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1.
The fitness of organisms depends upon the rate at which they generate superoxide (O-2) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) as toxic by-products of aerobic metabolism. In Escherichia coli these oxidants arise primarily from the autoxidation of components of its respiratory chain. Inverted vesicles that were incubated with NADH generated O-2 and H2O2 at accelerated rates either when treated with cyanide or when devoid of quinones, implicating an NADH dehydrogenase as their source. Null mutations in the gene encoding NADH dehydrogenase II averted autoxidation of vesicles, and its overproduction accelerated it. Thus NADH dehydrogenase II but not NADH dehydrogenase I, respiratory quinones, or cytochrome oxidases formed substantial O-2 and H2O2. NADH dehydrogenase II that was purified from both wild-type and quinone-deficient cells generated approximately 130 H2O2 and 15 O-2 min-1 by autoxidation of its reduced FAD cofactor. Sulfite reductase is a second autoxidizable electron transport chain of E. coli, containing FAD, FMN, [4Fe-4S], and siroheme moieties. Purified flavoprotein that contained only the FAD and FMN cofactors had about the same oxidation turnover number as did the holoenzyme, 7 min-1 FAD-1. Oxidase activity was largely lost upon FMN removal. Thus the autoxidation of sulfite reductase, like that of the respiratory chain, occurs primarily by autoxidation of an exposed flavin cofactor. Great variability in the oxidation turnover numbers of these and other flavoproteins suggests that endogenous oxidants will be predominantly formed by only a few oxidizable enzymes. Thus the degree of oxidative stress in a cell may depend upon the titer of such enzymes and accordingly may vary with growth conditions and among different cell types. Furthermore, the chemical nature of these reactions was manifested by their acceleration at high temperatures and oxygen concentrations. Thus these environmental parameters may also directly affect the O-2 and H2O2 loads that organisms must bear.  相似文献   

2.
Native FAD was removed from chicken liver xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH) and replaced with a number of artificial flavins of different redox potential. Dithionite titration of the 2-thio-FAD- or 4-thio-FAD (high potential)-containing enzymes showed that the first center to be reduced was the flavin. With native enzyme, iron-sulfur centers are the first to be reduced. With the low potential flavin, 6-OH-FAD, the enzyme-bound flavin was the last center to be reduced in reductive titration with xanthine. These shifts in the reduction profile support the hypothesis that the distribution of reducing equivalents in multi-center oxidation-reduction enzymes of this type is determined by the relative potentials of the centers. The reaction of molecular oxygen with fully reduced 2-thio-FAD XDH or 4-thio-FAD XDH resulted in 5 electron eq being released in a fast phase and one in a slow phase. Reduction of these enzymes by xanthine was limited at a rate comparable to that for the release of urate from native XDH. Xanthine/O2 turnover with these enzymes (and native XDH) resulted in approximately 40-50% of the xanthine reducing equivalents appearing as superoxide. Steady state turnover experiments involving all modified flavin-containing enzymes, as well as native enzyme, showed that shifting the flavin potential either positive or negative relative to FAD caused a decrease in catalytic activity in the xanthine/NAD reductase reaction. In the case of the xanthine/O2 reductase activity, there is no simple obvious relationship between the activity and the redox potential of the reconstituted flavin.  相似文献   

3.
Brevibacterium sterolicum possesses two forms of cholesterol oxidase, one containing noncovalently bound FAD, the second containing a FAD covalently linked to His(69) of the protein backbone. The functional role of the histidyl-FAD bond in the latter cholesterol oxidase was addressed by studying the properties of the H69A mutant in which the FAD is bound tightly, but not covalently, and by comparison with native enzyme. The mutant retains catalytic activity, but with a turnover rate decreased 35-fold; the isomerization step of the intermediate 3-ketosteroid to the final product is also preserved. Stabilization of the flavin semiquinone and binding of sulfite are markedly decreased, this correlates with a lower midpoint redox potential (-204 mV compared with -101 mV for wild-type). Reconstitution with 8-chloro-FAD led to a holoenzyme form of H69A cholesterol oxidase with a midpoint redox potential of -160 mV. In this enzyme form, flavin semiquinone is newly stabilized, and a 3.5-fold activity increase is observed, this mimicking the thermodynamic effects induced by the covalent flavin linkage. It is concluded that the flavin 8alpha-linkage to a (N1)histidine is a pivotal factor in the modulation of the redox properties of this cholesterol oxidase to increase its oxidative power.  相似文献   

