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1.
Li X  Jones LH  Pearson AR  Wilmot CM  Davidson VL 《Biochemistry》2006,45(44):13276-13283
Tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ), the prosthetic group of methylamine dehydrogenase, is formed by post-translational modifications of two tryptophan residues that result in the incorporation of two oxygens into one tryptophan side chain and the covalent cross-linking of that side chain to a second tryptophan residue. MauG is a novel 42 kDa di-heme protein, which is required for the biosynthesis of TTQ. An experimental system has been developed that allows the direct continuous monitoring of MauG-dependent TTQ biosynthesis in vitro. Four diverse electron donors, ascorbate, dithiothreitol, reduced glutathione, and NADH, were each able to provide reducing equivalents for MauG-dependent TTQ biosynthesis under aerobic conditions. The reaction with NADH was mediated by an NADH-dependent oxidoreductase. Under anaerobic conditions in the absence of an electron donor, H(2)O(2) could serve as a substrate for MauG-dependent TTQ biosynthesis. During the reaction with H(2)O(2), a discrete reaction intermediate was observed, which is likely the reduced quinol form of TTQ that then is oxidized to the quinone. These results suggest that not only the incorporation of oxygen into the monohydroxylated biosynthetic intermediate but also the subsequent oxidation of quinol MADH during TTQ biosynthesis is a MauG-dependent process. The implications of these results in elucidating the mechanism of MauG-dependent TTQ biosynthesis and identifying potential physiologic electron and oxygen donors for TTQ biosynthesis in vivo are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Zhu Z  Davidson VL 《Biochemistry》1999,38(15):4862-4867
The two-electron oxidation of tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ) in substrate-reduced methylamine dehydrogenase (MADH) by amicyanin is known to proceed via an N-semiquinone intermediate in which the substrate-derived amino group remains covalently attached to TTQ [Bishop, G. R., and Davidson, V. L. (1996) Biochemistry 35, 8948-8954]. A new method for the stoichiometric formation of the N-semiquinone in vitro has allowed the study of the oxidation of the N-semiquinone by amicyanin in greater detail than was previously possible. Conversion of N-semiquinone TTQ to the quinone requires two biochemical events, electron transfer to amicyanin and release of ammonia from TTQ. Using rapid-scanning stopped-flow spectroscopy, it is shown that this occurs by a sequential mechanism in which oxidation to an imine (N-quinone) precedes hydrolysis by water and ammonia release. Under certain reaction conditions, the N-quinone intermediate accumulates prior to the relatively slow hydrolysis step. Correlation of these transient kinetic data with steady-state kinetic data indicates that the slow hydrolysis of the N-quinone by water does not occur in the steady state. In the presence of excess substrate, the next methylamine molecule initiates a nucleophilic attack of the N-quinone TTQ, causing release of ammonia that is concomitant with the formation of the next enzyme-substrate cofactor adduct. In light of these results, the usually accepted steady-state reaction mechanism of MADH is revised and clarified to indicate that reactions of the quinone form of TTQ are side reactions of the normal catalytic pathway. The relevance of these conclusions to the reaction mechanisms of other enzymes with carbonyl cofactors, the reactions of which proceed via Schiff base intermediates, is also discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Interprotein electron transfer (ET) occurs between the tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ) prosthetic group of aromatic amine dehydrogenase (AADH) and copper of azurin. The ET reactions from two chemically distinct reduced forms of TTQ were studied: an O-quinol form that was generated by reduction by dithionite, and an N-quinol form that was generated by reduction by substrate. It was previously shown that on reduction by substrate, an amino group displaces a carbonyl oxygen on TTQ, and that this significantly alters the rate of its oxidation by azurin (Hyun, Y-L., and Davidson V. L. (1995) Biochemistry 34, 12249-12254). To determine the basis for this change in reactivity, comparative kinetic and thermodynamic analyses of the ET reactions from the O-quinol and N-quinol forms of TTQ in AADH to the copper of azurin were performed. The reaction of the O-quinol exhibited values of electronic coupling (H(AB)) of 0.13 cm(-1) and reorganizational energy (lambda) of 1.6 eV, and predicted an ET distance of approximately 15 A. These results are consistent with the ET event being the rate-determining step for the redox reaction. Analysis of the reaction of the N-quinol by Marcus theory yielded an H(AB) which exceeded the nonadiabatic limit and predicted a negative ET distance. These results are diagnostic of a gated ET reaction. Solvent deuterium kinetic isotope effects of 1.5 and 3.2 were obtained, respectively, for the ET reactions from O-quinol and N-quinol AADH indicating that transfer of an exchangeable proton was involved in the rate-limiting reaction step which gates ET from the N-quinol, but not the O-quinol. These results are compared with those for the ET reactions from another TTQ enzyme, methylamine dehydrogenase, to amicyanin. The mechanism by which the ET reaction of the N-quinol is gated is also related to mechanisms of other gated interprotein ET reactions.  相似文献   

