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1.
The intramolecular and intermolecular perturbation on the electronic state of FAD was investigated by FTIR spectroscopy by using the C=O stretching vibrations as probes in D(2)O solution. Natural and artificial FADs, i.e. 8-CN-, 8-Cl-, 8-H-, 8-OCH(3)-, and 8-NH(2)-FAD labelled by 2-(13)C, (18)O=C(2), or 4,10a-(13)C(2) were used for band assignments. The C(2)=O and C(4)=O stretching vibrations of oxidized FAD were shifted systematically by the substitution at the 8-position, i.e. the stronger the electron-donating ability (NH(2) > OCH(3) > CH(3) > H > Cl > CN) of the substituent, the lower the wavenumber region where both the C(2)=O and C(4)=O bands appear. In contrast, the C(4)=O band of anionic reduced FAD scarcely shifted. The 1,645-cm(-1) band containing C(2)=O stretching vibration shifted to 1,630 cm(-1) in the medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (MCAD)-bound state, which can be explained by hydrogen bonds at C(2)=O of the flavin ring. The band was observed at 1,607 cm(-1) in the complex of MCAD with 3-thiaoctanoyl-CoA. The 23 cm(-1) shift was explained by the charge-transfer interaction between oxidized flavin and the anionic acyl-CoA. In the case of electron-transferring flavoprotein, two bands associated with the C(4)=O stretching vibration were obtained at 1,712 and 1,686 cm(-1), providing evidence for the multiple conformations of the protein.  相似文献   

2.
In pyruvate oxidase (POX) from Lactobacillus plantarum, valine 265 participates in binding the cofactor FAD and is responsible for the strained conformation of its isoalloxazine moiety that is visible in the crystal structure of POX. The contrasting effects of the conservative amino acid exchange V265A on the enzyme's catalytic properties, cofactor affinity, and protein structure were investigated. The most prominent effect of the exchange was observed in the 2.2 A crystal structure of the mutant POX. While the overall structures of the wild-type and the variant are similar, flavin binding in particular is clearly different. Local disorder at the isoalloxazine binding site prevents modeling of the complete FAD cofactor and two protein loops of the binding site. Only the ADP moiety shows well-defined electron density, indicating an "anchor" function for this part of the molecule. This notion is corroborated by competition experiments where ADP was used to displace FAD from the variant enzyme. Despite the fact that the affinity of FAD binding in the variant is reduced, the catalytic properties are very similar to the wild-type, and the redox potential of the bound flavin is the same for both proteins. The rate of electron transfer toward the flavin during turnover is reduced to one-third compared to the wild-type, but k(cat) remains unchanged. Redox-triggered FTIR difference spectroscopy of free FAD shows the nu(C(10a)=N(1)) band at 1548 cm(-)(1). In POX-V265A, this band is found at 1538 cm(-)(1) and thus shifted less strongly than in wild-type POX where it is found at 1534 cm(-)(1). Taking these observations together, the conservative exchange V265A in POX has a surprisingly small effect on the catalytic properties of the enzyme, whereas the effect on the three-dimensional structure is rather big.  相似文献   

3.
Yang KY  Swenson RP 《Biochemistry》2007,46(9):2298-2305
Nonresonance Raman spectroscopy has been used to investigate the protein-flavin interactions of the oxidized and anionic semiquinone states of the electron-transfer flavoprotein from the methylotrophic bacteria W3A1 (wETF) in solution. Several unique features of oxidized wETF were revealed from the Raman data. The unusually high frequency of the Raman band for the C(4)=O of the flavin suggests that hydrogen-bonding interactions with the C(4)O are very weak or nonexistent in wETF. In contrast, hydrogen bonding with the C(2)=O is one of the strongest among the flavoproteins investigated thus far. According to the crystal structure, the side-chain hydroxyl group of alphaSer254 serves as a hydrogen bond donor to the N(5) atom in the oxidized flavin cofactor in wETF. The replacement of alphaSer254 by cysteine by site-directed mutagenesis resulted in shifts in N(5)-relevant Raman bands in both the oxidized and anionic semiquinone states of the protein. These results confirm the presence of the hydrogen-bonding interaction at N(5) that is evident in the crystal structure of the oxidized protein and that it persists in the one-electron reduced state. The data suggest that these bands can serve as useful Raman markers for the N(5) interactions in both oxidation states of flavoproteins. The wETF displays unusually low frequencies of flavin ring I (o-xylene ring) relevant bands, which suggests a ring I microenvironment different from most of the other flavoproteins. As indicated by Raman data, the alphaS254C mutation changed the environment of ring I, perhaps as the consequence of changes in the mobility of the FAD domain of wETF. These unusual flavin-protein interactions may be associated with the unique redox properties of wETF.  相似文献   

