首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 62 毫秒
1.
The influence of the amino acid residues surrounding the flavin ring in the flavodoxin of the cyanobacterium Anabaena PCC 7119 on the electron spin density distribution of the flavin semiquinone was examined in mutants of the key residues Trp(57) and Tyr(94) at the FMN binding site. Neutral semiquinone radicals of the proteins were obtained by photoreduction and examined by electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) and hyperfine sublevel correlation (HYSCORE) spectroscopies. Significant differences in electron density distribution were observed in the flavodoxin mutants Trp(57) --> Ala and Tyr(94) --> Ala. The results indicate that the presence of a bulky residue (either aromatic or aliphatic) at position 57, as compared with an alanine, decreases the electron spin density in the nuclei of the benzene flavin ring, whereas an aromatic residue at position 94 increases the electron spin density at positions N(5) and C(6) of the flavin ring. The influence of the FMN ribityl and phosphate on the flavin semiquinone was determined by reconstituting apoflavodoxin samples with riboflavin and with lumiflavin. The coupling parameters of the different nuclei of the isoalloxazine group, as detected by ENDOR and HYSCORE, were very similar to those of the native flavodoxin. This indicates that the protein conformation around the flavin ring and the electron density distribution in the semiquinone form are not influenced by the phosphate and the ribityl of FMN.  相似文献   

2.
Murray TA  Swenson RP 《Biochemistry》2003,42(8):2307-2316
The pathway(s) by which the flavin cofactor binds to the apoflavoprotein is the subject of some debate. The crystal and NMR structures of several different flavodoxins have provided some insight, although there is disagreement about the location of the initial interaction between the flavin mononucleotide (FMN) and the apoflavodoxin and the degree of protein conformational change associated with cofactor binding [Genzor, C. G., Perales-Alcon, A., Sancho, J., and Romero, A. (1996) Nat. Struct. Biol. 3, 329-332; Steensma, E., and van Mierlo, C. P. M. (1998) J. Mol. Biol. 282, 653-666]. Binding kinetics using stopped-flow spectrofluorimetry and phosphate competition studies were used to develop a model for flavin binding to the flavodoxin from Desulfovibrio vulgaris. In the presence of phosphate, the time course of fluorescence quenching associated with FMN binding to apoflavodoxin was biphasic, whereas riboflavin, which lacks the 5'-phosphate group of FMN, displayed monophasic binding kinetics. When the concentration of phosphate in solution was increased, the FMN binding rates of the two phases behaved differently; the rate of one phase decreased, while the rate of the other increased. A similar increase in the single phase associated with riboflavin binding was also observed. This has led to the following model. The binding of the flavin isoalloxazine ring to its subsite is dependent on the presence of a phosphate group in the phosphate-binding subsite. When phosphate is in the buffer solution, FMN can bind in either of two ways: by the initial insertion of the 5'-phosphate group followed by ring binding or, when inorganic phosphate from solution is bound, the insertion of the isoalloxazine ring first. Riboflavin, which lacks the phosphate moiety of FMN, binds only in the presence of inorganic phosphate, presumably due to the binding of this group in the phosphate-binding subsite. These results suggest that cooperative interactions exist between the phosphate subsite and the ring-binding region in the D. vulgaris flavodoxin that are necessary for isoalloxazine ring binding.  相似文献   

3.
Flavodoxins catalyze redox reactions using the isoalloxazine moiety of the flavin mononucleotide (FMN) cofactor stacked between two aromatic residues located in two peptide loops. At high FMN concentrations that favor stacked FMN dimers in solution, isothermal titration calorimetric studies show that these dimers bind strongly to apo-flavodoxin from Desulfovibrio desulfuricans (30 degrees C, 20 mM Hepes, pH 7, K(D) = 5.8 microM). Upon increasing the temperature so the FMN dimers dissociate (as shown by (1)H NMR), only one-to-one (FMN-to-protein) binding is observed. Calorimetric titrations result in one-to-one binding also in the presence of phosphate or sulfate (30 degrees C, 13 mM anion, pH 7, K(D) = 0.4 microM). FMN remains dimeric in the presence of phosphate and sulfate, suggesting that specific binding of a divalent anion to the phosphate-binding site triggers ordering of the peptide loops so only one isoalloxazine can fit. Although the physiological relevance of FMN and other nucleotides as dimers has not been explored, our study shows that high-affinity binding to proteins of such dimers can occur in vitro. This emphasizes that the cofactor-binding site in flavodoxin is more flexible than previously expected.  相似文献   

