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1.
Chemical modification studies have been conducted on spinach ferredoxin to determine the nature of the groups on ferredoxin involved in its interaction with its reaction partners. Modification of a limited number (three or four) carboxyl groups or of the single histidine residue resulted in a decreased ability of ferredoxin to participate in NADP photoreduction but not in cytochrome c photoreduction, suggesting that these groups may be involved in interaction with ferredoxin:NADP reductase but are not involved in interaction with the reducing side of Photosystem I. In contrast, modification of amino groups or the single arginine residue on ferredoxin had little effect on the ability of ferredoxin to participate in NADP photoreduction, suggesting these groups are not involved in the interaction of ferredoxin with either ferredoxin:NADP reductase or the reducing side of Photosystem I. Attempts to modify tyrosine residues on ferredoxin resulted in destruction of the iron-sulfur center of the protein.  相似文献   

2.
Treatment of spinach ferredoxin with glycine ethyl ester in the presence of a water soluble carbodiimide resulted in the modification of 3-4 carboxyl groups and decreased the ability of ferredoxin to participate in NADP photoreduction by chloroplast membranes by about 80%. The ability of the modified ferredoxin to receive electrons from the reducing side of Photosystem I was relatively unaffected. These findings suggest that the modified ferredoxin is unable to interact with ferredoxin:NADP reductase. This has been verified by demonstration that the modified ferredoxin fails to produce difference spectra typical of a ferredoxin-ferredoxin:NADP reductase complex when added to ferredoxin:NADP reductase.  相似文献   

3.
Chemical modification of ferredoxin--NADP+ reductase from the cyanobacteria Anabaena has been performed using the alpha-dicarbonyl reagent phenylglyoxal. Inactivation of both the diaphorase and cytochrome-c reductase activities, characteristic of the enzyme, indicates the involvement of one or more arginyl residues in the catalytic process of the enzyme. The determination of the rate constants for the inactivation process under different conditions, including those in which substrates, NADP+ and ferredoxin, as well as other NADP+ analogs were present, indicates the involvement of two different groups in the inactivation process, one that reacts very rapidly with the reagent (kobs = 8.3 M-1 min-1) and is responsible for the binding of NADP+, and a second less reactive group (kobs = 0.9 M-1 min-1), that is involved in the binding of ferredoxin. Radioactive labeling of the enzyme with [14C]phenylglyoxal confirms that two groups are modified while amino acid analysis of the modified protein indicates that the modified groups are arginine residues. The identification of the amino acid residues involved in binding and catalysis of the substrates of ferredoxin--NADP+ reductase will help to elucidate the mechanism of the reaction catalyzed by this important enzyme.  相似文献   

4.
The tryptophan fluorescence properties of the flavoprotein ferredoxin:NADP reductase have been examined. Although not sensitive to changes in pH or salt concentration, the tryptophan fluorescence is affected by the presence of substrates for the flavoprotein. While NADP addition results in a slight quenching of the fluorescence, ferredoxin decreases the fluorescence by nearly 50%, suggesting the presence of tryptophan in or near the ferredoxin binding site. Titration of this effect gives a dissociation constant for the ferredoxin: flavoprotein complex which is similar to that obtained by spectral perturbations. This approach has also been used to demonstrate that a chemically modified ferredoxin which does not produce spectral perturbations when added to flavoprotein is capable of interacting with the flavoprotein although with a higher dissociation constant than for native ferredoxin.  相似文献   

5.
To determine if the interaction between ferredoxin and ferredoxin:NADP reductase is similar to the interaction between the purified proteins when the ferrodoxin:NADP reductase is membrane bound, the effect of pH, salt, and coupling state on the Km for ferredoxin in NADP reduction by chloroplast membranes has been examined. Increasing pH and salt concentrations as well as uncouplers all resulted in increases in the Km for ferredoxin. The pH and salt effects on the Km are similar to effects observed by others (C. Batie and H. Kamin (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 7756-7763) on the dissociation constant for a complex between the two purified proteins, although the salt effect on the Km appears to be affected by the surface potential of the chloroplast membrane. These results suggest that the interaction between ferredoxin and the membrane-bound ferredoxin:NADP reductase is not greatly different from the interaction which has been characterized between the two purified proteins.  相似文献   

