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1.
We have used multiple solution state techniques and crystallographic analysis to investigate the importance of a putative transient interaction formed between Arg-alpha237 in electron transferring flavoprotein (ETF) and Tyr-442 in trimethylamine dehydrogenase (TMADH) in complex assembly, electron transfer, and structural imprinting of ETF by TMADH. We have isolated four mutant forms of ETF altered in the identity of the residue at position 237 (alphaR237A, alphaR237K, alphaR237C, and alphaR237E) and with each form studied electron transfer from TMADH to ETF, investigated the reduction potentials of the bound ETF cofactor, and analyzed complex formation. We show that mutation of Arg-alpha237 substantially destabilizes the semiquinone couple of the bound FAD and impedes electron transfer from TMADH to ETF. Crystallographic structures of the mutant ETF proteins indicate that mutation does not perturb the overall structure of ETF, but leads to disruption of an electrostatic network at an ETF domain boundary that likely affects the dynamic properties of ETF in the crystal and in solution. We show that Arg-alpha237 is required for TMADH to structurally imprint the as-purified semiquinone form of wild-type ETF and that the ability of TMADH to facilitate this structural reorganization is lost following (i) redox cycling of ETF, or simple conversion to the oxidized form, and (ii) mutagenesis of Arg-alpha237. We discuss this result in light of recent apparent conflict in the literature relating to the structural imprinting of wild-type ETF. Our studies support a mechanism of electron transfer by conformational sampling as advanced from our previous analysis of the crystal structure of the TMADH-2ETF complex [Leys, D. , Basran, J. , Sutcliffe, M. J., and Scrutton, N. S. (2003) Nature Struct. Biol. 10, 219-225] and point to a key role for the Tyr-442 (TMADH) and Arg-alpha237 (ETF) residue pair in transiently stabilizing productive electron transfer configurations. Our work also points to the importance of Arg-alpha237 in controlling the thermodynamics of electron transfer, the dynamics of ETF, and the protection of reducing equivalents following disassembly of the TMADH-2ETF complex.  相似文献   

2.
The interaction between the physiological electron transfer partners trimethylamine dehydrogenase (TMADH) and electron-transferring flavoprotein (ETF) from Methylophilus methylotrophus has been examined with particular regard to the proposal that the former protein "imprints" a conformational change on the latter. The results indicate that the absorbance change previously attributed to changes in the environment of the FAD of ETF upon binding to TMADH is instead caused by electron transfer from partially reduced, as-isolated TMADH to ETF. Prior treatment of the as-isolated enzyme with the oxidant ferricenium essentially abolishes the observed spectral change. Further, when the semiquinone form of ETF is used instead of the oxidized form, the mirror image of the spectral change seen with as-isolated TMADH and oxidized ETF is observed. This is attributable to a small amount of electron transfer in the reverse of the physiological direction. Kinetic determination of the dissociation constant and limiting rate constant for electron transfer within the complex of (reduced) TMADH with (oxidized) ETF is reconfirmed and discussed in the context of a recently proposed model for the interaction between the two proteins that involves "structural imprinting" of ETF.  相似文献   

3.
The most positive redox potential ever recorded for a flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) containing protein has been measured for an electron-transfer flavoprotein (ETF) synthesized by Methylophilus methylotrophus. This potential value, 0.196 V versus the standard hydrogen electrode (vs SHE), was measured at pH 7.0 for the one-electron reduction of fully oxidized ETF (ETFox) to the red anionic semiquinone form of ETF (ETF.-). Quantitative formation of ETF.- was observed. The first successful reduction of ETF from M. methylotrophus to its two-electron fully reduced form was also achieved. Although addition of the second electron to ETF.- was extremely slow, the potential value measured for this reduction was -0.197 V vs SHE, suggesting a kinetic rather than thermodynamic barrier to two-electron reduction. These data are believed to be consistent with the postulated catalytic function of ETF to accept one electron from the iron-sulfur cluster of trimethylamine dehydrogenase (TMADH). The second electron reduction appears to have no catalytic function. The very positive potential measured for this ETF and the wide separation of potentials for the two electron reduction steps show that this ETF is a unique and interesting flavoprotein. In addition, this work highlights that while ETFs exhibit similar structural and spectral properties, they display wide variations in redox properties.  相似文献   