4.
Interactions of oxaloacetate with Escherichia coli fumarate reductase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Fumarate reductase of Escherichia coli is converted to a deactivated state when tightly bound by oxaloacetate (OAA). Incubation of the inhibited enzyme with anions or reduction of the enzyme by substrate restores both the activity of the enzyme and its sensitivity to thiol reagents. In these respects the enzyme behaves like cardiac succinate dehydrogenase. Close to an order of magnitude difference was found to exist between the affinities of OAA for the oxidized (KD approximately 0.12 microM) and reduced (KD approximately 0.9 microM) forms of fumarate reductase. Redox titrations of deactivated fumarate reductase preparations have confirmed that reductive activation, as in cardiac succinate dehydrogenase (B. A. C. Ackrell, E. B. Kearney, and D. Edmondson (1975) J. Biol. Chem. 250, 7114-7119), is the result of reduction of the covalently bound FAD moiety and not the non-heme iron clusters of the enzyme. However, the processes differed for the two enzymes; activation of fumarate reductase involved 2e- and 1H+, consistent with reduction of the flavin to the anionic hydroquinone form, whereas the process requires 2e- and 2H+ in cardiac succinate dehydrogenase. The reason for the difference is not known. The redox potential of the FAD/FADH2 couple in FRD (Em approximately -55 mV) was also slightly more positive than that in cardiac succinate dehydrogenase (-90 mV).  相似文献   

5.
The autoxidation of 3-hydroxyanthranilate to cinnabarinate at 37 degrees C and at pH 7.4 is hastened by superoxide dismutase (SOD). The Cu,Zn-containing enzyme from bovine erythrocytes and the Mn-containing enzyme from Escherichia coli were equally effective in this regard; whereas the H2O2-inactivated Cu,Zn enzyme was ineffective. Catalase appears to augment the effect of superoxide dismutase, because it prevents the bleaching of cinnabarinate by H2O2. It follows that O2-, which is a product of the autoxidation, slows the net autoxidation by engaging in back reactions and that SOD increases the rate of autoxidation by removal of O2- and thus by prevention of these back reactions.  相似文献   

6.
Succinate dehydrogenase consists of two protein subunits and contains one FAD and three iron-sulfur clusters. The flavin is covalently bound to a histidine in the larger, Fp, subunit. The reduction oxidation midpoint potentials of the clusters designated S-1, S-2, and S-3 in Bacillus subtilis wild-type membrane-bound enzyme were determined as +80, -240, and -25 mV, respectively. Magnetic spin interactions between clusters S-1 and S-2 and between S-1 and S-3 were detected by using EPR spectroscopy. The point mutations of four B. subtilis mutants with defective Fp subunits were mapped. The gene of the mutant specifically lacking covalently bound flavin in the enzyme was cloned. The mutation was determined from the DNA sequence as a glycine to aspartate substitution at a conserved site seven residues downstream from the histidine that binds the flavin in wild-type enzyme. The redox midpoint potential of the iron-sulfur clusters and the magnetic spin interactions in mutated succinate dehydrogenases were indistinguishable from the those of the wild type. This shows that flavin has no role in the measured magnetic spin interactions or in the structure and stability of the iron-sulfur clusters. It is concluded from sequence and mutant studies that conserved amino acid residues around the histidyl-FAD are important for FAD binding; however, amino acids located more than 100 residues downstream from the histidyl in the Fp subunit can also effect flavinylation.  相似文献   

