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1.
1. Mössbauer spectra were measured of adrenodoxin purified from porcine adrenal glands. They show similarities to the spectra of the plant ferredoxins. All of these proteins contain two atoms of iron and two of inorganic sulphide per molecule, and on reduction accept one electron. 2. As with the plant ferredoxins the adrenodoxin for these measurements was enriched with 57Fe by reconstitution of the apo-protein, and subsequently was carefully purified and checked by a number of methods to ensure that it was in the same conformation as the native protein and contained no extraneous iron. 3. The Mössbauer spectra of oxidized adrenodoxin at temperatures from 4.2°K to 197°K show that the iron atoms are probably high-spin Fe3+, and in similar environments, and experience little or no magnetic field from the electrons. 4. Mössbauer spectra of reduced adrenodoxin showed magnetic hyperfine structure at all temperatures from 1.7°K to 244°K, in contrast with the reduced plant ferredoxins, which showed it only at lower temperatures. This is a consequence of a longer electron-spin relaxation time in reduced adrenodoxin. 5. At 4.2°K in a small magnetic field the spectrum of reduced adrenodoxin shows a sixline Zeeman pattern due to Fe3+ superimposed upon a combined magnetic and quadrupole spectrum due to Fe2+. 6. In a large magnetic field (30kG) each hyperfine pattern is further split into two. Analysis of these spectra at 4.2°K and 1.7°K shows that the effective fields at the Fe3+ and Fe2+ nuclei are in opposite directions. This agrees with the proposal, first made for the ferredoxins, that the iron atoms are antiferromagnetically coupled. 7. In accord with the model for the ferredoxins, it is proposed that the oxidized adrenodoxin contains two high-spin Fe3+ atoms which are antiferromagnetically coupled; on reduction one iron atom becomes high-spin Fe2+.  相似文献   

2.
Mössbauer-effect studies of the super-reduced form of Chromatium high-potential iron–sulphur protein indicate that the iron atoms are in a similar valency state to those in reduced ferredoxin from Clostridium pasteurianum, with possibly some inequivalence between the iron atoms within the four-iron centre. Mössbauer spectroscopy also shows magnetic differences between the four-iron centres in the two proteins.  相似文献   

3.
1. The Mössbauer spectra of Scenedesmus ferredoxin enriched in 57Fe were measured and found to be identical with those of two other plant-type ferredoxins (from spinach and Euglena) that had been previously measured. Better resolved Mössbauer spectra of spinach ferredoxin are also reported from protein enriched in 57Fe. All these iron–sulphur proteins are known to contain two iron atoms in a molecule that takes up one electron on reduction. 2. The Mössbauer spectra at 195°K have electric hyperfine structure only and show that on reduction the electron goes to one of the iron atoms, the other appearing to remain unchanged. 3. In the oxidized state, both iron atoms are in a similar chemical state, which appears from the chemical shift and quadrupole splitting to be high-spin Fe3+, but they are in slightly different environments. In the reduced state the iron atoms are different and the molecule appears to contain one high-spin Fe2+ and one high-spin Fe3+ atom. 4. At lower temperatures (77 and 4.2°K) the spectra of both iron atoms in the reduced proteins show magnetic hyperfine structure which suggests that the iron in the oxidized state also has unpaired electrons. This provides experimental evidence for earlier suggestions that in the oxidized state there is antiferromagnetic exchange coupling, which would result in a low value for the magnetic susceptibility. 5. In a small magnetic field the spectrum of the reduced ferredoxin shows a Zeeman splitting with hyperfine field (Hn) of 180kG at the nuclei. On application of a strong magnetic field H the spectrum splits into two spectra with effective fields Hn±H, thus confirming the presence of the two antiferromagnetically coupled iron atoms. 6. These results are in agreement with the model proposed by Gibson, Hall, Thornley & Whatley (1966); in the oxidized state there are two Fe3+ atoms (high spin) antiferromagnetically coupled and on reduction of the ferredoxin by one electron one of the ferric atoms becomes Fe2+ (high spin).  相似文献   

4.
The magnetic hyperfine structure observed in the 57Fe Mössbauer spectra of the high-potential iron protein from Chromatium shows that the iron atoms are inequivalent in pairs, with hyperfine fields of 121 and 90kG.  相似文献   

5.
There are major differences in the temperature dependence of the Mössbauer spectra of ferritin and haemosiderin extracted from the organs of humans suffering from transfusional iron overload. Iron overload can also occur in animal systems as a result of artificial treatments or dietary factors. None of the animal systems which were investigated in the present study showed evidence in their Mössbauer spectra for the presence of the haemosiderin found in transfusional iron overload in humans. This suggests that the haemosiderin which occurs in the case of human transfusional iron overload may be specific to that situation.  相似文献   

