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1.
2.
Nitrous oxide reductase (N(2)OR) catalyses the final step of the denitrification pathway-the reduction of nitrous oxide to nitrogen. The catalytic centre (CuZ) is a unique tetranuclear copper centre bridged by inorganic sulphur in a tetrahedron arrangement that can have different oxidation states. Previously, Marinobacter hydrocarbonoclasticus N(2)OR was isolated with the CuZ centre as CuZ*, in the [1Cu(2+) : 3Cu(+)] redox state, which is redox inert and requires prolonged incubation under reductive conditions to be activated. In this work, we report, for the first time, the isolation of N(2)OR from M. hydrocarbonoclasticus in the 'purple' form, in which the CuZ centre is in the oxidized [2Cu(2+) : 2Cu(+)] redox state and is redox active. This form of the enzyme was isolated in the presence of oxygen from a microaerobic culture in the presence of nitrate and also from a strictly anaerobic culture. The purple form of the enzyme was biochemically characterized and was shown to be a redox active species, although it is still catalytically non-competent, as its specific activity is lower than that of the activated fully reduced enzyme and comparable with that of the enzyme with the CuZ centre in either the [1Cu(2+) : 3Cu(+)] redox state or in the redox inactive CuZ* state.  相似文献   

3.
Aromatic amine dehydrogenase was purified and characterized from Alcaligenes xylosoxidans IFO13495 grown on beta-phenylethylamine. The molecular mass of the enzyme was 95.5 kDa. The enzyme consisted of heterotetrameric subunits (alpha2beta2) with two different molecular masses of 42.3 kDa and 15.2 kDa. The N-terminal amino acid sequences of the alpha-subunit (42.3-kDa subunit) and the beta-subunit (15.2-kDa subunit) were DLPIEELXGGTRLPP and APAAGNKXPQMDDTA respectively. The enzyme had a quinone cofactor in the beta-subunit and showed a typical absorption spectrum of tryptophan tryptophylquinone-containing quinoprotein showing maxima at 435 nm in the oxidized form and 330 nm in the reduced form. The pH optima of the enzyme activity for histamine, tyramine, and beta-phenylethylamine were the same at 8.0. The enzyme retained full activity after incubation at 70 degrees C for 40 min. It readily oxidized various aromatic amines as well as some aliphatic amines. The Michaelis constants for phenazine methosulfate, beta-phenylethylamine, tyramine, and histamine were 48.1, 1.8, 6.9, and 171 microM respectively. The enzyme activity was strongly inhibited by carbonyl reagents. The enzyme could be stored without appreciable loss of enzyme activity at 4 degrees C for one month at least in phosphate buffer (pH 7.0).  相似文献   

4.
Maleylacetate reductase (EC 1.3.1.32) plays a major role in the degradation of chloroaromatic compounds by channeling maleylacetate and some of its substituted derivatives into the 3-oxoadipate pathway. The enzyme was purified to apparent homogeneity from an extract of 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetate (2,4-D)-grown cells of Alcaligenes eutrophus JMP134. Maleylacetate reductase appears to be a dimer of two identical subunits of 35 kDa. The pI was determined to be at pH 5.4. There was no indication of a flavin prosthetic group. The enzyme was inactivated by p-chloromercuribenzoate but not by EDTA, 1,10-phenanthroline, or dithiothreitol. Maleylacetate and 2-chloromaleylacetate were converted with similar efficiencies (with NADH as cosubstrate, Km = 31 microM for each substrate and kcat = 8,785 and 7,280/min, respectively). NADH was preferred to NADPH as the cosubstrate. Upon reduction of 2-chloramaleylacetate by the purified enzyme, chloride was liberated and the resulting maleylacetate was further reduced by a second NADH. These results and the kinetic parameters suggest that the maleylacetate reductase is sufficient to channel the 2,4-D degradation intermediate 2-chloromaleylacetate into the 3-oxoadipate pathway. In a data base search the NH2-terminal sequence of maleylacetate reductase was found to be most similar to that of TfdF, a pJP4-encoded protein of as-yet-unknown function in 2,4-D degradation.  相似文献   

5.
The effects of freezing on Alcaligenes sp. nitrite reductase [nitric-oxide: ferricytochrome c oxidoreductase, EC 1.7.2.1] dissolved in sodium phosphate (pH 7.2) were investigated. The nitrite reductase was gradually activated with time in the frozen state, resulting in an increase in its activity of 2.5-4.5 times. The final freezing temperature influenced the enzyme activation, maximal activation being observed at around -20 degrees C. All the enzymatic activities that the nitrite reductase is known to catalyze were enhanced by freeze-thawing. The activation was followed by neither association-dissociation nor any gross conformational change of the enzyme molecule, but was accompanied by an increase in the fluorescence intensity of 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulfonate used as a hydrophobic probe. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that the activation of the NiR is due to a limited conformational change of the enzyme molecule, particularly in the hydrophobic region. The mechanism of the activation of NiR by freeze-thawing is discussed, in comparison with the mechanisms of inactivation by freeze-thawing of many enzymes reported by previous workers.  相似文献   

