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1.
Smith AT  Su Y  Stevens DJ  Majtan T  Kraus JP  Burstyn JN 《Biochemistry》2012,51(32):6360-6370
Cystathionine β-synthase (CBS) is an essential pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP)-dependent enzyme of the transsulfuration pathway that condenses serine with homocysteine to form cystathionine; intriguingly, human CBS also contains a heme b cofactor of unknown function. Herein we describe the enzymatic and spectroscopic properties of a disease-associated R266K hCBS variant, which has an altered hydrogen-bonding environment. The R266K hCBS contains a low-spin, six-coordinate Fe(III) heme bearing a His/Cys ligation motif, like that of WT hCBS; however, there is a geometric distortion that exists at the R266K heme. Using rR spectroscopy, we show that the Fe(III)-Cys(thiolate) bond is longer and weaker in R266K, as evidenced by an 8 cm(-1) downshift in the ν(Fe-S) resonance. Presence of this longer and weaker Fe(III)-Cys(thiolate) bond is correlated with alteration of the fluorescence spectrum of the active PLP ketoenamine tautomer. Activity data demonstrate that, relative to WT, the R266K variant is more impaired in the alternative cysteine-synthesis reaction than in the canonical cystathionine-synthesis reaction. This diminished cysteine synthesis activity and a greater sensitivity to exogenous PLP correlate with the change in PLP environment. Fe-S(Cys) bond weakening causes a nearly 300-fold increase in the rate of ligand switching upon reduction of the R266K heme. Combined, these data demonstrate cross talk between the heme and PLP active sites, consistent with previous proposals, revealing that alteration of the Arg(266)-Cys(52) interaction affects PLP-dependent activity and dramatically destabilizes the ferrous thiolate-ligated heme complex, underscoring the importance of this hydrogen-bonding residue pair.  相似文献   

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Human cystathionine beta-synthase (CBS) is an essential enzyme for the removal of the toxic metabolite homocysteine. Heme and pyridoxal phosphate (PLP) cofactors are necessary to catalyze the condensation of homocysteine and serine to generate cystathionine. While the role for the PLP cofactor is thought to be similar to that in other PLP-dependent enzymes that catalyze beta-replacement reactions, the exact role for the heme remains unclear. In this study, we have characterized the heme cofactor of CBS in both the ferric and ferrous states using resonance Raman spectroscopy. Positive identification of a cysteine ligand was achieved by global (34)S isotopic substitution which allowed us to assign the nu(Fe-S) for the six-coordinate low-spin ferric heme at 312 cm(-1). In addition, the CO adduct of ferrous CBS has vibrational frequencies characteristic of a histidine-heme-CO complex in a hydrophobic environment, and indicates that the Fe-S(Cys) bond is labile. We have also found that addition of HgCl(2) to the ferric heme causes conversion of the low-spin heme to a five-coordinate high-spin heme with loss of the cysteine ligand. The present spectroscopic studies do not support a reaction mechanism in which homocysteine binds directly to the heme via displacement of the Cys ligand in the binary enzyme complex, as had been previously proposed.  相似文献   

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Previous spectroscopic studies of chloroperoxidase have provided evidence for endogenous thiolate sulfur donor ligation to the central heme iron of the enzyme. This conclusion is further supported by recent DNA sequence data which revealed the existence of a third cysteine residue (in addition to a disulfide pair detected earlier) in the protein available for coordination to the heme iron. Thus, chloroperoxidase shares many spectroscopic properties with cytochrome P-450, the only other known thiolate-ligated heme protein. Surprisingly, a previous electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) study of low-spin ferric chloroperoxidase-ligand complexes (Hollenberg, P.F., Hager, L.P., Blumberg, W.E. and Peisach, J. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 4801-4807) was unable to provide clear support for the presence of a thiolate ligand, although sulfur coordination was implicated. This was, in part, because an insufficient number of complexes was examined. In this work, we have significantly expanded upon the previous EPR study by using an extensive variety of over twenty exogenous ligands including carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorus and sulfur donors. Crystal field analysis, using the procedure of Blumberg and Peisach, of the present data in comparison with data for analogous complexes of cytochrome P-450-CAM, thiolate-ligated heme model systems, and myoglobin, is clearly indicative of endogenous thiolate ligation for chloroperoxidase. In addition, the UV-visible absorption and EPR spectral data suggest that a carboxylate ligand is a possible candidate for the endogenous sixth ligand to the heme iron that is responsible for the reversible conversion of ferric chloroperoxidase from high-spin to low-spin at low temperatures (less than 200 K).  相似文献   

