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1.
He MM  Clugston SL  Honek JF  Matthews BW 《Biochemistry》2000,39(30):8719-8727
The metalloenzyme glyoxalase I (GlxI) converts the nonenzymatically produced hemimercaptal of cytotoxic methylglyoxal and glutathione to nontoxic S-D-lactoylglutathione. Human GlxI, for which the structure is known, is active in the presence of Zn(2+). Unexpectedly, the Escherichia coli enzyme is inactive in the presence of Zn(2+) and is maximally active with Ni(2+). To understand this difference in metal activation and also to obtain a representative of the bacterial enzymes, the structure of E. coli Ni(2+)-GlxI has been determined. Structures have also been determined for the apo enzyme as well as complexes with Co(2+), Cd(2+), and Zn(2+). It is found that each of the protein-metal complexes that is catalytically active has octahedral geometry. This includes the complexes of the E. coli enzyme with Ni(2+), Co(2+), and Cd(2+), as well as the structures reported for the human Zn(2+) enzyme. Conversely, the complex of the E. coli enzyme with Zn(2+) has trigonal bipyramidal coordination and is inactive. This mode of coordination includes four protein ligands plus a single water molecule. In contrast, the coordination in the active forms of the enzyme includes two water molecules bound to the metal ion, suggesting that this may be a key feature of the catalytic mechanism. A comparison of the human and E. coli enzymes suggests that there are differences between the active sites that might be exploited for therapeutic use.  相似文献   

2.
For the first time, the nickel site of the hydrogen sensor of Ralstonia eutropha, the regulatory [NiFe] hydrogenase (RH), was investigated by X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) at the nickel K-edge. The oxidation state and the atomic structure of the Ni site were investigated in the RH in the absence (air-oxidized, RH(ox)) and presence of hydrogen (RH(+H2)). Incubation with hydrogen is found to cause remarkable changes in the spectroscopic properties. The Ni-C EPR signal, indicative of Ni(III), is detectable only in the RH(+H2) state. XANES and EXAFS spectra indicate a coordination of the Ni in the RH(ox) and RH(+H2) that pronouncedly differs from the one in standard [NiFe] hydrogenases. Also, the changes induced by exposure to H(2) are unique. A drastic modification in the XANES spectra and an upshift of the K-edge energy from 8339.8 (RH(ox)) to 8341.1 eV (RH(+H2)) is observed. The EXAFS spectra indicate a change in the Ni coordination in the RH upon exposure to H(2). One likely interpretation of the data is the detachment of one sulfur ligand in RH(+H2) and the binding of additional (O,N) or H ligands. The following Ni oxidation states and coordinations are proposed: five-coordinated Ni(II)(O,N)(2)S(3) for RH(ox) and six-coordinated Ni((III))(O,N)(3)X(1)S(2) [X being either an (O,N) or H ligand] for RH(+H2). Implications of the structural features of the Ni site of the RH in relation to its function, hydrogen sensing, are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
The glyoxalase system catalyzes the conversion of toxic, metabolically produced α-ketoaldehydes, such as methylglyoxal, into their corresponding nontoxic 2-hydroxycarboxylic acids, leading to detoxification of these cellular metabolites. Previous studies on the first enzyme in the glyoxalase system, glyoxalase I (GlxI), from yeast, protozoa, animals, humans, plants, and Gram-negative bacteria, have suggested two metal activation classes, Zn(2+) and non-Zn(2+) activation. Here, we report a biochemical and structural investigation of the GlxI from Clostridium acetobutylicum, which is the first GlxI enzyme from Gram-positive bacteria that has been fully characterized as to its three-dimensional structure and its detailed metal specificity. It is a Ni(2+)/Co(2+)-activated enzyme, in which the active site geometry forms an octahedral coordination with one metal atom, two water molecules, and four metal-binding ligands, although its inactive Zn(2+)-bound form possesses a trigonal bipyramidal geometry with only one water molecule liganded to the metal center. This enzyme also possesses a unique dimeric molecular structure. Unlike other small homodimeric GlxI where two active sites are located at the dimeric interface, the C. acetobutylicum dimeric GlxI enzyme also forms two active sites but each within single subunits. Interestingly, even though this enzyme possesses a different dimeric structure from previously studied GlxI, its metal activation characteristics are consistent with properties of other GlxI. These findings indicate that metal activation profiles in this class of enzyme hold true across diverse quaternary structure arrangements.  相似文献   

