首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 46 毫秒
1.
Rat liver microsomal NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase was prepared free of detectable amounts of FMN by a new procedure based on the exchange of this flavin into apoflavodoxin. The resulting FMN-free reductase binds NADP in the oxidized state with the same affinity (Kd = 5 microM) and stoichiometry (1:1 molar ratio) as does the native enzyme. Both the native and FMN-free reductase catalyze rapid reduction of ferricyanide, but the ability to reduce th 5,6-benzoflavone-inducible form of the liver microsomal cytochrome P-450 (P-450LM4) is lost upon removal of FMN. The FMN-free enzyme was reconstituted with artificial flavins which, in the free state, have oxidation-reduction potentials ranging from -152 to -290 mV, including 5-carba-5-deaza-FMN and several FMN analogs with a halogen or sulfur substituent on the dimethylbenzene portion of the ring system. Enzyme reconstituted with 5-carba-5-deaza-FMN has catalytic properties which are not significantly different from those of the FMN-free reductase, and is unable to reduce P-450LM4. On the other hand, the ability to reduce P-450LM4 and the other FMN-dependent activities of the native reductase are restored by substitution of several other analogs for FMN, but the kinetics of P-450LM4 reduction, studied under anaerobic conditions by stopped flow spectrophotometry, are significantly altered. The oxidation-reduction behavior of enzyme reconstituted with 7-nor-7-Br-FMN is substantially different from that of the native enzyme, and less thermodynamic stabilization of the semiquinone is observed with this flavin analog. In contrast, the oxidation-reduction properties of enzyme containing 8-nor-8-mercapto-FMN are similar to those of the native enzyme, but the spectral properties are significantly different. As shown in a stopped flow experiment, reduction of this FMN analog precedes reduction of P-450LM4 when a complex of the flavoprotein and P-450LM4 is allowed to react with NADPH. Our experiments support a sequence of electron transfer in this enzyme system as follows: NADPH leads to FAD leads to FMN leads to P-450. We propose that the enzyme cycles between a le- and a 3e-reduced state during turnover and that electrons are donated to acceptors via the reaction, FMNH2 leads to FMNH ..  相似文献   

2.
p-Hydroxyphenylacetate (HPA) hydroxylase (HPAH) was purified from Acinetobacter baumannii and shown to be a two-protein component enzyme. The small component (C1) is the reductase enzyme with a subunit molecular mass of 32 kDa. C1 alone catalyses HPA-stimulated NADH oxidation without hydroxylation of HPA. C1 is a flavoprotein with FMN as a native cofactor but can also bind to FAD. The large component (C2) is the hydroxylase component that hydroxylates HPA in the presence of C1. C2 is a tetrameric enzyme with a subunit molecular mass of 50 kDa and apparently contains no redox centre. FMN, FAD, or riboflavin could be used as coenzymes for hydroxylase activity with FMN showing the highest activity. Our data demonstrated that C2 alone was capable of utilizing reduced FMN to form the product 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetate. Mixing reduced flavin with C2 also resulted in the formation of a flavin intermediate that resembled a C(4a)-substituted flavin species indicating that the reaction mechanism of the enzyme proceeded via C(4a)-substituted flavin intermediates. Based on the available evidence, we conclude that the reaction mechanism of HPAH from A. baumannii is similar to that of bacterial luciferase. The enzyme uses a luciferase-like mechanism and reduced flavin (FMNH2, FADH2, or reduced riboflavin) to catalyse the hydroxylation of aromatic compounds, which are usually catalysed by FAD-associated aromatic hydroxylases.  相似文献   