4.
The trimethylamine dehydrogenase-electron transferring flavoprotein (TMADH.ETF) electron transfer complex has been studied by fluorescence and absorption spectroscopies. These studies indicate that a series of conformational changes occur during the assembly of the TMADH.ETF electron transfer complex and that the kinetics of assembly observed with mutant TMADH (Y442F/L/G) or ETF (alpha R237A) complexes are much slower than are the corresponding rates of electron transfer in these complexes. This suggests that electron transfer does not occur in the thermodynamically most favorable state (which takes too long to form), but that one or more metastable states (which are formed more rapidly) are competent in transferring electrons from TMADH to ETF. Additionally, fluorescence spectroscopy studies of the TMADH.ETF complex indicate that ETF undergoes a stable conformational change (termed structural imprinting) when it interacts transiently with TMADH to form a second, distinct, structural form. The mutant complexes compromise imprinting of ETF, indicating a dependence on the native interactions present in the wild-type complex. The imprinted form of semiquinone ETF exhibits an enhanced rate of electron transfer to the artificial electron acceptor, ferricenium. Overall molecular conformations as probed by small-angle x-ray scattering studies are indistinguishable for imprinted and non-imprinted ETF, suggesting that changes in structure likely involve confined reorganizations within the vicinity of the FAD. Our results indicate a series of conformational events occur during the assembly of the TMADH.ETF electron transfer complex, and that the properties of electron transfer proteins can be affected lastingly by transient interaction with their physiological redox partners. This may have significant implications for our understanding of biological electron transfer reactions in vivo, because ETF encounters TMADH at all times in the cell. Our studies suggest that caution needs to be exercised in extrapolating the properties of in vitro interprotein electron transfer reactions to those occurring in vivo.  相似文献   

5.
TMADH (trimethylamine dehydrogenase) is a complex iron-sulphur flavoprotein that forms a soluble electron-transfer complex with ETF (electron-transferring flavoprotein). The mechanism of electron transfer between TMADH and ETF has been studied using stopped-flow kinetic and mutagenesis methods, and more recently by X-ray crystallography. Potentiometric methods have also been used to identify key residues involved in the stabilization of the flavin radical semiquinone species in ETF. These studies have demonstrated a key role for 'conformational sampling' in the electron-transfer complex, facilitated by two-site contact of ETF with TMADH. Exploration of three-dimensional space in the complex allows the FAD of ETF to find conformations compatible with enhanced electronic coupling with the 4Fe-4S centre of TMADH. This mechanism of electron transfer provides for a more robust and accessible design principle for interprotein electron transfer compared with simpler models that invoke the collision of redox partners followed by electron transfer. The structure of the TMADH-ETF complex confirms the role of key residues in electron transfer and molecular assembly, originally suggested from detailed kinetic studies in wild-type and mutant complexes, and from molecular modelling.  相似文献   

6.
A stable apoprotein has been prepared from a soluble purified bovine thyroid iodotyrosine deiodinase, previously shown to be an FMN-containing flavoprotein requiring dithionite for enzymatic activities. The apoprotein binds FMN (Ka = 1.47 x 10(8) M-1) with an almost complete restoration of enzymatic activity. It can also bind FAD (Ka = 0.58 x 10(8) M-1) with partial restoration of activity, but does not bind riboflavin. Photoreduction of the holoenzyme in presence of excess of its free cofactor, FMN, supported enzyme activity at a level of 50% of that obtained with dithionite; substituting FAD or riboflavin for FMN produced, respectively, 20 and 11% of the dithionite-supported activity. The oxidation-reduction potential (E1) of the couple semiquinone/fully reduced enzyme is -0.412 V at pH 7 and 25 degrees C. The value (E2) for the oxidized/semiquinone couple is -0.190 V at pH 7 and 25 degrees C. Potentiometric titrations with sodium hydrosulfite suggests that the enzyme is reduced in two successive 1-electron oxidation-reduction steps. Effects of pH on E1 suggest ionization of the protonated flavin with an ionization constant of 5.7 x 10(-7). The highly negative oxidation-reduction potential for the fully reduced enzyme species and the apparent requirement for full reduction for enzymatic activity suggests that in NADPH-mediated microsomal deiodination an NADPH-linked electron carrier of suitably negative midpoint potential is a probable intermediate.  相似文献   

