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1.
Sah S  Phale PS 《Biodegradation》2011,22(3):517-526
1-Naphthol 2-hydroxylase (1-NH) which catalyzes the conversion of 1-naphthol to 1,2-dihydroxynaphthalene was purified to homogeneity from carbaryl-degrading Pseudomonas sp. strain C6. The enzyme was found to be a homodimer with subunit molecular weight of 66 kDa. UV, visible and fluorescence spectral properties, identification of flavin moiety by HPLC as FAD, and reconstitution of apoenzyme by FAD suggest that enzyme is FAD-dependent. 1-NH accepts electron from NADH as well as NADPH. Besides 1-naphthol (K m, 9.1 μM), the enzyme also accepts 5-amino 1-naphthol (K m, 6.4 μM) and 4-chloro 1-naphthol (K m, 2.3 μM) as substrates. Enzyme showed substrate inhibition phenomenon at high concentration of 1-naphthol (K i, 283 μM). Stoichiometric consumption of oxygen and NADH, and biochemical properties suggest that 1-NH belongs to FAD containing external flavomonooxygenase group of oxido-reductase class of enzymes. Based on biochemical and kinetic properties, 1-NH from Pseudomonas sp. strain C6 appears to be different than that reported earlier from Pseudomonas sp. strain C4. Chemical modification and protection by 1-naphthol and NADH suggest that His, Arg, Cys, Tyr and Trp are at or near the active site of 1-NH.  相似文献   

2.
Pseudomonas sp. strains C4, C5, and C6 utilize carbaryl as the sole source of carbon and energy. Identification of 1-naphthol, salicylate, and gentisate in the spent media; whole-cell O2 uptake on 1-naphthol, 1,2-dihydroxynaphthalene, salicylaldehyde, salicylate, and gentisate; and detection of key enzymes, viz, carbaryl hydrolase, 1-naphthol hydroxylase, 1,2-dihydroxynaphthalene dioxygenase, and gentisate dioxygenase, in the cell extract suggest that carbaryl is metabolized via 1-naphthol, 1,2-dihydroxynaphthalene, and gentisate. Here, we demonstrate 1-naphthol hydroxylase and 1,2-dihydroxynaphthalene dioxygenase activities in the cell extracts of carbaryl-grown cells. 1-Naphthol hydroxylase is present in the membrane-free cytosolic fraction, requires NAD(P)H and flavin adenine dinucleotide, and has optimum activity in the pH range 7.5 to 8.0. Carbaryl-degrading enzymes are inducible, and maximum induction was observed with carbaryl. Based on these results, the proposed metabolic pathway is carbaryl --> 1-naphthol --> 1,2-dihydroxynaphthalene --> salicylaldehyde --> salicylate --> gentisate --> maleylpyruvate.  相似文献   

3.
An arylketone monooxygenase was purified from Pseudomonas putida JD1 by ion exchange and affinity chromatography. It had the characteristics of a Baeyer-Villiger-type monooxygenase and converted its substrate, 4-hydroxyacetophenone, into 4-hydroxyphenyl acetate with the consumption of one molecule of oxygen and oxidation of one molecule of NADPH per molecule of substrate. The enzyme was a monomer with an M(r) of about 70,000 and contained one molecule of flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD). The enzyme was specific for NADPH as the electron donor, and spectral studies showed rapid reduction of the FAD by NADPH but not by NADH. Other arylketones were substrates, including acetophenone and 4-hydroxypropiophenone, which were converted into phenyl acetate and 4-hydroxyphenyl propionate, respectively. The enzyme displayed Michaelis-Menten kinetics with apparent K(m) values of 47 microM for 4-hydroxyacetophenone, 384 microM for acetophenone, and 23 microM for 4-hydroxypropiophenone. The apparent K(m) value for NADPH with 4-hydroxyacetophenone as substrate was 17.5 microM. The N-terminal sequence did not show any similarity to other proteins, but an internal sequence was very similar to part of the proposed NADPH binding site in the Baeyer-Villiger monooxygenase cyclohexanone monooxygenase from an Acinetobacter sp.  相似文献   

