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1.
Recent electrostatics calculations on the cytochrome c oxidase from Paracoccus denitrificans revealed an unexpected coupling between the redox state of the heme-copper center and the state of protonation of a glutamic acid (E78II) that is 25 A away in subunit II of the oxidase. Examination of more than 300 sequences of the homologous subunit in other heme-copper oxidases shows that this residue is virtually totally conserved and is in a cluster of very highly conserved residues at the "negative" end (bacterial cytoplasm or mitochondrial matrix) of the second transmembrane helix. The functional importance of several residues in this cluster (E89II, W93II, T94II, and P96II) was examined by site-directed mutagenesis of the corresponding region of the cytochrome bo(3) quinol oxidase from Escherichia coli (where E89II is the equivalent of residue E78II of the P. denitrificans oxidase). Substitution of E89II with either alanine or glutamine resulted in reducing the rate of turnover to about 43 or 10% of the wild-type value, respectively, whereas E89D has only about 60% of the activity of the control oxidase. The quinol oxidase activity of the W93V mutant is also reduced to about 30% of that of the wild-type oxidase. Spectroscopic studies with the purified E89A and E89Q mutants indicate no perturbation of the heme-copper center. The data suggest that E89II (E. coli numbering) is critical for the function of the heme copper oxidases. The proximity to K362 suggests that this glutamic acid residue may regulate proton entry or transit through the K-channel. This hypothesis is supported by the finding that the degree of oxidation of the low-spin heme b is greater in the steady state using hydrogen peroxide as an oxidant in place of dioxygen for the E89Q mutant. Thus, it appears that the inhibition resulting from the E89II mutation is due to a block in the reduction of the heme-copper binuclear center, expected for K-channel mutants.  相似文献   

2.
Elucidating the properties of the heme Fe-Cu(B) binuclear center and the dynamics of the protein response in cytochrome c oxidase is crucial to understanding not only the dioxygen activation and bond cleavage by the enzyme but also the events related to the release of the produced water molecules. The time-resolved step-scan FTIR difference spectra show the ν(7a)(CO) of the protonated form of Tyr residues at 1247 cm(-1) and that of the deprotonated form at 1301 cm(-1). By monitoring the intensity changes of the 1247 and 1301 cm(-1) modes as a function of pH, we measured a pK(a) of 7.8 for the observed tyrosine. The FTIR spectral changes associated with the tyrosine do not belong to Tyr-237 but are attributed to the highly conserved in heme-copper oxidases Tyr-136 and/or Tyr-133 residue (Koutsoupakis, K., Stavrakis, S., Pinakoulaki, E., Soulimane, T., and Varotsis, C. (2002) J. Biol. Chem. 277, 32860-32866). The oxygenation of CO by the mixed-valence form of the enzyme revealed the formation of the ~607 nm P (Fe(IV)=O) species in the pH 6-9 range and the return to the oxidized form without the formation of the 580 nm F form. The data indicate that Tyr-237 is not involved in the proton transfer pathway in the oxygenation of CO by the mixed-valence form of the enzyme. The implication of these results with respect to the role of Tyr-136 and Tyr-133 in proton transfer/gating along with heme a(3) ring D propionate-H(2)O-ring A propionate-Asp-372 site to the exit/output proton channel (H(2)O pool) is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
The purified cytochrome aa3-type oxidase from Sulfolobus acidocaldarius (DSM 639) consists of a single subunit, containing one low-spin and one high-spin A-type hemes and copper [Anemüller, S. and Sch?fer, G. (1990) Eur. J. Biochem. 191, 297-305]. The enzyme metal centers were investigated by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy (EPR), coupled to redox potentiometry. The low-spin heme EPR signal has the following g-values: gz = 3.02, gy = 2.23 and gx = 1.45 and the high-spin heme exhibits an almost axial spectrum (gy = 6.03 and gx = 5.97, E/D < 0.002). In the enzyme as isolated the low-spin resonance corresponds to 95 +/- 10% of the enzyme concentration, while the high-spin signal accounts for only 40 +/- 5%. However, taking into account the redox potential dependence of the high-spin heme signal, this value also rises to 95 +/- 10%. The high-spin heme signal of the Sulfolobus enzyme shows spectral characteristics distinct from those of the Paracoccus denitrificans one: it shows a smaller rhombicity (gy = 6.1 and gx = 5.9, E/D = 0.004 for the P. denitrificans enzyme) and it is easier to saturate, having a half saturation power of 148 mW compared to 360 mW for the P. denitrificans protein, both at 10 K. The EPR spectrum of an extensively dialyzed and active enzyme sample containing only one copper atom/enzyme molecule does not display CuA-like resonances, indicating that this enzyme contains only a CUB-type center. The EPR-redox titration of the high-spin heme signal, which is assigned to cytochrome a3, gives a bell shaped curve, which was simulated by a non-interactive two step redox process, with reduction potentials of 200 +/- 10 mV and 370 +/- 10 mV at pH = 7.4. The decrease of the signal amplitude at high redox potentials is proposed to be due to oxidation of a CUB(I) center, which in the CUB(II) state is tightly spin-coupled to the heme a3 center. The reduction potential of the low-spin resonance was determined using the same model as 305 +/- 10 mV at pH = 7.4 by EPR redox titration. Addition of azide to the enzyme affects only the high-spin heme signal, consistent with the assignment of this resonance to heme a3. The results are discussed in the context of the redox center composition of quinol and cytochrome c oxidases.  相似文献   