6.
We report the first partial purification of nitrous oxide reductase, a unique and labile enzyme of denitrifying bacteria. The procedure, which required anaerobic conditions throughout, resulted in a 60-fold purification relative to crude lysate in the case ofParococcus denitrificans. The molecular weight was estimated by gel exclusion chromatography to be about 85,000. The partially purified enzyme is inactivated rapidly by O2, dithionite, and mercaptoethanol and is reversibly inhibited by moderate concentrations of common salts. Up to 80% of the original activity can be reconstituted following O2 inactivation by incubating the enzyme with reduced benzyl viologen for 2 to 3 h. TheV max pH profile shows a broad maximum at pH 8. The enzyme is irreversibly retained by common anion exchangers in the range pH 7 to 8 but can be eluted in acceptable yield as one of the last components from an imidazole-based anion exchange material by means of a pH gradient. This behavior implies that nitrous oxide reductase is very acidic. Among the several peptides observed by sodium dodecyl sulfate slab electrophoresis, only two, with apparent molecular weights of 58,000 and 25,000, correlated closely with the activity of fractions eluted from the imidazole column. These two peptides together comprised about 30% of the total protein in the fractions with highest specific activity.  相似文献   

7.
The nirA gene encoding the blue dissimilatory nitrite reductase from Alcaligenes xylosoxidans has been cloned and sequenced. To our knowledge, this is the first report of the characterization of a gene encoding a blue copper-containing nitrite reductase. The deduced amino acid sequence exhibits a high degree of similarity to other copper-containing nitrite reductases from various bacterial sources. The full-length protein included a 24-amino-acid leader peptide. The nirA gene was overexpressed in Escherichia coli and was shown to be exported to the periplasm. Purification was achieved in a single step, and analysis of the recombinant Nir enzyme revealed that cleavage of the signal peptide occurred at a position identical to that for the native enzyme isolated from A. xylosoxidans. The recombinant Nir isolated directly was blue and trimeric and, on the basis of electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy and metal analysis, possessed only type 1 copper centers. This type 2-depleted enzyme preparation also had a low nitrite reductase enzyme activity. Incubation of the periplasmic fraction with copper sulfate prior to purification resulted in the isolation of an enzyme with a full complement of type 1 and type 2 copper centers and a high specific activity. The kinetic properties of the recombinant enzyme were indistinguishable from those of the native nitrite reductase isolated from A. xylosoxidans. This rapid isolation procedure will greatly facilitate genetic and biochemical characterization of both wild-type and mutant derivatives of this protein.  相似文献   

8.
Nitrous oxide reductase, which catalyzes the reduction of N2O to N2, was purified in a largely oxidized form from Pseudomonas aeruginosa strain P2 by a simple anaerobic procedure to yield an enzyme with a peptide purity of 95-98%. For the native (dimeric) enzyme, Mr = 120,000 and for the denatured subunit, Mr = 73,000. The enzyme contained four Cu atoms/subunit, was purple in color, and exhibited a broad absorption band at 550 nm with an extinction coefficient of about 11,000 M-1 x cm-1 referenced to the dimer. It was nearly inactive as prepared but could be activated by incubation with 2-(N-cyclohexylamino)ethane sulfonate buffer, pH 10, to specific activities as high as 27 mumol of N2O x min-1 x mg-1.Km for N2O and benzyl viologen radical cation was about 2 and 4 microM, respectively, both before and after enzyme activation. Activation increased the t1/2 for turnover-dependent inactivation from about 30 s to 5-10 min. Reduction of the enzyme by dithionite was kinetically biphasic and resulted in the loss of the 550-nm band and ultimate appearance of a 670-nm band. Isoelectric focusing revealed five components with pI values from 5.2 to 5.7. The pI values did not change following activation. The copper CD spectrum of the enzyme as prepared was different from that for the activated enzyme, whereas those for the enzyme after exposure to air and the activated enzyme were similar. Because the activated enzyme is a mixture of activated and inactive species, the specific activity of the activated species must be substantially greater than the observed value. Molecular heterogeneity may also explain the decreased optical absorbance and CD amplitude that resulted from the activation process. The data overall reinforce the view that the absorption spectrum of nitrous oxide reductase is not a good predictor of absolute activity.  相似文献   

