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1.
The cytochrome bo3 ubiquinol oxidase from Escherichia coli resides in the bacterial cytoplasmic membrane and catalyzes the two-electron oxidation of ubiquinol-8 and four-electron reduction of O2 to water. The one-electron reduced semiquinone forms transiently during the reaction, and the enzyme has been demonstrated to stabilize the semiquinone. Two-dimensional electron spin echo envelope modulation has been applied to explore the exchangeable protons involved in hydrogen bonding to the semiquinone by substitution of 1H2O by 2H2O. Three exchangeable protons possessing different isotropic and anisotropic hyperfine couplings were identified. The strength of the hyperfine interaction with one proton suggests a significant covalent O-H binding of carbonyl oxygen O1 that is a characteristic of a neutral radical, an assignment that is also supported by the unusually large hyperfine coupling to the methyl protons. The second proton with a large anisotropic coupling also forms a strong hydrogen bond with a carbonyl oxygen. This second hydrogen bond, which has a significant out-of-plane character, is from an NH2 or NH nitrogen, probably from an arginine (Arg-71) known to be in the quinone binding site. Assignment of the third exchangeable proton with smaller anisotropic coupling is more ambiguous, but it is clearly not involved in a direct hydrogen bond with either of the carbonyl oxygens. The results support a model that the semiquinone is bound to the protein in a very asymmetric manner by two strong hydrogen bonds from Asp-75 and Arg-71 to the O1 carbonyl, while the O4 carbonyl is not hydrogen-bonded to the protein.  相似文献   

2.
Exchangeable protons in the immediate neighborhood of the semiquinone (SQ) at the Qi-site of the bc1 complex (ubihydroquinone:cytochrome c oxidoreductase (EC 1.10.2.2)) from Rhodobacter sphaeroides have been characterized using electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) and hyperfine sublevel correlation spectroscopy (HYSCORE) and visualized by substitution of H2O by 2H2O. Three exchangeable protons interact with the electron spin of the SQ. They possess different isotropic and anisotropic hyperfine couplings that allow a clear distinction between them. The strength of interactions indicates that the protons are involved in hydrogen bonds with SQ. The hyperfine couplings differ from values typical for in-plane hydrogen bonds previously observed in model experiments. It is suggested that the two stronger couplings involve formation of hydrogen bonds with carbonyl oxygens, which have a significant out-of-plane character due to the combined influence of bulky substituents and the protein environment. These two hydrogen bonds are most probably to side chains suggested from crystallographic structures (His-217 and Asp-252 in R. sphaeroides). Assignment of the third hydrogen bond is more ambiguous but may involve either a bond between Asn-221 and a methoxy O-atom or a bond to water. The structural and catalytic roles of the exchangeable protons are discussed in the context of three high resolution crystallographic structures for mitochondrial bc1 complexes. Potential H-bonds, including those to water molecules, form a network connecting the quinone (ubiquinone) occupant and its ligands to the propionates of heme bH and the external aqueous phase. They provide pathways for exchange of protons within the site and with the exteriors, needed to accommodate the different hydrogen bonding requirements of different quinone species during catalysis.  相似文献   