4.
Pig kidney medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase is specifically alkylated at a methionine residue by treatment with iodoacetate at pH 6.6. This residue corresponds to Met249 in the human medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase sequence [Kelly, D. P., Kim, J. J., Billadello, J. J., Hainline, B. E., Chu, T. W., & Strauss, A. W. (1987) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 84, 4068-4072]. The S-carboxymethylated dehydrogenase shows a drastically lowered affinity for octanoyl-CoA (from submicromolar to 65 microM), but retains about 23% of the maximal activity of the native enzyme. In addition, alkylation perturbs the internal redox equilibrium: E.FADox.octanoyl-CoA K2 in equilibrium with E.FAD2e.octenoyl-CoA K2 ranges from about 9 for the native enzyme to about 0.2 for the homogeneously modified protein. This effect is not due to a significant change in the redox potential of the free enzyme upon alkylation. Rather, carboxymethylation weakens the preferential binding of enoyl-CoA product to the reduced enzyme (K3) compared to octanoyl-CoA binding to the oxidized dehydrogenase (K1) that is required to pull the substrate thermodynamically uphill. Thus, the ratio of dissociation constants, K1/K3, decreases from about 15,000 for the native enzyme to only 330 upon carboxymethylation of Met249. Binding studies with a variety of acyl-CoA analogues and manipulation of enzyme redox potentials by substitution of the natural prosthetic group by 8-Cl-FAD confirm the thermodynamic effects of alkylation.  相似文献   

5.
Cytochrome c oxidase contains two established proton-conducting structures, the D- and K-pathways. The role of the K-pathway appears to be to conduct the first two protons to be used in water formation, which are taken up on reduction of the oxidized enzyme. Previous computational work has suggested that Lys(I)-319 is neutral over a large pH range and in various redox states. We have constructed oxidase models in different redox states using quantum-chemically derived charge parameters for the redox metal centers. The protonation behaviour of titratable sites in the two-subunit enzyme was defined by continuum electrostatics. The calculations reported here show substantial protonation of Lys(I)-319 at neutral pH once the stable X-ray crystallographic water molecule found immediately next to it is treated explicitly. The immediate structure of the Lys(I)-319 environment is independent of redox state, but the pK(a) value of this residue changes with the redox state of the binuclear heme a3/Cu(B) site whenever that change is electrically uncompensated. Lys(I)-319 is also found to interact electrostatically with the conserved residue Glu(II)-62 in subunit II. These results are discussed in relation to the role of the K-pathway in oxidase function.  相似文献   

