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1.
Ascorbate peroxidase (APX) is a heme-containing protein that plays a central role in scavenging H(2)O(2) in higher plants. The structure of stromal APX (sAPX) was determined at 1.6 A to an R-factor of 19.1% and an R-free-factor of 22.3%. The electrostatic potential of the gamma-channel that connects the molecular surface of sAPX to the gamma-edge of heme was more positive than that of cytosolic APX (cAPX) from pea, so sAPX might bind more easily with ascorbate than cAPX. The overall structure of sAPX was similar to those of cAPX from pea and cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP) from yeast, with a substantial difference in a loop structure located in the vicinity of the heme. The side chain of Arg169 in sAPX corresponding to His169 in cAPX and His181 in CCP extended in the opposite direction from the heme, forming two hydrogen bonds with carbonyl groups in the loop structure. The rapid inactivation of sAPX might be due to the characteristic conformation of Arg169 owing to the loop structure of sAPX.  相似文献   

2.
The crystal structures of ascorbate peroxidase (APX) and cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP) show that the active site structures are nearly identical. Both enzymes contain a His-Asp-Trp catalytic triad in the proximal pocket. The proximal Asp residue hydrogen bonds with both the His proximal heme ligand and the indole ring nitrogen of the proximal Trp. The Trp is stacked parallel to and in contact with the proximal His ligand. This Trp is known to be the site of free radical formation in CCP compound I and also is essential for activity. However, APX forms a porphyrin radical and not a Trp-centered radical, even though the His-Asp-Trp triad structure is the same in both peroxidases. We found that conversion of the proximal Trp to Phe has no effect on APX enzyme activity and that the mutant crystal structure shows that changes in the structure are confined to the site of mutation. This indicates that the paths of electron transfer in CCP and APX are distinctly different. The Trp-to-Phe mutant does alter the stability of the APX compound I porphyrin radical, by a factor of two. Electrostatic calculations and modeling studies show that a potassium cation located about 8?Å from the proximal Trp in APX, but absent in CCP, makes a significant contribution to the stability of a cation Trp radical. This underscores the importance of long-range electrostatic effects in enzyme catalyzed reactions.  相似文献   

3.
A series of ferric and ferrous derivatives of wild-type ascorbate peroxidase (APX) and of an engineered K+-site mutant of APX that has had its potassium cation binding site removed have been examined by electronic absorption and magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectroscopy at 4??°C. Wild-type ferric APX has spectroscopic properties that are very similar to those of ferric cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP) and likely exists primarily as a five-coordinate high-spin heme ligated on the proximal side by a histidine at pH 7. There is also evidence for minority contributions from six-coordinate high- and low-spin species (histidine-water, histidine-hydroxide, and bis-histidine). The K+-site mutant of APX varies considerably in the electronic absorption and MCD spectra in both the ferric and ferrous states when compared with spectra of the wild-type APX. The electronic absorption and MCD spectra of the engineered K+-site APX mutant are essentially identical to those of cytochrome b 5, a known bis-imidazole (histidine) ligated heme system. It therefore appears that the K+-site mutant of APX has undergone a conformational change to yield a bis-histidine coordination structure in both the ferric and ferrous oxidation states at neutral pH. This conformational change is the result of mutagenesis of the protein to remove the K+-binding site which is located ~8?Å from the peroxide binding pocket. Thus, mutations of protein residues on the proximal side of the heme cause changes in iron ligation on the distal side.  相似文献   

4.
Earlier work [Bonagura et al. (1996) Biochemistry 35, 6107] showed that the K+ site found in the proximal pocket of ascorbate peroxidase (APX) could be engineered into cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP). Binding of K+ at the engineered site results in a loss in activity and destabilization of the CCP compound I Trp191 cationic radical owing to long-range electrostatic effects. The engineered CCP mutant crystal structure has been refined to 1.5 A using data obtained at cryogenic temperatures which provides a more detailed basis for comparison with the naturally occurring K+ site in APX. The characteristic EPR signal associated with the Trp191 radical becomes progressively weaker as K+ is added, which correlates well with the loss in enzyme activity as [K+] is increased. These results coupled with stopped-flow studies support our earlier conclusions that the loss in activity and EPR signal is due to destabilization of the Trp191 cationic radical.  相似文献   