3.
Nabedryk E  Paddock ML  Okamura MY  Breton J 《Biochemistry》2005,44(44):14519-14527
In the photosynthetic reaction center (RC) from the purple bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides, proton-coupled electron-transfer reactions occur at the secondary quinone (Q(B)) site. Several nearby residues are important for both binding and redox chemistry involved in the light-induced conversion from Q(B) to quinol Q(B)H(2). Ser-L223 is one of the functionally important residues located near Q(B). To obtain information on the interaction between Ser-L223 and Q(B) and Q(B)(-), isotope-edited Q(B)(-)/Q(B) FTIR difference spectra were measured in a mutant RC in which Ser-L223 is replaced with Ala and compared to the native RC. The isotope-edited IR fingerprint spectra for the C=O [see text] and C=C [see text] modes of Q(B) (Q(B)(-)) in the mutant are essentially the same as those of the native RC. These findings indicate that highly equivalent interactions of Q(B) and Q(B)(-) with the protein occur in both native and mutant RCs. The simplest explanation of these results is that Ser-L223 is not hydrogen bonded to Q(B) or Q(B)(-) but presumably forms a hydrogen bond to a nearby acid group, preferentially Asp-L213. The rotation of the Ser OH proton from Asp-L213 to Q(B)(-) is expected to be an important step in the proton transfer to the reduced quinone. In addition, the reduced quinone remains firmly bound, indicating that other distinct hydrogen bonds are more important for stabilizing Q(B)(-). Implications on the design features of the Q(B) binding site are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
The B3LYP hybrid density functional method is used to calculate spin densities and hyperfine couplings for the 1,4-naphthosemiquinone anion radical and a model of the phyllosemiquinone anion radical. The effect of hydrogen bonding on the spin density distribution is shown to lead to a redistribution of pi spin density from the semiquinone carbonyl oxygens to the carbonyl carbon atoms. The effect of in plane and out of plane hydrogen bonding is examined. Out of plane hydrogen bonding is shown to give rise to a significant delocalisation of spin density on to the hydrogen bond donor heavy atom. Excellent agreement is observed between calculated and experimental hyperfine couplings. Comparison of calculated hyperfine couplings with experimental determinations for the A1 phyllosemiquinone anion radical present in Photosystem I (PS I) of higher plant photosynthesis indicates that the in vivo radical may have a hydrogen bond to the O4 atom only as opposed to hydrogen bonds to each oxygen atom in alcohol solvents. The hydrogen bonding situation appears to be the reverse of that observed for QA in the bacterial type II reaction centres where the strong hydrogen bond occurs to the quinone O1 oxygen atom. For different types of reaction centre the presence or absence of the non-heme Fe(II) atom may well determine which type of hydrogen bonding situation prevails at the primary quinone site which in turn may influence the direction of subsequent electron transfer.  相似文献   

5.
Hydrogen bonds are important in determining the structure and function of biomolecules. Of particular interest are hydrogen bonds to quinones, which play an important role in the bioenergetics of respiration and photosynthesis. In this work we investigated the hydrogen bonds to the two carbonyl oxygens of the semiquinone QA*- in the well-characterized reaction center from the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides R-26. We used electron paramagnetic resonance and electron nuclear double resonance techniques at 35 GHz at a temperature of 80 K. The goal of this study was to identify and assign sets of 1H-ENDOR lines to protons hydrogen bonded to each of the two oxygens. This was accomplished by preferentially exchanging the hydrogen bond on one of the oxygens with deuterium while concomitantly monitoring the changes in the amplitudes of the 1H-ENDOR lines. The preferential deuteration of one of the oxygens was made possible by the different 1H --> 2H exchange times of the protons bonded to the two oxygens. The assignment of the 1H-ENDOR lines sets the stage for the determination of the geometries of the H-bonds by a detailed field selection ENDOR study to be presented in a future article.  相似文献   