6.
The small inorganic complex Cr(CN)6(3-) is a clean inhibitor of the ferredoxin: NADP+ reductase-catalysed oxidation of reduced spinach ferredoxin by NADP+. Independent spectrophotometric measurements show that millimolar additions of Cr(CN)6(3-) to mixtures of ferredoxin and ferredoxin NADP+ reductase give a marked attenuation of the difference spectrum characteristic of ferredoxin-ferredoxin: NADP+ reductase complex formation. Since there is no evidence, from NMR studies, for significant binding of Cr(CN)6(3-) to ferredoxin, these results indicate that Cr(CN)6(3-) binds to ferredoxin: NADP+ reductase at a site which is crucial to its interaction with the electron-transfer protein. The effective kinetic binding constant for Cr(CN)6(3-), measured at low ferredoxin concentration, is 445 M-1 (ie Kdiss congruent to 2 mM) at 25 degrees, pH7.5, I = 0.10 M. With assumption of a simple electrostatic interaction, an enzyme domain with an effective charge of 3+/4+ is proposed.  相似文献   

7.
Ferredoxin and the flavoprotein, ferredoxin: NADP reductase, have been covalently linked by incubation in the presence of a water soluble carbodiimide. The cross-linking reaction yields an adduct having a 1:1 stoichiometry. The adduct has depressed levels of diaphorase and NADPH oxidase activity and is inactive in reduction of cytochrome c using NADPH as an electron donor. Thus, although similar to an adduct described by Zanetti and coworkers [J Biol Chem 259: 6153–6157 (1984)] in its stoichiometry, the adduct described herein has significantly different enzymatic properties. It is suggested that this may be a reflection of differences in the interaction between the two proteins resulting from differences in experimental conditions in which the two adducts were prepared.Abbreviations Fd ferredoxin - Fp ferredoxin: NADP reductase - Fd Fp covalently linked Fd-Fp adduct - Fd:Fp noncovalently linked complex between Fd and Fp - EDC 1-ethyl-3-(dimethylaminopropyl) carbodiimide - Tris tris-hydroxymethylaminomethane - MOPS 3-(N-morpholino)propane sulfonic acid - DCIP 2,6-dichloropenolindophenol  相似文献   

8.
The trinitrophenylation of a single amino group of spinach ferredoxin abolishes its ability to inhibit the diaphorase activity of the flavoprotein, ferredoxin:NADP oxidoreductase (EC 1.6.7.1); in contrast, the ability of ferredoxin to participate in the ferredoxin-linked cytochrome c reductase activity catalyzed by the flavoprotein is unaffected. Comparison with previously published results [Davis, D. J., and San Pietro, A. (1977) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun.74, 33–40]indicates that the site of interaction between ferredoxin and the flavoprotein resulting in inhibition if diaphorase activity is responsible for the spectrally observable 1:1 complex between the two proteins and is identical to the site of ferredoxin involvement in NADP photoreduction. The role of ferredoxin in the ferredoxin-linked cytochrome c reductase activity of the flavoprotein has been reexamined under conditions were the entire electron-accepting system (rather than just the ferredoxin component) is rate limiting. The data support a mechanism by which ferredoxin can bind either to the flavoprotein or to cytochrome c, and the ferredoxin:cytochrome c complex serves as the true substrate for reduction by the flavoprotein. Furthermore, Chromatographic evidence is presented for the formation of complexes between ferredoxin and cytochrome c.  相似文献   

9.
Eleven independent monoclonal antibodies, all IgG's, have been raised against the ferredoxin:NADP+ oxidoreductase of spinach leaves. All 11 monoclonal antibodies were able to produce substantial inhibition of the NADPH to 2,6-dichlorophenol indophenol (DCPIP) diaphorase activity of the enzyme, but none of the antibodies produced any significant inhibition of electron flow from NADPH to ferredoxin catalyzed by the enzyme. Spectral perturbation assays were used to demonstrate that antibody interaction with NADP+ reductase did not interfere significantly with the binding of either ferredoxin or NADP+ to the enzyme. Ultrafiltration binding assays were used to confirm that the monoclonal antibodies did not interfere with complex formation between ferredoxin and the enzyme. These results have been interpreted in terms of the likely presence of one or more highly antigenic epitopes at the site where the nonphysiological electron acceptor, DCPIP, binds to the enzyme. Furthermore, the results suggest that the site where DCPIP is reduced differs from both of the two separate sites at which the two physiological substrates, ferredoxin and NADP+/NADPH, are bound.  相似文献   

