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1.
Four titrating histidine ring C2 and C4 proton resonances are observed in 220 MHz proton NMR spectra of human metmyoglobin as a function of pH. Values of ionization constants determined from the NMR titration data using an equation describing a simple proton association-dissociation equilibrium are curves (1) 6.6, (2) 7.0, (3) 5.8, and (4) 7.4. Four histidine residues have also been found to be solvent-accessible in human metmyoglobin by carboxymethylation studies (Harris, C.M., and Hill, R.L. (1969) J. Biol. Chem. 244, 2195-2203). Two of the titration curves (3 and 4) deviate significantly from the chemical shift values normally observed for histidine C2 proton resonances. Curve 3, with a low pKa, is shifted downfield at high values of pH and also exhibits a second minor inflection with a pKa value of 8.8. On the other hand, the high pKa curve, 4, is shifted upfield at all values of pH. The characteristics of the NMR titration curves with the lowest and highest pKa values (3 and4) are very similar to curves observed previously with sperm whale and horse metmyoglobins (Cohen, J.S., Hagenmaier, H., Pollard, H., and Schechter, A.N. (1972) J. Mol. Biol. 71, 513-519). These results indicate that the histidine residues from which these curves are derived have unusual and characteristic environments in this series of homologous proteins. The NMR spectra of all three metmyoglobins are changed extensively as a result of azide ion binding, indicating conformational changes affecting the environments of several imidazole side chains. The presence of azide ion causes a selective downfield chemical shift for the low pKa curve and a selective upfield chemical shift for the high pKa curve in all three proteins. Azide also abolishes the second inflection seen in the low pKa curve at high pH. In addition to these effects, the presence of azide ion permits the observation of two additional titrating proton resonances for all three metmyoglobins. Increasing the azide to protein ratio at several fixed values of pH yields results which show that a slow exchange process is occurring with each of the metmyoglobins. In the azide titration studies the maximum changes in the NMR spectra occurred at approximately equimolar concentrations. The NMR results for these proteins in the absence and presence of azide ion are related to x-ray crystallographic studies of sperm whale metmyoglobin and the known alkylation properties of the histidine residues. Tentative assignments of the titrating resonances observed are suggested.  相似文献   

2.
Fe(IV)=O resonance Raman stretching vibrations were recently identified by this laboratory for horseradish peroxidase compound II and ferryl myoglobin. In the present report it is shown that Fe(IV)=O stretching frequency for horseradish peroxidase compound II will switch between two values depending on pH, with pKa values corresponding to the previously reported compound II heme-linked ionizations of pKa = 6.9 for isoenzyme A-2 and pKa = 8.5 for isoenzyme C. Similar pH-dependent shifts of the Fe(IV)=O frequency of ferryl myoglobin were not detected above pH 6. The Fe(IV)=O stretching frequencies of compound II of the horseradish peroxidase isoenzymes at pH values above the transition points were at a high value approaching the Fe(IV)=O stretching frequency of ferryl myoglobin. Below the transition points the horseradish peroxidase frequencies were found to be 10 cm-1 lower. Frequencies of the Fe(IV)=O stretching vibrations of horseradish peroxidase compound II for one set of isoenzymes were found to be sensitive to deuterium exchange below the transition point but not above. These results were interpreted to be indicative of an alkaline deprotonation of a distal amino acid group, probably histidine, which is hydrogen bonded to the oxyferryl group below the transition point. Deprotonation of this group at pH values above the pKa disrupts hydrogen bonding, raising the Fe(IV)=O stretching frequency, and is proposed to account for the lowering of compound II reactivity at alkaline pH. The high value of the Fe(IV)=O vibration of compound II above the transition point appears to be identical in frequency to what is believed to be the Fe(IV)=O vibration of compound X.  相似文献   

