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1.
The P450cam monooxygenase system consists of three separate proteins: the FAD-containing, NADH-dependent oxidoreductase (putidaredoxin reductase or Pdr), cytochrome P450cam and the 2Fe2S ferredoxin (putidaredoxin or Pdx), which transfers electrons from Pdr to P450cam. Over the past few years our lab has focused on the interaction between these redox components. It has been known for some time that Pdx can serve as an effector in addition to its electron shuttle role. The binding of Pdx to P450cam is thought to induce structural changes in the P450cam active site that couple electron transfer to substrate hydroxylation. The nature of these structural changes has remained unclear until a particular mutant of P450cam (Leu358Pro) was found to exhibit spectral perturbations similar to those observed in wild type P450cam bound to Pdx. The crystal structure of the L358P variant has provided some important insights on what might be happening when Pdx docks. In addition to these studies, many Pdx mutants have been analyzed to identify regions important for electron transfer. Somewhat surprisingly, we found that Pdx residues predicted to be at the P450cam–Pdx interface play different roles in the reduction of ferric P450cam and the ferrous P450–O2 complex. More recently we have succeeded in obtaining the structure of a chemically cross-linked Pdr–Pdx complex. This fusion protein represents a valid model for the noncovalent Pdr–Pdx complex as it retains the redox activities of native Pdr and Pdx and supports monooxygenase reactions catalyzed by P450cam. The insights gained from these studies will be summarized in this review.  相似文献   

2.
The camphor monoxygenase cytochrome P450cam (CYP101) requires potassium ion (K+) to drive formation of the characteristic high-spin state of the heme Fe+3 upon substrate binding. Amide 1H, 15N correlations in perdeuterated [U-15N] CYP101 were monitored as a function of K+ concentration by 2D-TROSY-HSQC in both camphor-bound oxidized (CYP-S) and camphor- and CO-bound reduced CYP101 (CYP-S-CO). In both forms, K+-induced spectral perturbations are detected in the vicinity of the K+ binding site proposed from crystallographic structures, but are larger and more widespread structurally in CYP-S than in CYP-S-CO. In CYP-S-CO, K+-induced perturbations occur primarily near the proposed K+ binding site in the B-B' loop and B' helix, which are also perturbed by binding of effector, putidaredoxin (Pdx). The spectral effects of K+ binding in CYP-S-CO oppose those observed upon Pdxr titration. However, Pdxr titration of CYP-S-CO in the absence of K+ results in multiple conformations. The spin-state equilibrium in the L358P mutant of CYP101 is more sensitive to K+ concentration than WT CYP101, consistent with a hypothesis that L358P preferentially populates conformations enforced by Pdx binding in WT CYP101. Thallium(I), a K+ mimic, minimizes the effects of Pdx titration on the NMR spectrum of CYP-S-CO, but is competent to replace K+ in driving the formation of high-spin CYP-S. These observations suggest that the role of K+ is to stabilize conformers of CYP-S that drive the spin-state change prior to the first electron transfer, and that K+ stabilizes the CYP-S-CO conformer that interacts with Pdx. However, upon binding of Pdx, further conformational changes occur that disfavor K+ binding.  相似文献   

3.
Resonance Raman spectroscopy at 2.5cm(-1) resolution was used to probe differences in wild-type and Y96F mutant P450cam (CYP101), both with and without bound camphor or styrene substrates. In the substrate-free state, the spin state equilibrium is shifted from 6-coordinate low spin (6CLS) toward more 5-coordinate high spin (5CHS) when tyrosine-96 in the substrate pocket is replaced by phenylalanine. About 25% of substrate-free Y96F mutant is 5CHS as opposed to 8% for substrate-free wild-type P450cam. Spin equilibrium constants calculated from Raman intensities indicate that the driving force for electron transfer from putidaredoxin, the natural redox partner of P450cam, is significantly smaller on styrene binding than for camphor binding. Spectral differences suggest that there is a tilt in camphor toward the pyrrole III ring on Y96F mutation. This finding is consistent with the altered product distribution found for camphor hydroxylation by the Y96F mutant relative to the single enantiomer produced by the wild-type enzyme.  相似文献   

