首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
This work reports for the first time a resonance Raman study of the mixed-valence and fully reduced forms of Paracoccus pantotrophus bacterial cytochrome c peroxidase. The spectra of the active mixed-valence enzyme show changes in the structure of the ferric peroxidatic heme compared to the fully oxidized enzyme; these differences are observed upon reduction of the electron-transferring heme and upon full occupancy of the calcium site. For the mixed-valence form in the absence of Ca(2+), the peroxidatic heme is six-coordinate and low-spin on the basis of the frequencies of the structure-sensitive Raman lines: the enzyme is inactive. With added Ca(2+), the peroxidatic heme is five-coordinate high-spin and active. The calcium-dependent spectral differences indicate little change in the conformation of the ferrous electron-transferring heme, but substantial changes in the conformation of the ferric peroxidatic heme. Structural changes associated with Ca(2+) binding are indicated by spectral differences in the structure-sensitive marker lines, the out-of-plane low-frequency macrocyclic modes, and the vibrations associated with the heme substituents of that heme. The Ca(2+)-dependent appearance of a strong gamma 15 saddling-symmetry mode for the mixed-valence form is consistent with a strong saddling deformation in the active peroxidatic heme, a feature seen in the Raman spectra of other peroxidases. For the fully reduced form in the presence of Ca(2+), the resonance Raman spectra show that the peroxidatic heme remains high-spin.  相似文献   

2.
Horseradish peroxidase C (HRPC) binds 2 mol calcium per mol of enzyme with binding sites located distal and proximal to the heme group. The effect of calcium depletion on the conformation of the heme was investigated by combining polarized resonance Raman dispersion spectroscopy with normal coordinate structural decomposition analysis of the hemes extracted from models of Ca(2+)-bound and Ca(2+)-depleted HRPC generated and equilibrated using molecular dynamics simulations. Results show that calcium removal causes reorientation of heme pocket residues. We propose that these rearrangements significantly affect both the in-plane and out-of-plane deformations of the heme. Analysis of the experimental depolarization ratios are clearly consistent with increased B(1g)- and B(2g)-type distortions in the Ca(2+)-depleted species while the normal coordinate structural decomposition results are indicative of increased planarity for the heme of Ca(2+)-depleted HRPC and of significant changes in the relative contributions of three of the six lowest frequency deformations. Most noteworthy is the decrease of the strong saddling deformation that is typical of all peroxidases, and an increase in ruffling. Our results confirm previous work proposing that calcium is required to maintain the structural integrity of the heme in that we show that the preferred geometry for catalysis is lost upon calcium depletion.  相似文献   

3.
The extent to which the structural Ca(2+) ions of horseradish peroxidase (HRPC) are a determinant in defining the heme pocket architecture is investigated by electronic absorption and resonance Raman spectroscopy upon removal of one Ca(2+) ion. The Fe(III) heme states are modified upon Ca(2+) depletion, with an uncommon quantum mechanically mixed spin state becoming the dominant species. Ca(2+)-depleted HRPC forms complexes with benzohydroxamic acid and CO which display spectra very similar to those of native HRPC, indicating that any changes to the distal cavity structural properties upon Ca(2+) depletion are easily reversed. Contrary to the native protein, the Ca(2+)-depleted ferrous form displays a low-spin bis-histidyl heme state and a small proportion of high-spin heme. Furthermore, the nu(Fe-Im) stretching mode downshifts 27 cm(-1) upon Ca(2+) depletion revealing a significant structural perturbation of the proximal cavity near the histidine ligand. The specific activity of the Ca(2+)-depleted enzyme is 50% that of the native form. The effects on enzyme activity and spectral features observed upon Ca(2+) depletion are reversible upon reconstitution. Evaluation of the present and previous data firmly favors the proximal Ca(2+) ion as that which is lost upon Ca(2+) depletion and which likely plays the more critical role in regulating the heme pocket structural and catalytic properties.  相似文献   