4.
In order to describe the detailed conformation of the oxidized flavodoxin from a eukaryotic red alga, Chondrus crispus, the crystal structure has been refined by a restrained least-squares method. The crystallographic R factor is 0.168 for 13,899 reflections with F greater than 2 sigma F between 6.0 and 1.8 A resolution. The refined model includes 173 amino acid residues, flavin mononucleotide (FMN) and 110 water molecules. The root-mean-square deviation in bond lengths from ideal values is 0.015 A, and the mean co-ordinate error is estimated to be 0.2 A. The FMN is located at the periphery of the molecule. The orientation of the isoalloxazine ring is such that the C-7 and C-8 methyl groups are exposed to solvent and the pyrimidine moiety is buried in the protein. Three peptide segments, T8-T13, T55-T58 and D94-C103, are involved in FMN binding. The first segment of T8-T13 enfolds the phosphate group of the FMN. The three oxygen atoms in the phosphate group form extensive hydrogen bonds with amide groups of the main chain and the O gamma atoms of the side-chains in this segment. T55 O and W56 N epsilon 1 in the second segment form hydrogen bonds with O-2 in the ribityl moiety and one of the oxygen atoms in the phosphate group, respectively. The O gamma H of T58 forms a hydrogen bond with the N-5 atom in the isoalloxazine ring, which is expected to be protonated in the semiquinone form. The third segment is in contact with the isoalloxazine ring. It appears that the hydrogen bond acceptor of the NH of Asp94 in the third segment is O-2 rather than N-1 in the isoalloxazine ring. The isoalloxazine ring is flanked by the side-chains of Trp56 and Tyr98; it forms an angle of 38 degrees with the indole ring of Trp56 and is almost parallel to the benzene ring of Tyr98. The environment of the phosphate group is conserved as in other flavodoxins whereas that of the isoalloxazine ring differs. The relationship between the hydrogen bond to the N-5 in the ring and the redox potential for the oxidized/semiquinone couple is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
The redox protein flavodoxin has been shown earlier to be reduced by the pyruvate-oxidoreductase (POR) enzyme complex of Helicobacter pylori, and also was proposed to be involved in the pathogenesis of gastric mucosa-associated lymphoid-tissue lymphoma (MALToma). Here, we report its X-ray structure, which is similar to flavodoxins of other bacteria and cyanobacteria. However, H. pylori flavodoxin has an alanine residue near the isoalloxazine ring of its cofactor flavin mononucleotide (FMN), while the other previously crystallized flavodoxins have a larger hydrophobic residue at this position. This creates a solute filled hole near the FMN cofactor of H. pylori flavodoxin. We also show that flavodoxin is essential for the survival of H. pylori, and conclude that its structure can be used as a starting point for the modeling of an inhibitor for the interaction between the POR-enzyme complex and flavodoxin.  相似文献   