3.
The ionization of 4-nitroimidazole to 4-nitroimidazolate was investigated as a function of ionic strength. The apparent pKa varies from 8.99 to 9.50 between 0.001 and 1.0 M ionic strength, respectively, at 25 degrees C. The ionic strength dependence of this ionization is anomalous. The binding of 4-nitroimidazole by horse metmyoglobin was studied between pH 5.0 and 11.5 and as a function of ionic strength between 0.01 and 1.0 M. The association rate constant is pH-dependent, varying from 24 M(-1)s(-1) at pH 5 to a maximum value of 280 M(-1)s(-1) at pH 9.5 and then decreasing to 10 M(-1)s(-1) at pH 11.5 in 0.1 M ionic strength buffers. The dissociation rate constant has a much smaller pH dependence, varying from 0.082 s(-1) at low pH to 0.035 s(-1) at high pH, with an apparent pKa of 6.5. The binding affinity of 4-nitroimidazole to horse metmyoglobin is about 2.5 orders of magnitude stronger than that for imidazole and this increased affinity is attributed to the much slower dissociation rate for 4-nitroimidazole compared to that of imidazole. Although the ionic strength dependence of the binding rate is small and secondary kinetic salt effects can account for the ionic strength dependence of the association rate constant, the pH dependence of the rate constants and microscopic reversibility arguments indicate that the anionic form of the ligand binds more rapidly to all forms of metmyoglobin than does the neutral form of the ligand. However, the spectrum of the complex is similar to model complexes involving neutral imidazole and not imidazolate. The latter observation suggests that the initial metmyoglobin/4-nitroimidazolate complex rapidly binds a proton and the neutral form of the bound ligand is stabilized, probably through hydrogen binding with the distal histidine.  相似文献   

4.
The normally hexa coordinate ferrous form of neuroglobin binds CO by replacement of the heme-linked distal histidine residue. We have studied this reaction in detail using stopped flow techniques. The reaction time courses are complex at all the wavelengths studied. Specifically the reaction with CO occurs in two temporally separable phases, each of which shows a hyperbolic dependence of rate on CO concentration, indicating they each arise from histidine replacement by CO. Analysis of the observed rates as a function of the CO concentration, measured in the pH range 6.0-8.0, allows us to determine both the rate of histidine-heme ligand binding and dissociation for each of the two forms of the protein present in solution at each pH value. The pH dependence of the histidine association and dissociation rates is complex, as are the derived equilibrium constants for distal histidine binding. The spectral change associated with each reaction phase is very similar and independent of the CO concentration, showing that the two protein forms responsible for the two observed kinetic processes are not in equilibrium on the time scale of our investigations. Our data suggests that, unlike many other heme proteins, neuroglobin displays complex reactivity with ligands in the ferrous form due to heme rotational disorder, as has previously been reported for the ferric form of the protein.  相似文献   

5.
The crystal structures of sperm whale metmyoglobins reconstituted with three kinds of modified hemes, 2,4-diisopropyldeuteroheme, 2-isopropyl-4-vinyldeuteroheme, and 2-vinyl-4-isopropyldeuteroheme, have been determined and refined at 2.2 A resolution to R = 0.216, 0.219, and 0.195, respectively. All the crystals of these myoglobins are isomorphous with that of native metmyoglobin. The 2-vinyl-4-isopropyldeuteroheme was found to be in a reverse orientation, in which the heme plane is rotated by 180 degrees about an axis through the alpha-gamma-meso carbons, whereas the orientations of the other two hemes were the same as that of protoheme in native myoglobin. In the myoglobins with 2,4-diisopropyldeuteroheme and 2-vinyl-4-isopropyldeuteroheme, both of which have lower oxygen affinities than native myoglobin, the bulky isopropyl side chain pushes Phe 43 0.7 A toward His 64 (the distal histidine) in the former, and the whole E helix at most 1.5 A, including a 0.7 A shift of the His 64 imidazole ring, in the latter. The changes of the structures prevent His 64 from forming a hydrogen bond with the liganded oxygen molecule, so that these two modified myoglobins show low oxygen affinities. On the other hand, there is no such drastic displacement in myoglobin with 2-isopropyl-4-vinyldeuteroheme, which has a slightly higher oxygen affinity than native myoglobin.  相似文献   

6.
Resonance Raman and electronic absorption spectra obtained at various pH values for the Fe3+ form of distal F54 mutants of Coprinus cinereus peroxidase are reported, together with the Fe2+ form and fluoride and imidazole adducts at pH 6.0, 5.0, and 10.5, respectively. The distal phenylalanine residue has been replaced by the small aliphatic residues glycine and valine and the hydrogen-bonding aromatic residues tyrosine and tryptophan (F54G, -V, -Y, and -W, respectively). These mutations resulted in transitions between ferric high-spin five-coordinate and six-coordinate forms, and caused a decrease of the pKa of the alkaline transition together with a higher tendency for unfolding. The mutations also alter the ability of the proteins to bind fluoride in such a way that those that are six-coordinate at pH 5.0 bind more strongly than both wild-type CIP and F54Y which are five-coordinate at this pH value. The data provide evidence that the architecture of the distal pocket of CIP is altered by the mutations. Direct evidence is provided that the distal phenylalanine plays an important role in controlling the conjugation between the vinyl double bonds and the porphyrin macrocycle, as indicated by the reorientation of the vinyl groups upon mutation of phenylalanine with the small aliphatic side chains of glycine and valine residues. Furthermore, it appears that the presence of the hydrogen-bonding tyrosine or tryptophan in the cavity increases the pKa of the distal histidine for protonation compared with that of wild-type CIP.  相似文献   