4.
Ghanem M  Fan F  Francis K  Gadda G 《Biochemistry》2003,42(51):15179-15188
Choline oxidase catalyzes the four-electron oxidation of choline to glycine betaine, with molecular oxygen acting as primary electron acceptor. Recently, the recombinant enzyme expressed in Escherichia coli was purified to homogeneity and shown to contain FAD in a mixture of oxidized and anionic semiquinone redox states [Fan et al. (2003) Arch. Biochem. Biophys., in press]. In this study, methods have been devised to convert the enzyme-bound flavin semiquinone to oxidized FAD and vice versa, allowing characterization of the resulting forms of choline oxidase. The enzyme-bound oxidized flavin showed typical UV-vis absorbance peaks at 359 and 452 nm (with epsilon(452) = 11.4 M(-1) cm(-1)) and emitted light at 530 nm (with lambda(ex) at 452 nm). The affinity of the enzyme for sulfite was high (with a K(d) value of approximately 50 microM at pH 7 and 15 degrees C), suggesting the presence of a positive charge near the N(1)C(2)=O locus of the flavin. The enzyme-bound anionic flavin semiquinone was unusually insensitive to oxygen or ferricyanide at pH 8 and showed absorbance peaks at 372 and 495 nm (with epsilon(372) = 19.95 M(-1) cm(-1)), maximal fluorescence emission at 454 nm (with lambda(ex) at 372 nm), circular dichroic signals at 370 and 406 nm, and an ESR peak-to-peak line width of 13.9 G. Both UV-vis absorbance studies on the enzyme under turnover with choline and steady-state kinetic data with either choline or betaine aldehyde were consistent with the flavin semiquinone being not involved in catalysis. The pH dependence of the kinetic parameters at varying concentrations of both choline and oxygen indicated that a catalytic base is required for choline oxidation but not for oxygen reduction and that the order of the kinetic steps involving substrate binding and product release is not affected by pH.  相似文献   

5.
Resonance Raman (RR) spectra of the complex of pig kidney medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase with acetoacetyl-CoA and of the purple complex formed upon the addition of octanoyl-CoA to the dehydrogenase were obtained. RR spectra were also measured for the complexes prepared by using isotopically labeled compounds, i.e., [3-13C]-, [1,3-13C]-, and [2,4-13C2]acetoacetyl-CoA; [1-13C]octanoyl-CoA; the dehydrogenase reconstituted with [4a-13C]- and [4,10a-13C2]FAD. Both bands of oxidized flavin and acetoacetyl-CoA were resonance-enhanced in the 632.8 nm excited spectra of the acetoacetyl-CoA complex; this confirms that the broad long-wavelength absorption band is a charge-transfer absorption band between oxidized flavin and acetoacetyl-CoA. The 1,622 cm-1 band was assigned to the C(3)=O stretching mode coupling with the C(2)-H bending mode of the enolate form of acetoacetyl-CoA and the bands at 1,483 and 1,119 cm-1 were assigned to bands associated with the C(2)=C(1)-O- moiety. Both bands of fully reduced flavin and the substrate were resonance-enhanced in the 632.8 nm excited spectra of the purple complex. As the enzyme is already reduced, the substrate must be oxidized to octenoyl-CoA; the complex is a charge-transfer complex between the reduced enzyme and octenoyl-CoA. The low frequency value of the 1,577 cm-1 band, which is associated with the C(2)-C(1)=O moiety of the octenoyl-CoA, suggests that the enzyme-bound octenoyl-CoA has an appreciable contribution of C(2)=C(1)-O-.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
Blazyk JL  Lippard SJ 《Biochemistry》2002,41(52):15780-15794
Soluble methane monooxygenase (sMMO) from Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath) catalyzes the selective oxidation of methane to methanol, the first step in the primary catabolic pathway of methanotrophic bacteria. A reductase (MMOR) mediates electron transfer from NADH through its FAD and [2Fe-2S] cofactors to the dinuclear non-heme iron sites housed in a hydroxylase (MMOH). The structurally distinct [2Fe-2S], FAD, and NADH binding domains of MMOR facilitated division of the protein into its functional ferredoxin (MMOR-Fd) and FAD/NADH (MMOR-FAD) component domains. The 10.9 kDa MMOR-Fd (MMOR residues 1-98) and 27.6 kDa MMOR-FAD (MMOR residues 99-348) were expressed and purified from recombinant Escherichia coli systems. The Fd and FAD domains have absorbance spectral features identical to those of the [2Fe-2S] and flavin components, respectively, of MMOR. Redox potentials, determined by reductive titrations that included indicator dyes, for the [2Fe-2S] and FAD cofactors in the domains are as follows: -205.2 +/- 1.3 mV for [2Fe-2S](ox/red), -172.4 +/- 2.0 mV for FAD(ox/sq), and -266.4 +/- 3.5 mV for FAD(sq/hq). Kinetic and spectral properties of intermediates observed in the reaction of oxidized MMOR-FAD (FAD(ox)) with NADH at 4 degrees C were established with stopped-flow UV-visible spectroscopy. Analysis of the influence of pH on MMOR-FAD optical spectra, redox potentials, and NADH reaction kinetics afforded pK(a) values for the semiquinone (FAD(sq)) and hydroquinone (FAD(hq)) MMOR-FAD species and two protonatable groups near the flavin cofactor. Electron transfer from MMOR-FAD(hq) to oxidized MMOR-Fd is extremely slow (k = 1500 M(-1) s(-1) at 25 degrees C, compared to 90 s(-1) at 4 degrees C for internal electron transfer between cofactors in MMOR), indicating that cofactor proximity is essential for efficient interdomain electron transfer.  相似文献   

