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1.
 Protein R2, the small component of ribonucleotide reductase from Escherichia coli, contains a diferric center and a catalytically essential tyrosyl radical. In vitro, this radical can be produced in the protein from two inactive forms, metR2, containing an intact diiron center and lacking the tyrosyl radical, and apoR2, lacking both iron and the radical. While activation of apoR2 requires only a source of ferrous iron and exposure to O2, activation of metR2 was achieved using a multienzymatic system consisting of an NAD(P)H:flavin oxidoreductase, superoxide dismutase and a poorly defined protein fraction, named fraction b (Fontecave M, Eliasson R, Reichard P (1987) J Biol Chem 262 : 12325–12331). In both reactions, reduced R2, containing a diferrous center, is a key intermediate which is subsequently converted to active R2 during reaction with O2. By in vivo labeling of E. coli with radioactive 59Fe, we show that fraction b contains iron. Depletion of the iron in fraction b inactivates it, and fraction b can be substituted for by ferric citrate solutions. Furthermore, aqueous Fe2+ in the presence of dithiothreitol is able to convert metR2 into reduced R2. Therefore we propose that the function of fraction b is to provide, in association with the flavin reductase, ferrous iron for reduction of the endogenous diiron center. Since fraction b is not a single well-defined protein, it remains to be shown whether, in vivo, that function resides in a specific protein. Exogenous iron can thus participate in activation of both apoR2 and metR2, but it is incorporated into R2 only in the former case. A unifying mechanism is proposed. Received: 13 November 1996 / Accepted: 3 April 1997  相似文献   

2.
The active form of one subunit of Escherichia coli ribonucleotide reductase (protein B2) contains an organic free radical localized to tyrosine 122 of its polypeptide chain. When this radical is scavenged, e.g. by treatment with hydroxyurea, the enzyme is inactivated (protein B2/HU). E. coli contains an enzyme system consisting of at least three proteins that in the presence of NADPH, FMN, dithiothreitol, and oxygen introduce the tyrosyl radical into B2/HU (Eliasson, R., J?rnvall, H., and Reichard, P. (1986) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 83, 2373-2377). One of the three proteins was identified as superoxide dismutase. We now identify a second protein, previously provisionally named Fraction c, as an NAD(P)H:flavin oxidoreductase (flavin reductase). After 4,000-fold purification the protein moved as a single band on sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis with a molecular weight of 28,000-29,000. The enzyme contained no flavin but reduced riboflavin, FMN, and FAD by NADH, or riboflavin and FMN by NADPH. It is a powerful ferric iron reductase. We propose that its complementing activity during radical generation involves participation in the reduction of the ferric iron center of protein B2/HU. Radical formation is then linked to the reoxidation of iron by oxygen. The flavin reductase may also participate in other aspects of iron metabolism of E. coli.  相似文献   

3.
Heme A, a prosthetic group of cytochrome c oxidase [EC 1.9.3.1], has been introduced into two de novo designed four helix bundle proteins, [H10A24](2) and [H10H24](2), known to bind 2-4 equiv of heme B, respectively [Robertson, D. E., Farid, R. S., Moser, C. C., Mulholland, S. E., Pidikiti, R., Lear, J. D., Wand, A., J., DeGrado, W. F., and Dutton, P. L. (1994) Nature 368, 425-432]. [H10A24](2), [Ac-CGGGELWKL x HEELLKK x FEELLKL x AEERLKK x L-CONH(2)](2)(2), binds two heme A molecules per four-helix unit via bis-histidine ligation at the 10,10' positions with measured K(d) values of <0.1 and 5 nM, values much lower than those measured for heme B (K(d) values of 50 and 800 nM). The heme A-protein complex, [heme A-H10A24](2), exhibits well-defined absorption spectra in both the ferric and ferrous states, and an electron paramagnetic resonance spectrum characteristic of a low spin heme in the ferric form. A single midpoint redox potential (E(m8)) was determined for [heme A-H10A24](2) at -45 mV (vs SHE), which is significantly higher than that of the protein bound heme B (-130 and -200 mV). The observation of a single midpoint redox potential for [heme A-H10A24](2) and a pair of midpoints for [heme B-H10A24](2) indicates that the di-alpha-helical monomers are oriented in an anti topology (disulfides on opposite sides of bundle) in the former (lacking heme-heme electrostatic interaction) and syn in the latter. A mixture of global topologies was indicated by the potentiometric titration of the related [heme A-H10H24](2) which possess two distinct reduction potentials of +41 (31%) and -65 mV (69%). Self-assembly of the mixed cofactor heme A-heme B-[H10A24](2) was accomplished by addition of a single equivalent of each heme A and heme B to [H10A24](2). The single midpoint redox potential of heme B, E(m8) = -200 mV, together with the split midpoint redox potential of heme A in heme A-heme B-[H10A24](2), E(m8) = +28 mV (33%) and -65 mV (67%), indicated the existence of both syn and anti topologies of the two di-alpha-helical monomers in this four helix bundle. Synthesis of the mixed cofactor [heme A-heme B-H10H24](2) was accomplished by addition of a 2 equiv of each heme A and heme B to [H10H24](2) and potentiometry indicated the pair of hemes B resided in the 10,10' sites and heme A occupied the 24,24' sites. The results indicate that heme peripheral structure controls the orientation of the di-alpha-helical monomers in the four-helix bundle which are interchangeable between syn and anti topologies. In the reduced form, [heme A-H10A24](2), reacts quantitatively to form [carbonmonoxy-heme A-H10A24](2) as evidenced by optical spectroscopy. The synthetic [heme A-H10A24](2) can be enzymatically reduced by NAD(P)H with natural reductases under anaerobic conditions, and reversibly oxidized by dioxygen to the ferric form.  相似文献   

