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1.
C S Tsai D M Templeton J R Godin K P Farrell A J Wand 《Comparative biochemistry and physiology. B, Comparative biochemistry》1988,90(2):335-339
1. Glutathione reductase and lipoamide dehydrogenase are structurally and mechanistically related flavoenzymes catalyzing various one and two electron transfer reactions between NAD(P)H and substrates with different structures. 2. The two enzymes differ in their coenzyme and functional specificities. Lipoamide dehydrogenase shows higher coenzyme preference while glutathione reductase displays greater functional specificity. 3. Binding preference of the two flavoenzymes for nicotinamide coenzymes is demonstrated by 31P-NMR spectroscopy. 4. The presence of arginines in glutathione reductase which is inactivated by phenyl glyoxal, is likely to be responsible for the NADPH-activity of glutathione reductase. 5. The substrate binding sites of the two enzymes are similar, though their functional details differ. 6. The active-site histidine of glutathione reductase functions primarily as the proton donor during catalysis. While the active-site histidine of lipoamide dehydrogenase stabilizes the thiolate anion intermediate and relays a proton in the catalytic process. 相似文献
2.
Evidence for a novel mechanism of time-resolved flavin fluorescence depolarization in glutathione reductase 下载免费PDF全文
Time-resolved flavin fluorescence anisotropy studies on glutathione reductase (GR) have revealed a remarkable new phenomenon: wild-type GR displays a rapid process of fluorescence depolarization, that is absent in mutant enzymes lacking a nearby tyrosine residue that blocks the NADPH-binding cleft. Fluorescence lifetime data, however, have shown a more rigid active-site structure for wild-type GR than for the tyrosine mutants. These results suggest that the rapid depolarization in wild-type GR originates from an interaction with the flavin-shielding tyrosine, and not from restricted reorientational motion of the flavin. A novel mechanism of fluorescence depolarization is proposed that involves a transient charge-transfer complex between the tyrosine and the light-excited flavin, with a concomitant change in the direction of the emission dipole moment of the flavin. This interaction is likely to result from side-chain relaxation of the tyrosine in the minor fraction of enzyme molecules in which this residue is in an unsuitable position for immediate fluorescence quenching at the moment of excitation. Support for this mechanism is provided by binding studies with NADP+ and 2'P-5'ADP-ribose that can intercalate between the flavin and tyrosine and/or block the latter. Fluorescence depolarization analyses as a function of temperature and viscosity confirm the dynamic nature of the process. A comparison with fluorescence depolarization effects in a related flavoenzyme indicates that this mechanism of flavin fluorescence depolarization is more generally applicable. 相似文献
3.
Regeneration of the antioxidant ubiquinol by lipoamide dehydrogenase, thioredoxin reductase and glutathione reductase 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2
Nordman T Xia L Björkhem-Bergman L Damdimopoulos A Nalvarte I Arnér ES Spyrou G Eriksson LC Björnstedt M Olsson JM 《BioFactors (Oxford, England)》2003,18(1-4):45-50
Ubiquinol is a powerful antioxidant, which is oxidized in action and needs to be replaced or regenerated to be capable of a sustained effort. This article summarises current knowledge of extramitochondrial reduction of ubiquinone by three flavoenzymes, i.e. lipoamide dehydrogenase, glutathione reductase and thioredoxin reductase, belonging to the same pyridine nucleotide-disulfide oxidoreductase family. These three enzymes are the most efficient extramitochondrial ubiquinone reductases so far described. The reduction of ubiquinone by lipoamide dehydrogenase and glutathione reductase is potently stimulated by zinc and the highest rate of reduction is achieved at acidic pH and the rates are equal with either NADPH or NADH as co-factors. The most efficient ubiquinone reductases are mammalian cytosolic thioredoxin reductases, which are selenoenzymes with a number of biological functions. Reduction of ubiquinone by thioredoxin reductase is in contrast to the other two enzymes investigated, inhibited by zinc and shows a sharp physiological pH optimum at pH 7.5. Furthermore, the reaction is selenium dependent as revealed from experiments using truncated and mutant forms of the enzyme and also in a cellular context by selenium treatment of transfected thioredoxin reductase overexpressing stable cell lines. The reduction of ubiquinone by the three enzymes offers a multifunctional system for extramitochondrial regeneration of an important antioxidant. 相似文献
4.
