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1.
Du J  Huang X  Sun S  Wang C  Lebioda L  Dawson JH 《Biochemistry》2011,50(38):8172-8180
Dehaloperoxidase (DHP), discovered in the marine terebellid polychaete Amphitrite ornata, is the first heme-containing globin with a peroxidase activity. The sequence and crystal structure of DHP argue that it evolved from an ancient O(2) transport and storage globin. Thus, DHP retains an oxygen carrier function but also has the ability to degrade halophenol toxicants in its living environment. Sperm whale myoglobin (Mb) in the ferric state has a peroxidase activity ~10 times lower than that of DHP. The catalytic activity enhancement observed in DHP appears to have been generated mainly by subtle changes in the positions of the proximal and distal histidine residues that appeared during DHP evolution. Herein, we report investigations into the mechanism of action of DHP derived from examination of "peroxidase-like" Mb mutants and "Mb-like" DHP mutants. The dehalogenation ability of wild-type Mb is augmented in the peroxidase-like Mb mutants (F43H/H64L, G65T, and G65I Mb) but attenuated in the Mb-like T56G DHP variant. X-ray crystallographic data show that the distal His residues in G65T Mb and G65I are positioned ~0.3 and ~0.8 ?, respectively, farther from the heme iron compared to that in the wild-type protein. The H93K/T95H double mutant Mb with the proximal His shifted to the "DHP-like" position has an increased peroxidase activity. In addition, a better dehaloperoxidase (M86E DHP) was generated by introducing a negative charge near His89 to enhance the imidazolate character of the proximal His. Finally, only minimal differences in dehalogenation activities are seen among the exogenous ligand-free DHP, the acetate-bound DHP, and the distal site blocker L100F DHP mutant. Thus, we conclude that binding of halophenols in the internal binding site (i.e., distal cavity) is not essential for catalysis. This work provides a foundation for a new structure-function paradigm for peroxidases and for the molecular evolution of the dual-function enzyme DHP.  相似文献   

2.
Dehaloperoxidase (DHP) from the annelid Amphitrite ornata is a catalytically active hemoglobin-peroxidase that possesses a unique internal binding cavity in the distal pocket above the heme. The previously published crystal structure of DHP shows 4-iodophenol bound internally. This led to the proposal that the internal binding site is the active site for phenol oxidation. However, the native substrate for DHP is 2,4,6-tribromophenol, and all attempts to bind 2,4,6-tribromophenol in the internal site under physiological conditions have failed. Herein, we show that the binding of 4-halophenols in the internal pocket inhibits enzymatic function. Furthermore, we demonstrate that DHP has a unique two-site competitive binding mechanism in which the internal and external binding sites communicate through two conformations of the distal histidine of the enzyme, resulting in nonclassical competitive inhibition. The same distal histidine conformations involved in DHP function regulate oxygen binding and release during transport and storage by hemoglobins and myoglobins. This work provides further support for the hypothesis that DHP possesses an external binding site for substrate oxidation, as is typical for the peroxidase family of enzymes.  相似文献   

3.
Belyea J  Gilvey LB  Davis MF  Godek M  Sit TL  Lommel SA  Franzen S 《Biochemistry》2005,44(48):15637-15644
Amphitrite ornata dehaloperoxidase (DHP) is a heme enzyme with a globin structure, which is capable of oxidizing para-halogenated phenols to the corresponding quinones. Cloning, high-level expression, and purification of recombinant DHP are described. Recombinant DHP was assayed by stopped-flow experiments for its ability to oxidatively debrominate 2,4,6-tribromophenol (TBP). The enzymatic activity of the ferric form of recombinant DHP is intermediate between that of a typical peroxidase (horseradish peroxidase) and a typical globin (horse heart myoglobin). The present study shows that, unlike other known peroxidases, DHP activity requires the addition of substrate, TBP, prior to the cosubstrate, peroxide. The presence of a substrate-binding site in DHP is consistent with a two-electron oxidation mechanism and an obligatory order for activation of the enzyme by addition of the substrate prior to the cosubstrate.  相似文献   

