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1.
Mononuclear Mo-containing enzymes of the xanthine oxidase (XO) family catalyze the oxidative hydroxylation of aldehydes and heterocyclic compounds. The molybdenum active site shows a distorted square-pyramidal geometry in which two ligands, a hydroxyl/water molecule (the catalytic labile site) and a sulfido ligand, have been shown to be essential for catalysis. The XO family member aldehyde oxidoreductase from Desulfovibrio gigas (DgAOR) is an exception as presents in its catalytically competent form an equatorial oxo ligand instead of the sulfido ligand. Despite this structural difference, inactive samples of DgAOR can be activated upon incubation with dithionite plus sulfide, a procedure similar to that used for activation of desulfo-XO. The fact that DgAOR does not need a sulfido ligand for catalysis indicates that the process leading to the activation of inactive DgAOR samples is different to that of desulfo-XO. We now report a combined kinetic and X-ray crystallographic study to unveil the enzyme modification responsible for the inactivation and the chemistry that occurs at the Mo site when DgAOR is activated. In contrast to XO, which is activated by resulfuration of the Mo site, DgAOR activation/inactivation is governed by the oxidation state of the dithiolene moiety of the pyranopterin cofactor, which demonstrates the non-innocent behavior of the pyranopterin in enzyme activity. We also showed that DgAOR incubation with dithionite plus sulfide in the presence of dioxygen produces hydrogen peroxide not associated with the enzyme activation. The peroxide molecule coordinates to molybdenum in a η2 fashion inhibiting the enzyme activity.  相似文献   

2.
 The crystal structure analysis of the aldehyde oxidoreductase from Desulfovibrio gigas was exceptionally revealing with regard to the ligands and structure of the molybdenum site and the mechanism of the hydroxylation reaction catalyzed. The metal is pentacoordinated by two sulfurs of the cis–dithiolene group of the molybdopterin cofactor and by facially arranged sulfido, oxo and water ligands. The latter is in hydrogen-bonding contact with the carboxylate group of Glu 869 and the hydroxyl group of an isopropanol molecule, a substrate analogue inhibitor. This steric arrangement strongly suggests a mechanism for the reductive half-cycle of the reaction with Glu 869 as the base, the metal-bound water as the source of the transferred hydroxyl group, and the sulfido group as the hydride acceptor. The geometry and the proposed mechanism are in agreement with density functional calculations on a model of the molybdenum site. In the oxidative half-reaction, electrons are withdrawn from Morv through the rigidly held pterin ring system, via the iron-sulfur clusters, to the protein surface. Received: 25 June 1997 / Accepted: 20 August 1997  相似文献   

3.
G N George  R C Bray 《Biochemistry》1988,27(10):3603-3609
Investigations have been carried out on the nature of the species from the enzyme xanthine oxidase that give rise to two molybdenum (V) electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) signals. Isotopic enrichment with 95Mo, 97Mo, 33S, and 17O was employed. Computer simulations of the EPR spectra recorded at 9- and 35-GHz microwave frequencies were used to evaluate the various hyperfine couplings and angular relations between the principal axes of g and A, as well as the nuclear electric quadrupole interaction for 97Mo. The results support the presence of an oxo ligand in the Rapid and of both an oxo and a sulfido ligand in the Very Rapid signal-giving species.  相似文献   