7.
Kinetic analysis and mechanistic aspects of autoxidation of catechins   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
A peroxidase-based bioelectrochemical sensor of hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) and a Clark-type oxygen electrode were applied to continuous monitoring and kinetic analysis of the autoxidation of catechins. Four major catechins in green tea, (-)-epicatechin, (-)-epicatechin gallate, (-)-epigallocatechin, and (-)-epigallocatechin gallate, were used as model compounds. It was found that dioxygen (O(2)) is quantitatively reduced to H(2)O(2). The initial rate of autoxidation is suppressed by superoxide dismutase and H(+), but is independent of buffer capacity. Based on these results, a mechanism of autoxidation is proposed; the initial step is the one-electron oxidation of the B ring of catechins by O(2) to generate a superoxide anion (O(2)(*-)) and a semiquinone radical, as supported in part by electron spin resonance measurements. O(2)(*-) works as a stronger one-electron oxidant than O(2) against catechins and is reduced to H(2)O(2). The semiquinone radical is more susceptible to oxidation with O(2) than fully reduced catechins. The autoxidation rate increases with pH. This behavior can be interpreted in terms of the increase in the stability of O(2)(*-) and the semiquinone radical with increasing pH, rather than the acid dissociation of phenolic groups. Cupric ion enhances autoxidation; most probably it functions as a catalyst of the initial oxidation step of catechins. The product cuprous ion can trigger a Fenton reaction to generate hydroxyl radical. On the other hand, borate ion suppresses autoxidation drastically, due to the strong complex formation with catechins. The biological significance of autoxidation and its effectors are also discussed.  相似文献   

8.
The fumarate reductase complex of the anaerobic bacterium Wolinella succinogenes catalyzes the electron transfer from menaquinol to fumarate. Two structural genes coding for subunits of the enzyme have been cloned in Escherichia coli. The genes were isolated from a lambda EMBL3 phage gene bank by immunological screening and subcloned in an expression vector. The genes frdA and frdB, which encode the FAD protein (Frd A, Mr 79,000) and the iron-sulfur protein (Frd B, Mr 31,000) of the fumarate reductase complex, were cloned together with a W. succinogenes promoter. The gene order was promoter-frdA-frdB. The FAD protein and the iron-sulfur protein were expressed in the correct molar mass in E. coli from the clones. The identity of the frdA gene and the suggested polarity were confirmed by comparing the amino-terminal sequence of the Frd A protein with that predicted from the 5'-terminal nucleotide sequence of frdA. The frdA and frdB genes are present only once in the genome. A region downstream of frdB, possibly a gene encoding cytochrome b of the fumarate reductase complex, hybridizes with a second site in the genome.  相似文献   

9.
The autoxidation of DT-diaphorase-reduced 1,4-naphthoquinone, 2-OH-1,4-naphthoquinone, and 2-OH-p-benzoquinone is efficiently prevented by superoxide dismutase. This effect was assessed in terms of an inhibition of NADPH oxidation (over the amount required to reduce the available quinone), O2 consumption, and H2O2 formation. Superoxide dismutase also affects the distribution of molecular products -hydroquinone/quinone-involved in autoxidation, by favoring the accumulation of the reduced form of the above quinones. In contrast, the rate of autoxidation of DT-diaphorase-reduced 1,2-naphthoquinone is enhanced by superoxide dismutase, as shown by increased rates of NADPH oxidation, O2 consumption, and H2O2 formation and by an enhanced accumulation of the oxidized product, 1,2-naphthoquinone. These findings suggest that superoxide dismutase can either prevent or enhance hydroquinone autoxidation. The former process would imply a possible new activity displayed by superoxide dismutase involving the reduction of a semiquinone by O2-.. This activity is probably restricted to the redox properties of the semiquinones under study, as indicated by the failure of superoxide dismutase to prevent autoxidation of 1,2-naphthohydroquinone.  相似文献   