6.
Tripp BC  Ferry JG 《Biochemistry》2000,39(31):9232-9240
Four glutamate residues in the prototypic gamma-class carbonic anhydrase from Methanosarcina thermophila (Cam) were characterized by site-directed mutagenesis and chemical rescue studies. Alanine substitution indicated that an external loop residue, Glu 84, and an internal active site residue, Glu 62, are both important for CO(2) hydration activity. Two other external loop residues, Glu 88 and Glu 89, are less important for enzyme function. The two E84D and -H variants exhibited significant activity relative to wild-type activity in pH 7.5 MOPS buffer, suggesting that the original glutamate residue could be substituted with other ionizable residues with similar pK(a) values. The E84A, -C, -K, -Q, -S, and -Y variants exhibited large decreases in k(cat) values in pH 7.5 MOPS buffer, but only exhibited small changes in k(cat)/K(m). These same six variants were all chemically rescued by pH 7.5 imidazole buffer, with 23-46-fold increases in the apparent k(cat). These results are consistent with Glu 84 functioning as a proton shuttle residue. The E62D variant exhibited a 3-fold decrease in k(cat) and a 2-fold decrease in k(cat)/K(m) relative to those of the wild type in pH 7.5 MOPS buffer, while other substitutions (E62A, -C, -H, -Q, -T, and -Y) resulted in much larger decreases in both k(cat) and k(cat)/K(m). Imidazole did not significantly increase the k(cat) values and slightly decreased the k(cat)/K(m) values of most of the Glu 62 variants. These results indicate a primary preference for a carboxylate group at position 62, and support a proposed catalytic role for residue Glu 62 in the CO(2) hydration step, but do not definitively establish its role in the proton transport step.  相似文献   

7.
Engineering of the PhoN enzyme of Salmonella typhimurium due to its superior characteristics for bioremediation of heavy metals has been advocated by Macaskie and colleagues [Basnakova, G., Stephens, E.R., Thaller, M.C., Rossolini, G.M., Macaskie, L.E., 1998. The use of Escherichia coli bearing a phoN gene for the removal of uranium and nickel from aqueous flows. Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol. 50, 266-272]. The native enzyme hydrolyzes disparate organophosphates and exhibits optimal phosphatase activity at pH 5.5, for instance, with substrate p-nitrophenyl phosphate. Structurally guided Ile-78 was mutated using site-directed mutagenesis to Ala, Asp and His residues, with an aim to shift the optimum pH of the PhoN enzyme. Encouragingly, the I78A mutant displays significantly higher (as high as 160%) enzymatic efficiency over a broad pH range of 3.0-9.0, compared to the wild-type PhoN. The higher catalytic efficiency is due to the increase in k(cat), and can be mainly attributed to a deshielding of catalytic His-158 from the bulk-solvent. The I78D mutant possesses nearly twice the specific activity at the optimum pH of 7.0. The alkaline shift of the pH-activity profile agrees well with reasoning based on electrostatics. An increase in K(m), however, lowers the catalytic efficiency of the I78D mutant at the optimum pH. The I78H mutant, counter-intuitively, also exhibits an alkaline shift in the pH-optimum. Nonetheless, the active site scaffold in I78H mutant may not be disturbed, as similar steady-state kinetic parameters are observed for both I78H mutant and wild-type PhoN at their respective pH optima.  相似文献   

8.
Divalent metal derivatives of the hamster dihydroorotase domain.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Dihydroorotase (DHOase, EC 3.5.2.3) is a zinc enzyme that catalyzes the reversible cyclization of N-carbamyl-L-aspartate to L-dihydroorotate in the third reaction of the de novo pathway for biosynthesis of pyrimidine nucleotides. The recombinant hamster DHOase domain from the trifunctional protein, CAD, was overexpressed in Escherichia coli and purified. The DHOase domain contained one bound zinc atom at the active site which was removed by dialysis against the chelator, pyridine-2,6-dicarboxylate, at pH 6.0. The apoenzyme was reconstituted with different divalent cations at pH 7.4. Co(II)-, Zn(II)-, Mn(II)-, and Cd(II)-substituted DHOases had enzymic activity, but replacement with Ni(2+), Cu(2+), Mg(2+), or Ca(2+) ions did not restore activity. Atomic absorption spectroscopy showed binding of one Co(II), Zn(II), Mn(II), Cd(II), Ni(II), or Cu(II) to the enzyme, while Mg(II) and Ca(II) were not bound. The maximal enzymic activities of the active, reconstituted DHOases were in the following order: Co(II) --> Zn(II) --> Mn(II) --> Cd(II). These metal substitutions had major effects upon values for V(max); effects upon the corresponding K(m) values were less pronounced. The pK(a) values of the Co(II)-, Mn(II)-, and Cd(II)-substituted enzymes derived from pH-rate profiles are similar to that of Zn(II)-DHOase, indicating that the derived pK(a) value of 6.56 obtained for Zn-DHOase is not due to ionization of an enzyme-metal aquo complex, but probably a histidine residue at the active site. The visible spectrum of Co(II)-substituted DHOase exhibits maxima at 520 and 570 nm with molar extinction coefficients of 195 and 210 M(-1) cm(-1), consistent with pentacoordination of Co(II) at the active site. The spectra at high and low pH are different, suggesting that the environment of the metal binding site is different at these pHs where the reverse and forward reactions, respectively, are favored.  相似文献   