4.
Dehaloperoxidase-hemoglobin (DHP) is a unique multifunctional enzyme with a globin fold. The enzyme serves as the respiratory hemoglobin for the marine worm Amphitrite ornata and has been shown to catalyze the conversion of highly toxic trihalophenols to dihaloquinones as a detoxification function for the organism. Given the simplicity of the structure of A. ornata, it is entirely possible that DHP may play an even more general role in detoxification of the organism from sulfide commonly found in the coastal estuaries where A. ornata thrives. Comparison of DHP with other sulfide-binding hemoglobins shows that DHP possesses several distal cavity structural properties, such as an aromatic cage and a hydrogen-bond-donor amino acid (His55), that facilitate sulfide binding. Furthermore, a complete reduction of the ferric heme occurs after sulfide exposure under aerobic or anaerobic conditions to yield either the oxy or the deoxy ferrous states of DHP, respectively. Oxidation of sulfide by the heme leads to sulfur products that are less toxic to A. ornata. This proposed new function for DHP relies on the highly flexible distal His55 for deprotonation of the bound hydrogen sulfide, similar to H2O2 activation of the peroxidase function, and provides further support for the importance of the flexibility of the distal His55 in this novel globin.  相似文献   

5.
The coelomic hemoglobin of Amphitrite ornata, termed dehaloperoxidase (DHP), is the first known multifunctional catalytic globin to possess biologically-relevant peroxidase and peroxygenase activities. Although the two isoenzymes of DHP, A and B, differ in sequence by only 5 amino acids out of 137 residues, DHP B consistently exhibits a greater activity than isoenzyme A. To delineate the contributions of each amino acid substitution to the activity of either isoenzyme, the substitutions of the five amino acids were systematically investigated, individually and in combination, using 22 mutants. Biochemical assays and mechanistic studies demonstrated that the mutants that only contained the I9L substitution showed increased i) kcat values (peroxidase activity), ii) 5-Br-indole conversion and binding affinity (peroxygenase activity), and iii) rate of Compound ES formation (enzyme activation). Whereas the X-ray structures of the oxyferrous forms of DHP B (L9I) (1.96 Å), DHP A (I9L) (1.20 Å), and WT DHP B (1.81 Å) showed no significant differences, UV–visible spectroscopy (ASoret/A380 ratio) revealed that the I9L substitution increased the 5-coordinate high-spin heme population characterized by the “open” conformation (i.e., distal histidine swung out of the pocket), which likely favors substrate binding. The positioning of the distal histidine closer to the heme cofactor in the solution state also appears to facilitate activation of DHP via the Compound ES intermediate. Taken together, the studies undertaken here shed light on the structure-function relationship in dehaloperoxidase, but also help to establish the foundation for understanding how enzymatic activity can be tuned in isoenzymes of a multifunctional catalytic globin.  相似文献   

6.
D'Antonio J  Ghiladi RA 《Biochemistry》2011,50(27):5999-6011
Dehaloperoxidase (DHP) from the terebellid polychaete Amphitrite ornata is a bifunctional enzyme that possesses both hemoglobin and peroxidase activities. The bifunctional nature of DHP as a globin peroxidase appears to be at odds with the traditional starting oxidation state for each individual activity. Namely, reversible oxygen binding is only mediated via a ferrous heme in globins, and peroxidase activity is initiated from ferric centers and to the exclusion of the oxyferrous oxidation state from the peroxidase cycle. Thus, to address what appears to be a paradox, herein we report the details of our investigations into the DHP catalytic cycle when initiated from the deoxy- and oxyferrous states using biochemical assays, stopped-flow UV-visible, and rapid-freeze-quench electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopies, and anaerobic methods. We demonstrate the formation of Compound II directly from deoxyferrous DHP B upon its reaction with hydrogen peroxide and show that this occurs both in the presence and in the absence of trihalophenol. Prior to the formation of Compound II, we have identified a new species that we have preliminarily attributed to a ferrous-hydroperoxide precursor that undergoes heterolysis to generate the aforementioned ferryl intermediate. Taken together, the results demonstrate that the oxyferrous state in DHP is a peroxidase competent starting species, and an updated catalytic cycle for DHP is proposed in which the ferric oxidation state is not an obligatory starting point for the peroxidase catalytic cycle of dehaloperoxidase. The data presented herein provide a link between the peroxidase and oxygen transport activities, which furthers our understanding of how this bifunctional enzyme is able to unite its two inherent functions in one system.  相似文献   