4.
Al-Mjeni F  Ju T  Pochapsky TC  Maroney MJ 《Biochemistry》2002,41(21):6761-6769
Acireductone dioxygenases (ARDs) are enzymes involved in the methionine recycle pathway, which regulates aspects of the cell cycle. Klebsiella pneumoniae produces two enzymes that share a common polypeptide sequence and differ only in the metal ion present. Reaction of acireductone (1,2-dihydroxy-3-keto-5-methylthiopentene) with Fe-ARD and dioxygen produces formate and 2-keto-4-methylthiobutanoic acid, the alpha-ketoacid precursor of methionine. Ni-ARD reacts with acireductone and dioxygen to produce methylthiopropionate, CO, and formate and does not lie on the methionine recycle pathway. An X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) study of the structure of the catalytic Ni center in resting Ni-ARD enzyme and the enzyme-substrate complex is reported. This study establishes the structure of the Ni site in resting Ni-ARD as containing a six coordinate Ni site composed of O/N-donor ligands including 3-4 histidine residues, demonstrates that the substrate binds to the Ni center in a bidentate fashion by displacing two ligands, at least one of which is a histidine ligand, and provides insight into the mechanism of catalysis employed by a Ni-containing dioxygenase. Efficiently relaxed and hyperfine-shifted resonances are observed in the (1)H nuclear magnetic resonance spectrum of Ni-ARD that can be attributed to the His imidazoles ligating the paramagnetic Ni ion and are consistent with the XAS results regarding His ligation. These resonances show significant perturbation in the presence of substrate, confirming that the metal ion interacts directly with the substrate.  相似文献   

5.
Giri NC  Sun H  Chen H  Costa M  Maroney MJ 《Biochemistry》2011,50(22):5067-5076
Human ABH2 repairs DNA lesions by using an Fe(II)- and αKG-dependent oxidative demethylation mechanism. The structure of the active site features the facial triad of protein ligands consisting of the side chains of two histidine residues and one aspartate residue that is common to many non-heme Fe(II) oxygenases. X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) of metallated (Fe and Ni) samples of ABH2 was used to investigate the mechanism of ABH2 and its inhibition by Ni(II) ions. The data are consistent with a sequential mechanism that features a five-coordinate metal center in the presence and absence of the α-ketoglutarate cofactor. This aspect is not altered in the Ni(II)-substituted enzyme, and both metals are shown to bind the cofactor. When the substrate is bound to the native Fe(II) complex with α-ketoglutarate bound, a five-coordinate Fe(II) center is retained that features an open coordination position for O(2) binding. However, in the case of the Ni(II)-substituted enzyme, the complex that forms in the presence of the cofactor and substrate is six-coordinate and, therefore, features no open coordination site for oxygen activation at the metal.  相似文献   

6.
Prion diseases are thought to be caused by the misfolding of the ubiquitous neuronal membrane prion protein (PrP) through an unknown mechanism that may involve Cu(II) coordination to the PrP. Previous work has utilized Ni(II) as a diamagnetic probe for Cu(II) coordination [C.E. Jones, M. Klewpatinond, S.R. Abdelraheim, D.R. Brown, J.H. Viles, J. Mol. Biol. 346 (2005) 1393-1407]. Herein we investigate Ni(II) coordination to the PrP fragment PrP(93-114) (AcN-GGTHSQWNKPSKPKTNMKHMAG) at pH=10.0 by Ni K-edge X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS). We find that two equivalents of Ni(II) will coordinate to PrP(93-114) by UV/Vis titrations and mass spectrometry. Ni K-edge XAS data is consistent with Ni(II) ligated by five N/O based ligands (three N/O ligands at 2.01(2) Angstrom and two at 1.855(2) Angstrom). We were also able to locate a Ni-Ni vector at 3.1(1) Angstrom, which suggests the two Ni(II) centers are contained in a bis-mu-hydroxo dimer. We therefore suggest that Ni(II) may not be a suitable diamagnetic mimic for Cu(II) coordination within the PrP since differential coordination modes for the two metals exist.  相似文献   

