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1.
Adrenodoxin reductase, the flavoprotein moiety of the adrenal cortex mitochondrial steroid hydroxylating system, participates in adrenodoxin-dependent cytochrome c and adrenodoxin-independent ferricyanide reduction, with NADPH as electron donor for both of these 1-electron reductions. For ferricyanide reduction, adrenodoxin reductase cycles between oxidized and 2-electron-reduced forms, reoxidation proceeding via the neutral flavin (FAD) semiquinone form (Fig. 9). Addition of adrenodoxin has no effect upon the kinetic parameters of flavoprotein-catalyzed ferricyanide reduction. For cytochrome c reduction, the adrenodoxin reductase-adrenodoxin 1:1 complex has been shown to be the catalytically active species (Lambeth, J. D., McCaslin, D. R., and Kamin, H. (1976) J. Biol. Chem. 251, 7545-7550). Present studies, using stopped flow techniques, have shown that the 2-electron-reduced form of the complex (produced by reaction with 1 eq of NADPH) reacts rapidly with 1 eq of cytochrome c (k approximately or equal to 4.6 s-1), but only slowly with a second cytochrome c (k = 0.1 to 0.3 s-1). However, when a second NADPH is included, two more equivalents of cytochrome are reduced rapidly. Thus, the adrenodoxin reductase-adrenodoxin complex appears to cycle between 1- and 3-electron reduced states, via an intermediate 2-electron-containing form produced by reoxidation by cytochrome (Fig. 10). For ferricyanide reduction by adrenodoxin reductase, the fully reduced and semiquinone forms of flavin each transfer 1 electron at oxidation-reduction potentials which differ by approximately 130 mV. However, adrenodoxin in a complex with adrenodoxin reductase allows electrons of constant potential to be delivered from flavin to cytochrome c via the iron sulfur center...  相似文献   

2.
Anaerobic reduction of the flavoprotein adrenodoxin reductase with NADPH yields a spectrum with long wavelength absorbance, 750 nm and higher. No EPR signal is observed. This spectrum is produced by titration of oxidized adrenodoxin reductase with NADPH, or of dithionite-reduced adrenodoxin reductase with NADP+. Both titrations yield a sharp endpoint at 1 NADP(H) added per flavin. Reduction with other reductants, including dithionite, excess NADH, and catalytic NADP+ with an NADPH generating system, yields a typical fully reduced flavin spectrum, without long wavelength absorbance. The species formed on NADPH reduction appears to be a two-electron-containing complex, with a low dissociation constant, between reduced adrenodoxin reductase and NADP+, designated ARH2-NADP+. Titration of dithionite-reduced adrenodoxin reductase with NADPH also produces a distinctive spectrum, with a sharp endpoint at 1 NADPH added per reduced flavin, indicating formation of a four-electron-containing complex between reduced adrenodoxin reductase and NADPH. Titration of adrenodoxin reductase with NADH, instead of NADPH, provides a curved titration plot rather than the sharp break seen with NADPH, and permits calculation of a potential for the AR/ARH2 couple of -0.291 V, close to that of NAD(P)H (-0.316 V). Oxidized adrenodoxin reductase binds NADP+ much more weakly (Kdiss=1.4 X 10(-5) M) than does reduced adrenodoxin reductase, with a single binding site. The preferential binding of NADP+ to reduced enzyme permits prediction of a more positive oxidation-reduction potential of the flavoprotein in the presence of NADP+; a change of about + 0.1 V has been demonstrated by titration with safranine T. From this alteration in potential, a Kdiss of 1.0 X 10(-8) M for binding of NADP+ to reduced adrenodoxin reductase is calculated. It is concluded that the strong binding of NADP+ to reduced adrenodoxin reductase provides the thermodynamic driving force for formation of a fully reduced flavoprotein form under conditions wherein incomplete reduction would otherwise be expected. Stopped flow studies demonstrate that reduction of adrenodoxin reductase by equimolar NADPH to form the ARH2-NADP+ complex is first order (k=28 s-1). When a large excess of NADPH is used, a second apparently first order process is observed (k=4.25 s-1), which is interpreted as replacement of NADPH for NADP+ in the ARH2-NADP+ complex. Comparison of these rate constants to catalytic flavin turnover numbers for reduction of various oxidants by NADPH, suggests an ordered sequential mechanism in which reduction of oxidant is accomplished by the ARH2-NADP+ complex, followed by dissociation of NADP+. The absolute dependence of NADPH-cytochrome c reduction on both adrenodoxin reductase and adrenodoxin is confirmed...  相似文献   