7.
Amphitrite ornata dehaloperoxidase (DHP) and Notomastus lobatus chloroperoxidase (NCPO) catalyze the peroxide-dependent dehalogenation of halophenols and halogenation of phenols, respectively. Both enzymes have histidine (His) as their proximal heme iron ligand. Crystallographic examination of DHP revealed that it has a globin fold [M.W. LaCount, E. Zhang, Y.-P. Chen, K. Han, M.M. Whitton, D.E. Lincoln, S.A. Woodin, L. Lebioda, J. Biol. Chem. 275 (2000) 18712-18716] and kinetics studies established that ferric DHP is the active state [R.L. Osborne, L.O. Taylor, K. Han, B. Ely, J.H. Dawson, Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 324 (2004) 1194-1198]. NCPO likely has these same properties. Previous work with His-ligated heme proteins has revealed characteristic spectral distinctions between dioxygen binding globins and peroxide-activating peroxidases. Since DHP, and likely NCPO, is a peroxide-activating globin, we have sought to determine in the present investigation whether the ferric resting states of these two novel heme-containing enzymes are myoglobin-like or peroxidase-like. To do so, we have examined their exogenous ligand-free ferric states as well as their azide, imidazole and NO bound ferric adducts (and ferrous-NO complexes) with UV-Visible absorption and magnetic circular dichroism spectroscopy. We have also compared each derivative to the analogous states of horse heart myoglobin (Mb) and horseradish peroxidase (HRP). The spectra observed for parallel forms of DHP and NCPO are virtually identical to each other as well as to the spectra of the same Mb states, while being less similar to the spectra of corresponding HRP derivatives. From these data, we conclude that exogenous ligand-free ferric DHP and NCPO are six-coordinate with water and neutral His as ligands. This coordination structure is distinctly different from the ferric resting state of His-ligated peroxidases and indicates that DHP and NCPO do not activate bound peroxide through a mechanism dependent on a push effect imparted by a partially ionized proximal His as proposed for typical heme peroxidases.  相似文献   

8.
Blair-Johnson M  Fiedler T  Fenna R 《Biochemistry》2001,40(46):13990-13997
The 1.9 A X-ray crystal structure of human myeloperoxidase complexed with cyanide (R = 0.175, R(free) = 0.215) indicates that cyanide binds to the heme iron with a bent Fe-C-N angle of approximately 157 degrees, and binding is accompanied by movement of the iron atom by 0.2 A into the porphyrin plane. The bent orientation of the cyanide allows the formation of three hydrogen bonds between its nitrogen atom and the distal histidine as well as two water molecules in the distal cavity. The 1.85 A X-ray crystal structure of an inhibitory complex with thiocyanate (R = 0.178, R(free) = 0.210) indicates replacement of chloride at a proximal helix halide binding site in addition to binding in the distal cavity in an orientation parallel with the heme. The thiocyanate replaces two water molecules in the distal cavity and is hydrogen bonded to Gln 91. The 1.9 A structures of the complexes formed by bromide (R = 0.215, R(free) = 0.270) and thiocyanate (R = 0.198, R(free) = 0.224) with the cyanide complex of myeloperoxidase show how the presence of bound cyanide alters the binding site for bromide in the distal heme cavity, while having little effect on thiocyanate binding. These results support a model for a single common binding site for halides and thiocyanate as substrates or as inhibitors near the delta-meso carbon of the porphyrin ring in myeloperoxidase.  相似文献   