10.
Ferredoxin:NADP+ oxidoreductase (ferredoxin: NADP+ reductase, EC 1.18.1.2) was shown to form a ternary complex with its substrates ferredoxin (Fd) and NADP(H), but the ternary complex was less stable than the separate binary complexes. Kd for oxidized binary Fd-ferredoxin NADP+ reductase complex was less than 50 nM; Kd(Fd) increased with NADP+ concentration, approaching 0.5-0.6 microM when the flavoprotein was saturated with NADP+ K(NADP+) also increased from about 14 microM to about 310 microM, on addition of excess Fd. The changes in Kd were consistent with negative cooperativity between the associations of Fd and NADP+ and with our unpublished observations which suggest that product dissociation is rate-limiting in the reaction mechanism. Similar interference in binding was observed in more reduced states; NADPH released much ferredoxin:NADP+ reductase from Fd-Sepharose whether the proteins were initially oxidized or reduced. Complexation between Fd and ferredoxin: NADP+ reductase was found to shield each center from paramagnetic probes; charge specificity suggested that the active sites of Fd and ferredoxin:NADP+ reductase were, respectively, negatively and positively charged.  相似文献   

11.
Ferredoxin-NADP(H) reductases catalyse the reversible hydride/electron exchange between NADP(H) and ferredoxin/flavodoxin, comprising a structurally defined family of flavoenzymes with two distinct subclasses. Those present in Gram-negative bacteria (FPRs) display turnover numbers of 1-5 s(-1) while the homologues of cyanobacteria and plants (FNRs) developed a 100-fold activity increase. We investigated nucleotide interactions and hydride transfer in Rhodobacter capsulatus FPR comparing them to those reported for FNRs. NADP(H) binding proceeds as in FNRs with stacking of the nicotinamide on the flavin, which resulted in formation of charge-transfer complexes prior to hydride exchange. The affinity of FPR for both NADP(H) and 2'-P-AMP was 100-fold lower than that of FNRs. The crystal structure of FPR in complex with 2'-P-AMP and NADP(+) allowed modelling of the adenosine ring system bound to the protein, whereas the nicotinamide portion was either not visible or protruding toward solvent in different obtained crystals. Stabilising contacts with the active site residues are different in the two reductase classes. We conclude that evolution to higher activities in FNRs was partially favoured by modification of NADP(H) binding in the initial complexes through changes in the active site residues involved in stabilisation of the adenosine portion of the nucleotide and in the mobile C-terminus of FPR.  相似文献   

12.
Plant ferredoxin serves as the physiological electron donor for sulfite reductase, which catalyzes the reduction of sulfite to sulfide. Ferredoxin and sulfite reductase form an electrostatically stabilized 1:1 complex for the intermolecular electron transfer. The protein-protein interaction between these proteins from maize leaves was analyzed by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Chemical shift perturbation and cross-saturation experiments successfully mapped the location of two major interaction sites of ferredoxin: region 1 including Glu-29, Glu-30, and Asp-34 and region 2 including Glu-92, Glu-93, and Glu-94. The importance of these two acidic patches for interaction with sulfite reductase was confirmed by site-specific mutation of acidic ferredoxin residues in regions 1 and 2, separately and in combination, by which the ability of mutant ferredoxins to transfer electrons and bind to sulfite reductase was additively lowered. Taken together, this study gives a clear illustration of the molecular interaction between ferredoxin and sulfite reductase. We also present data showing that this interaction surface of ferredoxin significantly differs from that when ferredoxin-NADP(+) reductase is the interaction partner.  相似文献   

13.
Spinach ferredoxin was modified chemically with trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid (TNBS), a reagent which reacts specifically with amino groups. The trinitrophenylated ferredoxin (TNP-Fd) can accept electrons from Photosystem I as indicated by its full activity in the photoreduction of cytochrome c. The modified protein is inactive, however, in the photoreduction of NADP and cannot form a complex with the flavoprotein, ferredoxin: NADP oxidoreductase. The data presented indicate that the inactivity of the modified protein is the result of modification of a single amino group.  相似文献   

14.
Reaction of spinach leaves ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase (NADPH:ferredoxin oxidoreductase, EC 1.6.7.1) with alpha-dicarbonyl compounds results in a biphasic loss of activity. The rapid phase yields modified enzyme with about 30% of the original activity, but no change in the Km for NADPH. Only partial protection against inactivation is provided by NADP+, NADPH and their analogs, whereas ferredoxin affords complete protection. The reductase inactivated to 30% of original activity shows a loss of about two arginyl residues, whereas only one residue is lost in the NADP+-protected enzymes. The data suggest that the integrity of at least two arginyl residues are requested for maximal activity of ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase: one residue being located near the NADP+-binding site, the other presumably situated in the ferredoxin-binding domain.  相似文献   