4.
Paracoccus denitrificans methylamine dehydrogenase (MADH) is an enzyme containing a quinone cofactor tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ) derived from two tryptophan residues (betaTrp(57) and betaTrp(108)) within the polypeptide chain. During cofactor formation, the two tryptophan residues become covalently linked, and two carbonyl oxygens are added to the indole ring of betaTrp(57). Expression of active MADH from P. denitrificans requires four other genes in addition to those that encode the polypeptides of the MADH alpha(2)beta(2) heterotetramer. One of these, mauG, has been shown to be involved in TTQ biogenesis. It contains two covalently attached c-type hemes but exhibits unusual properties compared to c-type cytochromes and diheme cytochrome c peroxidases, to which it has some sequence similarity. To test the role that MauG may play in TTQ maturation, the predicted proximal histidine to each heme (His(35) and His(205)) has each been mutated to valine, and wild-type MADH was expressed in the background of these two mauG mutants. The resultant MADH has been characterized by mass spectrometry and electrophoretic and kinetic analyses. The majority species is a TTQ biogenesis intermediate containing a monohydroxylated betaTrp(57), suggesting that this is the natural substrate for MauG. Previous work has shown that MADH mutated at the betaTrp(108) position (the non-oxygenated TTQ partner) is predominantly also this intermediate, and work on these mutants is extended and compared to the MADH expressed in the background of the histidine to valine mauG mutations. In this study, it is unequivocally demonstrated that MauG is required to initiate the formation of the TTQ cross-link, the conversion of a single hydroxyl located on betaTrp(57) to a carbonyl, and the incorporation of the second oxygen into the TTQ ring to complete TTQ biogenesis. The properties of MauG, which are atypical of c-type cytochromes, are discussed in the context of these final stages of TTQ biogenesis.  相似文献   

5.
The quinoprotein aromatic amine dehydrogenase (AADH) uses a covalently bound tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ) cofactor to oxidatively deaminate primary aromatic amines. Recent crystal structures have provided insight into the reductive half-reaction. In contrast, no atomic details are available for the oxidative half-reaction. The TTQ O7 hydroxyl group is protonated during reduction, but it is unclear how this proton can be removed during the oxidative half-reaction. Furthermore, compared with the electron transfer from the N-quinol form, electron transfer from the non-physiological O-quinol form to azurin is significantly slower. Here we report crystal structures of the O-quinol, N-quinol, and N-semiquinone forms of AADH. A comparison of oxidized and substrate reduced AADH species reveals changes in the TTQ-containing subunit, extending from residues in the immediate vicinity of the N-quinol to the putative azurin docking site, suggesting a mechanism whereby TTQ redox state influences interprotein electron transfer. In contrast, chemical reduction of the TTQ center has no significant effect on protein conformation. Furthermore, structural reorganization upon substrate reduction places a water molecule near TTQ O7 where it can act as proton acceptor. The structure of the N-semiquinone, however, is essentially similar to oxidized AADH. Surprisingly, in the presence of substrate a covalent N-semiquinone substrate adduct is observed. To our knowledge this is the first detailed insight into a complex, branching mechanism of quinone oxidation where significant structural reorganization upon reduction of the quinone center directly influences formation of the electron transfer complex and nature of the electron transfer process.  相似文献   