3.
Trimethylamine dehydrogenase (TMADH) is an iron-sulfur flavoprotein that catalyzes the oxidative demethylation of trimethylamine to form dimethylamine and formaldehyde. It contains a unique flavin, in the form of a 6-S-cysteinyl FMN, which is bent by approximately 25 degrees along the N5-N10 axis of the flavin isoalloxazine ring. This unusual conformation is thought to modulate the properties of the flavin to facilitate catalysis, and has been postulated to be the result of covalent linkage to Cys-30 at the flavin C6 atom. We report here the crystal structures of recombinant wild-type and the C30A mutant TMADH enzymes, both determined at 2.2 A resolution. Combined crystallographic and NMR studies reveal the presence of inorganic phosphate in the FMN binding site in the deflavo fraction of both recombinant wild-type and C30A proteins. The presence of tightly bound inorganic phosphate in the recombinant enzymes explains the inability to reconstitute the deflavo forms of the recombinant wild-type and C30A enzymes that are generated in vivo. The active site structure and flavin conformation in C30A TMADH are identical to those in recombinant and native TMADH, thus revealing that, contrary to expectation, the 6-S-cysteinyl FMN link is not responsible for the 25 degrees butterfly bending along the N5-N10 axis of the flavin in TMADH. Computational quantum chemistry studies strongly support the proposed role of the butterfly bend in modulating the redox properties of the flavin. Solution studies reveal major differences in the kinetic behavior of the wild-type and C30A proteins. Computational studies reveal a hitherto, unrecognized, contribution made by the S(gamma) atom of Cys-30 to substrate binding, and a role for Cys-30 in the optimal geometrical alignment of substrate with the 6-S-cysteinyl FMN in the enzyme active site.  相似文献   

4.
The influence of the amino acid residues surrounding the flavin ring in the flavodoxin of the cyanobacterium Anabaena PCC 7119 on the electron spin density distribution of the flavin semiquinone was examined in mutants of the key residues Trp(57) and Tyr(94) at the FMN binding site. Neutral semiquinone radicals of the proteins were obtained by photoreduction and examined by electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) and hyperfine sublevel correlation (HYSCORE) spectroscopies. Significant differences in electron density distribution were observed in the flavodoxin mutants Trp(57) --> Ala and Tyr(94) --> Ala. The results indicate that the presence of a bulky residue (either aromatic or aliphatic) at position 57, as compared with an alanine, decreases the electron spin density in the nuclei of the benzene flavin ring, whereas an aromatic residue at position 94 increases the electron spin density at positions N(5) and C(6) of the flavin ring. The influence of the FMN ribityl and phosphate on the flavin semiquinone was determined by reconstituting apoflavodoxin samples with riboflavin and with lumiflavin. The coupling parameters of the different nuclei of the isoalloxazine group, as detected by ENDOR and HYSCORE, were very similar to those of the native flavodoxin. This indicates that the protein conformation around the flavin ring and the electron density distribution in the semiquinone form are not influenced by the phosphate and the ribityl of FMN.  相似文献   

5.
Chemical synthesis and some properties of 6-substituted flavins   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
A number of derivatives of riboflavin and of 3-methyllumiflavin substituted in the 6 position have been synthesized starting with 6-nitro flavins, reduction to the 6-amino flavin, and diazotization, followed by reaction with the appropriate nucleophile. The absorption spectra, oxidation-reduction potentials, and the electron spin resonance spectra of the radical cationic forms of several of these synthetic compounds have been determined, including 6-S-cysteinyl-3-methyllumiflavin and 6-S-cysteinylriboflavin. The latter has been shown to be identical with the dephosphorylated form of the aminoacyl flavin isolated from trimethylamine dehydrogenase [Steenkamp, D. J., Kenney, W. C. & Singer, T. P. (1978) J. Biol. Chem. 253, 2812-2817; Steenkamp, D. J., McIntire, W., & Kenney, W. C. (1978) J. Biol. Chem. 253, 2818-2824] in regard to absorption specturm, photochemical properties, and mobility in high-voltage electrophoresis and in thin-layer chromatography. An unusually pronounced interaction between the amino group and the isoalloxazine ring system was deduced from the absorption spectra of 6-amino-3-methyllumiflavin and 6-aminoriboflavin.  相似文献   