7.
Myeloperoxidase compound II has been characterized by using optical absorption and resonance Raman spectroscopies. Compared to compounds II in other peroxidases, the electronic and vibrational properties of this intermediate are strongly perturbed due to the unusual active-site iron chromophore that occurs in myeloperoxidase. Despite this difference in prosthetic group, however, other properties of myeloperoxidase compound II are similar to those observed for this intermediate in the more common peroxidases (horseradish peroxidase in particular). Two forms of the myeloperoxidase intermediate species, each with distinct absorption spectra, are recognized as a function of pH. We present evidence consistent with interconversion of these two forms via a heme-linked ionization of a distal amino acid residue with a pKa congruent to 9. From resonance Raman studies of isotopically labeled species at pH 10.7, we identify an iron-oxygen stretching frequency at 782 cm-1, indicating the presence of an oxoferryl (O = FeIV) group in myeloperoxidase compound II. We further conclude that the oxo ligand is not hydrogen bonded above the pKa but possibly exhibits oxygen exchange with the medium at pH values below the pKa due to hydrogen bonding of the oxo ligand to the distal protein group.  相似文献   

8.
Bacterial nitric-oxide reductase catalyzes the two electron reduction of nitric oxide to nitrous oxide. In the oxidized form the active site non-heme Fe(B) and high spin heme b(3) are mu-oxo bridged. The heme b(3) has a ligand-to-metal charge transfer band centered at 595 nm, which is insensitive to pH over the range of 6.0-8.5. Partial reduction of nitric-oxide reductase yields a three electron-reduced state where only the heme b(3) remains oxidized. This results in a shift of the heme b(3) charge transfer band lambda(max) to longer wavelengths. At pH 6.0 the charge transfer band lambda(max) is 605 nm, whereas at pH 8.5 it is 635 nm. At pH 6.5 and 7.5 the nitric-oxide reductase ferric heme b(3) population is a mixture of both 605- and 635-nm forms. Magnetic circular dichroism spectroscopy suggests that at all pH values examined the proximal ligand to the ferric heme b(3) in the three electron-reduced form is histidine. At pH 8.5 the distal ligand is hydroxide, whereas at pH 6.0, when the enzyme is most active, it is water.  相似文献   

9.
New class of 19F pH indicators: fluoroanilines   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
The pH dependence of the 19F chemical shift has been characterized for a number of fluorine-substituted aniline derivatives. These compounds constitute a new class of 19F nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) pH indicators, characterized by single 19F resonance lines with sensitivities ranging from 2 to 7 ppm/pH unit near the aniline pKa; total shifts between conjugate acid and base of 5-15 ppm; and pKas ranging from 1 to 7. One compound, N,N-(methyl-2-carboxyisopropyl)-4-fluoroaniline, has a pKa of 6.8 and a sensitivity of 5 ppm/pH unit. This compound displays significant broadening of its 19F resonance near the aniline pKa (6.8), due to a decreased rate of exchange between conjugate acid and base species. Our results are consistent with slow dissociation of an intramolecular hydrogen bond in the zwitterionic species that limits the exchange rate between protonated and unprotonated forms for N,N-(methyl-2-carboxyisopropyl)-4-fluoroaniline.  相似文献   

10.
Spectrophotometric titration of ferric octaethylporphyrin (OEP) with apomyoglobin revealed their 1:1 complex formation. Proton NMR spectrum of the OEP-reconstituted deoxymyoglobin exhibits an exchangeable peak from the proximal F8 histidine at 78.5 ppm, indicating the incorporation of iron OEP into the heme cavity to form the Fe-N(His-F8) bond. OEP metmyoglobin without external ligand has an iron-bound water that deprotonates above pH 7.8. Affinities of the aquometmyoglobin for several ionic ligands were comparable with those of native metmyoglobin. Deoxy OEP myoglobin at 25 degrees C reversibly binds oxygen with an affinity of P50 = 0.8 mm Hg, which is similar to that of native protein. These results indicate that iron OEP serves as a prosthetic group for myoglobin with normal function, despite the significant structural and electronic difference between OEP and protoporphyrin. The unexpected functional similarity between native and OEP myoglobins was interpreted in terms of a structural perturbation at the heme distal site caused by introduction of bulky OEP into the heme pocket.  相似文献   

