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1.
We have shown that many fungi (eukaryotes) exhibit distinct denitrifying activities, although occurrence of denitrification was previously thought to be restricted to bacteria (prokaryotes), and have characterized the fungal denitrification system. It comprises NirK (copper-containing nitrite reductase) and P450nor (a cytochrome P450 nitric oxide (NO) reductase (Nor)) to reduce nitrite to nitrous oxide (N(2)O). The system is localized in mitochondria functioning during anaerobic respiration. Some fungal systems further contain and use dissimilatory and assimilatory nitrate reductases to denitrify nitrate. Phylogenetic analysis of nirK genes showed that the fungal-denitrifying system has the same ancestor as the bacterial counterpart and suggested a possibility of its proto-mitochondrial origin. By contrast, fungi that have acquired a P450 from bacteria by horizontal transfer of the gene, modulated its function to give a Nor activity replacing the original Nor with P450nor. P450nor receives electrons directly from nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide to reduce NO to N(2)O. The mechanism of this unprecedented electron transfer has been extensively studied and thoroughly elucidated. Fungal denitrification is often accompanied by a unique phenomenon, co-denitrification, in which a hybrid N(2) or N(2)O species is formed upon the combination of nitrogen atoms of nitrite with a nitrogen donor (amines and imines). Possible involvement of NirK and P450nor is suggested.  相似文献   

2.
Cytochrome P450nor (P450nor) is a heme enzyme isolated from the denitrifying fungus Fusarium oxysporum and catalyzes the NO reduction to N2O. Crystal structures of the wild type and two Ser286 mutants (Ser286-->Val, Ser286-->Thr) of P450nor have been determined for the ferric resting forms at a 1.7 A resolution at cryogenic temperature (100 K). We carried out three comparative analyses: (1) between the structures of P450nor at room temperature and cryogenic temperature, (2) between the structures of P450nor and four monooxygenase P450s, and (3) between the structures of the WT and the Ser286 mutant enzymes of P450nor. Comparison of the charge distribution on the protein surface suggests that proton and electron flow to the heme site is quite different in P450nor than in monooxygenase P450s. On the basis of the mutant structures, it was found that a special hydrogen-bonding network, Wat99-Ser286-Wat39-Asp393-solvent, acts as a proton delivery pathway in NO reduction by P450nor. In addition, the positively charged cluster located beneath the B'-helix is suggested as possible NADH binding site in P450nor, from which the direct two-electron transfer to the heme site allows to generate the characteristic intermediate in the NO reduction. These structural characteristics were not observed in structures of monooxygenase P450s, implying that these are factors determining the unique NO reduction activity of P450nor.  相似文献   

3.
A soluble cytochrome P450 from the yeast Trichosporon cutaneum was purified to homogeneity, using ammonium sulfate fractionation followed by fast protein liquid chromatography (FPLC) with DEAE-cellulose and phenyl-Sepharose columns. This procedure resulted in a 45-fold increase in specific activity with an activity yield of 6.8%. One- and two-dimensional sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed that the purified enzyme was homogeneous and had a molecular mass of 45 kDa. The purified enzyme contained a heme group and had a characteristic absorption peak at 448 nm in the reduced carbon monoxide difference spectrum. This enzyme was a monomeric protein and catalyzed the conversion of salicylic acid to catechol in the presence of NADH or NADPH. The N-terminal amino acid sequence indicated that the Trichosporon cutaneum cytochrome P450 did not show homology to most eukaryotic cytochromes P450, but had a high degree of homology to one cytochrome P450, the nitric oxide reductase, of Fusarium oxysporum.  相似文献   