3.
Summary The flavoprotein NADPH-adrenodoxin reductase and the iron sulfur protein adrenodoxin function as a short electron transport chain which donates electrons one-at-a-time to adrenal cortex mitochondrial cytochromes P-450. The soluble adrenodoxin acts as a mobile one-electron shuttle, forming a complex first with NADPH-reduced adrenodoxin reductase from which it accepts an electron, then dissociating, and finally reassociating with and donating an electron to the membrane-bound cytochrome P-450 (Fig. 9). Dissociation and reassociation with flavoprotein then allows a second cycle of electron transfers. A complex set of factors govern the sequential protein-protein interactions which comprise this adrenodoxin shuttle mechanism; among these factors, reduction of the iron sulfur center by the flavin weakens the adrenodoxinadrenodoxin reductase interaction, thus promoting dissociation of this complex to yield free reduced adrenodoxin. Substrate (cholesterol) binding to cytochrome P-450scc both promotes the binding of the free adrenodoxin to the cytochrome, and alters the oxidation-reduction potential of the heme so as to favor reduction by adrenodoxin. The cholesterol binding site on cytochrome P-450scc appears to be in direct communication with the hydrophobic phospholipid milieu in which this substrate is dissolved. Specific effects of both phospholipid headgroups and fatty acyl side-chains regulate the interaction of cholesterol with its binding side. Cardiolipin is an extremely potent positive effector for cholesterol binding, and evidence supports the existence of a specific effector lipid binding site on cytochrome P.450scc to which this phospho-lipid binds.  相似文献   

4.
We have shown (Seybert, D., Lambeth, D., and Kamin, H. (1978), J. Biol. Chem. 253, 8355-8358) that, whereas the 1:1 complex between adrenodoxin reductase and adrenodoxin is the active species for cytochrome c reduction, the complex is not sufficient to allow cytochrome P-45011 beta-mediated hydroxylations;adrenodoxin in excess of reductase is required. In the present studies, reduction by NADPH of excess adrenodoxin is shown to occur at a rate sufficient to support both cytochrome P-450 11 beta-mediated hydroxylation of deoxycorticosterone, and cytochrome P-450sec-mediated side chain cleavage of cholesterol. Oxidation-reduction potential and ion effect studies indicate that the mechanism of steroidogenic electron transport involves an adrenodoxin electron "shuttle" rather than a macromolecular complex of reductase, adrenodoxin, and cytochrome. The oxidation-reduction potential of adrenodoxin is shifted about -100 mV when bound to reductase, and reduction of the iron-sulfur protein thus promotes dissociation of the complex. The rate of adrenodoxin reduction is first stimulated, then inhibited by increasing salt; the effect is ion-specific, with Ca2+ approximately Mg2+ greater than Na+ greater than NH/+. Similar ion-specific rate effects are observed for both of the cytochrome P-450-mediated hydroxylations, indicating that the same reduction mechanism is required for these reactions. Increasing salt concentrations caused dissociation of the complex; dissociation of the form of the complex containing reduced adrenodoxin occurred at lower salt concentrations than that containing oxidized adrenodoxin. The order of effectiveness of ions in causing dissociation is the same as the order for stimulation of adrenodoxin reduction, suggesting a dissociation step in the mechanism. This proposed model, together with dissociation constants for the form of the complex containing either oxidized or reduced adrenodoxin, allows accurate prediction of the salt rate effects curve. For all ions, an activity maximum is seen at the ion concentration which produces the largest molar difference between associated-oxidized and dissociated-reduced states, and the model predicts the positions of the maxima for adrenodoxin reduction, 11 beta-hydroxylation, and side chain cleavage. Thus reduction-induced dissociation of adrenodoxin from adrenodoxin reductase appears to be a required step in steroidogenic electron transport by this system, and a role for adrenodoxin as a mobile electron shuttle is proposed.  相似文献   