7.
Modeling studies of the trimethylamine dehydrogenase-electron transferring flavoprotein (TMADH-ETF) electron transfer complex have suggested potential roles for Val-344 and Tyr-442, found on the surface of TMADH, in electronic coupling between the 4Fe-4S center of TMADH and the FAD of ETF. The importance of these residues in electron transfer, both to ETF and to the artificial electron acceptor, ferricenium (Fc(+)), has been studied by site-directed mutagenesis and stopped-flow spectroscopy. Reduction of the 6-(S)-cysteinyl FMN in TMADH is not affected by mutation of either Tyr-442 or Val-344 to a variety of alternate side chains, although there are modest changes in the rate of internal electron transfer from the 6-(S)-cysteinyl FMN to the 4Fe-4S center. The kinetics of electron transfer from the 4Fe-4S center to Fc(+) are sensitive to mutations at position 344. The introduction of smaller side chains (Ala-344, Cys-344, and Gly-344) leads to enhanced rates of electron transfer, and likely reflects shortened electron transfer "pathways" from the 4Fe-4S center to Fc(+). The introduction of larger side chains (Ile-344 and Tyr-344) reduces substantially the rate of electron transfer to Fc(+). Electron transfer to ETF is not affected, to any large extent, by mutation of Val-344. In contrast, mutation of Tyr-442 to Phe, Leu, Cys, and Gly leads to major reductions in the rate of electron transfer to ETF, but not to Fc(+). The data indicate that electron transfer to Fc(+) is via the shortest pathway from the 4Fe-4S center of TMADH to the surface of the enzyme. Val-344 is located at the end of this pathway at the bottom of a small groove on the surface of TMADH, and Fc(+) can penetrate this groove to facilitate good electronic coupling with the 4Fe-4S center. With ETF as an electron acceptor, the observed rate of electron transfer is substantially reduced on mutation of Tyr-442, but not Val-344. We conclude that the flavin of ETF does not penetrate fully the groove on the surface of TMADH, and that electron transfer from the 4Fe-4S center to ETF may involve a longer pathway involving Tyr-442. Mutation of Tyr-442 likely disrupts electron transfer by perturbing the interaction geometry of TMADH and ETF in the productive electron transfer complex, leading to less efficient coupling between the redox centers.  相似文献   

8.
Mammalian electron-transferring flavoproteins have previously been reported to form the red anionic semiquinone on 1-electron reduction. This work describes a new form of electron-transferring flavoprotein (ETFB) from pig kidney which yields the blue neutral semiquinone upon photochemical, dithionite, or enzymatic reduction. ETFB appears in varying amounts as part of an established purification scheme for ETF. Both the normal form of ETF (ETFR) and ETFB show small differences in the spectra of their oxidized flavins, but no detectable differences in molecular weight or subunit composition. The catalytic activities of ETFR and ETFB are comparable when they mediate the transfer of reducing equivalents between medium chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase and 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol. ETFB can be converted into a form showing the characteristic red semiquinone of ETFR by full reduction at pH 6.5 or by preparation of the apoprotein and reconstitution with FAD. In contrast, no conditions for the conversion of red to blue forms of ETF have been found. ETFB contains substoichiometric levels of an unusual FAD analogue which yields a pink flavin species on photochemical or dithionite reduction. The evidence presented suggests that ETFB contains a labile factor or protein modification which is irreversibly lost on conversion to ETFR. The possible physiological significance of these data is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Pig kidney general acyl-CoA dehydrogenase is markedly stabilized against loss of flavin and activity in 7.3 M-urea or at 60 degrees C upon reduction with sodium dithionite or octanoyl-CoA. Electron transferring flavoprotein is similarly stabilized, whereas egg white riboflavin-binding protein loses flavin more readily on reduction. These and other data support the anticipated correlation between the kinetic stability of the holoproteins and the oxidation-reduction potential of their bound flavins.  相似文献   