7.
An X-ray absorption spectroscopic study of structural changes occurring at the Ni site of Chromatium vinosum hydrogenase during reductive activation, CO binding, and photolysis is presented. Structural details of the Ni sites for the ready silent intermediate state, SI(r), and the carbon monoxide complex, SI-CO, are presented for the first time in any hydrogenase. Analysis of nickel K-edge energy shifts in redox-related samples reveals that reductive activation is accompanied by an oscillation in the electron density of the Ni site involving formally Ni(III) and Ni(II), where all the EPR-active states (forms A, B, and C) are formally Ni(III), and the EPR-silent states are formally Ni(II). Analysis of XANES shows that the Ni site undergoes changes in the coordination number and geometry that are consistent with five-coordinate Ni sites in forms A, B, and SI(u); distorted four-coordinate sites in SI(r) and R; and a six-coordinate Ni site in form C. EXAFS analysis reveals that the loss of a short Ni-O bond accounts for the change in coordination number from five to four that accompanies formation of SI(r). A shortening of the Ni-Fe distance from 2.85(5) A in form B to 2.60(5) A also occurs at the SI level and is thus associated with the loss of the bridging O-donor ligand in the active site. Multiple-scattering analysis of the EXAFS data for the SI-CO complex reveals the presence of Ni-CO ligation, where the CO is bound in a linear fashion appropriate for a terminal ligand. The putative role of form C in binding H(2) or H(-) was examined by comparing the XAS data from form C with that of its photoproduct, form L. The data rule out the suggestion that the increase in charge density on the NiFe active site that accompanies the photoprocess results in a two-electron reduction of the Ni site [Ni(III) --> Ni(I)] [Happe, R. P., Roseboom, W., and Albracht, S. P. J. (1999) Eur. J. Biochem. 259, 602-608]; only subtle structural differences between the Ni sites were observed.  相似文献   

8.
Elsholtzia splendens is a Cu-tolerant plant growing in copper mine areas in the south of China. In this study, X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) was used to investigate the Cu speciation and biotransformation in E. splendens with 300 μM Cu treatment from 10 days to 60 days. The results showed that 300 μM Cu was phytotoxic to E. spendens. The Cu K-edge X-ray absorption near edge structure (XANES) revealed that most copper in roots, stems and leaves exists as divalent Cu. Cu speciation changed depending on the treatment time, but there was no unidirectional trend in roots, stems, and leaves. The percentages of potential Cu ligands in all samples were estimated by fitting the XANES spectra with linear combinations. Most Cu in roots, stems and leaves was bound with cell wall and histidine (His)-like ligands, while a minor proportion of the Cu was bound to oxalate and glutathione-like ligands. The fitting results of Cu K-edge extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EAXFS) showed that nitrogen/oxygen (N/O) ligands were dominant in roots, stems and leaves of the plant, while S ligands were rare. All these results suggest that Cu bound by N/O ligands plays a key role in Cu detoxification of E. splendens, and a role for classical metal-detoxifying S ligands, such as metallothioneins and phytochelatins, in Cu detoxification of E. splendens is not supported in the present study. Due to the phytotoxicity of 300 μM Cu to E. splendens, the question of whether S ligands play a significant role in Cu detoxification in E. splendens exposed to lower levels of Cu should be further studied.  相似文献   

9.
Cytotoxic methylglyoxal is detoxified by the two-enzyme glyoxalase system. Glyoxalase I (GlxI) catalyzes conversion of non-enzymatically produced methylglyoxal-glutathione hemithioacetal into its corresponding thioester. Glyoxalase II (Glx II) hydrolyzes the thioester into d-lactate and free glutathione. Glyoxalase I and II are metalloenzymes, which possess mononuclear and binuclear active sites, respectively. There are two distinct classes of GlxI; the first class is Zn2+-dependent and is composed of GlxI from mainly eukaryotic organisms and the second class is composed of non-Zn2+-dependent (but Ni2+ or Co2+-dependent) GlxI enzymes (mainly prokaryotic and leishmanial species). GlxII is typically Zn2+-activated, containing Zn2+ and either Fe3+/Fe2+ or Mn2+ at the active site depending upon the biological source. To address whether two classes of GlxII might exist, glyoxalase II from Escherichia coli was cloned and overexpressed and characterized. Unlike E. coli GlxI, which is non-Zn2+-dependent, Zn2+ activates the E. coli GlxII enzyme, with no evidence for Ni2+ metal utilization.  相似文献   