4.
α1-Microglobulin is a 26 kDa plasma and tissue glycoprotein that belongs to the lipocalin protein superfamily. Recent reports show that it is a reductase and radical scavenger and that it binds heme and has heme-degrading properties. This study has investigated the protective effects of α1-microglobulin against oxidation by heme and reactive oxygen species in the human erythroid cell line, K562. The results show that α1-microglobulin prevents intracellular oxidation and up-regulation of heme oxygenase-1 induced by heme, hydrogen peroxide and Fenton reaction-generated hydroxyl radicals in the culture medium. It also reduces the cytosol of non-oxidized cells. Endogeneous expression of α1-microglobulin was up-regulated by these oxidants and silencing of the α1-microglobulin expression increased the cytosol oxidation. α1-microglobulin also inhibited cell death caused by heme and cleared cells from bound heme. Binding of heme to α1-microglobulin increased the radical reductase activity of the protein as compared to the apo-protein. Finally, α1-microglobulin was localized mainly at the cell surface both when administered exogeneously and in non-treated cells. The results suggest that α1-microglobulin is involved in the defence against oxidative cellular injury caused by haemoglobin and heme and that the protein may employ both heme-scavenging and one-electron reduction of radicals to achieve this.  相似文献   

5.
O2-dependent reactions of the ferric and ferrous forms of alpha-hydroxyheme complexed with water-soluble rat heme oxygenase-1 were examined by rapid-scan stopped-flow measurements. Ferric alpha-hydroxyheme reacted with O2 to form ferric verdoheme with an O2-dependent rate constant of 4x10(5) M(-1) s(-1) at pH 7.4 and 9.0. A decrease of the rate constant to 2.8x10(5) M(-1) s(-1) at pH 6.5 indicates that the reaction proceeds by direct attack of O2 on the pi-neutral radical form of alpha-hydroxyheme, which is generated by deprotonation of the alpha-hydroxy group. The reaction of ferrous alpha-hydroxyheme with O2 yielded ferrous verdoheme in a biphasic fashion involving a new intermediate having absorption maxima at 415 and 815 nm. The rate constants for this two-step reaction were 68 and 145 s(-1). These results show that conversion of alpha-hydroxyheme to verdoheme is much faster than the reduction of coordinated iron (<1 s(-1)) under physiological conditions [Y. Liu, P.R. Ortiz de Montellano, Reaction intermediates and single turnover rate constants for the oxidation of heme by human heme oxygenase-1, J. Biol. Chem. 275 (2000) 5297-5307], suggesting that, in vivo, the conversion of ferric alpha-hydroxyheme to ferric verdoheme precedes the reduction of ferric alpha-hydroxyheme.  相似文献   