6.
The incorporation of 57Fe into two lipoxygenase isoenzymes from soybeans has been achieved making possible the first observations of the iron environment in these proteins using M?ssbauer spectroscopy. Immature soybean seeds were grown in tissue culture medium supplied with 57Fe. The iron in the active lipoxygenases that were isolated from the cultured seeds was readily detected in M?ssbauer measurements. It was unequivocally demonstrated that the native enzyme contains high-spin Fe(II). Based on the sign of the electric field gradient, the most likely ligand sphere for the iron in native lipoxygenase consists of oxygen and nitrogen ligands in a roughly octahedral field of symmetry. It was possible to detect M?ssbauer signals in highly concentrated samples of native lipoxygenases containing 57Fe at natural abundance. The spectra obtained for enriched and natural abundance native enzyme had the same high-spin Fe(II) M?ssbauer parameters. This confirmed that the environment of the iron in enzymes isolated from cultured seeds and dry soybeans were the same. The M?ssbauer spectra (4.2-250 K) for samples of both isoenzymes after oxidation of the iron in native enzyme by the product of lipoxygenase catalysis were extremely broad (20 mm/s) with no obvious narrow resonance lines. This was the result of the existence of paramagnetically broadened spectra for such samples even at relatively high temperature as evidenced by the appropriate EPR signal. A small molecule containing an iron site sharing many of these M?ssbauer and electron paramagnetic resonance properties with lipoxygenase was identified: Fe(II)/(III).diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid.  相似文献   

7.
M?ssbauer and EPR studies of a highly active hydroxylase component of methane monooxygenase isolated from Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b are reported. The M?ssbauer spectra of the oxidized (as isolated) hydroxylase show iron in a diamagnetic cluster containing an even number of Fe3+ sites. The parameters are consistent with an antiferromagnetically coupled binuclear cluster similar to those of hemerythrin and purple acid phosphatases. Upon partial reduction of the hydroxylase, an S = 1/2 EPR spectrum with g values at 1.94, 1.86, and 1.75 (gav = 1.85) is observed. Such spectra are characteristic of oxo-bridged iron dimers in the mixed valent Fe(II).Fe(III) state. Further reduction leads to the appearance of a novel EPR resonance at g = 15. Comparison with an inorganic model compound for mu-oxo-bridged binuclear iron suggests that the g = 15 signal is characteristic of the doubly reduced state of the cluster in the protein. In this state, the M?ssbauer spectra exhibit two quadrupole doublets typical of high spin Fe2+, consistent with the Fe(II).Fe(II) form of the cluster. The spectral features of the iron center of the hydroxylase in three oxidation states are all similar to those reported for mu-oxo (or mu-hydroxo)-bridged binuclear iron clusters. Since no known monooxygenase contains such a cluster, a new oxygenase mechanism is suggested. Three different preparative methods yielded hydroxylases spanning a 9-fold range in specific activity, yet the same cluster concentration and spectral characteristics were observed. Thus, other parameters than those measured here have a major influence on the activity.  相似文献   

8.
We have recently shown (Lindahl, P. A., Day, E. P., Kent, T. A., Orme-Johnson, W. H., and Münck, E. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 11160-11173) that the [4Fe-4S]1+ cluster of the native Fe protein can exist in two forms characterized by different cluster spin: an S = 1/2 state exhibiting a g = 1.94 type EPR signal and an S = 3/2 state yielding signals at g approximately 5.8 and 5.1. We have now extended our study of the Fe protein to include the MgATP- and MgADP-bound forms. The [4Fe-4S]1+ cluster of the nucleotide-bound Fe protein exists in a similar S = 1/2, S = 3/2 spin mixture. The S = 3/2 cluster exhibits a broad EPR signal at g approximately 4.8. In spectra of the MgATP-bound protein, we have also observed a g = 4.3 signal from an S = 5/2 state (D = 1 - 3 cm-1, E/D approximately 0.32). Various experiments strongly suggest that this signal does not originate from adventitiously bound Fe3+. The g = 4.3 signal may arise from approximately 2% of the [4Fe-4S]1+ clusters when MgATP is protein-bound. We have also discovered substoichiometric amounts of what appears to be ADP in some nominally nucleotide-free Fe protein samples. MgATP binds to Fe protein in the presence of perturbing solvents, resulting in EPR spectra similar to those of MgATP-bound samples in aqueous solutions; MgADP binding, on the other hand, results in signals more typical of the solvent state. Spectra of samples frozen during turnover of the nitrogenase system exhibit a mixture of spin states. Characterization of the Fe protein EPR signature described here should aid future mechanistic and nucleotide-binding studies.  相似文献   

