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1.
Myeloperoxidase (MPO) is the most abundant neutrophil enzyme and catalyzes predominantly the two-electron oxidation of ubiquitous chloride to generate the potent bleaching hypochlorous acid, thus contributing to pathogen killing as well as inflammatory diseases. Its catalytic properties are closely related with unique posttranslational modifications of its prosthetic group. In MPO, modified heme b is covalently bound to the protein via two ester linkages and one sulfonium ion linkage with a strong impact on its (electronic) structure and biophysical and chemical properties. Here, the thermodynamics of the one-electron reduction of the ferric heme in wild-type recombinant MPO and variants with disrupted heme-protein bonds (M243V, E242Q, and D94V) have been investigated by thin-layer spectroelectrochemistry. It turns out that neither the oligomeric structure nor the N-terminal extension in recombinant MPO modifies the peculiar positive reduction potential (E°' = 0.001 V at 25 °C and pH 7.0) or the enthalpy or entropy of the Fe(III) to Fe(II) reduction. By contrast, upon disruption of the MPO-typical sulfonium ion linkage, the reduction potential is significantly lower (-0.182 V). The M243V mutant has an enthalpically stabilized ferric state, whereas its ferrous form is entropically favored because of the loss of rigidity of the distal H-bonding network. Exchange of an adjacent ester bond (E242Q) induced similar but less pronounced effects (E°' = -0.094 V), whereas in the D94V variant (E°' = -0.060 V), formation of the ferrous state is entropically disfavored. These findings are discussed with respect to the chlorination and bromination activity of the wild-type protein and the mutants.  相似文献   

2.
In all mammalian peroxidases, the heme is covalently attached to the protein via two ester linkages between conserved aspartate (Asp94) and glutamate residues (Glu242) and modified methyl groups on pyrrole rings A and C. Only myeloperoxidase has an additional sulfonium ion linkage between the sulfur atom of the conserved methionine 243 and the beta-carbon of the vinyl group on pyrrole ring A. Upon reduction from Fe(III) to Fe(II), lactoperoxidase (LPO) but not myeloperoxidase (MPO) is shown to adopt three distinct active site conformations which depend on pH and time. Comparative spectroscopic analysis (UV-Vis absorption and resonance Raman) of the ferrous forms of LPO, wild-type MPO and the variants Asp94Val, Glu242Gln, Met243Thr and Met243Val clearly demonstrate that a single, stable ferrous form of MPO is present only in those proteins which retain an intact sulfonium linkage. By contrast, both ferrous Met243Thr and Met243Val can assume two conformations. They resemble ferrous LPO, being five-coordinated high-spin species that are distinguished by the strength of the proximal Fe-histidine bond. This bond weakens with time or decreasing pH, as indicated by the Fe-histidine stretching bands.  相似文献   