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Cystathionine beta-synthase (CBS) is a pyridoxal-5'-phosphate-dependent enzyme that catalyzes the condensation of serine and homocysteine to form cystathionine. Mammalian CBS also contains a heme cofactor that has been proposed to allosterically regulate enzyme activity via the heme redox state, with FeII CBS displaying approximately half the activity of FeIII CBS in vitro. The results of this study show that human FeII CBS spontaneously loses enzyme activity over the course of a 20 min enzyme assay. Both the full-length 63-kDa and truncated 45-kDa form of CBS slowly and irreversibly lose activity upon reduction to the FeII form. Additionally, electronic absorption spectroscopy reveals that FeII CBS undergoes a heme ligand exchange to FeII CBS424 when the enzyme is incubated at 37 degrees C and pH 8.6. The addition of enzyme substrates or imidazole has a moderate effect on the rate of the ligand switch, but does not prevent conversion to the inactive species. Time-dependent spectroscopic data describing the conversion of FeII CBS to FeII CBS424 were fitted to a three-state kinetic model. The resultant rate constants were used to fit assay data and to estimate the activity of FeII CBS prior to the ligand switch. Based on this fit it appears that FeII CBS initially has the same enzyme activity as FeIII CBS, but FeII CBS loses activity as the ligand switch proceeds. The slow and irreversible loss of FeII CBS enzyme activity in vitro resembles protein denaturation, and suggests that a simple regulatory mechanism based on the heme redox state is unlikely.  相似文献   

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To investigate the functional and structural roles of the proximal thiolate ligand in cytochrome P450cam, we prepared the C357H mutant of the enzyme in which the axial cysteine residue (Cys357) was replaced with a histidine residue. We obtained the unstable C357H mutant by developing a new preparation procedure involving in vitro folding of P450cam from the inclusion bodies. The C357H mutant in the ferrous-CO form exhibited the Soret peak at 420 nm and the Fe-CO stretching line at 498 cm-1, indicating a neutral histidine residue as the axial ligand. However, another internal ligand is coordinated to the heme iron as the sixth ligand in the ferric and ferrous forms of the C357H mutant, suggesting the collapse of the substrate-binding site. The C357H mutant showed no catalytic activity for camphor hydroxylation and the reduced heterolytic/homolytic ratio of the O-O bond scission in the reaction with cumene hydroperoxide. The present observations indicate that the thiolate coordination in P450cam is important for the construction of the heme pocket and the heterolysis of the O-O bond.  相似文献   

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In humans, cystathionine β-synthase (CBS) is a hemeprotein, which catalyzes a pyridoxal phosphate (PLP)-dependent condensation reaction. Changes in the heme environment are communicated to the active site, which is ∼20 Å away. In this study, we have examined the role of H67 and R266, which are in the second coordination sphere of the heme ligands, H65 and C52, respectively, in modulating the heme’s electronic properties and in transmitting information between the heme and active sites. While the H67A mutation is comparable to wild-type CBS, interesting differences are revealed by mutations at the R266 site. The pathogenic mutant, R266K, is moderately PLP-responsive while the R266M mutation shows dramatic differences in the ferrous state. The electrostatic interaction between C52 and R266 is critical for stabilizing the ferrous heme and its disruption leads to the facile formation of a 424 nm (C-424) absorbing ferrous species, which is inactive, compared to the active 449 nm ferrous species for wild-type CBS. Resonance Raman studies on the R266M mutant reveal that the kinetics of C52 rebinding after Fe-CO photolysis are comparable to that of wild-type CBS. EXAFS studies on C-424 CBS are consistent with the presence of two axial N/O low Z scatters with only one being a rigid unit of a histidine residue while the other could be a solvent molecule, an oxygen atom from the peptide backbone or a side chain nitrogen. The redox potential for the heme in full-length CBS is −350 ± 4 mV and is substantially lower than the value of −287 ± 2 mV determined for truncated CBS. A redox-regulated ligand change has the potential to serve as an allosteric on/off switch in human CBS and the second sphere ligand, R266, plays an important role in this transition.  相似文献   

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Cystathionine beta-synthase is a key heme and pyridoxal phosphate-dependent enzyme involved in homocysteine metabolism in humans. The role of the recently discovered heme in this protein remains an important open question. The axial ligands to the heme in both the ferrous and ferric states have been assigned as cysteine and histidine residues, respectively. In this study, we have examined the effect of ligation and spin state changes in the heme on the activity of the enzyme. Treatment of the ferric enzyme with HgCl2 results in the conversion of six-coordinate low-spin heme to five-coordinate high-spin heme and is paralleled by a loss of activity. In contrast, treatment of the ferrous enzyme with HgCl2 results in replacement of the cysteine ligand by an unidentified sixth ligand and retention of the six-coordinate state, and is also accompanied by loss of enzyme activity. Treatment of the five-coordinate HgCl2-treated enzyme with thiols, such as homocysteine, results in reversion to a six-coordinate state. Resonance Raman spectroscopy with 34S-labeled enzyme reveals the return of the endogenous thiol ligand under these conditions and rules out direct coordination by the thiolate of homocysteine to the heme.  相似文献   

