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1.
Three yeast cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) variants with apolar distal heme pockets have been constructed. The CcP variants have Arg48, Trp51, and His52 mutated to either all alanines, CcP(triAla), all valines, CcP(triVal), or all leucines, CcP(triLeu). The triple mutants have detectable enzymatic activity at pH 6 but the activity is less than 0.02% that of wild-type CcP. The activity loss is primarily due to the decreased rate of reaction between the triple mutants and H2O2 compared to wild-type CcP. Spectroscopic properties and cyanide binding characteristics of the triple mutants have been investigated over the pH stability region of CcP, pH 4 to 8. The absorption spectra indicate that the CcP triple mutants have hemes that are predominantly five-coordinate, high-spin at pH 5 and six-coordinate, low-spin at pH 8. Cyanide binding to the triple mutants is biphasic indicating that the triple mutants have two slowly-exchanging conformational states with different cyanide affinities. The binding affinity for cyanide is reduced at least two orders of magnitude in the triple mutants compared to wild-type CcP and the rate of cyanide binding is reduced by four to five orders of magnitude. Correlation of the reaction rates of CcP and 12 distal pocket mutants with H2O2 and HCN suggests that both reactions require ionization of the reactants within the distal heme pocket allowing the anion to bind the heme iron. Distal pocket features that promote substrate ionization (basic residues involved in base-catalyzed substrate ionization or polar residues that can stabilize substrate anions) increase the overall rate of reaction with H2O2 and HCN while features that inhibit substrate ionization slow the reactions.  相似文献   

2.
Cyanide binding to a cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) variant in which the distal histidine has been replaced by a leucine residue, CcP(H52L), has been investigated as a function of pH using spectroscopic, equilibrium, and kinetic methods. Between pH 4 and 8, the apparent equilibrium dissociation constant for the CcP(H52L)/cyanide complex varies by a factor of 60, from 135 microM at pH 4.7 to 2.2 microM at pH 8.0. The binding kinetics are biphasic, involving bimolecular association of the two reactants, followed by an isomerization of the enzyme/cyanide complex. The association rate constant could be determined up to pH 8.9 using pH-jump techniques. The association rate constant increases by almost 4 orders of magnitude over the pH range investigated, from 1.8 x 10(2) M(-1) s(-1) at pH 4 to 9.2 x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1) at pH 8.6. In contrast to wild-type CcP, where the binding of HCN is the dominant binding pathway, CcP(H52L) preferentially binds the cyanide anion. Above pH 8, cyanide binding to CcP(H52L) is faster than cyanide binding to wild-type CcP. Cyanide dissociates 4 times slower from the mutant protein although the pH dependence of the dissociation rate constant is essentially identical for CcP(H52L) and CcP. Isomerization of the CcP(H52L)/cyanide complex is observed between pH 4 and 8 and stabilizes the complex. The isomerization rate constant has a similar magnitude and pH dependence as the cyanide dissociation rate constant, and the two reactions are coupled at low cyanide concentrations. This isomerization has no counterpart in the wild-type CcP/cyanide complex.  相似文献   

3.
Foshay MC  Vitello LB  Erman JE 《Biochemistry》2004,43(17):5065-5072
Replacement of the distal histidine, His-52, in cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) with a lysine residue produces a mutant cytochrome c peroxidase, CcP(H52K), with spectral and kinetic properties significantly altered compared to those of the wild-type enzyme. Three spectroscopically distinct forms of the enzyme are observed between pH 4.0 and 8.0 with two additional forms, thought to be partially denatured forms, making contributions to the observed spectra at the pH extremes. CcP(H52K) exists in at least three, slowly interconverting conformational states over most of the pH range that was investigated. The side chain epsilon-amino group of Lys-52 has an apparent pK(a) of 6.4 +/- 0.2, and the protonation state of Lys-52 affects the spectral properties of the enzyme and the reactions with both hydrogen peroxide and HCN. In its unprotonated form, Lys-52 acts as a base catalyst facilitating the reactions of both hydrogen peroxide and HCN with CcP(H52K). The major form of CcP(H52K) reacts with hydrogen peroxide with a rate approximately 50 times slower than that of wild-type CcP but reacts with HCN approximately 3 times faster than does the wild-type enzyme. The major form of the mutant enzyme has a higher affinity for HCN than does native CcP.  相似文献   