4.
The involvement of cytochrome P450nor (P450nor) is the most striking feature of the fungal denitrifying system, and has never been shown in bacterial systems. To establish the physiological significance of the P450nor, we constructed and investigated mutants of Fusarium oxysporum that lacked the gene for P450nor. We mutated the gene by targeted integration of a disrupted gene into the chromosome of F. oxysporum. The mutants were shown to contain neither P450nor protein nor nitric oxide (NO) reductase (Nor) activity, implying that they are indeed deficient in P450nor. These mutants had apparently lost the denitrifying activity and failed to evolve nitrous oxide (N2O) upon incubation under oxygen-limiting conditions in the presence of nitrate. Their mycelia exhibited normal levels of dissimilatory nitrite reductase (Nir) activity and were able to evolve NO under these conditions. The promoter region of the P450nor gene was fused to lacZ and introduced into the wild-type strain of F. oxysporum. The transformed strain produced β-galactosidase under denitrifying conditions as efficiently as the wild type does P450nor. These results represent unequivocal genetic evidence that P450nor is essential for the reduction of NO to N2O, the last step in denitrification by F. oxysporum. Received: 28 June 1999 / Accepted: 22 December 1999  相似文献   

5.
Arg and Lys residues are concentrated on the distal side of cytochrome P450nor (P450nor) to form a positively charged cluster facing from the outside to the inside of the distal heme pocket. We constructed mutant proteins in which the Arg and Lys residues were replaced with Glu, Gln, or Ala. The results showed that this cluster plays crucial roles in NADH interaction. We also showed that some anions such as bromide (Br(-)) perturbed the heme environment along with the reduction step in P450nor-catalyzed reactions, which was similar to the effects caused by the mutations. We determined by x-ray crystallography that a Br(-), termed an anion hole, occupies a key region neighboring heme, which is the terminus of the positively charged cluster and the terminus of the hydrogen bond network that acts as a proton delivery system. A comparison of the predicted mechanisms between the perturbations caused by Br(-) and the mutations suggested that Arg(174) and Arg(64) play a crucial role in binding NADH to the protein. These results indicated that the positively charged cluster is the unique structure of P450nor that responds to direct interaction with NADH.  相似文献   

6.
Threonine 243 of cytochrome P450nor (fungal nitric oxide reductase) corresponds to the 'conserved' Thr in the long I helix of monooxygenase cytochrome P450s. In P450nor, the replacement of Thr243 with Asn, Ala or Val makes the enzymatic activity dramatically reduce. In order to understand the roles of Thr243 in the reduction reaction of NO by P450nor, the crystal structures of three Thr243 mutants (Thr243-->Asn, Thr243-->Val, Thr243-->Ala) of P450nor were determined at a 1.4-A resolution and at cryogenic temperature. However, the hydrogen-bonding pattern in the heme pocket of these mutants is essentially similar for that of the WT enzyme. This suggests that the determination of the structure of the NADH complex of P450nor is required, in order to evaluate the role of Thr243 in its enzymatic reaction. We attempted to crystallize the NADH complex under several conditions, but have not yet been successful.  相似文献   

7.
We have reported that low levels of peroxynitrite (PN) can cause inactivation of the heme-thiolate protein prostacyclin (PGI2)-synthase by nitration of a tyrosine residue. To prove that iron catalysis is involved we studied the interaction of PN with microperoxidase and P450nor, a heme-thiolate protein of known structure. Spectral and kinetic analyses allow to conclude on a ferryl nitrogen dioxide complex as an intermediate which decomposes in the presence of an excess of PN under formation of dioxygen, nitrite, and nitrate. This occurs in a catalytic cycle which was more efficient with P450nor than with microperoxidase. If phenol was added to the reaction mixtures of PN and the ferric complexes the ratio of hydroxylated to nitrated phenols decreased compared to the metal-free system. Phenol competed with the formation of dioxygen indicating that the ferryl intermediate was involved in both pathways. One therefore can postulate that the ferryl complex reacts with phenol to give the phenoxyradical which is nitrated in the presence of nitrogen dioxide but does not give hydroxylated products as with metal-free PN. Alternately, the ferryl nitrogen dioxide complex can oxidize a second PN molecule to the radical, *OONO, which can decompose to dioxygen and NO. The latter forms N2O3, with the remaining *NO2 radical. A third pathway consists in the isomerization to nitrate which also is catalyzed by the heme proteins since the ratio of nitrite/nitrate does not change significantly during the catalytic reaction with excess of PN. Our data explain the mechanism of nitration of PGI2-synthase, suggest a role of P450nor as a PN scavenger, and favor heme-thiolate complexes for trapping PN.  相似文献   