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Human cystathionine beta-synthase (CBS) is a unique pyridoxal-5'-phosphate-dependent enzyme in which heme is also present as a cofactor. Because the function of heme in this enzyme has yet to be elucidated, the study presented herein investigated possible relationships between the chemistry of the heme and the strong pH dependence of CBS activity. This study revealed, via study of a truncation variant, that the catalytic core of the enzyme governs the pH dependence of the activity. The heme moiety was found to play no discernible role in regulating CBS enzyme activity by sensing changes in pH, because the coordination sphere of the heme is not altered by changes in pH over a range of pH 6-9. Instead, pH was found to control the equilibrium amount of ferric and ferrous heme present after reaction of CBS with one-electron reducing agents. A variety of spectroscopic techniques, including resonance Raman, magnetic circular dichroism, and electron paramagnetic resonance, demonstrated that at pH 9 Fe(II) CBS is dominant while at pH 6 Fe(III) CBS is favored. At low pH, Fe(II) CBS forms transiently but reoxidizes by an apparent proton-gated electron-transfer mechanism. Regulation of CBS activity by the iron redox state has been proposed as the role of the heme moiety in this enzyme. Given that the redox behavior of the CBS heme appears to be controlled by pH, interplay of pH and oxidation state effects must occur if CBS activity is redox regulated.  相似文献   

13.
Heme-regulated eIF2alpha kinase (HRI) is an important enzyme that modulates protein synthesis during cellular emergency/stress conditions, such as heme deficiency in red cells. It is essential to identify the heme axial ligand(s) and/or binding sites to establish the heme regulation mechanism of HRI. Previous reports suggest that a His residue in the N-terminal region and a Cys residue in the C-terminal region trans to the His are axial ligands of the heme. Moreover, mutational analyses indicate that a residue located in the kinase insertion (KI) domain between Kinase I and Kinase II domains in the C-terminal region is an axial ligand. In the present study, we isolate the KI domain of mouse HRI and employ site-directed mutagenesis to identify the heme axial ligand. The optical absorption spectrum of the Fe(III) hemin-bound wild-type KI displays a broad Soret band at around 373nm, while that of the Fe(II) heme-bound protein contains a band at 422nm. Spectral titration studies conducted for both the Fe(III) hemin and Fe(II) heme complexes with KI support a 1:1 stoichiometry of heme iron to protein. Resonance Raman spectra of Fe(III) hemin-bound KI suggest that thiol is the axial ligand in a 5-coordinate high-spin heme complex as a major form. Electron spin resonance (ESR) spectra of Fe(III) hemin-bound KI indicate that the axial ligands are OH(-) and Cys. Since Cys385 is the only cysteine in KI, the residue was mutated to Ser, and its spectral characteristics were analyzed. The Soret band position, heme spectral titration behavior and ESR parameters of the Cys385Ser mutant were markedly different from those of wild-type KI. Based on these spectroscopic findings, we conclude that Cys385 is an axial ligand of isolated KI.  相似文献   

14.
To evaluate the potential of using heme-containing lipocalin nitrophorin 1 (NP1) as a template for protein engineering, we have replaced the native axial heme-coordinating histidine residue with glycine, alanine, and cysteine. We report here the characterization of the cysteine mutant H60C_NP1 by spectroscopic and crystallographic methods. The UV/vis, resonance Raman, and magnetic circular dichroism spectra suggest weak thiolate coordination of the ferric heme in the H60C_NP1 mutant. Reduction to the ferrous state resulted in loss of cysteine coordination, while addition of exogenous imidazole ligands gave coordination changes that varied with the ligand. Depending on the substitution of the imidazole, we could distinguish three heme coordination states: five-coordinate monoimidazole, six-coordinate bisimidazole, and six-coordinate imidazole/thiolate. Ligand binding affinities were measured and found to be generally 2–3 orders of magnitude lower for the H60C mutant relative to NP1. Two crystal structures of the H60C_NP1 in complex with imidazole and histamine were solved to 1.7- and 1.96-Å resolution, respectively. Both structures show that the H60C mutation is well tolerated by the protein scaffold and suggest that heme–thiolate coordination in H60C_NP1 requires some movement of the heme within its binding cavity. This adjustment may be responsible for the ease with which the engineered heme–thiolate coordination can be displaced by exogenous ligands.  相似文献   