9.
M?ssbauer effect in some haemoglobin compounds   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
  相似文献   

10.
Mössbauer spectra have been obtained from samples of the liver of Spitsbergen reindeer at different times of the year. Most of the iron is in a very similar form to that of the iron storage materials ferritin and haemosiderin. The data reflect the large differences in the amount of iron found in the liver at different times of the year and also indicate that there are only relatively small differences in the chemical and physical form of the iron found in the liver at different times of the year.  相似文献   

11.
Iron uptake into the nonheme ferritin of Escherichia coli (EcFtnA) and its site-directed variants have been investigated by M?ssbauer spectroscopy. EcFtnA, like recombinant human H chain ferritin (HuHF), oxidized Fe(II) at a dinuclear ferroxidase center situated at a central position within each subunit. As with HuHF, M?ssbauer subspectra observed between 1 min and 24 h after Fe(II) addition were assigned to Fe(III) monomers, "c", mu-oxo-bridged dimers, "b", and clusters, "a", the latter showing magnetically split spectra, "d", at 4.1 K. Like those of HuHF, the mu-oxo-bridged dimers were formed at the ferroxidase centers. However, the analysis also revealed the presence of a new type of dimer, "e" (QS1 = 0.38 mm/s, IS1 = 0.51 mm/s and QS2 = 0.72 mm/s, IS2 = 0.50 mm/s), and this was also assigned to the ferroxidase center. Dimers "b" appeared to be converted to dimers "e" over time. Subspectra "e" became markedly asymmetric at temperatures above 90 K, suggesting that the two Fe(III) atoms of dimers "e" were more weakly coupled than in the mu-oxo-bridged dimers "b", possibly due to OH- bridging. Monomeric Fe(III), giving relaxation spectra "c", was assigned to a unique site C that is near the dinuclear center. In EcFtnA all three iron atoms seemed to be oxidized together. In contrast to HuHF, no Fe(III) clusters were observed 24 h after the aerobic addition of 48 Fe(II) atoms/molecule in wild-type EcFtnA. This implies that iron is more evenly distributed between molecules in the bacterial ferritins, which may account for its greater accessibility.  相似文献   

12.
Mössbauer spectra obtained from the terminal dioxygenase protein of the benzene dioxygenase system from Pseudomonas putida show that it contains [2Fe--2S] centres similar to those of the two-iron plant-type ferredoxins. In the oxidized form the two iron atoms within the centre are high-spin ferric but with considerable inequivalence. In the reduced form the centre contains one extra electron, and this is localized on one of the iron atoms, which becomes high-spin ferrous.  相似文献   

13.
J A Broadwater  C Achim  E Münck  B G Fox 《Biochemistry》1999,38(38):12197-12204
Stearoyl-ACP Delta(9)-desaturase (Delta 9D) is a diiron enzyme that catalyzes 18:0-ACP desaturation. Each subunit of homodimeric resting Delta 9D contains a diferric cluster, while chemical reduction by 4e(-) produces a diferrous cluster in each subunit. Reaction of 4e(-)-reduced Delta 9D with 18:0-ACP and O(2) yields a blue chromophore (lambda(max) approximately 700 nm) that exhibits a vibrational spectrum indicative of a micro-1,2-peroxo complex; this species has been designated peroxo Delta9D. In contrast to other enzymic peroxodiiron intermediates, peroxo Delta 9D is long-lived (t(1/2) approximately 30 min at 25 degrees C) and decays via an oxidase reaction without formation of either H(2)O(2) or product (18:1-ACP). In this work, optical, transient kinetic, and M?ssbauer techniques have been used to further investigate the origin and nature of this unusual peroxodiiron complex. Rapid mixing of 4e(-) Delta 9D with O(2)-equilibrated 18:0-ACP produced peroxo Delta 9D as revealed by a temperature-dependent, pseudo-first-order absorption increase at 700 nm (k = 46 s(-)(1) at 6 degrees C). The M?ssbauer spectrum of peroxo Delta 9D, accounting for 96% of the total iron, consists of two quadrupole doublets present in equal proportions: delta(1) = 0.68(1) mm/s, and Delta E(Q)(1) = 1.90(2) mm/s; delta(2) = 0.64(1) mm/s, and Delta E(Q)(2) = 1.06(2) mm/s. Decay of the 700 nm optical band (k = 0.004 min(-)(1) at 6 degrees C) correlates with the complete conversion of peroxo Delta 9D into a complex called peroxo-cycled Delta 9D, which exhibits two new doublets present in equal proportions: delta(1) = 0.57(2) mm/s, and Delta E(Q)(1) = 1. 91(3) mm/s; delta(2) = 0.52(2) mm/s, and Delta E(Q)(2) = 1.41(3) mm/s. Thus, peroxo Delta 9D contains two asymmetric diferric clusters and reacts to yield peroxo-cycled Delta 9D, also containing two asymmetric diferric clusters that most probably represent a substrate complex state. The clusters of both peroxo Delta 9D and peroxo-cycled Delta 9D have a diamagnetic ground state. Because peroxo Delta 9D and peroxo-cycled Delta 9D are observed only in the presence of 18:0-ACP, substrate binding appears to have introduced asymmetry into the Delta 9D diiron clusters. In situ photolysis of peroxo Delta 9D at 4.2 K in the M?ssbauer cryostat caused the release of O(2) and the reappearance of a diferrous Delta 9D.18:0-ACP complex with slightly changed parameters, suggesting a constrained cluster configuration was produced by the photolysis event. Annealing the photolyzed sample for 30 min at 77 K quantitatively restored the M?ssbauer spectrum of peroxo Delta 9D, showing that the released O(2) was effectively sequestered within the active site.  相似文献   