6.
The brewer's yeast old yellow enzyme (OYE) was reconstituted with 8-fluoro-8-demethyl FMN (8F-FMN). The reconstituted enzyme exhibited absorption maxima at 355 and 450 nm in the visible region. This reconstituted enzyme underwent no further spectral changes, showing no evidence of modification in the flavin moiety. However, when the reconstituted enzyme was subjected to specific limited proteolysis with bovine alpha-chymotrypsin, gradual spectral changes were observed with disappearance of the 355- and 450-nm bands accompanied by the appearance of a new band at 496 nm. Identical spectral changes were observed when the proteolytically cleaved OYE (nicked OYE) was reconstituted with 8F-FMN. The process associated with these spectral changes was found to be unimolecular by kinetic analysis. Reverse-phase HPLC analysis revealed that these spectral changes resulted from covalent bond formation between 8F-FMN and the protein moiety after the proteolytic cleavage of the protein into 14K and 34K fragments. The reverse-phase HPLC monitored at 490 nm showed that the chromophore with 496 nm absorption maximum was covalently attached to the 14K fragment. The amino acid sequence analysis of the flavinylated 14K fragment together with that of the 14K fragment of native OYE indicated that the N-terminal leucine of the 14K fragment is the site of flavinylation. These findings imply that the amino group of the N-terminal leucine of the 14K fragment became available as the result of proteolysis and that this amino group nucleophilically attacked the 8-position of 8F-FMN, forming a covalent bond between the flavin moiety and the 14K fragment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
S Ghisla  V Massey  K Yagi 《Biochemistry》1986,25(11):3282-3289
6-Azidoflavins, 6-thiocyanatoflavins, and 6-mercaptoflavins at the lumiflavin, riboflavin, FMN, and FAD level were prepared from the corresponding 6-aminoflavins and some of their properties investigated. They are bound tightly by apoflavin enzymes which bind either riboflavin, FMN, or FAD. 6-Azidoflavins undergo facile photolysis. One major product was identified as 6-aminoflavin. A further product, which was formed also during acid decomposition of the azide, results from opening of the flavin benzene ring and is proposed to have a lumazine structure. 6-Thiocyanatoflavins are easily converted by dithiothreitol to 6-mercaptoflavins. The latter are stabilized against dimerization in the presence of reducing thiols. 6-Mercaptoflavins have a pK of 5.9, which corresponds to ionization of the 6-SH function. The neutral form is yellow, while the anion is green, due to a long-wavelength band (lambda max approximately 600 nm) extending beyond 700 nm. These properties suggest the use of these 6-substituted flavins for probing the active site of flavin enzymes. Because their reactive substituents are in close proximity to the flavin N(5)-position, these 6-substituted derivatives should also serve as useful probes of the environment around the flavin N(5), a position known to be involved in all flavin-mediated redox processes.  相似文献   

8.
NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase releases FAD upon dilution into slightly acidic potassium bromide. Chromatography on high performance hydroxylapatite resolved the FAD-dependent reductase from holoreductase. The FAD dependence was matched by a low FAD content, with the ratio of FAD to FMN as low as 0.015. The aporeductase had negligible activity toward cytochrome c, ferricyanide, menadione, dichlorophenolindophenol, nitro blue tetrazolium, and an analogue of NADP, acetylpyridine adenine dinucleotide phosphate. A 4-min incubation in FAD reconstituted from one-half to all of the enzyme activity, as compared to the untreated reductase, depending upon the substrate. After a 2-h reconstitution, the reductase eluted from hydroxylapatite at the same location in the elution profile as did the untreated holoreductase. The reconstituted reductase had little flavin dependence, was nearly equimolar in FMN and FAD, and had close to the specific activity, per mol of flavin, of untreated reductase. The dependence upon FAD implies that FMN is not a competent electron acceptor from NADPH. Thus, the FAD site must be the only point of electron uptake from NADPH.  相似文献   

9.
The apoenzyme of NADPH oxidoreductase, 'old yellow enzyme', was reconstituted with selectively 13C-enriched flavin mononucleotides and investigated by 13C NMR spectroscopy. The 13C NMR results confirm the results obtained by 15N NMR spectroscopy and yield additional information about the coenzyme-apoenzyme interaction. A strong deshielding of the C(2) and C(4) atoms of enzyme-bound FMN both in the oxidized and reduced state is observed, which is supposed to be induced by hydrogen-bond formation between the protein and the two carbonyl groups at C(2) and C(4) of the isoalloxazine ring system. The chemical shifts of all 13C resonances of the flavin in the two-electron-reduced state indicate that the N(5) atom is sp3-hybridized. From 31P NMR measurements it is concluded that the FMN phosphate group is not accessible to bulk solvent. The unusual 31P chemical shift of FMN in old yellow enzyme seems to indicate a different binding mode of the FMN phosphate group in this enzyme as compared to the flavodoxins. The 13C and 15N NMR data on the old-yellow-enzyme--phenolate complexes show that the atoms of the phenolate are more deshielded whereas the atoms of the enzyme-bound isoalloxazine ring are more shielded upon complexation. A non-linear correlation exists between the chemical shifts of the N(5) and the N(10) atoms and the pKa value of the phenolate derivative bound to the protein. Since the chemical shifts of N(5), N(10) and C(4a) are influenced most on complexation it is suggested that the phenolate is bound near the pyrazine ring of the isoalloxazine system. 15N NMR studies on the complex between FMN and 2-aminobenzoic acid indicate that the structure of this complex differs from that of the old-yellow-enzyme--phenolate complexes.  相似文献   