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Ojha S  Wu J  LoBrutto R  Banerjee R 《Biochemistry》2002,41(14):4649-4654
Human cystathionine beta-synthase is a hemeprotein that catalyzes a pyridoxal phosphate (PLP)-dependent condensation of serine and homocysteine into cystathionine. Biophysical characterization of this enzyme has led to the assignment of the heme ligands as histidine and cysteinate, respectively, which has recently been confirmed by crystal structure determination of the catalytic core of the protein. Using site-directed mutagenesis, we confirm that C52 and H65 represent the thiolate and histidine ligands to the heme. Conversion of C52 to alanine or serine results in spectral properties of the resulting hemeprotein that are consistent with the loss of a thiolate ligand. Thus, the Soret peak blue-shifts from 428 to 415 and 417 nm in the ferric forms of the C52S and C52A mutants, respectively, and from 450 to 423 nm in the ferrous states of both mutants. Addition of CO to the dithionite-reduced ferrous C52 mutants results in spectra with Soret peaks at 420 nm. EPR spectroscopy of the ferric C52 variants reveals the predominance of a high-spin species. The H65R mutant, a variant described in a homocystinuric patient, has Soret peaks at 424, 421, and 420 nm in the ferric, ferrous, and ferrous CO states, respectively. EPR spectroscopy reveals predominance of the low-spin species. Both C52A and C52S mutations lead to protein with substoichiometric heme (19% with respect to wild type); however, the PLP content is comparable to that of wild-type enzyme. The heme and PLP contents of the H65R mutant are 40% and 75% that of wild-type enzyme. These results indicate that heme saturation does not dictate PLP saturation in these mutant enzymes. Both H65 and C52 variants display low catalytic activity, revealing that changes in the heme binding domain modulate activity, consistent with a regulatory role for this cofactor.  相似文献   

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Heme oxygenases (HOs) are monooxygenases that catalyze the first step in heme degradation, converting heme to biliverdin with concomitant release of Fe(II) and CO from the porphyrin macrocycle. Two heme oxygenase isoforms, HO-1 and HO-2, exist that differ in several ways, including a complete lack of Cys residues in HO-1 and the presence of three Cys residues as part of heme-regulatory motifs (HRMs) in HO-2. HRMs in other heme proteins are thought to directly bind heme, or to otherwise regulate protein stability or activity; however, it is not currently known how the HRMs exert these effects on HO-2 function. To better understand the properties of this vital enzyme and to elucidate possible roles of its HRMs, various forms of HO-2 possessing distinct alterations to the HRMs were prepared. In this study, variants with Cys265 in a thiol form are compared with those with this residue in an oxidized (part of a disulfide bond or existing as a sulfenate moiety) form. Absorption and magnetic circular dichroism spectroscopic data of these HO-2 variants clearly demonstrate that a new low-spin Fe(III) heme species characteristic of thiolate ligation is formed when Cys265 is reduced. Additionally, absorption, magnetic circular dichroism, and resonance Raman data collected at different temperatures reveal an intriguing temperature dependence of the iron spin state in the heme–HO-2 complex. These findings are consistent with the presence of a hydrogen-bonding network at the heme’s distal side within the active site of HO-2 with potentially significant differences from that observed in HO-1.  相似文献   

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Cystathionine beta-synthase (CBS) condenses homocysteine, a toxic metabolite, with serine in a pyridoxal phosphate-dependent reaction. It also contains a heme cofactor to which carbon monoxide (CO) or nitric oxide can bind, resulting in enzyme inhibition. To understand the mechanism of this regulation, we have investigated the equilibria and kinetics of CO binding to the highly active catalytic core of CBS, which is dimeric. CBS exhibits strong anticooperativity in CO binding with successive association constants of 0.24 and 0.02 microm(-1). Stopped flow measurements reveal slow CO association (0.0166 s(-1)) limited by dissociation of the endogenous ligand, Cys-52. Rebinding of CO and of Cys-52 following CO photodissociation were independently monitored via time-resolved resonance Raman spectroscopy. The Cys-52 rebinding rate, 4000 s(-1), is essentially unchanged between pH 7.6 and 10.5, indicating that the pK(a) of Cys-52 is shifted below pH 7.6. This effect is attributed to the nearby Arg-266 residue, which is proposed to form a salt bridge with the dissociated Cys-52, thereby inhibiting its protonation and slowing rebinding to the Fe. This salt bridge suggests a pathway for enzyme inactivation upon CO binding, because Arg-266 is located on a helix that connects the heme and pyridoxal phosphate cofactor domains.  相似文献   

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