3.
In human myeloperoxidase the heme is covalently attached to the protein via two ester linkages between the carboxyl groups of Glu242 and Asp94 and modified methyl groups on pyrrole rings A and C of the heme as well as a sulfonium ion linkage between the sulfur atom of Met243 and the beta-carbon of the vinyl group on pyrrole ring A. In the present study, wild-type recombinant myeloperoxidase (recMPO) and the variant Glu242Gln were produced in Chinese hamster ovary cells and investigated in a comparative sequential-mixing stopped-flow study in order to elucidate the role of the Glu242-heme ester linkage in the individual reaction steps of both the halogenation and peroxidase cycle. Disruption of the ester bond increased heme flexibility, blue shifted the UV-vis spectrum, and, compared with recMPO, decelerated cyanide binding (1.25 x 10(4) versus 1.6 x 10(6) M(-)(1) s(-)(1) at pH 7 and 25 degrees C) as well as compound I formation mediated by either hydrogen peroxide (7.8 x 10(5) versus 1.9 x 10(7) M(-)(1) s(-)(1)) or hypochlorous acid (7.5 x 10(5) versus 2.3 x 10(7) M(-)(1) s(-)(1)). The overall chlorination and bromination activity of Glu242Gln was 2.0% and 24% of recMPO. The apparent bimolecular rate constants of compound I reduction by chloride (65 M(-)(1) s(-)(1)), bromide (5.4 x 10(4) M(-)(1) s(-)(1)), iodide (6.4 x 10(5) M(-)(1) s(-)(1)), and thiocyanate (2.2 x10(5) M(-)(1) s(-)(1)) were 500, 25, 21, and 63 times decreased compared with recMPO. By contrast, Glu242Gln compound I reduction by tyrosine was only 5.4 times decreased, whereas tyrosine-mediated compound II reduction was 60 times slower compared with recMPO. The effects of exchange of Glu242 on electron transfer reactions are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
The enzyme myeloperoxidase shows several unusual properties compared to other peroxidases, e.g. a red-shifted absorption spectrum and a peroxidase activity towards chloride. It has been suggested that this is caused by the unusual covalent links between the heme group and the surrounding protein, but whether it is caused by the two ester links to Glu-242 and Asp-94 or the sulfonium ion linkage to Met-243 is unclear. To investigate these suggestions, we have used density functional theory to study the structure, spectra, and reduction potential of 25 models of myeloperoxidase in the reduced (FeII) and oxidized (FeIII) states, as well as in the compound I (formally FeVO) and II (FeIVO or FeIVOH) states, using appropriate models of the linkages to the Asp, Glu, and Met residues (including the back-bone connection between Glu-242 and Met-243) in varying combinations. The calculated spectral shifts indicate that both the ester and sulfonium linkages play a role in the spectral shift. On the other hand, the sulfonium linkage seems to be mainly responsible for the high positive reduction potential for the both ferric/ferrous and compound I/II couples of myeloperoxidase.  相似文献   

5.
In mammalian peroxidases the proximal histidine is in close interaction with a fully conserved asparagine which in turn is hydrogen bonded with an arginine that stabilizes the propionate substituent of pyrrol ring D in bent conformation. In order to probe the role of this rigid proximal architecture for structural integrity and catalysis of human myeloperoxidase (MPO), the variants Asn421Asp, Arg333Ala and Arg333Lys have been recombinantly expressed in HEK cell lines. The standard reduction potential of the Fe(III)/Fe(II) couple of Asn421Asp was still wild-type-like (−50 mV at pH 7.0) but the spectral properties of the ferric and ferrous forms as well as of higher oxidation states showed significant differences. Additionally, rates of ligand binding and oxidation of both one- and two-electron donors were diminished. The effect of exchange of Arg333 was even more dramatic. We did not succeed in production of mutant proteins that could bind heme at the active site. The importance of this His–Asn–Arg triad in linking the heme iron with the propionate at pyrrol ring D for heme insertion and binding as well as in maintenance of the architecture of the substrate binding site(s) at the entrance to the heme cavity is discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Reduction potentials for the catalytic compound I/compound II and compound II/Fe3+ redox couples, and for the two-electron compound I/Fe3+ redox couple, have been determined for ascorbate peroxidase (APX) and for a number of site-directed variants. For the wild type enzyme, the values are E degrees '(compound I/compound II) = 1156 mV, E degrees '(compound II/Fe3+) = 752 mV, and E degrees '(compound I/Fe3+) = 954 mV. For the variants, the analysis also includes determination of Fe3+/Fe2+ potentials which were used to calculate (experimentally inaccessible) E degrees '(compound II/Fe3+) potentials. The data provide a number of new insights into APX catalysis. The measured values for E degrees '(compound I/compound II) and E degrees '(compound II/Fe3+) for the wild type protein account for the much higher oxidative reactivity of compound I compared to compound II, and this correlation holds for a number of other active site and substrate binding variants of APX. The high reduction potential for compound I also accounts for the known thermodynamic instability of this intermediate, and it is proposed that this instability can account for the deviations from standard Michaelis kinetics observed for most APX enzymes during steady-state oxidation of ascorbate. This study provides the first systematic evaluation of the redox properties of any ascorbate peroxidase using a number of methods, and the data provide an experimental and theoretical framework for accurate determination of the redox properties of Fe3+, compound I, and compound II species in related enzymes.  相似文献   