6.
The primary quinone acceptor radical anion Q(A)(-)(*) (a menaquinone-9) is studied in reaction centers (RCs) of Rhodopseudomonas viridis in which the high-spin non-heme Fe(2+) is replaced by diamagnetic Zn(2+). The procedure for the iron substitution, which follows the work of Debus et al. [Debus, R. J., Feher, G., and Okamura, M. Y. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 2276-2287], is described. In Rps. viridisan exchange rate of the iron of approximately 50% +/- 10% is achieved. Time-resolved optical spectroscopy shows that the ZnRCs are fully competent in charge separation and that the charge recombination times are similar to those of native RCs. The g tensor of Q(A)(-)(*) in the ZnRCs is determined by a simulation of the EPR at 34 GHz yielding g(x) = 2.00597 (5), g(y) = 2.00492 (5), and g(z) = 2.00216 (5). Comparison with a menaquinone anion radical (MQ(4)(-)(*)) dissolved in 2-propanol identifies Q(A)(-)(*) as a naphthoquinone and shows that only one tensor component (g(x)) is predominantly changed in the RC. This is attributed to interaction with the protein environment. Electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) experiments at 9 GHz reveal a shift of the spin density distribution of Q(A)(-)(*) in the RC as compared with MQ(4)(-)(*) in alcoholic solution. This is ascribed to an asymmetry of the Q(A) binding site. Furthermore, a hyperfine coupling constant from an exchangeable proton is deduced and assigned to a proton in a hydrogen bond between the quinone oxygen and surrounding amino acid residues. By electron spin-echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) techniques performed on Q(A)(-)(*) in the ZnRCs, two (14)N nuclear quadrupole tensors are determined that arise from the surrounding amino acids. One nitrogen coupling is assigned to a N(delta)((1))-H of a histidine and the other to a polypeptide backbone N-H by comparison with the nuclear quadrupole couplings of respective model systems. Inspection of the X-ray structure of Rps. viridis RCs shows that His(M217) and Ala(M258) are likely candidates for the respective amino acids. The quinone should therefore be bound by two H bonds to the protein that could, however, be of different strength. An asymmetric H-bond situation has also been found for Q(A)(-)(*) in the RC of Rhodobacter sphaeroides. Time-resolved electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) experiments are performed on the radical pair state P(960)(+) (*)Q(A)(-)(*) in ZnRCs of Rps. viridis that were treated with o-phenanthroline to block electron transfer to Q(B). The orientations of the two radicals in the radical pair obtained from transient EPR and their distance deduced from pulsed EPR (out-of-phase ESEEM) are very similar to the geometry observed for the ground state P(960)Q(A) in the X-ray structure [Lancaster, R., Michel, H. (1997) Structure 5, 1339].  相似文献   

7.
The action of dipyridamole (DIP) on dark recombination between the photooxidized special pair bacteriochlorophyll BChl2+ and reduced primary quinone acceptor Q(A)- in the reaction centres (RCs) of the bacteria Rhodobacter sphaeroides was studied in the presence of different detergents (LDAO, Triton X-100, sodium cholate, sodium dodecyl sulfate). DIP accelerated this reaction approximately 4-5-fold. In RCs with the extracted H-subunit, the effect of DIP was observed at lower concentrations. The possibility of modification of the RC structure-dynamic state by DIP (including changes in RC hydrogen bonds) is proposed. The modification obviously disturbs the processes of the long-life electrostatic stabilization of Q(A)-.  相似文献   

8.
The mechanism of propagation of the radical center between the cofactor, substrate, and product in the adenosylcobalamin- (AdoCbl) dependent reaction of ethanolamine ammonia-lyase has been probed by pulsed electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectroscopy. The radical of S-2-aminopropanol, which appears in the steady state of the reaction, was used in ENDOR experiments to determine the nuclear spin transition frequencies of (2)H introduced from either deuterated substrate or deuterated coenzyme and of (13)C introduced into the ribosyl moiety of AdoCbl. A (2)H doublet (1.4 MHz splitting) was observed centered about the Larmor frequency of (2)H. Identical ENDOR frequencies were observed for (2)H irrespective of its mode of introduction into the complex. A (13)C doublet ENDOR signal was observed from samples prepared with [U-(13)C-ribosyl]-AdoCbl. The (13)C coupling tensor obtained from the ENDOR powder pattern shows that the (13)C has scalar as well as dipole-dipole coupling to the unpaired electron located at C1 of S-2-aminopropanol. The dipole-dipole coupling is consistent with a distance of 3.4+/-0.2 A between C1 of the radical and C5' of the labeled cofactor component. These results establish that the C5' carbon of the 5'-deoxyadenosyl radical moves approximately 7 A from its position as part of AdoCbl to a position where it is in contact with C1 of the substrate which lies approximately 12 A from the Co(2+) of cob(II)alamin. These findings are also consistent with the contention that 5'-deoxyadenosine is the sole mediator of hydrogen transfers in ethanolamine ammonia-lyase.  相似文献   