6.
Mixed-valent species were generated in the diiron site of active (with tyrosyl free radical) and met (without radical) forms of protein R2-2 in a class Ib ribonucleotide reductase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis by low temperature reduction (γ-irradiation) at 77 K. The primary mixed-valent EPR signal is a mixture of two components with axial symmetry and gav<2.0, observable at temperatures up to 77 K, and assigned to antiferromagnetically coupled high spin ferric/ferrous sites. The two components in the primary EPR signal can be explained by the existence of two structurally distinct μ-oxo-bridged diferric centers, possibly related to structural heterogeneity around the iron site, and/or different properties of the two polypeptide chains in the homodimeric protein after the radical reconstitution reaction. Annealing of the irradiated R2-2 samples to 143 K transforms the primary EPR signal into a rhombic spectrum characterized by gav<1.8 and observable only below 25 K. This spectrum is assigned to a partially relaxed form with a μ-hydroxo-bridge. Further annealing at 228 K produces a new complex rhombic EPR spectrum composed of at least two components. An identical EPR spectrum was observed and found to be stable upon chemical reduction of Mycobacterium tuberculosis RNR R2-2 at 293 K by dithionite.  相似文献   

7.
The oxidation of ferric cytochrome c peroxidase by hydrogen peroxide yields a product, compound ES [Yonetani, T., Schleyer, H., Chance, B., & Ehrenberg, A. (1967) in Hemes and Hemoproteins (Chance, B., Estabrook, R. W., & Yonetani, T., Eds.) p 293, Academic Press, New York], containing an oxyferryl heme and a protein free radical [Dolphin, D., Forman, A., Borg, D. C., Fajer, J., & Felton, R. H. (1971) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 68, 614-618]. The same oxidant takes the ferrous form of the enzyme to a stable Fe(IV) peroxidase [Ho, P. S., Hoffman, B. M., Kang, C. H., & Margoliash, E. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 4356-4363]. It is 1 equiv more highly oxidized than the ferric protein, contains the oxyferryl heme, but leaves the radical site unoxidized. Addition of sodium fluoride to Fe(IV) peroxidase gives a product with an optical spectrum similar to that of the fluoride complex of the ferric enzyme. However, reductive titration and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) data demonstrate that the oxidizing equivalent has not been lost but rather transferred to the radical site. The EPR spectrum for the radical species in the presence of Fe(III) heme is identical with that of compound ES, indicating that the unusual characteristics of the radical EPR signal do not result from coupling to the heme site. By stopped-flow measurements, the oxidizing equivalent transfer process between heme and radical site is first order, with a rate constant of 0.115 s-1 at room temperature, which is independent of either ligand or protein concentration.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Absorption and circular dichroism (CD) spectra of cytochrome bd from Escherichia coli have been compared for the wild type enzyme and an inactive mutant in which a highly conserved E445 in subunit I has been replaced by alanine [Zhang, J., Hellwig, P., Osborne, J. P., Huang, H. W., Moenne-Loccoz, P., Konstantinov, A. A., and Gennis, R. B. (2001) Biochemistry 40, 8548-8556]. The absorption bands of ferrous heme b595 are absent from the spectrum of the dithionite-reduced E445A form of cytochrome bd. The difference between the spectra of the dithionite-reduced WT and E445A enzymes indicates that in the mutant, heme b595 is present but is not reducible by dithionite. Cytochrome bd reveals intense CD signals dominated by heme d, with almost no contribution from heme b595 or heme b558. The CD spectrum of the reduced wild type enzyme in the Soret band indicates strong excitonic interactions between ferrous heme d and ferrous heme b595, and these interactions are not observed in dithionite-reduced E445A mutant, in which heme b595 remains in the ferric state. Modeling the excitonic interactions in both absorption and CD spectra has been carried out, yielding an estimate of the Fe-to-Fe distance between heme d and heme b595 of about 10 A. The physical proximity supports the hypothesis that heme d and heme b595 can form a di-heme oxygen reducing site, a unique structure for respiratory oxidases.  相似文献   