4.
Pseudomonas sp. strains C4, C5, and C6 utilize carbaryl as the sole source of carbon and energy. Identification of 1-naphthol, salicylate, and gentisate in the spent media; whole-cell O2 uptake on 1-naphthol, 1,2-dihydroxynaphthalene, salicylaldehyde, salicylate, and gentisate; and detection of key enzymes, viz, carbaryl hydrolase, 1-naphthol hydroxylase, 1,2-dihydroxynaphthalene dioxygenase, and gentisate dioxygenase, in the cell extract suggest that carbaryl is metabolized via 1-naphthol, 1,2-dihydroxynaphthalene, and gentisate. Here, we demonstrate 1-naphthol hydroxylase and 1,2-dihydroxynaphthalene dioxygenase activities in the cell extracts of carbaryl-grown cells. 1-Naphthol hydroxylase is present in the membrane-free cytosolic fraction, requires NAD(P)H and flavin adenine dinucleotide, and has optimum activity in the pH range 7.5 to 8.0. Carbaryl-degrading enzymes are inducible, and maximum induction was observed with carbaryl. Based on these results, the proposed metabolic pathway is carbaryl → 1-naphthol → 1,2-dihydroxynaphthalene → salicylaldehyde → salicylate → gentisate → maleylpyruvate.  相似文献   

5.
Ge L  Seah SY 《Journal of bacteriology》2006,188(20):7205-7210
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is an opportunistic pathogen that produces the siderophore pyoverdine, which enables it to acquire the essential nutrient iron from its host. Formation of the iron-chelating hydroxamate functional group in pyoverdine requires the enzyme PvdA, a flavin-dependent monooxygenase that catalyzes the N(5) hydroxylation of l-ornithine. pvdA from P. aeruginosa was successfully overexpressed in Escherichia coli, and the enzyme was purified for the first time. The enzyme possessed its maximum activity at pH 8.0. In the absence of l-ornithine, PvdA has an NADPH oxidase activity of 0.24 +/- 0.02 micromol min(-1) mg(-1). The substrate l-ornithine stimulated this activity by a factor of 5, and the reaction was tightly coupled to the formation of hydroxylamine. The enzyme is specific for NADPH and flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD(+)) as cofactors, as it cannot utilize NADH and flavin mononucleotide. By fluorescence titration, the dissociation constants for NADPH and FAD(+) were determined to be 105.6 +/- 6.0 microM and 9.9 +/- 0.3 microM, respectively. Steady-state kinetic analysis showed that the l-ornithine-dependent NADPH oxidation obeyed Michaelis-Menten kinetics with apparent K(m) and V(max) values of 0.58 mM and 1.34 micromol min(-1) mg(-1). l-Lysine was a nonsubstrate effector that stimulated NADPH oxidation, but uncoupling occurred and hydrogen peroxide instead of hydroxylated l-lysine was produced. l-2,4-Diaminobutyrate, l-homoserine, and 5-aminopentanoic acid were not substrates or effectors, but they were competitive inhibitors of the l-ornithine-dependent NADPH oxidation reaction, with K(ic)s of 3 to 8 mM. The results indicate that the chemical nature of effectors is important for simulation of the NADPH oxidation rate in PvdA.  相似文献   

6.
Abstract Three bacterial isolates which appeared to use the insecticide, carbaryl (1-naphthyl, N -methyl-carbamate) as their sole carbon and nitrogen sources were originally selected from garden soil. Only one isolate, Pseudomonas sp. (NCIB 12043) could metabolise carbaryl rapidly to 1-naphthol and methylamine. The other two isolates, Pseudomonas sp. (NCIB 12042) and Rhodococcus sp. (NCIB 12038) relied on slow chemical hydrolysis of carbaryl to 1-naphthol and methylamine. All three isolates used 1-naphthol as their sole carbon source; however, their ability to use naphthalene and a range of mono- and dihydroxy-substituted naphthalene compounds varied. NCIB 12038 and NCIB 12043 showed little or no growth on naphthalene, 2,3-dihydroxynaphthalene or 1,3-dihydroxynaphthalene as sole carbon sources and their 1-naphthol oxygenases had little activity with these substrates. In contrast, NCIB 12042 could use these compounds as sole carbon sources and its 1-naphthol oxygenase also showed activity with them. We conclude that 1-naphthol oxygenase from NCIB 12042 is a relatively non-specific dioxygenase, whereas the 1-naphthol oxygenases from NCIB 12038 and NCIB 12043 are relatively specific monooxygenases requiring hydroxylated naphthalene compounds as substrates.  相似文献   