14.
Under anaerobic conditions the molybdenum-iron protein (MoFe protein) from Azotobacter vinelandii can be reversibly oxidized with thionine. Electron paramagnetic resonance studies reveal that the oxidation proceeds in two distinct phases: the MoFe protein can be oxidized by four electrons without loss of the EPR signal from the S = 3/2 cofactor centers. A second oxidation step, involving two electrons, leads to the disappearance of the cofactor EPR signal. In order to correlate the events during the thionine titration with redox reactions involving individual iron centers we have studied the MoFe proteins from A vinelandii and Clostridium pasteurianum with M?ssbauer spectroscopy. Spectra were taken in the temperature range from 1.5 K to 200 K in applied magnetic fields of up to 54 kG. Analysis of the M?ssbauer data allows us to draw three major conclusions: (1) the holoprotein contains 30 +/- 2 iron atoms. (2) Most probably, 12 iron atoms belong to two, apparently identical, iron clusters (labeled M) which we have shown previously to be structural components of the iron and molybdenum containing cofactor of nitrogenase. The M-centers can be stabilized in three distinct oxidation states, MOXe- in equilibrium MNe- in equilibrium MR. The diamagnetic (S = 0) state MOX is attained by oxidation of the native state MN with either thionine or oxygen. MR is observed under nitrogen fixing conditions. (3) The data strongly suggest that 16 iron atoms are associated with four iron centers which we propose to call P-clusters. Each P-cluster contains four spin-coupled iron atoms. In the native protein the P-clusters are in the diamagnetic state PN, yielding the M?ssbauer signature which we have labeled previously 'components D and Fe2+'. Three irons of the D-type and one iron of the Fe2+-type appear to comprise a P-cluster. A one-electron oxidation yields the paramagnetic state POX. Although the state POX is characterized by half-integral electronic spin a peculiar combination of zero-field splitting parameters and spin relaxation renders this state EPR-silent. Spectroscopically, the P-clusters are novel structures; there is, however, evidence that they are closely related to familiar 4Fe-4S centers.  相似文献   