10.
The effect of superoxide dismutase on the autoxidation of hydro- and semi-1,4-naphthoquinones with different substitution pattern and covering a one-electron reduction potential range from -95 to -415 mV was examined. The naphthoquinone derivatives were reduced via one or two electrons by purified NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase or DT-diaphorase, respectively. Superoxide dismutase did not alter or slightly enhance the initial rates of enzymic reduction, whereas it affected in a different manner the following autoxidation of the semi- and hydroquinones formed. Autoxidation was assessed as NADPH oxidation in excess to the amounts required to reduce the quinone present, H2O2 formation, and the redox state of the quinones. Superoxide dismutase enhanced 2--8-fold the autoxidation of 1,4-naphthosemiquinones, following the reduction of the oxidized counterpart by NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase, except for the glutathionyl-substituted naphthosemiquinones, whose autoxidation was not affected by superoxide dismutase. Superoxide dismutase exerted two distinct effects on the autoxidation of naphthohydroquinones formed during DT-diaphorase catalysis: on the one hand, it enhanced slightly the autoxidation of 1,4-naphthohydroquinones with a hydroxyl substituent in the benzene ring: 5-hydroxy-1,4-naphthoquinone and the corresponding derivatives with methyl- and/or glutathionyl substituents at C2 and C3, respectively. On the other hand, superoxide dismutase inhibited the autoxidation of naphthohydroquinones that were either unsubstituted or with glutathionyl-, methyl-, methoxyl-, hydroxyl substituents (the latter in the quinoid ring). The inhibition of hydroquinone autoxidation was reflected as a decrease of NADPH oxidation, suppression of H2O2 production, and accumulation of the reduced form of the quinone. The enhancement of autoxidation of 1,4-naphthosemiquinones by superoxide dismutase has been previously rationalized in terms of the rapid removal of O2-. by the enzyme from the equilibrium of the autoxidation reaction (Q2-. + O2----Q + O2-.), thus displacing it towards the right. The superoxide dismutase-dependent inhibition of H2O2 formation as well as NADPH oxidation during the autoxidation of naphthohydroquinones--except those with a hydroxyl substituent in the benzene ring--seems to apply to those organic substrates which can break down with simultaneous formation of a semiquinone and O2-.. Inhibition of hydroquinone autoxidation by superoxide dismutase can be interpreted in terms of suppression by the enzyme of O2-.- dependent chain reactions or a direct catalytic interaction with the enzyme that might involve reduction of the semiquinone at expense of O2(-.).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
4-Hydroxyphenylacetate 3-hydroxylase (HpaB and HpaC) of Escherichia coli W has been reported as a two-component flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD)-dependent monooxygenase that attacks a broad spectrum of phenolic compounds. However, the function of each component in catalysis is unclear. The large component (HpaB) was demonstrated here to be a reduced FAD (FADH(2))-utilizing monooxygenase. When an E. coli flavin reductase (Fre) having no apparent homology with HpaC was used to generate FADH(2) in vitro, HpaB was able to use FADH(2) and O(2) for the oxidation of 4-hydroxyphenylacetate. HpaB also used chemically produced FADH(2) for 4-hydroxyphenylacetate oxidation, further demonstrating that HpaB is an FADH(2)-utilizing monooxygenase. FADH(2) generated by Fre was rapidly oxidized by O(2) to form H(2)O(2) in the absence of HpaB. When HpaB was included in the reaction mixture without 4-hydroxyphenylacetate, HpaB bound FADH(2) and transitorily protected it from rapid autoxidation by O(2). When 4-hydroxyphenylacetate was also present, HpaB effectively competed with O(2) for FADH(2) utilization, leading to 4-hydroxyphenylacetate oxidation. With sufficient amounts of HpaB in the reaction mixture, FADH(2) produced by Fre was mainly used by HpaB for the oxidation of 4-hydroxyphenylacetate. At low HpaB concentrations, most FADH(2) was autoxidized by O(2), causing uncoupling. However, the coupling of the two enzymes' activities was increased by lowering FAD concentrations in the reaction mixture. A database search revealed that HpaB had sequence similarities to several proteins and gene products involved in biosynthesis and biodegradation in both bacteria and archaea. This is the first report of an FADH(2)-utilizing monooxygenase that uses FADH(2) as a substrate rather than as a cofactor.  相似文献   

12.
A mechanism for the production of hydroxyl radical (*OH) during the oxidation of hydroquinones by laccase, the ligninolytic enzyme most widely distributed among white-rot fungi, has been demonstrated. Production of Fenton reagent (H2O2 and ferrous ion), leading to *OH formation, was found in reaction mixtures containing Pleurotus eryngii laccase, lignin-derived hydroquinones, and chelated ferric ion. The semiquinones produced by laccase reduced both ferric to ferrous ion and oxygen to superoxide anion radical (O2*-). Dismutation of the latter provided the H2O2 for *OH generation. Although O2*- could also contribute to ferric ion reduction, semiquinone radicals were the main agents accomplishing the reaction. Due to the low extent of semiquinone autoxidation, H2O2 was the limiting reagent in Fenton reaction. The addition of aryl alcohol oxidase and 4-methoxybenzyl alcohol (the natural H2O2-producing system of P. eryngii) to the laccase reaction greatly increased *OH generation, demonstrating the synergistic action of both enzymes in the process.  相似文献   