Among the three closely related enzymes, lipoamide dehydrogenase, mercuric reductase, and glutathione reductase only the latter is inhibited by 2,4,6-trinitrobenzenesulfonate (TNBS). On the other hand, all three enzymes exhibit high rates of TNBS-dependent NADPH oxidation. In the case of glutathione reductase and mercuric reductase this TNBS-dependent activity displays substrate inhibition by excess of NADPH and is strongly stimulated by NADP+. The stimulation is especially pronounced with mercuric reductase, 25-fold under some conditions. Neither substrate inhibition nor stimulation by NAD+ is observed with lipoamide dehydrogenase. 相似文献
5.
Conformational dynamics and intersubunit energy transfer in wild-type and mutant lipoamide dehydrogenase from Azotobacter vinelandii. A multidimensional time-resolved polarized fluorescence study. 下载免费PDF全文
Time-resolved fluorescence and fluorescence anisotropy data surfaces of flavin adenine dinucleotide bound to lipoamide dehydrogenase from Azotobacter vinelandii in 80% glycerol have been obtained by variation of excitation energy and temperature between 203 and 303 K. The fluorescence kinetics of a deletion mutant lacking 14 COOH-terminal amino acids were compared with the wild-type enzyme to study a possible interaction of the COOH-terminal tail with the active site of the enzyme. The flavin adenine dinucleotide fluorescence in both proteins exhibits a bimodal lifetime distribution as recovered by the maximum entropy method of data analysis. The difference in standard enthalpy and entropy of associated conformational substates was retrieved from the fractional contributions of the two lifetime classes. Activation energies of thermal quenching were obtained that confirm that the isoalloxazines in the deletion mutant are solvent accessible in contrast to the wild-type enzyme. Red-edge spectroscopy in conjunction with variation of temperature provides the necessary experimental axes to interpret the fluorescence depolarization in terms of intersubunit energy transfer rather than reorientational dynamics of the flavins. The results can be explained by a compartmental model that describes the anisotropy decay of a binary, inhomogeneously broadened, homoenergy transfer system. By using this model in a global analysis of the fluorescence anisotropy decay surface, the distance between and relative orientation of the two isoalloxazine rings are elucidated. For the wild-type enzyme, this geometrical information is in agreement with crystallographic data of the A. vinelandii enzyme, whereas the mutual orientation of the subunits in the deletion mutant is slightly altered. In addition, the ambiguity in the direction of the emission transition moment in the isoalloxazine ring is solved. The anisotropy decay parameters also provide information on electronic and dipolar relaxational properties of the flavin active site. The local environment of the prosthetic groups in the deletion mutant of the A. vinelandii enzyme is highly inhomogeneous, and a transition from slow to rapid dipolar relaxation is observed over the measured temperature range. In the highly homogeneous active site of the wild-type enzyme, dipolar relaxation is slowed down beyond the time scale of fluorescence emission at any temperature studied. Our results are in favor of a COOH-terminal polypeptide interacting with the active site, thereby shielding the isoalloxazines from the solvent. This biological system forms a very appropriate tool to test the validity of photophysical models describing homoenergy transfer. 相似文献
6.