10.
1. Dinitrophenylation of 2 +/- 0.2mol of residues/mol of enzyme-bound FMN resulted in the complete inactivation of the flavoenzyme L-lactate oxidase. 2. Hydrolysates of the inactivated enzyme contained 1mol each of Nim-Dnp-histidine (abbreviation: Dnp-,2,4-dinitrophenyl-; Nim indicates that either of the N atoms in the imidazole ring is substituted) and epsilon-Dnp-lysine/mol of FMN. 3. Competitive inhibitors decreased the extent of inactivation to a 10% loss of activity, and dinitrophenylation was decreased from 2 to approx. 0.5mol/mol of FMN. Only Nim-Dnp-histidine was detected in the hydrolysates. 4. Although the dinitrophenylated enzyme did not possess enzyme activitiy, L-lactate reduced approx. 50% of the enzyme-bound flavin slowly (0.6min-1), and approx. 50% of the flavin in the modified enzyme-bound flavin slowly (0.6min-1), and approx. 50% of the flavin in the modified enzyme formed a complex with bisulphite. 6. The modified enzyme (2mol of Dnp/mol of FMN) was unable to bind substrate analogues and competitive inhibitors.  相似文献   

11.
Ferric methemoglobin is reduced to its ferrous form by photoirradiation either by direct photoexcitation of the heme portion to induce electron transfer from the surrounding media (Sakai at al. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 14595-14602) or by an indirect electron transfer from a photochemically reduced electron mediator such as flavin. In this research, we studied the mechanism and optimal condition that facilitates photoreduction of flavin mononucleotide (FMN) to FMNH(2) by irradiation of visible light, and the succeeding reduction of concentrated metHb in phospholipid vesicles to restore its O(2) binding ability. Visible light irradiation (435 nm) of a metHb solution containing FMN and an electron donor such as EDTA showed a significantly fast reduction to ferrous Hb with a quantum yield (Phi) of 0.17, that is higher than the method of direct photoexcitation of heme (Phi = 0.006). Electron transfer from a donor molecule to metHb via FMN was completed within 30 ns. Native-PAGE and IEF electrophoresis indicated no chemical modification of the surface of the reduced Hb. Coencapsulation of concentrated Hb solution (35 g/dL) and the FMN/EDTA system in vesicles covered with a phospholipid bilayer membrane (Hb-vesicles, HbV, diameter: 250 nm) facilitated the metHb photoreduction even under aerobic conditions, and the reduced HbV restored the reversible O(2) binding property. A concentrated HbV suspension ([Hb] = 8 g/dL) was sandwiched with two glass plates to form a liquid layer with the thickness of about 10 microm (close to capillary diameter in tissue, 5 microm), and visible light irradiation (221 mW/cm(2)) completed 100% metHb photoreduction within 20 s. The photoreduced FMNH(2) reacted with O(2) to produce H(2)O(2), which was detected by the fluorescence measurement of the reaction of H(2)O(2) and p-nitrophenylacetic acid. However, the amount of H(2)O(2) generated during the photoreduction of HbV was significantly reduced in comparison with the homogeneous Hb solution, indicating that the photoreduced FMNH(2) was effectively consumed during the metHb reduction in a highly concentrated condition inside the HbV nanoparticles.  相似文献   

12.
Na+-translocating NADH:quinone oxidoreductase (NQR) is a redox-driven sodium pump operating in the respiratory chain of various bacteria, including pathogenic species. The enzyme has a unique set of redox active prosthetic groups, which includes two covalently bound flavin mononucleotide (FMN) residues attached to threonine residues in subunits NqrB and NqrC. The reason of FMN covalent bonding in the subunits has not been established yet. In the current work, binding of free FMN to the apo-form of NqrC from Vibrio harveyi was studied showing very low affinity of NqrC to FMN in the absence of its covalent bonding. To study structural aspects of flavin binding in NqrC, its holo-form was crystallized and its 3D structure was solved at 1.56 Å resolution. It was found that the isoalloxazine moiety of the FMN residue is buried in a hydrophobic cavity and that its pyrimidine ring is squeezed between hydrophobic amino acid residues while its benzene ring is extended from the protein surroundings. This structure of the flavin-binding pocket appears to provide flexibility of the benzene ring, which can help the FMN residue to take the bended conformation and thus to stabilize the one-electron reduced form of the prosthetic group. These properties may also lead to relatively weak noncovalent binding of the flavin. This fact along with periplasmic location of the FMN-binding domains in the vast majority of NqrC-like proteins may explain the necessity of the covalent bonding of this prosthetic group to prevent its loss to the external medium.  相似文献   