7.
Myeloperoxidase (MPO) is an important component of the neutrophil's antimicrobial armory and has been implicated in promoting tissue damage in numerous inflammatory diseases. For the first time the standard reduction potential of the redox couple compound II/native enzyme has been determined to be (0.97+/-0.01)V at pH 7.0 and 25 degrees C. This was achieved by rapid mixing of preformed compound II with either tyrosine or nitrite by using the sequential-mixing stopped-flow technique and measuring spectrophotometrically the concentrations of the reacting species and products at equilibrium. Using the recently determined standard reduction potential for the couple compound I/native enzyme (1.16 V), the reduction potential of the couple compound I/compound II was calculated to be 1.35 V at pH 7 and 25 degrees C. These data reveal substantial differences between the two known heme peroxidase superfamilies and reflect the dramatic differences observed in the oxidisability of substrates by the MPO redox intermediates compound I and compound II.  相似文献   

8.
R E Whitwam  R S Koduri  M Natan  M Tien 《Biochemistry》1999,38(30):9608-9616
Site-directed mutagenesis was performed on Mn peroxidase (MnP) from the white-rot fungus Phanerochaete chrysosporium to investigate the role of the axial ligand hydrogen-bonding network on heme reactivity. D242 is hydrogen bonded to the proximal His of MnP; in other peroxidases, this conserved Asp, in turn, is hydrogen bonded to a Trp. In MnP and other fungal peroxidases, the Trp is replaced by a Phe (F190). Both residues are thought to have a direct influence on the electronic environment of the catalytic center. To study only the active mutants at D242 and F190, we used degenerate oligonucleotides allowing us to screen all 19 possible amino acid mutants at these positions. Two mutants at D242 passed our screen, D242E and D242S. Both mutations impaired only the functioning of compound II. The reactions of the ferric enzyme with H(2)O(2) were unaffected by the mutations, as were the reactions of compound I with reducing substrates. The D242S and D242E mutations reduced the first-order rate constant for the reaction of MnP compound II with chelated Mn(2+) from 233 s(-1) (wild type) to 154 s(-1) and 107 s(-1), respectively. Three F190 mutants passed our screen, F190V, F190L, and F190W. Similar to mutants at D242, these mutants largely affected the function of compound II. The F190V mutation increased the first-order rate constant for the reduction of compound II by chelated Mn(2+) to 320 s(-1). The F190L mutation decreased this rate to 137 s(-1). The F190W mutant was not very stable, but at pH 6.0, this mutation decreased the rate of compound II reduction by Mn(2+) from 140 s(-1) in the wild type to 36 s(-1). There was no indication that the F190W mutant was capable of forming a protein-centered Trp cation radical. All the mutations altered the midpoint potential of the Fe(3+)/Fe(2+) couple of the enzyme, as calculated from cyclic voltammagrams of the proteins. The values were shifted from -96 mV in the wild-type enzyme to -123 mV in D242S, -162 mV in D242E, -82 mV in F190L, -173 mV in F190V, and -51 mV in F190W. Collectively, these results demonstrate that D242 and F190 in MnP influence the electronic environment around the heme and that the reactions of compound II are far more sensitive to this influence than the reduction of compound I.  相似文献   