11.
The interaction between RNase T1 and a non-hydrolysable substrate analog, 2'-deoxy-2'-fluoroguanylyl-(3'-5')uridine (GfpU), was investigated using 1H-NMR spectroscopy. In the complex, the Gfp portion takes the syn form around the glycosidic bond and the 3'-endo form for the ribose moiety, similar to those found in 3'-GMP and 2'-deoxy-2'-fluoroguanosine 3'-monophosphate (Gfp). However, in contrast to the cases of these two inhibitors, the complex formation with GfpU at pH 6.0 was found to shift the His-40 C2 proton resonance of RNase T1 to high field as much as 1 ppm. At pH 6.0, this histidine residue appears to be unprotonated in the complex, but is protonated in the free enzyme (pKa of His-40 being 7.9). His-40, rather than Glu-58, is probably involved in the catalytic mechanism as a Lewis base, supporting the recent results from site-directed mutagenesis.  相似文献   

12.
To probe the mechanism of stromelysin (SLN)-catalyzed peptide hydrolysis, we determined the pH dependence of kc/Km and solvent deuterium isotope effects on kc and kc/Km. pH dependencies of kc/Km were determined for the SLN-catalyzed hydrolysis of three peptides: Arg-Pro-Lys-Pro-Gln-Gln-Phe-Phe-Gly-Leu-Nle-NH2,Arg-Pro-Ala-Pro-Gln-Gln- Phe-Phe - Gly-Leu-NleNH2, and N-acetyl-Arg-Pro-Ala-Pro-Gln-Gln-Phe-Phe-Gly-Leu-Nle-NH2 (cleavage at Gln-Phe bond). The pH dependencies are all bell-shaped with shoulders that extend from pH 7.5 to 8.5. The existence of a shoulder indicates that the reaction mechanism involves at least two routes to products. These curves are governed by three proton ionizations with pKa values of 5.4, 6.1, and 9.5. The solvent isotope effect measurements provided the following values: D(kc/Km) = 0.80 +/- 0.05 and D(kc) = 1.58 +/- 0.05. That D(kc/Km) and D(kc) are different suggests that the rate-limiting transition states for the processes governed by kc/Km and kc cannot be the same. We use these results, together with analogy to thermolysin catalysis, to develop a mechanism for SLN catalysis.  相似文献   

13.
To find a simple criterion for the presence of the distal (E7) histidine residue in myoglobins and hemoglobins, the Soret magnetic-circular-dichroic spectra were examined for ferric metmyoglobins from various species. A distinct and symmetric dispersion-type curve was obtained for myoglobins containing the distal histidine, whereas a relatively weak and unsymmetric pattern was observed for myoglobins lacking this residue, such as those from three kinds of gastropodic sea molluscs, a shark and the African elephant. The magnetic-circular-dichroic spectra obtained would thus be a direct reflection of the presence or absence of a water molecule at the sixth coordinate position of the heme iron(III), this axial water ligand being stabilized by hydrogen-bond formation to the distal histidine residue. On the basis of these Soret magnetic-circular-dichroic signals, we also examined the structure of a protozoan myoglobin (or a monomeric hemoglobin) from Paramecium caudatum of particular interest for the evolution of these proteins from protozoa to higher animals.  相似文献   