4.
The EPR characterization of the molybdenum(V) forms obtained on formate reduction of both as-prepared and inhibited formate dehydrogenase from Desulfovibrio desulfuricans ATCC 27774, an enzyme that catalyzes the oxidation of formate to CO(2), is reported. The Mo(V) EPR signal of the as-prepared formate-reduced enzyme is rhombic (g(max)=2.012, g(mid)=1.996, g(min)=1.985) and shows hyperfine coupling with two nuclear species with I=1/2. One of them gives an anisotropic splitting and is not solvent exchangeable (A(max)=11.7, A(mid)=A(min)=non-detectable, A-values in cm(-1)x10(-4)). The second species is exchangeable with solvent and produces a splitting at the three principal g-values (A(max)=7.7, A(mid)=10.0, A(min)=9.3). The hyperfine couplings of the non-solvent and solvent exchangeable nuclei are assigned to the hydrogen atoms of the beta-methylene carbon of a selenocysteine and to a Mo ligand whose nature, sulfydryl or hydroxyl, is still in debate. The Mo(V) species obtained in the presence of inhibitors (azide or cyanide) yields a nearly axial EPR signal showing only one detectable splitting given by nuclear species with I=1/2 (g(max)=2.092, g(mid)=2.000, g(min)=1.989, A(max)=non-detectable, A(mid)=A(min)=7.0), which is originated from the alpha-proton donated by the formate to a proximal ligand of the molybdenum. The possible structures of both paramagnetic molybdenum species (observed upon formate reduction in presence and absence of inhibitors) are discussed in comparison with the available structural information of this enzyme and the structural and EPR properties of the closely related formate dehydrogenase-H from Escherichia coli.  相似文献   

5.
Nitrate reductases are enzymes that catalyze the conversion of nitrate to nitrite. We report here electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) studies in the periplasmic nitrate reductase isolated from the sulfate-reducing bacteria Desulfovibrio desulfuricans ATCC 27774. This protein, belonging to the dimethyl sulfoxide reductase family of mononuclear Mo-containing enzymes, comprises a single 80-kDa subunit and contains a Mo bis(molybdopterin guanosine dinucleotide) cofactor and a [4Fe–4S] cluster. EPR-monitored redox titrations, carried out with and without nitrate in the potential range from 200 to −500 mV, and EPR studies of the enzyme, in both catalytic and inhibited conditions, reveal distinct types of Mo(V) EPR-active species, which indicates that the Mo site presents high coordination flexibility. These studies show that nitrate modulates the redox properties of the Mo active site, but not those of the [4Fe–4S] center. The possible structures and the role in catalysis of the distinct Mo(V) species detected by EPR are discussed.Electronic Supplementary Material Supplementary material is available for this article at and is accessible for authorized users.  相似文献   

6.
Re-evaluation of the crystallographic data of the molybdenum-containing E. coli formate dehydrogenase H (Boyington et al. Science 275:1305–1308, 1997), reported in two redox states, reveals important structural differences for the formate-reduced form, with large implications for the reaction mechanism proposed in that work. We have re-refined the reduced structure with revised protocols and found substantial rearrangement in some parts of it. The original model is essentially correct but an important loop close to the molybdenum active site was mistraced, and, therefore, catalytic relevant residues were located in wrong positions. In particular selenocysteine-140, a ligand of molybdenum in the original work, and essential for catalysis, is no longer bound to the metal after reduction of the enzyme with formate. These results are incompatible with the originally proposed reaction mechanism. On the basis of our new interpretation, we have revised and proposed a new reaction mechanism, which reconciles the new X-ray model with previous biochemical and extended X-ray absorption fine structure data.  相似文献   

7.
Aldehyde oxidoreductase (AOR) activity has been found in a number of sulfate-reducing bacteria. The enzyme that is responsible for the conversion of aldehydes to carboxylic acids is a mononuclear molybdenum enzyme belonging to the xanthine oxidase family. We report here the purification and characterization of AOR isolated from the sulfate-reducing bacterium Desulfovibrio (D.) aminophilus DSM 12254, an aminolytic strain performing thiosulfate dismutation. The enzyme is a homodimer (ca. 200 kDa), containing a molybdenum centre and two [2Fe-2S] clusters per monomer. UV/Visible and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra of D. aminophilus AOR recorded in as-prepared and reduced states are similar to those obtained in AORs from Desulfovibrio gigas, Desulfovibrio desulfuricans and Desulfovibrio alaskensis. Despite AOR from D. aminophilus is closely related to other AORs, it presents lower activity towards aldehydes and no activity towards N-heterocyclic compounds, which suggests another possible role for this enzyme in vivo. A comparison of the molecular and EPR properties of AORs from different Desulfovibrio species is also included.  相似文献   