13.
31P NMR spectroscopy has been utilized in conjunction with site-directed mutagenesis and phospholipid analysis to determine structural aspects of the prosthetic flavins, FAD and FMN, of NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase. Comparisons are made among detergent-solubilized and protease (steapsin)-solubilized preparations of porcine liver reductases, showing unequivocally that the 31P NMR signals at approximately 0.0 ppm in the detergent-solubilized, hydrophobic form are attributable to phospholipids. By extraction and TLC analysis, the phospholipid contents of detergent-solubilized rat liver reductase, both tissue-purified and Escherichia coli-expressed, have been determined to reflect the membranes from which the enzyme was extracted. In addition, the cloned, wild-type NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase exhibits an additional pair of signals downfield of the normal FAD pyrophosphate resonances reported by Otvos et al. [(1986) Biochemistry 25, 7220-7228], but these signals are not observed with tissue-purified or mutant enzyme preparations. The Tyr140----Asp140 mutant, which exhibits only 20% of wild-type activity, displays no gross changes in 31P NMR spectra. However, the Tyr178----Asp178 mutant, which has no catalytic activity and does not bind FMN, exhibits no FMN 31P NMR signal and a normal, but low intensity, pair of signals for FAD. The latter experiments, taking advantage of mutations in residues putatively on either side of the FMN isoalloxazine ring, suggest subtle to severe changes in the binding of the flavin prosthetic groups and, perhaps, cooperative interactions of flavin binding to NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase.  相似文献   

14.
B Lei  M Liu  S Huang    S C Tu 《Journal of bacteriology》1994,176(12):3552-3558
NAD(P)H-flavin oxidoreductases (flavin reductases) from luminous bacteria catalyze the reduction of flavin by NAD(P)H and are believed to provide the reduced form of flavin mononucleotide (FMN) for luciferase in the bioluminescence reaction. By using an oligonucleotide probe based on the partial N-terminal amino acid sequence of the Vibrio harveyi NADPH-FMN oxidoreductase (flavin reductase P), a recombinant plasmid, pFRP1, was obtained which contained the frp gene encoding this enzyme. The DNA sequence of the frp gene was determined; the deduced amino acid sequence for flavin reductase P consists of 240 amino acid residues with a molecular weight of 26,312. The frp gene was overexpressed, apparently through induction, in Escherichia coli JM109 cells harboring pFRP1. The cloned flavin reductase P was purified to homogeneity by following a new and simple procedure involving FMN-agarose chromatography as a key step. The same chromatography material was also highly effective in concentrating diluted flavin reductase P. The purified enzyme is a monomer and is unusual in having a tightly bound FMN cofactor. Distinct from the free FMN, the bound FMN cofactor showed a diminished A375 peak and a slightly increased 8-nm red-shifted A453 peak and was completely or nearly nonfluorescent. The Kms for FMN and NADPH and the turnover number of this flavin reductase were determined. In comparison with other flavin reductases and homologous proteins, this flavin reductase P shows a number of distinct features with respect to primary sequence, redox center, and/or kinetic mechanism.  相似文献   