6.
The apoenzyme of NADPH oxidoreductase, 'old yellow enzyme', was reconstituted with selectively 13C-enriched flavin mononucleotides and investigated by 13C NMR spectroscopy. The 13C NMR results confirm the results obtained by 15N NMR spectroscopy and yield additional information about the coenzyme-apoenzyme interaction. A strong deshielding of the C(2) and C(4) atoms of enzyme-bound FMN both in the oxidized and reduced state is observed, which is supposed to be induced by hydrogen-bond formation between the protein and the two carbonyl groups at C(2) and C(4) of the isoalloxazine ring system. The chemical shifts of all 13C resonances of the flavin in the two-electron-reduced state indicate that the N(5) atom is sp3-hybridized. From 31P NMR measurements it is concluded that the FMN phosphate group is not accessible to bulk solvent. The unusual 31P chemical shift of FMN in old yellow enzyme seems to indicate a different binding mode of the FMN phosphate group in this enzyme as compared to the flavodoxins. The 13C and 15N NMR data on the old-yellow-enzyme--phenolate complexes show that the atoms of the phenolate are more deshielded whereas the atoms of the enzyme-bound isoalloxazine ring are more shielded upon complexation. A non-linear correlation exists between the chemical shifts of the N(5) and the N(10) atoms and the pKa value of the phenolate derivative bound to the protein. Since the chemical shifts of N(5), N(10) and C(4a) are influenced most on complexation it is suggested that the phenolate is bound near the pyrazine ring of the isoalloxazine system. 15N NMR studies on the complex between FMN and 2-aminobenzoic acid indicate that the structure of this complex differs from that of the old-yellow-enzyme--phenolate complexes.  相似文献   

7.
The crystal structure of the oxidized form of a flavodoxin from an eukaryotic red alga, Chondrus crispus, has been determined by multiple isomorphous replacement and anomalous scattering methods. A model of the 173 residues and flavin mononucleotide (FMN) has been refined by a restrained least squares method to a crystallographic R-factor of 22.6% using 6236 reflections between 6.0 and 2.35 A with F greater than 3 sigma F. This molecule has a sheet consisting of five parallel beta-strands with two alpha-helices on one side of the sheet and three on the other side, and has a (beta alpha)5 structure. The molecule incorporates a substantial insertion in beta 5, as in Anacystis nidulans flavodoxin, which distinguishes these flavodoxins from the short-chain type. The isoalloxazine ring of FMN is sandwiched between the side chains of Trp-56 and Tyr-98, with its C-7 and C-8 methyl groups being exposed to solvent. The phosphate group of FMN is located at the N-terminal end of alpha 1, and forms extensive hydrogen bonds with the loop (T8-T13) between beta 1 and alpha 1 of the protein. Six of the total 11 lysine residues are clustered at the opposing face to the FMN-binding site, while about two-thirds of the total 35 acidic residues are located in the half of the molecule which includes the FMN-binding site. Such localization of charged residues produces a dipole within the molecule, which may be important in its recognition of the other proteins participating in electron transfer reactions.  相似文献   

8.
Flavodoxins, noncovalent complexes between apoflavodoxins and flavin mononucleotide (FMN), are useful models to investigate the mechanism of protein/flavin recognition. In this respect, the only available crystal structure of an apoflavodoxin (that from Anabaena) showed a closed isoalloxazine pocket and the presence of a bound phosphate ion, which posed many questions on the recognition mechanism and on the potential physiological role exerted by phosphate ions. To address these issues we report here the X-ray structure of the apoflavodoxin from the pathogen Helicobacter pylori. The protein naturally lacks one of the conserved aromatic residues that close the isoalloxazine pocket in Anabaena, and the structure has been determined in a medium lacking phosphate. In spite of these significant differences, the isoallozaxine pocket in H. pylori apoflavodoxin appears also closed and a chloride ion is bound at a native-like FMN phosphate site. It seems thus that it is a general characteristic of apoflavodoxins to display closed, non-native, isoalloxazine binding sites together with native-like, rather promiscuous, phosphate binding sites that can bear other available small anions present in solution. In this respect, both binding energy hot spots of the apoflavodoxin/FMN complex are initially unavailable to FMN binding and the specific spot for FMN recognition may depend on the dynamics of the two candidate regions. Molecular dynamics simulations show that the isoalloxazine binding loops are intrinsically flexible at physiological temperatures, thus facilitating the intercalation of the cofactor, and that their mobility is modulated by the anion bound at the phosphate site.  相似文献   