9.
Site-directed mutagenesis studies have shown that Asp140 in both human and rat heme oxygenase-1 is critical for enzyme activity. Here, we report the D140A mutant crystal structure in the Fe(III) and Fe(II) redox states as well as the Fe(II)-NO complex as a model for the Fe(II)-oxy complex. These structures are compared to the corresponding wild-type structures. The mutant and wild-type structures are very similar, except for the distal heme pocket solvent structure. In the Fe(III) D140A mutant one water molecule takes the place of the missing Asp140 carboxylate side-chain and a second water molecule, novel to the mutant, binds in the distal pocket. Upon reduction to the Fe(II) state, the distal helix running along one face of the heme moves closer to the heme in both the wild-type and mutant structures thus tightening the active site. NO binds to both the wild-type and mutant in a bent conformation that orients the NO O atom toward the alpha-meso heme carbon atom. A network of water molecules provides a H-bonded network to the NO ligand, suggesting a possible proton shuttle pathway required to activate dioxygen for catalysis. In the wild-type structure, Asp140 exhibits two conformations, suggesting a dynamic role for Asp140 in shuttling protons from bulk solvent via the water network to the iron-linked oxy complex. On the basis of these structures, we consider why the D140A mutant is inactive as a heme oxygenase but active as a peroxidase.  相似文献   

10.
Nitric oxide-derived oxidants (e.g., peroxynitrite) are believed to participate in antimicrobial activities as part of normal host defenses but also in oxidative tissue injury in inflammatory disorders. A similar role is ascribed to the heme enzyme myeloperoxidase (MPO), the most abundant protein of polymorphonuclear leukocytes, which are the terminal phagocytosing effector cells of the innate immune system. Concomitant production of peroxynitrite and release of millimolar MPO are characteristic events during phagocytosis. In order to understand the mode of interaction between MPO and peroxynitrite, we have performed a comprehensive stopped-flow investigation of the reaction between all physiological relevant redox intermediates of MPO and peroxynitrite. Both iron(III) MPO and iron(II) MPO are rapidly converted to compound II by peroxynitrite in monophasic reactions with calculated rate constants of (6.8+/-0.1) x 10(6) M(-1)s(-1) and (1.3+/-0.2) x 10(6) M(-1)s(-1), respectively (pH 7.0 and 25 degrees C). Besides these one- and two-electron reduction reactions of peroxynitrite, which produce nitrogen dioxide and nitrite, a one-electron oxidation to the oxoperoxonitrogen radical must occur in the fast monophasic transition of compound I to compound II mediated by peroxynitrite at pH 7.0 [(7.6+/-0.1) x 10(6) M(-1)s(-1)]. In addition, peroxynitrite induced a steady-state transition from compound III to compound II with a rate of (1.0+/-0.3) x 10(4) M(-1)s(-1). Thus, the interconversion among the various oxidation states of MPO that is prompted by peroxynitrite is remarkable. Reaction mechanisms are proposed and the physiological relevance is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Five residues in the multifunctional catalase-peroxidase KatG of Burkholderia pesudomallei are essential for catalase, but not peroxidase, activity. Asp141 is the only one of these catalase-specific residues not related with the covalent adduct found in KatGs that when replaced with a nonacidic residue reduces catalase activity to 5% of native levels. Replacing the nearby catalytic residue Arg108 causes a reduction in catalase activity to 35% of native levels, whereas a variant with both Asp141 and Arg108 replaced exhibits near normal catalase activity (82% of native), suggesting a synergism in the roles of the two residues in support of catalase activity in the enzyme. Among the Asp141 variants, D141E is unique in retaining normal catalase activity but with modified kinetics, suggesting more favorable compound I formation and less favorable compound I reduction. The crystal structure of the D141E variant has been determined at 1.8-A resolution, revealing that the carboxylate of Glu141 is moved only slightly compared with Asp141, but retains its hydrogen bond interaction with the main chain nitrogen of Ile237. In contrast, the low temperature ferric Electron Paramagnetic Resonance spectra of the D141A, R108A, and R108A/D141A variants are consistent with modifications of the water matrix and/or the relative positioning of the distal residue side chains. Such changes explain the reduction in catalase activity in all but the double variant R108A/D141A. Two pathways of hydrogen bonded solvent lead from the entrance channel into the heme active site, one running between Asp141 and Arg108 and the second between Asp141 and the main chain atoms of residues 237-239. It is proposed that binding of substrate H(2)O(2) to Asp141 and Arg108 controls H(2)O(2) access to the heme active site, thereby modulating the catalase reaction.  相似文献   