5.
Barrows TP  Poulos TL 《Biochemistry》2005,44(43):14062-14068
Cytochrome c (CcP) and ascorbate peroxidase (APX) are heme peroxidases which have very similar active site structures yet differ substantially in the properties of compound I, the intermediate formed upon reaction with peroxides. Although both peroxidases have a tryptophan in the proximal heme pocket, Trp191 in CcP and Trp179 in APX, only Trp191 in CcP forms a stable cation radical while APX forms the more traditional porphyrin pi-cation radical. Previous work [Barrows, T. P., et al. (2004)Biochemistry 43, 8826-8834] has shown that converting three methionine residues in the cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) proximal heme pocket to the corresponding residues in APX dramatically decreased the stability of the Trp191 radical in CcP compound I. On the basis of these results, we reasoned that replacing the analogous residues at positions 160, 203, and 204 in APX with methionine should stabilize a Trp179 radical in APX compound I. Steady- and transient-state kinetics of this mutant (designated APX3M) show a significant destabilization of the native porphyrin pi-radical, while electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) studies show an increase in the intensity of the signal at g = 2.006 with characteristics consistent with formation of a Trp radical. This hypothesis was tested by replacing Trp179 with Phe in the APX3M background. The EPR spectrum of this mutant was very similar to that of the CcP W191G mutant which is known to form a tyrosine radical. Previously published theoretical studies [Guallar, V., et al. (2003) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 100, 6998-7002] suggest that electrostatic shielding of the heme propionates also plays a role in the stability of the porphyrin radical. Arg172 in APX hydrogen bonds with one of the heme propionates. Replacing Arg172 with an asparagine residue in the APX3M background generates a mutant which no longer forms the full complement of the compound I porphyrin pi-radical. These results suggest that the electrostatics of the proximal pocket and the shielding of propionate groups by salt bridges are critical factors controlling the location of a stable compound I radical in heme peroxidases.  相似文献   

6.
We have previously shown that the K(+) site found in ascorbate peroxidase can be successfully engineered into the closely homologous peroxidase, cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP) (Bonagura, C. A. , Sundaramoorthy, M., Pappa, H. S., Patterson, W. R., and Poulos, T. L. (1996) Biochemistry 35, 6107-6115; Bonagura, C. A., Sundaramoorthy, M., Bhaskar, B., and Poulos, T. L. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 5538-5545). All other peroxidases bind Ca(2+) rather than K(+). Using the K(+)-binding CCP mutant (CCPK2) as a template protein, together with observations from structural modeling, mutants were designed that should bind Ca(2+) selectively. The crystal structure of the first generation mutant, CCPCA1, showed that a smaller cation, perhaps Na(+), is bound instead of Ca(2+). This is probably because the full eight-ligand coordination sphere did not form owing to a local disordering of one of the essential cation ligands. Based on these observations, a second mutant, CCPCA2, was designed. The crystal structure showed Ca(2+) binding in the CCPCA2 mutant and a well ordered cation-binding loop with the full complement of eight protein to cation ligands. Because cation binding to the engineered loop results in diminished CCP activity and destabilization of the essential Trp(191) radical as measured by EPR spectroscopy, these measurements can be used as sensitive methods for determining cation-binding selectivity. Both activity and EPR titration studies show that CCPCA2 binds Ca(2+) more effectively than K(+), demonstrating that an iterative protein engineering-based approach is important in switching protein cation selectivity.  相似文献   

7.
The parasitic protozoa Leishmania major produces a peroxidase (L. major peroxidase; LmP) that exhibits activities characteristic of both yeast cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP) and plant cytosolic ascorbate peroxidase (APX). One common feature is a key Trp residue, Trp(208) in LmP and Trp(191) in CCP, that is situated adjacent to the proximal His heme ligand in CCP, APX, and LmP. In CCP, Trp(191) forms a stable cationic radical after reaction with H(2)O(2) to form Compound I; in APX, the radical is located on the porphyrin ring. In order to clarify the role of Trp(208) in LmP and to further probe peroxidase structure-function relationships, we have determined the crystal structure of LmP and have studied the role of Trp(208) using electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy (EPR), mutagenesis, and enzyme kinetics. Both CCP and LmP have an extended section of β structure near Trp(191) and Trp(208), respectively, which is absent in APX. This region provides stability to the Trp(191) radical in CCP. EPR of LmP Compound I exhibits an intense and stable signal similar to CCP Compound I. In the LmP W208F mutant, this signal disappears, indicating that Trp(208) forms a stable cationic radical. In LmP conversion of the Cys(197) to Thr significantly weakens the Compound I EPR signal and dramatically lowers enzyme activity. These results further support the view that modulation of the local electrostatic environment controls the stability of the Trp radical in peroxidases. Our results also suggest that the biological role of LmP is to function as a cytochrome c peroxidase.  相似文献   