9.
Finazzi G 《Biochemistry》2002,41(23):7475-7482
The pH dependence of cytochrome b(6)f catalytic activity has been measured in whole cells of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii over the 5-8 range. An acid pH slowed the reactions occurring at the lumenal side of the complex (cytochrome b(6) and f reduction) and affected also the rate and amplitude of the slow electrogenic reaction (phase b), which is supposed to reflect transmembrane electron flow in the complex. On the other hand, a direct measurement of the transmembrane electron flow from the kinetics of cytochrome b(6) oxidation revealed no pH sensitivity. This suggests that a substantial fraction of the electrogenicity associated with cytochrome b(6)f catalysis is not due to electron transfer in the b(6) hemes but to a plastoquinol-oxidation-triggered charge movement, in agreement with previous suggestions that a redox-coupled proton pump operates in cytochrome b(6)f complex. The pH dependence of cytochrome b(6)f activity has also been measured in two mutant strains, where the glutamic 78 of the conserved PEWY sequence of subunit IV has been substituted for a basic (E78K) and a polar (E78Q) residue [Zito, F., Finazzi, G., Joliot, P., and Wollman, F.-A. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 10395-10403]. Their comparison with the wild type revealed that this residue plays an essential role in plastoquinol oxidation at low pH, while it is not required for efficient activity at neutral pH. Its involvement in gating the redox-coupled proton pumping activity is also shown.  相似文献   

10.
Flavocytochrome c-sulfide dehydrogenases (FCSDs) are complexes of a flavoprotein with a c-type cytochrome performing hydrogen sulfide-dependent cytochrome c reduction in vitro. The amino acid sequence analysis revealed that the phylogenetic relationship of different flavoproteins reflected the relationship of sulfur-oxidizing bacteria. The flavoprotein SoxF of Paracoccus pantotrophus is 29-67% identical to the flavoprotein subunit of FCSD of phototrophic sulfur-oxidizing bacteria. Purification of SoxF yielded a homogeneous emerald-green monomeric protein of 42 797 Da. SoxF catalyzed sulfide-dependent horse heart cytochrome c reduction at the optimum pH of 6.0 with a k(cat) of 3.9 s(-1), a K(m) of 2.3 microM for sulfide, and a K(m) of 116 microM for cytochrome c, as determined by nonlinear regression analysis. The yield of 1.9 mol of cytochrome c reduced per mole of sulfide suggests sulfur or polysulfide as the product. Sulfide dehydrogenase activity of SoxF was inhibited by sulfur (K(i) = 1.3 microM) and inactivated by sulfite. Cyanide (1 mM) inhibited SoxF activity at pH 6.0 by 25% and at pH 8.0 by 92%. Redox titrations in the infrared spectral range from 1800 to 1200 cm(-1) and in the visible spectral range from 400 to 700 nm both yielded a midpoint potential for SoxF of -555 +/- 10 mV versus Ag/AgCl at pH 7.5 and -440 +/- 20 mV versus Ag/AgCl at pH 6.0 (-232 mV versus SHE') and a transfer of 1.9 electrons. Electrochemically induced FTIR difference spectra of SoxF as compared to those of free flavin in solution suggested a strong cofactor interaction with the apoprotein. Furthermore, an activation/variation of SoxF during the redox cycles is observed. This is the first report of a monomeric flavoprotein with sulfide dehydrogenase activity.  相似文献   