8.
Nitrate reductase from Desulfovibrio desulfuricans ATCC 27774 (DdNapA) is a monomeric protein of 80 kDa harboring a bis(molybdopterin guanine dinucleotide) active site and a [4Fe-4S] cluster. Previous electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) studies in both catalytic and inhibiting conditions showed that the molybdenum center has high coordination flexibility when reacted with reducing agents, substrates or inhibitors. As-prepared DdNapA samples, as well as those reacted with substrates and inhibitors, were crystallized and the corresponding structures were solved at resolutions ranging from 1.99 to 2.45 A. The good quality of the diffraction data allowed us to perform a detailed structural study of the active site and, on that basis, the sixth molybdenum ligand, originally proposed to be an OH/OH(2) ligand, was assigned as a sulfur atom after refinement and analysis of the B factors of all the structures. This unexpected result was confirmed by a single-wavelength anomalous diffraction experiment below the iron edge (lambda = 1.77 A) of the as-purified enzyme. Furthermore, for six of the seven datasets, the S-S distance between the sulfur ligand and the Sgamma atom of the molybdenum ligand Cys(A140) was substantially shorter than the van der Waals contact distance and varies between 2.2 and 2.85 A, indicating a partial disulfide bond. Preliminary EPR studies under catalytic conditions showed an EPR signal designated as a turnover signal (g values 1.999, 1.990, 1.982) showing hyperfine structure originating from a nucleus of unknown nature. Spectropotentiometric studies show that reduced methyl viologen, the electron donor used in the catalytic reaction, does not interact directly with the redox cofactors. The turnover signal can be obtained only in the presence of the reaction substrates. With use of the optimized conditions determined by spectropotentiometric titration, the turnover signal was developed with (15)N-labeled nitrate and in D(2)O-exchanged DdNapA samples. These studies indicate that this signal is not associated with a Mo(V)-nitrate adduct and that the hyperfine structure originates from two equivalent solvent-exchangeable protons. The new coordination sphere of molybdenum proposed on the basis of our studies led us to revise the currently accepted reaction mechanism for periplasmic nitrate reductases. Proposals for a new mechanism are discussed taking into account a molybdenum and ligand-based redox chemistry, rather than the currently accepted redox chemistry based solely on the molybdenum atom.  相似文献   

9.
Site-directed mutations D262C, D262H, D262N, and D262T were made to the beta subunit Walker Homology B aspartate of chloroplast F(1)-ATPase in Chlamydomonas. Photoautotrophic growth and photophosphorylation rates were 3-14% of wild type as were ATPase activities of purified chloroplast F(1) indicating that betaD262 is an essential residue for catalysis. The EPR spectrum of vanadyl bound to Site 3 of chloroplast F(1) as VO(2+)-ATP gave rise to two EPR species designated B and C in wild type and mutants. (51)V-hyperfine parameters of species C, present exclusively in the activated enzyme state, did not change significantly by the mutations examined indicating that it is not an equatorial ligand to VO(2+), nor is it hydrogen-bonded to a coordinated water at an equatorial position. Every mutation changed the ratio of EPR species C/B and/or the (51)V-hyperfine parameters of species B, the predominant conformation of VO(2+)-nucleotide bound to Site 3 in the latent (down-regulated) state. The results indicate that the Walker Homology B aspartate coordinates the metal of the predominant metal-nucleotide conformation at Site 3 in the latent state but not in the conformation present exclusively upon activation and elucidates one of the specific changes in metal ligation involved with activation.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Mouse aldehyde oxidase (mAOX1) forms a homodimer and belongs to the xanthine oxidase family of molybdoenzymes which are characterized by an essential equatorial sulfur ligand coordinated to the molybdenum atom. In general, mammalian AOs are characterized by broad substrate specificity and an yet obscure physiological function. To define the physiological substrates and the enzymatic characteristics of mAOX1, we established a system for the heterologous expression of the enzyme in Eschericia coli. The recombinant protein showed spectral features and a range of substrate specificity similar to the native protein purified from mouse liver. The EPR data of recombinant mAOX1 were similar to those of AO from rabbit liver, but differed from the homologous xanthine oxidoreductase enzymes. Site-directed mutagenesis of amino acids Val806, Met884 and Glu1265 at the active site resulted in a drastic decrease in the oxidation of aldehydes with no increase in the oxidation of purine substrates. The double mutant V806E/M884R and the single mutant E1265Q were catalytically inactive enzymes regardless of the aldehyde or purine substrates tested. Our results show that only Glu1265 is essential for the catalytic activity by initiating the base-catalyzed mechanism of substrate oxidation. In addition, it is concluded that the substrate specificity of molybdo-flavoenzymes is more complex and not only defined by the three characterized amino acids in the active site.  相似文献   