9.
N-Carbomoyl-L-amino acid amidohydrolase was purified to homogeneity for the first time from Alcaligenes xylosoxidans. The enzyme showed high affinity toward N-carbomoyl-L-amino acids with long-chain aliphatic or aromatic substituents, and hydrolyzed those with short-chain substituents quite well. The enzyme hydrolyzed N-formyl- and N-acetylamino acids quickly and very slowly, respectively. The enzyme did not hydrolyze -ureidopropionate and ureidosuccinate. The relative molecular mass of the native enzyme was about 135 000 and the enzyme consisted of two identical polypeptide chains. The enzyme activity was significantly inhibited by sulfhydryl reagents and required the following divalent metal ions: Mn2+, Ni2+ and Co2+.  相似文献   

10.
Covalent cross-linking reaction between SH1 and SH2 groups in myosin subfragment-1 (S-1) by N,N'-p-phenylenedimaleimide (pPDM) was followed by the degree of inactivation of NH4+-EDTA ATPase activity. The rate of the cross-linking reaction decreased to less than a 20th in the presence of F-actin. The inhibitory effect of F-actin was not observed in the presence of MgATP. Binding of F-actin to S-1 was measured using ultracentrifugation. S-1 whose SH1 and SH2 were covalently cross-linked by pPDM or 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB) did not bind F-actin. After the DTNB-cross-linked S-1 is reduced by dithiothreitol, the ability to bind F-actin is recovered. These results suggest that S-1 has a binding site for F-actin in the region between SH1 and SH2. This site appears to determine the high affinity of acto-S-1 complex at the rigor while decreasing the affinity more than 10(2) times in the presence of MgATP.  相似文献   

11.
The denitrifying bacterium Alcaligenes xylosoxidans synthesises two azurins (Az), which are termed Az I and Az 2. Both function as effective electron donors to copper nitrite reductase (NiR) in vitro. As a first step towards identifying the physiological relevance of these electron transfer proteins in the denitrification process, the gene (azuA) encoding Az I was characterised and its expression with respect to denitrification determined. We show that the azuA gene from A. xylosoxidans is monocistronic and its expression is increased when cells are grown under denitrifying conditions in the presence of nitrate or nitrite. The expression pattern of azuA was similar, though not identical, to that of the monocistronic nirK gene, which encodes copper NiR, and is in accord with both gene products being synthesised when the bacterium denitrifies. Recombinant Az I was exported to the periplasm of the heterologous host Escherichia coli, was synthesised at very high levels (80 mg purified protein per litre) and was fully loaded with copper. Electron donation from reduced recombinant Az to NiR was indistinguishable from the activity determined with the native protein. Taken together, these findings indicate that in A. xylosoxidans azuA expression is coordinated with denitrification and recombinant Az I is processed and matured in the periplasm of E. coli in the same way it is in A. xylosoxidans.  相似文献   

12.
We demonstrated recently that two protons are involved in reduction of nitrite to nitric oxide through a proton-coupled electron transfer (ET) reaction catalyzed by the blue Cu-dependent nitrite reductase (Cu NiR) of Alcaligenes xylosoxidans (AxNiR). Here, the functionality of two putative proton channels, one involving Asn90 and the other His254, is studied using single (N90S, H254F) and double (N90S--H254F) mutants. All mutants studied are active, indicating that protons are still able to reach the active site. The H254F mutation has no effect on the catalytic activity, while the N90S mutation results in ~70% decrease in activity. Laser flash-photolysis experiments show that in H254F and wild-type enzyme electrons enter at the level of the T1Cu and then redistribute between the two Cu sites. Complete ET from T1Cu to T2Cu occurs only when nitrite binds at the T2Cu site. This indicates that substrate binding to T2Cu promotes ET from T1Cu, suggesting that the enzyme operates an ordered mechanism. In fact, in the N90S and N90S--H254F variants, where the T1Cu site redox potential is elevated by ~60 mV, inter-Cu ET is only observed in the presence of nitrite. From these results it is evident that the Asn90 channel is the main proton channel in AxNiR, though protons can still reach the active site if this channel is disrupted. Crystallographic structures provide a clear structural rationale for these observations, including restoration of the proton delivery via a significant movement of the loop connecting the T1Cu ligands Cys130 and His139 that occurs on binding of nitrite. Notably, a role for this loop in facilitating interaction of cytochrome c(551) with Cu NiR has been suggested previously based on a crystal structure of the binary complex.  相似文献   