15.
NADPH:ferredoxin reductase (AvFPR) is involved in the response to oxidative stress in Azotobacter vinelandii. The crystal structure of AvFPR has been determined at 2.0 A resolution. The polypeptide fold is homologous with six other oxidoreductases whose structures have been solved including Escherichia coli flavodoxin reductase (EcFldR) and spinach, and Anabaena ferredoxin:NADP+ reductases (FNR). AvFPR is overall most homologous to EcFldR. The structure is comprised of a N-terminal six-stranded antiparallel beta-barrel domain, which binds FAD, and a C-terminal five-stranded parallel beta-sheet domain, which binds NADPH/NADP+ and has a classical nucleotide binding fold. The two domains associate to form a deep cleft where the NADPH and FAD binding sites are juxtaposed. The structure displays sequence conserved motifs in the region surrounding the two dinucleotide binding sites, which are characteristic of the homologous enzymes. The folded over conformation of FAD in AvFPR is similar to that in EcFldR due to stacking of Phe255 on the adenine ring of FAD, but it differs from that in the FNR enzymes, which lack a homologous aromatic residue. The structure of AvFPR displays three unique features in the environment of the bound FAD. Two features may affect the rate of reduction of FAD: the absence of an aromatic residue stacked on the isoalloxazine ring in the NADPH binding site; and the interaction of a carbonyl group with N10 of the flavin. Both of these features are due to the substitution of a conserved C-terminal tyrosine residue with alanine (Ala254) in AvFPR. An additional unique feature may affect the interaction of AvFPR with its redox partner ferredoxin I (FdI). This is the extension of the C-terminus by three residues relative to EcFldR and by four residues relative to FNR. The C-terminal residue, Lys258, interacts with the AMP phosphate of FAD. Consequently, both phosphate groups are paired with a basic group due to the simultaneous interaction of the FMN phosphate with Arg51 in a conserved FAD binding motif. The fourth feature, common to homologous oxidoreductases, is a concentration of 10 basic residues on the face of the protein surrounding the active site, in addition to Arg51 and Lys258.  相似文献   

16.
The ferredoxin nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate reductase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa ( pa-FPR) in complex with NADP (+) has been characterized by X-ray crystallography and in solution by NMR spectroscopy. The structure of the complex revealed that pa-FPR harbors a preformed NADP (+) binding pocket where the cofactor binds with minimal structural perturbation of the enzyme. These findings were complemented by obtaining sequential backbone resonance assignments of this 29518 kDa enzyme, which enabled the study of the pa-FPR-NADP complex by monitoring chemical shift perturbations induced by addition of NADP (+) or the inhibitor adenine dinucleotide phosphate (ADP) to pa-FPR. The results are consistent with a preformed NADP (+) binding site and also demonstrate that the pa-FPR-NADP complex is largely stabilized by interactions between the protein and the 2'-P AMP portion of the cofactor. Analysis of the crystal structure also shows a vast network of interactions between the two cofactors, FAD and NADP (+), and the characteristic AFVEK (258) C'-terminal extension that is typical of bacterial FPRs but is absent in their plastidic ferredoxin NADP (+) reductase (FNR) counterparts. The conformations of NADP (+) and FAD in pa-FPR place their respective nicotinamide and isoalloxazine rings 15 A apart and separated by residues in the C'-terminal extension. The network of interactions among NADP (+), FAD, and residues in the C'-terminal extension indicate that the gross conformational rearrangement that would be necessary to place the nicotinamide and isoalloxazine rings parallel and adjacent to one another for direct hydride transfer between NADPH and FAD in pa-FPR is highly unlikely. This conclusion is supported by observations made in the NMR spectra of pa-FPR and the pa-FPR-NADP complex, which strongly suggest that residues in the C'-terminal sequence do not undergo conformational exchange in the presence or absence of NADP (+). These findings are discussed in the context of a possible stepwise electron-proton-electron transfer of hydride in the oxidation of NADPH by FPR enzymes.  相似文献   