5.
Radiometric methods for the assay of deoxycorticosterone 11beta-hydroxylase and for the determination of NADP on a microscale were developed. The determination of NADP was based on the quantitative conversion of 6-phospho[1-14C]gluconate to 14CO2 by the action of 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase. Using these methods NADPH oxidase activity of the adrenodoxin reductase-adrenodoxin system as well as kinetic properties of deoxycorticosterone 11beta-hydroxylase (cytochrome P-450) were investigated. The NADPH oxidase activity observed in the presence of adrenodoxin reductase, adrenodoxin, and O2, but in the absence of cytochrome P-450 and deoxycorticosterone, were functions of O2 and adrenodoxin concentrations and represented the autooxidation of reduced adrenodoxin which resulted in the production of H2O2. Due to the rapid autooxidizability of reduced adrenodoxin, only a small fraction of electrons conveyed from NADPH to adrenodoxin by way of adrenodoxin reductase was utilized for the deoxycorticosterone 11beta-hydroxylase reaction under the conditions employed.  相似文献   

6.
The origin of steroid hormones in mammals is cholesterol that is metabolized by the mitochondrial CYP11A1 system. The cytochrome P450 is fed with reduction equivalents via a small electron transfer chain consisting of NADPH, adrenodoxin reductase, and adrenodoxin. Though the redox behavior of the individual protein components has been studied previously, the kinetics of the system in its entirety has not yet been analyzed. In this study we combine surface plasmon resonance experiments to determine the binding constants for the different pairs of redox partners with measurements of the pre-steady-state kinetics of the different reaction steps of this system and steady-state kinetics. We could correlate the individual protein-protein interactions with the effect of distinct reduction-oxidation steps on the overall catalytic activity of the CYP11A1 system. For the first time, we were able to follow the reduction of each of the protein components of this system within one measurement when we mixed all oxidized protein components with NADPH. These measurements allowed the determination of the individual apparent rate constants for the reduction of all three proteins involved. In addition, variation of the ionic strength in these experiments revealed different optimum salt concentrations for the reduction of adrenodoxin reductase and adrenodoxin, respectively, and unraveled dramatically changing reduction rates of CYP11A1 by adrenodoxin.  相似文献   

7.
The gene fprA of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, encoding a putative protein with 40% identity to mammalian adrenodoxin reductase, was expressed in Escherichia coli and the protein purified to homogeneity. The 50-kDa protein monomer contained one tightly bound FAD, whose fluorescence was fully quenched. FprA showed a low ferric reductase activity, whereas it was very active as a NAD(P)H diaphorase with dyes. Kinetic parameters were determined and the specificity constant (kcat/Km) for NADPH was two orders of magnitude larger than that of NADH. Enzyme full reduction, under anaerobiosis, could be achieved with a stoichiometric amount of either dithionite or NADH, but not with even large excess of NADPH. In enzyme titration with substoichiometric amounts of NADPH, only charge transfer species (FAD-NADPH and FADH2-NADP+) were formed. At NADPH/FAD ratios higher than one, the neutral FAD semiquinone accumulated, implying that the semiquinone was stabilized by NADPH binding. Stabilization of the one-electron reduced form of the enzyme may be instrumental for the physiological role of this mycobacterial flavoprotein. By several approaches, FprA was shown to be able to interact productively with [2Fe-2S] iron-sulfur proteins, either adrenodoxin or plant ferredoxin. More interestingly, kinetic parameters of the cytochrome c reductase reaction catalyzed by FprA in the presence of a 7Fe ferredoxin purified from M. smegmatis were determined. A Km value of 30 nm and a specificity constant of 110 microM(-1) x s(-1) (10 times greater than that for the 2Fe ferredoxin) were determined for this ferredoxin. The systematic name for FprA is therefore NADPH-ferredoxin oxidoreductase.  相似文献   

