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1.
Forty-six charge-reversal mutants of yeast cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) have been constructed in order to determine the effect of localized charge on the catalytic properties of the enzyme. The mutants include the conversion of all 20 glutamate residues and 24 of the 25 aspartate residues in CcP, one at a time, to lysine residues. In addition, two positive-to-negative charge-reversal mutants, R31E and K149D, are included in the study. The mutants have been characterized by absorption spectroscopy and hydrogen peroxide reactivity at pH 6.0 and 7.5 and by steady-state kinetic studies using recombinant yeast iso-1 ferrocytochrome c (C102T) as substrate at pH 7.5. Many of the charge-reversal mutations cause detectable changes in the absorption spectrum of the enzyme reflecting increased amounts of hexacoordinate heme compared to wild-type CcP. The increase in hexacoordinate heme in the mutant enzymes correlates with an increase in H 2O 2-inactive enzyme. The maximum velocity of the mutants decreases with increasing hexacoordination of the heme group. Steady-state velocity studies indicate that 5 of the 46 mutations (R31E, D34K, D37K, E118K, and E290K) cause large increases in the Michaelis constant indicating a reduced affinity for cytochrome c. Four of the mutations occur within the cytochrome c binding site identified in the crystal structure of the 1:1 complex of yeast cytochrome c and CcP [Pelletier, H., and Kraut, J. (1992) Science 258, 1748-1755] while the fifth mutation site lies outside, but near, the crystallographic site. These data support the hypothesis that the CcP has a single, catalytically active cytochrome c binding domain, that observed in the crystal structures of the cytochrome c/CcP complex.  相似文献   

2.
Leesch VW  Bujons J  Mauk AG  Hoffman BM 《Biochemistry》2000,39(33):10132-10139
Cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) can bind as many as two cytochrome c (Cc) molecules in an electrostatic complex. The location of the two binding domains on CcP has been probed by photoinduced interprotein electron transfer (ET) between zinc-substituted horse cytochrome c (ZnCc) and CcP with surface charge-reversal mutations and by isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC). These results, which are the first experimental evidence for the location of domain 2, indicate that the weak-binding domain includes residues 146-150 on CcP. CcP(E290K) has a charge-reversal mutation in the tight-binding domain, which should weaken binding, and it weakens the 1:1 complex; K(1) decreases 20-fold at 18 mM ionic strength. We have employed two mutations to probe the proposed location for the weak-binding domain on the CcP surface: (i) D148K, a "detrimental" mutation with a net (+2) change in the charge of CcP, and (ii) K149E, a "beneficial" mutation with a net (-2) change in the charge. The interactions between FeCc and CcP(WT and K149E) also have been studied with ITC. The CcP(D148K) mutation causes no substantial change in the 2:1 binding but an increase in the reactivity of the 2:1 complex. The latter can be interpreted as a long-range influence on the heme environment or, more likely, the enhancement of a minority subset of binding conformations with favorable pathways for ET. CcP(K149E) has a charge-reversal mutation in the weak-binding domain that produces a substantial increase in the 2:1 binding constant as measured by both quenching and ITC. For the 1:1 complex of CcP(WT), DeltaG(1) = -8.2 kcal/mol (K(1) = 1.3 x 10(6) M(-)(1)), DeltaH(1) = +2.7 kcal/mol, and DeltaS(1) = +37 cal/K.mol at 293 K; for the second binding stage, K(2) < 5 x 10(3) M(-)(1), but accurate thermodynamic parameters were not obtained. For the 1:1 complex of CcP(K149E), DeltaG(1) = -8.5 kcal/mol (K(1) = 2 x 10(6) M(-)(1)), DeltaH(1) = +2. 0 kcal/mol, and DeltaS(1) = +36 cal/K.mol; for the second stage, DeltaG(2) = -5.5 kcal/mol (K(1) = 1.3 x 10(4) M(-)(1)), DeltaH(2) = +2.9 kcal/mol, and DeltaS(2) = +29 cal/K.mol.  相似文献   