7.
Resonance Raman (RR) spectra were measured for the purple intermediates of D-amino acid oxidase reconstituted with isotopically labelled FAD's, i.e., [4a-13C]-, [4,10a-13C2]-, [2-13C]-, [5-15N]-, and [1,3-15N2]flavin adenine dinucleotides, and compared with those with the native enzyme. The RR lines around 1605 cm-1 with D-alanine or D-proline as a substrate and at 1548 cm-1 with D-alanine undergo isotopic shifts upon [4a-13C]- and [4,10a-13C2]-labelling. These lines are assigned to the vibrational modes associated with C(10a) = C(4a) - C(4) = O moiety of reduced flavin, providing the first assignment of RR lines of reduced flavin and conclusive evidence that reduced flavin is involved in this intermediate.  相似文献   

8.
The cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer (CPD) and (6-4) photoproduct, two major types of DNA damage caused by UV light, are repaired under illumination with near UV-visible light by CPD and (6-4) photolyases, respectively. To understand the mechanism of DNA repair, we examined the resonance Raman spectra of complexes between damaged DNA and the neutral semiquinoid and oxidized forms of (6-4) and CPD photolyases. The marker band for a neutral semiquinoid flavin and band I of the oxidized flavin, which are derived from the vibrations of the benzene ring of FAD, were shifted to lower frequencies upon binding of damaged DNA by CPD photolyase but not by (6-4) photolyase, indicating that CPD interacts with the benzene ring of FAD directly but that the (6-4) photoproduct does not. Bands II and VII of the oxidized flavin and the 1398/1391 cm(-1) bands of the neutral semiquinoid flavin, which may reflect the bending of U-shaped FAD, were altered upon substrate binding, suggesting that CPD and the (6-4) photoproduct interact with the adenine ring of FAD. When substrate was bound, there was an upshifted 1528 cm(-1) band of the neutral semiquinoid flavin in CPD photolyase, indicating a weakened hydrogen bond at N5-H of FAD, and band X seemed to be downshifted in (6-4) photolyase, indicating a weakened hydrogen bond at N3-H of FAD. These Raman spectra led us to conclude that the two photolyases have different electron transfer mechanisms as well as different hydrogen bonding environments, which account for the higher redox potential of CPD photolyase.  相似文献   