8.
The intrinsic isotope effect on the reduction of the FAD-containing dehydrogenase electron transferase, adrenodoxin reductase, by (4S)-[2H]NADPH has been determined to be 7.1 to 7.7. The replacement of FAD by a series of FAD analogs at the active site of adrenodoxin reductase with oxidation-reduction potentials which vary over a range of 212 mV has made it possible to extrapolate to this limiting value from the variation in the observed isotope effect on Vmax with flavin midpoint potential. Stop-flow studies which allow the direct determination of the intrinsic isotope effect on the reductive half-reaction corroborate this result. During the steady state reduction of ferricyanide by the native enzyme under conditions of Vmax, this isotope effect is almost fully expressed (VH/VD = 6.7 to 6.8). In contrast, we observe a dramatic attenuation of the intrinsic isotope effect (due to hydride transfer to flavin) when the oxidative half-reaction is mediated by the natural acceptor protein, the 2Fe/2S ferredoxin, adrenodoxin. In a coupled three-protein system, the adrenodoxin-mediated reductions of both the artificial electron acceptor, cytochrome c, and the physiological electron acceptor, cytochrome P-450scc, by adrenodoxin reductase occur at similar rates and with similar kinetic isotope effects (1.9 to 2.0) when (4S)-[2H]NADPH is the reductant. We infer similar mechanisms for the reduction of both cytochromes. These results are in agreement with previous studies (Lambeth, J.D., and Kamin, H. (1979) J. Biol. Chem. 254, 2766-2774) which show that the reductive half-reaction is not solely rate-determining in adrenodoxin-mediated processes. The observation of a linear free energy relationship between Vmax and the flavin midpoint potential during steady state reduction of ferricyanide confirms that the reductive half-reaction is rate-determining in this assay. The relationship between Vmax and flavin midpoint potential in reactions which require adrenodoxin suggests that the midpoint potential of native adrenodoxin reductase has been optimized. Thus, the apoenzyme of adrenodoxin reductase tailors the midpoint potential of bound FAD in order to balance the activation energies of the reductive and oxidative half-reactions.  相似文献   

9.
The reduction of putidaredoxin reductase by reduced pyridine nucleotides   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Putidaredoxin reductase (PdR), an FAD-containing protein, mediates the transfer of electrons from NADH to putidaredoxin in the cytochrome P-450cam-dependent oxidation of camphor. Using stopped-flow spectrophotometry, reduction of putidaredoxin reductase by NADH (70 microM) at 4 degrees C appeared to be a pseudo-first-order process with a rate constant in excess of 600 s-1. The reduction of putidaredoxin reductase by NADPH was much slower with a second-order rate constant of 530 s-1 M-1 at 4 degrees C. The reduction of the enzyme was monitored at several wavelengths: 455 nm to follow flavin reduction; 700 nm to follow the appearance of the long-wavelength charge-transfer complex; and 513 nm to detect the presence of a semiquinone form of the flavoprotein. There was no apparent semiquinone formation observed during reduction. The charge-transfer complex can be formed in the presence of NAD+, whereas, no charge-transfer band could be detected when PdR was reduced with NADPH. The titration of chemically or NADPH-reduced putidaredoxin reductase with either a stoichiometric or an excess amount of NAD+ resulted in the formation of a charge-transfer complex, indicating that the reduced form of PdR has a high affinity for NAD+ regardless of the method of reduction. The data presented indicate that putidaredoxin reductase is reduced without the formation of semiquinone intermediate and, upon reduction, forms a tight complex with NAD+. The Keq for the reduction of PdR by NADPH is 1.1 and the midpoint potential for this reaction is -317 +/- 5 mV.  相似文献   