6.
Para-substituted benzylamines are poor reactivity probes for structure-reactivity studies with TTQ-dependent aromatic amine dehydrogenase (AADH). In this study, we combine kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) with structure-reactivity studies to show that para-substituted benzylamines are good reactivity probes of TTQ mechanism with the isolated TTQ-containing subunit of AADH. Contrary to the TTQ-containing subunit of methylamine dehydrogenase (MADH), which is catalytically inactive, the small subunit of AADH catalyzes the oxidative deamination of a variety of amine substrates. Observed rate constants are second order with respect to substrate and inhibitor (phenylhydrazine) concentration. Kinetic studies with para-substituted benzylamines and their dideuterated counterparts reveal KIEs (>6) larger than those observed with native AADH (KIEs approximately unity). This is attributed to formation of the benzylamine-derived iminoquinone requiring structural rearrangement of the benzyl side chain in the active site of the native enzyme. This structural reorganization requires motions from the side chains of adjacent residues (which are absent in the isolated small subunit). The position of Phealpha97 in particular is responsible for the conformational gating (and hence deflated KIEs) observed with para-substituted benzylamines in the native enzyme. Hammett plots for the small subunit exhibit a strong correlation of structure-reactivity data with electronic substituent effects for para-substituted benzylamines and phenethylamines, unlike native AADH for which a poor correlation is observed. TTQ reduction in the isolated subunit is enhanced by electron withdrawing substituents, contrary to structure-reactivity studies reported for synthetic TTQ model compounds in which rate constants are enhanced by electron donating substituents. We infer that para-substituted benzylamines are good reactivity probes of TTQ mechanism with the isolated small subunit. This is attributed to the absence of structural rearrangement prior to H-transfer that limits the rate of TTQ reduction by para-substituted benzylamines in native enzyme.  相似文献   

7.
Aromatic amine dehydrogenase uses a tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ) cofactor to oxidatively deaminate primary aromatic amines. In the reductive half-reaction, a proton is transferred from the substrate C1 to betaAsp-128 O-2, in a reaction that proceeds by H-tunneling. Using solution studies, kinetic crystallography, and computational simulation we show that the mechanism of oxidation of aromatic carbinolamines is similar to amine oxidation, but that carbinolamine oxidation occurs at a substantially reduced rate. This has enabled us to determine for the first time the structure of the intermediate prior to the H-transfer/reduction step. The proton-betaAsp-128 O-2 distance is approximately 3.7A, in contrast to the distance of approximately 2.7A predicted for the intermediate formed with the corresponding primary amine substrate. This difference of approximately 1.0 A is due to an unexpected conformation of the substrate moiety, which is supported by molecular dynamic simulations and reflected in the approximately 10(7)-fold slower TTQ reduction rate with phenylaminoethanol compared with that with primary amines. A water molecule is observed near TTQ C-6 and is likely derived from the collapse of the preceding carbinolamine TTQ-adduct. We suggest this water molecule is involved in consecutive proton transfers following TTQ reduction, and is ultimately repositioned near the TTQ O-7 concomitant with protein rearrangement. For all carbinolamines tested, highly stable amide-TTQ adducts are formed following proton abstraction and TTQ reduction. Slow hydrolysis of the amide occurs after, rather than prior to, TTQ oxidation and leads ultimately to a carboxylic acid product.  相似文献   

8.
V L Davidson  M A Kumar  J Y Wu 《Biochemistry》1992,31(5):1504-1508
Methanol dehydrogenase activity, when assayed with phenazine ethosulfate (PES) as an electron acceptor, was inhibited by superoxide dismutase (SOD) and by Mn2+ only under aerobic conditions. Catalase, formate, and other divalent cations did not inhibit the enzyme. The enzyme also exhibited significantly higher levels of activity when assayed with PES under anaerobic conditions relative to aerobic conditions. The oxygen- and superoxide-dependent effects on methanol dehydrogenase were not observed when either Wurster's Blue or cytochrome c-55li was used as an electron acceptor. Another quinoprotein, methylamine dehydrogenase, which possesses tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ) rather than pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ) as a prosthetic group, was not inhibited by SOD or Mn2+ when assayed with PES as an electron acceptor. Spectroscopic analysis of methanol dehydrogenase provided no evidence for any oxygen- or superoxide-dependent changes in the redox state of the enzyme-bound PQQ cofactor of methanol dehydrogenase. To explain these data, a model is presented in which this cofactor reacts reversibly with oxygen and superoxide, and in which oxygen is able to compete with PES as an electron acceptor for the reduced species.  相似文献   