8.
 The heme enyzmes cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP) and pea cytosolic ascorbate peroxidase (APX) show a high level of sequence identity. The main difference near the active sites is the presence of a cation binding site in APX located about 1 nm from the Trp-179 side chain, which is hydrogen-bonded to Asp-208. It is possible that this difference in electrostatics provided by the protein environment is an essential determinant of the stabilization of the ion-pair or neutral form of the Trp...Asp couple in APX and CCP. Semiempirical molecular orbital calculations support the hypothesis that the position of the moving proton inside the couple influences the location of the free electron, leading to radical formation either on the heme or on the Trp side chain of these enzymes. Received, accepted: 26 November 1996  相似文献   

9.
Bhaskar B  Bonagura CA  Li H  Poulos TL 《Biochemistry》2002,41(8):2684-2693
We have previously shown that the K(+) site found in the proximal heme pocket of ascorbate peroxidase (APX) could be successfully engineered into the closely homologous cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) [Bonagura et al., (1996) Biochemistry 35, 6107-6115; Bonagura et al. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 5538-5545]. In addition, specificity could be switched to binding Ca(2+) as found in other peroxidases [Bonagura et al. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 37827-37833]. The introduction of a proximal cation-binding site also promotes conversion of the Trp191 containing cation-binding loop from a "closed" to an "open" conformer. In the present study we have changed a crucial hinge residue of the cation-binding loop, Asn195, to Pro which stabilizes the loop, albeit, only in the presence of bound K(+). The crystal structure of this mutant, N195PK2, has been refined to 1.9 A. As predicted, introduction of this crucial hinge residue stabilizes the cation-binding loop in the presence of the bound K(+). As in earlier work, the characteristic EPR signal of Trp191 cation radical becomes progressively weaker with increasing [K(+)] and the lifetime of the Trp191 radical also has been considerably shortened in this mutant. This mutant CcP exhibits reduced enzyme activity, which could be titrated to lower levels with increasing [K(+)] when horse heart cytochrome c is the substrate. However, with yeast cytochrome c as the substrate, the mutant was as active as wild-type at low ionic strength, but 40-fold lower at high ionic strength. We attribute this difference to a change in the rate-limiting step as a function of ionic strength when yeast cytochrome c is the substrate.  相似文献   

10.
Isoniazid (INH, isonicotinic acid hydrazine) is one of only two therapeutic agents effective in treating tuberculosis. This prodrug is activated by the heme enzyme catalase peroxidase (KatG) endogenous to Mycobacterium tuberculosis but the mechanism of activation is poorly understood, in part because the binding interaction has not been properly established. The class I peroxidases ascorbate peroxidase (APX) and cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) have active site structures very similar to KatG and are also capable of activating isoniazid. We report here the first crystal structures of complexes of isoniazid bound to APX and CcP. These are the first structures of isoniazid bound to any activating enzymes. The structures show that isoniazid binds close to the delta-heme edge in both APX and CcP, although the precise binding orientation varies slightly in the two cases. A second binding site for INH is found in APX at the gamma-heme edge close to the established ascorbate binding site, indicating that the gamma-heme edge can also support the binding of aromatic substrates. We also show that in an active site mutant of soybean APX (W41A) INH can bind directly to the heme iron to become an inhibitor and in a different mode when the distal histidine is replaced by alanine (H42A). These structures provide the first unambiguous evidence for the location of the isoniazid binding site in the class I peroxidases and provide rationalization of isoniazid resistance in naturally occurring KatG mutant strains of M. tuberculosis.  相似文献   