9.
Wells TA  Takahashi E  Wraight CA 《Biochemistry》2003,42(14):4064-4074
In the primary quinone (Q(A)) binding site of Rb. sphaeroides reaction centers (RCs), isoleucine M265 is in extensive van der Waals contact with the ubiquinone headgroup. Substitution of threonine or serine for this residue (mutants M265IT and M265IS), but not valine (mutant M265IV), lowers the redox midpoint potential of Q(A) by about 100 mV (Takahashi et al. (2001) Biochemistry 40, 1020-1028). The unexpectedly large effect of the polar substitutions is not due to reorientation of the methoxy groups as similar redox potential changes are seen for these mutants with either ubiquinone or anthraquinone as Q(A). Using FTIR spectroscopy to compare Q(A)(-)/Q(A) IR difference spectra for wild type and the M265 mutant RCs, we found changes in the polar mutants (M265IT and M265IS) in the quinone C[double bond]O and C[double bond]C stretching region (1600-1660 cm(-1)) and in the semiquinone anion band (1440-1490 cm(-1)), as well as in protein modes. Modeling the mutations into the X-ray structure of the wild-type RC indicates that the hydroxyl group of the mutant polar residues, Thr and Ser, is hydrogen bonded to the peptide C[double bond]O of Thr(M261). It is suggested that the mutational effect is exerted through the extended backbone region that includes Ala(M260), the hydrogen bonding partner to the C1 carbonyl of the quinone headgroup. The resulting structural perturbations are likely to include lengthening of the hydrogen bond between the quinone C1[double bond]O and the peptide NH of Ala(M260). Possible origins of the IR spectroscopic and redox potential effects are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Quinones are naturally occurring isoprenoids that are widely exploited by photosynthetic reaction centers. Protein interactions modify the properties of quinones such that similar quinone species can perform diverse functions in reaction centers. Both type I and type II (oxygenic and nonoxygenic, respectively) reaction centers contain quinone cofactors that serve very different functions as the redox potential of similar quinones can operate at up to 800 mV lower reduction potential when present in type I reaction centers. However, the factors that determine quinone function in energy transduction remain unclear. It is thought that the location of the quinone cofactor, the geometry of its binding site, and the "smart" matrix effects from the surrounding protein environment greatly influence the functional properties of quinones. Photosystem II offers a unique system for the investigation of the factors that influence quinone function in energy transduction. It contains identical plastoquinones in the primary and secondary quinone acceptor sites, Q(A) and Q(B), which exhibit very different functional properties. This study is focused on elucidating the tuning and control of the primary semiquinone state, Q(A)(-), of photosystem II. We utilize high-resolution two-dimensional hyperfine sublevel correlation spectroscopy to directly probe the strength and orientation of the hydrogen bonds of the Q(A)(-) state with the surrounding protein environment of photosystem II. We observe two asymmetric hydrogen bonding interactions of reduced Q(A)(-) in which the strength of each hydrogen bond is affected by the relative nonplanarity of the bond. This study confirms the importance of hydrogen bonds in the redox tuning of the primary semiquinone state of photosystem II.  相似文献   

11.
The incorporation of alpha-aminoisobutyryl (Aib) residues into peptide sequences facilitates helical folding. Aib-containing sequences have been chosen for the design of rigid helical segments in a modular approach to the construction of a synthetic protein mimic. The helical conformation of the synthetic peptide Boc-Aib-(Val-Ala-Leu-Aib)3-OMe in crystals is established by X-ray diffraction. The 13-residue apolar peptide adopts a helical form in the crystal with seven alpha-type hydrogen bonds in the middle and 3(10)-type hydrogen bonds at either end. The helices stack in columns, zigzag rather than linear, by means of direct NH...OC head to tail hydrogen bonds. Leucyl side chains are extended on one side of the helix and valyl side chains on the other side. Water molecules form hydrogen bonds with several backbone carbonyl oxygens that also participate in alpha-helix hydrogen bonds. There is no apparent distortion of the helix caused by hydration. The space group is P2(1)2(1)2(1), with a = 9.964 (3) A, b = 20.117 (3) A, c = 39.311 (6) A, Z = 4, and dx = 1.127 g/cm3 for C64H106N13O16.1.33H2O. The final agreement factor R was 0.089 for 3667 data observed greater than 3 sigma(F) with a resolution of 0.9 A.  相似文献   