15.
Zhan X  Carpenter RA  Ellis HR 《Biochemistry》2008,47(7):2221-2230
The two-component alkanesulfonate monooxygenase system from Escherichia coli includes an FMN reductase (SsuE) and an FMNH2-dependent alkanesulfonate monooxygenase (SsuD) involved in the acquisition of sulfur from alkanesulfonates during sulfur starvation. The SsuD enzyme directly catalyzes the oxidation of alkanesulfonate to aldehyde and sulfite in the presence of O2 and FMNH2. The goal of these studies was to investigate the kinetic mechanism of SsuD through rapid reaction kinetics and substrate binding studies. The SsuD enzyme shows a clear preference for FMNH2 (Kd, 0.32 +/- 0.15 microM) compared to FMN (Kd, 10.2 +/- 0.4 microM) with a 1:1 binding stoichiometry for each form of the flavin. The kinetic trace of premixed SsuD and FMNH2 mixed with oxygenated buffer was best fit to a double exponential with no observed formation of the C4a-(hydro)peroxyflavin. However, when FMNH2 was mixed with SsuD and oxygenated buffer an initial fast phase (kobs, 12.9 s-1) was observed, suggesting that the mixing order is critical for the accumulation of the C4a-(hydro)peroxyflavin. Results from fluorimetric titrations with octanesulfonate imply that reduced flavin must bind first to promote octanesulfonate binding. When octanesulfonate was included in the kinetic studies the C4a-(hydro)peroxyflavin was observed at 370 nm when FMNH2 was not premixed with SsuD, which correlated with an increase in octanal product. There was a clear hyperbolic dependence on octanesulfonate binding, indicating that octanesulfonate binds in rapid equilibrium, and further results indicated there was a second isomerization step following binding. These results suggest that an ordered substrate binding mechanism is important in the desulfonation reaction by SsuD with reduced flavin binding first followed by either O2 or octanesulfonate.  相似文献   

16.
FerB from Paracoccus denitrificans is a soluble cytoplasmic flavoprotein that accepts redox equivalents from NADH or NADPH and transfers them to various acceptors such as quinones, ferric complexes and chromate. The crystal structure and small-angle X-ray scattering measurements in solution reported here reveal a head-to-tail dimer with two flavin mononucleotide groups bound at the opposite sides of the subunit interface. The dimers tend to self-associate to a tetrameric form at higher protein concentrations. Amino acid residues important for the binding of FMN and NADH and for the catalytic activity are identified and verified by site-directed mutagenesis. In particular, we show that Glu77 anchors a conserved water molecule in close proximity to the O2 of FMN, with the probable role of facilitating flavin reduction. Hydride transfer is shown to occur from the 4-pro-S position of NADH to the solvent-accessible si side of the flavin ring. When using deuterated NADH, this process exhibits a kinetic isotope effect of about 6 just as does the NADH-dependent quinone reductase activity of FerB; the first, reductive half-reaction of flavin cofactor is thus rate-limiting. Replacing the bulky Arg95 in the vicinity of the active site with alanine substantially enhances the activity towards external flavins that obeys the standard bi-bi ping-pong reaction mechanism. The new evidence for a cryptic flavin reductase activity of FerB justifies the previous inclusion of this enzyme in the protein family of NADPH-dependent FMN reductases.  相似文献   

17.
Procedures and conditions have been established such that the unstable enzyme-bound flavin intermediate produced in the bacterial luciferase reaction can be isolated as approximately 70% of the flavin product, the remaining being the final product, FMN. The structure of the intermediate is proposed to be that of a luciferase-bound 4a,5-dihydroflavin-4a-hydroxide. The intermediate has a half-life of 33 min at 2°C and decays spontaneously to give H2O and luciferase-bound FMN with an activation enthalpy of about 120 kJ/mol. It has an absorption spectrum (λmax = 360 nm) that is consistent with the proposed structure, and a fluorescence emission (λmax = 485 nm) that matches the bioluminescence emission closely.  相似文献   

18.
The alkanesulfonate monooxygenase system from Escherichia coli is involved in scavenging sulfur from alkanesulfonates under sulfur starvation. An FMN reductase (SsuE) catalyzes the reduction of FMN by NADPH, and the reduced flavin is transferred to the monooxygenase (SsuD). Rapid reaction kinetic analyses were performed to define the microscopic steps involved in SsuE catalyzed flavin reduction. Results from single-wavelength analyses at 450 and 550 nm showed that reduction of FMN occurs in three distinct phases. Following a possible rapid equilibrium binding of FMN and NADPH to SsuE (MC-1) that occurs before the first detectable step, an initial fast phase (241 s(-1)) corresponds to the interaction of NADPH with FMN (CT-1). The second phase is a slow conversion (11 s(-1)) to form a charge-transfer complex of reduced FMNH(2) with NADP(+) (CT-2), and represents electron transfer from the pyridine nucleotide to the flavin. The third step (19 s(-1)) is the decay of the charge-transfer complex to SsuE with bound products (MC-2) or product release from the CT-2 complex. Results from isotope studies with [(4R)-(2)H]NADPH demonstrates a rate-limiting step in electron transfer from NADPH to FMN, and may imply a partial rate-limiting step from CT-2 to MC-2 or the direct release of products from CT-2. While the utilization of flavin as a substrate by the alkanesulfonate monooxygenase system is novel, the mechanism for flavin reduction follows an analogous reaction path as standard flavoproteins.  相似文献   