4.
A cationic peroxidase was isolated and characterized from the latex of the perennial Mediterranean plant Euphorbia characias. The purified enzyme contained one heme prosthetic group identified as ferric iron-protoporphyrin IX. In addition, the purified peroxidase contained 1 mol of endogenous calcium per mol of enzyme; removal of this calcium ion resulted in almost complete loss of the enzyme activity. However, when excess Ca(2+) was added to the native enzyme the catalytic efficiency was enhanced by 3 orders of magnitude. The mechanism of activation was studied using a wide range of spectroscopic and analytic techniques. Analysis of the steady state by stopped-flow measurements suggests that the main effect of calcium ions is to favor the oxidation of the ferric enzyme by hydrogen peroxide to form compound I, whereas the other steps of the catalytic cycle seem to be affected to a lesser extent. UV/vis absorption spectra and CD measurements show that the heme iron is pentacoordinated high-spin in native enzyme and remains so after the binding of Ca(2+). Only minor changes in the secondary or tertiary structure of the protein could be detected by fluorescence or CD measurements in the presence of Ca(2+) ions, except for a significant perturbation of the Fe(3+) inner sphere geometry, as detected by EPR measurements. We propose that Ca(2+) binding to a low affinity site induces a reorientation of the distal histidine changing the almost inactive form of Euphorbia peroxidase to a high activity form. This is the first example of a peroxidase that responds as an on/off switch to variations in the external Ca(2+) level.  相似文献   

5.
The production of cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP) from Pseudomonas ( Ps.) stutzeri (ATCC 11607) was optimized by adjusting the composition of the growth medium and aeration of the culture. The protein was isolated and characterized biochemically and spectroscopically in the oxidized and mixed valence forms. The activity of Ps. stutzeri CCP was studied using two different ferrocytochromes as electron donors: Ps. stutzeri cytochrome c(551) (the physiological electron donor) and horse heart cytochrome c. These electron donors interact differently with Ps. stutzeri CCP, exhibiting different ionic strength dependence. The CCP from Paracoccus ( Pa.) denitrificans was proposed to have two different Ca(2+) binding sites: one usually occupied (site I) and the other either empty or partially occupied in the oxidized enzyme (site II). The Ps. stutzeri enzyme was purified in a form with tightly bound Ca(2+). The affinity for Ca(2+) in the mixed valence enzyme is so high that Ca(2+) returns to it from the EGTA which was added to empty the site in the oxidized enzyme. Molecular mass determination by ultracentrifugation and behavior on gel filtration chromatography have revealed that this CCP is isolated as an active dimer, in contrast to the Pa. denitrificans CCP which requires added Ca(2+) for formation of the dimer and also for activation of the enzyme. This is consistent with the proposal that Ca(2+) in the bacterial peroxidases influences the monomer/dimer equilibrium and the transition to the active form of the enzyme. Additional Ca(2+)does affect both the kinetics of oxidation of horse heart cytochrome c (but not cytochrome c(551)) and higher aggregation states of the enzyme. This suggests the presence of a superficial Ca(2+)binding site of low affinity.  相似文献   

6.
Cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP) catalyses the reduction of H(2)O(2) to H(2)O, an important step in the cellular detoxification process. The crystal structure of the di-heme CCP from Pseudomonas nautica 617 was obtained in two different conformations in a redox state with the electron transfer heme reduced. Form IN, obtained at pH 4.0, does not contain Ca(2+) and was refined at 2.2 A resolution. This inactive form presents a closed conformation where the peroxidatic heme adopts a six-ligand coordination, hindering the peroxidatic reaction from taking place. Form OUT is Ca(2+) dependent and was crystallized at pH 5.3 and refined at 2.4 A resolution. This active form shows an open conformation, with release of the distal histidine (His71) ligand, providing peroxide access to the active site. This is the first time that the active and inactive states are reported for a di-heme peroxidase.  相似文献   

7.
Laberge M  Szigeti K  Fidy J 《Biopolymers》2004,74(1-2):41-45
Horseradish peroxidase C (HRPC) is a class III peroxidase whose structure is stabilized by the presence of two endogenous calcium atoms. Calcium removal has been shown to decrease the enzymatic activity of the enzyme. The spin state of the iron, a mixture of high spin (HS) and mixed quantum spin state (QS) consisting of intermediate spin (IS) 3/2 + (HS) 5/2, is also significantly affected by calcium removal, going from a predominant QS component to a predominant HS component upon removal of one calcium. Removal of both calcium ions, however, results in the appearance of a significant LS contribution, easily monitored in the charge transfer (CT) band region by low-T absorption. Normal structural decomposition (NSD) calculations of the in-plane (ip) modes of the heme extracted from HRPC native and Ca(2+)-depleted models show that removal of the proximal calcium is associated with perturbed E(u) and increased A(1g) ip distortions of the heme. The effect of complete or distal calcium removal on the heme also results in increased A(1g) ip distortions, but in significantly decreased E(u) distortions. The overall effect is to decrease the nonplanarity of the heme: the total ip distortion of the native HRPC heme is 0.200 and 0.134 A for the Ca(2+)-depleted species. Our NSD results corroborate the role proposed for the protein matrix, namely to fine-tune the active site by inducing subtle changes in heme planarity and spin state of the iron.  相似文献   