10.
J D Beckmann  F E Frerman 《Biochemistry》1985,24(15):3913-3921
Electron-transfer flavoprotein-ubiquinone oxidoreductase (ETF-QO) was purified to homogeneity from pig liver submitochondrial particles. It is comparable in molecular weight and general properties to ETF-QO from beef heart [Ruzicka, F. J., & Beinert, H. (1977) J. Biol. Chem. 252, 8440-8445], and the electron spin resonance signals of the reduced iron-sulfur cluster are essentially identical. ETF-QO catalyzes the transfer of electrons from electron-transfer flavoprotein (ETF) to nitro blue tetrazolium, with a sluggish reaction turnover number of about 10-30 min-1. In contrast, the enzyme rapidly disproportionates ETF semiquinone, with a turnover number of 200 s-1. The reverse reaction, comproportionation of oxidized and hydroquinone ETF, provides an enzymatic assay for ETF-QO with picomolar sensitivity. Equilibrium spectrophotometric titrations show that ETF-QO accepts a maximum of two electrons from ETF and accepts three electron equivalents from dithionite or by photochemical reduction. All electrons from the enzymatically or chemically reduced protein can be transferred to 2,3-dimethoxy-5-methyl-6-pentyl-1,4-benzoquinone (PB), and this reaction is readily reversible. Reduction of ETF-QO by 2,3-dimethoxy-5-methyl-6-pentyl-1,4-benzohydroquinone is pH dependent and indicates the enzyme to have a redox potential that decreases by 47 mV per pH unit. Therefore, ETF-QO binds one to two protons upon reduction. The EO' at pH 7.3 is 38 mV. The ability of ETF-QO to catalyze the equilibration of ETF redox states has been used to evaluate the equilibrium 2ETFsq + nH+ in equilibrium ETFox + ETFhq.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Electron-transferring flavoprotein (ETF) was purified from the bacterium Paracoccus denitrificans and the structural and redox relationships to the porcine and human ETFs were investigated. The three proteins have essentially identical subunit masses and the alpha-helix content of the bacterial and porcine ETFs are very similar, indicating global structural similarity. An anti-(porcine ETF) polyclonal antibody that crossreacts with the human large and small subunits also crossreacts strongly with the large subunit of Paracoccus ETF. However, crossreactivity with the small subunit is very weak. Nonetheless, an amino-terminal peptide and four internal peptides of the small bacterial subunit show extensive sequence identity with the human small subunit. Local similarities in environment are also indicated by the intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence emission spectra of porcine and Paracoccus ETFs. Although the visible spectra of porcine and Paracoccus ETFs are virtually identical, flavin fluorescence in the bacterial protein is only 15% that of the mammalian protein. Further, the circular dichroic spectrum of the flavin in the bacterial protein is significantly more intense, suggesting that the microenvironment of the isoalloxazine ring is different in the two proteins. Enzymatic or photochemical reduction of Paracoccus ETF rapidly yields an anionic semiquinone; formation of the fully reduced flavin in the bacterial ETF is very slow. The spacing of the oxidation-reduction potentials of the flavin couples in the bacterial ETF is essentially identical to that in procine ETF as judged from the disproportionation equilibrium of the bacterial ETF flavin semiquinone. Together, the enzymatic reduction and disproportionation equilibria suggest that the flavin potentials of the two ETFs must be very close. The data indicate that the structural properties of the bacterial and mammalian proteins and the thermodynamic properties of the flavin prosthetic group of the proteins are very similar.  相似文献   