4.
Pochapsky SS  Pochapsky TC  Wei JW 《Biochemistry》2003,42(19):5649-5656
The camphor hydroxylase cytochrome P450(cam) (CYP101) catalyzes the 5-exo hydroxylation of camphor in the first step of camphor catabolism by Pseudomonas putida. CYP101 forms a specific electron transfer complex with its physiological reductant, the Cys(4)Fe(2)S(2) ferredoxin putidaredoxin (Pdx). Pdx, along with other proteins and small molecules, has also been shown to be an effector for turnover by CYP101. Multidimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) techniques have been used to make extensive sequential (1)H, (15)N, and (13)C resonance assignments in CYP101 that permit a more complete characterization of the complex formed by CYP101 and Pdx. NMR-detected perturbations in CYP101 upon Pdx binding encompass regions of the CYP101 remote from the putative Pdx binding site, including in particular a region of the CYP101 molecule that has been implicated in substrate access to the active site via dynamical processes. A model for effector activity is proposed in which the primary role of the effector is to prevent uncoupling (formation of reduced oxo species without formation of hydroxycamphor) by enforcing conformations of CYP101 that prevent loss of substrate and/or intermediates prior to turnover. A secondary role could also be to enforce conformations that permit efficient proton transfer into the active site for coupled proton/electron transfer.  相似文献   

5.
P450cam has long served as a prototype for the cytochrome P450 (CYP) gene family. But, little is known about how substrate enters its active site pocket, and how access is achieved in a way that minimizes exposure of the reactive heme. We hypothesize that P450cam may first bind substrate transiently near the mobile F-G helix that covers the active site pocket. Such a two-step binding process is kinetically required if P450cam rarely populates an open conformation-as suggested by previous literature and the inability to obtain a crystal structure of P450cam in an open conformation. Such a mechanism would minimize exposure of the heme by allowing P450cam to stay in a closed conformation as long as possible, since only brief flexing into an open conformation would be required to allow substrate entry. To test this model, we have attempted to dock a second camphor molecule into the crystal structure of camphor-bound P450cam. The docking identified only one potential entry site pocket, a well-defined cavity on the F-helix side of the F-G flap, 16 A from the heme iron. Location of this entry site pocket is consistent with our NMR T1 relaxation-based measurements of distances for a camphor that binds in fast exchange (active site camphor is known to bind in slow exchange). Presence of a second camphor binding site is also confirmed with [(1)H-(13)C] HSQC titrations of (13)CH3-threonine labeled P450cam. To confirm that camphor can bind outside of the active site pocket, (13)CH3-S-pyridine was bound to the heme iron to physically block the active site, and to serve as an NMR chemical shift probe. Titration of this P450cam-pyridine complex confirms that camphor can bind to a site outside the active site pocket, with an estimated Kd of 43 microM. The two-site binding model that is proposed based on these data is analogous to that recently proposed for CYP3A4, and is consistent with recent crystal structures of P450cam bound to tethered-substrates, which force a partially opened conformation.  相似文献   

6.
We have performed resonance Raman studies on ferrous NO- and CO-adducts of cytochrome P450(cam) and investigated the effects of diprotein complex formation with reduced putidaredoxin. We have found that the Fe-NO stretching mode of NO-P450(cam) can be resolved into two peaks at 551 and 561 cm(-1), and the binding of putidaredoxin increases the intensity of the high frequency component. Because the Fe-NO mode has been shown to be more sensitive to the nature of the heme proximal ligand than to the distal pocket environment, such a perturbation upon putidaredoxin binding is suggestive of changes in conformation or electronic structure that affect the proximal iron-cysteine bond. In accordance with this idea, the isotope shifts for the Fe-XO stretching and Fe-X-O bending modes (X = N or C) are insensitive to the presence or absence of putidaredoxin, indicating that the geometry of the Fe-X-O unit is not significantly altered by the complex formation. On the other hand, complex formation does induce a perturbation of the low frequency heme vibrational modes, suggesting that alterations of the heme electronic structure and/or geometry take place when putidaredoxin binds. We also find that cytochrome b(5) minimally affects the heme active site of the enzyme, although both putidaredoxin and cytochrome b(5) bind to the same or similar site on P450(cam). These observations suggest that there is a key specific interaction between P450(cam) and putidaredoxin, and that this interaction increases the population of a protein conformation that exhibits structural and/or electronic distortions of the heme group associated with the proximal side of the heme pocket and the S --> Fe electron donation. These electronic and structural changes are potentially correlated with H-bonding to the proximal cysteine.  相似文献   