7.
Two species of Pseudomonas capable of utilizing nitroglycerin (NG) as a sole nitrogen source were isolated from NG-contaminated soil and identified as Pseudomonas putida II-B and P. fluorescens I-C. While 9 of 13 laboratory bacterial strains that presumably had no previous exposure to NG could degrade low concentrations of NG (0.44 mM), the natural isolates tolerated concentrations of NG that were toxic to the lab strains (1.76 mM and higher). Whole-cell studies revealed that the two natural isolates produced different mixtures of the isomers of dinitroglycerol (DNG) and mononitroglycerol (MNG). A monomeric, flavin mononucleotide-containing NG reductase was purified from each natural isolate. These enzymes catalyzed the NADPH-dependent denitration of NG, yielding nitrite. Apparent kinetic constants were determined for both reductases. The P. putida enzyme had a Km for NG of 52 +/- 4 microM, a Km for NADPH of 28 +/- 2 microM, and a Vmax of 124 +/- 6 microM x min(-1), while the P. fluorescens enzyme had a Km for NG of 110 +/- 10 microM, a Km for NADPH of 5 +/- 1 microM, and a Vmax of 110 +/- 11 microM x min(-1). Anaerobic titration experiments confirmed the stoichiometry of NADPH consumption, changes in flavin oxidation state, and multiple steps of nitrite removal from NG. The products formed during time-dependent denitration reactions were consistent with a single enzyme being responsible for the in vivo product distributions. Simulation of the product formation kinetics by numerical integration showed that the P. putida enzyme produced an approximately 2-fold molar excess of 1,2-DNG relative to 1,3-DNG. This result could be fortuitous or could possibly be consistent with a random removal of the first nitro group from either the terminal (C-1 and C-3) positions or middle (C-2) position. However, during the denitration of 1,2-DNG, a 1.3-fold selectivity for the C-1 nitro group was determined. Comparable simulations of the product distributions from the P. fluorescens enzyme showed that NG was denitrated with a 4.6-fold selectivity for the C-2 position. Furthermore, a 2.4-fold selectivity for removal of the nitro group from the C-2 position of 1,2-DNG was also determined. The MNG isomers were not effectively denitrated by either purified enzyme, which suggests a reason why NG could not be used as a sole carbon source by the isolated organisms.  相似文献   

8.
A soluble cyclohexanone monooxygenase was purified 16.1-fold to homogeneity from a Xanthobacter sp. grown upon cyclohexane as sole source of carbon and energy. The native enzyme is a 50-kDa single polypeptide chain associated with FMN rather than FAD as flavin prosthetic group in a 1:1 stoichiometric relationship. The monooxygenase catalyses the transformation of cyclohexanone to the lactone 1-oxa-2-oxocycloheptane in an oxygen ring insertion reaction. Only related cycloalkanone substrates are accepted for oxygenation, no activity is shown towards straight-chain alkanones. Enzyme activity is strongly inhibited by sulphydryl-reactive agents, but is relatively insensitive to metal chelators, electron transport inhibitors and the metal ions Fe3+ and Cu2+. Cyclohexanone monooxygenase has Km values for cyclohexanone and NADPH of less than 0.5 microM and 12.5 microM respectively. Kinetic investigations under steady-state conditions demonstrate that the flavoprotein prosthetic group, FMN, is involved in the monooxygenase catalytic mechanism. The systematic name for the enzyme is cyclohexanone, NADPH:oxygen oxidoreductase (6-hydroxylating, 1,2-lactonizing) (EC 1.14.13.22).  相似文献   