4.
The pH dependence of the Fe(III) reduction potential, E0′, for yeast cytochrome c peroxidase (yCcP) and three distal pocket mutants, CcP(H52L), CcP(H52Q), and CcP(R48L/W51L/H52L), has been determined between pH 4 and 8. E0′ values at pH 7.0 for the yCcP, CcP(H52L), CcP(H52Q), and CcP(R48L/W51L/H52L) are − 189, − 170, − 224, and − 146 mV, respectively. A heme-linked ionization in the reduced enzyme affects the reduction potential for yCcP and all three mutants. Apparent pKA values for the heme-linked ionization are 7.5 ± 0.2, 6.5 ± 0.3, 6.4 ± 0.2, and 7.0 ± 0.3 for yCcP and the H52L, H52Q, and R48L/W51L/H52L mutants, respectively. A cooperative, two-proton ionization causing a spectroscopically-detectable transition was observed in the ferrous states of yCcP, CcP(H52L) and CcP(H52Q), with apparent pKA values of 7.7 ± 0.2, 7.4 ± 0.1 and 7.8 ± 0.1, respectively. These data indicate that: (1) the distal histidine in CcP is not the site of proton binding upon reduction of the ferric CcP, (2) the distal histidine is not one of the two groups involved in the cooperative, two-proton ionization observed in ferrous CcP, and (3) the proton-binding site is not involved in the cooperative, two-proton ionization observed in the reduced enzyme.  相似文献   

5.
Both cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) and a mutant cytochrome c peroxidase in which the distal histidine has been replaced by leucine, CcP(H52L), are converted to hydroxy-ligated derivatives at alkaline pH. In CcP, the hydroxy-ligated derivative is subsequently converted to a bis-imidazole species prior to protein denaturation while the initial hydroxy-ligated CcP(H52L) is converted to a second, spectroscopically distinct hydroxy-ligated species prior to denaturation. The spectra of the alkaline forms of CcP and CcP(H52L) have been determined between 310 and 700 nm. The pH dependence of the rate of reaction between CcP(H52L) and hydrogen peroxide has been extended to pH 10. The hydroxy-ligated form of CcP(H52L) reacts with hydrogen peroxide 4 times more rapidly than the pentacoordinate, high-spin form of CcP(H52L) that exists at neutral pH. The rate of the reaction between p-nitroperoxybenzoic acid and CcP(H52L) has been measured between pH 4 and pH 8. Neutral p-nitroperoxybenzoic acid reacts with CcP(H52L) 10(5) times more slowly than with CcP while the negatively charged p-nitroperoxybenzoate reacts with CcP(H52L) 10(3) times more slowly than with CcP. These data indicate that the role of the distal histidine during the initial formation of the peroxy anion/heme iron complex is not simply base catalysis.  相似文献   

6.
The cyclooxygenase (COX) activity of prostaglandin endoperoxide H synthases (PGHSs) converts arachidonic acid and O2 to prostaglandin G2 (PGG2). PGHS peroxidase (POX) activity reduces PGG2 to PGH2. The first step in POX catalysis is formation of an oxyferryl heme radical cation (Compound I), which undergoes intramolecular electron transfer forming Intermediate II having an oxyferryl heme and a Tyr-385 radical required for COX catalysis. PGHS POX catalyzes heterolytic cleavage of primary and secondary hydroperoxides much more readily than H2O2, but the basis for this specificity has been unresolved. Several large amino acids form a hydrophobic "dome" over part of the heme, but when these residues were mutated to alanines there was little effect on Compound I formation from H2O2 or 15-hydroperoxyeicosatetraenoic acid, a surrogate substrate for PGG2. Ab initio calculations of heterolytic bond dissociation energies of the peroxyl groups of small peroxides indicated that they are almost the same. Molecular Dynamics simulations suggest that PGG2 binds the POX site through a peroxyl-iron bond, a hydrogen bond with His-207 and van der Waals interactions involving methylene groups adjoining the carbon bearing the peroxyl group and the protoporphyrin IX. We speculate that these latter interactions, which are not possible with H2O2, are major contributors to PGHS POX specificity. The distal Gln-203 four residues removed from His-207 have been thought to be essential for Compound I formation. However, Q203V PGHS-1 and PGHS-2 mutants catalyzed heterolytic cleavage of peroxides and exhibited native COX activity. PGHSs are homodimers with each monomer having a POX site and COX site. Cross-talk occurs between the COX sites of adjoining monomers. However, no cross-talk between the POX and COX sites of monomers was detected in a PGHS-2 heterodimer comprised of a Q203R monomer having an inactive POX site and a G533A monomer with an inactive COX site.  相似文献   