9.
The apoprotein of glucose oxidase from Aspergillus niger was reconstituted with specifically 15N- and 13C-enriched FAD derivatives and investigated by 15N- and 13C-NMR spectroscopy. On the basis of the 15N-NMR results it is suggested that, in the oxidized state of glucose oxidase, hydrogen bonds are formed to the N(3) and N(5) positions of the isoalloxazine system. The hydrogen bond to N(3) is more pronounced than that to N(5) as compared with the respective hydrogen bonds formed between FMN and water. The resonance position of N(10) indicates a small decrease in sp2 hybridization compared to free flavin in water. Apparently the isoalloxazine ring is not planar at this position in glucose oxidase. Additional hydrogen bonds at the carbonyl groups of the oxidized enzyme-bound FAD were derived from the 13C-NMR results. A strong downfield shift observed for the C(4a) resonance may be ascribed in part to the decrease in sp2 hybridization at the N(10) position and to the polarization of the carbonyl groups at C(2) and C(4). The polarization of the isoalloxazine ring in glucose oxidase is more similar to FMN in water than to that of tetraacetyl-riboflavin in apolar solvents. In the reduced enzyme the N(1) position is anionic at pH 5.6. The pKa is shifted to lower pH values by at least 1 owing to the interaction of the FAD with the apoprotein. As in the oxidized state of the enzyme, a hydrogen bond is also formed at the N(3) position of the reduced flavin. The N(5) and N(10) resonances of the enzyme-bound reduced FAD indicate a decrease in the sp2 character of these atoms as compared with that of reduced FMN in aqueous solution. Some of the 15N- and 13C-resonance positions of the enzyme-bound reduced cofactor are markedly pH-dependent. The pH dependence of the N(5) and C(10a) resonances indicates a decrease in sp2 hybridization of the N(5) atom with increasing pH of the enzyme solution.  相似文献   

10.
Hirota S  Iwamoto T  Tanizawa K  Adachi O  Yamauchi O 《Biochemistry》1999,38(43):14256-14263
Carbon monoxide complexes have been generated for copper/topa quinone (TPQ)-containing amine oxidases from Arthrobactor globiformis (AGAO) and Aspergillus niger (AO-I) and characterized by various spectroscopic measurements. Addition of CO to AGAO anaerobically reduced with its substrate 2-phenylethylamine led to a slight increase of absorption bands at 440 and 470 nm derived from the semiquinone form (TPQ(sq)) of the TPQ cofactor, concomitantly giving rise to new CO-related absorption bands at 334 and 434 nm. The intensity of the TPQ(sq) radical EPR signal at g = 2.004 also increased in the presence of CO, while its hyperfine coupling structure was affected insignificantly. FT-IR measurements revealed C-O stretching bands (nu(CO)) at 2063 and 2079 cm(-1) for the CO complex of the substrate-reduced AGAO (at 2085 cm(-1) for AO-I), which shifted nearly 100 cm(-1) to lower frequencies upon using (13)C(18)O. Collectively, these results suggest that CO is bound to the Cu(I) ion in the Cu(I)/TPQ(sq) species formed in the reductive half-reaction of amine oxidation, thereby shifting the Cu(II)/aminoresorcinol right arrow over left arrow Cu(I)/semiquinone equilibrium toward the latter. When AGAO was reduced with dithionite, an intermediary form of the enzyme with Cu(II) reduced to Cu(I) but TPQ still in the oxidized state (TPQ(ox)) was produced. Dithionite reduction of AGAO in the presence of CO resulted in the immediate formation of FT-IR bands at 2064 and 2083 cm(-1), which were assigned to the nu(CO) bands of the CO bound to the TPQ(ox) enzyme. The intense 2083 cm(-1) band was then displaced by a new band at 2077 cm(-1), corresponding to the formation of the fully reduced topa. Significant variation of these nu(CO) frequencies indicates that vibrational properties of CO bound to copper amine oxidases are sensitively influenced by the coordination structure of the Cu(I) ion, which may be modulated by the chemical and redox states of the TPQ cofactor.  相似文献   