12.
Hydrogen bonds formed between photosynthetic reaction centers (RCs) and their cofactors were shown to affect the efficacy of electron transfer. The mechanism of such influence is determined by sensitivity of hydrogen bonds to electron density rearrangements, which alter hydrogen bonds potential energy surface. Quantum chemistry calculations were carried out on a system consisting of a primary quinone Q(A), non-heme Fe(2+) ion and neighboring residues(.) The primary quinone forms two hydrogen bonds with its environment, one of which was shown to be highly sensitive to the Q(A) state. In the case of the reduced primary quinone two stable hydrogen bond proton positions were shown to exist on [Q(A)-His(M219)] hydrogen bond line, while there is only one stable proton position in the case of the oxidized primary quinone. Taking into account this fact and also the ability of proton to transfer between potential energy wells along a hydrogen bond, theoretical study of temperature dependence of hydrogen bond polarization was carried out. Current theory was successfully applied to interpret dark P(+)/Q(A)(-) recombination rate temperature dependence.  相似文献   

13.
Theoretical and spectroscopic studies of 3,3'-benzylidenedi-4-hydroxycoumarin (bhc) have been performed. B3LYP/6-31G* calculations reproduced the experimental molecular structure of bhc and showed two O-H...O asymmetrical intramolecular hydrogen bonds with O...O distances 2.638 and 2.696 A. The calculated Fukui functions and Molecular Electrostatic Potential for bhc and its deprotonated form, bhc(2-), predicted that the most probable reactive sites for electrophilic attack and hydrogen bonds are the carbonyl oxygens, followed by the hydroxyl oxygens. The coordination ability of 3,3'-benzylidenedi-4-hydroxycoumarin has been proved in a complexation reaction with neodymium (III) ion. The new neodymium (III) complex of bhc was studied by elemental analyses, conductivity and other physical properties, mass spectra, (1)H, (13)C NMR, UV-Vis and IR spectroscopy. The data obtained are in agreement with the metal:ligand ratio of 1:1, and the formula Nd(bhc(2-))(OH)(H(2)O), where bhc(2-)=C(25)H(14)O(6)(2-). The vibrational analysis of the neodymium (III) complex, free bhc, and its monomeric building block, 4-hydroxycoumarin, showed that in the Nd(III) complex the ligand coordinates to the metal ion through both deprotonated hydroxyl groups. The participation of both carbonyl groups in coordination to the metal ion was confirmed by the significant shift of nu(C=O) to lower wavenumber. The evaluation of the cytotoxic activity of the new Nd(III) complex on SKW-3 and HL-60/Dox cells revealed, that it is a potent cytotoxic agent and should be subset further to more detailed pharmacological and toxicological study.  相似文献   

14.
Ubiquinone-2 (UQ-2) selectively labeled with (13)C (I =(1)/(2)) at either the position 1- or the 4-carbonyl carbon is incorporated into the ubiquinol oxidase bo(3) from Escherichia coli in which the native quinone (UQ-8) has been previously removed. The resulting stabilized anion radical in the high-affinity quinone-binding site (Q(H)(*)(-)) is investigated using multifrequency (9, 34, and 94 GHz) electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. The corresponding spectra reveal dramatic differences in (13)C hyperfine couplings indicating a strongly asymmetric spin density distribution over the quinone headgroup. By comparison with previous results on labeled ubisemiquinones in proteins as well as in organic solvents, it is concluded that Q(H)(*)(-) is most probably bound to the protein via a one-sided hydrogen bond or a strongly asymmetric hydrogen-bonding network. This observation is discussed with regard to the function of Q(H) in the enzyme and contrasted with the information available on other protein-bound semiquinone radicals.  相似文献   