7.
Comparative proton NMR studies have been carried out on high-spin and low-spin forms of recombinant native cytochrome c peroxidase (rCcP) and its His52 --> Leu variant. Proton NMR spectra of rCcP(H52L) (high spin) and rCcP(H52L)CN (low spin) reveal the presence of multiple enzyme forms in solution, whereas only single enzyme forms are found in spectra of wild-type and recombinant wild-type CcP and CcPCN near neutral pH. The spectroscopic behaviors of these forms have been studied in detail when pH, temperature, and solvent isotope composition were varied. For resting-state rCcP(H52L) the comparatively large NMR line widths compromise resolution, but two specific enzyme forms were found. They were interconvertible on the basis of varying temperature. For rCcP(H52L)CN four magnetically distinct enzyme forms were identified by NMR. It was found that these forms dynamically interconvert with changing pH, temperature, and solvent isotope composition (percent D(2)O). These studies have identified the alkaline titration of His52 and essentially identical alkaline enzyme forms for natWTCcPCN and rCcP(H52L)CN. From this work we interpret an essential role of His52 in CcP function to be preservation of a single active site structure in addition to the critical role of general base catalysis.  相似文献   

8.
The reduction potentials of 22 yeast cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) mutants were determined at pH 7.0 in order to determine the effect of both heme pocket and surface mutations on the Fe(III)/Fe(II) redox couple of CcP, as well as to determine the range in redox potentials that could be obtained through point mutations in the enzyme. Spectroscopic properties of the Fe(III) and Fe(II) forms of the mutant enzymes are also reported. The mutations include variants in the distal and proximal heme pockets as well as on the enzyme surface and involve single, double, and triple point mutations. A spectrochemical redox titration technique used in this study gave an E(0') value of -189 mV for yeast CcP compared to a previously reported value of -194 mV determined by potentiometry [C.W. Conroy, P. Tyma, P.H. Daum, J.E. Erman, Biochim. Biophys. Acta 537 (1978) 62-69]. Both positive and negative shifts in the reduction potential from that of the wild-type enzyme were observed, spanning a range of 113 mV. The His-52-->Asn mutation gave the most negative potential, -259 mV, while a triple mutant in which the three distal pocket residues, Arg-48, Trp-51, and His-52, were all converted to leucine residues gave the most positive potential, -146 mV.  相似文献   

9.
The oxygenated form of myoglobin or hemoglobin is oxidized easily to the ferric met-form with generation of the superoxide anion. To make clear the possible role(s) of the distal histidine (H64) residue in the reaction, we have carried out detailed pH-dependence studies of the autoxidation rate, using some typical H64 mutants of sperm whale myoglobin, over the wide range of pH 5-12 in 0.1 M buffer at 25 degrees C. Each mutation caused a dramatic increase in the autoxidation rate with the trend H64V >/= H64G >/= H64L > H64Q > H64 (wild-type) at pH 7.0, whereas each mutant protein showed a characteristic pH-profile which is essentially different from that of the wild-type or native sperm whale MbO2. In particular, all the mutants have lost the acid-catalyzed process that can play a dominant role in the autoxidation reaction of most mammalian myoglobins or hemoglobins. Kinetic analyses of various types of pH-profiles lead us to conclude that the distal histidine residue can play a dual role in the nucleophilic displacement of O2- from MbO2 or HbO2 in protic, aqueous solution. One is in a proton-relay mechanism via its imidazole ring, and the other is in the maximum protection of the FeO2 center against a water molecule or an hydroxyl ion that can enter the heme pocket from the surrounding solvent.  相似文献   