9.
Sun D  Chen ZW  Mathews FS  Davidson VL 《Biochemistry》2002,41(47):13926-13933
Methylamine dehydrogenase (MADH) possesses an alpha(2)beta(2) structure with each smaller beta subunit possessing a tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ) prosthetic group. Phe55 of the alpha subunit is located where the substrate channel from the enzyme surface opens into the active site. Site-directed mutagenesis of alphaPhe55 has revealed roles for this residue in determining substrate specificity and binding monovalent cations at the active site. It is now shown that the alphaF55A mutation also increases the rate of the true electron transfer (ET) reaction from O-quinol MADH to amicyanin. The reorganization energy associated with the ET reaction is decreased from 2.3 to 1.8 eV. The electronic coupling associated with the ET reaction is decreased from 12 to 3 cm(-1). The crystal structure of alphaF55A MADH in complex with its electron acceptors, amicyanin and cytochrome c-551i, has been determined. Little difference in the overall structure is seen, relative to the native complex; however, there are significant changes in the solvent content of the active site and substrate channel. The crystal structure of alphaF55A MADH has also been determined with phenylhydrazine covalently bound to TTQ in the active site. Phenylhydrazine binding significantly perturbs the orientation of the TTQ rings relative to each other. The ET results are discussed in the context of the new and old crystal structures of the native and mutant enzymes.  相似文献   

10.
Phenylhydrazine, semicarbazide, aminoguanidine, hydrazine, and hydroxylamine each irreversibly inactivated methylamine dehydrogenase from Paracoccus denitrificans and caused changes in the absorbance spectrum of the protein-bound tryptophan tryptophylquinone [TTQ] prosthetic group. Different spectral perturbations were observed on reaction with each of these inactivators. In each case a stoichiometry of 2 mol per mol of enzyme (1:1 per cofactor) was required to observe complete modification of the absorbance spectrum. Identical changes were observed in the presence and absence of oxygen. The reactions of hydrazine and hydroxylamine were very rapid, with stoichiometric inactivation occurring in less than 30 s. Inactivation by phenylhydrazine and semicarbazide exhibited apparent bimolecular kinetics and second order rate constants for inactivation, respectively, of 25 min-1 mM-1 and 39 min-1 mM-1. In contrast, inactivation by aminoguanidine exhibited saturation behavior and kinetic parameters of KI = 2.5 mM and kinact = 0.5 min-1 were obtained. Ammonium salts did not inactivate the enzyme, but were reversible competitive inhibitors with respect to methylamine. A Ki of 20 mM was obtained for ammonium chloride. A mechanism for the reactions of these compounds with the TTQ cofactor of methylamine dehydrogenase is proposed, and the relationship of these data to the mechanisms of interaction of these compounds with o-quinones and other quinoproteins which possess TTQ and other quinone cofactors is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
The diheme enzyme MauG catalyzes the posttranslational modification of a precursor protein of methylamine dehydrogenase (preMADH) to complete the biosynthesis of its protein-derived tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ) cofactor. It catalyzes three sequential two-electron oxidation reactions which proceed through a high-valent bis-Fe(IV) redox state. Tyr294, the unusual distal axial ligand of one c-type heme, was mutated to His, and the crystal structure of Y294H MauG in complex with preMADH reveals that this heme now has His-His axial ligation. Y294H MauG is able to interact with preMADH and participate in interprotein electron transfer, but it is unable to catalyze the TTQ biosynthesis reactions that require the bis-Fe(IV) state. This mutation affects not only the redox properties of the six-coordinate heme but also the redox and CO-binding properties of the five-coordinate heme, despite the 21 ? separation of the heme iron centers. This highlights the communication between the hemes which in wild-type MauG behave as a single diheme unit. Spectroscopic data suggest that Y294H MauG can stabilize a high-valent redox state equivalent to Fe(V), but it appears to be an Fe(IV)═O/π radical at the five-coordinate heme rather than the bis-Fe(IV) state. This compound I-like intermediate does not catalyze TTQ biosynthesis, demonstrating that the bis-Fe(IV) state, which is stabilized by Tyr294, is specifically required for this reaction. The TTQ biosynthetic reactions catalyzed by wild-type MauG do not occur via direct contact with the Fe(IV)═O heme but via long-range electron transfer through the six-coordinate heme. Thus, a critical feature of the bis-Fe(IV) species may be that it shortens the electron transfer distance from preMADH to a high-valent heme iron.  相似文献   