9.
The properties of the riboflavin-binding site in the riboflavin-binding protein from egg white have been elucidated by determining constants for binding of flavin analogs to the protein and by changes in absorption spectra of free and bound flavins. The spectral changes and unfavorable interaction of the protein with charged species indicate that the overall flavin environment in the holoprotein is hydrophobic. Modification of either ring or side-chain portions of flavin usually results in a decrease of binding energy. Although no one portion of the structure is absolutely essential, both 7- and 8-methyl groups and 2′-hydroxyl group contribute most significantly to binding. The binding site at the region of C-2 and N-3 of the isoalloxazine is rather insensitive to the relative site of a substituent and thus relatively open, whereas considerable steric limitation is imposed at C-8, N-10, especially C-1′, and 4carbonyl positions. The hydroxyl groups of the N-10 side chain contribute in a stereoselective manner by formation of hydrogen bonds. Studies with model compounds that represent only a part of flavin suggest that the dimethylbenzenoid portion of the ring is involved in primary interactions of binding, and relatively buried in the protein. The quenching of protein fluorescence upon binding is mainly due to ground-state stacking interaction between a trytophanyl residue at the binding site and the quinoxaline portion, and not to Förster energy transfer.  相似文献   

10.
Flavodoxins from Clostridium beijerinckii and from Megasphaera elsdenii with 1-carba-1-deaza-FMN substituted for FMN have been used to study flavin-protein interactions in flavodoxins. The oxidized 1-deaza analogue of FMN binds to apoflavodoxins from M. elsdenii and C. beijerinckii (a.k.a. Clostridium MP) with association constants (Ka) of 1.0 x 10(7) M-1 and 3.1 x 10(6) M-1, values about 10(2) less than the corresponding Ka values for FMN. X-ray structure analysis of oxidized 1-deaza-FMN flavodoxin from C. beijerinckii at 2.5-A resolution shows that the analogue binds with the flavin atoms in the same locations as their equivalents in FMN but that the protein moves in the vicinity of Gly 89 to accommodate the 1-CH group, undergoing displacements which increase the distance between position 1 of the flavin ring and the main-chain atoms of Gly 89 and move the peptide hydrogen of Gly 89 by about 0.6 A. The X-ray analysis implies that protonation of normal flavin at N(1), as would occur in formation of the neutral fully reduced species, would result in a similar structural perturbation. The oxidation-reduction potentials of 1-deaza-FMN flavodoxin from M. elsdenii have been determined in the pH range 4.5-9.2. The oxidized/semiquinone equilibrium (E'0 = -160 mV at pH 7.0) displays a pH dependence of -60 mV per pH unit; the semiquinone/reduced equilibrium (E'0 = -400 mV at pH 7.0) displays a pH dependence of -60 mV per pH unit at low pH and is pH independent at high pH, with a redox-linked pK of 7.4. Spectral changes of fully reduced 1-deaza-FMN flavodoxin with pH suggest that this latter pK corresponds to protonation of the flavin ring system (the pK of free reduced 1-deaza-FMN is 5.6 [Spencer, R., Fisher, J., & Walsh, C. (1977) Biochemistry 16, 3586-3593]. The pK of reduced 1-deaza-FMN flavodoxin provides an estimate of the electrostatic interaction between the protein and the bound prosthetic group; the free energy of binding neutral reduced 1-deaza-FMN is more negative than that for binding the anionic reduced 1-deaza-FMN by 2.4 kcal.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Assignments for the 137 amino acid residues of Megasphaera elsdenii flavodoxin in the reduced state have been made using the sequential resonance assignment procedure. Several hydroxyl and sulfhydryl protons were observed at 41 degrees C at pH 8.3. Spin systems were sequentially assigned using phase-sensitive two-dimensional-correlated spectroscopy and phase-sensitive nuclear Overhauser enhancement spectroscopy. Spectra of the protein in H2O and of protein preparations either completely or partly exchanged against 2H2O were obtained. Use of the fast electron shuttle between the paramagnetic semiquinone and the diamagnetic hydroquinone state greatly simplified the NMR spectra, making it possible to assign easily the 1H resonances of amino acid residues located in the immediate neighbourhood of the isoalloxazine ring. The majority of the nuclear Overhauser effect contracts between the flavin and the apoprotein correspond to the crystal structure of the flavin domain of Clostridium MP flavodoxin, but differences are also observed. The assignments provide the basis for the structure determination of M. elsdenii flavodoxin in the reduced state as well as for assigning the resonances of the oxidized flavodoxin.  相似文献   