13.
By mutating the target residue of covalent flavinylation in vanillyl-alcohol oxidase, the functional role of the histidyl-FAD bond was studied. Three His(422) mutants (H422A, H422T, and H422C) were purified, which all contained tightly but noncovalently bound FAD. Steady state kinetics revealed that the mutants have retained enzyme activity, although the turnover rates have decreased by 1 order of magnitude. Stopped-flow analysis showed that the H422A mutant is still able to form a stable binary complex of reduced enzyme and a quinone methide product intermediate, a crucial step during vanillyl-alcohol oxidase-mediated catalysis. The only significant change in the catalytic cycle of the H422A mutant is a marked decrease in reduction rate. Redox potentials of both wild type and H422A vanillyl-alcohol oxidase have been determined. During reduction of H422A, a large portion of the neutral flavin semiquinone is observed. Using suitable reference dyes, the redox potentials for the two one-electron couples have been determined: -17 and -113 mV. Reduction of wild type enzyme did not result in any formation of flavin semiquinone and revealed a remarkably high redox potential of +55 mV. The marked decrease in redox potential caused by the missing covalent histidyl-FAD bond is reflected in the reduced rate of substrate-mediated flavin reduction limiting the turnover rate. Elucidation of the crystal structure of the H422A mutant established that deletion of the histidyl-FAD bond did not result in any significant structural changes. These results clearly indicate that covalent interaction of the isoalloxazine ring with the protein moiety can markedly increase the redox potential of the flavin cofactor, thereby facilitating redox catalysis. Thus, formation of a histidyl-FAD bond in specific flavoenzymes might have evolved as a way to contribute to the enhancement of their oxidative power.  相似文献   

14.
The FAD of p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase (PHBH) is known to exist in two conformations. The FAD must be in the in-position for hydroxylation of p-hydroxybenzoate (pOHB), whereas the out-position is essential for reduction of the flavin by NADPH. In these investigations, we have used 8-mercapto-FAD and 8-hydroxy-FAD to probe the movement of the flavin in catalysis. Under the conditions employed, 8-mercapto-FAD (pK(a) = 3.8) and 8-hydroxy-FAD (pK(a) = 4.8) are mainly anionic. The spectral characteristics of the anionic forms of these flavins are very sensitive to their environment, making them sensitive probes for detecting movement of the flavin during catalysis. With these flavin analogues, the enzyme hydroxylates pOHB efficiently, but at a rate much slower than that of enzyme with FAD. Reaction of oxygen with reduced forms of these modified enzymes in the absence of substrate appears to proceed through the formation of the flavin-C4a-hydroperoxide intermediate, as with normal enzyme, but the decay of this intermediate is so fast compared to its formation that very little accumulates during the reaction. However, after elimination of H2O2 from the flavin-C4a-hydroperoxide, a perturbed oxidized enzyme spectrum is observed (Eox*), and this converts slowly to the spectrum of the resting oxidized form of the enzyme (Eox). In the presence of pOHB, PHBH reconstituted with 8-mercapto-FAD also shows the additional oxidized intermediate (Eox*) after the usual oxygenated C4a-intermediates have formed and decayed in the course of the hydroxylation reaction. This Eox* to Eox step is postulated to be due to flavin movement. Furthermore, binding of pOHB to resting (Eox) follows a three-step equilibrium mechanism that is also consistent with flavin movement being the rate-limiting step. The rate for the slowest step during pOHB binding is similar to that observed for the conversion of Eox* to Eox during the oxygen reaction in the absence or presence of substrate. Steady-state kinetic analysis of PHBH substituted with 8-mercapto-FAD demonstrated that the apparent k(cat) is also similar to the rate of Eox* conversion to Eox. Presumably, the protein environment surrounding the flavin in Eox* differs slightly from that of the final resting form of the enzyme (Eox).  相似文献   