10.
Mo K-edge X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) has been used to probe the environment of Mo in dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) reductase from Rhodobacter capsulatus in concert with protein crystallographic studies. The oxidised (MoVI) protein has been investigated in solution at 77?K; the Mo K-edge position (20006.4?eV) is consistent with the presence of MoVI and, in agreement with the protein crystallographic results, the extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) is also consistent with a seven-coordinate site. The site is composed of one oxo-group (Mo=O 1.71?Å), four S atoms (considered to arise from the dithiolene groups of the two molybdopterins, two at 2.32?Å and two at 2.47?Å, and two O atoms, one at 1.92?Å (considered to be H-bonded to Trp 116) and one at 2.27?Å (considered to arise from Ser 147). The Mo K-edge XAS recorded for single crystals of oxidised (MoVI) DMSO reductase at 77?K showed a close correspondence to the data for the frozen solution but had an inferior signal:noise ratio. The dithionite-reduced form of the enzyme and a unique form of the enzyme produced by the addition of dimethylsulfide (DMS) to the oxidised (MoVI) enzyme have essentially identical energies for the Mo K-edge, at 20004.4?eV and 20004.5?eV, respectively; these values, together with the lack of a significant presence of MoV in the samples as monitored by EPR spectroscopy, are taken to indicate the presence of MoIV. For the dithionite-reduced sample, the Mo K-edge EXAFS indicates a coordination environment for Mo of two O atoms, one at 2.05?Å and one at 2.51?Å, and four S atoms at 2.36?Å. The coordination environment of the Mo in the DMS-reduced form of the enzyme involves three O atoms, one at 1.69?Å, one at 1.91?Å and one at 2.11?Å, plus four S atoms, two at 2.28?Å and two at 2.37?Å. The EXAFS and the protein crystallographic results for the DMS-reduced form of the enzyme are consistent with the formation of the substrate, DMSO, bound to MoIV with an Mo-O bond of length 1.92?Å.  相似文献   

11.
Copper X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) has been used to examine the structures of the Cu(II) and Cu(I) forms of the cytochrome bo3 quinol oxidase from Escherichia coli. Cytochrome bo3 is a member of the superfamily of heme-copper respiratory oxidases. Of particular interest is the fact that these enzymes function as redox-linked proton pumps, resulting in the net translocation of one H+ per electron across the membrane. The molecular mechanism of how this pump operates and the manner by which it is linked to the oxygen chemistry at the active site of the enzyme are unknown. Several proposals have featured changes in the coordination of CuB during enzyme turnover that would result in sequential protonation or deprotonation events that are key to the functioning proton pump. This would imply lability of the ligands to CuB. In this work, the structure of the protein in the immediate vicinity of CuB, in both the fully oxidized and fully reduced forms of the enzyme, has been examined by Cu XAS, a technique that is particularly sensitive to changes in metal coordination. The results show that in the oxidized enzyme, CuB(II) is four-coordinate, consistent with three imidazoles and one hydroxyl (or water). Upon reduction of the enzyme, the coordination of CuB(I) is significantly altered, consistent with the loss of one of the histidine imidazole ligands in at least a substantial fraction of the population. These data add to the credibility that changes in the ligation of CuB might occur during catalytic turnover of the enzyme and, therefore, could, in principle, be part of the mechanism of proton pumping.  相似文献   

12.
Cu K-edge X-ray absorption spectra have been recorded for the enzyme tyrosinase from Neurospora crassa, in its oxy, resting (met-aquo), and inhibitor-bound (met-mimosine) forms. The K-edges proper resemble those of oxy- and met-hemocyanin, and confirm the presence of CuII. The forbidden 1s----3d transition is noticeably stronger for the 1-mimosine-bound enzyme, implying some distortion of the tetragonal Cu coordination group on inhibitor binding. The extended fine structure (EXAFS) beyond the K-edge has been analyzed. The first shell scattering is consistent with the presence of two N- and two O-ligand atoms, at 2.0 and 1.9 A, for all three forms of the enzyme; there is no evidence for heavy atom (S) scattering in the first shell. As in analogous hemocyanin derivatives, the outer shell scattering contains contributions from distant atoms of imidazole ligands, as well as from an addition scattering atom, at 3.4-3.6 A. For oxy-tyrosinase the additional scatterer is unambiguously a heavy atom (Cu), although a larger Debye-Waller factor suggests a somewhat less rigid binuclear site than in oxy-hemocyanin.  相似文献   