11.
Kozachkov L  Herz K  Padan E 《Biochemistry》2007,46(9):2419-2430
The 3D structure of Escherichia coli NhaA, determined at pH 4, provided the first structural insights into the mechanism of antiport and pH regulation of a Na+/H+ antiporter. However, because NhaA is activated at physiological pH (pH 7.0-8.5), many questions pertaining to the active state of NhaA have remained open, including the physiological role of helix X. Using a structural-based evolutionary approach in silico, we identified a segment of most conserved residues in the middle of helix X. These residues were then used as targets for functional studies at physiological pH. Cysteine-scanning mutagenesis showed that Gly303, in the middle of the conserved segment, is an essential residue and Cys replacement of Lys300 retains only Li+/H+ antiporter activity, with a 20-fold increase in the apparent KM for Li+. Cys replacements of Leu296 and Gly299 increase the apparent KM of the Na+/H+ antiporter for both Na+ and Li+. Accessibility test to N-ethylmaleimide and 2-sulfonatoethyl methanethiosulfonate showed that G299C, K300C, and G303C are accessible to the cytoplasm. Suppressor mutations and site-directed chemical cross-linking identified a functional and/or structural interaction between helix X (G295C) and helix IVp (A130C). While these results were in accordance with the acid-locked crystal structure, surprisingly, conflicting data were also obtained; E78C of helix II cross-links very efficiently with several Cys replacements of helix X, and E78K/K300E is a suppressor mutation of K300E. These results reveal that, at alkaline pH, the distance between the conserved center of helix X and E78 of helix II is drastically decreased, implying a pH-induced conformational change of one or both helices.  相似文献   

12.
Mechanism of reaction of myeloperoxidase with nitrite   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Myeloperoxidase (MPO) is a major neutrophil protein and may be involved in the nitration of tyrosine residues observed in a wide range of inflammatory diseases that involve neutrophils and macrophage activation. In order to clarify if nitrite could be a physiological substrate of myeloperoxidase, we investigated the reactions of the ferric enzyme and its redox intermediates, compound I and compound II, with nitrite under pre-steady state conditions by using sequential mixing stopped-flow analysis in the pH range 4-8. At 15 degrees C the rate of formation of the low spin MPO-nitrite complex is (2.5 +/- 0.2) x 10(4) m(-1) s(-1) at pH 7 and (2.2 +/- 0.7) x 10(6) m(-1) s(-1) at pH 5. The dissociation constant of nitrite bound to the native enzyme is 2.3 +/- 0.1 mm at pH 7 and 31.3 +/- 0.5 micrometer at pH 5. Nitrite is oxidized by two one-electron steps in the MPO peroxidase cycle. The second-order rate constant of reduction of compound I to compound II at 15 degrees C is (2.0 +/- 0.2) x 10(6) m(-1) s(-1) at pH 7 and (1.1 +/- 0.2) x 10(7) m(-1) s(-1) at pH 5. The rate constant of reduction of compound II to the ferric native enzyme at 15 degrees C is (5.5 +/- 0.1) x 10(2) m(-1) s(-1) at pH 7 and (8.9 +/- 1.6) x 10(4) m(-1) s(-1) at pH 5. pH dependence studies suggest that both complex formation between the ferric enzyme and nitrite and nitrite oxidation by compounds I and II are controlled by a residue with a pK(a) of (4.3 +/- 0.3). Protonation of this group (which is most likely the distal histidine) is necessary for optimum nitrite binding and oxidation.  相似文献   