10.
A stable covalent complex was prepared by cross-linking adrenodoxin reductase with adrenodoxin using 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide. The covalent complex was purified extensively until free components were removed completely. The major component of the complex had a molecular weight of 63 kDa, which corresponds to a 1:1 stoichiometric complex between adrenodoxin reductase and adrenodoxin. NADPH-cytochrome c reduction activity of the covalent complex was comparable to that of an equimolar mixture of adrenodoxin reductase and adrenodoxin (native complex), and the NADPH-ferricyanide reduction activity of the complex was equal to that of the native one. In contrast to the native complex, the covalent complex produced much less superoxide upon NADPH-oxidation, and the covalent complex was found to be more stable than the native complex, suggesting that the complex state is more favorable for catalysis. From these results, we conclude that the adrenodoxin molecule does not need to dissociate from the complex during electron transfer from NADPH to cytochrome c.  相似文献   

11.
Bifunctional reagents 3,3'-dithiobis(succinimidyl propionate), 1-ethyl 3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide and N-succinimidyl 3-(2-pyridyldithio)propionate have been used in an attempt to study molecular organization and covalent cross-linking of adrenodoxin reductase with adrenodoxin, the components of steroidogenic electron transfer system in bovine adrenocortical mitochondria. There was no cross-linking of individual proteins by the bifunctional reagents used, except for adrenodoxin cross-linking with water-soluble carbodiimide. Substantial cross-linking of adrenodoxin reductase with adrenodoxin was observed when water-soluble carbodiimide was used as cross-linking reagent. However, the cross-linked complex failed to transfer electrons. Significant amounts of the functional cross-linked complex (up to 42%) were observed when the proteins were cross-linked with N-succinimidyl 3-(2-pyridyldithio)propionate. Using gel filtration, ion-exchange chromatography and affinity chromatography on adrenodoxin-Sepharose, the complex was obtained in a highly purified form. In the presence of cytochrome P-450scc or cytochrome c, the cross-linked complex of adrenodoxin reductase with adrenodoxin was active in electron transfer from NADPH to heme proteins. The data obtained indicate that there are distinct binding sites on the adrenodoxin molecule responsible for the adrenodoxin reductase and cytochrome P-450scc binding, which suggests that steroidogenic electron transfer may be realized in an organized complex.  相似文献   

12.
We have investigated the formal reduction potentials (E degrees') of adrenodoxin with and without adrenodoxin reductase in order to elucidate the mechanism of electron transfer from adrenodoxin reductase (a flavoprotein) to adrenodoxin (an iron-sulfur protein). It was found by our spectropotentiostatic method that adrenodoxin showed no variation of E degrees' at different pH's in the absence of adrenodoxin reductase. The average E degrees' was -252 +/- 2 mV in the pH range between 6.0 and 8.3. In the presence of adrenodoxin reductase, adrenodoxin exhibited, on the other hand, a pH dependence of E degrees' at pH higher than 7.2 with a slope of -59 mV per pH unit: Adrenodoxin molecule possesses one protonation site with a pKa of 7.2. Cyclic voltammograms of adrenodoxin additionally revealed that the reoxidation reaction of reduced adrenodoxin is very slow in the absence of adrenodoxin reductase, but that it is readily reoxidized in the presence of adrenodoxin reductase.  相似文献   