17.
The interaction between reduced Anabaena ferredoxin and oxidized ferredoxin:NADP(+) reductase (FNR), which occurs during photosynthetic electron transfer (ET), has been investigated extensively in the authors' laboratories using transient and steady-state kinetic measurements and X-ray crystallography. The effect of a large number of site-specific mutations in both proteins has been assessed. Many of the mutations had little or no effect on ET kinetics. However, non-conservative mutations at three highly conserved surface sites in ferredoxin (F65, E94 and S47) caused ET rate constants to decrease by four orders of magnitude, and non-conservative mutations at three highly conserved surface sites in FNR (L76, K75 and E301) caused ET rate constants to decrease by factors of 25-150. These residues were deemed to be critical for ET. Similar mutations at several other conserved sites in the two proteins (D67 in Fd; E139, L78, K72, and R16 in FNR) caused smaller but still appreciable effects on ET rate constants. A strong correlation exists between these results and the X-ray crystal structure of an Anabaena ferredoxin/FNR complex. Thus, mutations at sites that are within the protein-protein interface or are directly involved in interprotein contacts generally show the largest kinetic effects. The implications of these results for the ET mechanism are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
The water-soluble carbodiimide, N-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl) carbodiimide (EDC) serves as an effective reagent for cross-linking spinach leaf ferredoxin and the ferredoxin-dependent spinach leaf enzyme, glutamate synthase. The cross-linked complex was functional in the absence of added ferredoxin, suggesting that ferredoxin is cross-linked to glutamate synthase at the physiological binding site on the enzyme for this iron-sulfur protein electron donor. The ferredoxin:glutamate synthase stoichiometry of the cross-linked complex was estimated to be 2:1. The absorbance spectrum of the oxidized, cross-linked complex was very similar to that of an electrostatically stabilized, noncovalent, 2:1 complex of the two proteins. An antibody raised against spinach NADP+ reductase, which recognizes a ferredoxin-binding site on glutamate synthase, does not recognize the cross-linked ferredoxin-glutamate synthase complex. This implies that the ferredoxin-binding sites on the two enzymes are structurally similar enough so that an antibody raised against one of these ferredoxin-dependent enzymes recognizes an epitope at the ferredoxin-binding site of the second enzyme. Cross-linking of ferredoxin to its binding site on glutamate synthase renders this epitope inaccessible to the antibody.  相似文献   

19.
Oxidized ferredoxin:NADP+ oxidoreductase (FNR) was slowly and irreversibly inactivated by N-ethylmaleimide. Complete protection against inactivation was afforded by saturating concentrations of NADP+. In the presence of NADPH, a rapid inhibition of the enzyme ensued; however, this inhibition was found to be reversible. In the tryptic map of the flavoprotein, modified with N-ethyl[2,3-14C]maleimide in oxidizing conditions, a unique radioactive peptide was found. Its sequence comprised residues 110-117 of the enzyme: Lys116 was shown to be the residue alkylated by N-ethylmaleimide. It is noteworthy that the same residue of FNR was found to be modified by 5-dimethylaminoaphthalene-1-sulfonyl(dansyl) chloride at the putative NADP(H)-binding site [Cidaria, D., Biondi, P. A., Zanetti, G. & Ronchi, S. (1985) Eur. J. Biochem. 146, 295-299]. Furthermore, the data reported here demonstrate that the sulfhydryl groups of FNR are not involved in enzyme inactivation by N-ethylmaleimide.  相似文献   

20.
The ferredoxin-dependent nitrate reductase from the cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. PCC 7942 has been shown to form a high-affinity complex with ferredoxin at low ionic strength. This complex, detected by changes in both the absorbance and circular dichroism (CD) spectra, did not form at high ionic strength. When reduced ferredoxin served as the electron donor for the reduction of nitrate to nitrite, the activity of the enzyme declined markedly as the ionic strength increased. In contrast, the activity of the enzyme with reduced methyl viologen (a non-physiological electron donor) was independent of ionic strength. These results suggest that an electrostatically stabilized complex between Synechococcus nitrate reductase and ferredoxin plays an important role in the mechanism of nitrate reduction catalyzed by this enzyme. Treatment of Synechococcus nitrate reductase with either an arginine-modifying reagent or a lysine-modifying reagent inhibited the ferredoxin-dependent activity of the enzyme but did not affect the methyl viologen-dependent activity. Treatment with these reagents also resulted in a large decrease in the affinity of the enzyme for ferredoxin. Formation of a nitrate reductase complex with ferredoxin prior to treatment with either reagent protected the enzyme against loss of ferredoxin-dependent activity. These results suggest that lysine and arginine residues are present at the ferredoxin-binding site of Synechococcus nitrate reductase. Results of experiments using site-specific, charge reversal variants of the ferredoxin from the cyanobacterium Anabaena sp. PCC 7119 as an electron donor to nitrate reductase were consistent with a role for negatively charged residues on ferredoxin in the interaction with Synechococcus nitrate reductase.  相似文献   

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