11.
To investigate the structural modulation of ligands and their interaction in the active-site nanospace when they form charge-transfer (CT) complexes with D-amino acid oxidase (DAO) in three redox states, we compared Raman bands of the ligands in complex with DAO with those of ligands free in solution. Isotope-labeled ligands were synthesized for assignments of observed bands. The COO(-) stretching of ligands observed around, 1,370 cm(-1) downshifted by about 17 cm(-1) upon complexation with oxidized, semiquinoid and reduced DAO, except for the case of reduced DAO-N-methylisonicotinate complex (8 cm(-1) downward shift); the interaction mode of the carboxylate group with the guanidino group of Arg283 and the hydroxy moiety of Tyr228 of DAO is similar in the three redox states. The C=N stretching mode (1,704 cm(-1)) of Delta(1)-piperideine-2-carboxylate (D1PC) downshifted to 1,675 and 1,681 cm(-1) upon complexation with reduced and semiquinoid DAO, respectively. The downward shifts indicate that the C=N bond is weakened upon the complexation. This is probably due mainly to charge-transfer (CT) interaction between D1PC and semiquinoid or reduced flavin, i.e., the partial electron donation from the highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) of reduced flavin or a singly occupied molecular orbital (SOMO) of semiquinoid flavin to the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO), an antibonding orbital, of D1PC. This speculation was supported by the finding that the magnitude of the shift is smaller by 5 cm(-1) (observed at 1,680 cm(-1)) in the case of reduced DAO reconstituted with 7,8-Cl(2)-FAD, whose reduced form has lower electron-donating ability than natural reduced FAD. The amount of electron flow was estimated by applying the theory of Friedrich and Person [(1966) J. Chem. Phys. 44, 2166-2170] to these complexes; the amounts of charge transfer from reduced FAD and reduced 7,8-Cl(2)-FAD to D1PC were estimated to be about 10 and 8% of one electron, respectively, in the CT complexes of reduced DAO with D1PC.  相似文献   

12.
Thioredoxin reductase (TrxR) from Escherichia coli, the mutant proteins E159Y and C138S, and the mutant protein C138S treated with phenylmercuric acetate were reconstituted with [U-(13)C(17),U-(15)N(4)]FAD and analysed, in their oxidized and reduced states, by (13)C-, (15)N- and (31)P-NMR spectroscopy. The enzymes studied showed very similar (31)P-NMR spectra in the oxidized state, consisting of two peaks at -9.8 and -11.5 p.p.m. In the reduced state, the two peaks merge into one apparent peak (at -9.8 p.p.m.). The data are compared with published (31)P-NMR data of enzymes closely related to TrxR. (13)C and (15)N-NMR chemical shifts of TrxR and the mutant proteins in the oxidized state provided information about the electronic structure of the protein-bound cofactor and its interactions with the apoproteins. Strong hydrogen bonds exist between protein-bound flavin and the apoproteins at C(2)O, C(4)O, N(1) and N(5). The N(10) atoms in the enzymes are slightly out of the molecular plane of the flavin. Of the ribityl carbon atoms C(10alpha,gamma,delta) are the most affected upon binding to the apoprotein and the large downfield shift of the C(10gamma) atom indicates strong hydrogen bonding with the apoprotein. The hydrogen bonding pattern observed is in excellent agreement with X-ray data, except for the N(1) and the N(3) atoms where a reversed situation was observed. Some chemical shifts observed in C138S deviate considerably from those of the other enzymes. From this it is concluded that C138S is in the FO conformation and the others are in the FR conformation, supporting published data. In the reduced state, strong hydrogen bonding interactions are observed between C(2)O and C(4)O and the apoprotein. As revealed by the (15)N chemical shifts and the N(5)H coupling constant the N(5) and the N(10) atom are highly sp(3) hybridized. The calculation of the endocyclic angles for the N(5) and the N(10) atoms shows the angles to be approximately 109 degrees, in perfect agreement with X-ray data showing that the flavin assumes a bent conformation along the N(10)/N(5) axis of the flavin. In contrast, the N(1) is highly sp(2) hybridized and is protonated, i.e. in the neutral state. Upon reduction of the enzymes, the (13)C chemical shifts of some atoms of the ribityl side chain undergo considerable changes also indicating conformational rearrangements of the side-chain interactions with the apoproteins. The chemical shifts between native TrxR and C138S are now rather similar and differ from those of the two other mutant proteins. This strongly indicates that the former enzymes are in the FO conformation and the other two are in the FR conformation. The data are discussed briefly in the context of published NMR data obtained with a variety of flavoproteins.  相似文献   