13.
NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (Complex I), the electron input enzyme in the respiratory chain of mitochondria and many bacteria, couples electron transport to proton translocation across the membrane. Complex I is a primary proton pump; although its proton translocation mechanism is yet to be known, it is considered radically different from any other mechanism known for redox-driven proton pumps: no redox centers have been found in its membrane domain where the proton translocation takes place. Here we studied the properties and the catalytic role of the enzyme-bound ubiquinone in the solubilized, purified Complex I from Escherichia coli. The ubiquinone content in the enzyme preparations was 1.3±0.1 per bound FMN residue. Rapid mixing of Complex I with NADH, traced optically, demonstrated that both reduction and re-oxidation kinetics of ubiquinone coincide with the respective kinetics of the majority of Fe-S clusters, indicating kinetic competence of the detected ubiquinone. Optical spectroelectrochemical redox titration of Complex I followed at 270-280nm, where the redox changes of ubiquinone contribute, did not reveal any transition within the redox potential range typical for the membrane pool, or loosely bound ubiquinone (ca. +50-+100mV vs. NHE, pH 6.8). The transition is likely to take place at much lower potentials (E(m) ≤-200mV). Such perturbed redox properties of ubiquinone indicate that it is tightly bound to the enzyme's hydrophobic core. The possibility of two ubiquinone-binding sites in Complex I is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Conversion of the pi subunit of prohistidine decarboxylase to the alpha beta subunits of the active enzyme proceeds by a nonhydrolytic, monovalent cation-dependent, serinolysis reaction in which the hydroxyl oxygen of serine 82 of the pi chain is incorporated into the carboxyl group at the COOH terminus (serine 81) of the beta chain. Serine-82 becomes the pyruvate residue at the NH2 terminus of the alpha chain (Recsei, P.A., Huynh, Q. K., and Snell, E.E. (1983) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 80, 973-977). The unusual reactivity of this particular -Ser-Ser- bond is demonstrated by its sensitivity to 1 M hydroxylamine, which cleaves the native proenzyme under mild conditions (pH 8.0, 37 degrees C) to yield a modified beta chain with serine hydroxamate at the COOH terminus (Ser-81) and a modified alpha chain containing serine (Ser-82 of the proenzyme) rather than pyruvate at the NH2 terminus. Neither an -Asn-Gly- bond nor other -Ser-Ser- bonds in the proenzyme were cleaved under these conditions. The reaction also did not occur with the denatured enzyme or with model peptides, indicating that the enhanced reactivity is a result of the particular conformation at this position in the native protein. The reaction with the native proenzyme proceeded optimally at pH 7.5-8.0 with a half-time (30 min) substantially less than that (3.5-4.5 h) required for the activation reaction and was not increased in rate by addition of K+. Correspondingly, preincubation of the proenzyme at pH 8.0 in the absence of both hydroxylamine and K+ modestly increased the rate of activation when K+ was subsequently added. Although these findings do not exclude other mechanisms, they are all consistent with and most easily explained by rearrangement of the pi chain to form an internal ester intermediate prior to the beta-elimination that occurs during activation to yield the alpha and beta chains of the mature enzyme.  相似文献   

16.
The reduction potentials of 22 yeast cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) mutants were determined at pH 7.0 in order to determine the effect of both heme pocket and surface mutations on the Fe(III)/Fe(II) redox couple of CcP, as well as to determine the range in redox potentials that could be obtained through point mutations in the enzyme. Spectroscopic properties of the Fe(III) and Fe(II) forms of the mutant enzymes are also reported. The mutations include variants in the distal and proximal heme pockets as well as on the enzyme surface and involve single, double, and triple point mutations. A spectrochemical redox titration technique used in this study gave an E(0') value of -189 mV for yeast CcP compared to a previously reported value of -194 mV determined by potentiometry [C.W. Conroy, P. Tyma, P.H. Daum, J.E. Erman, Biochim. Biophys. Acta 537 (1978) 62-69]. Both positive and negative shifts in the reduction potential from that of the wild-type enzyme were observed, spanning a range of 113 mV. The His-52-->Asn mutation gave the most negative potential, -259 mV, while a triple mutant in which the three distal pocket residues, Arg-48, Trp-51, and His-52, were all converted to leucine residues gave the most positive potential, -146 mV.  相似文献   

17.
FTIR difference spectroscopy is used to reveal changes in the internal structure and amino acid protonation states of bovine cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) that occur upon photolysis of the CO adduct of the two-electron reduced (mixed valence, MV) and four-electron reduced (fully reduced, FR) forms of the enzyme. FTIR difference spectra were obtained in D(2)O (pH 6-9.3) between the MV-CO adduct (heme a(3) and Cu(B) reduced; heme a and Cu(A) oxidized) and a photostationary state in which the MV-CO enzyme is photodissociated under constant illumination. In the photostationary state, part of the enzyme population has heme a(3) oxidized and heme a reduced. In MV-CO, the frequency of the stretch mode of CO bound to ferrous heme a(3) decreases from 1965.3 cm(-1) at pH* 相似文献   