Macroscopic pKa values associated with the influence of pH on the visible spectrum of 2-electron reduced pig heart lipoamide dehydrogenase and yeast glutathione reductase have been determined by monitoring changes in the principal flavin band near 460 nm and the charge transfer band at 540 nm. The ionization of at least three active site amino acid side chains can influence the spectra over the range of pH studied: the two nascent thiols (interchange thiol and electron transfer thiol) and the histidine residue which acts as the base catalyst in lipoamide dehydrogenase and the acid catalyst in glutathione reductase thiol-disulfide interchange reactions. These systems are analogous to, but more complex than, those in glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase and papain where a single thiol and a histidine residue in a relatively apolar milieu form a thiolate-imidazolium ion pair which is favored over the thiol-imidazole prototropic tautomer. In an effort to more nearly mimic the papain titrations, the macroscopic pKa values were determined on reduced glutathione reductase which had been monoalkylated with iodoacetamide under conditions known to favor the reaction of the interchange thiol by at least 10 to 1 (Arscott, L. D., Thorpe, C., and Williams, C. H., Jr. (1981) Biochemistry 20, 1513-1520). Like papain and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, alkylated glutathione reductase showed two macroscopic pKa values, at pH 3.7 and pH 9.1, and by analogy, these were associated primarily with the thiol and the imidazole, respectively. Results with the native enzymes depended on the wavelength monitored. Glutathione reductase had pKa values at 4.8, 7.1, and 9.2 when monitored at 540 nm and 5.1 and 8.2 when monitored at 462 nm. Lipoamide dehydrogenase had pKa values at 4.4 and 8.7 when monitored at 529 nm and 3.9, 7.0, and 9.3 when monitored at 455 nm. 相似文献
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The relationship between the NADH:lipoamide reductase and NADH:quinone reductase reactions of pig heart lipoamide dehydrogenase (EC 1.6.4.3) was investigated. At pH 7.0 the catalytic constant of the quinone reductase reaction (kcat.) is 70 s-1 and the rate constant of the active-centre reduction by NADH (kcat./Km) is 9.2 x 10(5) M-1.s-1. These constants are almost an order lower than those for the lipoamide reductase reaction. The maximal quinone reductase activity is observed at pH 6.0-5.5. The use of [4(S)-2H]NADH as substrate decreases kcat./Km for the lipoamide reductase reaction and both kcat. and kcat./Km for the quinone reductase reaction. The kcat./Km values for quinones in this case are decreased 1.85-3.0-fold. NAD+ is a more effective inhibitor in the quinone reductase reaction than in the lipoamide reductase reaction. The pattern of inhibition reflects the shift of the reaction equilibrium. Various forms of the four-electron-reduced enzyme are believed to reduce quinones. Simple and 'hybrid ping-pong' mechanisms of this reaction are discussed. The logarithms of kcat./Km for quinones are hyperbolically dependent on their single-electron reduction potentials (E1(7]. A three-step mechanism for a mixed one-electron and two-electron reduction of quinones by lipoamide dehydrogenase is proposed. 相似文献
9.
Refined crystal structure of lipoamide dehydrogenase from Azotobacter vinelandii at 2.2 A resolution. A comparison with the structure of glutathione reductase 总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12
The structure of lipoamide dehydrogenase from Azotobacter vinelandii has been refined by the molecular dynamics technique to an R-factor of 19.8% at 2.2 A resolution. In the final model, the root-mean-square deviation from ideality is 0.02 A for bond lengths and 3.2 degrees for bond angles. The asymmetric unit comprises two subunits, each consisting of 466 amino acid residues and the prosthetic group FAD, plus 512 solvent molecules. The last ten amino acid residues of both chains are not visible in the electron density distribution and they are probably disordered. The operation required to superimpose the two chains forming the dimer is a rotation of exactly 180 degrees with no translation component. The final model shows the two independently refined subunits to be very similar, except for six loops located at the surface of the molecule. The structure of each subunit of the enzyme consists of four domains with the catalytic centre located at the subunit interface. The reactive disulphide bridge, 48-53, is oxidized with S gamma of Cys53 located 3.5 A away from carbon C-4a of the isoalloxazine ring. The side-chain of His450' points its N epsilon 2 towards S gamma of Cys48 and is hydrogen bonded to the carboxylate of Glu455'. The FAD is bound in an extended conformation and the isoalloxazine ring is not completely planar with an angle between the pteridine and the benzene ring of 7.3 degrees in the first subunit and of 12.1 degrees in the second one. The overall folding of lipoamide dehydrogenase is very similar to that of glutathione reductase. However, a comparison of the two enzymes, which have only 26% sequence identity, reveals significant conformational differences. These concern the tertiary as well as the quaternary structure of the two molecules. In each subunit of lipoamide dehydrogenase the NAD-binding domain and the interface domain appear to be differently oriented with respect to the FAD-binding domain by 7.1 degrees and 7.8 degrees, respectively. The interface domain contains, in addition, major changes in tertiary structure. Furthermore, the two subunits forming the dimer appear to be shifted with respect to each other by more than 4 A, when the lipoamide dehydrogenase dimer is compared with that of glutathione reductase. In spite of all these changes at the tertiary and quaternary level the active sites of the enzymes, which occur at the dimer interface, appear to be remarkably similar.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS) 相似文献
10.