15.
Superoxide ions (O2-) oxidized oxyhaemoglobin to methaemoglobin and reduced methaemoglobin to oxyhaemoglobin. The reactions of superoxide and H2O2 with oxyhaemoglobin or methaemoglobin and their inhibition by superoxide dismutase or catalase were used to detect the formation of superoxide or H2O2 on autoxidation of oxyhaemoglobin. The rate of autoxidation was decreased at about 35% in the presence of both enzymes. The copper-catalysed autoxidation of Hb (haemoglobin) was also shown to involve superoxide production. Superoxide was released on autoxidation of three unstable haemoglobins and isolated alpha and beta chains, at rates faster than with Hb A. Reactions of superoxide with Hb Christchurch and Hb Belfast were identical with those with Hb A, and occurred at the same rate. Hb Koln contrasted with the other haemoglobins in that the thiol groups of residue beta-93 as well as the haem groups reacted with superoxide. Haemichrome formation from methaemoglobin occurred very rapidly with Hb Christchurch and Hb Belfast, as well as the isolated chains, compared with Hb A. The process did not involve superoxide production or utilization. The relative importance of autoxidation and superoxide production compared with haemichrome formation in the haemolytic process associated with these abnormal haemoglobins and thalassaemia is considered.  相似文献   

16.
A scheme for the detoxification of superoxide in Pyrococcus furiosus has been previously proposed in which superoxide reductase (SOR) reduces (rather than dismutates) superoxide to hydrogen peroxide by using electrons from reduced rubredoxin (Rd). Rd is reduced with electrons from NAD(P)H by the enzyme NAD(P)H:rubredoxin oxidoreductase (NROR). The goal of the present work was to reconstitute this pathway in vitro using recombinant enzymes. While recombinant forms of SOR and Rd are available, the gene encoding P. furiosus NROR (PF1197) was found to be exceedingly toxic to Escherichia coli, and an active recombinant form (rNROR) was obtained via a fusion protein expression system, which produced an inactive form of NROR until cleavage. This allowed the complete pathway from NAD(P)H to the reduction of SOR via NROR and Rd to be reconstituted in vitro using recombinant proteins. rNROR is a 39.9-kDa protein whose sequence contains both flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD)- and NAD(P)H-binding motifs, and it shares significant similarity with known and putative Rd-dependent oxidoreductases from several anaerobic bacteria, both mesophilic and hyperthermophilic. FAD was shown to be essential for activity in reconstitution assays and could not be replaced by flavin mononucleotide (FMN). The bound FAD has a midpoint potential of -173 mV at 23 degrees C (-193 mV at 80 degrees C). Like native NROR, the recombinant enzyme catalyzed the NADPH-dependent reduction of rubredoxin both at high (80 degrees C) and low (23 degrees C) temperatures, consistent with its proposed role in the superoxide reduction pathway. This is the first demonstration of in vitro superoxide reduction to hydrogen peroxide using NAD(P)H as the electron donor in an SOR-mediated pathway.  相似文献   

17.
Cholesterol oxidase is a monomeric flavoenzyme that catalyses the oxidation of cholesterol to cholest-5-en-3-one followed by isomerization to cholest-4-en-3-one. The enzyme from Brevibacterium sterolicum contains the FAD cofactor covalently bound to His121. It was previously demonstrated that the H121A substitution results in a approximately 100 mV decrease in the midpoint redox potential and a approximately 40-fold decrease in turnover number compared to wild-type enzyme [Motteran, Pilone, Molla, Ghisla and Pollegioni (2001) Journal of Biological Chemistry 276, 18024-18030]. A detailed kinetic analysis of the H121A mutant enzyme shows that the decrease in turnover number is largely due to a corresponding decrease in the rate constant of flavin reduction, whilst the re-oxidation reaction is only marginally altered and the isomerization reaction is not affected by the substitution and precedes product dissociation. The X-ray structure of the mutant protein, determined to 1.7 A resolution (1 A identical with 0.1 nm), reveals only minor changes in the overall fold of the protein, namely: two loops have slight movements and a tryptophan residue changes conformation by a rotation of 180 degrees about chi1 compared to the native enzyme. Comparison of the isoalloxazine ring moiety of the FAD cofactor between the structures of the native and mutant proteins shows a change from a non-planar to a planar geometry (resulting in a more tetrahedral-like geometry for N5). This change is proposed to be a major factor contributing to the observed alteration in redox potential. Since a similar distortion of the flavin has not been observed in other covalent flavoproteins, it is proposed to represent a specific mode to facilitate flavin reduction in covalent cholesterol oxidase.  相似文献   