9.
Cells of Pseudomonas sp. strain NCIB 9816, after growth with naphthalene or salicylate, contain a multicomponent enzyme system that oxidizes naphthalene to cis-(1R,2S)-dihydroxy-1,2-dihydronaphthalene. We purified one of these components to homogeneity and found it to be an iron-sulfur flavoprotein that loses the flavin cofactor during purification. Dialysis against flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) showed that the enzyme bound 1 mol of FAD per mol of enzyme protein. The enzyme consisted of a single polypeptide with an apparent molecular weight of 36,300. The purified protein contained 1.8 g-atoms of iron and 2.0 g-atoms of acid-labile sulfur and showed absorption maxima at 278, 340, 420, and 460 nm, with a broad shoulder at 540 nm. The purified enzyme catalyzed the reduction of cytochrome c, dichlorophenolindophenol, Nitro Blue Tetrazolium, and ferricyanide. These activities were enhanced in the presence of added FAD. The ability of the enzyme to catalyze the reduction of the ferredoxin involved in naphthalene reduction and other electron acceptors indicates that it functions as an NAD(P)H-oxidoreductase in the naphthalene dioxygenase system. The results suggest that naphthalene dioxygenase requires two proteins with three redox groups to transfer electrons from NADH to the terminal oxygenase.  相似文献   

10.
Carbazole is a nitrogen-containing heteroaromatic compound that occurs as a widespread and mutagenic environmental pollutant. The 2'aminobiphenyl-2,3-diol 1,2-dioxygenase involved in carbazole degradation was purified to near electrophoretic homogeneity from Pseudomonas sp. LD2 by a combination of ion-exchange chromatography, ammonium sulfate precipitation, and hydrophobic interaction chromatography. This purification was challenging due to the great instability of the enzyme under many standard conditions. The enzyme was also purified to electrophoretic homogeneity from recombinant Escherichia coli expressing the 2'aminobiphenyl-2,3-diol 1,2-dioxygenase-encoding gene cloned from Pseudomonas sp. LD2. The molecular mass of the native enzyme was determined by gel filtration to be 70 kDa. The subunit molecular masses were determined to be 25 and 8 kDa by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, indicating that the dioxygenase is an [alpha2beta2] heterotetramer. The optimal temperature and pH for the enzymatic production of 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoic acid (HOPDA) from 2,3-dihydroxybiphenyl were determined to be 40 degrees C and 8.0, respectively. The maximum observed specific activity on 2,3-dihydroxybiphenyl was 48.1 mmol HOPDA min(-1) mg(-1). This indicated a maximum observed turnover rate of 360,000 molecules HOPDA enz(-1) s(-1). The K'm inhibition constant Ks and Vmax on 2,3 dihydroxybiphenyl were determined to be 5 microM, 37 microM, and 44 mmol min(-1) mg(-1), respectively. These results show that 2'aminobiphenyl-2,3-diol 1,2-dioxygenase is a meta-cleavage enzyme related to the 4,5-protocatechuate dioxygenase family, with comparable purification challenges posed by intrinsic enzyme instability.  相似文献   

11.
1-Hydroxy-2-naphthoate is formed as an intermediate in the bacterial degradation of phenanthrene. A monooxygenase which catalyzed the oxidation of 1-hydroxy-2-naphthoateto 1,2-dihydroxynaphthalene was purified from the phenanthrene- and naphthalene-degrading Pseudomonas putida strain BS202-P1. The purified protein had a molecular weight of45 kDa and required NAD(P)H and FAD as cofactors. The purified enzyme also catalysed the oxidation of salicylate and various substituted salicylates. The comparison of the Kmand Vmax values for 1-hydroxy-2-naphthoate and salicylate demonstrated a higher catalytic efficiency of the enzyme for salicylate as a substrate. A significant substrate-inhibition was detected with higher concentrations of 1-hydroxy-2-naphthoate.The aminoterminal amino acid sequence of the purified enzyme showed significant homologies to salicylate 1-monooxygenases from other Gram negative bacteria. It was therefore concluded that during the degradation of phenanthrene the conversion of 1-hydroxy-2-naphthoate to 1,2-dihydroxynaphthalene is catalysed by a salicylate1-monooxygenase. Together with previous studies, this suggested that the enzymes of the naphthalene pathway are sufficient to catalyse also the mineralization of phenanthrene.  相似文献   