15.
One of the most striking features of Alzheimer disease (AD) is an accumulation of iron in neurofibrillary tangles and senile plaques. Intriguingly, this iron is found as both iron (II) and iron (III) and is redox-active. To address the issue of whether such iron participates in redox cycling, it was essential to investigate how iron (II) accumulates, since oxidation of iron (II) can lead to the generation of reactive oxygen species. To begin to address this issue, here we investigated ceruloplasmin, a key protein involved in the regulation of the redox state of iron by converting iron (II) to iron (III). Cases of AD and age-matched controls, obtained at autopsy with similar postmortem intervals, display similar levels of ceruloplasmin immunoreactivity that is mainly confined to neurons. However, in marked contrast, cases of AD show a significant increase in ceruloplasmin within the neuropil determined by immunoblot analysis of tissue homogenates as well as a generalized increased neuropil staining. Together, these findings suggest that neuronal induction of ceruloplasmin is feeble in AD, even while there is an increase in tissue ceruloplasmin. Therefore, a failure of neuronal ceruloplasmin to respond to iron may be an important factor that then leads to an accumulation of redox-active iron in neurons in AD.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Ferritin plays an important role in iron metabolism and our aim is to understand the mechanisms by which iron is sequestered within its protein shell as the mineral ferrihydrite. We present M?ssbauer spectroscopic data on recombinant human and horse spleen ferritin from which we draw the following conclusions: (1) that apoferritin catalyses Fe(II) oxidation as a first step in ferrihydrite deposition, (2) that the catalysis of Fe(II) oxidation is associated with residues situated within H chains, at the postulated 'ferroxidase centre' and not in the 3-fold inter-subunit channels previously suggested as the initial Fe(II) binding and oxidation site; (3) that both isolated Fe(III) and Fe(III) mu-oxo-bridged dimers found previously by M?ssbauer spectroscopy to be intermediates in iron-core formation in horse spleen ferritin, are located on H chains; and (4) that these dimers form at ferroxidase centres. The importance of the ferroxidase centre is suggested by the conservation of its ligands in many ferritins from vertebrates, invertebrates and plants. Nevertheless iron-core formation does occur in those ferritins that lack ferroxidase centres even though the initial Fe(II) oxidation is relatively slow. We compare the early stages of core formation in such variants and in horse spleen ferritin in which only 10-15% of its chains are of the H type. We discuss our findings in relation to the physiological role of isoferritins in iron storage processes.  相似文献   

18.
M?ssbauer studies of solid thionin-oxidized MoFe protein of nitrogenase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Recently Hagen et al. (Hagen, W. R., Wassink, H., Eady, R. R., Smith, B. E., and Haaker, H. (1987) Eur. J. Biochem. 169, 457-465) reported the observation of S = 7/2 EPR signals for thionin-oxidized nitrogenase MoFe protein. Here we have studied the protein from Azotobacter vinelandii and Klebsiella pneumoniae with M?ssbauer and EPR spectroscopies, with the following results: when the MoFe protein is oxidized by addition of stoichiometric amounts (6-8 equivalents) of dissolved thionin, the well characterized P-cluster state Pox results. Pox has an as yet undetermined, but half-integer electronic spin; however, the state is EPR-silent. In contrast, oxidation by addition of a large excess of solid thionin powder, the method used by Hagen et al., yields mixtures with variable proportions of two oxidized P-cluster forms, namely the familiar Pox and the new state Pox(S = 7/2) observed by Hagen et al. The M?ssbauer data suggest that Pox and Pox(S = 7/2) are isoelectronic. The two states, however, have distinct electronic structures; the M?ssbauer spectra of Pox exhibit the characteristic trapped-valence Fe2+ site, whereas the spectra of Pox(S = 7/2) lack this feature. Hagen et al. have proposed two new P-cluster models. We conclude that one of the models is incompatible with the M?ssbauer data and that the basic assumptions of the other model are not supported by the available data. Finally, the M?ssbauer data show that either oxidation method puts the cofactor centers into the diamagnetic state Mox.  相似文献   

19.
Mössbauer spectroscopic studies of whole cells of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, grown under different conditions, indicate that the predominant form of iron in the cells varies significantly. These differences are interpreted in terms of differences in the nature of the iron cores of the bacterial ferritin, which result from different growth conditions.  相似文献   

20.
Previous M?ssbauer and EPR studies of the MoFe protein (approximately 30 Fe and 2 Mo) of nitrogenase have revealed the presence of two unique clusters, namely, the P-clusters (presumably of the Fe4S4 type) and the molybdenum- and iron-containing cofactors (or M-clusters). M?ssbauer components D (approximately 10-12 Fe) and Fe2+ (approximately 4 Fe) represent subsites of the P-clusters while component S (approximately 2 Fe) appeared to belong to a separate, unidentified cluster. In order to refine the analyses of M?ssbauer spectra, we have constructed an isotopic hybrid of the Klebsiella pneumoniae protein which contains 57Fe-enriched P-clusters and 56Fe-enriched M-clusters. The highly resolved 57Fe M?ssbauer spectra of this hybrid show that component S behaves spectroscopically like the P-cluster sites D and Fe2+ in oxidized and reduced MoFe protein. This suggests that S is a subset of the P-clusters rather than a different cluster type. The present study shows, for the first time, that the Debye-Waller factors of different P-cluster subsites have a different temperature dependence. Thus, the Fe2+/D absorption ratio is 4.0:10.0 at 4.2 K and 4.0:11.6 at 173 K. We propose that the reduced MoFe protein contains two pairs of P-clusters: one pair containing one Fe2+ and three D-sites and the other one Fe2+, two D, and one S-site. We have argued previously that the oxidized P-clusters occur in pairs as well.  相似文献   

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