8.
In the present review we wanted to highlight the characteristic features of cytochtome P450 NADH-NO reductase (P450nor) from Fusarium oxysporum which belongs to the heme-thiolate protein family. This enzyme catalyzes the reduction of two NO molecules to N2O. The discovery, isolation, identification and crystallography are described in detail. Special emphasis was focused on the mechanism of NO reduction and possible electronic configurations of the 444 nm intermediate were discussed. Among heme-thiolate proteins nitric oxide reductase (P450nor) is unique since it catalyzes the conversion to dinitrogen oxide as a reductive process. However, it joins the typical physical characteristics of other P450 proteins including the ferric NO complex which can be considered as the enzyme-substrate complex of the enzyme. At a closer look some of its properties like a tilted structure and a shorter Fe-N distance indicate properties for a facilitated hydride transfer from NADH. The resulting intermediate forms the product in a subsequent reaction with the NO radical. For this rate-limiting step at physiological NO levels electron transfer is postulated as a common feature with other heme-thiolate mechanisms. P450nor seems to have an important role in protecting the fungus from NO inhibition of mitochondria especially when dioxygen becomes limiting.  相似文献   

9.
Nitric oxide reductase (Nor) cytochrome P450nor (P450nor) is unique because it is catalytically self-sufficient, receiving electrons directly from NADH or NADPH. However, little is known about the direct binding of NADH to cytochrome. Here, we report that oxidized pyridine nucleotides (NAD(+) and NADP(+)) and an analogue induce a spectral perturbation in bound heme when mixed with P450nor. The P450nor isoforms are classified according to electron donor specificity for NADH or NADPH. One type (Fnor, a P450nor of Fusarium oxysporum) utilizes only NADH. We found that NAD(+) induced a type I spectral change in Fnor, whereas NADP(+) induced a reverse type I spectral change, although the K(d) values for both were comparable. In contrast, NADP(+) as well as NAD(+) caused a type I spectral change in Tnor, a P450nor isozyme from Trichosporon cutaneum that utilizes both NADH and NADPH as electron donors. The B' helix region of Tnor ((73)SAGGKAAA(80)) contains some Ala and Gly residues, whereas the sequence is replaced at a few sites with more bulky amino acid residues in Fnor ((73)SASGKQAA(80)). A single mutation (S75G) significantly improved the NADPH- dependent Nor activity of Fnor, and the overall activity was accelerated via the NADPH-enhanced reduction step. These results showed that pyridine nucleotide cofactors can bind P450nor and that only a few residues in the B' helix region determine cofactor specificity. We further showed that a poor electron donor (NADPH) could also bind Fnor, but an appropriate configuration for electron transfer is blocked by steric hindrance mainly by Ser(75) against the 2'-phosphate moiety. The present results along with previous observations together revealed a novel motif for cofactor binding.  相似文献   

10.
Human intestinal Caco-2 cells metabolize and detoxify NO via a dioxygen- and NADPH-dependent, cyanide- and CO-sensitive pathway that yields nitrate. Enzymes catalyzing NO dioxygenation fractionate with membranes and are enriched in microsomes. Microsomal NO metabolism shows apparent KM values for NO, O2, and NADPH of 0.3, 9, and 2 microM, respectively, values similar to those determined for intact or digitonin-permeabilized cells. Similar to cellular NO metabolism, microsomal NO metabolism is superoxide-independent and sensitive to heme-enzyme inhibitors including CO, cyanide, imidazoles, quercetin, and allicin-enriched garlic extract. Selective inhibitors of several cytochrome P450s and heme oxygenase fail to inhibit the activity, indicating limited roles for a subset of microsomal heme enzymes in NO metabolism. Diphenyleneiodonium and cytochrome c(III) inhibit NO metabolism, suggesting a role for the NADPH-cytochrome P450 oxidoreductase (CYPOR). Involvement of CYPOR is demonstrated by the specific inhibition of the NO metabolic activity by inhibitory anti-CYPOR IgG. In toto, the results suggest roles for a microsomal CYPOR-coupled and heme-dependent NO dioxygenase in NO metabolism, detoxification, and signal attenuation in mammalian cells.  相似文献   