12.
The stoichiometry of reducing equivalents per protomer for the complex molybdoflavoprotein xanthine oxidase has been re-examined by reductive titrations with sodium dithionite and anaerobic reoxidation with cytochrome c and phenazine methosulfate of dithionite- or photo-reduced enzyme. It is found that 8.0 +/- 0.1 reducing equivalents are taken up (or given up) by the enzyme, a value of 2 eq greater than expected on the basis of the known oxidation-reduction centers in the enzyme. The reaction of reduced xanthine oxidase with [14C]iodoacetate indicates that, in the reduced form of the enzyme, additional cysteine residues are available for reaction. These results, in conjunction with the observation that reaction of oxidized enzyme with sulfite results in the appearance of an additional equivalent of thiol capable of reacting with 5,5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) or iodoacetate, indicate the presence of a disulfide linkage in the enzyme that can be reduced by dithionite or photochemically employing EDTA and 5-deazaflavin. Neither xanthine nor lumazine, however, is capable of reducing this oxidation-reduction center, suggesting that the disulfide does not play a role in the catalytic reactions of the enzyme. These results resolve discrepancies in the literature which indicated that greater than 6 reducing equivalents were consistently needed to bring about the complete reduction of xanthine oxidase.  相似文献   

13.
Studies of the spectral (UV/vis and resonance Raman) and electrochemical properties of the FAD-containing enzyme glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase (GCD) from Paracoccus denitrificans reveal that the properties of the oxidized enzyme (GCDox) appear to be invariant from those properties known for other acyl-CoA dehydrogenases such as mammalian general acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (GACD) and butyryl-CoA dehydrogenase (BCD) from Megasphaera elsdenii. However, when either free or complexed GCD is reduced, its spectral and electrochemical behavior differs from that of both GACD and BCD. Free GCD does not stabilize any form of one-electron-reduced GCD, but when GCD is complexed to its inhibitor, aceto-acetyl-CoA, the enzyme stabilizes 20% of the blue neutral radical form of FAD (FADH.) upon reduction. Like GACD, when crotonyl-CoA- (CCoA) bound GCD is reduced, the red anionic form of FAD radical (FAD.-) is stabilized, and excess reduction equivalents are necessary to effect full reduction of the complex. A comproportionation reaction is proposed between fully reduced crotonyl-CoA-bound GCD (GCD2e-CCoA) and GCDox-CCoA to partially explain the stabilization of GCD-bound FAD.- by CCoA. When GCD is reduced by its optimal substrate, glutaryl-CoA, a two-electron reduction is observed with concomitant formation of a long-wavelength charge-transfer band. It is proposed that the ETF specific for GCD abstracts one electron from this charge-transfer species and this is followed by the decarboxylation of the oxidized substrate. At pH 6.4, potential values measured for free GCD and GCD bound to acetoacetyl-CoA are -0.085 and -0.129 V, respectively. Experimental evidence is given for a positive shift in the reduction potential of GCD when the enzyme is bound to a 1:1 mixture of butyryl-CoA and CCoA. However, significant GCD hydratase activity is observed, preventing quantitation of the potential shift.  相似文献   