A derivative of the flavoprotein pig heart lipoamide dehydrogenase has been described recently (Thorpe, C., and Williams, C.H. (1976) J. Biol. Chem. 251, 3553-3557), in which 1 of the 2 cysteine residues generated on reduction of the intrachain active center disulfide bridge is selectively alkylated with iodoacetamide. This monolabeled enzyme exhibits a spectrum of oxidized bound flavin. The addition of 1 mM NAD+ to this derivative at pH 8.3 causes a decrease in absorbance of approximately 50% at 448 nm, with a concomitant increase at 380 nm. These spectral changes are complete within 3 ms and are reversible. NAD+ titrations generate isosbestic points at 408, 374, and 327 nm; allowing values for the apparent dissociation constant for NAD+ and the extent of bleaching at infinite ligand to be obtained from double reciprocal plots. Between pH 6.1 and 8.8, the apparent KD decreases from 320 to 35 muM, whereas the extrapolated delta epsilon 448 values remain approximately constant at 1/2 epsilon 448. Direct measurement of NAD+ binding by gel filtration at pH 8.8 indicates that the spectral changes are associated with a stoichiometry of 1.2 mol of NAD+ bound/2 mol of FAD. The modified protein is a dimer containing 1 FAD and 1 alkylated cysteine residue/subunit; the native enzyme is also dimeric. The visible spectrum of the species absorbing at 380 nm, approximated by correction for the residual oxidized FAD, shows a single maximum at 384 nm, epsilon 384 = 8.7 mM-1cm-1. Comparison of this spectrum with that of model compounds of known structure suggests that it may represent a reversible covalent flavin adduct induced on binding NAD+. 相似文献
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Lipoamide dehydrogenase catalyses the NAD(+)-dependent oxidation of the dihydrolipoyl cofactors that are covalently attached to the acyltransferase components of the pyruvate dehydrogenase, alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase, and glycine reductase multienzyme complexes. It contains a tightly, but noncovalently, bound FAD and a redox-active disulfide, which cycle between the oxidized and reduced forms during catalysis. The mechanism of reduction of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis lipoamide dehydrogenase by NADH and [4S-(2)H]-NADH was studied anaerobically at 4 degrees C and pH 7.5 by stopped-flow spectrophotometry. Three phases of enzyme reduction were observed. The first phase, characterized by a decrease in absorbance at 400-500 nm and an increase in absorbance at 550-700 nm, was fast (k(for) = 1260 s(-)(1), k(rev) = 590 s(-)(1)) and represents the formation of FADH(2).NAD(+), an intermediate that has never been observed before in any wild-type lipoamide dehydrogenase. A primary deuterium kinetic isotope effect [(D)(k(for) + k(rev)) approximately 4.2] was observed on this phase. The second phase, characterized by regain of the absorbance at 400-500 nm, loss of the 550-700 nm absorbance, and gain of 500-550 nm absorbance, was slower (k(obs) = 200 s(-)(1)). This phase represents the intramolecular