3.
Yeast cytochrome c peroxidase: mechanistic studies via protein engineering   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) is a yeast mitochondrial enzyme that catalyzes the reduction of hydrogen peroxide to water by ferrocytochrome c. It was the first heme enzyme to have its crystallographic structure determined and, as a consequence, has played a pivotal role in developing ideas about structural control of heme protein reactivity. Genetic engineering of the active site of CcP, along with structural, spectroscopic, and kinetic characterization of the mutant proteins has provided considerable insight into the mechanism of hydrogen peroxide activation, oxygen-oxygen bond cleavage, and formation of the higher-oxidation state intermediates in heme enzymes. The catalytic mechanism involves complex formation between cytochrome c and CcP. The cytochrome c/CcP system has been very useful in elucidating the complexities of long-range electron transfer in biological systems, including protein-protein recognition, complex formation, and intracomplex electron transfer processes.  相似文献   

4.
J A Sigman  A E Pond  J H Dawson  Y Lu 《Biochemistry》1999,38(34):11122-11129
In an effort to investigate factors required to stabilize heme-thiolate ligation, key structural components necessary to convert cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) into a thiolate-ligated cytochrome P450-like enzyme have been evaluated and the H175C/D235L CcP double mutant has been engineered. The UV-visible absorption, magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra for the double mutant at pH 8.0 are reported herein. The close similarity between the spectra of ferric substrate-bound cytochrome P450cam and those of the exogenous ligand-free ferric state of the double mutant with all three techniques support the conclusion that the latter has a pentacoordinate, high-spin heme with thiolate ligation. Previous efforts to prepare a thiolate-ligated mutant of CcP with the H175C single mutant led to Cys oxidation to cysteic acid [Choudhury et al. (1994) J. Biol. Chem. 267, 25656-25659]. Therefore it is concluded that changing the proximal Asp235 residue to Leu is critical in forming a stable heme-thiolate ligation in the resting state of the enzyme. To further probe the versatility of the CcP double mutant as a ferric P450 model, hexacoordinate low-spin complexes have also been prepared. Addition of the neutral ligand imidazole or of the anionic ligand cyanide results in formation of hexacoordinate adducts that retain thiolate ligation as determined by spectral comparison to the analogous derivatives of ferric P450cam. The stability of these complexes and their similarity to the analogous forms of P450cam illustrates the potential of the H175C/D235L CcP double mutant as a model for ferric P450 enzymes. This study marks the first time a stable cyanoferric complex of a model P450 has been made and demonstrates the importance of the environment around the primary coordination ligands in stabilizing metal-ligand ligation.  相似文献   

5.
Here we describe paramagnetic NMR analysis of the low- and high-spin forms of yeast cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP), a 34 kDa heme enzyme involved in hydroperoxide reduction in mitochondria. Starting from the assigned NMR spectra of a low-spin CN-bound CcP and using a strategy based on paramagnetic pseudocontact shifts, we have obtained backbone resonance assignments for the diamagnetic, iron-free protein and the high-spin, resting-state enzyme. The derived chemical shifts were further used to determine low- and high-spin magnetic susceptibility tensors and the zero-field splitting constant (D) for the high-spin CcP. The D value indicates that the latter contains a hexacoordinate heme species with a weak field ligand, such as water, in the axial position. Being one of the very few high-spin heme proteins analyzed in this fashion, the resting state CcP expands our knowledge of the heme coordination chemistry in biological systems.  相似文献   

6.
The reduction potentials of 22 yeast cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) mutants were determined at pH 7.0 in order to determine the effect of both heme pocket and surface mutations on the Fe(III)/Fe(II) redox couple of CcP, as well as to determine the range in redox potentials that could be obtained through point mutations in the enzyme. Spectroscopic properties of the Fe(III) and Fe(II) forms of the mutant enzymes are also reported. The mutations include variants in the distal and proximal heme pockets as well as on the enzyme surface and involve single, double, and triple point mutations. A spectrochemical redox titration technique used in this study gave an E(0') value of -189 mV for yeast CcP compared to a previously reported value of -194 mV determined by potentiometry [C.W. Conroy, P. Tyma, P.H. Daum, J.E. Erman, Biochim. Biophys. Acta 537 (1978) 62-69]. Both positive and negative shifts in the reduction potential from that of the wild-type enzyme were observed, spanning a range of 113 mV. The His-52-->Asn mutation gave the most negative potential, -259 mV, while a triple mutant in which the three distal pocket residues, Arg-48, Trp-51, and His-52, were all converted to leucine residues gave the most positive potential, -146 mV.  相似文献   