7.
Mouri T  Kamiya N  Goto M 《Biotechnology letters》2006,28(18):1509-1513
Catalytic activity of a recombinant Escherichia coli whole cell biocatalyst harboring a cytochrome P450cam monooxygenase system from Pseudomonas putida coupled with enzymatic co-factor regeneration was investigated. About 0.7 μmol camphor was hydroxylated per mg dry cells at 4°C in 50 mM Tris/HCl buffer (pH 7.4) when utilizing a stable putidaredoxin (Pdx) mutant, C73S/C85S-Pdx (Cys73Ser, Cys85Ser double mutant), instead of wild-type Pdx, which was about two-fold improvement in the substrate conversion. Ten-micromole camphor was completely hydroxylated at 20°C in 6 h by 15 mg dry cell weight of whole cell biocatalyst including C73S/C85S-Pdx. Thus, modulation of protein-protein interaction in multicomponent enzymatic catalysis in whole cells is important.  相似文献   

8.
Hydrostatic pressure has been used to convert cytochrome P-450camphor to cytochrome P-420. The latter is an inactivated but soluble and undenaturated form of cytochrome P-450camphor. Using camphor analogues as probes of the active site we show that the inactivation volume change is directly correlated to the initial degree of hydration of the heme pocket. The values range between -73 ml/mol and -197 ml/mol [Di Primo, C., Hui Bon Hoa, G., Douzou, P. & Sligar, S. G. (1990) Eur. J. Biochem. 193, 383-386] for a totally hydrated (substrate-free, low-spin, six coordinated heme iron) and a non-hydrated (camphor-bound, high-spin, five coordinated heme iron) heme pocket. These results suggest that the larger value, -197 ml/mol, for the inactivation volume change is due to a hydration change of the heme pocket resulting from the displacement of the substrate during the compression and the subsequent entrance of water molecules. Similarly, the stability of the protein against compression is correlated with water accessibility to the active site. Increase in substrate mobility by loss of specific interactions with both regions of well defined secondary structure of cytochrome P-450camphor results in an increase of water accessibility and decrease of stability. Thus for camphor and adamantanone which strongly interact with the protein and exclude water from the active site [Poulos, T. L., Finzel, B. C. & Howard, A. J. (1987) J. Mol. Biol. 195, 687-700; Raag, R. & Poulos, T. L. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 917-922] the increase in stability compared to the free protein is roughly 30 kJ/mol at 20 degrees C. With smaller substrates such as norcamphor, which loosely fits into the active site and does not completely exclude water [Raag, R. & Poulos, T. L. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 917-922], the increase in stability is only 7 kJ/mol. Finally these results suggest that cytochrome P-420 induced by hydrostatic pressure is a unique form where the active site is hydrated and camphor is displaced from its binding site.  相似文献   

9.
The two-protein complex between putidaredoxin (Pdx) and cytochrome P450(cam) (CYP101) is the catalytically competent species for camphor hydroxylation by CYP101. We detected a conformational change in CYP101 upon binding of Pdx that reorients bound camphor appropriately for hydroxylation. Experimental evidence shows that binding of Pdx converts a single X-proline amide bond in CYP101 from trans or distorted trans to cis. Mutation of proline 89 to isoleucine yields a mixture of both bound camphor orientations, that seen in Pdx-free and that seen in Pdx-bound CYP101. A mutation in CYP101 that destabilizes the cis conformer of the Ile 88-Pro 89 amide bond results in weaker binding of Pdx. This work provides direct experimental evidence for involvement of X-proline isomerization in enzyme function.  相似文献   