10.
Studies that elucidate the behavior of the hemoglobins (Hbs) and myoglobins upon reaction with hydrogen peroxide are essential to the development of oxygen carrier substitutes. Stopped-flow kinetics and resonance Raman data show that the reaction between hydrogen peroxide and oxygenated and deoxygenated ferric Hb I (oxy- and deoxy-HbI) from Lucina pectinata produce compound I and compound II ferryl species. The rate constants ratio (k23/k41) between the formation of compound II from compound I (k23) and the oxidation of the ferrous HbI (k41, i.e., 25 M(-1) s(-1)) of 12 x 10(-4) M suggests that HbI has a peroxidative capacity for removing H2O2 from solution. Resonance Raman presents the formation of both, met-aquo-HbI and compound II ferryl species in the cyclic reaction of HbI with H2O2. The ferric HbI species is maintained by the presence of H2O2; it can produce HbI compound I, or it can be reduced to a deoxy-HbI derivative to form HbI compound II upon reaction with H2O2. The compound II ferryl vibration frequency appears at 805 and 769 cm(-1) for HbIFe(IV)=(16)O and HbIFe(IV)=(18)O species, respectively. This ferryl mode indicates the absence of hydrogen bonding between the carbonyl group of the distal Q64 and the HbIFe(IV)=O ferryl moiety. The observation suggests that both the trans-ligand effect and the polarizabilty of the HbI heme pocket are responsible for the observed ferryl oxo vibrational energy. The vibrational mode also suggests that the carbonyl group of the distal Q64 is oriented toward the iron of the heme group, increasing the distal pocket electron density.  相似文献   

11.
Catalase-peroxidases have a predominant catalase activity but differ from monofunctional catalases in exhibiting a substantial peroxidase activity and in having different residues in the heme cavity. We present a kinetic study of the formation of the key intermediate compound I by probing the role of the conserved distal amino acid triad Arg-Trp-His of a recombinant catalase-peroxidase in its reaction with hydrogen peroxide, peroxoacetic acid, and m-chloroperbenzoic acid. Both the wild-type enzyme and six mutants (R119A, R119N, W122F, W122A, H123Q, H123E) have been investigated by steady-state and stopped-flow spectroscopy. The turnover number of catalase activity of R119A is 14.6%, R119N 0.5%, H123E 0.03%, and H123Q 0.02% of wild-type activity. Interestingly, W122F and W122A completely lost their catalase activity but retained their peroxidase activity. Bimolecular rate constants of compound I formation of the wild-type enzyme and the mutants have been determined. The Trp-122 mutants for the first time made it possible to follow the transition of the ferric enzyme to compound I by hydrogen peroxide spectroscopically underlining the important role of Trp-122 in catalase activity. The results demonstrate that the role of the distal His-Arg pair in catalase-peroxidases is important in the heterolytic cleavage of hydrogen peroxide (i.e. compound I formation), whereas the distal tryptophan is essential for compound I reduction by hydrogen peroxide.  相似文献   

12.
To examine the role of the distal His42 residue in the catalytic mechanism of pea cytosolic ascorbate peroxidase, two site-directed variants were prepared in which His42 was replaced with alanine (H42A) or glutamic acid (H42E). Electronic spectra of the ferric derivatives of H42A and H42E (pH 7.0, mu = 0.10 m, 25.0 degrees C) revealed wavelength maxima [lambda(max) (nm): 397, 509, approximately equal to 540(sh), 644 (H42A); 404, 516, approximately equal to 538(sh), 639 (H42E)] consistent with a predominantly five-co-ordinate high-spin iron. The specific activity of H42E for oxidation of L-ascorbate (8.2 +/- 0.3 U.mg(-1)) was approximately equal to 30-fold lower than that of the recombinant wild-type enzyme (rAPX); the H42A variant was essentially inactive but activity could be partially recovered by addition of exogenous imidazoles. The spectra of the Compound I intermediates of H42A [lambda(max) (nm) = 403, 534, 575(sh), 645] and H42E [lambda(max) (nm) = 404, 530, 573(sh), 654] were similar to those of rAPX. Pre-steady-state data for formation of Compound I for H42A and H42E were consistent with a mechanism involving accumulation of a transient enzyme intermediate (K(d)) followed by conversion of this intermediate into Compound I (k'(1)). Values for k'(1) and K(d) were, respectively, 4.3 +/- 0.2 s(-1) and 30 +/- 2.0 mM (H42A) and 28 +/- 1.0 s(-1) and 0.09 +/- 0.01 mM (H42E). Photodiode array experiments for H42A revealed wavelength maxima for this intermediate at 401 nm, 522 nm and 643 nm, consistent with the formation of a transient [H42A-H(2)O(2)] species. Rate constants for Compound I formation for H42A were independent of pH, but for rAPX and H42E were pH-dependent [pKa = 4.9 +/- 0.1 (rAPX) and pK(a) = 6.7 +/- 0.2 (H42E)]. The results provide: (a) evidence that His42 is critical for Compound I formation in APX; (b) confirmation that titration of His42 controls Compound I formation and an assignment of the pK(a) for this group; (c) mechanistic and spectroscopic evidence for an intermediate before Compound I formation; (d) evidence that a glutamic acid residue at position 42 can act as the acid-base catalyst in ascorbate peroxidase.  相似文献   