18.
The apoproteins of the streptococcal NADH peroxidase (H2O2----2H2O) and NADH oxidase (O2----2H2O) stabilize the neutral forms of 6-hydroxy- and 6-mercapto-FAD, respectively. The redox behavior of the 6-hydroxy-FAD peroxidase closely mimics that of the native enzyme with both dithionite and NADH. Both oxidase and peroxidase preferentially stabilize the N(1)-protonated p-quinonoid species of 8-mercapto-FAD, and the 8-position of the bound flavin is accessible to solvent in both proteins. The 8-mercapto-FAD peroxidase yields an EH2 spectrum on reduction virtually identical to that seen with 8-mercapto-FAD glutathione reductase, but no distinct EH2.NADH form appears. The dramatic decreases in reactivity at the flavin 2- and 4-positions for both the peroxidase and the oxidase, assessed with the reconstituted 2- and 4-thio-FAD enzymes, suggest that these positions are buried by elements of both protein structures. Furthermore, reconstitution of the peroxidase with the higher potential 2- and 4-thioflavins yields enzyme forms which are fully reducible with 1.4 eq of NADH/FAD, giving rise to stable thio-FADH2.NAD+ complexes. This behavior closely mimics that of the native NADH oxidase and provides further evidence supporting the hypothesis that a major functional distinction between the two structurally related proteins is determined by the redox potential and/or NADH reactivity of the bound flavin coenzyme.  相似文献   

19.
Electron-transfer flavoprotein (ETF) serves as an intermediate electron carrier between primary flavoprotein dehydrogenases and terminal respiratory chains in mitochondria and prokaryotic cells. The three-dimensional structures of human and Paracoccus denitrificans ETFs determined by X-ray crystallography indicate that the 4'-hydroxyl of the ribityl side chain of FAD is hydrogen bonded to N(1) of the flavin ring. We have substituted 4'-deoxy-FAD for the native FAD and investigated the analog-containing ETF to determine the role of this rare intra-cofactor hydrogen bond. The binding constants for 4'-deoxy-FAD and FAD with the apoprotein are very similar, and the energy of binding differs by only 2 kJ/mol. The overall two-electron oxidation-reduction potential of 4'-deoxy-FAD in solution is identical to that of FAD. However, the potential of the oxidized/semiquinone couple of the ETF containing 4'-deoxy-FAD is 0.116 V less than the oxidized/semiquinone couple of the native protein. These data suggest that the 4'-hydoxyl-N(1) hydrogen bond stabilizes the anionic semiquinone in which negative charge is delocalized over the N(1)-C(2)O region. Transfer of the second electron to 4'-deoxy-FAD reconstituted ETF is extremely slow, and it was very difficult to achieve complete reduction of the flavin semiquinone to the hydroquinone. The turnover of medium chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase with native ETF and ETF containing the 4'-deoxy analogue was essentially identical when the reduced ETF was recycled by reduction of 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol. However, the steady-state turnover of the dehydrogenase with 4'-deoxy-FAD was only 23% of the turnover with native ETF when ETF semiquinone formation was assayed directly under anaerobic conditions. This is consistent with the decreased potential of the oxidized semiquinone couple of the analog-containing ETF. ETF containing 4'-deoxy-FAD neither donates to nor accepts electrons from electron-transfer flavoprotein ubiquinone oxidoreductase (ETF-QO) at significant rates (相似文献   

20.
A potential novel fumarate reductase gene designated frd1A was isolated by screening a marine metagenomic library through a sequence-based strategy. Sequence analyses indicated that Frd1A and other putative fumarate reductases were closely related. The putative fumarate reductase gene was subcloned into a pETBlue-2 vector and expressed in Escherichia coli Tuner(DE3)pLac? cells. The recombinant protein was purified to homogeneity. Functional characterization by high-performance liquid chromatography demonstrated that the recombinant Frd1A protein could catalyze the hydrogenation of fumarate to succinate acid. The Frd1A protein displayed an optimal activity at pH 7.0 and 28 °C, which could be stimulated by adding metal ions such as Zn2+ and Mg2+. The Frd1A enzyme showed a comparable affinity and catalytic efficiency under optimal reaction conditions: k m?=0.227 mmol/L, v max= 29.9 U/mg, and k cat/k m=5.44?×?104 per mol/s. The identification of Frd1A protein underscores the potential of marine metagenome screening for novel biomolecules.  相似文献   

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