12.
An activation domain in p67(phox) (residues within 199-210) is essential for cytochrome b(558)-dependent activation of NADPH superoxide (O2(-.)) generation in a cell-free system (Han, C.-H., Freeman, J. L. R., Lee, T., Motalebi, S. A., and Lambeth, J. D. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 16663-16668). To determine the steady state reduction flavin in the presence of highly absorbing hemes, 8-nor-8-S-thioacetamido-FAD ("thioacetamido-FAD") was reconstituted into the flavocytochrome, and the fluorescence of its oxidized form was monitored. Thioacetamido-FAD-reconstituted cytochrome showed lower activity (7% versus 100%) and increased steady state flavin reduction (28 versus <5%) compared with the enzyme reconstituted with native FAD. Omission of p67(phox) decreased the percent steady state reduction of the flavin to 4%, but omission of p47(phox) had little effect. The activation domain on p67(phox) was critical for regulating flavin reduction, since mutations in this region that decreased O2(-.) generation also decreased the steady state reduction of flavin. Thus, the activation domain on p67(phox) regulates the reductive half-reaction for FAD. This reaction is comprised of the binding of NADPH followed by hydride transfer to the flavin. Kinetic deuterium isotope effects along with K(m) values permitted calculation of the K(d) for NADPH. (R)-NADPD but not (S)-NADPD showed kinetic deuterium isotope effects on V and V/K of about 1.9 and 1.5, respectively, demonstrating stereospecificity for the R hydride transfer. The calculated K(d) for NADPH was 40 microM in the presence of wild type p67(phox) and was approximately 55 microM using the weakly activating p67(phox)(V205A). Thus, the activation domain of p67(phox) regulates the reduction of FAD but has only a small effect on NADPH binding, consistent with a dominant effect on hydride/electron transfer from NADPH to FAD.  相似文献   

13.
The initial reactions in the oxidation of naphthalene by Pseudomonas sp. strain NCIB 9816 involves the enzymatic incorporation of one molecule of oxygen into the aromatic nucleus to form (+)-cis-(1R,2S)-dihydroxy-1,2-dihydronaphthalene. The enzyme catalyzing this reaction, naphthalene dioxygenase, was resolved into three protein components, designated A, B, and C, by DEAE-cellulose chromatography. Incubation of naphthalene with components A, B, and C in the presence of NADH resulted in the formation of (+)-cis-(1R,2S)-dihydroxy-1,2-dihydronaphthalene. The ratio of oxygen and NADH utilization to product formation was 1:1:1. NADPH also served as an electron donor for naphthalene oxygenation. However, its activity was less than 50% of that observed with NADH. Component A showed NAD(P)H-cytochrome c reductase activity which was stimulated by the addition of flavin adenine dinucleotide and flavin mononucleotide. A similar stimulation was observed when these flavin nucleotides were added to the naphthalene dioxygenase assay system. These preliminary observations indicate that naphthalene dioxygenase has properties in common with both monooxygenase and dioxygenase multicomponent enzyme systems.  相似文献   

14.
The flavin prosthetic group (FAD) of p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase from Pseudomonas fluorescens was replaced by a stereochemical analog, which is spontaneously formed from natural FAD in alcohol oxidases from methylotrophic yeasts. Reconstitution of p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase from apoprotein and modified FAD is a rapid process complete within seconds. Crystals of the enzyme-substrate complex of modified FAD-containing p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase diffract to 2.1 A resolution. The crystal structure provides direct evidence for the presence of an arabityl sugar chain in the modified form of FAD. The isoalloxazine ring of the arabinoflavin adenine dinucleotide (a-FAD) is located in a cleft outside the active site as recently observed in several other p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase complexes. Like the native enzyme, a-FAD-containing p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase preferentially binds the phenolate form of the substrate (pKo = 7.2). The substrate acts as an effector highly stimulating the rate of enzyme reduction by NADPH (kred > 500 s-1). The oxidative part of the catalytic cycle of a-FAD-containing p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase differs from native enzyme. Partial uncoupling of hydroxylation results in the formation of about 0.3 mol of 3,4-dihydroxybenzoate and 0.7 mol of hydrogen peroxide per mol NADPH oxidized. It is proposed that flavin motion in p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase is important for efficient reduction and that the flavin "out" conformation is associated with the oxidase activity.  相似文献   

