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1.
The isozymes 2 and 4 of rabbit microsomal cytochrome P-450 (LM2, LM4) have been studied by resonance Raman spectroscopy. Based on high quality spectra, a vibrational assignment of the porphyrin modes in the frequency range between 100-1700 cm-1 is presented for different ferric states of cytochrome P-450 LM2 and LM4. The resonance Raman spectra are interpreted in terms of the spin and ligation state of the heme iron and of heme-protein interactions. While in cytochrome P-450 LM2 the six-coordinated low-spin configuration is predominantly occupied, in the isozyme LM4 the five-coordinated high-spin form is the most stable state. The different stability of these two spin configurations in LM2 and LM4 can be attributed to the structures of the active sites. In the low-spin form of the isozymes LM4 the protein matrix forces the heme into a more rigid conformation than in LM2. These steric constraints are removed upon dissociation of the sixth ligand leading to a more flexible structure of the active site in the high-spin form of the isozyme LM4. The vibrational modes of the vinyl groups were found to be characteristic markers for the specific structures of the heme pockets in both isozymes. They also respond sensitively to type-I substrate binding. While in cytochrome P-450 LM4 the occupation of the substrate-binding pocket induces conformational changes of the vinyl groups, as reflected by frequency shifts of the vinyl modes, in the LM2 isozyme the ground-state conformation of these substituents remain unaffected, suggesting that the more flexible heme pocket can accommodate substrates without imposing steric constraints on the porphyrin. The resonance Raman technique makes structural changes visible which are induced by substrate binding in addition and independent of the changes associated with the shift of the spin state equilibrium: the high-spin states in the substrate-bound and substrate-free enzyme are structurally different. The formation of the inactive form, P-420, involves a severe structural rearrangement in the heme binding pocket leading to drastic changes of the vinyl group conformations. The conformational differences of the active sites in cytochromes P-450 LM2 and LM4 observed in this work contribute to the understanding of the structural basis accounting for substrate and product specificity of cytochrome P-450 isozymes.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract— Some parameters affecting the activity of monoamine oxidase (MAO) in purified beef brain mitochondria were investigated, and diversities in enzyme properties were found as a function of substrate. The deamination of the biogenic amines: serotonin, dopamine, tyramine, tryptamine, phenylethylamine and two non-physiological amines, kynuramine and m-iodobenzylamine, was studied. Anions in high concentrations inhibited enzyme activity with kynuramine being the substrate most affected. Among the biogenic amines, the activity with the indolalkylamines showed greater sensitivity to mono-valent anions such as chloride than to polyvalent ions such as phosphate whereas the opposite was true with the phenylalkylamines. However, pyrophosphate ion had little or no effect on MAO activity, regardless of substrate. The inhibition of kynuramine and serotonin deamination was non-competitive but mixed competitive inhibition was found with tyramine and phenylethylamine. The activity of MAO was markedly affected by pH, and it had been previously reported that the substrates showed different pH optima in their oxidation. The effect of pH on activity has been attributed in part to changes in the ionization of the substrate and the hypothesis that the true substrate is the non-protonated amine. This was reflected in kinetic studies showing high substrate inhibition with increased pH. It was calculated that phenylethylamine would have the highest percentage of un-ionized amine at pH 8.2 and 9.1. At these pHs, there was more pronounced inhibition with high substrate concentrations of phenylethylamine than with the other substrates. In contrast, there was little inhibition with high substrate concentrations of tyramine which was the most ionizable of the substrates tested. When Km values obtained at pH 7.4, 8.2 and 9.1 were corrected for ionization of the substrate, the corrected Km was lowest at pH 7.4 for all substrates. Less than 50% of MAO activity was lost when beef brain mitochondria was heated at 50°C for 20 min. However, there was only a slight variation with substrate in the thermal inactivation experiments. It is concluded that the mitochondrial membrane environment surrounding the enzyme imposes certain restrictions on the enzymatic activity with respect to the different substrates which, in turn, are also affected by such parameters as pH and ions. The results are discussed in terms of the relationship of these factors to the question of enzyme multiplicity.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of high pressure (1-2000 bar) on the spin state and substrate binding equilibria in cytochrome P-450 have been determined. The high-spin (S = 5/2) to low spin (S = 1/2) transition of the ferric hemoprotein was monitored by uv-visible spectroscopy at various substrate concentrations. Increasing hydrostatic pressure on a sample of substrate-bound cytochrome P-450 resulted in a decrease in the high-spin fraction as monitored by a Soret maxima at 391 nm and an increase in the low-spin 417-nm region of the spectrum. These pressure-induced optical changes were totally reversible for all pressures below 800 bar and were found to correspond to simple substrate dissociation from the enzyme. High levels of the normally metabolized substrate, d-camphor, corresponding to a 99.9% saturation of the hemoprotein active site (50 mM Tris-Cl, 100 mM KCl, pH 7.2) completely prevented the pressure-induced high-spin to low-spin transition that is observed at less than saturating substrate concentrations. A gradual increase in the formation of the inactive P-420 form of the cytochrome was noted if the pressure of the sample was increased above 800 bar. These pressure-linked spectral changes were used to determine the microscopic volume change accompanying substrate binding, which was found to be -47.0 +/- 2 ml/mol (pH 7.2) which represents a substantial change for a ligand dissociation reaction. The observed volume change for camphor binding decreases to -30.6 +/- 2 ml/mol at pH 6.0, suggesting the involvement of a linked proton equilibrium. Various substrate analogs of camphor induce varying degrees of low-spin to high-spin shift upon binding to ferric cytochrome P-450 (3). The volume changes for the dissociation of these substrates were very similar to those obtained with camphor. The conformational changes associated with a shift from high- to low-spin ferric iron appear to be small in comparison to the overall macroscopic changes in volume accompanying substrate binding to the enzyme.  相似文献   