13.
An overexpression system for nitrous oxide reductase (N(2)OR), an enzyme that catalyzes the conversion of N(2)O to N(2) and H(2)O, has been developed in Achromobacter cycloclastes. Anaerobically purified A. cycloclastes recombinant N(2)OR (AcN(2)OR) has on average 4.5 Cu and 1.2 S per monomer. Upon reduction by methyl viologen, AcN(2)OR displays a high specific activity: 124 U/mg at 25 degrees C. Anaerobically purified AcN(2)OR displays a unique absorption spectrum. UV-visible and EPR spectra, combined with kinetics studies, indicate that the as-purified form of the enzyme is predominately a mixture of the fully-reduced Cu(Z)=[4Cu(I)] state and the Cu(Z)=[3Cu(I).Cu(II)] state, with the latter readily reducible by reduced forms of viologens. CD spectra of the as-purified AcN(2)OR over a range of pH values reveal perturbations of the protein conformation induced by pH variations, although the principal secondary structure elements are largely unaltered. Further, the activity of AcN(2)OR in D(2)O is significantly decreased compared with that in H(2)O, indicative of a significant solvent isotope effect on N(2)O reduction. These data are in good agreement with conclusions reached in recent studies on the effect of pH on catalysis by N(2)OR [K. Fujita, D.M. Dooley, Inorg. Chem. 46 (2007) 613-615].  相似文献   

14.
Aromatic amine dehydrogenase was purified and characterized from Alcaligenes xylosoxidans IFO13495 grown on β-phenylethylamine. The molecular mass of the enzyme was 95.5 kDa. The enzyme consisted of heterotetrameric subunits (α2β2) with two different molecular masses of 42.3 kDa and 15.2 kDa. The N-terminal amino acid sequences of the α-subunit (42.3-kDa subunit) and the β-subunit (15.2-kDa subunit) were DLPIEELXGGTRLPP and APAAGNKXPQMDDTA respectively. The enzyme had a quinone cofactor in the β-subunit and showed a typical absorption spectrum of tryptophan tryptophylquinone-containing quinoprotein showing maxima at 435 nm in the oxidized form and 330 nm in the reduced form. The pH optima of the enzyme activity for histamine, tyramine, and β-phenylethylamine were the same at 8.0. The enzyme retained full activity after incubation at 70 °C for 40 min. It readily oxidized various aromatic amines as well as some aliphatic amines. The Michaelis constants for phenazine methosulfate, β-phenylethylamine, tyramine, and histamine were 48.1, 1.8, 6.9, and 171 μM respectively. The enzyme activity was strongly inhibited by carbonyl reagents. The enzyme could be stored without appreciable loss of enzyme activity at 4 °C for one month at least in phosphate buffer (pH 7.0).  相似文献   

15.
Farver O  Eady RR  Sawers G  Prudêncio M  Pecht I 《FEBS letters》2004,561(1-3):173-176
Pulse radiolysis has been employed to investigate the intramolecular electron transfer (ET) between the type 1 (T1) and type 2 (T2) copper sites in the Met144Ala Alcaligenes xylosoxidans nitrite reductase (AxCuNiR) mutant. This mutation increases the reduction potential of the T1 copper center. Kinetic results suggest that the change in driving force has a dramatic influence on the reactivity: The T2Cu(II) is initially reduced followed by ET to T1Cu(II). The activation parameters have been determined and are compared with those of the wild-type (WT) AxCuNiR. The reorganization energy of the T2 site in the latter enzyme was calculated to be 1.6+/-0.2 eV which is two-fold larger than that of the T1 copper center in the WT protein.  相似文献   

16.
A preliminary endonuclease restriction map of a bacteriophage isolated from Desulfovibrio vulgaris has been established. BamHI cleaved whole phage DNA into four fragments while HindIII cut the same DNA into seven fragments. Mapping studies succeeded in linking the four BamHI fragments into two DNA segments; however, no linkage between the two segments was detected. These data imply that two phages were induced from cultures of D. vulgaris and that the two segments represented the DNA from these phages. Support for this hypothesis came from size approximation of restriction enzyme fragments, electron micrographs, and density gradients.  相似文献   