12.
Myeloperoxidase (MPO), an abundant protein in neutrophils, monocytes, and subpopulations of tissue macrophages, is believed to play a critical role in host defenses and inflammatory tissue injury. To perform these functions, an array of diffusible radicals and reactive oxidant species may be formed through oxidation reactions catalyzed at the heme center of the enzyme. Myeloperoxidase and inducible nitric-oxide synthase are both stored in and secreted from the primary granules of activated leukocytes, and nitric oxide (nitrogen monoxide; NO) reacts with the iron center of hemeproteins at near diffusion-controlled rates. We now demonstrate that NO modulates the catalytic activity of MPO through distinct mechanisms. NO binds to both ferric (Fe(III), the catalytically active species) and ferrous (Fe(II)) forms of MPO, generating stable low-spin six-coordinate complexes, MPO-Fe(III).NO and MPO-Fe(II).NO, respectively. These nitrosyl complexes were spectrally distinguishable by their Soret absorbance peak and visible spectra. Stopped-flow kinetic analyses indicated that NO binds reversibly to both Fe(III) and Fe(II) forms of MPO through simple one-step mechanisms. The association rate constant for NO binding to MPO-Fe(III) was comparable to that observed with other hemoproteins whose activities are thought to be modulated by NO in vivo. In stark contrast, the association rate constant for NO binding to the reduced form of MPO, MPO-Fe(II), was over an order of magnitude slower. Similarly, a 2-fold decrease was observed in the NO dissociation rate constant of the reduced versus native form of MPO. The lower NO association and dissociation rates observed suggest a remarkable conformational change that alters the affinity and accessibility of NO to the distal heme pocket of the enzyme following heme reduction. Incubation of NO with the active species of MPO (Fe(III) form) influenced peroxidase catalytic activity by dual mechanisms. Low levels of NO enhanced peroxidase activity through an effect on the rate-limiting step in catalysis, reduction of Compound II to the ground-state Fe(III) form. In contrast, higher levels of NO inhibited MPO catalysis through formation of the nitrosyl complex MPO-Fe(III)-NO. NO interaction with MPO may thus serve as a novel mechanism for modulating peroxidase catalytic activity, influencing the regulation of local inflammatory and infectious events in vivo.  相似文献   

13.
The oxidation of melatonin by the mammalian myeloperoxidase (MPO) provides protection against the damaging effects of reactive oxygen species. Indole derivatives, such as melatonin and serotonin, are also substrates of the plant horseradish peroxidase (HRP), but this enzyme exhibits remarkable differences from MPO in the specificity and reaction rates for these compounds. A structural understanding of the determinants of the reactivity of these enzymes to indole derivatives would greatly aid their exploitation for biosynthetic and drug design applications. Consequently, after validation of the docking procedure, we performed computational docking of melatonin and serotonin to structural models of the ferric and compound I and II (co I and co II, respectively) states of HRP and MPO. The substrates dock at the heme edge on the distal side, but with different orientations in the two proteins. The distal cavity is larger in MPO than in HRP; however, in MPO, the substrates make closer contacts with the heme involving ring stacking, whereas in HRP, no ring stacking is observed. The observed differences in substrate binding may contribute to the higher reaction rates and lower substrate specificity of MPO relative to those of HRP. The docking results, along with the previously measured heme-protein reduction potentials, suggest that the differentially lowered reaction rates of co II of HRP and MPO with respect to those of co I could stem from as yet undetermined conformational or electrostatic differences between the co I and co II states of MPO, which are absent in HRP.  相似文献   