12.
The secondary structure of two-electron-reduced Megasphaera elsdenii flavodoxin has been determined by visual, qualitative inspection of the sequential connectivities involving C alpha H, C beta H and NH protons observed in NOESY (two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser enhancement spectroscopy) spectra. Results from an amide proton exchange experiment were used to confirm the secondary structure assignment and to demonstrate the compactness and stability of the protein. After the secondary structure elements were established, the global fold of the protein and the flavin binding site have been determined using nonsequential interresidual NOE connectivities as primary source of information. The secondary structure and the global fold of M. elsdenii and Clostridium MP flavodoxin appeared to be very similar, differences are observed however. M. elsdenii flavodoxin consists of a central parallel beta-sheet including five strands surrounded on both sides by a pair of alpha-helices.  相似文献   

13.
The flavodoxins from Megasphaera elsdenii, Clostridium MP, and Azotobacter vinelandii were studied by 13C, 15N, and 31P NMR techniques by using various selectivity enriched oxidized riboflavin 5'-phosphate (FMN) derivatives. It is shown that the pi electron distribution in protein-bound flavin differs from that of free flavin and depends also on the apoflavoprotein used. In the oxidized state Clostridium MP and M. elsdenii flavodoxins are very similar with respect to specific hydrogen bond interaction between FMN and the apoprotein and the electronic structure of flavin. A. vinelandii flavodoxin differs from these flavodoxins in both respects, but it also differs from Desulfovibrio vulgaris flavodoxin. The similarities between A. vinelandii and D. vulgaris flavodoxins are greater than the similarities with the other two flavodoxins. The differences in the pi electron distribution in the FMN of reduced flavodoxins from A. vinelandii and D. vulgaris are even greater, but the hydrogen bond patterns between the reduced flavins and the apoflavodoxins are very similar. In the reduced state all flavodoxins studied contain an ionized prosthetic group and the isoalloxazine ring is in a planar conformation. The results are compared with existing three-dimensional data and discussed with respect to the various possible mesomeric structures in protein-bound FMN. The results are also discussed in light of the proposed hypothesis that specific hydrogen bonding to the protein-bound flavin determines the specific biological activity of a particular flavoprotein.  相似文献   

14.
Flavodoxins are bacterial electron transport proteins whose redox competence is due to the presence of a tightly but noncovalently bound FMN molecule. While the thermodynamics of the complex are understood, the mechanism of association between the apoflavodoxin and the redox cofactor is not so clear. We investigate here the mechanism of FMN binding to the apoflavodoxin from Helicobacter pylori, an essential protein that is being used as a target to develop antimicrobials. This flavodoxin is structurally peculiar as it lacks the typical bulky residue interacting with the FMN re face but bears instead a small alanine. FMN binding is biphasic, regardless of the presence of phosphate molecules in solution, while riboflavin binding takes place in a single step, the rate constant of which coincides with the fast phase of FMN binding. A mutational study at the isoalloxazine and phosphate subsites for FMN binding clearly indicates that FMN association is always limited by interaction with the isoalloxazine subsite because mutating residues that interact with the phosphate moiety of FMN in the native complex hardly changes the observed rate constants and amplitudes. In contrast, replacing tyr92, which interacts with the isoalloxazine, greatly lowers the rate constants. Our analysis indicates that the two FMN binding phases observed are related neither with alternative or sequential interaction with the two binding subsites nor with the presence of bound phosphate. It is possible that they reflect the intrinsic conformational heterogeneity of the apoflavodoxin ensemble.  相似文献   