7.
The spectroscopic properties of a mutant cytochrome c peroxidase, in which Asp-235 has been replaced by an asparagine residue, were examined in both nitrate and phosphate buffers between pH 4 and 10.5. The spin state of the enzyme is pH dependent, and four distinct spectroscopic species are observed in each buffer system: a predominantly high-spin Fe(III) species at pH 4, two distinct low-spin forms between pH 5 and 9, and the denatured enzyme above pH 9.3. The spectrum of the mutant enzyme at pH 4 is dependent upon specific ion effects. Increasing the pH above 5 converts the mutant enzyme to a predominantly low-spin hydroxy complex. Subsequent conversion to a second low-spin form is essentially complete at pH 7.5. The second low-spin form has the distal histidine, His-52, coordinated to the heme iron. To evaluate the effect of the changes in coordination state upon the reactivity of the enzyme, the reaction between hydrogen peroxide and the mutant enzyme was also examined as a function of pH. The reaction of CcP(MI,D235N) with peroxide is biphasic. At pH 6, the rapid phase of the reaction can be attributed to the bimolecular reaction between hydrogen peroxide and the hydroxy-ligated form of the mutant enzyme. Despite the hexacoordination of the heme iron in this form, the bimolecular rate constant is approximately 22% that of pentacoordinate wild-type yeast cytochrome c peroxidase. The bimolecular reaction of the mutant enzyme with peroxide exhibits the same pH dependence in nitrate-containing buffers that has been described for the wild-type enzyme, indicating a loss of reactivity with the protonation of a group with an apparent pKa of 5.4. This observation eliminates Asp-235 as the source for this heme-linked ionization and strengthens the hypothesis that the pKa of 5.4 is associated with His-52. The slower phase of the reaction between peroxide and the mutant enzyme saturates at high peroxide concentration and is attributed to conversion of unreactive to reactive forms of the enzyme. The fraction of enzyme which reacts via the slow phase is dependent upon both pH and specific ion effects.  相似文献   

8.
Here the cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) from Nitrosomonas europaea is examined using the technique of catalytic protein film voltammetry. Submonolayers of the bacterial diheme enzyme at a pyrolytic graphite edge electrode give catalytic, reductive signals in the presence of the substrate hydrogen peroxide. The resulting waveshapes indicate that CcP is bound non-covalently in a highly active configuration. The native enzyme has been shown to possess two heme groups of low and high potential (L and H, -260 and +450 mV versus hydrogen, respectively), and here we find that the catalytic waves of the N. europaea enzyme have a midpoint potential of >500 mV and a shape that corresponds to a 1-electron process. The signals increase in magnitude with hydrogen peroxide concentration, revealing Michaelis-Menten kinetics and K(m) = 55 microm. The midpoint potentials shift with substrate concentration, indicating the electrochemically active species observed in our data corresponds to a catalytic species. The potentials also shift with respect to pH, and the pH dependence is interpreted in terms of a two pK(a) model for proton binding. Together the data show that the electrochemistry of the N. europaea cytochrome c peroxidase is unlike other peroxidases studied to date, including other bacterial enzymes. This is discussed in terms of a catalytic model for the N. europaea enzyme and compared with other cytochrome c peroxidases.  相似文献   