4.
Arylsulfhydrolases A and B from chicken and from bovine liver have been isolated and their reactions with a range of synthetic arylsulfates examined using kinetic methods. Some differences of Michaelis-Menten parameters were observed in comparing the A with the B forms from the two sources at the level of individual substrates. At that level also, interspecies comparisons of A forms and B forms similarly showed differences. However, for none of the four enzymes examined was there consistent correlations of kinetic values with electronic, hydrophobicity, or steric properties of the substrates. The bovine A enzyme displayed the well-documented “anomalous” kinetic behavior at high substrate concentrations; at low concentrations conventional hydrolysis of p-nitrocatechol sulfate occurred, except that there was evidence with this substrate and others of product inhibition. The avian A enzyme reacted normally over all substrate concentrations examined, but again product inhibition occurred. The mammalian but not the avian B enzyme was also clearly subject to product inhibition.  相似文献   

5.
Reductive titrations of the dissimilatory hexa-haem nitrite reductase, Wolinella succinogenes, with methyl viologen semiquinone (MV) and sodium dithionite, have been followed at room temperature by absorption, natural (CD) and magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectroscopies and at liquid helium temperature by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and MCD spectroscopies. The nature of the reduced enzyme depends on the reductant employed. At room temperature a single high-spin ferrous haem, observed by MCD after reduction with MV, is absent from dithionite reduced samples. It is suggested that a product of dithionite oxidation becomes bound with high affinity to the reduced state of the enzyme causing the ferrous haem to become low-spin. The site occupied is likely to be the substrate binding haem. The course of the titration with MV at room temperature shows the reduction of high-spin ferric to high-spin ferrous haem. Since the EPR spectrum reveals the presence of an unusual high-low spin ferric haem pair in the oxidised state we propose that the active site of the enzyme is a novel haem pair consisting of one high (5-coordinate) and one low-spin (6 coordinate) haem, magnetically coupled and possibly bridged by a histidinate ligand.  相似文献   

6.
Manganese peroxidase (MnP) is a component of the lignin degradation system of the basidiomycetous fungus, Phanerochaete chrysosporium. This novel MnII-dependent extracellular enzyme (Mr = 46,000) contains a single protoporphyrin IX prosthetic group and oxidizes phenolic lignin model compounds as well as a variety of other substrates. To elucidate the heme environment of this enzyme, we have studied its electron paramagnetic resonance and resonance Raman spectroscopic properties. These studies indicate that the native enzyme is predominantly in the high-spin ferric form and has a histidine as fifth ligand. The reduced enzyme has a high-spin, pentacoordinate ferrous heme. Fluoride and cyanide readily bind to the sixth coordination position of the heme iron in the native form, thereby changing MnP into a typical high-spin, hexacoordinate fluoro adduct or a low-spin, hexacoordinate cyano adduct, respectively. EPR spectra of 14NO- and 15NO-adducts of ferrous MnP were compared with those of horseradish peroxidase (HRP); the presence of a proximal histidine ligand was confirmed from the pattern of superhyperfine splittings of the NO signals centered at g approximately equal to 2.005. The appearance of the FeII-His stretch at approximately 240 cm-1 and its apparent lack of deuterium sensitivity suggest that the N delta proton of the proximal histidine of the enzyme is more strongly hydrogen bonded than that of oxygen carrier globins and that this imidazole ligand may be described as having a comparatively strong anionic character. Although resonance Raman frequencies for the spin- and coordination-state marker bands of native MnP, nu 3 (1487), nu 19 (1565), and nu 10 (1622 cm-1), do not fall into frequency regions expected for typical penta- or hexacoordinate high-spin ferric heme complexes, ligation of fluoride produces frequency shifts of these bands very similar to those observed for cytochrome c peroxidase and HRP. Hence, these data strongly suggest that the iron in native MnP is predominantly high-spin pentacoordinate. Analysis of the Raman frequencies indicates that the dx2-y2 orbital of the native enzyme is at higher energy than that of metmyoglobin. These features of the heme in MnP must be favorable for the peroxidase catalytic mechanism involving oxidation of the heme iron to FeIV. Consequently, it is most likely that the heme environment of MnP resembles those of HRP, cytochrome c peroxidase, and lignin peroxidase.  相似文献   