11.
Previous work [Sharp, K. H., et al. (2003) Nat. Struct. Biol. 10, 303-307] has revealed the location of the ascorbate binding site in ascorbate peroxidase and has identified hydrogen-bonding interactions to Arg172, Lys30, and the heme 6-propionate as important in formation of the enzyme-substrate complex. In this work, the individual and collective contributions of these hydrogen bond interactions have been dissected using site-directed mutagenesis, steady-state and pre-steady-state kinetics, X-ray crystallography, and modified substrate analogues. Steady-state and pre-steady-state kinetic data reveal that the hydrogen bonds to Arg172 and the heme 6-propionate play a major part in stabilization of the bound ascorbate but that the interaction with Lys30 plays only a minor role. Binding of aromatic substrates is not affected by substitutions at Arg172/Lys30. Neutralization or removal of electrostatic charge at (Lys30) or adjacent to (Lys31) the ascorbate site does not substantially disrupt the binding interaction. Substrate oxidation and reduction of Compounds I and II is still possible in the absence of Arg172, but at a much reduced level. Crystallographic data (to 1.8 A) for the R172A variant indicate that the molecular structure of the proposed [Sharp, K. H., et al. (2004) Biochemistry 43, 8644-8651] proton transfer pathway from the ascorbate to the heme is conserved, which accounts for the residual activity. The results are discussed in terms of our wider understanding of the structural features that control substrate binding specificity in other peroxidase enzymes.  相似文献   

12.
Ascorbate peroxidase from L. Major (LmAPX) is a functional hybrid between cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP) and ascorbate peroxidase (APX). We utilized point mutagenesis to investigate if a conserved proximal tryptophan residue (Trp208) among Class I peroxidase helps in controlling catalysis. The mutant W208F enzyme had no effect on both apparent dissociation constant of the enzyme-cytochrome c complex and K(m) value for cytochrome c indicating that cytochrome c binding affinity to the enzyme did not alter after mutation. Surprisingly, the mutant was 1000 times less active than the wild type in cytochrome c oxidation without affecting the second order rate constant of compound I formation. Our diode array stopped-flow spectral studies showed that the substrate unbound wild type enzyme reacts with H(2)O(2) to form compound I (compound II type spectrum), which was quite different from that of compound I in W208F mutant as well as horseradish peroxidase (HRP). The spectrum of the compound I in wild type LmAPX showed a red shift from 409 nm to 420 nm with equal intensity, which was broadly similar to those of known Trp radical. In case of compound I for W208F mutant, the peak in the Soret region was decreased in heme intensity at 409 nm and was not shifted to 420 nm suggesting this type of spectrum was similar to that of the known porphyrin pi-cation radical. In case of an enzyme-H(2)O(2)-ascorbate system, the kinetic for formation and decay of compound I and II of a mutant enzyme was almost identical to that of a wild type enzyme. Thus, the results of cytochrome c binding, compound I formation rate and activity assay suggested that Trp208 in LmAPX was essential for electron transfer from cytochrome c to heme ferryl but was not indispensable for ascorbate or guaiacol oxidation.  相似文献   

13.
Sharp KH  Moody PC  Brown KA  Raven EL 《Biochemistry》2004,43(27):8644-8651
  相似文献   

14.
Indra Singh  Kavita Shah 《Biometals》2014,27(2):247-263
Binding interactions of cadmium (Cd) with rice ascorbate peroxidase (OsAPX) in presence or absence of jasmonate was examined in-silico. OsAPX is a 250 amino acid long protein with 90 % sequence similarity to soybean-APX. The 3D model of OsAPX obtained by homology modeling using soybean APX (PDBID:1OAF) as template was associated with ?15975.85 kJ/mol energy, 100 % residues in favoured region, verify score of 0.85, ERRAT score 89.625 and a negative ProSA graph, suggesting OsAPX model to be of good quality, robust and reliable which was submitted with Protein Model Database with PMDBID: PM0078091. The rice ascorbate peroxidase ascorbate [OsAPX–Asc] complex had a substrate binding cavity involving residues at position 30KSCAPL35, 167RCH169 and 172R wherein ascorbate accommodated via three H-bonds involving 30Lys at the γ-edge of heme. 169His served as a bridge between heme-porphyrin of OsAPX and ascorbate creating a charge relay system. Cd bound in [OsAPX–Asc–Cd] complex at 29EKSCAPL35, a site similar to ascorbate binding site. The binding of Cd caused breaking of 169His bridge shifting the protein conformation. Cadmium exhibited four electrostatic interactions via 29Glu of OsAPX backbone. Docking of [OsAPX–Asc] with jasmonic acid (JA) resulted in [OsAPX–Asc–JA] complex where 4—H-bonds held JA to OsAPX in a cavity at γ-edge on the distal side of heme. The binding of [OsAPX–Asc–JA] to Cd show the metal to bind at a position other than that involved in binding of OsAPX with Cd alone. Results indicate that Cd does not replace iron or ascorbate or JA but binds to OsAPX on the surface at a separate site electrostatically. In presence of JA the interactions involved in formation of [OsAPXAsc] are restored which is otherwise altered by the presence of Cd. The formation and reformation of H-bond take place between the [OsAPX–Asc] and Cd/JA. It is the interaction between heme and ascorbate which is modulated differently in presence of Cd/JA. In absence of JA, Cd-binds to the [OsAPX–Asc] complex at the proximal end of APX near Asc-binding site, whereas in presence of JA, Cd-binds on the opposite site of the Asc-binding site involving 30Lys and 29Glu residues. In-silico binding studies well correlate with the wet-lab results where exogenous application of JA increased the activity of OsAPX in rice grown under Cd-stress. Therefore it is concluded that the activity of OsAPX in rice roots and shoots are compromised under Cd-stress alone.  相似文献   