8.
Cytochrome c oxidase (COX) from R. sphaeroides contains one Ca(2+) ion per enzyme that is not removed by dialysis versus EGTA. This is similar to COX from Paracoccus denitrificans [Pfitzner, U., Kirichenko, A., Konstantinov, A. A., Mertens, M., Wittershagen, A., Kolbesen, B. O., Steffens, G. C. M., Harrenga, A., Michel, H., and Ludwig, B. (1999) FEBS Lett. 456, 365-369] and is in contrast to the bovine oxidase, which binds Ca(2+) reversibly. A series of R. sphaeroides mutants with replacements of the E54, Q61, and D485 residues, which form the Ca(2+) coordination sphere in subunit I, has been generated. The substitutions for the E54 residue do not assemble normally. Mutants with the Q61 replacements are active and retain the tightly bound Ca(2+); their spectra are not perturbed by added Ca(2+) or EGTA. The D485A mutant is active, binds to Ca(2+) reversibly, like the mitochondrial oxidase, and exhibits the red shift in the heme a absorption spectrum upon Ca(2+) binding for both reduced and oxidized states of heme a. The K(d) value of 6 nM determined by equilibrium titrations is much lower than that reported for the homologous D477A mutant of Paracoccus denitrificans or for bovine COX (K(d) = 1-3 microM). The rate of Ca(2+) binding with the D485A oxidase (k(on) = 5 x 10(3) M(-1) s(-1)) is comparable to that observed earlier for bovine COX, but the off-rate is extremely slow (approximately 10(-3) s(-1)) and highly temperature-dependent. The k(off) /k(on) ratio (190 nM) is about 30-fold higher than the equilibrium K(d) of 6 nM, indicating that formation of the Ca(2+)-adduct may involve more than one step. Sodium ions reverse the Ca(2+)-induced red shift of heme a and dramatically decrease the rate of Ca(2+) binding to the D485A mutant COX. With the D485A mutant, 1 Ca(2+) competes with 1 Na(+) for the binding site, whereas 2 Na(+) compete with 1 Ca(2+) for binding to the bovine oxidase. This finding indicates that the aspartic residue D442 (a homologue of R. sphaeroides D485) may be the second Na(+) binding site in bovine COX. No effect of Ca(2+) binding to the D485A mutant is evident on either the steady-state enzymatic activity or several time-resolved partial steps of the catalytic cycle. It is proposed that the tightly bound Ca(2+) plays a structural role in the bacterial oxidases while the reversible binding with the mammalian enzyme may be involved in the regulation of mitochondrial function.  相似文献   

9.
Aqualysin I is a heat-stable protease; in the presence of 1 mM Ca(2+), the enzyme is stable at 80 degrees C and shows the highest activity at the same temperature. After gel filtration to remove free Ca(2+) from the purified enzyme sample, the enzyme (holo-aqualysin I) still bound Ca(2+) (1 mol/mol of the enzyme), but was no longer stable at 80 degrees C. On treatment of the holo-enzyme with EDTA, bound Ca(2+) decreased to about 0.3 mol/mol of the enzyme. The thermostability of holo-aqualysin I was dependent on the concentration of added Ca(2+), and 1 mM added Ca(2+) stabilized the enzyme completely, suggesting that aqualysin I has at least two Ca(2+) binding sites, i.e. stronger and weaker binding ones. Titration calorimetry showed single binding of Ca(2+) to the holo-enzyme with an association constant of 3.1 x 10(3) M(-1), and DeltaH and TDeltaS were calculated to be 2.3 and 6.9 kcal/mol, respectively, at 13 degrees C. La(3+), Sr(2+), Nd(3+), and Tb(3+) stabilized the holo-enzyme at 80 degrees C, as Ca(2+) did. These results suggest that the weaker binding site exhibits structural flexibility to bind several metal cations different in size and valency, and that the metal binding to the weaker binding site is essential for the thermostability of aqualysin I.  相似文献   