15.
Pseudomonas sp. VLB120 uses styrene as a sole source of carbon and energy. The first step in this metabolic pathway is catalyzed by an oxygenase (StyA) and a NADH-flavin oxidoreductase (StyB). Both components have been isolated from wild-type Pseudomonas strain VLB120 as well as from recombinant Escherichia coli. StyA from both sources is a dimer, with a subunit size of 47 kDa, and catalyzes the enantioselective epoxidation of CC double bonds. Styrene is exclusively converted to S-styrene oxide with a specific activity of 2.1 U mg(-1) (k(cat) = 1.6 s(-1)) and K(m) values for styrene of 0.45 +/- 0.05 mM (wild type) and 0.38 +/- 0.09 mM (recombinant). The epoxidation reaction depends on the presence of a NADH-flavin adenine dinucleotide (NADH-FAD) oxidoreductase for the supply of reduced FAD. StyB is a dimer with a molecular mass of 18 kDa and a NADH oxidation activity of 200 U mg(-1) (k(cat) [NADH] = 60 s(-1)). Steady-state kinetics determined for StyB indicate a mechanism of sequential binding of NADH and flavin to StyB. This enzyme reduces FAD as well as flavin mononucleotide and riboflavin. The NADH oxidation activity does not depend on the presence of StyA. During the epoxidation reaction, no formation of a complex of StyA and StyB has been observed, suggesting that electron transport between reductase and oxygenase occurs via a diffusing flavin.  相似文献   

16.
The oxidation-reduction potential of p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase (4-hydroxybenzoate, NADPH: oxygen oxidoreductase (3-hydroxylating), EC 1.14.13.2) from Pseudomonas fluorescens has been measured in the presence and absence of p-hydroxybenzoate using spectrocoulometry. The native enzyme demonstrated a two-electron midpoint potential of -129 mV during the initial reductive titration. The midpoint potential observed during subsequent oxidative and reductive titrations was -152 mV. This marked hysteresis is proposed to arise from the oxidation and reduction of the known air-sensitive thiol group on the enzyme (Van Berkel, W.J.H. and Müller, F. (1987) Eur. J. Biochem. 167, 35-46). Redox titrations of the enzyme in the presence of substrate showed a two-electron midpoint potential of -177 mV. No spectral or electrochemical evidence for the thermodynamic stabilization of any flavin semiquinone was observed in the titrations performed. These data show that the affinity of the apoenzyme for the hydroquinone form of FAD is 150-fold greater than for the oxidized flavin and that the substrate is bound to the reduced enzyme with a 3-fold lower affinity than to the oxidized enzyme. These data are consistent with the view that the stimulatory effect of substrate binding on the rate of enzyme reduction by NADPH is due to the respective geometries of the bound FAD and NADPH rather than to a large perturbation of the oxidation-reduction potential of the bound flavin coenzyme.  相似文献   

17.
K S Kim  Y T Ro    Y M Kim 《Journal of bacteriology》1989,171(2):958-964
A brown carbon monoxide dehydrogenase from CO-autotrophically grown cells of Acinetobacter sp. strain JC1, which is unstable outside the cells, was purified 80-fold in seven steps to better than 95% homogeneity, with a yield of 44% in the presence of the stabilizing agents iodoacetamide (1 mM) and ammonium sulfate (100 mM). The final specific activity was 474 mumol of acceptor reduced per min per mg of protein as determined by an assay based on the CO-dependent reduction of thionin. Methyl viologen, NAD(P), flavin mononucleotide, flavin adenine dinucleotide, and ferricyanide were not reduced by the enzyme, but methylene blue, thionin, and dichlorophenolindophenol were reduced. The molecular weight of the native enzyme was determined to be 380,000. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis revealed at least three nonidentical subunits of molecular weights 16,000 (alpha), 34,000 (beta), and 85,000 (gamma). The purified enzyme contained particulate hydrogenase-like activity. Selenium did not stimulate carbon monoxide dehydrogenase activity. The isoelectic point of the native enzyme was found to be 5.8; the Km of CO was 150 microM. The enzyme was rapidly inactivated by methanol. One mole of native enzyme was found to contain 2 mol of each of flavin adenine dinucleotide and molybdenum and 8 mol each of nonheme iron and labile sulfide, which indicated that the enzyme was a molybdenum-containing iron-sulfur flavoprotein. The ratio of densities of each subunit after electrophoresis (alpha:beta:gamma = 1:2:6) and the number of each cofactor in the native enzyme suggest a alpha 2 beta 2 gamma 2 structure of the enzyme. The carbon monoxide dehydrogenase of Acinetobacter sp. strain JC1 was found to have no immunological relationship with enzymes of Pseudomonas carboxydohydrogena and Pseudomonas carboxydovorans.  相似文献   

