without being oxidized at any time) or as real redox intermediates in a three-step electron hopping process (FADH degrees * <-- W382 <-- W359 <-- W306). Here we reinvestigate the W306F mutant photolyase by transient absorption spectroscopy. We demonstrate that electron transfer does occur upon excitation of FADH degrees and leads to the formation of FADH- and a deprotonated tryptophanyl radical, most likely W359 degrees. These photoproducts are formed in less than 10 ns and recombine to the dark state in approximately 1 micros. These results support the electron hopping mechanism.  相似文献   

13.
The galactofuranose moiety found in many surface constituents of microorganisms is derived from UDP-D-galactopyranose (UDP-Galp) via a unique ring contraction reaction catalyzed by a FAD-dependent UDP-Galp mutase. When the enzyme is reduced by sodium dithionite, its catalytic efficiency increases significantly. Since the overall transformation exhibits no net change in the redox state of the parties involved, how the enzyme-bound FAD plays an active role in the reaction mechanism is puzzling. In this paper, we report our study of the catalytic properties of UDP-Galp mutase reconstituted with deaza-FADs. It was found that the mutase reconstituted with FAD or 1-deazaFAD has comparable activity, while that reconstituted with 5-deazaFAD is catalytically inactive. Because 5-deazaFAD is restricted to net two-electron process, yet FAD and 1-deazaFAD can undergo concerted two-electron as well as stepwise one-electron redox reactions, the above results support a radical mechanism for the mutase catalyzed reaction. In addition, the activity of the mutase reconstituted with FAD was found to increase considerably at high pHs. These observations have allowed us to propose a new mechanism involving one-electron transfer from the reduced FAD to an oxocarbenium intermediate generated by C-1 elimination of UDP to give a hexose radical and a flavin semiquinone. Subsequent radical recombination leads to a coenzyme-substrate adduct which may play a central role to facilitate the opening and recyclization of the galactose ring. A deprotonation step, accompanied or followed the electron transfer step, to increase the nucleophilicity of the flavin radical anion may account for the activity enhancement at pH > 8.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
Escherichia coli photolyase catalyzes the repair of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPD) in DNA under near UV/blue-light irradiation. The enzyme contains flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) and methenyltetrahydrofolate (MTHF) as noncovalently bound light sensing cofactors. To study the apoprotein-chromophore interactions we developed a new procedure to prepare apo-photolyase. MTHF-free photolyase was obtained by binding the C-terminal His-tagged holoenzyme to a metal-affinity column at neutral pH and washing the column with deionized water. Under these conditions the flavin remains bound and the defolated enzyme can be released from the column with 0.5 M imidazole pH 7.2. The MTHF-free protein was still capable of DNA repair, showing 70% activity of native enzyme. Fluorescence polarization experiments confirmed that MTHF binding is weakened at low ionic strength. Apo-photolyase was obtained by treating the His-tagged holoenzyme with 0.5 M imidazole pH 10.0. The apo-photolyase thus obtained was highly reconstitutable and bound nearly stoichiometric amounts of FAD(ox). Photolyase reconstituted with FAD(ox) had about 34% activity of native enzyme, which increased to 83% when FAD(ox) was reduced to FADH(-). Reconstitution kinetics performed at 20 degrees C showed that apo-photolyase associates with FADH(-) much faster (k(obs) approximately 3,000 M(-1) s(-1)) than with FAD(ox) (k(obs)=16 [corrected] M(-1) s(-1)). The dissociation constant of the photolyase-FAD(ox) complex is about 2.3 microM and that of E-FADH(-) is not higher than 20 nM (pH 7.2).  相似文献   

16.
Ultraviolet radiation promotes the formation of a cyclobutane ring between adjacent pyrimidine residues on the same DNA strand to form a pyrimidine dimer. Such dimers may be restored to their monomeric forms through the action of a light-absorbing enzyme named DNA photolyase. The redox-active cofactor involved in the light-induced electron transfer reactions of DNA repair and enzyme photoactivation is a noncovalently bound FAD. In this paper, the FAD cofactor of Escherichia coli DNA photolyase was characterized as the neutral flavin semiquinone by EPR spectroscopy at 9.68 and 94.5 GHz. From the high-frequency/high-field EPR spectrum, the principal values of the axially symmetric g-matrix of FADH(*) were extracted. Both EPR spectra show an emerging hyperfine splitting of 0.85 mT that could be assigned to the isotropic hyperfine coupling constant (hfc) of the proton at N(5). To obtain more information about the electron spin density distribution ENDOR and TRIPLE resonance spectroscopies were applied. All major proton hfc's could be measured and unambiguously assigned to molecular positions at the isoalloxazin moiety of FAD. The isotropic hfc's of the protons at C(8alpha) and C(6) are among the smallest values reported for protein-bound neutral flavin semiquinones so far, suggesting a highly restricted delocalization of the unpaired electron spin on the isoalloxazin moiety. Two further hfc's have been detected and assigned to the inequivalent protons at C(1'). Some conclusions about the geometrical arrangement of the ribityl side chain with respect to the isoalloxazin ring could be drawn: Assuming tetrahedral angles at C(1') the dihedral angle between the C(1')-C(2') bond and the 2p(z)() orbital at N(10) has been estimated to be 170.4 degrees +/- 1 degrees.  相似文献   