13.
Six double mutants of Glu(795) and Glu(820) present in transmembrane domains 5 and 6 of the alpha-subunit of rat gastric H(+),K(+)-ATPase were generated and expressed with the baculovirus expression system. Five of the six mutants exhibited an SCH 28080-sensitive ATPase activity in the absence of K(+). The activity levels decreased in the following order: E795Q/E820A > E795Q/E820Q > E795Q/E820D congruent with E795A/E820A > E795L/E820Q. The E795L/E820D mutant possessed no constitutive activity. The relative low ATPase activity of the E795L/E820Q mutant is due to its low phosphorylation rate so that the dephosphorylation step was no longer rate-limiting. The constitutively active mutants showed a much lower vanadate sensitivity than the wild-type enzyme and K(+)-sensitive mutants, indicating that these mutants have a preference for the E(1) conformation. In contrast to the constitutively active single mutants generated previously, the double mutants exhibited a high spontaneous dephosphorylation rate at 0 degrees C compared to that of the wild-type enzyme. In addition, the H(+),K(+)-ATPase inhibitor SCH 28080 increased the steady-state phosphorylation level of the constitutively active mutants, due to the formation of a stable complex with the E(2)-P form. These studies further substantiate the idea that the empty ion binding pockets of some mutants apparently mimic the K(+)-filled binding pocket of the native enzyme.  相似文献   

14.
Fogle EJ  Liu W  Woon ST  Keller JW  Toney MD 《Biochemistry》2005,44(50):16392-16404
Dialkylglycine decarboxylase (DGD) is a pyridoxal phosphate dependent enzyme that catalyzes both decarboxylation and transamination in its normal catalytic cycle. DGD uses stereoelectronic effects to control its unusual reaction specificity. X-ray crystallographic structures of DGD suggest that Q52 is important in maintaining the substrate carboxylate in a stereoelectronically activated position. Here, the X-ray structures of the Q52A mutant and the wild type (WT) DGD-PMP enzymes are presented, as is the analysis of steady-state and half-reaction kinetics of three Q52 mutants (Q52A, Q52I, and Q52E). As expected if stereoelectronic effects are important to catalysis, the steady-state rate of decarboxylation for all three mutants has decreased significantly compared to that of WT. Q52A exhibits an approximately 85-fold decrease in k(cat) relative to that of WT. The rate of the decarboxylation half-reaction decreases approximately 10(5)-fold in Q52I and approximately 10(4)-fold in Q52E compared to that of WT. Transamination half-reaction kinetics show that Q52A and Q52I have greatly reduced rates compared to that of WT and are seriously impaired in pyridoxamine phosphate (PMP) binding, with K(PMP) at least 50-100-fold greater than that of WT. The larger effect on the rate of l-alanine transamination than of pyruvate transamination in these mutants suggests that the rate decrease is the result of selective destabilization of the PMP form of the enzyme in these mutants. Q52E exhibits near-WT rates for transamination of both pyruvate and l-alanine. Substrate binding has been greatly weakened in Q52E with apparent dissociation constants at least 100-fold greater than that of WT. The rate of decarboxylation in Q52E allows the energetic contribution of stereoelectronic effects, DeltaG(stereoelectronic), to be estimated to be -7.3 kcal/mol for DGD.  相似文献   