15.
The structure of a putative protease from Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron features an unprecedented binding site for flavin mononucleotide. The flavin isoalloxazine ring is sandwiched between two tryptophan residues in the interface of the dimeric protein. We characterized the recombinant protein with regard to its affinity for naturally occurring flavin derivatives and several chemically modified flavin analogs. Dissociation constants were determined by isothermal titration calorimetry. The protein has high affinity to naturally occurring flavin derivatives, such as riboflavin, FMN, and FAD, as well as lumichrome, a photodegradation product of flavins. Similarly, chemically modified flavin analogs showed high affinity to the protein in the nanomolar range. Replacement of the tryptophan by phenylalanine gave rise to much weaker binding, whereas in the tryptophan to alanine variant, flavin binding was abolished. We propose that the protein is an unspecific scavenger of flavin compounds and may serve as a storage protein in vivo.  相似文献   

16.
Escherichia coli general NAD(P)H:flavin oxidoreductase (Fre) does not have a bound flavin cofactor; its flavin substrates (riboflavin, FMN, and FAD) are believed to bind to it mainly through the isoalloxazine ring. This interaction was real for riboflavin and FMN, but not for FAD, which bound to Fre much tighter than FMN or riboflavin. Computer simulations of Fre.FAD and Fre.FMN complexes showed that FAD adopted an unusual bent conformation, allowing its ribityl side chain and ADP moiety to form an additional 3.28 H-bonds on average with amino acid residues located in the loop connecting Fbeta5 and Falpha1 of the flavin-binding domain and at the proposed NAD(P)H-binding site. Experimental data supported the overlapping binding sites of FAD and NAD(P)H. AMP, a known competitive inhibitor with respect to NAD(P)H, decreased the affinity of Fre for FAD. FAD behaved as a mixed-type inhibitor with respect to NADPH. The overlapped binding offers a plausible explanation for the large K(m) values of Fre for NADH and NADPH when FAD is the electron acceptor. Although Fre reduces FMN faster than it reduces FAD, it preferentially reduces FAD when both FMN and FAD are present. Our data suggest that FAD is a preferred substrate and an inhibitor, suppressing the activities of Fre at low NADH concentrations.  相似文献   