12.
It had been previously reported that aromatic amines were not substrates for the bacterial quinoprotein methylamine dehydrogenase. In this study, benzylamine-dependent activity was also not observed in the steady-state assay of this enzyme with the artificial electron acceptor phenazine ethosulfate (PES). Benzylamines did, however, stoichiometrically reduce the protein-bound tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ) prosthetic group and acted as reversible competitive inhibitors of methylamine oxidation when the enzyme was assayed with PES. When methylamine dehydrogenase activity was monitored using a steady-state assay which employed its physiological electron acceptor amicyanin instead of PES, very low but detectable benzylamine-dependent activity was observed. The reactions of a series of para-substituted benzylamines with methylamine dehydrogenase were examined. A Hammett plot of the log of Ki values for the competitive inhibition by these amines against sigma p exhibited a negative slope. Rapid kinetic measurements allowed the determination of values of k3 and Ks for the reduction of TTQ by each of these amines. A Hammett plot of log k3 versus sigma p exhibited a positive slope, which suggests that the oxidation of these amines by methylamine dehydrogenase proceeds through a carbanionic reaction intermediate. A negative slope was observed for the correlation between log Ks and sigma p. Plots of log k3 and log Ks against substituent constants which reflected either resonance or field/inductive parameters for each para substituent indicated that the magnitude of k3 was primarily influenced by field/inductive effects while Ks was primarily influenced by resonance effects. No correlation was observed between either k3 or Ks and the relative hydrophobicity of the para-substituted benzylamines or steric parameters.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
Site-directed mutagenesis was used to alter active-site residues of methylamine dehydrogenase (MADH) from Paracoccus denitrificans. Four residues of the beta subunit of MADH which are in close proximity to the tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ) prosthetic group were modified. The crystal structure of MADH reveals that each of these residues participates in hydrogen bonding interactions with other active-site residues, TTQ or water. Relatively conservative mutations which removed the potentially reactive oxygens on the side chains of Thr122, Tyr119, Asp76 and Asp32 each resulted in greatly reduced or undetectable levels of MADH production. The reduction of MADH levels was determined by assays of activity and Western blots of crude extracts with antisera specific for the MADH beta subunit. No activity or cross-reactive protein was detected in extracts of cells expressing D76N, T122A and T122C MADH mutants. Very low levels of active MADH were produced by cells expressing D32N, Y119F, Y119E and Y119K MADH mutants. The Y119F and D32N mutants were purified from cell extracts and found to be significantly less stable than wild-type MADH. Only the T122S MADH mutant was produced at near wild-type levels. Possible roles for these amino acid residues in stabilizing unusual structural features of the MADH beta subunit, protein folding and TTQ biosynthesis are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Protein-derived cofactors are formed by irreversible covalent posttranslational modification of amino acid residues. An example is tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ) found in the enzyme methylamine dehydrogenase (MADH). TTQ biosynthesis requires the cross-linking of the indole rings of two Trp residues and the insertion of two oxygen atoms onto adjacent carbons of one of the indole rings. The diheme enzyme MauG catalyzes the completion of TTQ within a precursor protein of MADH. The preMADH substrate contains a single hydroxyl group on one of the tryptophans and no crosslink. MauG catalyzes a six-electron oxidation that completes TTQ assembly and generates fully active MADH. These oxidation reactions proceed via a high valent bis-Fe(IV) state in which one heme is present as Fe(IV)=O and the other is Fe(IV) with both axial heme ligands provided by amino acid side chains. The crystal structure of MauG in complex with preMADH revealed that catalysis does not involve direct contact between the hemes of MauG and the protein substrate. Rather it is accomplished through long-range electron transfer, which presumably generates radical intermediates. Kinetic, spectrophotometric, and site-directed mutagenesis studies are beginning to elucidate how the MauG protein controls the reactivity of the hemes and mediates the long range electron/radical transfer required for catalysis. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Radical SAM enzymes and Radical Enzymology.  相似文献   