7.
Human estrogenic dehydrogenase (17β-HSD1) catalyses the last step in the biosynthesis of the active estrogens that stimulate the proliferation of breast cancer cells. While the primary substrate for the enzyme is estrone, the enzyme has some activity for the non-estrogenic substrates. To better understand the structure–function relationships of 17β-HSD1 and to provide a better ground for the design of inhibitors, we have determined the crystal structures of 17β-HSD1 in complex with different steroids.

The structure of the complex of estradiol with the enzyme determined previously (Azzi et al., Nature Structural Biology 3, 665–668) showed that the narrow active site was highly complementary to the substrate. The substrate specificity is due to a combination of hydrogen bonding and hydrophobic interactions between the steroid and the enzyme binding pocket. We have now determined structures of 17β-HSD1 in complex with dihydrotestosterone and 20-OH-progesterone. In the case of the C19 androgen, several residues within the enzyme active site make some small adjustments to accommodate the increased bulk of the substrate. In addition, the C19 steroids bind in a slightly different position from estradiol with shifts in positions of up to 1.4 Å. The altered binding position avoids unfavorable steric interactions between Leu 149 and the C19 methyl group (Han et al., unpublished). The known kinetic parameters for these substrates can be rationalized in light of the structures presented. These results give evidence for the structural basis of steroid recognition by 17β-HSD1 and throw light on the design of new inhibitors for this pivotal steroid enzyme.  相似文献   


8.
Turnover of substrates by many enzymes involves free enzyme forms that differ from the stable form of the enzyme in the absence of substrate. These enzyme species, known as isoforms, have, in general, different physical and chemical properties than the native enzymes. They usually occur only in small concentrations under steady state turnover conditions and thus are difficult to detect. We show in this paper that in one particular case of an enzyme (a class C β-lactamase) with specific substrates (cephalosporins) the presence of an enzyme isoform (E′) can be detected by means of its different reactivity than the native enzyme (E) with a class of covalent inhibitors (phosphonate monoesters). Generation of E′ from E arises either directly from substrate turnover or by way of a branched path from an acyl-enzyme intermediate. The relatively slow spontaneous restoration of E from E′ is accelerated by certain small molecules in solution, for example cyclic amines such as imidazole and salts such as sodium chloride. Solvent deuterium kinetic isotope effects and the effect of methanol on cephalosporin turnover showed that for both E and E′, kcat is limited by deacylation of an acyl-enzyme intermediate rather than by enzyme isomerization.  相似文献   

9.
The catalytic cycle of horseradish peroxidase (HRP; donor:hydrogen peroxide oxidoreductase; EC 1.11.1.7) is initiated by a rapid oxidation of it by hydrogen peroxide to give an enzyme intermediate, compound I, which reverts to the resting state via two successive single electron transfer reactions from reducing substrate molecules, the first yielding a second enzyme intermediate, compound II. To investigate the mechanism of action of horseradish peroxidase on catechol substrates we have studied the oxidation of both 4-tert-butylcatechol and dopamine catalysed by this enzyme. The different polarity of the side chains of both o-diphenol substrates could help in the understanding of the nature of the rate-limiting step in the oxidation of these substrates by the enzyme. The procedure used is based on the experimental data to the corresponding steady-state equations and permitted evaluation of the more significant individual rate constants involved in the corresponding reaction mechanism. The values obtained for the rate constants for each of the two substrates allow us to conclude that the reaction of horseradish peroxidase compound II with o-diphenols can be visualised as a two-step mechanism in which the first step corresponds to the formation of an enzyme-substrate complex, and the second to the electron transfer from the substrate to the iron atom. The size and hydrophobicity of the substrates control their access to the hydrophobic binding site of horseradish peroxidase, but electron density in the hydroxyl group of C-4 is the most important feature for the electron transfer step.  相似文献   