19.
Sequence-specific 1H and 13C NMR assignments have been made for residues that form the five-stranded parallel beta-sheet and the flavin mononucleotide (FMN) binding site of oxidized Anabaena 7120 flavodoxin. Interstrand nuclear Overhauser enhancements (NOEs) indicate that the beta-sheet arrangement is similar to that observed in the crystal structure of the 70% homologous long-chain flavodoxin from Anacystis nidulans [Smith et al. (1983) J. Mol. Biol. 165, 737-755]. A total of 62 NOEs were identified: 8 between protons of bound FMN, 29 between protons of the protein in the flavin binding site, and 25 between protons of bound FMN and protons of the protein. These constraints were used to determine the localized solution structure of the FMN binding site. The electronic environment and conformation of the protein-bound flavin isoalloxazine ring were investigated by determining 13C chemical shifts, one-bond 13C-13C and 15N-1H coupling constants, and three-bond 13C-1H coupling constants. The carbonyl edge of the flavin ring was found to be slightly polarized. The xylene ring was found to be nonplanar. Tyrosine 94, located adjacent to the flavin isoalloxazine ring, was shown to have a hindered aromatic ring flip rate.  相似文献   

20.
Cénas N  Lê KH  Terrier M  Lederer F 《Biochemistry》2007,46(15):4661-4670
Saccharomyces cerevisiae flavocytochrome b2 (L-lactate:cytochrome c oxido reductase, EC 1.1.2.3) is a homotetramer, with FMN and protoheme IX binding on separate domains. The flavin-binding domains form the enzyme tetrameric core, while the cytochrome b2 domains appear to be mobile around a hinge region (Xia, Z. X., and Mathews, F. S. (1990) J. Mol. Biol. 212, 867-863). The enzyme catalyzes electron transfer from L-lactate to cytochrome c, or to nonphysiological acceptors such as ferricyanide, via FMN and heme b2. The kinetics of this multistep reaction are complex. In order to clarify some of its aspects, the tetrameric FMN-binding domain (FDH domain) has been independently expressed in Escherichia coli (Balme, A., Brunt, C. E., Pallister, R., Chapman, S. K., and Reid, G. A. (1995) Biochem. J. 309, 601-605). We present here an additional characterization of this domain. In our hands, it has essentially the same ferricyanide reductase activity as the holo-enzyme. The comparison of the steady-state kinetics with ferricyanide as acceptor and of the pre-steady-state kinetics of flavin reduction, as well as the kinetic isotope effects of the reactions using L-2-[2H]lactate, indicates that flavin reduction is the limiting step in lactate oxidation. During the oxidation of the reduced FDH domain by ferricyanide, the oxidation of the semiquinone is much faster than the oxidation of two-electron-reduced flavin. This order of reactivity is reversed during flavin to heme b2 transfer in the holo-enzyme. Potentiometric studies of the protein yielded a standard redox potential for FMN at pH 7.0, E(o)7, of -81 mV, a value practically identical to the published value of -90 mV for FMN in holo-flavocytochrome b2. However, as expected from the kinetics of the oxidative half-reaction, the FDH domain was characterized by a significantly destabilized flavin semiquinone state compared with holo-enzyme, with a semiquinone formation constant K of 1.25-0.64 vs 33.5, respectively (Tegoni, M., Silvestrini, M. C., Guigliarelli, B., Asso, M., and Bertrand, P. (1998) Biochemistry, 37, 12761-12771). As in the holo-enzyme, the semiquinone state in the FDH domain is significantly stabilized by the reaction product, pyruvate. We also studied the inhibition exerted in the steady and pre steady states by the reaction product pyruvate and by anions (bromide, chloride, phosphate, acetate), with respect to both flavin reduction and reoxidation. The results indicate that these compounds bind to the oxidized and the two-electron-reduced forms of the FDH domain, and that excess L-lactate also binds to the two-electron-reduced form. These findings point to the existence of a common or strongly overlapping binding site. A comparison of the effect of the anions on WT and R289K holo-flavocytochromes b2 indicates that invariant R289 belongs to this site. According to literature data, it must also be present in other members of the family of L-2-hydroxy acid-oxidizing enzymes.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号