13.
p-Hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase from Pseudomonas fluorescens and salicylate hydroxylase from Pseudomonas putida have been reconstituted with 13C- and 15N-enriched FAD. The protein preparations were studied by 13C-NMR, 15N-NMR and 31P-NMR techniques in the oxidized and in the two-electron-reduced states. The chemical shift values are compared with those of free flavin in water or chloroform. It is shown that the pi electron distribution in oxidized free p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase is comparable to free flavin in water, and it is therefore suggested that the flavin ring is solvent accessible. Addition of substrate has a strong effect on several resonances, e.g. C2 and N5, which indicates that the flavin ring becomes shielded from solvent and also that a conformational change occurs involving the positive pole of an alpha-helix microdipole. In the reduced state, the flavin in p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase is bound in the anionic form, i.e. carrying a negative charge at N1. The flavin is bound in a more planar configuration than when free in solution. Upon binding of substrate the resonances of N1, C10a and N10 shift upfield. It is suggested that these upfield shifts are the result of a conformational change similar, but not identical, to the one observed in the oxidized state. The 13C chemical shifts of FAD bound to apo(salicylate hydroxylase) indicate that in the oxidized state the flavin ring is also fairly solvent accessible in the free enzyme. Addition of substrate has a strong effect on the hydrogen bond formed with O4 alpha. It is suggested that this is due to the exclusion of water from the active site by the binding of substrate. In the reduced state, the flavin is anionic. Addition of substrate forces the flavin ring to adopt a more planar configuration, i.e. a sp2-hybridized N5 atom and a slightly sp3-hybridized N10 atom. The NMR results are discussed in relation to the reaction catalyzed by the enzymes.  相似文献   

14.
Xu L  Mu W  Ding Y  Luo Z  Han Q  Bi F  Wang Y  Song Q 《Biochemistry》2008,47(33):8736-8743
Escherichia coli DNA photolyase repairs cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer (CPD) in UV-damaged DNA through a photoinduced electron transfer mechanism. The catalytic activity of the enzyme requires fully reduced FAD (FADH (-)). After purification in vitro, the cofactor FADH (-) in photolyase is oxidized into the neutral radical form FADH (*) under aerobic conditions and the enzyme loses its repair function. We have constructed a mutant photolyase in which asparagine 378 (N378) is replaced with serine (S). In comparison with wild-type photolyase, we found N378S mutant photolyase containing oxidized FAD (FAD ox) but not FADH (*) after routine purification procedures, but evidence shows that the mutant protein contains FADH (-) in vivo as the wild type. Although N378S mutant photolyase is photoreducable and capable of binding CPD in DNA, the activity assays indicate the mutant protein is catalytically inert. We conclude that the Asn378 residue of E. coli photolyase is crucial both for stabilizing the neutral flavin radical cofactor and for catalysis.  相似文献   

15.
The crystal structure of glucooligosaccharide oxidase from Acremonium strictum was demonstrated to contain a bicovalent flavinylation, with the 6- and 8alpha-positions of the flavin isoalloxazine ring cross-linked to Cys(130) and His(70), respectively. The H70A and C130A single mutants still retain the covalent FAD, indicating that flavinylation at these two residues is independent. Both mutants exhibit a decreased midpoint potential of approximately +69 and +61 mV, respectively, compared with +126 mV for the wild type, and possess lower activities with k(cat) values reduced to approximately 2 and 5%, and the flavin reduction rate reduced to 0.6 and 14%. This indicates that both covalent linkages increase the flavin redox potential and alter the redox properties to promote catalytic efficiency. In addition, the isolated H70A/C130A double mutant does not contain FAD, and addition of exogenous FAD was not able to restore any detectable activity. This demonstrates that the covalent attachment is essential for the binding of the oxidized cofactor. Furthermore, the crystal structure of the C130A mutant displays conformational changes in several cofactor and substrate-interacting residues and hence provides direct evidence for novel functions of flavinylation in assistance of cofactor and substrate binding. Finally, the wild-type enzyme is more heat and guanidine HCl-resistant than the mutants. Therefore, the bicovalent flavin linkage not only tunes the redox potential and contributes to cofactor and substrate binding but also increases structural stability.  相似文献   