14.
Mutational analysis has previously indicated that D83 and E98 residues are essential for DNA cleavage activity and presumably chelate a Mg2+ ion at the active site of MunI restriction enzyme. In the absence of metal ions, protonation of an ionizable residue with a pKa > 7.0, most likely one of the active site carboxylates, controls the DNA binding specificity of MunI [Lagunavicius, A., Grazulis, S., Balciunaite, E., Vainius, D., and Siksnys, V. (1997) Biochemistry 36, 11093-11099.]. Thus, competition between H+ and Mg2+ binding at the active site of MunI presumably plays an important role in catalysis/binding. In the present study we have identified elementary steps and intermediates in the reaction pathway of plasmid DNA cleavage by MunI and elucidated the effect of pH and Mg2+ ions on the individual steps of the DNA cleavage reaction. The kinetic analysis indicated that the multiple-turnover rate of plasmid cleavage by MunI is limited by product release throughout the pH range 6.0-9.3. Quenched-flow experiments revealed that open circle DNA is an obligatory intermediate in the reaction pathway. Under optimal reaction conditions, open circle DNA remains bound to the MunI; however it is released into the solution at low [MgCl2]. Rate constants for the phoshodiester bond hydrolysis of the first (k1) and second (k2) strand of plasmid DNA at pH 7.0 and 10 mM MgCl2 more than 100-fold exceed the kcat value which is limited by product dissociation. The analysis of the pH and [Mg2+] dependences of k1 and k2 revealed that both H+ and Mg2+ ions compete for the binding to the same residue at the active site of MunI. Thus, the decreased rate of phosphodiester hydrolysis by MunI at pH < 7.0 may be due to the reduction of affinity for the Mg2+ binding at the active site. Kinetic analysis of DNA cleavage by MunI yielded estimates for the association-dissociation rate constants of enzyme-substrate complex and demonstrated the decreased stability of the MunI-DNA complex at pH values above 8.0.  相似文献   

15.
16.
J M Denu  P F Fitzpatrick 《Biochemistry》1992,31(35):8207-8215
Primary deuterium kinetic isotope and pH effects on the reduction of D-amino acid oxidase by amino acid substrates were determined using steady-state and rapid reaction methods. With D-serine as substrate, reduction of the enzyme-bound FAD requires that a group with a pKa value of 8.7 be unprotonated and that a group with a pKa value of 10.7 be protonated. The DV/Kser value of 4.5 is pH-independent, establishing that these pKa values are intrinsic. The limiting rate of reduction of the enzyme shows a kinetic isotope effect of 4.75, consistent with this as the intrinsic value. At high enzyme concentration (approximately 15 microM) at pH 9,D-serine is slightly sticky (k3/k2 = 0.8), consistent with a decrease in the rate of substrate dissociation. With D-alanine as substrate, the pKa values are perturbed to 8.1 and 11.5. The DV/Kala value increases from 1.3 at pH 9.5 to 5.1 at pH 4, establishing that D-alanine is sticky with a forward commitment of approximately 10. The effect of pH on the DV/Kala value is consistent with a model in which exchange with solvent of the proton from the group with pKa 8.7 is hindered and is catalyzed by H2O and OH- above pH 7 and by H3O+ and H2O below pH 7. With glycine, the pH optimum is shifted to a more basic value, 10.3. The DV/Kgly value increases from 1.26 at pH 6.5 to 3.1 at pH 10.7, consistent with fully reversible CH bond cleavage followed by a pH-dependent step. At pH 10.5, the kinetic isotope effect on the limiting rate of reduction is 3.4.  相似文献   

17.
Micrococcus luteus UV endonuclease incises DNA at the sites of ultraviolet (UV) light-induced pyrimidine dimers. The mechanism of incision has been previously shown to be a glycosylic bond cleavage at the 5'-pyrimidine of the dimer followed by an apyrimidine endonuclease activity which cleaves the phosphodiester backbone between the pyrimidines. The process by which M. luteus UV endonuclease locates pyrimidine dimers within a population of UV-irradiated plasmids was shown to occur, in vitro, by a processive or "sliding" mechanism on non-target DNA as opposed to a distributive or "random hit" mechanism. Form I plasmid DNA containing 25 dimers per molecule was incubated with M. luteus UV endonuclease in time course reactions. The three topological forms of plasmid DNA generated were analyzed by agarose gel electrophoresis. When the enzyme encounters a pyrimidine dimer, it is significantly more likely to make only the glycosylase cleavage as opposed to making both the glycosylic and phosphodiester bond cleavages. Thus, plasmids are accumulated with many alkaline-labile sites relative to single-stranded breaks. In addition, reactions were performed at both pH 8.0 and pH 6.0, in the absence of NaCl, as well as 25,100, and 250 mM NaCl. The efficiency of the DNA scanning reaction was shown to be dependent on both the ionic strength and pH of the reaction. At low ionic strengths, the reaction was shown to proceed by a processive mechanism and shifted to a distributive mechanism as the ionic strength of the reaction increased. Processivity at pH 8.0 is shown to be more sensitive to increases in ionic strength than reactions performed at pH 6.0.  相似文献   