14.
Reactive oxygen species production by mitochondrial enzymes plays a fundamental role both in cellular signaling and in the progression of dysfunctional states. However, sources of reactive oxygen species and the mechanisms by which enzymes produce these reactive species still remain elusive. We characterized the generation of reactive oxygen species by purified human electron-transfer flavoprotein (ETF), a mitochondrial enzyme that has a central role in the metabolism of lipids, amino acids, and choline. The results showed that ETF produces significant amounts of both superoxide and hydrogen peroxide in the presence of its partner enzyme medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (MCAD). ETF-mediated production of reactive oxygen species is partially inhibited at high MCAD/ETF ratios, whereas it is enhanced at high ionic strength. Determination of the reduction potentials of ETF showed that thermodynamic properties of the FAD cofactor are changed upon formation of a complex between ETF and MCAD, supporting the notion that protein:protein interactions modulate the reactivity of the protein with dioxygen. Two pathogenic ETF variants were also studied to determine which factors modulate the reactivity toward molecular oxygen and promote reactive oxygen species production. The results obtained show that destabilized conformations and defective protein:protein interactions increase the ability of ETF to generate reactive oxygen species. A possible role for these processes in mitochondrial dysfunction in metabolic disorders of fatty acid β-oxidation is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Reduction of cytochrome P-450S21 (SF) (SF, substrate-free; purified from bovine adrenocortical microsomes) with sodium dithionite (Na2S2O4) in the presence of phenylisocyanide produced a ferrous cytochrome P-450S21 (SF)-phenylisocyanide complex with Soret absorbance maxima at 429 and 456 nm. On the other hand, when a preformed ferric cytochrome P-450S21 (SF)-NADPH-cytochrome-P-450 reductase (Fp2) complex was reduced chemically or enzymatically under the same conditions, the absorbance spectrum of the ferrous cytochrome P-450S21 (SF)-phenylisocyanide complex changed drastically, as characterized by an increase in absorbance intensity at 429 nm and a decrease at 456 nm. Similar spectral changes were observed by addition of reduced Fp2 to the preformed ferrous cytochrome P-450S21 (SF)-phenylisocyanide complex. Experiments to reduce a ferric cytochrome P-450S21 (SF)-phenylisocyanide complex with sodium dithionite in the presence of various amounts of Fp2 showed that; (1), the spectral change reached maxima for both absorption increase at 429 nm and decrease at 456 nm when cytochrome P-450S21 and Fp2 were previously mixed at the cytochrome P-450S21:Fp2 ratio of 1:5; (2), the spectral change was suppressed in 300 mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH 7.4). These results suggest that the absorbance spectral change is due to a conformational change around the heme moiety induced by association with reduced Fp2.  相似文献   

16.
Electron transfer flavoprotein (ETF) from pig liver mitochondria has been purified to homogeneity by a three-step procedure with approx. 10-fold higher yields than previously reported. The purified ETF exhibits an absorption coefficient for the bound FAD of 13.5 mM-1.cm-1 at 436 nm and an isoelectric point of 6.75. Gel filtration, sodium dodecyl sulphate gel electrophoresis and flavin analysis indicate that pig liver ETF is a dimer, composed of non-identical subunits (Mr 38 000 and 32 000) with only one FAD/dimer. Anaerobic reduction by dithionite produces anionic flavin semiquinone as a stable intermediate and establishes the flavin to be the only redox-active chromophore in ETF.  相似文献   

17.
Potentiometric titrations of pig liver electron-transfer flavoprotein (ETF) were performed at pH 7.5 and 4 degrees C, both in the reductive and oxidative directions. Reduction of ETF to the hydroquinone form required a total of two reducing equivalents/mol of ETF with the formation of sub-stoichiometric amounts of anionic semiquinone as an intermediate. The oxidation-reduction potentials for the two one-electron couples, oxidized ETF/ETF semiquinone and ETF semiquinone/fully reduced ETF, are +4 mV and -50 mV respectively. The overall midpoint potential for the two-electron couple (oxidized ETF/fully reduced ETF) is -23 mV.  相似文献   