14.
The reaction of native myeloperoxidase (MPO) and its redox intermediate compound I with hydrogen peroxide, ethyl hydroperoxide, peroxyacetic acid, t-butyl hydroperoxide, 3-chloroperoxybenzoic acid and cumene hydroperoxide was studied by multi-mixing stopped-flow techniques. Hydroperoxides are decomposed by MPO by two mechanisms. Firstly, the hydroperoxide undergoes a two-electron reduction to its corresponding alcohol and heme iron is oxidized to compound I. At pH 7 and 15 degrees C, the rate constant of the reaction between 3-chloroperoxybenzoic acid and ferric MPO was similar to that with hydrogen peroxide (1.8x10(7) M(-1) s(-1) and 1.4x10(7) M(-1) s(-1), respectively). With the exception of t-butyl hydroperoxide, the rates of compound I formation varied between 5.2x10(5) M(-1) s(-1) and 2.7x10(6) M(-1) s(-1). Secondly, compound I can abstract hydrogen from these peroxides, producing peroxyl radicals and compound II. Compound I reduction is shown to be more than two orders of magnitude slower than compound I formation. Again, with 3-chloroperoxybenzoic acid this reaction is most effective (6. 6x10(4) M(-1) s(-1) at pH 7 and 15 degrees C). Both reactions are controlled by the same ionizable group (average pK(a) of about 4.0) which has to be in its conjugated base form for reaction.  相似文献   

15.
16.
We present a systematic investigation of how the axial ligand in heme proteins influences the geometry, electronic structure, and spin states of the active site, and the energies of the reaction cycles. Using the density functional B3LYP method and medium-sized basis sets, we have compared models with His, His+Asp, Cys, Tyr, and Tyr+Arg as found in myoglobin and hemoglobin, peroxidases, cytochrome P450, and heme catalases, respectively. We have studied 12 reactants and intermediates of the reaction cycles of these enzymes, including complexes with H(2)O, OH(-), O(2-), CH(3)OH, O(2), H(2)O(2), and HO(2)(-) in various formal oxidation states of the iron ion (II to V). The results show that His gives ~0.6 V higher reduction potentials than the other ligands. In particular, it is harder to reduce and protonate the O(2) complex with His than with the other ligands, in accordance with the O(2) carrier function of globins and the oxidative chemistry of the other proteins. For most properties, the trend Cys相似文献   

17.
The electronic structures of heme-dioxygen complexes have been studied as intermediate models of dioxygen reduction mechanism catalyzed by the mixed valence (MV) and fully reduced (FR) cytochrome c oxidase (CcO). Dioxygen, protons and electrons were sequentially added to the heme along the proposed reaction path for the O(2) reduction mechanism. The electronic structures of [FeOO], [FeOO](-), [FeOOH](+), [FeOOH], [Fe=O, H(2)O](+), [Fe=O](+) and [Fe=O] were thoroughly investigated by using the unrestricted hybrid exchange-correlation functional B3LYP method. The additions of two protons and an electron to [FeOO] lead to the OO bond cleavage to produce a H(2)O molecule with the electron transfer from Fe(II) in heme to the OO moiety. It is shown that the intrinsic OO bond cleavage occurs by adding two protons and two electrons into the OO bond, indicating consistency with a H(2)O formation catalyzed by both MV and FR CcO. The study of the electronic structures of heme-dioxygen complexes gave the different proposals for the mechanisms of a H(2)O formation by both MV and FR CcO. For the mixed valence CcO, starting from the [FeOO] complex, the final products are single H(2)O molecule and compound I of the oxo heme. For the fully reduced CcO, the final products are single H(2)O molecule and compound II of the oxo heme which is a reduced state of the compound I.  相似文献   