17.
Photoreduction with a 5-deazaflavin as the catalyst was used to convert flavodoxins from Desulfovibrio vulgaris, Megasphaera elsdenii, Anabaena PCC 7119, and Azotobacter vinelandii to their hydroquinone forms. The optical spectra of the fully reduced flavodoxins were found to vary with pH in the pH range of 5.0-8.5. The changes correspond to apparent pKa values of 6.5 and 5.8 for flavodoxins from D. vulgaris and M. elsdenii, respectively, values that are similar to the apparent pKa values reported earlier from the effects of pH on the redox potential for the semiquinone-hydroquinone couples of these two proteins (7 and 5.8, respectively). The changes in the spectra resemble those occurring with the free two-electron-reduced flavin for which the pKa is 6.7, but they are red-shifted compared with those of the free flavin. The optical changes occurring with flavodoxins from D. vulgaris and A. vinelandii flavodoxins are larger than those of free reduced FMN. The absorbance of the free and bound flavin increases in the region of 370-390 nm (Delta epsilon = 1-1.8 mM-1 cm-1) with increases of pH. Qualitatively similar pH-dependent changes occur when FMN in D. vulgaris flavodoxin is replaced by iso-FMN, and in the following mutants of D. vulgaris flavodoxin in which the residues mutated are close to the isoalloxazine of the bound flavin: D95A, D95E, D95A/D127A, W60A, Y98S, W60M/Y98W, S96R, and G61A. The 13C NMR spectrum of reduced D. vulgaris [2,4a-13C2]FMN flavodoxin shows two peaks. The peak due to C(4a) is unaffected by pH, but the peak due to C(2) broadens with decreasing pH; the apparent pKa for the change is 6.2. It is concluded that a decrease in pH induces a change in the electronic structure of the reduced flavin due to a change in the ionization state of the flavin, a change in the polarization of the flavin environment, a change in the hydrogen-bonding network around the flavin, and/or possibly a change in the bend along the N(5)-N(10) axis of the flavin. A change in the ionization state of the flavin is the simplest explanation, with the site of protonation differing from that of free FMNH-. The pH effect is unlikely to result from protonation of D95 or D127, the negatively charged amino acids closest to the flavin of D. vulgaris flavodoxin, because the optical changes observed with alanine mutants at these positions are similar to those occurring with the wild-type protein.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Sequence-specific 1H and 15N resonance assignments have been made for all 145 non-prolyl residues and for the flavin cofactor in oxidized Desulfovibrio vulgaris flavodoxin. Assignments were obtained by recording and analyzing 1H–15N heteronuclear three-dimensional NMR experiments on uniformly 15N-enriched protein, pH 6.5, at 300 K. Many of the side-chain resonances have also been assigned. Observed medium-and long-range NOEs, in combination with 3JNH coupling constants and 1HN exchange data, indicate that the secondary structure consists of a five-stranded parallel -sheet and four -helices, with a topology identical to that determined previously by X-ray crystallographic methods. One helix, which is distorted in the X-ray structure, is non-regular in solution as well. Several protein-flavin NOEs, which serve to dock the flavin ligand to its binding site, have also been identified. Based on fast-exchange into 2H2O, the 1HN3 proton of the isoalloxazine ring is solvent accessible and not strongly hydrogen-bonded in the flavin binding site, in contrast to what has been observed in several other flavodoxins. The resonance assignments presented here can form the basis for assigning single-site mutant flavodoxins and for correlating structural differences between wild-type and mutant flavodoxins with altered redox potentials.  相似文献   

19.
ActVB is the NADH:flavin oxidoreductase participating in the last step of actinorhodin synthesis in Streptomyces coelicolor. It is the prototype of a whole class of flavin reductases with both sequence and functional similarities. The mechanism of reduction of free flavins by ActVB has been studied. Although ActVB was isolated with FMN bound, we have demonstrated that it is not a flavoprotein. Instead, ActVB contains only one flavin binding site, suitable for the flavin reductase activity and with a high affinity for FMN. In addition, ActVB proceeds by an ordered sequential mechanism, where NADH is the first substrate. Whereas ActVB is highly specific for NADH, it is able to catalyze the reduction of a great variety of natural and synthetic flavins, but with K(m) values ranging from 1 microm (FMN) to 69 microm (lumiflavin). We show that both the ribitol-phosphate chain and the isoalloxazine ring contribute to the protein-flavin interaction. Such properties are unique and set the ActVB family apart from the well characterized Fre flavin reductase family.  相似文献   

20.
Diflavin reductases are enzymes which emerged as a gene fusion of ferredoxin (flavodoxin) reductase and flavodoxin. The enzymes of this family tightly bind two flavin cofactors, FAD and FMN, and catalyze transfer of the reducing equivalents from the two-electron donor NADPH to a variety of one-electron acceptors. Cytochrome P450 reductase (P450R), a flavoprotein subunit of sulfite reductase (SiR), and flavoprotein domains of naturally occurring flavocytochrome fusion enzymes like nitric oxide synthases (NOS) and the fatty acid hydroxylase from Bacillus megaterium are some of the enzymes of this family. In this review the results of the last decade of research are summarized, and some earlier results are reevaluated as well. The kinetic mechanism of cytochrome c reduction is analyzed in light of other results on flavoprotein interactions with nucleotides and cytochromes. The roles of the binding sites of the isoalloxazine rings of the flavin cofactors and conformational changes of the protein in electron transfer are discussed. It is proposed that minor conformational changes during catalysis can potentiate properties of the redox centers during the catalytic turnover. A function of the aromatic residue that shields the isoalloxazine ring of the FAD is also proposed.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号