10.
Ferrous-carbon monoxide bound form of cytochrome P450cam (CO-P450cam) has two infrared (IR) CO stretching bands at 1940 and 1932 cm(-1). The former band is dominant (>95% in area) for CO-P450cam free of putidaredoxin (Pdx), while the latter band is dominant (>95% in area) in the complex of CO-P450cam with reduced Pdx. The binding of Pdx to CO-P450cam thus evokes a conformational change in the heme active site. To study the mechanism involved in the conformational change, surface amino acid residues Arg79, Arg109, and Arg112 in P450cam were replaced with Lys, Gln, and Met. IR spectroscopic and kinetic analyses of the mutants revealed that an enzyme that has a larger 1932 cm(-1) band area upon Pdx-binding has a larger catalytic activity. Examination of the crystal structures of R109K and R112K suggested that the interaction between the guanidium group of Arg112 and Pdx is important for the conformational change. The mutations did not change a coupling ratio between the hydroxylation product and oxygen consumed. We interpret these findings to mean that the interaction of P450cam with Pdx through Arg112 enhances electron donation from the proximal ligand (Cys357) to the O-O bond of iron-bound O(2) and, possibly, promotes electron transfer from reduced Pdx to oxyP450cam, thereby facilitating the O-O bond splitting.  相似文献   

11.
We characterized electron transfer (ET) from putidaredoxin (Pdx) to the mutants of cytochrome P450(cam) (P450(cam)), in which one of the residues located on the putative binding site to Pdx, Gln360, was replaced with Glu, Lys, and Leu. The kinetic analysis of the ET reactions from reduced Pdx to ferric P450(cam) (the first ET) and to ferrous oxygenated P450(cam) (the second ET) showed the dissociation constants (K(m)) that were moderately perturbed for the Lys and Leu mutants and the distinctly increased for the Glu mutant. Although the alterations in K(m) indicate that Gln360 is located at the Pdx binding site, the effects of the Gln360 mutations (0.66-20-fold of that of wild type) are smaller than those of the Arg112 mutants (25-2500-fold of that of wild type) [Unno, M., et al. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271, 17869-17874], allowing us to conclude that Gln360 much less contributes to the complexation with Pdx than Arg112. The first ET rate (35 s(-1) for wild-type P450(cam)) was substantially reduced in the Glu mutant (5.4 s(-1)), while less perturbation was observed for the Lys (53 s(-1)) and Leu (23 s(-1)) mutants. In the second ET reaction, the retarded ET rate was detected only in the Glu mutant but not in the Lys and Leu mutants. These results showed the smaller mutational effects of Gln360 on the ET reactions than those of the Arg112 mutants. In contrast to the moderate perturbations in the kinetic parameters, the mutations at Gln360 significantly affected both the standard enthalpy and entropy of the redox reaction of P450(cam), which cause the negative shift of the redox potentials for the Fe(3+)/Fe(2+) couple by 20-70 mV. Since the amide group of Gln360 is located near the carbonyl oxygen of the amide group of the axial cysteine, it is plausible that the mutation at Gln360 perturbs the electronic interaction of the axial ligand with heme iron, resulting in the reduction of the redox potentials. We, therefore, conclude that Gln360 primarily regulates the ET reaction of P450(cam) by modulating the redox potential of the heme iron and not by the specific interaction with Pdx or the formation of the ET pathway that are proposed as the regulation mechanism of Arg112.  相似文献   

12.
During the monooxygenase reaction catalyzed by cytochrome P450cam (P450cam), a ternary complex of P450cam, reduced putidaredoxin, and d-camphor is formed as an obligatory reaction intermediate. When ligands such as CO, NO, and O2 bind to the heme iron of P450cam in the intermediate complex, the EPR spectrum of reduced putidaredoxin with a characteristic signal at 346 millitesla at 77 K changed into a spectrum having a new signal at 348 millitesla. The experiment with O2 was carried out by employing a mutant P450cam with Asp251 --> Asn or Gly where the rate of electron transfer from putidaredoxin to oxyferrous P450cam is considerably reduced. Such a ligand-induced EPR spectral change of putidaredoxin was also shown in situ in Pseudomonas putida. Mutations introduced into the neighborhood of the iron-sulfur cluster of putidaredoxin revealed that a Ser44 --> Gly mutation mimicked the ligand-induced spectral change of putidaredoxin. Arg109 and Arg112, which are in the putative putidaredoxin binding site of P450cam, were essential for the spectral changes of putidaredoxin in the complex. These results indicate that a change in the P450cam active site that is the consequence of an altered spin state is transmitted to putidaredoxin within the ternary complex and produces a conformational change of the 2Fe-2S active center.  相似文献   