transfer of electrons from FADH(2) to the redox-active disulfide to generate the anaerobically stable two-electron reduced enzyme, EH(2). The third phase, characterized by a decrease in absorbance at 400-550 nm, represents the formation of the four-electron reduced form of the enzyme, EH(4). The observed rate constant for this phase showed a decreasing NADH concentration dependence, and results from the slow (k(for) = 57 s(-)(1), k(rev) = 128 s(-)(1)) isomerization of EH(2) or slow release of NAD(+) before rapid NADH binding and reaction to form EH(4). The mechanism of oxidation of EH(2) by NAD(+) was also investigated under the same conditions. The 530 nm charge-transfer absorbance of EH(2) shifted to 600 nm upon NAD(+) binding in the dead time of mixing of the stopped-flow instrument and represents formation of the EH(2).NAD(+) complex. This was followed by two phases. The first phase (k(obs) = 750 s(-)(1)), characterized by a small decrease in absorbance at 435 and 458 nm, probably represents limited accumulation of FADH(2).NAD(+). The second phase was characterized by an increase in absorbance at 435 and 458 nm and a decrease in absorbance at 530 and 670 nm. The observed rate constant that describes this phase of approximately 115 s(-)(1) probably represents the overall rate of formation of E(ox) and NADH from EH(2) and NAD(+), and is largely determined by the slower rates of the coupled sequence of reactions preceding flavin oxidation. 相似文献
14.
The temperature dependence of the fluorescence emission spectra of flavin adenine dinucleotide bound to lipoamide dehydrogenase from Azotobacter vinelandii shows that the protein matrix in the vicinity of the prosthetic group is rigid on a nanosecond time scale in a medium of high viscosity (80% glycerol). The active site of a deletion mutant of this enzyme, which lacks 14 C-terminal amino acids, is converted from a solid-state environment (on the nanosecond time scale of fluorescence) into a state where efficient dipolar relaxation takes place at temperatures between 203 and 303 K. In aqueous solution, fast dipolar fluctuations are observed in both proteins. It is shown from fluorescence quenching of the flavin by iodide ions that the prosthetic groups of the mutant protein are partially iodide accessible in contrast to the wild type enzyme. A detailed analysis of the temperature dependence of spectral energies according to continuous relaxation models reveals two distinct relaxation processes in the deletion mutant, which were assigned to solvent and protein dipoles, respectively. From the long-wavelength shifts of the emission spectra upon red-edge excitation, it is demonstrated that the active site of the wild type enzyme has high structural homogeneity in comparison to the deletion mutant. In combination with results obtained by X-ray diffraction studies on crystals of the wild type enzyme, it can be concluded that the C-terminal polypeptide of the A. vinelandii enzyme interacts with the dehydrolipoamide binding site, thereby shielding the flavins from the solvent. 相似文献
15.