10.
ω-Transaminase (ω-TA) is the only naturally occurring enzyme allowing asymmetric amination of ketones for production of chiral amines. The active site of the enzyme was proposed to consist of two differently sized substrate binding pockets and the stringent steric constraint in the small pocket has presented a significant challenge to production of structurally diverse chiral amines. To provide a mechanistic understanding of how the (S)-specific ω-TA from Paracoccus denitrificans achieves the steric constraint in the small pocket, we developed a free energy analysis enabling quantification of individual contributions of binding and catalytic steps to changes in the total activation energy caused by structural differences in the substrate moiety that is to be accommodated by the small pocket. The analysis exploited kinetic and thermodynamic investigations using structurally similar substrates and the structural differences among substrates were regarded as probes to assess how much relative destabilizations of the reaction intermediates, i.e. the Michaelis complex and the transition state, were induced by the slight change of the substrate moiety inside the small pocket. We found that ≈80% of changes in the total activation energy resulted from changes in the enzyme-substrate binding energy, indicating that substrate selectivity in the small pocket is controlled predominantly by the binding step (KM) rather than the catalytic step (kcat). In addition, we examined the pH dependence of the kinetic parameters and the pH profiles of the KM and kcat values suggested that key active site residues involved in the binding and catalytic steps are decoupled. Taken together, these findings suggest that the active site residues forming the small pocket are mainly engaged in the binding step but not significantly involved in the catalytic step, which may provide insights into how to design a rational strategy for engineering of the small pocket to relieve the steric constraint toward bulky substituents.  相似文献   

11.
When alpha,beta-unsaturated substrates bind to the active site of enoyl-CoA hydratase, large spectral changes can be observed [D'Ordine, R. L., et al. (1994) Biochemistry 33, 12635-12643]. The differences in the isotropic magnetic shieldings of the free and active site-bound forms of the carbonyl, alpha-, and beta-carbons of the substrates, hexadienoyl-CoA, cinnamoyl-CoA, and (N,N-dimethyl-p-amino)cinnamoyl-CoA have been experimentally determined. The carbonyl and beta-carbons are all deshielded, while the alpha-carbons show increased shielding. These chemical shift perturbations are interpreted to suggest that the pi-electrons of the enoyl thiolester are polarized when bound at the active site. Using the crystal structure of (N,N-dimethyl-p-amino)cinnamoyl-CoA bound at the enzyme active site, the shielding tensors were calculated at three different levels of theory, up to a density functional theory model that included all of the contiguous active site residues. These calculations successfully reproduced the observed spectral changes and permitted the electronic polarization of the substrate to be quantified as an electron density difference map. The calculated electron density difference confirms the loss of electrons at the electrophilic beta-carbon and carbonyl carbon, while a slight increase in electron density at the alpha-carbon where proton donation occurs during the hydration reaction and a larger increase in electron density at the carbonyl oxygen are predicted. The energy required to polarize the electrons to the observed extent was calculated to be 3.2 kcal/mol. The force that provides the requisite energy for the polarization is the interaction of the electric field generated by the protein at the enzyme active site with the polarizable electrons of the substrate. Because the induced electronic polarization is along the predicted reaction pathway, the extent of substrate activation by the induced electronic strain is catalytically relevant.  相似文献   

12.
Zhu Z  Sun D  Davidson VL 《Biochemistry》2000,39(37):11184-11186
Methylamine dehydrogenase (MADH) is a tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ) dependent enzyme that catalyzes the oxidative deamination of primary amines. Amino acid residues of both the TTQ-bearing beta subunit and the noncatalytic alpha subunit line a substrate channel that leads from the protein surface to the enzyme active site. Phe55 of the alpha subunit is located at the opening of the active site. Conversion of alphaPhe55 to alanine dramatically alters the substrate preference of MADH. The K(m) for methylamine increases from 9 microM to 15 mM. The preferred substrates are now primary amines with chain lengths of at least seven carbons. The K(m) for 1, 10-diaminodecane is 11 microM, compared to 1.2 mM for wild-type MADH. Despite the large variation in K(m) values, k(cat) values are relatively unaffected by the mutation. Molecular modeling of substrates into the crystal structure of the enzyme active site and substrate channel provides an explanation for the dramatic changes in substrate specificity caused by this mutation of a single amino acid residue.  相似文献   