18.
Electron-transfer flavoprotein-ubiquinone oxidoreductase (ETF-QO) is an iron-sulfur flavoprotein that accepts electrons from electron-transfer flavoprotein (ETF) and reduces ubiquinone from the Q-pool. ETF-QO contains a single [4Fe-4S]2+,1+ cluster and one equivalent of FAD, which are diamagnetic in the isolated oxidized enzyme and can be reduced to paramagnetic forms by enzymatic donors or dithionite. Mutations were introduced by site-directed mutagenesis of amino acids in the vicinity of the iron-sulfur cluster of Rhodobacter sphaeroides ETF-QO. Y501 and T525 are equivalent to Y533 and T558 in the porcine ETF-QO. In the porcine protein, these residues are within hydrogen-bonding distance of the Sgamma of the cysteine ligands to the iron-sulfur cluster. Y501F, T525A, and Y501F/T525A substitutions were made to determine the effects on midpoint potential, activity, and EPR spectral properties of the cluster. The integrity of the mutated proteins was confirmed by optical spectra, EPR g-values, and spin-lattice relaxation rates, and the cluster to flavin point-dipole distance was determined by relaxation enhancement. Potentiometric titrations were monitored by changes in the CW EPR signals of the cluster and semiquinone. Single mutations decreased the midpoint potentials of the iron-sulfur cluster from +37 mV for wild type to -60 mV for Y501F and T525A and to -128 mV for Y501F/T525A. Lowering the midpoint potential resulted in a decrease in steady-state ubiquinone reductase activity and in ETF semiquinone disproportionation. The decrease in activity demonstrates that reduction of the iron-sulfur cluster is required for activity. There was no detectable effect of the mutations on the flavin midpoint potentials.  相似文献   

19.
The aerobic metabolism of benzphetamine by liver microsomes, during a cytochrome P-450-catalyzed mixed-function oxidation reaction, results in the formation of an easily detected spectral complex with an absorption band maximum at 456 nm. Electron paramagnetic resonance studies, as well as studies with the chemical reductant, sodium dithionite, or the oxidant, potassium ferricyanide, indicate that the spectral complex results from the formation of a product adduct with reduced cytochrome P-450. The spectral properties of this product complex of cytochrome P-450 have been compared to those observed with carbon monoxide, metyrapone, and ethylisocyanide. The reaction of these reagents to specific pools of microsomal cytochrome P-450 permits the identification of at least two major and two minor types of cytochrome P-450 in liver microsomes prepared from phenobarbital-treated rats.  相似文献   

20.
J P Mahy  D Mansuy 《Biochemistry》1991,30(17):4165-4172
Various N-alkylhydroxylamines such as N-hydroxyamphetamine react with prostaglandin synthase (PGHS) from sheep seminal vesicles, with the formation of new complexes characterized by a Soret peak around 421 nm. These complexes are very stable toward O2 or dithionite but are destroyed upon oxidation by Fe(CN)6K3 with regeneration of starting PGHS-FeIII. Their spectral characteristics, chemical properties, and routes of formation (either by direct oxidation of RNHOH or by in situ reduction of RNO2 in the presence of dithionite) are very similar to those previously reported for nitrosoalkane complexes of hemoglobin-, myoglobin-, and cytochrome P-450-FeII. Their FeII-N(O)R structure was completely confirmed in the case of N-hydroxyamphetamine, both by extraction of the heme complex by butanone and by identification to authentic protoporphyrin IX-FeII-N(O)-amphetamine, and by insertion of this authentic complex into apoPGHS. Phenylhydroxylamine also reacts with PGHS-FeIII to give a PGHS-FeII-N(O)Ph complex which is not stable in the presence of dithionite because of its weaker PGHS-FeII-N(O)R bond when compared to PGHS-FeII-nitrosoalkane complexes. The ability of various N-alkylhydroxylamines to form PGHS-FeII-N(O)R complexes greatly depends upon their hydrophobicity. Actually, CH3NHOH and C2H5NHOH are totally inactive whereas about 10 molar excess of N-hydroxyamphetamine and C6H5NHOH already lead to 50% complex formation. This is in favor of an hydrophobic environment of the heme in PGHS. Finally, PGHS engaged in such FeII-nitrosoalkane complexes completely loses its dioxygenase activity, suggesting that N-substituted hydroxylamines or compounds that can be metabolized in vivo to give such hydroxylamines could act as strong PGHS inhibitors.  相似文献   

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