9.
Catalase-1, one of four catalase activities of Neurospora crassa, is associated with non-growing cells and accumulates in asexual spores. It is a large, tetrameric, highly efficient, and durable enzyme that is active even at molar concentrations of hydrogen peroxide. Catalase-1 is oxidized at the heme by singlet oxygen without significant effects on enzyme activity. Here we present the crystal structure of catalase-1 at 1.75A resolution. Compared to structures of other catalases of the large class, the main differences were found at the carboxy-terminal domain. The heme group is rotated 180 degrees around the alpha-gamma-meso carbon axis with respect to clade 3 small catalases. There is no co-ordination bond of the ferric ion at the heme distal side in catalase-1. The catalase-1 structure exhibited partial oxidation of heme b to heme d. Singlet oxygen, produced catalytically or by photosensitization, may hydroxylate C5 and C6 of pyrrole ring III with a subsequent formation of a gamma-spirolactone in C6. The modification site in catalases depends on the way dioxygen exits the protein: mainly through the central channel or the main channel in large and small catalases, respectively. The catalase-1 structure revealed an unusual covalent bond between a cysteine sulphur atom and the essential tyrosine residue of the proximal side of the active site. A peptide with the predicted theoretical mass of the two bound tryptic peptides was detected by mass spectrometry. A mechanism for the Cys-Tyr covalent bond formation is proposed. The tyrosine bound to the cysteine residue would be less prone to donate electrons to compound I to form compound II, explaining catalase-1 resistance to substrate inhibition and inactivation. An apparent constriction of the main channel at Ser198 lead us to propose a gate that opens the narrow part of the channel when there is sufficient hydrogen peroxide in the small cavity before the gate. This mechanism would explain the increase in catalytic velocity as the hydrogen peroxide concentration rises.  相似文献   

10.
The x-ray crystal structure of human myeloperoxidase has been extended to 1.8 A resolution, using x-ray data recorded at -180 degrees C (r = 0.197, free r = 0.239). Results confirm that the heme is covalently attached to the protein via two ester linkages between the carboxyl groups of Glu(242) and Asp(94) and modified methyl groups on pyrrole rings A and C of the heme as well as a sulfonium ion linkage between the sulfur atom of Met(243) and the beta-carbon of the vinyl group on pyrrole ring A. In the native enzyme a bound chloride ion has been identified at the amino terminus of the helix containing the proximal His(336). Determination of the x-ray crystal structure of a myeloperoxidase-bromide complex (r = 0.243, free r = 0.296) has shown that this chloride ion can be replaced by bromide. Bromide is also seen to bind, at partial occupancy, in the distal heme cavity, in close proximity to the distal His(95), where it replaces the water molecule hydrogen bonded to Gln(91). The bromide-binding site in the distal cavity appears to be the halide-binding site responsible for shifts in the Soret band of the absorption spectrum of myeloperoxidase. It is proposed that halide binding to this site inhibits the enzyme by effectively competing with H(2)O(2) for access to the distal histidine, whereas in compound I, the same site may be the halide substrate-binding site.  相似文献   

11.
Belyea J  Belyea CM  Lappi S  Franzen S 《Biochemistry》2006,45(48):14275-14284
The study of axial ligation by anionic ligands to ferric heme iron by resonance Raman spectroscopy provides a basis for comparison of the intrinsic electron donor ability of the proximal histidine in horse heart myoglobin (HHMb), dehaloperoxidase (DHP), and horseradish peroxidase (HRP). DHP is a dimeric hemoglobin (Hb) originally isolated from the terebellid polychaete Amphitrite ornata. The monomers are structurally related to Mb and yet DHP has a peroxidase function. The core size marker modes, v2 and v3, were observed using Soret excitation, and DHP-X was compared to HHMb-X for the ligand series X = F, Cl, Br, SCN, OH, N3, and CN. Special attention was paid to the hydroxide adduct, which is also formed during the catalytic cycle of peroxidases. The Fe-OH stretching frequency was observed and confirmed by deuteration and is higher in DHP than in HHMb. The population of high-spin states of the heme iron in DHP was determined to be intermediate between HHMb and HRP. The data provide the first direct measurement of the effect of axial ligation on the heme iron in DHP. The Raman data support a modified charge relay in DHP, in which a strongly hydrogen-bonded backbone carbonyl (>C=O) polarizes the proximal histidine. The charge relay mechanism by backbone carbonyl >C=O-His-Fe is the analogue of the Asp-His-Fe of peroxidases and Glu-His-Fe of flavohemoglobins.  相似文献   