12.
Oxalate oxidase (E.C. 1.2.3.4) catalyzes the oxygen-dependent oxidation of oxalate to carbon dioxide in a reaction that is coupled with the formation of hydrogen peroxide. Although there is currently no structural information available for oxalate oxidase from Ceriporiopsis subvermispora (CsOxOx), sequence data and homology modeling indicate that it is the first manganese-containing bicupin enzyme identified that catalyzes this reaction. Interestingly, CsOxOx shares greatest sequence homology with bicupin microbial oxalate decarboxylases (OxDC). We show that CsOxOx activity directly correlates with Mn content and other metals do not appear to be able to support catalysis. EPR spectra indicate that the Mn is present as Mn(II), and are consistent with the coordination environment expected from homology modeling with known X-ray crystal structures of OxDC from Bacillus subtilis. EPR spin-trapping experiments support the existence of an oxalate-derived radical species formed during turnover. Acetate and a number of other small molecule carboxylic acids are competitive inhibitors for oxalate in the CsOxOx catalyzed reaction. The pH dependence of this reaction suggests that the dominant contribution to catalysis comes from the monoprotonated form of oxalate binding to a form of the enzyme in which an active site carboxylic acid residue must be unprotonated.  相似文献   

13.
Mitochondrial amidoxime reducing components (mARC-1 and mARC-2) represent a novel group of Mo-containing enzymes in eukaryotes. These proteins form the catalytic part of a three-component enzyme complex known to be responsible for the reductive activation of several N-hydroxylated prodrugs. No X-ray crystal structures are available for these enzymes as yet. A previous biochemical investigation [Wahl, B., et al. (2010) J. Biol. Chem., 285, 37847-37859 ] has revealed that two of the Mo coordination positions are occupied by sulfur atoms from a pyranopterindithiolate (molybdopterin, MPT) cofactor. In this work, we have used continuous wave and pulsed electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy and density functional theoretical (DFT) calculations to determine the nature of remaining ligands in the Mo(V) state of the active site of mARC-2. Experiments with samples in D(2)O have identified the exchangeable equatorial ligand as a hydroxyl group. Experiments on samples in H(2)(17)O-enriched buffer have shown the presence of a slowly exchangeable axial oxo ligand. Comparison of the experimental (1)H and (17)O hyperfine interactions with those calculated using DFT has shown that the remaining nonexchangeable equatorial ligand is, most likely, protein-derived and that the possibility of an equatorial oxo ligand can be excluded.  相似文献   

14.
Mycobacterium tuberculosis adenosine 5'-phosphosulfate reductase (MtAPR) is an iron-sulfur protein and a validated target to develop new antitubercular agents, particularly for the treatment of latent infection. The enzyme harbors a [4Fe-4S](2+) cluster that is coordinated by four cysteinyl ligands, two of which are adjacent in the amino acid sequence. The iron-sulfur cluster is essential for catalysis; however, the precise role of the [4Fe-4S] cluster in APR remains unknown. Progress in this area has been hampered by the failure to generate a paramagnetic state of the [4Fe-4S] cluster that can be studied by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. Herein, we overcome this limitation and report the EPR spectra of MtAPR in the [4Fe-4S](+) state. The EPR signal is rhombic and consists of two overlapping S = ½ species. Substrate binding to MtAPR led to a marked increase in the intensity and resolution of the EPR signal and to minor shifts in principle g values that were not observed among a panel of substrate analogs, including adenosine 5'-diphosphate. Using site-directed mutagenesis, in conjunction with kinetic and EPR studies, we have also identified an essential role for the active site residue Lys-144, whose side chain interacts with both the iron-sulfur cluster and the sulfate group of adenosine 5'-phosphosulfate. The implications of these findings are discussed with respect to the role of the iron-sulfur cluster in the catalytic mechanism of APR.  相似文献   