10.
McKay RT  Saltibus LF  Li MX  Sykes BD 《Biochemistry》2000,39(41):12731-12738
Structural studies have shown that the regulatory domains of skeletal and cardiac troponin C (sNTnC and cNTnC) undergo different conformational changes upon Ca(2+) binding; sNTnC "opens" with a large exposure of the hydrophobic surface, while cNTnC retains a "closed" conformation similar to that in the apo state. This is mainly due to the fact that there is a defunct Ca(2+)-binding site I in cNTnC. Despite the striking difference, the two proteins bind their respective troponin I (TnI) regions (sTnI(115-131) and cTnI(147-163), respectively) in a similar open fashion. Thus, there must exist a delicate energetic balance between Ca(2+) and TnI binding and the accompanying conformational changes in TnC for each system. To understand the coupling between Ca(2+) and TnI binding and the concomitant structural changes, we have previously engineered an E41A mutant of sNTnC and demonstrated that this mutation drastically reduced the Ca(2+)-binding affinity of site I in sNTnC, and as a result, E41A-sNTnC remains closed in the Ca(2+)-bound state. In the present work, we investigated the interaction of E41A-sNTnC with the sTnI(115-131) peptide and found that the peptide binds to the Ca(2+)-saturated E41A-sNTnC with a 1:1 stoichiometry and a dissociation constant of 300 +/- 100 microM. The peptide-induced chemical shift changes resemble those of Ca(2+) binding to sNTnC, suggesting that sTnI(115-131) induces the "opening" of E41A-sNTnC. In addition, the binding of sTnI(115-131) appears to be accompanied by a conformational change in site I of E41A-sNTnC so that the damaged regulatory site can bind Ca(2+) more tightly. Without Ca(2+), sTnI(115-131) only interacts with E41A-sNTnC nonspecifically. When Ca(2+) is titrated into E41A-sNTnC in the presence of sTnI(115-131), the Ca(2+)-binding affinity of site I was enhanced by approximately 5-fold as compared to when sTnI(115-131) was not present. These observations suggest that the binding of Ca(2+) and TnI is intimately coupled to each other. Together with our previous studies on Ca(2+) and TnI peptide binding to sNTnC and cNTnC, these results allow us to dissect the mechanism and energetics of coupling of ligand binding and structural opening intricately involved in the regulation of skeletal and cardiac muscle contraction.  相似文献   

11.
The isozymes 2 and 4 of rabbit microsomal cytochrome P-450 (LM2, LM4) have been studied by resonance Raman spectroscopy. Based on high quality spectra, a vibrational assignment of the porphyrin modes in the frequency range between 100-1700 cm-1 is presented for different ferric states of cytochrome P-450 LM2 and LM4. The resonance Raman spectra are interpreted in terms of the spin and ligation state of the heme iron and of heme-protein interactions. While in cytochrome P-450 LM2 the six-coordinated low-spin configuration is predominantly occupied, in the isozyme LM4 the five-coordinated high-spin form is the most stable state. The different stability of these two spin configurations in LM2 and LM4 can be attributed to the structures of the active sites. In the low-spin form of the isozymes LM4 the protein matrix forces the heme into a more rigid conformation than in LM2. These steric constraints are removed upon dissociation of the sixth ligand leading to a more flexible structure of the active site in the high-spin form of the isozyme LM4. The vibrational modes of the vinyl groups were found to be characteristic markers for the specific structures of the heme pockets in both isozymes. They also respond sensitively to type-I substrate binding. While in cytochrome P-450 LM4 the occupation of the substrate-binding pocket induces conformational changes of the vinyl groups, as reflected by frequency shifts of the vinyl modes, in the LM2 isozyme the ground-state conformation of these substituents remain unaffected, suggesting that the more flexible heme pocket can accommodate substrates without imposing steric constraints on the porphyrin. The resonance Raman technique makes structural changes visible which are induced by substrate binding in addition and independent of the changes associated with the shift of the spin state equilibrium: the high-spin states in the substrate-bound and substrate-free enzyme are structurally different. The formation of the inactive form, P-420, involves a severe structural rearrangement in the heme binding pocket leading to drastic changes of the vinyl group conformations. The conformational differences of the active sites in cytochromes P-450 LM2 and LM4 observed in this work contribute to the understanding of the structural basis accounting for substrate and product specificity of cytochrome P-450 isozymes.  相似文献   