9.
Foshay MC  Vitello LB  Erman JE 《Biochemistry》2004,43(17):5065-5072
Replacement of the distal histidine, His-52, in cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) with a lysine residue produces a mutant cytochrome c peroxidase, CcP(H52K), with spectral and kinetic properties significantly altered compared to those of the wild-type enzyme. Three spectroscopically distinct forms of the enzyme are observed between pH 4.0 and 8.0 with two additional forms, thought to be partially denatured forms, making contributions to the observed spectra at the pH extremes. CcP(H52K) exists in at least three, slowly interconverting conformational states over most of the pH range that was investigated. The side chain epsilon-amino group of Lys-52 has an apparent pK(a) of 6.4 +/- 0.2, and the protonation state of Lys-52 affects the spectral properties of the enzyme and the reactions with both hydrogen peroxide and HCN. In its unprotonated form, Lys-52 acts as a base catalyst facilitating the reactions of both hydrogen peroxide and HCN with CcP(H52K). The major form of CcP(H52K) reacts with hydrogen peroxide with a rate approximately 50 times slower than that of wild-type CcP but reacts with HCN approximately 3 times faster than does the wild-type enzyme. The major form of the mutant enzyme has a higher affinity for HCN than does native CcP.  相似文献   

10.
Proton NMR spectroscopy at 500 and 361 MHz has been used to characterize the noncovalent or electrostatic complexes of yeast cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) with horse, tuna, yeast isozyme-1, and yeast isozyme-2 ferricytochromes c and the covalently cross-linked complexes of cytochrome c peroxidase with horse and yeast isozyme-1 ferricytochromes c. Under the conditions employed in this work, the stoichiometry of the predominant complex formed in solution (which totaled greater than 90% of complex formed) was found to be 1:1 in all cases. These studies have elucidated significant differences in the proton NMR absorption spectra and the one-dimensional nuclear Overhauser effect difference spectra of the complexes, depending on the specific species of ferricytochrome c incorporated. In particular, the results indicate that the noncovalent complexes formed between CcP and physiological redox partners (yeast isozyme-1 or yeast isozyme-2 ferricytochromes c) are distinctly different from the noncovalent complexes formed between CcP and ferricytochromes c from horse and tuna. Parallel chemical cross-linking studies carried out using mixtures of cytochrome c peroxidase with horse ferricytochrome c, and cytochrome c peroxidase with yeast isozyme-1 ferricytochrome c further emphasize such cytochrome c-dependent differences, with only the covalently cross-linked complex of physiological redox partners (cytochrome c peroxidase/yeast isozyme-1) displaying NMR spectra characteristic of a heterogeneous mixture of different 1:1 complexes. Finally, one-dimensional nuclear Overhauser effect experiments have proven valuable in selectively and efficiently probing the protein-protein interface in these complexes, including the environment around the cytochrome c heme 3-methyl group and Phe-82.  相似文献   

11.
Both cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) and a mutant cytochrome c peroxidase in which the distal histidine has been replaced by leucine, CcP(H52L), are converted to hydroxy-ligated derivatives at alkaline pH. In CcP, the hydroxy-ligated derivative is subsequently converted to a bis-imidazole species prior to protein denaturation while the initial hydroxy-ligated CcP(H52L) is converted to a second, spectroscopically distinct hydroxy-ligated species prior to denaturation. The spectra of the alkaline forms of CcP and CcP(H52L) have been determined between 310 and 700 nm. The pH dependence of the rate of reaction between CcP(H52L) and hydrogen peroxide has been extended to pH 10. The hydroxy-ligated form of CcP(H52L) reacts with hydrogen peroxide 4 times more rapidly than the pentacoordinate, high-spin form of CcP(H52L) that exists at neutral pH. The rate of the reaction between p-nitroperoxybenzoic acid and CcP(H52L) has been measured between pH 4 and pH 8. Neutral p-nitroperoxybenzoic acid reacts with CcP(H52L) 10(5) times more slowly than with CcP while the negatively charged p-nitroperoxybenzoate reacts with CcP(H52L) 10(3) times more slowly than with CcP. These data indicate that the role of the distal histidine during the initial formation of the peroxy anion/heme iron complex is not simply base catalysis.  相似文献   