15.
Site-directed mutations were made to the phosphate-binding loop threonine in the beta-subunit of the chloroplast F1-ATPase in Chlamydomonas (betaT168). Rates of photophosphorylation and ATPase-driven proton translocation measured in coupled thylakoids purified from betaT168D, betaT168C, and betaT168L mutants had <10% of the wild type rates, as did rates of Mg2+-ATPase activity of purified chloroplast F1-ATPase (CF1). The EPR spectra of VO2+-ATP bound to Site 3 of CF1 from wild type and mutants showed that EPR species C, formed exclusively upon activation, was altered in CF1 from each mutant in both signal intensity and in 51V hyperfine parameters that depend on the equatorial VO2+ ligands. These data provide the first direct evidence that Site 3 is a catalytic site. No significant differences between wild type and mutants were observed in EPR species B, the predominant form of the latent enzyme. Thus, the phosphate-binding loop threonine is an equatorial metal ligand in the activated conformation but not in the latent conformation of Site 3. The metal-nucleotide conformation that gives rise to species B is consistent with the Mg2+-ADP complex that becomes entrapped in a catalytic site in a manner that regulates enzymatic activity. The lack of catalytic function of CF1 with entrapped Mg2+-ADP may be explained in part by the absence of the phosphate-binding loop threonine as a metal ligand.  相似文献   

16.
A hydrogenase from a new species of sulfate reducing bacterium has been isolated and characterized. In contrast to other hydrogenases isolated from Desulfovibrio, this enzyme is found in the cytoplasmic fraction rather than in the periplasm. The specific activity of the enzyme, as measured in the hydrogen evolution assay, is twice as high as the specific activity of the hydrogenase from D. gigas. It also differentiates itself from the periplasmic Desulfovibrio hydrogenases by being more active in the hydrogen evolution rather than in the hydrogen uptake assay. The enzyme was shown to contain 0.9 atoms of nickel, 11 atoms of iron and 10 atoms of labile sulfide per mole of enzyme. It exhibits an unusually low intensity of the g = 2.31 nickel EPR signal in the isolated enzyme but shows a normal intensity for the g = 2.19 nickel EPR signal when reduced under hydrogen.  相似文献   

17.
The type-2 depleted form of ascorbate oxidase from zucchini has been prepared in crystals and characterised by X-ray crystallography and EPR spectroscopy. The X-ray structure analysis by difference-Fourier techniques and refinement shows that, on average, about 1.3 Cu atoms/ascorbate oxidase monomer are removed. The copper is lost from the trinuclear site whereby the EPR-active type-2 copper is depleted most; type-1 copper is not affected. This observation indicates preferential formation of a 1 Cu-depleted form with the hole equally distributed over all three copper sites. Each of these 1 Cu-depleted species may represent an anti-ferromagnetically coupled copper pair which is EPR-silent and could explain the disappearance of the type-2 EPR signal.  相似文献   