12.
Indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase is a heme enzyme that catalyzes the oxidative degradation of L-Trp and other indoleamines. We have used resonance Raman spectroscopy to characterize the heme environment of purified recombinant human indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (hIDO). In the absence of L-Trp, the spectrum of the Fe(3+) form displayed six-coordinate, mixed high and low spin character. Addition of L-Trp triggered a transition to predominantly low spin with two Fe-OH(-) stretching modes identified at 546 and 496 cm(-1), suggesting H-bonding between the NH group of the pyrrole ring of L-Trp and heme-bound OH(-). The distal pocket of Fe(3+) hIDO was explored further by an exogenous heme ligand, CN(-); again, binding of L-Trp introduced strong H-bonding and/or steric interactions to the heme-bound CN(-). On the other hand, the spectrum of Fe(2+) hIDO revealed a five-coordinate and high spin heme with or without L-Trp bound. The proximal Fe-His stretching mode, identified at 236 cm(-1), did not shift upon L-Trp addition, indicating that the proximal Fe-His bond strength is not affected by binding of the substrate. The high Fe-His stretching frequency suggests that Fe(2+) hIDO has a strong "peroxidase-like" Fe-His bond. Using CO as a structural probe for the distal environment of Fe(2+) hIDO revealed that binding of L-Trp in the distal pocket converted IDO to a peroxidase-like enzyme. Binding of L-Trp also caused conformational changes to the heme vinyl groups, which were independent of changes of the spin and coordination state of the heme iron. Together these data indicate that the strong proximal Fe-His bond and the strong H-bonding and/or steric interactions between l-Trp and dioxygen in the distal pocket are likely crucial for the enzymatic activity of hIDO.  相似文献   

13.
The aa(3)-type cytochrome c oxidases from mitochondria and bacteria contain a cation-binding site located in subunit I near heme a. In the oxidases from Paracoccus denitrificans or Rhodobacter sphaeroides, the site is occupied by tightly bound calcium, whereas the mitochondrial oxidase binds reversibly calcium or sodium that compete with each other. The functional role of the site has not yet been established. D477A mutation in subunit I of P. denitrificans oxidase converts the cation-binding site to a mitochondrial-type form that binds reversibly calcium and sodium ions [Pfitzner, U., Kirichenko, A., et al. (1999) FEBS Lett. 456, 365-369]. We have studied reversible cation binding with P. denitrificans D477A oxidase and compared it with that in bovine enzyme. In bovine oxidase, one Ca(2+) competes with two Na(+) for the binding, indicating the presence of two Na(+)-binding sites in the enzyme, Na(+)((1)) and Na(+)((2)). In contrast, the D477A mutant of COX from P. denitrificans reveals competition of Ca(2+) (K(d) = 1 microM) with only one sodium ion (K(d) = 4 mM). The second binding site for Na(+) in bovine oxidase is proposed to involve D442, homologous to D477 in P. denitrificans oxidase. A putative place for Na(+)((2)) in subunit I of bovine oxidase has been found with the aid of structure modeling located 7.4 A from the bound Na(+)((1)) . Na(+)((2)) interacts with a cluster of residues forming an exit part of the so-called H-proton channel, including D51 and S441.  相似文献   

14.
A class III peroxidase, isolated and characterized from the latex of the perennial Mediterranean shrub Euphorbia characias, contains one ferric iron-protoporphyrin IX pentacoordinated with a histidine 'proximal' ligand as heme prosthetic group. In addition, the purified peroxidase contained 1 mole of endogenous Ca(2+) per mole of enzyme, and in the presence of excess Ca(2+), the catalytic efficiency was enhanced by three orders of magnitude. The incubation of the native enzyme with Ni(2+) causes reversible inhibition, whereas, in the presence of excess Ca(2+), Ni(2+) leads to an increase of the catalytic activity of Euphorbia peroxidase. UV/visible absorption spectra show that the heme iron remains in a quantum mechanically mixed-spin state as in the native enzyme after addition of Ni(2+), and only minor changes in the secondary or tertiary structure of the protein could be detected by fluorescence or CD measurements in the presence of Ni(2+). In the presence of H(2)O(2) and in the absence of a reducing agent, Ni(2+) decreases the catalase-like activity of Euphorbia peroxidase and accelerates another pathway in which the inactive stable species accumulates with a shoulder at 619 nm. Analysis of the kinetic measurements suggests that Ni(2+) affects the H(2)O(2)-binding site and inhibits the formation of compound I. In the presence of excess Ca(2+), Ni(2+) accelerates the reduction of compound I to the native enzyme. The reported results are compatible with the hypothesis that ELP has two Ni(2+)-binding sites with opposite functional effects.  相似文献   