12.
We report the characterization of the diheme cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) from Shewanella oneidensis (So) using UV-visible absorbance, electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy, and Michaelis-Menten kinetics. While sequence alignment with other bacterial diheme cytochrome c peroxidases suggests that So CcP may be active in the as-isolated state, we find that So CcP requires reductive activation for full activity, similar to the case for the canonical Pseudomonas type of bacterial CcP enzyme. Peroxide turnover initiated with oxidized So CcP shows a distinct lag phase, which we interpret as reductive activation in situ. A simple kinetic model is sufficient to recapitulate the lag-phase behavior of the progress curves and separate the contributions of reductive activation and peroxide turnover. The rates of catalysis and activation differ between MBP fusion and tag-free So CcP and also depend on the identity of the electron donor. Combined with Michaelis-Menten analysis, these data suggest that So CcP can accommodate electron donor binding in several possible orientations and that the presence of the MBP tag affects the availability of certain binding sites. To further investigate the structural basis of reductive activation in So CcP, we introduced mutations into two different regions of the protein that have been suggested to be important for reductive activation in homologous bacterial CcPs. Mutations in a flexible loop region neighboring the low-potential heme significantly increased the activation rate, confirming the importance of flexible loop regions of the protein in converting the inactive, as-isolated enzyme into the activated form.  相似文献   

13.
Modeling studies suggest that electrons are transferred from cytochrome c to cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) with cytochrome c predominantly bound at a site facing the gamma-meso edge of the CcP prosthetic heme group (Poulos, T.L., and Kraut, J. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 10322-10330). As shown here, guaiacol and ferrocyanide are oxidized at a different site of CcP. Thus, the oxidations of cytochrome c and guaiacol are differentially inactivated by phenylhydrazine and sodium azide. The loss of guaiacol oxidation activity correlates with covalent binding of 1 equivalent of [14C]phenylhydrazine to the protein, whereas the slower loss of cytochrome c activity correlates with the appearance of a 428-nm absorbance maximum attributed to the formation of a sigma-phenyl-iron heme complex. The delta-meso-phenyl and 8-hydroxymethyl derivatives of heme are formed as minor products. Catalytic oxidation of azide to the azidyl radical results in inactivation of CcP and formation of delta-meso-azidoheme. Reconstitution of apo-CcP with delta-meso-azido-, -ethyl-, and -(2-phenylethyl)heme yields holoproteins that give compound I species with H2O2 and exhibit 80, 59, and 31%, respectively, of the control kcat value for cytochrome c oxidation but little or no guaiacol or ferrocyanide oxidizing activity. Conversely, CcP reconstituted with gamma-meso-ethylheme is fully active in the oxidation of guaiacol and ferrocyanide but only retains 27% of the cytochrome c oxidizing activity. These results indicate that guaiacol and ferrocyanide are primarily oxidized near the delta-meso-heme edge rather than, like cytochrome c, at a surface site facing the gamma-meso edge.  相似文献   

14.
Steady-state kinetics for the reaction of Rhodobacter capsulatus bacterial cytochrome c peroxidase (BCCP) with its substrate cytochrome c(2) were investigated. The Rb. capsulatus BCCP is dependent on calcium for activation as previously shown for the Pseudomonas aeruginosa BCCP and Paracoccus denitrificans enzymes. Furthermore, the activity shows a bell-shaped pH dependence with optimum at pH 7.0. Enzyme activity is greatest at low ionic strength and drops off steeply as ionic strength increases, resulting in an apparent interaction domain charge product of -13. All cytochromes c(2) show an asymmetric distribution of surface charge, with a concentration of 14 positive charges near the exposed heme edge of Rb. capsulatus c(2) which potentially may interact with approximately 6 negative charges, localized near the edge of the high-potential heme of the Rb. capsulatus BCCP. To test this proposal, we constructed charge reversal mutants of the 14 positively charged residues located on the front face of Rb. capsulatus cytochrome c(2) and examined their effect on steady-state kinetics with BCCP. Mutated residues in Rb. capsulatus cytochrome c(2) that showed the greatest effects on binding and enzyme activity are K12E, K14E, K54E, K84E, K93E, and K99E, which is consistent with the site of electron transfer being located at the heme edge. We conclude that a combination of long-range, nonspecific electrostatic interactions as well as localized salt bridges between, e.g., cytochrome c(2) K12, K14, K54, and K99 with BCCP D194, D241, and D6, account for the observed kinetics.  相似文献   