17.
Reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography has been used to separate a number of flavin and flavin analogs at the riboflavin, FMN, and FAD coenzyme level. Analytical methods were developed which enable the facile determination of a particular flavin or mixture of flavins present. These methods also allowed the separation of oxidized from reduced forms of oxygen-stable flavin analogs. Past investigations have utilized enzymatically synthesized FAD analogs with the problem of potential contamination by other levels of the coenzyme or ATP a cosubstrate in the flavokinase/FAD synthetase reaction. Preparative methods show that all the potential reaction products may be separated from one another thereby allowing the rapid purification of these redox coenzyme analogs. To demonstrate the utility of this method, radiolabeled FAD and 1-deazaFAD were prepared and purified.  相似文献   

18.
Neuronal nitric-oxide synthase (nNOS) differs from inducible NOS (iNOS) in both its dependence on the intracellular Ca2+ concentration and the production rate of NO. To investigate what difference(s) exist between the two NOS flavin domains at the electron transfer level, we isolated the recombinant human NOS flavin domains, which were co-expressed with human calmodulin (CaM). The flavin semiquinones, FADH* and FMNH*, in both NOSs participate in the regulation of one-electron transfer within the flavin domain. Each semiquinone can be identified by a characteristic absorption peak at 520 nm (Guan, Z.-W., and Iyanagi, T. (2003) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 412, 65-76). NADPH reduction of the FAD and FMN redox centers by the CaM-bound flavin domains was studied by stopped-flow and rapid scan spectrometry. Reduction of the air-stable semiquinone (FAD-FMNH*) of both domains with NADPH showed that the extent of conversion of FADH2/FMNH* to FADH*/FMNH2 in the iNOS flavin domain was greater than that of the nNOS flavin domain. The reduction of both oxidized domains (FAD-FMN) with NADPH resulted in the initial formation of a small amount of disemiquinone, which then decayed. The rate of intramolecular electron transfer between the two flavins in the iNOS flavin domain was faster than that of the nNOS flavin domain. In addition, the formation of a mixture of the two- and four-electron-reduced states in the presence of excess NADPH was different for the two NOS flavin domains. The data indicate a more favorable formation of the active intermediate FMNH2 in the iNOS flavin domain.  相似文献   

19.
Roitel O  Scrutton NS  Munro AW 《Biochemistry》2003,42(36):10809-10821
Cys-999 is one component of a triad (Cys-999, Ser-830, and Asp-1044) located in the FAD domain of flavocytochrome P450 BM3 that is almost entirely conserved throughout the diflavin reductase family of enzymes. The role of Cys-999 has been studied by steady-state kinetics, stopped-flow spectroscopy, and potentiometry. The C999A mutants of BM3 reductase (containing both FAD and FMN cofactors) and the isolated FAD domain are substantially compromised in their capacity to reduce artificial electron acceptors in steady-state turnover with either NADPH or NADH as electron donors. Stopped-flow studies indicate that this is due primarily to a substantially slower rate of hydride transfer from nicotinamide coenzyme to FAD cofactor in the C999A enzymes. The compromised rates of hydride transfer are not attributable to altered thermodynamic properties of the flavins. A reduced enzyme-NADP(+) charge-transfer species is populated following hydride transfer in the wild-type FAD domain, consistent with the slow release of NADP(+) from the 2-electron-reduced enzyme. This intermediate does not accumulate in the C999A FAD domain or wild-type and C999A BM3 reductases, suggesting more rapid release of NADP(+) from these enzyme forms. Rapid internal electron transfer from FAD to FMN in wild-type BM3 reductase releases NADP(+) from the nicotinamide-binding site, thus preventing the inhibition of enzyme activity through the accumulation of a stable FADH(2)-NADP(+) charge-transfer complex. Hydride transfer is reversible, and the observed rate of oxidation of the 2-electron-reduced C999A BM3 reductase and FAD domain is hyperbolically dependent on NADP(+) concentration. With the wild-type BM3 reductase and FAD domain, the rate of flavin oxidation displays an unusual dependence on NADP(+) concentration, consistent with a two-site binding model in which two coenzyme molecules bind to catalytic and regulatory regions (or sites) within a bipartite coenzyme binding site. A kinetic model is proposed in which binding of coenzyme to the regulatory site hinders sterically the release of NADPH from the catalytic site. The results are discussed in the light of kinetic and structural studies on mammalian cytochrome P450 reductase.  相似文献   

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

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