13.
P450sca-2 is an industrially important enzyme that stereoselectively converts mevastatin into pravastatin. However, little information or engineering efforts have been reported for this enzyme or its redox partner. In this study, we successfully reconstituted the P450sca-2 activity in Escherichia coli by co-expression with putidaredoxin reductase (Pdr) and putidaredoxin (Pdx) from the Pseudomonas putida cytochrome P450cam system. With an HPLC-based screening assay, random mutagenesis was applied to yield a mutant (R8-5C) with a pravastatin yield of the whole-cell biotransformation 4.1-fold that of the wild type. P450sca-2 wild-type and R8-5C were characterized in terms of mevastatin binding and hydroxylation, electron transfer, and circular dichroism spectroscopy. R8-5C showed an active P450 expression level that was 3.8-fold that of the wild type, with relatively smaller changes in the apparent kcat/KM with respect to the substrate mevastatin (1.3-fold) or Pdx (1.5-fold) compared with the wild type. Thus, the increase in the pravastatin yield of the whole-cell biotransformation primarily came from the improved active P450 expression, which has resulted largely from better heme incorporation, although none of the six mutations of R8-5C are located near the heme active site. These results will facilitate further engineering of this P450sca-2 system and provide useful clues for improving other hybrid P450 systems.  相似文献   

14.
Substrate binding to cytochrome P450cam is generally considered to be a two-step process. The first step corresponds to the entrance of the substrate, camphor, into the heme pocket. The second step corresponds to a spin transition (low spin-->high spin) of the iron in the protein-substrate complex. This spin transition is related to the mobility of the substrate inside the active site [Biochim Biophys Acta 1338 (1997) 77]. Potassium cations (K(+)) have a specific effect on the spin equilibrium. This is generally attributed to the K(+) ion-induced conformational change of tyrosine 96, the hydroxyl group of which is hydrogen bonded to the keto group of camphor and results in optimum substrate orientation and reduced mobility of this substrate in the active site. In the present paper, we show that K(+) not only affects the substrate-Tyr 96 couple, but acts more globally since K(+) effects are also observed in the Tyr96Phe mutant as well as in complexes with camphor-analogues. Large compounds, that fit well in the heme pocket and bind with higher affinity than camphor, display high spin contents that are less dependent on the presence of K(+). In contrast, K(+) has a significant effect on the high spin content of substrate-cytochrome P450cam complexes with looser interactions. We conclude that large compounds with higher affinities than camphor have more van der Waals contacts with the active site residues. Their mobilities are then reduced and less dependent on the presence of K(+). In this study, we also explored, for comparison, the K(+) effect on the spin transition state of another member of the P450 superfamily, cytochrome P450lin. This effect is not as strong as those observed for cytochrome P450cam. Even though the spin equilibrium does not change dramatically in the presence of K(+) or Na(+), the value of the dissociation constant (K(d)) for linalool binding is significantly affected by ionic strength. Analysis of the thermodynamic parameters for the linalool binding strongly suggests that, similarly to our previous finding for cytochrome P450cam, electrostatic gates participate in the control of substrate access.  相似文献   

15.
Addition of alcohols to cytochrome P450cam (CYP101) was shown to release the substrate camphor from the heme pocket of the enzyme. The release of the substrate was found to be caused both due to increased solubility of the substrate in solution in presence of alcohol and due to change in the tertiary structure of the active site of the enzyme. The far-UV CD and near-UV CD spectra reveal that addition of alcohols to cytochrome P450cam cause a small change in the secondary structural elements but a significant change in the tertiary structural organization of this enzyme. The CD spectra at the heme region at various concentrations of alcohols indicate a substantial change in the tertiary structural organization around the heme moiety too. The equilibrium constant associated with the binding of camphor to Cyt P450cam is strongly dependent on the concentration of alcohols and the corresponding free energy associated with the binding is found to scale linearly with the concentration of alcohols. Kinetic experiments on binding of camphor to Cyt P450cam show that both k(on) and k(off) rate constants are strongly affected by addition of alcohols suggesting that alcohol expel camphor out of the heme cavity of Cyt P450cam by affecting tertiary structure of Cyt P450cam as well as by modifying the solubility properties of camphor in aqueous medium.  相似文献   