9.
The ferric high-spin form of the myoglobin from the shark Galeorhinus japonicus, which possesses a Gln residue at the distal site instead of the usual His residue, has been studied by 1H-NMR spectroscopy. Using the heme meso-proton (C5H, C10H, C15H and C20H) resonance shift as a diagnostic probe for identifying the coordination system of the iron center in ferric high-spin form of hemoprotein, it has been shown that G. japonicus metmyoglobin (metMb) possesses the pentacoordinated active site. The pH-dependence study of NMR spectra of G. japonicus metMb revealed the appearance of the hydroxyl form of metMb at high pH, indicating that the protein undergoes the transition between the acidic and alkaline forms. The pK value and the rate for this acid-alkaline transition in G. japonicus metMb were found to be approximately 10 and much less than 4 x 10(2) s-1, respectively. Since the pK value of the acid-alkaline transition for the pentacoordinated heme in Aplysia limacina metMb is 7.8 [Giacometti, G.M., Das Ros, A., Antonini, E. & Brunori, M. (1975) Biochemistry 14, 1584-1588] and that of the hexacoordinated heme in sperm whale metMb is 9.1 [Brunori, M., Antonini, E., Fasella, P., Wyman, J. & Rossi-Fanelli, A. (1968) J. Mol. Biol. 34, 497-504], the OH- affinity of the ferric heme iron does not appear to depend on its coordination system. The acid-alkaline transition rate in A. limacina metMb was reported to be much less than 1.5 x 10(2) s-1 [Pande, U., La Mar, G.N., Lecomte, J.T.J., Ascoli, F., Brunori, M., Smith, K.M., Pandey, R.K., Parish, D.W. & Thanabal, V. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 5638-5646] and therefore a slow transition rate may be unique to the pentacoordinated active site of Mb.  相似文献   

10.
Frederik A.J. Rotsaert 《BBA》2008,1777(3):239-249
We have examined the pre-steady-state kinetics and thermodynamic properties of the b hemes in variants of the yeast cytochrome bc1 complex that have mutations in the quinone reductase site (center N). Trp-30 is a highly conserved residue, forming a hydrogen bond with the propionate on the high potential b heme (bH heme). The substitution by a cysteine (W30C) lowers the redox potential of the heme and an apparent consequence is a lower rate of electron transfer between quinol and heme at center N. Leu-198 is also in close proximity to the bH heme and a L198F mutation alters the spectral properties of the heme but has only minor effects on its redox properties or the electron transfer kinetics at center N. Substitution of Met-221 by glutamine or glutamate results in the loss of a hydrophobic interaction that stabilizes the quinone ligands. Ser-20 and Gln-22 form a hydrogen-bonding network that includes His-202, one of the carbonyl groups of the ubiquinone ring, and an active-site water. A S20T mutation has long-range structural effects on center P and thermodynamic effects on both b hemes. The other mutations (M221E, M221Q, Q22E and Q22T) do not affect the ubiquinol oxidation kinetics at center P, but do modify the electron transfer reactions at center N to various extents. The pre-steady reduction kinetics suggest that these mutations alter the binding of quinone ligands at center N, possibly by widening the binding pocket and thus increasing the distance between the substrate and the bH heme. These results show that one can distinguish between the contribution of structural and thermodynamic factors to center N function.  相似文献   

11.
Nitric-oxide synthase (NOS) is composed of an oxygenase domain having cytochrome P450-type heme active site and a reductase domain having FAD- and FMN-binding sites. To investigate the route of electron transfer from the reductase domain to the heme, we generated mutants at Lys(423) in the heme proximal site of neuronal NOS and examined the catalytic activities, electron transfer rates, and NADPH oxidation rates. A K423E mutant showed no NO formation activity (<0.1 nmol/min/nmol heme), in contrast with that (72 nmol/min/nmol heme) of the wild type enzyme. The electron transfer rate (0.01 min(-1)) of the K423E on addition of excess NADPH was much slower than that (>10 min(-1)) of the wild type enzyme. From the crystal structure of the oxygenase domain of endothelial NOS, Lys(423) of neuronal NOS is likely to interact with Trp(409) which lies in contact with the heme plane and with Cys(415), the axial ligand. It is also exposed to solvent and lies in the region where the heme is closest to the protein surface. Thus, it seems likely that ionic interactions between Lys(423) and the reductase domain may help to form a flavin to heme electron transfer pathway.  相似文献   