12.
The 2.6-A crystal structure of Pseudomonas putida cytochrome P-450   总被引:19,自引:0,他引:19  
The crystal structure of Pseudomonas putida cytochrome P-450cam in the ferric, camphor bound form has been determined and partially refined to R = 0.23 at 2.6 A. The single 414 amino acid polypeptide chain (Mr = 45,000) approximates a triangular prism with a maximum dimension of approximately 60 A and a minimum of approximately 30 A. Twelve helical segments (A through L) account for approximately 40% of the structure while antiparallel beta pairs account for only approximately 10%. The unexposed iron protoporphyrin IX is sandwiched between two parallel helices designated the proximal and distal helices. The heme iron atom is pentacoordinate with the axial sulfur ligand provided by Cys 357 which extends from the N-terminal end of the proximal (L) helix. A substrate molecule, 2-bornanone (camphor), is buried in an internal pocket just above the heme distal surface adjacent to the oxygen binding site. The substrate molecule is held in place by a hydrogen bond between the side chain hydroxyl group of Tyr 96 and the camphor carbonyl oxygen atom in addition to complementary hydrophobic contacts between the camphor molecule and neighboring aliphatic and aromatic residues. The camphor is oriented such that the exo-surface of C5 would contact an iron bound, "activated" oxygen atom for stereoselective hydroxylation.  相似文献   

13.
Phenylacetaldoxime dehydratase from Bacillus sp. strain OxB-1 (OxdB) catalyzes the dehydration of Z-phenylacetaldoxime (PAOx) to produce phenylacetonitrile. OxdB contains a protoheme that works as the active center of the dehydration reaction. The enzymatic activity of ferrous OxdB was 1150-fold higher than that of ferric OxdB, indicating that the ferrous heme was the active state in OxdB catalysis. Although ferric OxdB was inactive, the substrate was bound to the ferric heme iron. Electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy revealed that the oxygen atom of PAOx was bound to the ferric heme, whereas PAOx was bound to the ferrous heme in OxdB via the nitrogen atom of PAOx. These results show a novel mechanism by which the activity of a heme enzyme is regulated; that is, the oxidation state of the heme controls the coordination structure of a substrate-heme complex, which regulates enzymatic activity. Rapid scanning spectroscopy using stopped-flow apparatus revealed that a reaction intermediate (the PAOx-ferrous OxdB complex) showed Soret, alpha, and beta bands at 415, 555, and 524 nM, respectively. The formation of this intermediate complex was very fast, finishing within the dead time of the stopped-flow mixer (approximately 3 ms). Site-directed mutagenesis revealed that His-306 was the catalytic residue responsible for assisting the elimination of the hydrogen atom of PAOx. The pH dependence of OxdB activity suggested that another amino acid residue that assists the elimination of the OH group of PAOx would work as a catalytic residue along with His-306.  相似文献   

14.
Lactoperoxidase (LPO) belongs to mammalian heme peroxidase superfamily, which also includes myeloperoxidase (MPO), eosinophil peroxidase (EPO), and thyroid peroxidase (TPO). LPO catalyzes the oxidation of a number of substrates including thiocyanate while TPO catalyzes the biosynthesis of thyroid hormones. LPO is also been shown to catalyze the biosynthesis of thyroid hormones indicating similar functional and structural properties. The binding studies showed that 2‐mercaptoimidazole (MZY) bound to LPO with a dissociation constant of 0.63 µM. The inhibition studies showed that the value of IC50 was 17 µM. The crystal structure of the complex of LPO with MZY showed that MZY bound to LPO in the substrate‐binding site on the distal heme side. MZY was oriented in the substrate‐binding site in such a way that the sulfur atom is at a distance of 2.58 Å from the heme iron. Previously, a similar compound, 3‐amino‐1,2,4‐triazole (amitrole) was also shown to bind to LPO in the substrate‐binding site on the distal heme side. The amino nitrogen atom of amitrole occupied the same position as that of sulfur atom in the present structure indicating a similar mode of binding. Recently, the structure of the complex of LPO with a potent antithyroid drug, 1‐methylimidazole‐2‐thiol (methimazole, MMZ) was also determined. It showed that MMZ bound to LPO in the substrate‐binding site on the distal heme side with 2 orientations. The position of methyl group was same in the 2 orientations while the positions of sulfur atom differed indicating a higher preference for a methyl group.  相似文献   