13.
Adrenodoxin of bovine adrenocortical mitochondria was spin-labeled with two different spin-labeling reagents, N-(2,2,5,5-tetramethyl-3-carbonylpyrroline-1-oxyl)imidazole (I) and N-(1-oxyl-2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-4-piperidinyl)maleimide (II), without major loss of its activity for electron transport from NADPH to cytochrome c. The EPR spectrum of adrenodoxin spin-labeled with either of the reagents showed a pattern typical of a moderately immobilized spin label. When adrenodoxin was treated with (I), approximately two amino acid residues per molecule were spin-labeled, whereas a single residue was labeled by (II). While assition of NADPH to adrenodoxin spin-labeled with (I) did not diminish the EPR signal intensity, addition of the reductant to the labeled adrenodoxin in the presence of adrenodoxin reductase caused slow reduction of the spin label, the rate of which was dependent on the aerobicity. Addition of adrenodoxin reductase to adrenodoxin spin-labeled with (I) or (II) resulted in the appearance of a more immobilized component in the EPR spectrum. The ratio of the more immobilized component to the less immobilized component was saturated at a molar ratio of one to one. Addition of cytochrome P-450scc to adrenodoxin labeled with (I) had similar effects on the EPR spectrum.  相似文献   

14.
T Taniguchi  T Kimura 《Biochemistry》1975,14(26):5573-5578
Bovine apoadrenodoxin was treated with tetranitromethane to introduce a nitro group into the tyrosyl residue at position 82 of this protein. The degrees of nitration under the best conditions were estimated to be 90% and nearly 100% on the basis of amino acid analysis and the spectrophotometric method, respectively. An amino derivative was prepared by reducing the nitro group with sodium dithionite. The apoadrenodoxin derivatives could be reconstituted to have an iron-sulfur chromophore similar to the native adrenodoxin which contains a 1:1 molar ratio of labile sulfur to iron content and displays absorption peaks at 414 and 450 nm. The enzymatic acitivies of these reconstituted nitro and amino derivatives toward cytochrome c reduction in the presence of adrenodoxin reductase and NADPH were 19 and 7% of native adrenodoxin, respectively. We studied the kinetics of the direct reduction of the reconstituted amino derivative in the presence of NADPH and adrenodoxin reductase under anaerobic conditons. The initial rate of reduction for the amino derivative was 7% of the native adrenodoxin, which is in good agreement with its activity toward cytochrome c reduction. From these results, it is concluded that by modifying the tyrosyl residue at position 82 of the adrenodoxin polypeptide, the electron-transferring activity of the molecule is largely diminished.  相似文献   

15.
The novel cytochrome P450/redox partner fusion enzyme CYP116B1 from Cupriavidus?metallidurans was expressed in and purified from Escherichia coli. Isolated CYP116B1 exhibited a characteristic Fe(II)CO complex with Soret maximum at 449 nm. EPR and resonance Raman analyses indicated low-spin, cysteinate-coordinated ferric haem iron at both 10 K and ambient temperature, respectively, for oxidized CYP116B1. The EPR of reduced CYP116B1 demonstrated stoichiometric binding of a 2Fe-2S cluster in the reductase domain. FMN binding in the reductase domain was confirmed by flavin fluorescence studies. Steady-state reduction of cytochrome c and ferricyanide were supported by both NADPH/NADH, with NADPH used more efficiently (K(m[NADPH]) = 0.9 ± 0.5 μM and K(m[NADH]) = 399.1 ± 52.1 μM). Stopped-flow studies of NAD(P)H-dependent electron transfer to the reductase confirmed the preference for NADPH. The reduction potential of the P450 haem iron was -301 ± 7 mV, with retention of haem thiolate ligation in the ferrous enzyme. Redox potentials for the 2Fe-2S and FMN cofactors were more positive than that of the haem iron. Multi-angle laser light scattering demonstrated CYP116B1 to be monomeric. Type I (substrate-like) binding of selected unsaturated fatty acids (myristoleic, palmitoleic and arachidonic acids) was shown, but these substrates were not oxidized by CYP116B1. However, CYP116B1 catalysed hydroxylation (on propyl chains) of the herbicides S-ethyl dipropylthiocarbamate (EPTC) and S-propyl dipropylthiocarbamate (vernolate), and the subsequent N-dealkylation of vernolate. CYP116B1 thus has similar thiocarbamate-oxidizing catalytic properties to Rhodoccocus erythropolis CYP116A1, a P450 involved in the oxidative degradation of EPTC.  相似文献   