12.
Cameron MD  Aust SD 《Biochemistry》2000,39(44):13595-13601
The flavin cofactor within cellobiose dehydrogenase (CDH) was found to be responsible for the reduction of all electron acceptors tested. This includes cytochrome c, the reduction of which has been reported to be by the reduced heme of CDH. The heme group was shown to affect the reactivity and activation energy with respect to individual electron acceptors, but the heme group was not involved in the direct transfer of electrons to substrate. A complicated interaction was found to exist between the flavin and heme of cellobiose dehydrogenase. The addition of electron acceptors was shown to increase the rate of flavin reduction and the electron transfer rate between the flavin and heme. All electron acceptors tested appeared to be reduced by the flavin domain. The addition of ferric iron eliminated the flavin radical present in reduced CDH, as detected by low temperature ESR spectroscopy, while it increased the flavin radical ESR signal in the independent flavin domain, more commonly referred to as cellobiose:quinone oxidoreductase (CBQR). Conversely, no radical was detected with either CDH or CBQR upon the addition of methyl-1,4-benzoquinone. Similar reaction rates and activation energies were determined for methyl-1,4-benzoquinone with both CDH and CBQR, whereas the rate of iron reduction by CDH was five times higher than by CBQR, and its activation energy was 38 kJ/mol lower than that of CBQR. Oxygen, which may be reduced by either one or two electrons, was found to behave like a two-electron acceptor. Superoxide production was found only upon the inclusion of iron. Additionally, information is presented indicating that the site of substrate reduction may be in the cleft between the flavin and heme domains.  相似文献   

13.
An enzyme system from Escherichia coli activates an inactive form of ribonucleotide reductase by transforming a tyrosine residue of the enzyme into a cationic free radical. The process requires NAD(P)H, a flavin, dithiothreitol, and oxygen and at least three proteins. After purification to near homogeneity two of the proteins were identified as superoxide dismutase and NAD(P)H:flavin oxidoreductase (Fontecave, M., Eliasson, R., and Reichard, P. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 12325-12331). The nature of the third protein, provisionally named Fraction b, is unknown. The flavin reductase is believed to reduce the ferric iron center of the ribonucleotide reductase as a prerequisite for radical generation. Here we demonstrate that the flavin reductase under aerobic conditions generates superoxide anions which inactivate ribonucleotide reductase. Superoxide dismutase protects the enzyme or a sensitive intermediate formed during the generation of the tyrosyl radical from the harmful effects of superoxide. Hydrogen peroxide, formed by superoxide dismutase, is also harmful. In this case, catalase present in Fraction b might protect the system. Fraction b has, however, an additional unknown function in the overall process of radical generation.  相似文献   

14.
A C Anusiem  M Kelleher 《Biopolymers》1984,23(7):1147-1167
Interest in the thermodynamics of the iron-binding site in hemoproteins has increased in recent years due to refinements in x-ray crystallographic studies of hemoproteins [see Deathage, J. F., Lee, R. S., Anderson, C. M. & Moffat, K. (1976) J. Mol. Biol. 104 , 687–706; Heidner, E. J., Ladner, R. C. & Perutz, M. F. (1976) J. Mol. Biol. 104 , 707–722; Deathage, J. F., Lee, R. S. & Moffat, K. (1976) J. Mol. Biol. 104 , 723–728; Ladner, R. C., Heidner, E. J. & Perutz, M. F. (1976) J. Mol. Biol. 114 , 385–414; Fermi, G. & Perutz, M. F. (1977) J. Mol. Biol. 114 , 421–431; Takano, T. (1977) J. Mol. Biol. 110 , 537–568 and 569–589], the synthesis and x-ray analysis of model heme compounds [see Scheidt, W. R. (1977) Acc. Chem. Res. 10 , 339–345; Kastner, M. E., Scheidt, W. R., Mashino, T. & Reed, C. A. (1978) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 100 , 666–667; Mashiko, T., Kastner, M. E., Spartalian, K., Scheidt, W. R. & Reed, C. A. (1978) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 100 , 6354–6362; Hill, H. A. O., Skite, P. P., Buchler, J. W., Luchr, H., Tonn, M., Gregson, A. K. & Pellizer, G. (1979) Chem. Commun. 4 , 151–152; and Scheidt, W. R., Cohen, I. A. & Kastner, M. E. (1979) Biochemistry 18 , 3546–3556], and the numerous data on heme–protein interactions that account for the differences observed in ligand binding between the various species of animals. Numerous probes have been used and provide information about the structure and thermodynamics of the binding site, but no single probe can provide the complete picture [see Iizuka, T. & Yonetani, T. (1970) Adv. Biophys. 1 , 157–182; Smith, D. W. & Williams, R. J. P. (1970) Struct. Bond. 7 , 1–45; and Spiro, T. G. (1975) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 416 , 169–189].  相似文献   