15.
In the heme-based oxygen sensor protein FixL, conformational changes induced by oxygen binding to the heme sensor domain regulate the activity of a neighboring histidine kinase, eventually restricting expression of specific genes to hypoxic conditions. The conserved arginine 220 residue is suggested to play a key role in the signal transduction mechanism. To obtain detailed insights into the role of this residue, we replaced Arg(220) by histidine (R220H), glutamine (R220Q), glutamate (R220E), and isoleucine (R220I) in the heme domain FixLH from Bradyrhizobium japonicum. These mutations resulted in dramatic changes in the O(2) affinity with K(d) values in the order R220I < R220Q < wild type < R220H. For the R220H and R220Q mutants, residue 220 interacts with the bound O(2) or CO ligands, as seen by resonance Raman spectroscopy. For the oxy-adducts, this H-bond modifies the pi acidity of the O(2) ligand, and its strength is correlated with the back-bonding-sensitive nu(4) frequency, the k(off) value for O(2) dissociation, and heme core-size conformational changes. This effect is especially strong for the wild-type protein where Arg(220) is, in addition, positively charged. These observations strongly suggest that neither strong ligand fixation nor the displacement of residue 220 into the heme distal pocket are solely responsible for the reported heme conformational changes associated with kinase activity regulation, but that a significant decrease of the heme pi(*) electron density because of strong back-bonding toward the oxygen ligand also plays a key role.  相似文献   

16.
DypB from Rhodococcus jostii RHA1 is a bacterial dye-decolorizing peroxidase (DyP) that oxidizes lignin and Mn(II). Three residues interact with the iron-bound solvent species in ferric DypB: Asn-246 and the conserved Asp-153 and Arg-244. Substitution of either Asp-153 or Asn-246 with alanine minimally affected the second order rate constant for Compound I formation (k(1) ~ 10(5) M(-1)s(-1)) and the specificity constant (k(cat)/K(m)) for H(2)O(2). Even in the D153A/N246A double variant, these values were reduced less than 30-fold. However, these substitutions dramatically reduced the stability of Compound I (t(1/2) ~ 0.13 s) as compared with the wild-type enzyme (540 s). By contrast, substitution of Arg-244 with leucine abolished the peroxidase activity, and heme iron of the variant showed a pH-dependent transition from high spin (pH 5) to low spin (pH 8.5). Two variants were designed to mimic the plant peroxidase active site: D153H, which was more than an order of magnitude less reactive with H(2)O(2), and N246H, which had no detectable peroxidase activity. X-ray crystallographic studies revealed that structural changes in the variants are confined to the distal heme environment. The data establish an essential role for Arg-244 in Compound I formation in DypB, possibly through charge stabilization and proton transfer. The principle roles of Asp-153 and Asn-246 appear to be in modulating the subsequent reactivity of Compound I. These results expand the range of residues known to catalyze Compound I formation in heme peroxidases.  相似文献   

17.
In the thermophilic cytochrome P450 from the thermoacidophilic crenarchaeon Sulfolobus tokodaii strain 7 (P450st), a phenylalanine residue at position 310 and an alanine residue at position 320 are located close to the heme thiolate ligand, Cys317. Single site-directed mutants F310A and A320Q and double mutant F310A/A320Q have been constructed. All mutant enzymes as well as wild-type (WT) P450st were expressed at high levels. The substitution of F310 with Ala and of A320 with Gln induced shifts in redox potential and blue shifts in Soret absorption of ferrous-CO forms, while spectral characterization showed that in the resting state, the mutants almost retained the structural integrity of the active site. The redox potential of the heme varied as follows: -481 mV (WT), -477 mV (A320Q), -453 mV (F310A), and -450 mV (F310A/A320Q). The trend in the Soret band of the ferrous-CO form was as follows: 450 nm (WT) < 449 nm (A320Q) < 446 nm (F310A) < 444 nm (F310A/A320Q). These results established that the reduction potential and electron density on the heme iron are modulated by the Phe310 and Ala320 residues in P450st. The electron density on the heme decreases in the following order: WT > A320Q > F310A > F310A/A320Q. The electron density on the heme iron infers an essential role in P450 activity. The decrease in electron density interferes with the formation of a high-valent oxo-ferryl species called Compound I. However, steady-state turnover rates of styrene epoxidation with H2O2 show the following trend: WT approximately equal to A320Q < F310A approximately equal to F310A/A320Q. The shunt pathway which can provide the two electrons and oxygen required for a P450 reaction instead of NAD(P)H and dioxygen can rule out the first and second heme reduction in the catalytic process. Because the electron density on the heme iron might be deeply involved in the k cat values in this system, the intermediate Compound 0 which is the precursor species of Compound I mainly appears to participate dominantly in epoxidation with H2O2.  相似文献   