11.
Cytochrome P450nor catalyzes an unusual reaction that transfers electrons from NADP/NADPH to bound heme directly. To improve the expression level of P450nor2 from Cylindrocarpon tonkinense (C.P450nor2), Escherichia coli system was utilized to substitute the yeast system we constructed for expression of the P450nor2 gene, and the protein was purified in soluble form using Ni+-NTA affinity chromatography. In contrast to P450nor from Fusarium oxysporum (F.P450nor) and P450nor1 from Cylindrocarpon tonkinense (C.P450nor1), C.P450nor2 shows a dual specificity for using NADH or NADPH as electron donors. The present study developed a computational approach in order to illustrate the coenzyme specificity of C.P450nor2 for NADH and NADPH. This study involved homology modeling of C.P450nor2 and docking analyses of NADH and NADPH into the crystal structure of F.P450nor and the predictive model of C.P450nor2, respectively. The results suggested that C.P450nor2 and F.P450nor have different coenzyme specificity for NADH and NADPH; whilst the space around the B'-helix of the C.P450nor2, especially the Ser79 and Gly81, play a crucial role for the specificity of C.P450nor2. In the absence of the experimental structure of C.P450nor2, we hope that our model will be useful to provide rational explanation on coenzyme specificity of C.P450nor2.  相似文献   

12.
The large subunit of the eukaryotic ribosome possesses a long and protruding stalk formed by the ribosomal P proteins. This structure is involved in the translation step of protein synthesis through interaction with the elongation factor 2 (EF‐2). The Trypanosoma cruzi stalk complex is composed of four proteins of about 11 kDa, TcP1α, TcP1β, TcP2α, TcP2β and a fifth TcP0 of about 34 kDa. In a previous work, a yeast two‐hybrid (Y2H) protein–protein interaction map of T. cruzi ribosomal P proteins was generated. In order to gain new insight into the assembly of the stalk, a complete interaction map was generated by surface plasmon resonance (SPR) and the kinetics of each interaction was calculated. All previously detected interactions were confirmed and new interacting pairs were found, such as TcP1β–TcP2α and TcP1β–TcP2β. Moreover P2 but not P1 proteins were able to homo‐oligomerize. In addition, the region comprising amino acids 210–270 on TcP0 was identified as the region interacting with P1/P2 proteins, using Y2H and SPR. The interaction domains on TcP2β were also mapped by SPR identifying two distinct regions. The assembly order of the pentameric complex was assessed by SPR showing the existence of a hierarchy in the association of the different P proteins forming the stalk. Finally, the TcEF‐2 gene was identified, cloned, expressed and refolded. Using SPR analysis we showed that TcEF‐2 bound with similar affinity to the four P1/P2 ribosomal P proteins of T. cruzi but with reduced affinity to TcP0. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

13.
Resonance Raman spectra are reported for both the heme domain and holoenzyme of cytochrome P450BM3 in the resting state and for the ferric NO, ferrous CO, and ferrous NO adducts in the absence and presence of the substrate, palmitate. Comparison of the spectrum of the palmitate-bound form of the heme domain with that of the holoenzyme indicates that the presence of the flavin reductase domain alters the structure of the heme domain in such a way that water accessibility to the distal pocket is greater for the holoenzyme, a result that is consistent with analogous studies of cytochrome P450cam. The data for the exogenous ligand adducts are compared to those previously reported for corresponding derivatives of cytochrome P450cam and document significant and important differences for the two proteins. Specifically, while the binding of substrate induces relatively dramatic changes in the nu(Fe-XY) modes of the ferrous CO, ferric NO, and ferrous NO derivatives of cytochrome P450cam, no significant changes are observed for the corresponding derivatives of cytochrome P450BM3 upon binding of palmitate. In fact, the spectral data for substrate-free cytochrome P450BM3 provide evidence for distortion of the Fe-XY fragment, even in the absence of substrate. This apparent distortion, which is nonexistent in the case of substrate-free cytochrome P450cam, is most reasonably attributed to interaction of the Fe-XY fragment with the F87 phenylalanine side chain. This residue is known to lie very close to the heme iron in the substrate-free derivative of cytochrome P450BM3 and has been suggested to prevent hydroxylation of the terminal, omega, position of long-chain fatty acids.  相似文献   