1. Lipoamide dehydrogenase NADH: lipoamide oxidoreductase, (EC 1.6.4.3) from pig heart has been separated into two sets of isoenzymes by chromatography on lipoyl- and NAD+-derivatized Sepharose-4B matrices. The first fraction is eluted at 30 mM sodium phosphate buffer (pH 7.2), the other requires a higher ionic strength. The two groups originate from the alpha-ketoglutarate and the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex respectively. 2, Hydrophobic chromatography on a homologous series of alkyl-Sepharoses lead to similar results. The first fraction is eluted with 30 mM phosphate buffer in the case of propyl- and butyl-Sepharose but a high ionic strength is required in the case of an increased chain length (C5--C6). The second fraction is reversibly bound on Sepharose-NC3 and -NC4 but binding becomes irreversible at higher chain lengths. 3. Aminoalkyl-Sepharose behave qualitatively as the alkyl derivatives although elution, particularly in the case of the second fraction, can be realized at lower ionic strength. 4. Matrices which are negatively charged (Sepharose-NCnCOOH, n equal 3--7) have no affinity at pH 7.2. 5. The influence of a neutral polar substituent has been studied by comparing the following matrices: Sepharose-NC6OH, Sepharose-NC6NH2 and Sepharose NC6. Binding of the various isoenzymes is completely reversible in the case of a Sepharose-NC6OH matrix and the elution behaviour is identical to that on propyl- and butyl matrices. 相似文献
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C.S. Tsai A.J. Wand J.R.P. Godin G.W. Buchanan 《Archives of biochemistry and biophysics》1982,217(2):721-729
Rose bengal sensitizes photoinactivation of lipoamide dehydrogenase from pig heart to a constant residual reductase activity resulting from specific destruction of histidine residues. The rate of sensitized photoinactivation is pH dependent and is associated with an ionizable group with pK 6.6 ± 0.2. All steady-state kinetic parameters are markedly reduced by photooxidation. Spectroscopic studies indicate the contribution of oxidized flavin/dithiol to the half-reduced form of the photooxidized enzyme. The proton magnetic resonance spectrum of lipoamide dehydrogenase shows resolved histidine C2 proton peak at δ9.18 ppm and a shoulder at δ9.23 ppm. The shoulder protons are eliminated by the sensitized photooxidation and shifted upfield on deprotonation. At high pH, the characteristic Faraday A term also disappears. These observations suggest that the essential histidine stabilizes the nascent thiolate via the ion pair formation to facilitate the reductase reaction catalyzed by lipoamide dehydrogenase. 相似文献
18.
The allosteric transition of threonine-sensitive aspartokinase I-homoserine dehydrogenase I from Escherichia coli has been studied by time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy. Fluorescence decay can be resolved into 2 distinct classes of tryptophan emitters: a fast component, with a lifetime of about 1.5 ns; and a slow component, with a lifetime of about 4.5 ns. The fluorescence properties of the slow component are modified by the allosteric transition. In the T-form of the enzyme stabilized by threonine, the lifetime of the slow component is longer, with a red-shifted spectrum; its accessibility to quenching by acrylamide becomes slightly higher without any decrease of fluorescence anisotropy. These results indicate a change in polarity of the slow component environment. The quaternary structure change associated with the allosteric transition probably involves global movements of structural domains without leading to any local mobility on the nanosecond time-scale. We suggest that the slow component corresponds to the unique tryptophan of the buried kinase domain. 相似文献
19.
The insertion of a second disulfide bridge into native pig heart lipoamide dehydrogenase, requires two Cu-2+ ions for each catalytic center inactivated under anaerobic conditions. During inactivation, both metal atoms become reducible by their juxtaposition to the two participating cysteine residues and may be removed as the Cu+-chelates of neocuproine and bathocuproinesulfonate, leaving an additional disulfide bridge on the protein. Inactivation does not require the presence of oxygen, but when substoichiometric levels of copper are used under aerobic conditions the slow regeneration of Cu-2+ becomes rate-limiting. The course of aerobic inactivation is markedly biphasic at 0 degrees using 2 Cu-2+/FAD, with 30% of the total change completed rapidly, followed by a much slower phase. Both the extent of the fast phase and the rate of the second phase are enhanced by increasing levels of Cu-2+, but are relatively unaffected when the Cu-2+/FAD ratio is maintained at 2 and the protein concentration is varied. The enzyme affords several binding sites for Cu-2+ at pH 7.8, and it is suggested that competition between these sites during the initial statistical distribution of metal ions may explain this biphasic behavior. 相似文献
20.
Lipoamide dehydrogenase, glutathione reductase, thioredoxin reductase, and thioredoxin 总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4
C H Williams G Zanetti L D Arscott J K McAllister 《The Journal of biological chemistry》1967,242(22):5226-5231