15.
Aromatic substrate binding to peroxidases is mediated through hydrophobic and hydrogen bonding interactions between residues on the distal side of the heme and the substrate molecule. The effects of perturbing these interactions are investigated by an electronic absorption and resonance Raman study of benzohydroxamic acid (BHA) binding to a series of mutants of horseradish peroxidase isoenzyme C (HRPC). In particular, the Phe179 --> Ala, His42 --> Glu variants and the double mutant His42 --> Glu:Arg38 --> Leu are studied in their ferric state at pH 7 with and without BHA. A comparison of the data with those previously reported for wild-type HRPC and other distal site mutants reaffirms that in the resting state mutation of His42 leads to an increase of 6-coordinate aquo heme forms at the expense of the 5-coordinate heme state, which is the dominant species in wild-type HRPC. The His42Glu:Arg38Leu double mutant displays an enhanced proportion of the pentacoordinate heme state, similar to the single Arg38Leu mutant. The heme spin states are insensitive to mutation of the Phe179 residue. The BHA complexes of all mutants are found to have a greater amount of unbound form compared to the wild-type HRPC complex. It is apparent from the spectral changes induced on complexation with BHA that, although Phe179 provides an important hydrophobic interaction with BHA, the hydrogen bonds formed between His42 and, in particular, Arg38 and BHA assume a more critical role in the binding of BHA to the resting state.  相似文献   

16.
The active site architecture of Leishmania major peroxidase (LmP) is very similar with both cytochrome c peroxidase and ascorbate peroxidase. We utilized point mutagenesis to investigate if the conserved proximal methionine residues (Met248 and Met249) in LmP help in controlling catalysis. Steady-state kinetics of methionine mutants shows that ferrocytochrome c oxidation is <2% of wild type levels without affecting the second order rate constant of first phase of Compound I formation, while the activity toward a small molecule substrate, guaiacol or iodide, increases. Our diode array stopped-flow spectral studies show that the porphyrin π-cation radical of Compound I in mutant LmP is more stable than wild type enzyme. These results suggest that the electronegative sulfur atoms of the proximal pocket are critical factors for controlling the location of a stable Compound I radical in heme peroxidases and are important in the oxidation of ferrocytochrome c.  相似文献   

17.
Catalase-peroxidases (KatGs) are prokaryotic heme peroxidases with homology to yeast cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP) and plant ascorbate peroxidases (APXs). KatGs, CCP and APXs contain identical amino acid triads in the heme pocket (distal Arg/Trp/His and proximal His/Trp/Asp), but differ dramatically in their reactivities towards hydrogen peroxide and various one-electron donors. Only KatGs have high catalase activity in addition to a peroxidase activity of broad specificity. Here, we investigated the effect of mutating the conserved proximal triad on KatG catalysis. With the exception of W341F, all variants (H290Q, W341A, D402N, D402E) exhibited a catalase activity <1% of wild-type KatG and spectral properties indicating alterations in heme coordination and spin states. Generally, the peroxidase activity was much less effected by these mutations. Compared with wild-type KatG the W341F variant had a catalase and halogenation activity of about 40% and an even increased overall peroxidase activity. This variant, for the first time, allowed to monitor the hydrogen peroxide mediated transitions of ferric KatG to compound I and back to the resting enzyme. Compound I reduction by aromatic one-electron donors (o-dianisidine, pyrogallol, aniline) was not influenced by exchanging Trp by Phe. The findings are discussed in comparison with the data known from CCP and APX and a reaction mechanism for the multifunctional activity of the W341F variant is suggested.  相似文献   