16.
The conversion of cholesterol to pregnenolone by cytochrome P450scc is the rate-determining step in placental progesterone synthesis. The limiting component for placental cytochrome P450scc activity is the concentration of adrenodoxin reductase in the mitochondria, where it permits cytochrome P450scc to work at only 16% of maximum velocity. Adrenodoxin reductase serves to reduce adrenodoxin as part of the electron transfer from NADPH to cytochrome P450scc. We therefore measured the proportion of adrenodoxin in the reduced form in intact mitochondria from the human placenta during active pregnenolone synthesis, using EPR. We found that the adrenodoxin pool was only 30% reduced, indicating that the adrenodoxin reductase concentration was insufficient to maintain the adrenodoxin in the fully reduced state. As both oxidized and reduced adrenodoxin can bind to cytochrome P450scc we tested the ability of oxidized adrenodoxin to act as a competitive inhibitor of pregnenolone synthesis. This was done in a fully reconstituted system comprising 0.3% Tween 20 and purified proteins, and in a partially reconstituted system comprising submitochondrial particles, purified adrenodoxin and adrenodoxin reductase. We found that oxidized adrenodoxin is an effective competitive inhibitor of placental cytochrome P450scc with a Ki value half that of the Km for reduced adrenodoxin. We conclude that the limiting concentration of adrenodoxin reductase present in placental mitochondria has a two-fold effect on cytochrome P450scc activity. It limits the amount of reduced adrenodoxin that is available to donate electrons to cytochrome P450scc and the oxidized adrenodoxin that remains, competitively inhibits the cytochrome.  相似文献   

17.
The diaphorase activity of NADPH: adrenodoxin reductase (EC 1.18.1.2) is stimulated by adrenodoxin. The latter prevents the reductase inhibition by NADPH; the Line-weaver-Burk plots are characterized by a biphasic dependence of the reaction rate on the oxidizer concentration. At pH 7.0 the maximal rate of the first phase is 20s-1; that for the second phase at saturating concentrations of adrenodoxin is 5 s-1. Since the second phase rate is equal to that of the adrenodoxin-linked cytochrome c reduction by reductase it is concluded that this phase reflects the reduction of the oxidizers via reduced adrenodoxin. Quinones are reduced by adrenodoxin in an one-electron way; the logarithms of their rate constants depend hyperbolically on their single-electron reduction potentials (E7(1]. The oxidizers interact with a negatively charged domain of adrenodoxin. The depth of the adrenodoxin active center calculated from the Fe(EDTA)- reduction data is 5.9 A.  相似文献   

18.
The reaction process of adrenodoxin reductase with NADPH and NADH were investigated. The appearance of new intermediate with a broad absorption band at around 520 nm has been detected by rapid-scan stopped-flow spectrophotometry. Although the formation of this intermediate is more rapid with NADPH than with NADH, the rates of the subsequent decay to the fully reduced state are almost identical (Kobs values were 20.5 and 16.0s-1). These results indicate that the new intermediate is the complex formed between the oxidized enzyme and reduced pyridine nucleotide (enzyme-substrate complex), and that subsequent decay of the intermidiate is caused by a two-electron transfer process from the reduced pyridine nucleotide to the enzyme flavin. On the other hand, spectral and kinetic properties in the steady state of the reoxidation reaction of the enzyme reduced with NADPH and NADH were somewhat different. The rate of reoxidation of the enzyme under aerobic conditions from the reduced state to the oxidized state was 6.5 times faster when a 10-fold molar excess of NADH was used than when NADPH of the same concentration was used. This result is consistent with the fact that the NADH-dependent oxidase activity was 6.4 times greater than that dependent on NADPH. During reoxidation of the reduced enzyme under aerobic conditions in the presence of an excess of NADPH or NADH, the EPR spectra indicated the formation of the flavin semiquinone radical species. Similarly, the formation of semiquinone was observed in the absorption spectrum with either NADPH or NADH under the same conditions as in the EPR measurement. The intensity of the semiquinone signal on EPR was considerably smaller with NADH than with NADPH. These results suggest that NADP+ complex with the enzyme semiquinone protects the radical from oxidation by oxygen to a greater extent than NAD+, and consequently the semiquinone is easier to detect with NADPH than with NADH.  相似文献   