13.
Gu W  Seravalli J  Ragsdale SW  Cramer SP 《Biochemistry》2004,43(28):9029-9035
We have examined the C cluster in type II CO dehydrogenase (CODH) from Carboxydothermus hydrogenformans using Ni K-edge X-ray absorption near edge spectroscopy and extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) spectroscopy. The enzyme was studied under three conditions: "as-isolated" and after treatment with CO or Ti(III). The shape of the Ni K-edge changes slightly between the different conditions, but no significant edge shift is seen, suggesting that the C cluster contains Ni(II) in both forms. The Ni EXAFS of as-isolated CODH can be simulated with 4 Ni-S interactions at 2.20 A with a large spread in distances. A light atom (C, N, O) is not required to fit the spectrum. After CO treatment, significant changes are observed in the EXAFS. A new feature appears at approximately 2.7 A; this component is consistent with a Ni-Fe interaction. The average Ni-S distance also expands to approximately 2.25 A. The changes between the two forms suggest that the active site (C cluster) undergoes structural rearrangement after CO treatment, and the observed changes help reconcile the two different crystal structures. The implications of the structural change for the enzyme activation and mechanism are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
The local structures of ‘host’ and ‘guest’ layers of MoS2 intercalated with M(OH)2 (M=Mn, Co and Ni) prepared via interaction of single-layer MoS2 dispersions and solutions of M2+ salts were studied by X-ray absorption spectroscopy. According to M K-edge extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) and X-ray absorption near-edge structure (XANES) results, the electronic structure and atomic environment of the M atoms in the intercalates are similar to that of the crystalline hydroxides M(OH)2. In the Ni intercalate, Mo K-edge EXAFS revealed a structural change of the ‘host’ MoS2 layers similar to that reported for water dispersions of MoS2 single layers. S K-edge XANES data indicate that the change is associated with increased electron density on the S atoms in the matrix. SO42− and Mo″ (4 < n < 6) were detected in the intercalated materials exposed to air, suggesting that transition metal intercalation may increase the susceptibility of the MoS2 layers to oxidation.  相似文献   

15.
Previous studies of ferrous wild-type phenylalanine hydroxylase, [Fe(2+)]PAH(T)[], have shown the active site to be a six-coordinate distorted octahedral site. After the substrate and cofactor bind to the enzyme ([Fe(2+)]PAH(R)[L-Phe,5-deaza-6-MPH(4)]), the active site converts to a five-coordinate square pyramidal structure in which the identity of the missing ligand had not been previously determined. X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) at the Fe K-edge further supports this coordination number change with the binding of both cosubstrates to the enzyme, and determines this to be due to the loss of a water ligand.  相似文献   

16.
X-ray crystallographic studies of the intradiol cleaving protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa have shown that the enzyme has a trigonal bipyramidal ferric active site with two histidines, two tyrosines, and a solvent molecule as ligands [Ohlendorf, D.H., Lipscomb, J.D., & Weber, P.C. (1988) Nature 336, 403-405]. Fe K-edge EXAFS studies of the spectroscopically similar protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase from Brevibacterium fuscum are consistent with a pentacoordinate geometry of the iron active site with 3 O/N ligands at 1.90 A and 2 O/N ligands at 2.08 A. The 2.08-A bonds are assigned to the two histidines, while the 1.90-A bonds are associated with the two tyrosines and the coordinated solvent. The short Fe-O distance for the solvent suggests that it coordinates as hydroxide rather than water. When the inhibitor terephthalate is bound to the enzyme, the XANES data indicate that the ferric site becomes 6-coordinate and the EXAFS data show a beat pattern which can only be simulated with an additional Fe-O/N interaction at 2.46 A. Together, the data suggest that the oxygens of the carboxylate group in terephthalate displace the hydroxide and chelate to the ferric site but in an asymmetric fashion. In contrast, protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase remains 5-coordinate upon the addition of the slow substrate homoprotocatechuic acid (HPCA). Previous EPR data have indicated that HPCA forms an iron chelate via the two hydroxyl functions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
HMA2 is a Zn2+-ATPase from Arabidopsis thaliana. It contributes to the maintenance of metal homeostasis in cells by driving Zn2+ efflux. Distinct from P1B-type ATPases, plant Zn2+-ATPases have long C-terminal sequences rich in Cys and His. Removal of the 244 amino acid C terminus of HMA2 leads to a 43% reduction in enzyme turnover without significant effect on the Zn2+ K(1/2) for enzyme activation. Characterization of the isolated HMA2 C terminus showed that this fragment binds three Zn2+ with high affinity (Kd = 16 +/- 3 nM). Circular dichroism spectral analysis indicated the presence of 8% alpha-helix, 45% beta-sheet, and 48% random coil in the C-terminal peptide with noticeable structural changes upon metal binding (8% alpha-helix, 39% beta-sheet, and 52% random coil). Zn K-edge XAS of Zn-C-MBD in the presence of one equivalent of Zn2+ shows that the average zinc complex formed is composed of three His and one Cys residues. Upon the addition of two extra Zn2+ ions per C-MBD, these appear coordinated primarily by His residues thus, suggesting that the three Zn2+ binding domains might not be identical. Modification of His residues with diethyl pyrocarbonate completely inhibited Zn2+ binding to the C terminus, pointing out the importance of His residues in Zn2+ coordination. In contrast, alkylation of Cys with iodoacetic acid did not prevent Zn2+ binding to the HMA2 C terminus. Zn K-edge XAS of the Cys-alkylated protein was consistent with (N/O)4 coordination of the zinc site, with three of those ligands fitting for His residues. In summary, plant Zn2+-ATPases contain novel metal binding domains in their cytoplasmic C terminus. Structurally distinct from the well characterized N-terminal metal binding domains present in most P1B-type ATPases, they also appear to regulate enzyme turnover rate.  相似文献   