15.
Structural change of Cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) due to interaction with lysine peptides (Lysptds) has been studied by absorption spectra and measurements on electron transfer between cytochrome c (cyt c) and CcP in the presence of Lysptd. Peaks were observed in the difference absorption spectrum of CcP between in the presence and absence of Lysptds, demonstrating a structural perturbation of CcP, at least at its heme site, on interaction with Lysptd. The interaction between CcP and Lysptd was electrostatic, since no significant peak was detected in the difference absorption spectrum when 100 mM of NaCl was added to the solution. Lysptds competitively inhibited electron transfer from cyt c to CcP, which indicated that they interacted with CcP at the same site as cyt c and would be models of the CcP interacting site of cyt c.  相似文献   

16.
The bimolecular reaction between Escherichia coli-produced cytochrome-c peroxidase (CcP(MI)) and hydrogen peroxide is identical to that of native yeast cytochrome-c peroxidase (CcP) and hydrogen peroxide in the neutral pH region. Both enzymes have pH-independent bimolecular rate constants of 46 microM-1.s-1 for the reaction with hydrogen peroxide. A second mutant enzyme, E. coli-produced cytochrome-c peroxidase mutant with phenylalanine at position 191 (CcP(MI, F191)), has a pH-independent bimolecular rate constant for the hydrogen peroxide reaction of 65 microM-1.s-1, 40% larger than for CcP or CcP(MI). The initial peroxide-oxidation product of CcP(MI, F191) is an oxyferryl porphyrin pi-cation radical intermediate in contrast to the oxyferryl amino-acid radical intermediate formed upon oxidation of CcP or CcP(MI) with hydrogen peroxide. The reactions of all three enzymes with hydrogen peroxide are pH-dependent in KNO3-containing buffers. The reactions are influenced by an ionizable group, which has an apparent pKa of 5.4 in all three enzymes. The enzymes react with hydrogen peroxide when the ionizable group is unprotonated. Both CcP(MI) and CcP(MI, F191) have slightly smaller pH stability regions compared to CcP as assessed by the hydrogen peroxide titer and spectral analysis. The alteration in structural stability must be attributed to differences in the primary sequence between CcP and CcP(MI) which occur at positions -2, -1, 53 and 152.  相似文献   

17.
A covalent complex between recombinant yeast iso-1-cytochrome c and recombinant yeast cytochrome c peroxidase (rCcP), in which the crystallographically defined cytochrome c binding site [Pelletier, H., and Kraut, J. (1992) Science 258, 1748-1755] is blocked, was synthesized via disulfide bond formation using specifically engineered cysteine residues in both yeast iso-1-cytochrome c and yeast cytochrome c peroxidase [Papa, H. S., and Poulos, T. L. (1995) Biochemistry 34, 6573-6580]. Previous studies on similar covalent complexes, those that block the Pelletier-Kraut crystallographic site, have demonstrated that samples of the covalent complexes have detectable activities that are significantly lower than those of wild-type yCcP, usually in the range of approximately 1-7% of that of the wild-type enzyme. Using gradient elution procedures in the purification of the engineered peroxidase, cytochrome c, and covalent complex, along with activity measurements during the purification steps, we demonstrate that the residual activity associated with the purified covalent complex is due to unreacted CcP that copurifies with the covalent complex. Within experimental error, the covalent complex that blocks the Pelletier-Kraut site has zero catalytic activity in the steady-state oxidation of exogenous yeast iso-1-ferrocytochrome c by hydrogen peroxide, demonstrating that only ferrocytochrome c bound at the Pelletier-Kraut site is oxidized during catalytic turnover.  相似文献   