18.
Forty-six charge-reversal mutants of yeast cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) have been constructed in order to determine the effect of localized charge on the catalytic properties of the enzyme. The mutants include the conversion of all 20 glutamate residues and 24 of the 25 aspartate residues in CcP, one at a time, to lysine residues. In addition, two positive-to-negative charge-reversal mutants, R31E and K149D, are included in the study. The mutants have been characterized by absorption spectroscopy and hydrogen peroxide reactivity at pH 6.0 and 7.5 and by steady-state kinetic studies using recombinant yeast iso-1 ferrocytochrome c (C102T) as substrate at pH 7.5. Many of the charge-reversal mutations cause detectable changes in the absorption spectrum of the enzyme reflecting increased amounts of hexacoordinate heme compared to wild-type CcP. The increase in hexacoordinate heme in the mutant enzymes correlates with an increase in H 2O 2-inactive enzyme. The maximum velocity of the mutants decreases with increasing hexacoordination of the heme group. Steady-state velocity studies indicate that 5 of the 46 mutations (R31E, D34K, D37K, E118K, and E290K) cause large increases in the Michaelis constant indicating a reduced affinity for cytochrome c. Four of the mutations occur within the cytochrome c binding site identified in the crystal structure of the 1:1 complex of yeast cytochrome c and CcP [Pelletier, H., and Kraut, J. (1992) Science 258, 1748-1755] while the fifth mutation site lies outside, but near, the crystallographic site. These data support the hypothesis that the CcP has a single, catalytically active cytochrome c binding domain, that observed in the crystal structures of the cytochrome c/CcP complex.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Ozaki S  Hara I  Matsui T  Watanabe Y 《Biochemistry》2001,40(4):1044-1052
The F43W and F43W/H64L myoglobin (Mb) mutants have been constructed to investigate effects of an electron rich oxidizable amino acid residue in the heme vicinity on oxidation activities of Mb. The Phe-43 --> Trp mutation increases the rate of one-electron oxidation of guaiacol by 3-4-fold; however, the peroxidase activity for F43W/H64L Mb is less than that of the F43W single mutant because the absence of histidine, a general acid-base catalyst, in the distal heme pocket suppresses compound I formation. More than 15-fold improvement versus wild-type Mb in the two-electron oxidation of thioanisole and styrene is observed with the Phe-43 --> Trp mutation. Our results indicate that Trp-43 in the mutants enhances both one- and two-electron oxidation activities (i.e., F43W Mb > wild-type Mb and F43W/H64L Mb > H64L Mb). The level of (18)O incorporation from H2(18)O2 into the epoxide product for the wild type is 31%; however, the values for F43W and F43W/H64L Mb are 75 and 73%, respectively. Thus, Trp-43 in the mutants does not appear to be utilized as a major protein radical site to form a peroxy protein radical in the oxygenation. The enhanced peroxygenase activity might be explained by the increase in the reactivity of compound I. However, the oxidative modification of F43W/H64L Mb in compound I formation with mCPBA prevents us from determining the actual reactivity of the catalytic species for the intact protein. The Lys-C achromobacter digestion of the modified F43W/H64L mutant followed by FPLC and mass analysis shows that the Trp-43-Lys-47 fragment gains a mass by 30 Da, which could correspond two oxygen atoms and loss of two protons.  相似文献   

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