15.
Extended x-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) studies were performed on reaction centers (RC) of the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides R-26. RC containing two, one, and no quinones (2Q, 1Q, 0Q) samples were studied. The average ligand distance of the first coordination shell was determined to be 2.10 +/- 0.02 A with a more distant shell at 4.14 +/- 0.05 A. The Fe2+ site in RC was found to have a very large structural disorder parameter, from which a spread in ligand distance per iron site of approximately +/- 0.1 A was deduced. The most likely coordination number of the first shell is six, with a mixture of oxygens and nitrogens as ligands. The edge absorption results are consistent with the Fe2+ being in distorted octahedral environment. The EXAFS spectra of the 2Q and 1Q samples with and without O-phenanthroline were found to be the same. This indicates that either the secondary quinone and o-phenanthroline do not bind to Fe2+ or that they replace an equivalent ligand. The 0Q sample showed a 12% decrease in the EXAFS amplitude, which was restored upon addition of o-phenanthroline. These results can be explained by either a loss of a ligand or a severe conformational change when the primary quinone was removed.  相似文献   

16.
In native reaction centers (RCs) from photosynthetic purple bacteria the primary quinone (QA) and the secondary quinone (QB) are interconnected via a specific His-Fe-His bridge. In Rhodobacter sphaeroides RCs the C4=O carbonyl of QA forms a very strong hydrogen bond with the protonated Npi of His M219, and the Ntau of this residue is in turn coordinated to the non-heme iron atom. The second carbonyl of QA is engaged in a much weaker hydrogen bond with the backbone N-H of Ala M260. In previous work, a Trp side chain was introduced by site-directed mutagenesis at the M260 position in the RC of Rb. sphaeroides, resulting in a complex that is completely devoid of QA and therefore nonfunctional. A photochemically competent derivative of the AM260W mutant was isolated that contains a Cys side chain at the M260 position (denoted AM260(W-->C)). In the present work, the interactions between the carbonyl groups of QA and the protein in the AM260(W-->C) suppressor mutant have been characterized by light-induced FTIR difference spectroscopy of the photoreduction of QA. The QA-/QA difference spectrum demonstrates that the strong interaction between the C4=O carbonyl of QA and His M219 is lost in the mutant, and the coupled CO and CC modes of the QA- semiquinone are also strongly perturbed. In parallel, a band assigned to the perturbation of the C5-Ntau mode of His M219 upon QA- formation in the native RC is lacking in the spectrum of the mutant. Furthermore, a positive band between 2900 and 2400 cm-1 that is related to protons fluctuating within a network of highly polarizable hydrogen bonds in the native RC is reduced in amplitude in the mutant. On the other hand, the QB-/QB FTIR difference spectrum is essentially the same as for the native RC. The kinetics of electron transfer from QA- to QB were measured by the flash-induced absorption changes at 780 nm. Compared to native RCs the absorption transients are slowed by a factor of about 2 for both the slow phase (in the hundreds of microseconds range) and fast phase (microseconds to tens of microseconds range) in AM260(W-->C) RCs. We conclude that the unusually strong hydrogen bond between the carbonyl of QA and His M219 in the Rb. sphaeroides RC is not obligatory for efficient electron transfer from QA- to QB.  相似文献   

17.
An analysis of the geometries of the hydrogen bonds observed by neutron diffraction in thirt-two crystal structures of amino acids shows the following results. Of the 168 hydrogen bonds in the data set, 64 involve the zwitterion groups 
and CO2. Another 18 are from
to sulphate or carbonyl oxygens. The majority, 46, of these
H … O bonds are three-centered (bifurcated). Nine are four-centered (trifurcated). The geometry in which the three-centered hydrogen bond involves both oxygens of the same carboxylate group is not especially favoured. When it does occur, one hydrogen bond is generally shorter and the other longer, than when the bonding involves oxygens on different carboxylate groups. The shortest hydrogen bonds are the OH … O C, from a carboxylic acid hydroxyl to a carboxylate oxygen, and NH … OC when the nitrogen is the ring atom in histidine or proline. Carboxylate groups, on average, accept six hydrogen bonds, with no examples of less than four bonds. The reason for the large number of three-centered
H … OC bonds is therefore a proton deficiency arising from the disparity between the tripled donor property of the
groups and the sextuple, on average, acceptor property of the carboxylate groups. There is good geometrical evidence for the existence of H … O and H … Cl? hydrogen bonds, especially involving the hydrogen atoms on α-atoms.  相似文献   