15.
The distance between the heme iron of ferrous cytochrome P-450-CAM and a fluorine label attached to the 9-methyl carbon of its substrate, (1R)-(+)-camphor, has been determined using 19F NMR. This investigation uses the Solomon-Bloembergen equation to measure the distance from a paramagnetic heme iron to a fluorine probe incorporated into a substrate that is not in fast exchange. The structural identity of the substrate analogue, 9-fluorocamphor, has been established using one- and two-dimensional NMR methods and mass spectrometry. The relaxation rate of 9-fluorocamphor bound to high-spin paramagnetic ferrous P-450-CAM has been studied at 188, 282, and 376 MHz, and the correlation time has been directly determined from the frequency dependence of the relaxation rate. When the substrate analogue was bound to the low-spin diamagnetic ferrous-CO derivative of the enzyme, the relaxation rate was found to be 100 times slower and was therefore neglected in the distance calculation. The relaxation data for the paramagnetic system and the correlation time have been used to calculate a distance of 3.8 A between the heme iron and the C-9 fluoride. A fit of the distance and the chemical shift data to the pseudocontact shift equation predicts an angle of approximately 52 degrees between the heme normal and the Fe-F vector. The solution state Fe-F distance is somewhat shorter and the angle between the heme normal and the Fe-F vector slightly larger for the substrate-bound ferrous enzyme reported herein than the analogous values for the substrate-bound ferric enzyme determined in the solid state by x-ray crystallography. These differences may reflect a structural change at the substrate-binding site upon reduction of the iron.  相似文献   

16.
The iron-sulfur protein of the cytochromebc 1 complex oxidizes ubiquinol at center P in the protonmotive Q cycle mechanism, transferring one electron to cytochromec 1 and generating a low-potential ubisemiquinone anion which reduces the low-potential cytochromeb-566 heme group. In order to catalyze this divergent transfer of two reducing equivalents from ubiquinol, the iron-sulfur protein must be structurally integrated into the cytochromebc 1 complex in a manner which facilitates electron transfer from the iron-sulfur cluster to cytochromec 1 and generates a strongly reducing ubisemiquinone anion radical which is proximal to theb-566 heme group. This radical must also be sequestered from spurious reactivities with oxygen and other high-potential oxidants. Experimental approaches are described which are aimed at understanding how the iron-sulfur protein is inserted into center P, and how the iron-sulfur cluster is inserted into the apoprotein.  相似文献   

17.
Polymerization of intraerythrocytic deoxyhemoglobin S (HbS) is the primary molecular event that leads to hemolytic anemia in sickle cell disease (SCD). We reasoned that HbS may contribute to the complex pathophysiology of SCD in part due to its pseudoperoxidase activity. We compared oxidation reactions and the turnover of oxidation intermediates of purified human HbS and HbA. Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) drives a catalytic cycle that includes the following three distinct steps: 1) initial oxidation of ferrous (oxy) to ferryl Hb; 2) autoreduction of the ferryl intermediate to ferric (metHb); and 3) reaction of metHb with an additional H2O2 molecule to regenerate the ferryl intermediate. Ferrous and ferric forms of both proteins underwent initial oxidation to the ferryl heme in the presence of H2O2 at equal rates. However, the rate of autoreduction of ferryl to the ferric form was slower in the HbS solutions. Using quantitative mass spectrometry and the spin trap, 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide, we found more irreversibly oxidized βCys-93in HbS than in HbA. Incubation of the ferric or ferryl HbS with cultured lung epithelial cells (E10) induced a drop in mitochondrial oxygen consumption rate and impairment of cellular bioenergetics that was related to the redox state of the iron. Ferryl HbS induced a substantial drop in the mitochondrial transmembrane potential and increases in cytosolic heme oxygenase (HO-1) expression and mitochondrial colocalization in E10 cells. Thus, highly oxidizing ferryl Hb and heme, the product of oxidation, may be central to the evolution of vasculopathy in SCD and may suggest therapeutic modalities that interrupt heme-mediated inflammation.  相似文献   