16.
Masuda S  Hasegawa K  Ishii A  Ono TA 《Biochemistry》2004,43(18):5304-5313
The sensor of blue-light using FAD (BLUF) domain is the flavin-binding fold categorized to a new class of blue-light sensing domain found in AppA from Rhodobacter sphaeroides and PAC from Euglena gracilis, but little is known concerning the mechanism of blue-light perception. An open reading frame slr1694 in a cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 encodes a protein possessing the BLUF domain. Here, a full-length Slr1694 protein retaining FAD was expressed and purified and found to be present as an oligomeric form (trimer or tetramer). Using the purified Slr1694, spectroscopic properties of Slr1694 were characterized. Slr1694 was found to show the same red-shift of flavin absorption and quenching of flavin fluorescence by illumination as those of AppA. These changes reversed in the dark although the rate of dark state regeneration was much faster in Slr1694 than AppA, indicating that Slr1694 is a blue-light receptor based on BLUF with the similar photocycle to that of AppA. The dark decay in D(2)O was nearly four times slower than in H(2)O. Light-induced Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) difference spectroscopy was applied to examine the light-induced structure change of a chromophore and apo-protein with deuteration and universal (13)C and (15)N isotope labeling. The FTIR results indicate that light excitation induced distinct changes in the amide I modes of peptide backbone but relatively limited changes in flavin chromophore. Light excitation predominantly weakened the C(4)=O and C(2)=O bonding and strengthened the N1C10a and/or C4aN5 bonding, indicating formational changes of the isoalloxazine ring II and III of FAD but little formational change in the isoalloxazine ring I. The photocycle of the BLUF is unique in the sense that light excitation leads to the structural rearrangements of the protein moieties coupled with a minimum formational change of the chromophore.  相似文献   

17.
Resonance Raman (RR) spectra were obtained in H2O or D2O solution for the purple intermediates of D-amino acid oxidase (DAO) with isotopically labeled substrates, i.e., [1-13C]-, [2-13C]-, [3-13C]-, [15N]-, and [3,3,3-D3]alanine; [carboxyl-13C]- and [15N]proline. RR spectra were also measured for the intermediates of DAO reconstituted with isotopically labeled FAD's, i.e., [4a-13C]-, [4,10a-13C2]-, [2-13C]-, [5-15N]-, and [1,3-15N2]FAD in D2O. The isotopic shift of the 1692 cm-1 band upon [15N]- or [2-13C]-substitution of alanine indicates that the band is due to the C = N stretching mode of an imino acid derived from D-alanine, i.e., alpha-iminopropionate. The 1658 cm-1 band with D-proline was also assigned to the C = N stretching mode of an imino acid derived from D-proline, i.e., delta 1-pyrrolidine-2-carboxylate, since the band shifts to 1633 cm-1 upon [15N]-substitution and its stretching frequency is generally found in this frequency region. Since the band shifts to low frequency in D2O, the imino acid should have a protonated imino group such as the C = N+1H form. The intense band at 1363 cm-1 with D-alanine was assigned to a mixing of the CO2- symmetric stretching and CH3 symmetric deformation modes in alpha-iminopropionate, based on the isotope effects. The 1359 cm-1 band with D-proline has probably contributions of CO2- symmetric stretching and CH2 wagging, considering the isotope effects with [carboxyl-13C]proline. The 1359 cm-1 band with D-proline was split into 1371 cm-1 and 1334 cm-1 bands in D2O. As this splitting of the 1359 cm-1 band with D-proline in D2O can not be interpreted only by the replacement of the C = N+1-H proton by deuterium, the carboxylate of the imino acid probably interacts with the enzyme through some proton(s) exchangeable by deuterium(s) in D2O. The bands around 1605 cm-1 which shift upon [4a-13C]- and [4,10a-13C2]-labeling of FAD are derived from a fully reduced flavin, because the isotopic shifts of the band are very different from those of the bands of oxidized or semiquinoid flavin observed near 1605 cm-1.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
We report the characterization by resonance Raman spectroscopy of the oxygenated complex (Fe(II)O(2)) of nitric-oxide synthases of Staphylococcus aureus (saNOS) and Bacillus subtilis (bsNOS) saturated with N(omega)-hydroxy-l-arginine. The frequencies of the nu(Fe-O) and nu(O-O) modes were 530 and 1135 cm(-), respectively, in both the presence and absence of tetrahydrobiopterin. On the basis of a comparison of these frequencies with those of saNOS and bsNOS saturated with l-arginine (nu(Fe-O) at 517 cm(-1) and nu(O-O) at 1123 cm(-1)) and those of substrate-free saNOS (nu(Fe-O) at 517 and nu(O-O) at 1135 cm(-1)) (Chartier, F. J. M., Blais, S. P., and Couture, M. (2006) J. Biol. Chem. 281, 9953-9962), we propose two models that account for the frequency shift of nu(Fe-O) (but not nu(O-O)) upon N(omega)-hydroxy-l-arginine binding as well as the frequency shift of nu(O-O) (but not nu(Fe-O)) upon l-arginine binding. The implications of these substrate-specific interactions with respect to catalysis by NOSs are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Resonance Raman (RR) spectra of purple intermediates of L-phenylalanine oxidase (PAO) with non-labeled and isotopically labeled phenylalanines as substrates, i.e., [1-13C], [2-13C], [ring-U-13C6], and [15N]phenylalanines, were measured with excitation at 632.8 nm within the broad absorption band around 540 nm. The spectra obtained resemble those of purple intermediates of D-amino acid oxidase (DAO). The isotope effects on the 1,665 cm-1 band with [15N] or [2-13C]phenylalanine indicate that the band is due to the C = N stretching mode of an imino acid derived from phenylalanine, i.e., alpha-imino-beta-phenylpropionate. The intense band at 1,389 cm-1 is contributed to by the CO2- symmetric stretching and C-CO2- stretching modes of alpha-imino-beta-phenylpropionate. The 1,602 cm-1 band, which does not shift upon isotopic substitution of phenylalanine, corresponds to the 1,605 cm-1 band of DAO purple intermediates and was assigned to a vibrational mode associated with the C(10a) = C(4a) - C(4) = O moiety of reduced flavin. These results confirm that PAO purple intermediates consist of the reduced enzyme and an imino acid derived from a substrate, and suggest that the plane defined by C(10a) = C(4a) - C(4) = O of reduced flavin and the plane containing H2+N = C - CO2- of an imino acid are arranged in close contact to each other, generating a charge-transfer interaction.  相似文献   