15.
A number of studies have indicated that Ca(2+)-ATPase, the integral membrane protein of the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) membrane, undergoes some structural change upon Ca2+ binding to its high affinity binding sites (i.e., upon conversion of the E1 to the CaxE1 form of the enzyme). We have used x-ray diffraction to study the changes in the electron density profile of the SR membrane upon high-affinity Ca2+ binding to the enzyme in the absence of enzyme phosphorylation. The photolabile Ca2+ chelator DM-nitrophen was used to rapidly release Ca2+ into the extravesicular spaces throughout an oriented SR membrane multilayer and thereby synchronously in the vicinity of the high affinity binding sites of each enzyme molecule in the multilayer. A critical control was developed to exclude possible artifacts arising from heating and non-Ca2+ photolysis products in the membrane multilayer specimens upon photolysis of the DM-nitrophen. Upon photolysis, changes in the membrane electron density profile arising from high-affinity Ca2+ binding to the enzyme are found to be localized to three different regions within the profile. These changes can be attributed to the added electron density of the Ca2+ bound at three discrete sites centered at 5, approximately 30, and approximately 67 A in the membrane profile, but they also require decreased electron density within the cylindrically averaged profile structure of the Ca(2+)-ATPase immediately adjacent (< 15 A) to these sites.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Ferrochelatase, the enzyme catalyzing metallation of protoporphyrin IX at the terminal step of heme biosynthesis, was co-crystallized with an isomer mixture of the potent inhibitor N-methylmesoporphyrin (N-MeMP). The X-ray structure revealed the active site of the enzyme, to which only one of the isomers was bound, and for the first time allowed characterization of the mode of porphyrin macrocycle distortion by ferrochelatase. Crystallization of ferrochelatase and N-MeMP in the presence of Cu(2+) leads to metallation and demethylation of N-MeMP. A mechanism of porphyrin distortion is proposed, which assumes that the enzyme holds pyrrole rings B, C and D in a vice-like grip and forces a 36 degrees tilt on ring A.  相似文献   

17.
Franco R  Ma JG  Lu Y  Ferreira GC  Shelnutt JA 《Biochemistry》2000,39(10):2517-2529
Ferrochelatase (EC 4.99.1.1), the terminal enzyme of the heme biosynthetic pathway, catalyzes Fe(2+) chelation into protoporphyrin IX. Resonance Raman and UV-vis absorption spectroscopies of wild-type and engineered variants of murine ferrochelatase were used to examine the proposed structural mechanism for iron insertion into porphyrin. The recombinant variants (i.e., H207N and E287Q) are enzymes in which the conserved amino acids histidine-207 and glutamate-287 of murine ferrochelatase were substituted with asparagine and glutamine, respectively. Both of these residues are at the active site of the enzyme as deduced from the Bacillus subtilis ferrochelatase three-dimensional structure. On the basis of changes in the UV-vis absorption spectrum, addition of free-base or metalated porphyrins to wild-type ferrochelatase and H207N variant yields a 1:1 complex, most likely a monomeric protein-bound species at the active site. In contrast, the addition of porphyrin (either free base or metalated) to E287Q is substoichiometric, as this variant retains bound porphyrin in the active site during isolation and purification. The specificity of porphyrin binding is confirmed by the narrowing of the structure-sensitive lines and the vinyl vibrational mode in the resonance Raman spectra. Shifts in the resonance Raman lines of free-base and metalated porphyrins bound to the wild-type ferrochelatase indicate a nonplanar distortion of the porphyrin macrocycle. However, the magnitude of the distortion cannot be determined without first defining the specific type of deformation. Significantly, the extent of the nonplanar distortion varies in the case of H207N- and E287Q-bound porphyrins. In fact, resonance Raman spectral decompositions indicate a homogeneous ruffled deformation for the nickel protoporphyrin bound to the wild-type ferrochelatase, whereas both planar and ruffled conformations are present for the H207N-bound porphyrin. Perhaps more revealing is the unusual resonance Raman spectrum of the endogenous E287Q-bound porphyrin, which has the structure-sensitive lines greatly upshifted relative to those of the free-base protoporphyrin in solution. This could be interpreted as an equilibrium between protein conformers, one of which favors a highly distorted porphyrin macrocycle. Taken together, these findings suggest that distortion occurs in murine ferrochelatase for some porphyrins, even without metal binding, which is apparently required for the yeast ferrochelatase.  相似文献   