18.
In the photosynthetic reaction centre (RC) from the purple bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides, the primary quinone, a ubiquinone-10 (Q(A)), has been substituted by anthraquinone. Three-dimensional crystals have been grown from the modified RC and its structure has been determined by X-ray crystallography to 2.4 A resolution. The bindings of the head-group from ubiquinone-10 and of the anthraquinone ring are very similar. In particular, both rings are parallel to each other and the hydrogen bonds connecting the native ubiquinone-10 molecule to AlaM260 and HisM219 are conserved in the anthraquinone containing RC. The space of the phytyl tail missing in the anthraquinone exchanged RC is occupied by the alkyl chain of a detergent molecule. Other structural changes of the Q(A)-binding site are within the limit of resolution. Our structural data bring strong credit to the very large amount of spectroscopic data previously achieved in anthraquinone-replaced RCs and which have participated in the determination of the energetics of the quinone system in bacterial RCs.  相似文献   

19.
Escherichia coli nitrate reductase A (NarGHI) is a membrane-bound enzyme that couples quinol oxidation at a periplasmically oriented Q-site (QD) to proton release into the periplasm during anaerobic respiration. To elucidate the molecular mechanism underlying such a coupling, endogenous menasemiquinone-8 intermediates stabilized at the QD site (MSQD) of NarGHI have been studied by high-resolution pulsed EPR methods in combination with 1H2O/2H2O exchange experiments. One of the two non-exchangeable proton hyperfine couplings resolved in hyperfine sublevel correlation (HYSCORE) spectra of the radical displays characteristics typical from quinone methyl protons. However, its unusually small isotropic value reflects a singularly low spin density on the quinone carbon α carrying the methyl group, which is ascribed to a strong asymmetry of the MSQD binding mode and consistent with single-sided hydrogen bonding to the quinone oxygen O1. Furthermore, a single exchangeable proton hyperfine coupling is resolved, both by comparing the HYSCORE spectra of the radical in 1H2O and 2H2O samples and by selective detection of the exchanged deuterons using Q-band 2H Mims electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectroscopy. Spectral analysis reveals its peculiar characteristics, i.e. a large anisotropic hyperfine coupling together with an almost zero isotropic contribution. It is assigned to a proton involved in a short ∼1.6 Å in-plane hydrogen bond between the quinone O1 oxygen and the Nδ of the His-66 residue, an axial ligand of the distal heme bD. Structural and mechanistic implications of these results for the electron-coupled proton translocation mechanism at the QD site are discussed, in light of the unusually high thermodynamic stability of MSQD.  相似文献   

20.
4-(4-Phenoxybenzoyl)benzoic acid derivatives (PBADs) were found to inhibit rat and human alpha-reductase isozymes 1 and 2 in vitro. Chemiluminescence (CL), electron spin resonance, spin trapping techniques, and spectrophotometry were used to examine the effect of PBADs on reactive oxygen species (superoxide radical, O(2)(.-); hydroxyl radical, HO(*); singlet oxygen, (1)O(2)) generating systems. All test compounds at a concentration of 0.5 mM enhanced the CL from O(2)(.-) up to fivefold, which was recorded as the light sums during 1 min. At 0.38 mM PBAD enhanced production of HO(*) from H(2)O(2) in the presence of Co(II) up to 90%, as measured by a deoxyribose assay. Using the spin trap agent 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide, it was found that the amplitude of the signal arising from the Fenton-like reaction [Co(II)/H(2)O(2)] was significantly diminished by the test compounds. The compounds also inhibited the (1)O(2) dependent 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-N-oxide radical, which is generated in the acetonitrile/H(2)O(2) system. The measured rate constants of (1)O(2)-dimol quenching by PBAD were in the range of (0.8-2.6) x 10(8) M(-1) s(-1). The interaction between PBAD and (1)O(2) was also checked using a spectrophotometry method based on bleaching of p-nitrosodimethylaniline. These results indicate that PBAD may directly scavenge HO(*) and (1)O(2), but not O(2)(.-). However, the compounds that were examined had prooxidant ability under some reaction conditions.  相似文献   

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