15.
The biosynthesis of methylamine dehydrogenase (MADH) from Paracoccus denitrificans requires four genes in addition to those that encode the two structural protein subunits, mauB and mauA. The accessory gene products appear to be required for proper export of the protein to the periplasm, synthesis of the tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ) prosthetic group, and formation of several structural disulfide bonds. To accomplish the heterologous expression of correctly assembled MADH, eight genes from the methylamine utilization gene cluster of P. denitrificans, mauFBEDACJG, were placed under the regulatory control of the coxII promoter of Rhodobacter sphaeroides and introduced into R. sphaeroides by using a broad-host-range vector. The heterologous expression of MADH was constitutive with respect to carbon source, whereas the native mau promoter allows induction only when cells are grown in the presence of methylamine as a sole carbon source and is repressed by other carbon sources. The recombinant MADH was localized exclusively in the periplasm, and its physical, spectroscopic, kinetic and redox properties were indistinguishable from those of the enzyme isolated from P. denitrificans. These results indicate that mauM and mauN are not required for MADH or TTQ biosynthesis and that mauFBEDACJG are sufficient for TTQ biosynthesis, since R. sphaeroides cannot synthesize TTQ. A similar construct introduced into Escherichia coli did not produce detectable MADH activity or accumulation of the mauB and mauA gene products but did lead to synthesizes of amicyanin, the mauC gene product. This finding suggests that active recombinant MADH is not expressed in E. coli because one of the accessory gene products is not functionally expressed. This study illustrates the potential utility of R. sphaeroides and the coxII promoter for heterologous expression of complex enzymes such as MADH which cannot be expressed in E. coli. These results also provide the foundation for future studies on the molecular mechanisms of MADH and TTQ biosynthesis, as well as a system for performing site-directed mutagenesis of the MADH gene and other mau genes.  相似文献   

16.
The biosynthesis of methylamine dehydrogenase (MADH) requires formation of six intrasubunit disulfide bonds, incorporation of two oxygens into residue betaTrp57 and covalent cross-linking of betaTrp57 to betaTrp108 to form the protein-derived cofactor tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ). Residues betaAsp76 and betaAsp32 are located in close proximity to the quinone oxygens of TTQ in the enzyme active site. These residues are structurally conserved in quinohemoprotein amine dehydrogenase, which possesses a cysteine tryptophylquinone cofactor. Relatively conservative betaD76N and betaD32N mutations resulted in very low levels of MADH expression. Analysis of the isolated proteins by mass spectrometry revealed that each mutation affected TTQ biogenesis. betaD76N MADH possessed the six disulfides but had no oxygen incorporated into betaTrp57 and was completely inactive. The betaD32N MADH preparation contained a major species with six disulfides but no oxygen incorporated into betaTrp57 and a minor species with both oxygens incorporated, which was active. The steady-state kinetic parameters for the betaD32N mutant were significantly altered by the mutation and exhibited a 1000-fold increase in the Km value for methylamine. These results have allowed us to more clearly define the sequence of events that lead to TTQ biogenesis and to define novel roles for aspartate residues in the biogenesis of a protein-derived cofactor.  相似文献   

17.
Li X  Fu R  Liu A  Davidson VL 《Biochemistry》2008,47(9):2908-2912
Methylamine dehydrogenase (MADH) contains the protein-derived cofactor tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ) which is generated by the posttranslational modification of two endogenous tryptophan residues. The modifications are incorporation of two oxygens into one tryptophan side chain and the covalent cross-linking of that side chain to a second tryptophan residue. This process requires at least one accessory gene, mauG. Inactivation of mauG in vivo results in production of an inactive 119 kDa tetrameric alpha 2beta 2 protein precursor of MADH with incompletely synthesized TTQ. This precursor can be converted to active MADH with mature TTQ in vitro by reaction with MauG, a 42 kDa diheme enzyme. Steady-state kinetic analysis of the MauG-dependent conversion of the precursor to mature MADH with completely synthesized TTQ yielded values of k cat of 0.20 +/- 0.01 s (-1) and K m of 6.6 +/- 0.6 microM for the biosynthetic precursor protein in an in vitro assay. In the absence of an electron donor to initiate the reaction it was possible to isolate the MauG-biosynthetic precursor (enzyme-substrate) complex in solution using high-resolution size-exclusion chromatography. This stable complex is noncovalent and could be separated into its component proteins by anion-exchange chromatography. In contrast to the enzyme-substrate complex, a mixture of MauG and its reaction product, mature MADH, did not elute as a complex during size-exclusion chromatography. The differential binding of MauG to its protein substrate and protein product of the reaction indicates that significant conformational changes in one or both of the proteins occur during catalysis which significantly affects the protein-protein interactions.  相似文献   