18.
Thioredoxin reductase is a flavoprotein which catalyzes the reduction of the small protein thioredoxin by NADPH. It contains a redox active disulfide and an FAD in each subunit of its dimeric structure. Each subunit is further divided into two domains, the FAD and the pyridine nucleotide binding domains. The orientation of the two domains determined from the crystal structure and the flow of electrons determined from mechanistic studies suggest that thioredoxin reductase requires a large conformational change to carry out catalysis (Williams CH Jr, 1995, FASEB J 9:1267-1276). The constituent amino acids of an ion pair, E48/R130, between the FAD and pyridine nucleotide binding domains, were mutagenized to cysteines to form E48C,R130C (CC mutant). Formation of a stable bridge between these cysteines was expected to restrict the enzyme largely in the conformation observed in the crystal structure. Crosslinking with the bifunctional reagent N,N,1,2 phenylenedimaleimide, spanning 4-9 A, resulted in a >95 % decrease in thioredoxin reductase and transhydrogenase activity. SDS-PAGE confirmed that the crosslink in the CC-mutant was intramolecular. Dithionite titration showed an uptake of electrons as in wild-type enzyme, but anaerobic reduction of the flavin with NADPH was found to be impaired. This indicates that the crosslinked enzyme is in the conformation where the flavin and the active site disulfide are in close proximity but the flavin and pyridinium rings are too far apart for effective electron transfer. The evidence is consistent with the hypothesis that thioredoxin reductase requires a conformational change to complete catalysis.  相似文献   

19.
An aldehyde oxidase, which oxidizes various aliphatic and aromatic aldehydes using O(2) as an electron acceptor, was purified from the cell-free extracts of Pseudomonas sp. KY 4690, a soil isolate, to an electrophoretically homogeneous state. The purified enzyme had a molecular mass of 132 kDa and consisted of three non-identical subunits with molecular masses of 88, 39, and 18 kDa. The absorption spectrum of the purified enzyme showed characteristics of an enzyme belonging to the xanthine oxidase family. The enzyme contained 0.89 mol of flavin adenine dinucleotide, 1.0 mol of molybdenum, 3.6 mol of acid-labile sulfur, and 0.90 mol of 5'-CMP per mol of enzyme protein, on the basis of its molecular mass of 145 kDa. Molecular oxygen served as the sole electron acceptor. These results suggest that aldehyde oxidase from Pseudomonas sp. KY 4690 is a new member of the xanthine oxidase family and might contain 1 mol of molybdenum-molybdpterin-cytosine dinucleotide, 1 mol of flavin adenine dinucleotide, and 2 mol of [2Fe-2S] clusters per mol of enzyme protein. The enzyme showed high reaction rates toward various aliphatic and aromatic aldehydes and high thermostability.  相似文献   

20.
2,4-Dichlorophenol hydroxylase, a flavoprotein monooxygenase from Pseudomonas cepacia grown on 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D) as the sole source of carbon, was purified to homogeneity by a single-step affinity chromatography on 2,4-DCP-Sepharose CL-4B. The enzyme was eluted from the affinity matrix with the substrate 2,4-dichlorophenol. The enzyme has a molecular weight of 275,000 consisting of four identical subunits of molecular weight 69,000 and requires exogenous addition of FAD for its complete catalytic activity. The enzyme required an external electron donor NADPH for hydroxylation of 2,4-dichlorophenol to 3,5-dichlorocatechol. NADPH was preferred over NADH. The enzyme had Km value of 14 microM for 2,4-dichlorophenol, and 100 microM for NADPH. The enzyme activity was significantly inhibited by heavy metal ions like Hg2+ and Zn2+ and showed marked inhibition with thiol reagents. Trichlorophenols inhibited the enzyme competitively. The hydroxylase activity decreased as a function of increasing concentrations of Cibacron blue and Procion red dyes. The apoenzyme prepared showed complete loss of FAD when monitored spectrophotometrically and had no enzymatic activity. The inactive apoenzyme was reconstituted with exogenous FAD which completely restored the enzyme activity.  相似文献   

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