15.
Heme oxygenase (HO) catalyzes physiological heme degradation consisting of three sequential oxidation steps that use dioxygen molecules and reducing equivalents. We determined the crystal structure of rat HO-1 in complex with heme and azide (HO-heme-N(3)(-)) at 1.9-A resolution. The azide, whose terminal nitrogen atom is coordinated to the ferric heme iron, is situated nearly parallel to the heme plane, and its other end is directed toward the alpha-meso position of the heme. Based on resonance Raman spectroscopic analysis of HO-heme bound to dioxygen, this parallel coordination mode suggests that the azide is an analog of dioxygen. The azide is surrounded by residues of the distal F-helix with only the direction to the alpha-meso carbon being open. This indicates that regiospecific oxygenation of the heme is primarily caused by the steric constraint between the dioxygen bound to heme and the F-helix. The azide interacts with Asp-140, Arg-136, and Thr-135 through a hydrogen bond network involving five water molecules on the distal side of the heme. This network, also present in HO-heme, may function in dioxygen activation in the first hydroxylation step. From the orientation of azide in HO-heme-N(3)(-), the dioxygen or hydroperoxide bound to HO-heme, the active oxygen species of the first reaction, is inferred to have a similar orientation suitable for a direct attack on the alpha-meso carbon.  相似文献   

16.
Miksovská J  Horsa S  Davis MF  Franzen S 《Biochemistry》2008,47(44):11510-11517
Herein, we present photoacoustic calorimetry and transient absorption studies of the dynamics and energetics associated with dissociation of a ligand from Fe(2+) dehaloperoxidase (DHP) from Amphitrite ornata. Our data show that CO photodissociation is associated with an endothermic (DeltaH = 8 +/- 3 kcal mol(-1)) volume expansion (DeltaV = 9.4 +/- 0.6 mL mol(-1)) that occurs within 50 ns upon photodissociation. No additional thermodynamics were detected on slower time scales (up to 10 micros), suggesting that the dissociated ligand rapidly escapes from the heme-binding pocket into the surrounding solvent. Similar volume and enthalpy changes were observed for CO photodissociation in the presence of the substrate, 2,4-dichlorophenol or 4-bromophenol, indicating that either the substrate does not bind in the protein distal cavity at ambient temperature or its presence does not impact the thermodynamic profile associated with ligand dissociation. We attribute a fast ligand exchange between the protein active site and the surrounding solvent to the high flexibility of the distal histidine residue, His55, that provides a direct pathway between the heme-binding pocket and the protein exterior. The dynamics and energetics of conformational changes observed for dissociation of a ligand from DHP differ significantly from those measured previously for photodissociation of CO from the structural homologue myoglobin, suggesting that structural dynamics in DHP are fine-tuned to enhance the peroxidase function of this protein.  相似文献   

17.
The crystal structure of rat heme oxygenase-1 in complex with biliverdin-iron chelate (biliverdin(Fe)-HO-1), the immediate precursor of the final product, biliverdin, has been determined at a 2.4-A resolution. The electron density in the heme pocket clearly showed that the tetrapyrrole ring of heme is cleaved at the alpha-meso edge. Like the heme bound to HO-1, biliverdin-iron chelate is located between the distal and proximal helices, but its accommodation state seems to be less stable in light of the disordering of the solvent-exposed propionate and vinyl groups. The middle of the distal helix is shifted away from the center of the active site in biliverdin(Fe)-HO-1, increasing the size of the heme pocket. The hydrogen-bonding interaction between Glu-29 and Gln-38, considered to restrain the orientation of the proximal helix in the heme-HO-1 complex, was lost in biliverdin(Fe)-HO-1, leading to relaxation of the helix. Biliverdin has a distorted helical conformation; the lactam oxygen atom of its pyrrole ring-A interacted with Asp-140 through a hydrogen-bonding solvent network. Because of the absence of a distal water ligand, the iron atom is five-coordinated with His-25 and four pyrrole nitrogen atoms. The coordination geometry deviates considerably from a square pyramid, suggesting that the iron may be readily dissociated. We speculate that the opened conformation of the heme pocket facilitates sequential product release, first iron then biliverdin, and that because of biliverdin's increased flexibility, iron release triggers its slow dissociation.  相似文献   