14.
Previous studies on mammalian peroxidases and cytochrome P450 family 4 enzymes have shown that a carboxylic group positioned close to a methyl group of the prosthetic heme is required for the formation of a covalent link between a protein carboxylic acid side chain and the heme. To determine whether there are additional requirements for covalent bond formation in the P450 enzymes, a glutamic acid or an aspartic acid has been introduced into P450(cam) close to the heme 5-methyl group. Spectroscopic and kinetic studies of the resulting G248E and G248D mutants suggest that the carboxylate group coordinates with the heme iron atom, as reported for a comparable P450(BM3) mutant [Girvan, H. M., Marshall, K. R., Lawson, R. J., Leys, D., Joyce, M. G., Clarkson, J., Smith, W. E., Cheesman, M. R., and Munro, A. W. (2004) J. Biol. Chem. 279, 23274-23286]. The two P450(cam) mutants have low catalytic activity, but in contrast to the P450(BM3) mutant, incubation of the G248E (but not G248D) mutant with camphor, putidaredoxin, putidaredoxin reductase, and NADH results in partial covalent binding of the heme to the protein. No covalent attachment is observed in the absence of camphor or any of the other reaction components. Pronase digestion of the G248E P450(cam) mutant after covalent attachment of the heme releases 5-hydroxyheme, establishing that the heme is covalently attached through its 5-methyl group as predicted by in silico modeling. The results establish that a properly positioned carboxyl group is the sole requirement for autocatalytic formation of a heme-protein link in P450 enzymes, but also show that efficient covalent binding requires placement of the carboxyl close to the methyl but in a manner that prevents strong coordination to the iron atom.  相似文献   

15.
Berka V  Tsai AL 《Biochemistry》2000,39(31):9373-9383
Endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) is a self-sufficient P450-like enzyme. A P450 reductase domain is tethered to an oxygenase domain containing the heme, the substrate (L-arginine) binding site, and a cofactor, tetrahydrobiopterin (BH(4)). This "triad", located at the distal heme pocket, is the center of oxygen activation and enzyme catalysis. To probe the relationships among these three components, we examined the binding kinetics of three different small heme ligands in the presence and absence of either L-arginine, BH(4), or both. Imidazole binding was strictly competitive with L-arginine, indicating a domain overlap. BH(4) had no obvious effect on imidazole binding but slightly increased the k(on) for L-arginine. L-Arginine decreased the k(on) and k(off) for cyanide by two orders, indicating a "kinetic obstruction" mechanism. BH(4) slightly enhanced cyanide binding. Nitric oxide (NO) binding kinetics were more complex. Increasing the L-arginine concentration decreased the NO binding affinity at equilibrium. In both BH(4)-abundant and BH(4)-deficient eNOS, half of the NO binding sites showed a sizable decrease of the binding rate by L-arginine, with the rate of NO binding at the other half of the sites remaining essentially unaltered by L-arginine, implying that the two heme centers in the eNOS dimer are functionally distinct.  相似文献   

16.
Ribosomal P proteins form a “stalk” complex in the large subunit of the ribosomes. In Trypanosoma cruzi, the etiological agent of Chagas disease, the complex is formed by five P protein members: TcP0, TcP1α, TcP1β, TcP2α and TcP2β. The TcP0 protein has 34 kDa, and TcP1 and TcP2 proteins have 10 kDa. The structure of T. cruzi P0 and the stalk complex TcP0–TcP1α–TcP1β–TcP2α–TcP2β have not been solved to date. In this work, we constructed a three-dimensional molecular model for TcP0 using homology modeling as implemented in the MODELLER 9v12 software. The model was constructed using different templates: the X-ray structures of the protein P0 from Pirococcus horikoshii, a segment from the Danio renio Ca+2/K+ channel and the C-terminal peptide (C13) from T. cruzi ribosomal P2 protein; the Cryo-EM structure of Triticum aestivum P0 protein and the NMR structure of Homo sapiens P1 ribosomal protein. TcP0 has a 200-residue-long N-terminal, which is an α/β globular stable domain, and a flexible C-terminal, 120-residue-long domain. The molecular surface electrostatic potential and hydrophobic surface were calculated. The surface properties are important for the C-terminal's antigenic properties. They are also responsible for P0-specific binding to RNA26S and the binding to the P1–P2 proteins. We explored and identified protein interactions that may be involved in conformational stability. The structure proposed in this work represents a first structural report for the TcP0 protein.  相似文献   