18.
Gentisate 1,2-dioxygenase catalyzes the oxygenolytic ring cleavage of gentisate (2,5-dihydroxybenzoate) between carbons 1 and 2 to form maleylpyruvate. The essential active site Fe2+ of the enzyme binds NO to yield an EPR-active (S = 3/2) complex. Hyperfine broadening from 17O (I = 5/2) is observed in the spectrum of the enzyme-nitrosyl complex prepared in 17O-enriched water, demonstrating that water is an iron ligand. Association of gentisate with the enzyme-nitrosyl complex causes the broadening due to [17O]water to disappear, suggesting that water is displaced. Hyperfine broadening of the EPR spectrum for the gentisate-bound complex is observed when 17O is incorporated into either the carbon 1 carboxylate or carbon 2 hydroxyl substituents of gentisate, but not when it is placed in the carbon 5 hydroxyl substituent. Thus, substrate apparently binds directly to the iron through the carbon 1 carboxylate and carbon 2 hydroxyl substituents, thereby bringing the site of ring cleavage close to the active site iron. Since NO must bind to the iron to elicit an EPR signal, a total of three sites in the iron coordination appear to be available for exogenous ligands. The role of the substrate functional groups in catalysis is investigated through comparison of the reaction kinetics of gentisate analogs using the gentisate 1,2-dioxygenases isolated from Pseudomonas acidovorans and Pseudomonas testosteroni. Turnover is either eliminated or substantially reduced on replacement of any of the functional groups of gentisate. Furthermore, an electron-donating group that can tautomerize (hydroxyl or amine) is required in a ring position either ortho or para to the carbon 2 substituent for turnover. The best alternate substrate of this group is 5-aminosalicylate, which is turned over at approximately 7% of the rate of gentisate by the enzyme from P. testosteroni. Both atoms from O2 are shown to be incorporated into the product of 5-aminosalicylate turnover. This is the first direct demonstration of dioxygenase stoichiometry in the reaction of any ferrous, non-heme, aromatic ring-cleaving dioxygenase. It is proposed that the enzyme-catalyzed O2 attack on the aromatic ring of gentisate is initiated from a complex in which O2 and substrate are simultaneously coordinated to the active site iron. Subsequent dioxygen bond cleavage and insertion are proposed to be promoted by a resonance shift involving ketonization of the carbon 5 hydroxyl group.  相似文献   

19.
The periplasmic nitrate reductase (NapAB) from Cupriavidus necator is a heterodimeric protein that belongs to the dimethyl sulfoxide reductase family of mononuclear Mo-containing enzymes and catalyzes the reduction of nitrate to nitrite. The protein comprises a large catalytic subunit (NapA, 91 kDa) containing the molybdenum active site plus one [4Fe-4S] cluster, as well as a small subunit (NapB, 17 kDa), which is a diheme c-type cytochrome involved in electron transfer. Crystals of the oxidized form of the enzyme diffracted beyond 1.5 Å at the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility. This is the highest resolution reported to date for a nitrate reductase, providing true atomic details of the protein active center, and this showed further evidence on the molybdenum coordination sphere, corroborating previous data on the related Desulfovibrio desulfuricans NapA. The molybdenum atom is bound to a total of six sulfur atoms, with no oxygen ligands or water molecules in the vicinity. In the present work, we were also able to prepare partially reduced crystals that revealed two alternate conformations of the Mo-coordinating cysteine. This crystal form was obtained by soaking dithionite into crystals grown in the presence of the ionic liquid [C4mim]Cl. In addition, UV-Vis and EPR spectroscopy studies showed that the periplasmic nitrate reductase from C. necator might work at unexpectedly high redox potentials when compared to all periplasmic nitrate reductases studied to date.  相似文献   

20.
[NiFe] hydrogenases catalyze the reversible heterolytic cleavage of molecular hydrogen. Several oxidized, inactive states of these enzymes are known that are distinguishable by their very different activation properties. So far, the structural basis for this difference has not been understood because of lack of relevant crystallographic data. Here, we present the crystal structure of the ready Ni-B state of Desulfovibrio fructosovorans [NiFe] hydrogenase and show it to have a putative -hydroxo Ni–Fe bridging ligand at the active site. On the other hand, a new, improved refinement procedure of the X-ray diffraction data obtained for putative unready Ni-A/Ni-SU states resulted in a more elongated electron density for the bridging ligand, suggesting that it is a diatomic species. The slow activation of the Ni-A state, compared with the rapid activation of the Ni-B state, is therefore proposed to result from the different chemical nature of the ligands in the two oxidized species. Our results along with very recent electrochemical studies suggest that the diatomic ligand could be hydro–peroxide.An erratum to this article can be found at  相似文献   

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