18.
Inteins are autocatalytic protein cleavage and splicing elements. A cysteine to alanine mutation at the N-terminal of inteins inhibits splicing and isolates the C-terminal cleavage reaction. Experiments indicate an enhanced C-terminal cleavage reaction rate upon decreasing the solution pH for the cleavage mutant, which cannot be explained by the existing mechanistic framework. We use intein crystal structure data and the information about conserved amino acids to perform semiempirical PM3 calculations followed by high-level density functional theory calculations in both gas phase and implicit solvent environments. Based on these calculations, we propose a detailed “low pH” mechanism for intein C-terminal cleavage. Water plays an important role in the proposed reaction mechanism, acting as an acid as well as a base. The protonation of the scissile peptide bond nitrogen by a hydronium ion is an important first step in the reaction. That step is followed by the attack of the C-terminal asparagine side chain on its carbonyl carbon, causing succinimide formation and simultaneous peptide bond cleavage. The computed reaction energy barrier in the gas phase is ~33 kcal/mol and reduces to ~25 kcal/mol in solution, close to the 21 kcal/mol experimentally observed at pH 6.0. This mechanism is consistent with the observed increase in C-terminal cleavage activity at low pH for the cleavage mutant of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis RecA mini-intein.  相似文献   

19.
Benzyloxycarbonyl (Z)-Ala-Pro-Phe-glyoxal and Z-Ala-Ala-Phe-glyoxal have both been shown to be inhibitors of alpha-chymotrypsin with minimal Ki values of 19 and 344 nM, respectively, at neutral pH. These Ki values increased at low and high pH with pKa values of approximately 4.0 and approximately 10.5, respectively. By using surface plasmon resonance, we show that the apparent association rate constant for Z-Ala-Pro-Phe-glyoxal is much lower than the value expected for a diffusion-controlled reaction. 13C NMR has been used to show that at low pH the glyoxal keto carbon is sp3-hybridized with a chemical shift of approximately 100.7 ppm and that the aldehyde carbon is hydrated with a chemical shift of approximately 91.6 ppm. The signal at approximately 100.7 ppm is assigned to the hemiketal formed between the hydroxy group of serine 195 and the keto carbon of the glyoxal. In a slow exchange process controlled by a pKa of approximately 4.5, the aldehyde carbon dehydrates to give a signal at approximately 205.5 ppm and the hemiketal forms an oxyanion at approximately 107.0 ppm. At higher pH, the re-hydration of the glyoxal aldehyde carbon leads to the signal at 107 ppm being replaced by a signal at 104 ppm (pKa approximately 9.2). On binding either Z-Ala-Pro-Phe-glyoxal or Z-Ala-Ala-Phe-glyoxal to alpha-chymotrypsin at 4 and 25 degrees C, 1H NMR is used to show that the binding of these glyoxal inhibitors raises the pKa value of the imidazolium ion of histidine 57 to a value of >11 at both 4 and 25 degrees C. We discuss the mechanistic significance of these results, and we propose that it is ligand binding that raises the pKa value of the imidazolium ring of histidine 57 allowing it to enhance the nucleophilicity of the hydroxy group of the active site serine 195 and lower the pKa value of the oxyanion forming a zwitterionic tetrahedral intermediate during catalysis.  相似文献   

20.
The active site amino acid residues of lignin peroxidase are homologous to those of other peroxidases; however, in contrast to other peroxidases, no pH dependence is observed for the reaction of ferric lignin peroxidase with H2O2 to form compound I (Andrawis, A., Johnson, K.A., and Tien, M. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 1195-1198). Chloride binding is used in the present study to investigate this reaction further. Chloride binds to lignin peroxidase at the same site as cyanide and hydrogen peroxide. This is indicated by the following. 1) Chloride competes with cyanide in binding to lignin peroxidase. 2) Chloride is a competitive inhibitor of lignin peroxidase with respect to H2O2. The inhibition constant (Ki) is equal to the dissociation constant (Kd) of chloride at all pH values studied. Chloride binding is pH dependent: chloride binds only to the protonated form of lignin peroxidase. Transient-state kinetic studies demonstrate that chloride inhibits lignin peroxidase compound I formation in a pH-dependent manner with maximum inhibition at low pH. An apparent pKa was calculated at each chloride concentration; the pKa increased as the chloride concentration increased. Extrapolation to zero chloride concentration allowed us to estimate the intrinsic pKa for the ionization in the lignin peroxidase active site. The results reported here provide evidence that an acidic ionizable group (pKa approximately 1) at the active site controls both lignin peroxidase compound I formation and chloride binding. We propose that the mechanism for lignin peroxidase compound I formation is similar to that of other peroxidases in that it requires the deprotonated form of an ionizable group near the active site.  相似文献   

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