18.
Mukherjee S  Kuchroo K  Chary KV 《Biochemistry》2005,44(34):11636-11645
One of the calcium binding proteins from Entamoeba histolytica (EhCaBP) is a 134 amino acid residue long (M(r) approximately 14.9 kDa) double domain EF-hand protein containing four Ca(2+) binding sites. CD and NMR studies reveal that the Ca(2+)-free form (apo-EhCaBP) exists in a partially collapsed form compared to the Ca(2+)-bound (holo) form, which has an ordered structure (PDB ID ). Deuterium exchange studies on the partially structured apo-EhCaBP reveal that the C-terminal domain is better structured than the N-terminal domain. The protein can be reversibly folded and unfolded upon addition of Ca(2+) and EGTA, respectively. Titration shows a slow initial folding of the apo form with increasing Ca(2+) concentration, followed by a highly cooperative folding to its final state at a certain threshold of Ca(2+). Ca(2+) and the EGTA titration taken together show that site II in the N-terminal domain has the highest affinity for Ca(2+) contrary to earlier studies. Further, this study has thrown light on the relative Ca(2+) binding affinity and specificity of each site in the intact protein. A structural model for the partially collapsed form of apo-EhCaBP and its equilibrium folding to its completely folded holo state has been suggested. Large conformational changes seen in transforming from the apo to holo form of EhCaBP suggest that this protein should be functioning as a sensor protein and might have a significant role in host-parasite recognition.  相似文献   

19.
The structure and activity of native horseradish peroxidase C (HRP) is stabilized by two bound Ca(2+) ions. Earlier studies suggested a critical role of one of the bound Ca(2+) ions but with conflicting conclusions concerning their respective importance. In this work we compare the native and totally Ca(2+)-depleted forms of the enzyme using pH-, pressure-, viscosity- and temperature-dependent UV absorption, CD, H/D exchange-FTIR spectroscopy and by binding the substrate benzohydroxamic acid (BHA). We report that Ca(2+)-depletion does not change the alpha helical content of the protein, but strongly modifies the tertiary structure and dynamics to yield a homogeneously loosened molten globule-like structure. We relate observed tertiary changes in the heme pocket to changes in the dipole orientation and coordination of a distal water molecule. Deprotonation of distal His42, linked to Asp43, itself coordinated to the distal Ca(2+), perturbs a H-bonding network connecting this Ca(2+) to the heme crevice that involves the distal water. The measured effects of Ca(2)(+) depletion can be interpreted as supporting a structural role for the distal Ca(2+) and for its enhanced significance in finetuning the protein structure to optimize enzyme activity.  相似文献   

20.
Inesi G  Zhang Z  Lewis D 《Biophysical journal》2002,83(5):2327-2332
High-affinity and cooperative binding of two Ca(2+) per ATPase (SERCA) occurs within the membrane-bound region of the enzyme. Direct measurements of binding at various Ca(2+) concentrations demonstrate that site-directed mutations within this region interfere selectively with Ca(2+) occupancy of either one or both binding sites and with the cooperative character of the binding isotherms. A transition associated with high affinity and cooperative binding of the second Ca(2+) and the engagement of N796 and E309 are both required to form a phosphoenzyme intermediate with ATP in the forward direction of the cycle and also to form ATP from phosphoenzyme intermediate and ADP in the reverse direction of the cycle. This transition, defined by equilibrium and kinetic characterization of the partial reactions of the enzyme cycle, extends from transmembrane helices to the catalytic site through a long-range linkage and is the mechanistic device for interconversion of binding and phosphorylation potentials.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号