20.
Human methionine synthase reductase (MSR) is a key enzyme in folate and methionine metabolism as it reactivates the catalytically inert cob(II)alamin form of methionine synthase (MS). Electron transfer from MSR to the cob(II)alamin cofactor coupled with methyl transfer from S-adenosyl methionine returns MS to the active methylcob(III)alamin state. MSR contains stoichiometric amounts of FAD and FMN, which shuttle NADPH-derived electrons to the MS cob(II)alamin cofactor. Herein, we have investigated the pre-steady state kinetic behavior of the reductive half-reaction of MSR by anaerobic stopped-flow absorbance and fluorescence spectroscopy. Photodiode array and single-wavelength spectroscopy performed on both full-length MSR and the isolated FAD domain enabled assignment of observed kinetic phases to mechanistic steps in reduction of the flavins. Under single turnover conditions, reduction of the isolated FAD domain by NADPH occurs in two kinetically resolved steps: a rapid (120 s(-1)) phase, characterized by the formation of a charge-transfer complex between oxidized FAD and NADPH, is followed by a slower (20 s(-1)) phase involving flavin reduction. These two kinetic phases are also observed for reduction of full-length MSR by NADPH, and are followed by two slower and additional kinetic phases (0.2 and 0.016 s(-1)) involving electron transfer between FAD and FMN (thus yielding the disemiquinoid form of MSR) and further reduction of MSR by a second molecule of NADPH. The observed rate constants associated with flavin reduction are dependent hyperbolically on NADPH and [4(R)-2H]NADPH concentration, and the observed primary kinetic isotope effect on this step is 2.2 and 1.7 for the isolated FAD domain and full-length MSR, respectively. Both full-length MSR and the separated FAD domain that have been reduced with dithionite catalyze the reduction of NADP+. The observed rate constant of reverse hydride transfer increases hyperbolically with NADP+ concentration with the FAD domain. The stopped-flow kinetic data, in conjunction with the reported redox potentials of the flavin cofactors for MSR [Wolthers, K. R., Basran, J., Munro, A. W., and Scrutton, N. S. (2003) Biochemistry, 42, 3911-3920], are used to define the mechanism of electron transfer for the reductive half-reaction of MSR. Comparisons are made with similar stopped-flow kinetic studies of the structurally related enzymes cytochrome P450 reductase and nitric oxide synthase.  相似文献   

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