17.
Huang L  Abu-Soud HM  Hille R  Stuehr DJ 《Biochemistry》1999,38(6):1912-1920
The neuronal NO synthase (nNOS) heme binds self-generated NO, and this negatively regulates NO synthesis. Here we utilized the nNOS oxygenase domain and full-length nNOS along with various spectroscopic methods to (1) study formation of the six-coordinate ferrous NO complex and its conversion to a five-coordinate NO complex and (2) investigate the spectral and catalytic properties of the five-coordinate NO complex following its air oxidation to a ferric enzyme. NO bound quickly to ferrous nNOS oxygenase to form a six-coordinate NO complex (kon and koff values of 1.25 x 10(-)3 mM-1 s-1 and 128 s-1 at 10 degreesC, respectively) that was stable in the presence of L-arginine or tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) but was converted to a five-coordinate NO complex in a biphasic process (k = 0.1 and 0.01 s-1 at 10 degreesC) in the absence of these molecules. Air oxidation of the ferrous six-coordinate NO complex generated an enzyme with full activity and ferrous-CO Soret absorbance at 444 nm. In contrast, oxidation of the five-coordinate NO complex generated an inactive dimer with ferrous-CO Soret absorbance at 420 nm, indicating nNOS was converted to a ferric P420 form. Incubation of ferric P420 nNOS with BH4 alone or BH4 and L-arginine resulted in time-dependent reactivation of catalysis and associated recovery of P450 character. Thus, nNOS is a heme-thiolate protein that can undergo a reversible P450-P420 conversion. BH4 has important roles in preventing P420 formation during NO synthesis, and in rescuing P420 nNOS.  相似文献   

18.
An in silico approach was used to investigate cytochrome c and the cytochrome c gene of Phanerochaete chrysosporium. The cytochrome c gene contains four introns. Omission of the introns reveals a DNA sequence coding for a complete predicted amino acid sequence for P. chrysosporium cytochrome c consistent with those of other cytochromes c. Fungal cytochromes c often have a short N-terminal peptide preceding a Gly that is the N-terminal amino acid in many cytochromes c. Thus a microexon codes for an N-terminal pentapeptide (MetProTyrAlaPro) in P. chrysosporium that is identical to the N-terminal pentapeptide of Schizosaccharomyces pombe, a well studied yeast, the genome of which bears more similarity to higher eukaryotes than to other fungi. The fourth intron, when omitted, reveals the presence of another microexon resulting in a sequence for the C-terminal portion of the protein and the stop codon. Interestingly, two interpretations for the sequence of this intron leads to predictions that the C-terminal sequence ends with either AlaValAsn or AlaTyr. Selected aspects of the molecular architecture of cytochrome c and regulatory control elements of the P. chrysosporium cytochrome c gene were analyzed and compared to those present in other fungi and to those present in genes for lignin peroxidases and cytochromes P-450, two important families of hemeproteins produced by this fungus.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
Although the insertion of heme into proteins enables their function in bioenergetics, metabolism, and signaling, the mechanisms and regulation of this process are not fully understood. We developed a means to study cellular heme insertion into apo-protein targets over a 3-h period and then investigated how nitric oxide (NO) released from a chemical donor (NOC-18) might influence heme (protoporphyrin IX) insertion into seven targets that present a range of protein structures, heme ligation states, and functions (three NO synthases, two cytochrome P450's, catalase, and hemoglobin). NO blocked cellular heme insertion into all seven apo-protein targets. The inhibition occurred at relatively low (nM/min) fluxes of NO, was reversible, and did not involve changes in intracellular heme levels, activation of guanylate cyclase, or inhibition of mitochondrial ATP production. These aspects and the range of protein targets suggest that NO can act as a global inhibitor of heme insertion, possibly by inhibiting a common step in the process.  相似文献   

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