18.
The rate of the reaction between p-nitroperoxybenzoic acid and cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) has been investigated as a function of pH and ionic strength. The pH dependence of the reaction between CcP and peracetic acid has also been determined. The rate of the reactions are influenced by two heme-linked ionizations in the protein. The enzyme is active when His-52 (pK(a) 3.8 +/- 0.1) is unprotonated and an unknown group with a pK(a) of 9.8 +/- 0.1 is protonated. The bimolecular rate constant for the reaction between peracetic acid and CcP and between p-nitroperoxybenzoic acid and CcP are (1.8 +/- 0.1) x 10(7) and (1.6 +/- 0.2) x 10(7) M(-)(1) s(-)(1), respectively. These rates are about 60% slower than the reaction between hydrogen peroxide and CcP. A critical comparison of the pH dependence of the reactions of hydrogen peroxide, peracetic acid, and p-nitroperoxybenzoic acid with CcP provides evidence that both the neutral and anionic forms of the two peroxyacids react directly with the enzyme. The peracetate and p-nitroperoxybenzoate anions react with CcP with rates of (1.5 +/- 0.1) x 10(6) and (1.6 +/- 0.2) x 10(6) M(-)(1) s(-)(1), respectively, about 10 times slower than the neutral peroxyacids. These data indicate that CcP discriminates between the neutral peroxyacids and their negatively charged ions. However, the apparent bimolecular rate constant for reaction between p-nitroperoxybenzoate and CcP is independent of ionic strength in the range of 0.01-1.0 M, suggesting that electrostatic repulsion between the anion and CcP is not the cause of the lower reactivity for the peroxybenzoate anion. The data are consistent with the hypothesis that the rate-limiting step for the oxidation of CcP to compound I by both neutral peroxyacid and the negatively charged peroxide ion is diffusion of the reactants through the protein matrix, from the surface of the protein to the distal heme pocket.  相似文献   

19.
The oxidation of yeast cytochrome c peroxidase by hydrogen peroxide produces a unique enzyme intermediate, cytochrome c peroxidase Compound I, in which the ferric heme iron has been oxidized to an oxyferryl state, Fe(IV), and an amino acid residue has been oxidized to a radical state. The reduction of cytochrome c peroxidase Compound I by horse heart ferrocytochrome c is biphasic in the presence of excess ferrocytochrome c as cytochrome c peroxidase Compound I is reduced to the native enzyme via a second enzyme intermediate, cytochrome c peroxidase Compound II. In the first phase of the reaction, the oxyferryl heme iron in Compound I is reduced to the ferric state producing Compound II which retains the amino acid free radical. The pseudo-first order rate constant for reduction of Compound I to Compound II increases with increasing cytochrome c concentration in a hyperbolic fashion. The limiting value at infinite cytochrome c concentration, which is attributed to the intracomplex electron transfer rate from ferrocytochrome c to the heme site in Compound I, is 450 +/- 20 s-1 at pH 7.5 and 25 degrees C. Ferricytochrome c inhibits the reaction in a competitive manner. The reduction of the free radical in Compound II is complex. At low cytochrome c peroxidase concentrations, the reduction rate is 5 +/- 3 s-1, independent of the ferrocytochrome c concentration. At higher peroxidase concentrations, a term proportional to the square of the Compound II concentration is involved in the reduction of the free radical. Reduction of Compound II is not inhibited by ferricytochrome c. The rates and equilibrium constant for the interconversion of the free radical and oxyferryl forms of Compound II have also been determined.  相似文献   

20.
Rates of yeast cytochrome c peroxidase (ferrocytochrome c:hydrogen-peroxide oxidoreductase, EC 1.11.1.5) catalyzed oxidation of bis(tripyridine)cobalt(II) ion, penta(amine)pyridineruthenium(II) ion and ferrocyanide ion by hydrogen peroxide have been found to obey the empirical equation: (formula; see text) in the pH range 5 to 8, and at saturating H2O2 concentrations. [( S] and [CcP] are the concentrations of the reductant and the enzyme, respectively.) Values of k2 were found to be independent of the reductant. The term k0[S] is only significant with the cobalt and ruthenium complexes at high pH. The mechanism proposed to account for this rate equation differs significantly from previous mechanistic proposals. In particular, the rate data require the assignment of the rate-limiting step at high substrate concentrations to a slow electron-transfer within the enzyme, and not, as previously suggested, to saturation of substrate binding to the enzyme. Also, the term k0[S] implies that the reactive substrates, including the natural substrate (yeast cytochrome c), react with the hydrogen peroxide-heme complex and not with the radical species formed by reaction with hydrogen peroxide in the absence of reductants.  相似文献   

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