16.
Prasad S  Mitra S 《Biochemistry》2002,41(49):14499-14508
The role of protein structural flexibility and substrate dynamics in catalysis by cytochrome P450 enzymes is an area of current interest. We have addressed these in cytochrome P450(cam) (P450(cam)) and its Y96A mutant with camphor and its related compounds using fluorescence spectroscopy. Previously [Prasad et al. (2000) FEBS Lett. 477, 157-160], we provided experimental support to dynamic fluctuations in P450(cam), and substrate access into the active site region via the channel next to the flexible F-G helix-loop-helix segment. In the investigation described here, we show that the dynamic fluctuations in the enzyme are substrate dependent as reflected by tryptophan fluorescence quenching experiments. The orientation of tryptophan relative to heme (kappa(2)) for W42 obtained from time-resolved tryptophan fluorescence measurements show variation with type of substrate bound to P450(cam) suggesting regions distant from heme-binding site are affected by physicochemical and steric characteristics/protein-substrate interactions of P450(cam) active site. We monitored substrate dynamics in the active site region of P450(cam) by time-resolved substrate anisotropy measurements. The anisotropy decay of substrates bound to P450(cam) indicate that mobility of substrates is modulated by physicochemical and steric characteristics/protein-substrate interactions of local active site structure, and provides an understanding of factors controlling observed hydroxylated products for substrate bound P450(cam) complexes. The present study shows that P450(cam) local and peripheral structural flexibility and heterogeneity along with substrate mobility play an important role in regulating substrate binding orientation during catalysis and accommodating diverse range of substrates within P450(cam) heme pocket.  相似文献   

17.
High-resolution resonance Raman spectra of the ferric, ferrous, and carbonmonoxy (CO)-bound forms of wild-type Escherichia coli-expressed Pseudomonas putida cytochrome P450cam and its P420 form are reported. The ferric and ferrous species of P450 and P420 have been studied in both the presence and absence of excess camphor substrate. In ferric, camphor-bound, P450 (mos), the E. coli-expressed P450 is found to be spectroscopically indistinguishable from the native material. Although substrate binding to P450 is known to displace water molecules from the heme pocket, altering the coordination and spin state of the heme iron, the presence of camphor substrate in P420 samples is found to have essentially no effect on the Raman spectra of the heme in either the oxidized or reduced state. A detailed study of the Raman and absorption spectra of P450 and P420 reveals that the P420 heme is in equilibrium between a high-spin, five-coordinate (HS,5C) form and low-spin six-coordinate (LS,6C) form in both the ferric and ferrous oxidation states. In the ferric P420 state, H2O evidently remains as a heme ligand, while alterations of the protein tertiary structure lead to a significant reduction in affinity for Cys(357) thiolate binding to the heme iron. Ferrous P420 also consists of an equilibrium between HS,5C and LS,6C states, with the spectroscopic evidence indicating that H2O and histidine are the most likely axial ligands. The spectral characteristics of the CO complex of P420 are found to be almost identical to those of a low pH of Mb. Moreover, we find that the 10-ns transient Raman spectrum of the photolyzed P420 CO complex possesses a band at 220 cm-1, which is strong evidence in favor of histidine ligation in the CO-bound state. The equilibrium structure of ferrous P420 does not show this band, indicating that Fe-His bond formation is favored when the iron becomes more acidic upon CO binding. Raman spectra of stationary samples of the CO complex of P450 reveal VFe-CO peaks corresponding to both substrate-bound and substrate-free species and demonstrate that substrate dissociation is coupled to CO photolysis. Analysis of the relative band intensities as a function of photolysis indicates that the CO photolysis and rebinding rates are faster than camphor rebinding and that CO binds to the heme faster when camphor is not in the distal pocket.  相似文献   