18.
Catalase-peroxidases (KatGs) are heme peroxidases with homology to yeast cytochrome cperoxidase (CCP) and plant ascorbate peroxidases (APXs). KatGs exhibit a peroxidase activity of broad specificity and a high catalase activity, which strongly depends on the presence of a distal Trp as part of the conserved amino acid triad Arg-Trp-His. By contrast, both CCP and APX do not have a substantial catalase activity despite the presence of the same triad. Thus, to elucidate structure-function relationships of catalase-peroxidases (for which no crystal structure is available at the moment), we performed UV-Vis and resonance Raman studies of recombinant wild-type KatG from the cyanobacterium SynechocystisPCC 6803 and the distal side variants (His123-->Gln, Glu; Arg119-->Ala, Asn; Trp122-->Phe, Ala). The distal cavity of KatG is very similar to that of the other class I peroxidases. A H-bond network involving water molecules and the distal Trp, Arg, and His is present, which connects the distal and proximal sides of the heme pocket. However, distal mutation not only affects the heme Fe coordination state and perturbs the proximal Fe-Im bond, as previously observed for other peroxidases, but also alters the stability of the heme architecture. The charge of the distal residues appears particularly important for maintaining the heme architecture. Moreover, the Trp plays a significant role in the distal H-bonding, much more pronounced than in CCP. The relevance of these findings for the catalase activity of KatG is discussed in light of the complete loss of catalase activity in the distal Trp mutants.  相似文献   

19.
In heme peroxidases, a distal His residue plays an essential role in the initial two electron oxidation of resting state enzyme to compound I by hydrogen peroxide. A distal Arg residue assists in this process. The contributions of the charge, H-bonding capacity, size, and mobility of this Arg residue to Coprinus cinereus peroxidase (CIP) reactivity and stability have been examined by substituting Arg51 with Gln (retains H-bond donor at N epsilon position), Asn (small size, H-bond donor and acceptor), Leu (similar to Asn, but hydrophobic), and Lys (charge and H-bond donor, but at N zeta position). UV-visible spectroscopy was used to monitor pH-linked heme changes, compound I formation and reduction, fluoride binding, and thermostability. (1)H NMR spectroscopy enabled heme pocket differences in both resting and cyanide-ligated states of the enzymes to be evaluated and compared with wild-type CIP. We found that the H-bonding capacity of distal Arg is key to fast compound I formation and ligand binding to heme, whereas charge is important for lowering the pK(a) of distal His and for the binding and stabilisation of anionic ligands at heme iron. The properties of the distal Arg residue in CIP, cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP) and horseradish peroxidase (HRP) differ significantly in their pH induced transitions and dynamics.  相似文献   

20.
To investigate the molecular basis for the 100-fold slower rate of CO dissociation in ferrous peroxidases relative to myoglobin, CO dissociation rates were measured as a function of pH in the cloned cytochrome c peroxidase from yeast [CCP(MI)] and in several mutants in the heme binding pocket prepared by site-directed mutagenesis. The mutants included Asp 235----Asn; Arg 48----Lys, Leu; and His 181----Gly. Changes in the absorption spectrum with pH are consistent with conversion of the CO-ferrous CCP(MI) complex from acidic to alkaline forms by a two-proton cooperative ionization, with an apparent pKa = 7.6, analogous to that described for CCP from bakers' yeast [Iizuka, T., Makino, R., Ishimura, Y., & Yonetani, T. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 1407-1412]. The rate of CO dissociation (koff) was increased 11-fold (from 0.7 x 10(-4) to 8.0 x 10(-4) s-1) by conversion of the acidic to the alkaline form. Analogous acidic and alkaline forms of the CO complex were also observed in the mutants of CCP(MI) examined here. In the acidic form, koff was increased 5- and 20-fold when Arg 48 was replaced with Lys and Leu, respectively, while in the acidic form of mutants that possess Arg 48, koff was similar to that observed in CCP(MI). Conversion of the CO complex from the acidic to alkaline form increased koff in all the mutants, and the pH-dependent increase in koff correlated with a two-proton cooperative ionization, except in the case of His 181----Gly. In this mutant, pH-dependent increase in koff correlated with a single-proton ionization, implicating His 181 as one of the two residues that is deprotonated in the conversion of CO-ferrous CCP(MI) from acidic to alkaline forms. Only a 2.5-fold variation was observed for koff between the alkaline form of CCP(MI) and the Arg 48----Leu mutant, suggesting that the influence of Arg 48 on the rate of CO dissociation is decreased in the alkaline form by a conformational change.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

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