18.
The proximal side of dehaloperoxidase-hemoglobin A (DHP A) from Amphitrite ornata has been modified via site-directed mutagenesis of methionine 86 into aspartate (M86D) to introduce an Asp-His-Fe triad charge relay. X-ray crystallographic structure determination of the metcyano forms of M86D [Protein Data Bank (PDB) entry 3MYN ] and M86E (PDB entry 3MYM ) mutants reveal the structural origins of a stable catalytic triad in DHP A. A decrease in the rate of H(2)O(2) activation as well as a lowered reduction potential versus that of the wild-type enzyme was observed in M86D. One possible explanation for the significantly lower activity is an increased affinity for the distal histidine in binding to the heme Fe to form a bis-histidine adduct. Resonance Raman spectroscopy demonstrates a pH-dependent ligation by the distal histidine in M86D, which is indicative of an increased trans effect. At pH 5.0, the heme Fe is five-coordinate, and this structure resembles the wild-type DHP A resting state. However, at pH 7.0, the distal histidine appears to form a six-coordinate ferric bis-histidine (hemichrome) adduct. These observations can be explained by the effect of the increased positive charge on the heme Fe on the formation of a six-coordinate low-spin adduct, which inhibits the ligation and activation of H(2)O(2) as required for peroxidase activity. The results suggest that the proximal charge relay in peroxidases regulate the redox potential of the heme Fe but that the trans effect is a carefully balanced property that can both activate H(2)O(2) and attract ligation by the distal histidine. To understand the balance of forces that modulate peroxidase reactivity, we studied three M86 mutants, M86A, M86D, and M86E, by spectroelectrochemistry and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy of (13)C- and (15)N-labeled cyanide adducts as probes of the redox potential and of the trans effect in the heme Fe, both of which can be correlated with the proximity of negative charge to the N(δ) hydrogen of the proximal histidine, consistent with an Asp-His-Fe charge relay observed in heme peroxidases.  相似文献   

19.
Structural features of the heme and the heme cavity of the monomeric hemoglobin (Hb) from the platyhelminth Dicrocoelium dendriticum were investigated by optical and proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Using nuclear Overhauser effects (NOEs) from resonances assigned previously through isotope labeling, most hyperfine-shifted resonances could be attributed to individual heme and protein protons in the cyano-metHb complex. It was observed that the heme 2-vinyl group is held in the trans orientation by nearby residues, whereas the 4-vinyl group exhibits an equilibrium between cis and trans orientations. NOE experiments in 1H2O allowed the identification of exchangeable protons belonging to the proximal histidine residue (F8) and to a distal residue. Detailed analysis of the NOE patterns obtained from the distal labile proton to non-labile protons and among these latter protons leads to the conclusion that a tyrosine side-chain occupies the distal site E7. Optical spectra of the alkaline-metHb also lead to this view, in that they are not typical of a hydroxy-metHb complex but instead resemble that of a hemin-phenolate or human mutant (M-type) Hb with a tyrosine residue linked to the iron atom. Further evidence for a distal tyrosine residue stems from the occurrence of an unusually stable transient ferrous Hb-cyanide complex, formed upon reduction of cyano-metHb to deoxy-Hb with dithionite. We suggest that the stability of this intermediate is due to a slow re-orientation of a large distal side-chain prior to cyanide dissociation. The sequence of the E-helix, known from the partially determined primary structure, was realigned to accommodate these findings. A frame-shift by one residue now positions a tyrosine at the distal site E7 instead of the originally proposed glycine residue.  相似文献   

20.
Using radiolytic reduction of the oxy-ferrous horseradish peroxidase (HRP) at 77 K, we observed the formation and decay of the putative intermediate, the hydroperoxo-ferric heme complex, often called "Compound 0." This intermediate is common for several different enzyme systems as the precursor of the Compound I (ferryl-oxo pi-cation radical) intermediate. EPR and UV-visible absorption spectra show that protonation of the primary intermediate of radiolytic reduction, the peroxo-ferric complex, to form the hydroperoxo-ferric complex is completed only after annealing at temperatures 150-180 K. After further annealing at 195-205 K, this complex directly transforms to ferric HRP without any observable intervening species. The lack of Compound I formation is explained by inability of the enzyme to deliver the second proton to the distal oxygen atom of hydroperoxide ligand, shown to be necessary for dioxygen bond heterolysis on the "oxidase pathway," which is non-physiological for HRP. Alternatively, the physiological substrate H2O2 brings both protons to the active site of HRP, and Compound I is subsequently formed via rearrangement of the proton from the proximal to the distal oxygen atom of the bound peroxide.  相似文献   

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