18.
To investigate the functional and structural characterization of a crucial cytochrome P450cam (P450cam)-putidaredoxin (Pdx) complex, we utilized a mutant whose spectroscopic property corresponds to the properties of the wild type P450cam in the presence of Pdx. The 1H NMR spectrum of the carbonmonoxy adduct of the mutant, the Leu-358 --> Pro mutant (L358P), in the absence of Pdx showed that the ring current-shifted signals arising from d-camphor were upfield-shifted and observed as resolved signals, which are typical for the wild type enzyme in the presence of Pdx. Signals from the beta-proton of the axial cysteine and the gamma-methyl group of Thr-252 were also shifted upfield and down-field, respectively, in the L358P mutant as observed for Pdx-bound wild type P450cam. The close similarity in the NMR spectra suggests that the heme environment of the L358P mutant mimics that of the Pdx-bound enzyme. The functional analysis of the L358P mutant has revealed that the oxygen adduct of the L358P mutant can promote the oxygenation reaction for d-camphor with nonphysiological electron donors such as dithionite and ascorbic acid, showing that oxygenated L358P is "activated" to receive electron from the donor. Based on the structural and functional characterization of the L358P mutant, we conclude that the Pdx-induced structural changes in P450cam would facilitate the electron transfer from the electron donor, and the Pdx binding to P450cam would be a trigger for the electron transfer to oxygenated P450cam.  相似文献   

19.
The vertebrate-type Cys(4)Fe(2)S(2) ferredoxins are a class of small acidic proteins that typically act as electron shuttles between NAD(P)H-dependent reductases and monoxygenases, particularly cytochromes P450. Nuclear magnetic resonance assignments and detailed analysis of nuclear Overhauser effects permit the direct comparison of the functional C-terminal domains of three vertebrate-type ferredoxins, the mammalian adrenodoxin (Adx) and the bacterial ferredoxins putidaredoxin (Pdx) and terpredoxin (Tdx). In particular, homologous hydrogen-bonding networks involving a conserved basic residue (His 49 in Pdx, His 56 in Adx, Arg 49 in Tdx) are detailed. This hydrogen bond network appears to play a role in the mechanical transmission of redox-dependent conformational and dynamic changes from the iron-sulfur binding loop to the C-terminal domain. Hydrogen/deuterium exchange measurements have been made in Adx as a function of oxidation state for comparison with previous studies of Pdx and Tdx. The results of these measurements highlight the importance of the conserved basic residue in the linkage between oxidation state and protein dynamics. Finally, a series of mutations have been made in the C-terminal domain of Pdx, including one, Y51F, that disrupts the proposed hydrogen-bonding network without perturbing steric and hydrophobic interactions in the functional domain. Although the mutant is considerably destabilized with respect to wild-type Pdx, relatively unperturbed chemical shifts for residues near the site of the mutation and NOEs between water and Phe 51 suggest that the network is reconstituted with a solvent water in place of the tyrosine hydroxyl group in this mutant.  相似文献   

20.
The 58-kDa complex formed between the [2Fe-2S] ferredoxin, putidaredoxin (Pdx), and cytochrome P450cam (CYP101) from the bacterium Pseudomonas putida has been investigated by high-resolution solution NMR spectroscopy. Pdx serves as both the physiological reductant and effector for CYP101 in the enzymatic reaction involving conversion of substrate camphor to 5-exo-hydroxycamphor. In order to obtain an experimental structure for the oxidized Pdx-CYP101 complex, a combined approach using orientational data on the two proteins derived from residual dipolar couplings and distance restraints from site-specific spin labeling of Pdx has been applied. Spectral changes for residues in and near the paramagnetic metal cluster region of Pdx in complex with CYP101 have also been mapped for the first time using 15N and 13C NMR spectroscopy, leading to direct identification of the residues strongly affected by CYP101 binding. The new NMR structure of the Pdx-CYP101 complex agrees well with results from previous mutagenesis and biophysical studies involving residues at the binding interface such as formation of a salt bridge between Asp38 of Pdx and Arg112 of CYP101, while at the same time identifying key features different from those of earlier modeling studies. Analysis of the binding interface of the complex reveals that the side chain of Trp106, the C-terminal residue of Pdx and critical for binding to CYP101, is located across from the heme-binding loop of CYP101 and forms non-polar contacts with several residues in the vicinity of the heme group on CYP101, pointing to a potentially important role in complex formation.  相似文献   

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