18.
Human serum albumin (HSA) is involved physiologically in heme scavenging; in turn, heme-albumin (HSA-heme-Fe) displays globin-like properties. Here, the allosteric effect of ibuprofen and warfarin on the local atomic structure around the ferric heme-Fe (heme-Fe(III)) atom of HSA-heme-Fe (HSA-heme-Fe(III)) has been probed by Fe-K edge X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS). The quantitative analysis of the Fe-K edge extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) signals and modeling of the near edge (XANES) spectral features demonstrated that warfarin and ibuprofen binding modify the local structure of the heme-Fe(III). Combined XAS data analysis and targeted molecular dynamics (MD) simulations provided atomic resolution insights of protein structural rearrangements required to accommodate the heme-Fe(III) upon ibuprofen and warfarin binding. In the absence of drugs, the heme-Fe(III) atom is penta-coordinated having distorted 4+1 configuration made by the nitrogen atoms of the porphyrin ring and the oxygen phenoxy atom of the Tyr161 residue. MD simulations show that ibuprofen and warfarin association to the secondary fatty acid (FA) binding site 2 (FA2) induces a reorientation of domain I of HSA-heme-Fe(III), this leads to the redirection of the His146 residue providing an additional bond to the heme-Fe(III) atom, providing the 5+1 configuration. The comparison of Fe-K edge XANES spectra calculated using MD structures with those obtained experimentally confirms the reliability of the proposed structural model. As a whole, combining XAS and MD simulations it has been possible to provide a reliable model of the heme-Fe(III) atom coordination state and to understand the complex allosteric transition occurring in HSA-heme-Fe(III) upon ibuprofen and warfarin binding.  相似文献   

19.
Conditions for heterologous expression of Rhodobacter sphaeroides biotin sulfoxide reductase in Escherichia coli were modified, resulting in a significant improvement in the yield of recombinant enzyme and enabling structural studies of the molybdenum center. Quantitation of the guanine and the molybdenum as compared to that found in R. sphaeroides DMSO reductase demonstrated the presence of the bis(MGD)molybdenum cofactor. UV-visible absorption spectra were obtained for the oxidized, NADPH-reduced, and dithionite-reduced enzyme. EPR spectra were obtained for the Mo(V) state of the enzyme. X-ray absorption spectroscopy at the molybdenum K-edge has been used to probe the molybdenum coordination of the enzyme. The molybdenum site of the oxidized protein possesses a Mo(VI) mono-oxo site (Mo=O at 1.70 A) with additional coordination by approximately four thiolate ligands at 2.41 A and probably one oxygen or nitrogen at 1.95 A. The NADPH- and dithionite-reduced Mo(IV) forms of the enzyme are des-oxo molybdenum sites with approximately four thiolates at 2.33 A and two different Mo-O/N ligands at 2.19 and 1.94 A.  相似文献   

20.
The Al site structure of serum transferrin and lactoferrin is investigated using X-ray absorption near edge structure (XANES) spectroscopy. Al K-edge spectra in the mono- and dialuminum forms of the proteins have been recorded for the first time. Our results show that the aluminium ion is hexa-coordinated in an octahedral-like symmetry and that the monoaluminum form, where only the C-terminal binding site is saturated, has an increased structural distortion around the metal site.  相似文献   

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