13.
Here we describe paramagnetic NMR analysis of the low- and high-spin forms of yeast cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP), a 34 kDa heme enzyme involved in hydroperoxide reduction in mitochondria. Starting from the assigned NMR spectra of a low-spin CN-bound CcP and using a strategy based on paramagnetic pseudocontact shifts, we have obtained backbone resonance assignments for the diamagnetic, iron-free protein and the high-spin, resting-state enzyme. The derived chemical shifts were further used to determine low- and high-spin magnetic susceptibility tensors and the zero-field splitting constant (D) for the high-spin CcP. The D value indicates that the latter contains a hexacoordinate heme species with a weak field ligand, such as water, in the axial position. Being one of the very few high-spin heme proteins analyzed in this fashion, the resting state CcP expands our knowledge of the heme coordination chemistry in biological systems.  相似文献   

14.
Immunoassays have developed to become an important analytical tool in life sciences for detection of endogenous and exogenous targets. Among the most important enzyme labels horseradish peroxidase (HRP), alkaline phosphatase (AP), and beta-D-galactosidase (GAL) is HRP the smallest enzyme and plays nowadays an outstanding role. The oldest substrates are chromogens widely applied for localization of sites of peroxidase (PO) activity in histochemistry as well as for colorimetric applications. They are represented by a diversity of aromatic amines and phenols. Encouraged by development of light excitation and measuring techniques and the commercial availability of highly sensitive equipment, luminescent labels represent the most sensitive and worthwhile detection tools to date. In contrast to chromogens fluorescent labels for detection PO activity are confined only to a few substrates developed more recently. These substrates are mostly applied in histochemistry at a short time scale due to their frequently high solubility. At the long time scale sole exception is so far the tyramine based fluorochome deposition technique (more general: catalytic reporter deposition, CARD). Despite quite different staining behavior both fluorometric and product deposition related principles are based on 4-hydroxy phenylalkyl substrates. The following article reviews basic principles of peroxidatic substrate degradation processes including chromogenic and fluorescent approaches with emphasis on recent advances in development of chromogens and fluorogens for application in histology. As a result of systematic efforts towards the design of substrates, the range of classical precipitating chromogens as well as fluorescent techniques could be complimented by novel highly sensitive substrates with superior staining capabilities: a) Metal chelating 2-hydroxy benzylamines are derived from classical aniline substrates (two steps) and utilize metal catalytic effects in an efficient intramolecular way. The enzymatically yielded dark colored polycondensation products are applicable in histochemistry, in colorimetry and especially as precipitating electron opaque labels with enhanced osmiophilic properties for light and electron microscopy. b) Fluorescent 4-hydroxy-styryl derivatives are capable of oxidative selfanchoring reactions at the cellular level close to sites of PO activity. In contrast to deposition of tyramine conjugated fluorochromes an altered fluorochrome with improved fluorescence properties is furnished during oxidative crosslinking of the substrate. This results in a highly specific and photostable fluorescence response and an outstanding low background staining. Histochemical and immunohistochemical applications are presented.  相似文献   

15.
In Coptis japonica cell cultures an alternative pathway has been discovered which leads from (S)-tetrahydrocolumbamine via (S)-canadine to berberine. The two enzymes involved have been partially purified. (S)-Tetrahydrocolumbamine is stereospecifically transformed into (S)-canadine under formation of the methylenedioxy bridge in ring A. This new enzyme was named (S)-canadine synthase. (S)-Canadine in turn is stereospecifically dehydrogenated to berberine by an oxidase, (S)-canadine oxidase (COX), which was partially purified (25-fold). This enzyme has many physical properties in common with the already known (S)-tetrahydroprotoberberine oxidase from Berberis but grossly differs from the latter enzyme in its cofactor requirement (Fe) and its substrate specificity. Neither (S)-norreticuline nor (S)-scoulerine serves as substrate for the Coptis enzyme, while both substrates are readily oxidized by the Berberis enzyme. The four terminal enzymes catalyzing the pathway from (S)-reticuline to berberine are housed in Berberis as well as in Coptis in smooth vesicles with a density of =1.14 g/ml. These vesicles have been enriched and characterized by electron microscopy.  相似文献   