18.
Redox activation of galactose oxidase: thin-layer electrochemical study   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The redox activation of galactose oxidase by various oxidants is characterized by using a unique thin-layer electrochemical cell. Activation is shown to be strictly a redox process and can be rapidly accomplished by using ferricyanide, cobalt terpyridine or tetracyanomonophenanthroline ferrate, and a control electrode to control solution potential. This oxidation is a one-electron process and does not result in modified galactose oxidase which exhibits enhanced activity. On the contrary, this oxidation is required for activity. The solution potential dependence of activity is independent of which of these mediator-titrants is used, the concentration used, and which of various substrates is used in the determination. The substrates used were acetol, dihydroxyacetone, glycerin, 2-propyn-1-ol, allyl alcohol, 2-butyne-1,4-diol, furfuryl alcohol, benzyl alcohol, 4-pyridylcarbinol, galactose, and stachyose. The E1/2 and n values obtained are 0.40 +/- 0.005 V vs. SHE and 0.9 +/- 0.1 electron at pH 7.3. E1/2 is defined as the potential at which half the maximal enzymatic activity is observed and probably reflects the E0' of the enzymic group involved in activation. A model is proposed in which activation occurs during turnover due to the redox buffering (by oxidants) of an enzymic Cu(II)/Cu(I) state which has a higher E0' than in resting galactose oxidase. The pH dependence of E1/2 is 60 mV/pH unit in the pH range 6.0-8.0. The data suggest that the deprotonation of an amino acid residue facilitates the one-electron oxidation (activation) of galactose oxidase.  相似文献   

19.
Leupeptin (acyl peptidyl-L-argininal) is a potent inhibitor of trypsin and related proteases. We analyzed the association of leupeptim with bovine trypsin kinetically, assuming that it proceeds by a pathway which involves two steps: E + I in equilibrium K1 Complex I k-2 in equilibrium k+2 Complex II. The observed dissociation constant (K1) for the first step was 1.24 X 10(-3) M (at pH 8.2 15 degrees C) and the two first-order rate constants (k+2 and k-2) were 166 s-1 and 1.75 X 10(-3.s-1, respectively (at pH 8.2, 15 degrees C). The dissociation constant (Kd) for the whole process was calculated from these parameters to be 1.34 X 10(-8) M. This value is compatible with that determined directly by an independent static method (2.36 X 10(-8) M). We also measured Kd for the leupeptine complex of anhydrotrypsin, a trypsin derivative in which the active-site hydroxyl group is missing. The observed value was about 5 orders of magnitude larger than Kd and was rather similar to K1 in native trypsin. A elupeptin isomer which contains a D-argininal residue did not show strong affinity towards trypsin. These findings suggest that complex II consists of a covalent hemiacetal adduct formed between the serine hydroxyl group in the enzyme active site and the aldehyde group in the inhibitor. The pH dependencies of the dissociation constant and other parameters show that deprotonation of the charge-relay sustem in the active site is important for the formation and stabilization of complex II.  相似文献   

20.
"Reduced minus oxidized" difference extinction coefficients Deltavarepsilon in the alpha-bands of Cyt b559 and Cyt c550 were determined by using functionally and structurally well-characterized PS II core complexes from the thermophilic cyanobacterium Thermosynechococcus elongatus. Values of 25.1+/-1.0 mM(-1) cm(-1) and 27.0+/-1.0 mM(-1) cm(-1) were obtained for Cyt b559 and Cyt c550, respectively. Anaerobic redox titrations covering the wide range from -250 up to +450 mV revealed that the heme groups of both Cyt b559 and Cyt c550 exhibit homogenous redox properties in the sample preparation used, with E(m) values at pH 6.5 of 244+/-11 mV and -94+/-21 mV, respectively. No HP form of Cyt b559 could be detected. Experiments performed on PS II membrane fragments of higher plants where the content of the high potential form of Cyt b559 was varied by special treatments (pH, heat) have shown that the alpha-band extinction of Cyt b559 does not depend on the redox form of the heme group. Based on the results of this study the Cyt b559/PSII stoichiometry is inferred to be 1:1 not only in thermophilic cyanobacteria as known from the crystal structure but also in PSII of plants. Possible interrelationships between the structure of the Q(B) site and the microenvironment of the heme group of Cyt b559 are discussed.  相似文献   

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