19.
Reipa V  Holden MJ  Vilker VL 《Biochemistry》2007,46(45):13235-13244
Putidaredoxin reductase (PdR) is the flavin protein that carries out the first electron transfer involved in the cytochrome P450cam catalytic cycle. In PdR, the flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD/FADH2) redox center acts as a transformer by accepting two electrons from soluble nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+/NADH) and donating them in two separate, one-electron-transfer steps to the iron-sulfur protein putidaredoxin (Pdx). PdR, like the two more intensively studied monoflavin reductases, adrenodoxin reductase (AdR) and ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase (FNR), has no other active redox moieties (e.g., sulfhydryl groups) and can exist in three different oxidation states: (i) oxidized quinone, (ii) one-electron reduced semiquinone (stable neutral species (blue) or unstable radical anion (red)), and (iii) two-electron fully reduced hydroquinone. Here, we present reduction potential measurements for PdR in support of a thermodynamic model for the modulation of equilibria among the redox components in this initial electron-transfer step of the P450 cycle. A spectroelectrochemical technique was used to measure the midpoint oxidation-reduction potential of PdR that had been carefully purified of all residual NAD+, E0' = -369 +/- 10 mV at pH 7.6, which is more negative than previously reported and more negative than the pyridine nucleotide NADH/NAD+ (-330 mV). After addition of NAD+, the formation of the oxidized reductase-oxidized pyridine nucleotide complex was followed by the two-electron-transfer redox reaction, PdRox:NAD+ + 2e- --> PdRrd:NAD+, when the electrode potential was lowered. The midpoint potential was a hyperbolic function of increasing NAD+ concentration, such that at concentrations of pyridine nucleotide typically found in an intracellular environment, the midpoint potential would be E0' = -230 +/- 10 mV, thereby providing the thermodynamically favorable redox equilibria that enables electron transfer from NADH. This thermodynamic control of electron transfer is a shared mechanistic feature with the adrenodoxin P450 and photosynthetic electron-transfer systems but is different from the kinetic control mechanisms in the microsomal P450 systems where multiple reaction pathways draw on reducing power held by NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase. The redox measurements were combined with protein fluorescence quenching of NAD+ binding to oxidized PdR to establish that the PdRox:NAD+ complex (KD = 230 microM) is about 5 orders of magnitude weaker than PdRrd:NAD+ binding. These results are integrated with known structural and kinetic information for PdR, as well as for AdR and FNR, in support of a compulsory ordered pathway to describe the electron-transfer processes catalyzed by all three reductases.  相似文献   

20.
The two main approaches presently used for cytochrome P-450scc modelling are as follows: i) the use of chemical compounds carrying activated oxygen species, e. g., peracids, organic hydroperoxides, iodosobenzene, etc., ii) the use of electrochemical reduction in the presence of redox-active compounds. In the present work, a new model system for simulation of steroidogenic electron transfer is proposed, which reduces cytochrome P-450 scc by NADPH in the absence of adrenodoxin reductase and adrenodoxin. Phenazine methosulfate is used as an electron carrier. More than 95% of cytochrome P-450scc is reduced in a model system. The reduction kinetics is characterized by a lag phase, thus indicating complex formation between cytochrome P-450scc and phenazine methosulfate or formation of intermediate reducing equivalents. NADH may also serve as an electron donor for cytochrome P-450scc. Phenazine methosulfate can reduce microsomal cytochrome P-450 LM2 and b5, but not cytochrome P-450 LM4. Superoxide dismutase does not affect the reduction, thus indicating that O9.- is not involved in the reduction process. The mechanism of hemoprotein reduction and the nature of intermediates which can be formed in the model system is proposed.  相似文献   

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