18.
EPR studies of the methylamine dehydrogenase (MADH)–amicyanin and MADH–amicyanin–cytochrome c551i crystalline complexes have been performed on randomly oriented microcrystals before and after exposure to the substrate, methylamine, as a function of pH. The results show that EPR signals from the redox centers present in the various proteins can be observed simultaneously. These results complement and extend earlier studies of the complexes under similar conditions that utilized single-crystal polarized absorption microspectrophotometry. The binary complex shows a blue copper axial signal, characteristic of oxidized amicyanin. After reaction of substrate with the MADH coenzyme tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ), the binary complex exhibits an equilibrium mixture of oxidized copper/reduced TTQ and reduced copper/TTQ· radical, whose ratio is dependent on the pH. In the oxidized ternary complex, the same copper axial signal is observed superimposed on the low-spin ferric heme features characteristic of oxidized cytochrome c551i. After addition of substrate to the ternary complex, a decrease of the copper signal is observed, concomitant with the appearance of the radical signal derived from the semiquinone form of TTQ. The equilibrium distribution of electrons between TTQ and copper as a function of pH is similar to that observed for the binary complex. This result was essential to establish that the copper center retains its function within the crystalline ternary complex. At high pH, with time the low-spin heme EPR features disappear and the spectrum indicates that full reduction of the complex by substrate has occurred.  相似文献   

19.
The crystal structure of an electron transfer complex of aromatic amine dehydrogenase (AADH) and azurin is presented. Electrons are transferred from the tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ) cofactor of AADH to the type I copper of the cupredoxin azurin. This structure is compared with the complex of the TTQ-containing methylamine dehydrogenase (MADH) and the cupredoxin amicyanin. Despite significant similarities between the two quinoproteins and the two cupredoxins, each is specific for its respective partner and the ionic strength dependence and magnitude of the binding constant for each complex are quite different. The AADH-azurin interface is largely hydrophobic, covering approximately 500 A(2) of surface on each molecule, with one direct hydrogen bond linking them. The closest distance from TTQ to copper is 12.6 A compared with a distance of 9.3 A in the MADH-amicyanin complex. When the MADH-amicyanin complex is aligned with the AADH-azurin complex, the amicyanin lies on top of the azurin but is oriented quite differently. Although the copper atoms differ in position by approximately 4.7 A, the amicyanin bound to MADH appears to be rotated approximately 90 degrees from its aligned position with azurin. Comparison of the structures of the two complexes identifies features of the interface that dictate the specificity of the protein-protein interaction and determine the rate of interprotein electron transfer.  相似文献   

20.
The biosynthesis of methylamine dehydrogenase (MADH) from Paracoccus denitrificans requires four genes in addition to those that encode the two structural protein subunits. None of these gene products have been previously isolated. One of these, mauG, exhibits sequence similarity to diheme cytochrome c peroxidases and is required for the synthesis of the tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ) prosthetic group of MADH. A system was developed for the homologous expression of MauG in P. denitrificans. Its signal sequence was correctly processed, and it was purified from the periplasmic cell fraction. The protein contains two covalent c-type hemes, as predicted from the deduced sequence. EPR spectroscopy reveals that the protein as isolated possesses about equal amounts of one high-spin heme with axial symmetry and one low-spin heme with rhombic symmetry. The low-spin heme contains a major and minor component suggesting a small degree of heme heterogeneity. The high-spin heme and the major low-spin heme component each exhibit resonances that are atypical of c-type hemes and dissimilar to those reported for diheme cytochrome c peroxidases. MauG exhibited only very weak peroxidase activity when assayed with either c-type cytochromes or o-dianisidine as an electron donor. Fully reduced MauG was shown to bind carbon monoxide and could be reoxidized by oxygen. The relevance of these unusual properties of MauG is discussed in the context of its role in TTQ biogenesis.  相似文献   

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