18.
Cytochrome P450 2B4 is a microsomal protein with a multi-step reaction cycle similar to that observed in the majority of other cytochromes P450. The cytochrome P450 2B4-substrate complex is reduced from the ferric to the ferrous form by cytochrome P450 reductase. After binding oxygen, the oxyferrous protein accepts a second electron which is provided by either cytochrome P450 reductase or cytochrome b5. In both instances, product formation occurs. When the second electron is donated by cytochrome b5, catalysis (product formation) is ∼10- to 100-fold faster than in the presence of cytochrome P450 reductase. This allows less time for side product formation (hydrogen peroxide and superoxide) and improves by ∼15% the coupling of NADPH consumption to product formation. Cytochrome b5 has also been shown to compete with cytochrome P450 reductase for a binding site on the proximal surface of cytochrome P450 2B4. These two different effects of cytochrome b5 on cytochrome P450 2B4 reactivity can explain how cytochrome b5 is able to stimulate, inhibit, or have no effect on cytochrome P450 2B4 activity. At low molar ratios (<1) of cytochrome b5 to cytochrome P450 reductase, the more rapid catalysis results in enhanced substrate metabolism. In contrast, at high molar ratios (>1) of cytochrome b5 to cytochrome P450 reductase, cytochrome b5 inhibits activity by binding to the proximal surface of cytochrome P450 and preventing the reductase from reducing ferric cytochrome P450 to the ferrous protein, thereby aborting the catalytic reaction cycle. When the stimulatory and inhibitory effects of cytochrome b5 are equal, it will appear to have no effect on the enzymatic activity. It is hypothesized that cytochrome b5 stimulates catalysis by causing a conformational change in the active site, which allows the active oxidizing oxyferryl species of cytochrome P450 to be formed more rapidly than in the presence of reductase.  相似文献   