18.
Taurine/alpha-ketoglutarate (alphaKG) dioxygenase (TauD), an archetype alphaKG-dependent hydroxylase, is a non-heme mononuclear Fe(II) enzyme that couples the oxidative decarboxylation of alphaKG with the conversion of taurine to aminoacetaldehyde and sulfite. The crystal structure of taurine-alphaKG-Fe(II)TauD is known, and spectroscopic studies have kinetically defined the early steps in catalysis and identified a high-spin Fe(IV)-oxo reaction intermediate. The present analysis extends our understanding of TauD catalysis by investigating the steady-state and transient kinetics of wild-type and variant forms of the enzyme with taurine and alternative sulfonates. TauD proteins substituted at residues surrounding the active site were shown to fold properly based on their abilities to form a diagnostic chromophore associated with the anaerobic Fe(II)-alphaKG chelate complex and to generate a tyrosyl radical upon subsequent reaction with oxygen. Steady-state studies of mutant proteins confirmed the importance of His 70 and Arg 270 in binding the sulfonate moiety of taurine and indicated the participation of Asn 95 in recognizing the substrate amine group. The N97A and S158A variants are likely to undergo an increase in hydrophobicity and expansion of the substrate-binding pocket, thus accounting for their decreased K(m) toward pentanesulfonic acid compared to wild-type TauD. Stopped-flow UV-visible spectroscopic examination of the reaction of oxygen with taurine-alphaKG-Fe(II)TauD confirmed a minimal three-step sequence of reactions attributed to Fe(IV)-oxo formation (k(1)), bleaching to the Fe(II) state upon substrate hydroxylation (k(2)), rebinding of excess substrates (k(3)), and indicated that none of the steps exhibit detectable solvent k(H)/k(D) isotope effects. This demonstrates that no protons are involved in the rate-determining step of Fe(IV)-oxo formation, in contrast to heme iron oxygenases. The Fe(IV)-oxo species is likely to be utilized in conversion of the alternative substrates pentanesulfonic acid and 3-N-morpholinopropanesulfonic acid; however, this spectroscopic intermediate was not detected because of the decreased k(1)/k(2) ratio. With taurine, k(1) was shown to depend on the oxygen concentration allowing calculation of a second-order rate constant of 1.58 x 10(5) M(-)(1) s(-)(1) for this irreversible reaction. Stopped-flow analyses of TauD variants provided several insights into how the protein environment influences the rates of Fe(IV)-oxo formation and decay. The Fe(IV)-oxo species was not detected in the N95D or N95A variants because of a reduced k(1)/k(2) ratio, likely related to a decreased substrate-dependent conversion of the six-coordinate to five-coordinate metal site.  相似文献   

19.
Abu-Soud HM  Hazen SL 《Biochemistry》2001,40(36):10747-10755
Recent studies demonstrate that myeloperoxidase (MPO), eosinophil peroxidase (EPO), and lactoperoxidase (LPO), homologous members of the mammalian peroxidase superfamily, can all serve as catalysts for generating nitric oxide- (nitrogen monoxide, NO) derived oxidants. These enzymes contain heme prosthetic groups that are ligated through a histidine nitrogen and use H(2)O(2) as the electron acceptor in the catalysis of oxidative reactions. Here we show that heme reduction of these peroxidases results in distinct electronic and/or conformational changes in their heme pockets using a combination of rapid kinetics measurements, optical absorbance, and diatomic ligand binding studies. Addition of reducing agent to each peroxidase at ground state [Fe(III) state] causes immediate buildup of the corresponding Fe(II) complexes. Spectral changes indicate that two LPO-Fe(II) species are present in solution at equilibrium. Analyses of stopped-flow traces collected when EPO, MPO, or LPO solutions rapidly mixed with NO were accurately fit by single-exponential functions. Plots of the apparent rate constants as a function of NO concentration for all Fe(III) and Fe(II) forms were linear with positive intercepts, consistent with NO binding to each form in a simple reversible one-step mechanism. Fe(II) forms of MPO and LPO, but not EPO, displayed significantly lower affinity toward NO compared to Fe(III) forms, suggesting that heme reduction causes a dramatic change in the heme pocket electronic environment that alters the affinity and/or accessibility of heme iron toward NO. Optical absorbance spectra indicate that CO binds to the Fe(II) forms of both LPO and EPO, but not with MPO, and generates their respective low-spin six-coordinate complexes. Kinetic analyses indicate that the binding of CO to EPO is monophasic while CO binding to LPO is biphasic. Collectively, these results illustrate for the first time functional differences in the heme pocket environments of Fe(II) forms of EPO, LPO, and MPO toward binding of diatomic ligands. Our results suggest that, upon reduction, the heme pocket of MPO collapses, LPO adopts two spectroscopically and kinetically distinguishable forms (one partially open and the other relatively closed), and EPO remains open.  相似文献   

20.
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