16.
Development of a peroxidase-coupled fluorometric assay for lysyl oxidase   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Lysyl oxidase catalyzes the oxidation of peptidyl lysine in elastin and collagen and also acts upon nonpeptidyl amines, although the enzyme becomes slowly inactivated while processing nonpeptidyl substrates. In spite of this complexity, it has been possible to devise a continuously monitored peroxidase-coupled fluorometric assay for the oxidation of simple amines by lysyl oxidase. In the present study, optimal assay conditions have been explored and found to include assay temperatures of 50 to 60°C, the presence of urea in the assay, and the use of diaminopentane as substrate. Although the assay is subject to interference by contaminating macromolecules in enzyme fractions, a linear assay response to enzyme concentration is obtained with highly purified lysyl oxidase with a limiting sensitivity of 0.3 μg of enzyme per assay.  相似文献   

17.
1. The transient kinetics of reduction of the 470-nm absorption band in benzylamine oxidase by substrate at different pH values between 6 and 10 have been studied by stopped-flow techniques, and substituent effects on kinetic parameters for the reduction process have been examined using a series of ring-substituted benzylamine derivatives as the substrates. 2. Reduction of the enzyme by substrate takes place in two kinetically distinguishable steps, with the intermediate formation of an enzyme-substrate complex in which the substrate appears to be covalently bound through its amino group to the prosthetic group of the enzyme, possibly in the form of an amine-pyridoxal Schiff-base. 3. The apparent stability of the enzyme-substrate complex shows no obvious dependence on the electronic properties of the amine substrates, but is strongly pH-dependent in a way suggesting that substrate-binding involves the non-protonated amines, exclusively, and requires the presence of the acid form of an ionizing group in the enzyme with apparent pKa of 8.8. 4. Reduction of the enzymatic 470-nm chromophore and release of the aldehyde product of the catalytic process are rate-limited by the same monomolecular reaction step involving the enzyme-substrate complex. Rate constants for the rate-limiting reaction exhibit no significant dependence on pH between 6 and 10, but correlate with Hammett sigma-values for the ring-substituted benzylamine derivatives tested, yielding a phi-value of + 0.3.  相似文献   

18.
E B Skibo  J H Gilchrist  C H Lee 《Biochemistry》1987,26(11):3032-3037
Quinazolin-4(3H)-one derivatives substituted at the 6- and/or 7-position were studied as electronic probes of substrate oxidation by buttermilk xanthine oxidase. Since the enzyme active site possesses dimensional tolerance, the substituents exert an electronic effect rather than a steric effect on the catalytic parameters for oxidation. This feature permitted a Hammett plot to be made for quinazoline-oxygen substrate activity. The concave downward nature of this plot indicates that the rate-determining step for oxidation changes when electron-withdrawing substituents are placed on the substrate. This plot and kinetic isotope effects obtained with 2-deuterio derivatives of the substrates indicate the following: (i) oxidation involves nucleophile transfer to the C(2) center in concert with hydride transfer to the molybdenum center, and (ii) the formation of oxidized product is a three-step process, i.e., Michaelis complex formation, oxidation, and hydrolysis of the oxidized substrate-enzyme adduct. The role of the nucleophile in oxidation appears to be to increase the electron density in the substrate and thereby facilitate hydride transfer. The implication of this study is that similar electronic probes may be designed to study other purine-utilizing enzymes possessing a dimensionally tolerant active site.  相似文献   

19.
20.
MauG is a diheme enzyme responsible for the post-translational formation of the catalytic tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ) cofactor in methylamine dehydrogenase (MADH). MauG can utilize hydrogen peroxide, or molecular oxygen and reducing equivalents, to complete this reaction via a catalytic bis-Fe(IV) intermediate. Crystal structures of diferrous, Fe(II)-CO, and Fe(II)-NO forms of MauG in complex with its preMADH substrate have been determined and compared to one another as well as to the structure of the resting diferric MauG-preMADH complex. CO and NO each bind exclusively to the 5-coordinate high-spin heme with no change in ligation of the 6-coordinate low-spin heme. These structures reveal likely roles for amino acid residues in the distal pocket of the high-spin heme in oxygen binding and activation. Glu113 is implicated in the protonation of heme-bound diatomic oxygen intermediates in promoting cleavage of the O-O bond. Pro107 is shown to change conformation on the binding of each ligand and may play a steric role in oxygen activation by positioning the distal oxygen near Glu113. Gln103 is in a position to provide a hydrogen bond to the Fe(IV)═O moiety that may account for the unusual stability of this species in MauG.  相似文献   

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