19.
Pseudomonas putida harbors two ferredoxin-NADP+ reductases (Fprs) on its chromosome, and their functions remain largely unknown. Ferric reductase is structurally contained within the Fpr superfamily. Interestingly, ferric reductase is not annotated on the chromosome of P. putida. In an effort to elucidate the function of the Fpr as a ferric reductase, we used a variety of biochemical and physiological methods using the wild-type and mutant strains. In both the ferric reductase and flavin reductase assays, FprA and FprB preferentially used NADPH and NADH as electron donors, respectively. Two Fprs prefer a native ferric chelator to a synthetic ferric chelator and utilize free flavin mononucleotide (FMN) as an electron carrier. FprB has a higher kcat/Km value for reducing the ferric complex with free FMN. The growth rate of the fprB mutant was reduced more profoundly than that of the fprA mutant, the growth rate of which is also lower than the wild type in ferric iron-containing minimal media. Flavin reductase activity was diminished completely when the cell extracts of the fprB mutant plus NADH were utilized, but not the fprA mutant with NADPH. This indicates that other NADPH-dependent flavin reductases may exist. Interestingly, the structure of the NAD(P) region of FprB, but not of FprA, resembled the ferric reductase (Fre) of Escherichia coli in the homology modeling. This study demonstrates, for the first time, the functions of Fprs in P. putida as flavin and ferric reductases. Furthermore, our results indicated that FprB may perform a crucial role as a NADH-dependent ferric/flavin reductase under iron stress conditions.Commonly, Fprs are ubiquitous, monomeric, reversible flavin enzymes. Fprs evidence a profound preference for NADP(H) over NAD(H) (3). They harbor a prosthetic flavin cofactor (FAD) and catalyze the reversible electron exchange between NADPH and either ferredoxin (Fd) or flavodoxin (Fld) (4, 5). In oxygenic photosynthesis, the Fd is reduced by the photosystem and subsequently passes electrons on to NADP+ via the Fpr. This reaction provides the cellular NADPH pool required for CO2 assimilation and other biosynthetic processes (4, 5). In heterotrophic organisms such as bacteria, reduced ferredoxin, owing to the reverse enzymatic activity of the Fpr, can donate an electron to several Fd-dependent enzymes, such as nitrite reductase, sulfite reductase, glutamate synthase, and Fd-thioredoxin reductase, allowing ferredoxin to function in a variety of systems, including oxidative stress (1, 4, 5).Iron is the fourth most abundant element in the natural environment and exists primarily as an oxidized form, Fe(III), which has very low solubility under neutral pH conditions (9, 34) and thus presents problems in terms of bioavailability. However, ferrous iron, of Fe(II), is soluble and available at neutral pH in bacterial cytosol (34). Most bacteria secrete siderophores, which are natural chelators of ferric iron. After they bind to ferric iron, that complex enters the bacteria and releases ferric iron into the cytosol in ferric or ferrous form (9). In the bacterial cytosol, ferric iron must be reduced to ferrous form, and thus ferric reductase is essential to bacterial iron utilization.Commonly, prokaryotic ferric reductases are divided into two groups—namely, the bacterial and archaeal types (34). The typical bacterial type ferric reductase is Escherichia coli Fre, which also functions as a flavin reductase. In other words, the ferric reductase can reduce free flavin as flavin reductase, rather than having the flavin cofactor as a prosthetic group in E. coli (38). The archaeal ferric reductase harbors a flavin cofactor in the enzyme and thus does not require a flavin carrier for ferric reduction (26, 34). E. coli Fre includes a Rosmann folding structure at the NAD(P) binding region, whereas the archaeal ferric reductase (FeR) of Archaeoglobus fulgidus does not evidence that folding structure (6, 34). Many bacterial ferric reductases utilize free flavins, such as flavin mononucleotide (FMN), flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) and riboflavin, as electron carrier and, NADH (NAD) or NADP as electron donors to ferric reductase (14, 34). However, reduced ferric iron by reduced free flavin gives rise to the Fenton reaction, which generates the hydroxyl radical within the cell (20, 38). The Fenton reaction is known to generate hydroxyl radicals from ferrous iron and hydrogen peroxide (20). The hydroxyl radical is the most reactive radical and can damage DNA, proteins, and membrane lipids (16, 20, 34, 38). Therefore, the fine-tuning of ferric reduction regulation is required for the survival of bacterial cells.Many Pseudomonas strains, including Pseudomonas putida, a gram-negative soil model bacteria, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a human pathogen bacteria, do not harbor annotated ferric reductase within their genome sequences. Commonly, the pathogens compete with the host for available iron, whichis crucial for their survival within the host. Thus, studies of P. aeruginosa regarding iron utilization, siderophores, and ferric reduction are considered to be essential for a better understanding of human infections (9, 19). Studying the physiology and ecology of P. putida also provides us with a new framework for elucidating the basis of the metabolic versatility and environmental stress response of soil microorganisms. Thus, the study of ferric reductase in strains of Pseudomonas at the molecular level is certainly required. From the structural perspective, ferric reductases are generally considered to be contained within the structurally diverse ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase (Fprs; EC 1.18.1.2) superfamily, which is frequently involved in the transfer of electrons between Fd/Fld and NADP(H) (2, 15, 34). Thus, we tested the role of the Fpr as a ferric reductase using free flavin (FMN or FAD), NADH, or NADPH as electron donors, and ferric-citrate or ferric-EDTA as terminal electron acceptors (37). We determined that FprA could efficiently utilize NADPH in ferric reduction. Rather, FprB could use NADH as an electron donor and may perform a crucial role as a NADH-dependent ferric reductase under iron stress conditions.  相似文献   

20.
A nitroxide spin label (SL) has been used to probe the electron spin relaxation times and the magnetic states of the oxygen-binding heme–copper dinuclear site in Escherichia coli cytochrome bo 3, a quinol oxidase (QO), in different oxidation states. The spin lattice relaxation times, T 1, of the SL are enhanced by the paramagnetic metal sites in QO and hence show a strong dependence on the oxidation state of the latter. A new, general form of equations and a computer simulation program have been developed for the calculation of relaxation enhancement by an arbitrary fast relaxing spin system of S ≥ 1/2. This has allowed us to obtain an accurate estimate of the transverse relaxation time, T 2, of the dinuclear coupled pair Fe(III)–CuB(II) in the oxidized form of QO that is too short to measure directly. In the case of the F′ state, the relaxation properties of the heme–copper center have been shown to be consistent with a ferryl [Fe(IV)=O] heme and CuB(II) coupled by approximately 1.5–3 cm−1 to a radical. The magnitude suggests that the coupling arises from a radical form of the covalently linked tyrosine–histidine ligand to Cu(II) with unpaired spin density primarily on the tyrosine component. This work demonstrates that nitroxide SLs are potentially valuable tools to probe both the relaxation and the magnetic properties of multinuclear high-spin paramagnetic active sites in proteins that are otherwise not accessible from direct EPR measurements.  相似文献   

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