17.
The bacterial heme protein cytochrome ? from Alcaligenes xylosoxidans (AXCP) reacts with nitric oxide (NO) to form a 5-coordinate ferrous nitrosyl heme complex. The crystal structure of ferrous nitrosyl AXCP has previously revealed that NO is bound in an unprecedented manner on the proximal side of the heme. To understand how the protein structure of AXCP controls NO dynamics, we performed absorption and Raman time-resolved studies at the heme level as well as a molecular computational dynamics study at the entire protein structure level. We found that after NO dissociation from the heme iron, the structure of the proximal heme pocket of AXCP confines NO close to the iron so that an ultrafast (7 ps) and complete (99 +/- 1%) geminate rebinding occurs, whereas the proximal histidine does not rebind to the heme iron on the timescale of NO geminate rebinding. The distal side controls the initial NO binding, whereas the proximal heme pocket controls its release. These dynamic properties allow the trapping of NO within the protein core and represent an extreme behavior observed among heme proteins.  相似文献   

18.
We provide the first atomic resolution (<1.20 A) structure of a copper protein, nitrite reductase, and of a mutant of the catalytically important Asp92 residue (D92E). The atomic resolution where carbon-carbon bonds of the peptide become clearly resolved, remains a key goal of structural analysis. Despite much effort and technological progress, still very few structures are known at such resolution. For example, in the Protein Data Bank (PDB) there are some 200 structures of copper proteins but the highest resolution structure is that of amicyanin, a small (12 kDa) protein, which has been resolved to 1.30 A. Here, we present the structures of wild-type copper nitrite reductase (wtNiR) from Alcaligenes xylosoxidans (36.5 kDa monomer), the "half-apo" recombinant native protein and the D92E mutant at 1.04, 1.15 and 1.12A resolutions, respectively. These structures provide the basis from which to build a detailed mechanism of this important enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
Nitrous oxide reductase from the denitrifying bacterium Paracoccus denitrificans has been purified very nearly to homogeneity by an anaerobic procedure that results in a product with high specific activity. The enzyme is a dimer of about Mr 144,000 composed of two subunits of apparently equal Mr and contains 4 mol of Cu per mol of subunit. The isoelectric point is 4.3; specific activity at 25 degrees C, pH 7.1, is 122 mumol X min-1 X mg of protein-1; and Km is about 7 microM N2O under the same conditions. The N2O- and O2-oxidized forms of the enzyme had principal absorption bands at 550 and 820 nm; the dithionite-reduced form, at 650 nm. The extinction coefficient at 550 nm for the oxidized enzyme is about 5300 (M subunit)-1 X cm-1. Ferricyanide-oxidized enzyme and enzyme exposed to O2 for a couple of days at 4 degrees C exhibited additional bands at 480, 620, and 780 nm and had very low specific activities. Cu-EPR signals were observed with oxidized and reduced forms of the enzyme with g perpendicular values at 2.042 and 2.055, respectively. The O2-oxidized enzyme had g parallel and A parallel values of about 2.244 and 35 gauss, respectively, based on the observation of four hyperfine lines in the g parallel region. The enzyme may therefore contain at least one Cu atom approximating the "Type 1" class. Spin counts against Cu-EDTA standards suggest that 20-30% of the enzyme-bound Cu is EPR detectable in the O2-oxidized enzyme and 7-15% in the enzyme as prepared and in the reduced enzyme. Much of the Cu thus appears to be EPR silent. Nitrous oxide reductase was observed to undergo turnover-dependent inactivation, and nitrite and fluoride among other anions were found to accelerate this process. In a number of characteristics, the enzyme resembles nitrous oxide reductase recently purified from Pseudomonas perfectomarina and Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides, particularly the former. Some differences appear related to whether or not purification is carried out entirely under anaerobic conditions.  相似文献   

20.
The aerobic purification of Pseudomonas nautica 617 nitrous oxide reductase yielded two forms of the enzyme exhibiting different chromatographic behaviors. The protein contains six copper atoms per monomer, arranged in two centers named Cu(A) and Cu(Z). Cu(Z) could be neither oxidized nor further reduced under our experimental conditions, and exhibits a 4-line EPR spectrum (g(x)=2.015, A(x)=1.5 mT, g(y)=2.071, A(y)=2 mT, g(z)=2.138, A(z)=7 mT) and a strong absorption at approximately 640 nm. Cu(A) can be stabilized in a reduced EPR-silent state and in an oxidized state with a typical 7-line EPR spectrum (g(x)=g(y)= 2.021, A(x) = A(y)=0 mT, g(z) = 2.178, A(z)= 4 mT) and absorption bands at 480, 540, and approximately 800 nm. The difference between the two purified forms of nitrous oxide reductase is interpreted as a difference in the oxidation state of the Cu(A) center. In form A, Cu(A) is predominantly oxidized (S = (1)/(2), Cu(1.5+)-Cu(1.5+)), while in form B it is mostly in the one-electron reduced state (S = 0, Cu(1+)-Cu(1+)). In both forms, Cu(Z) remains reduced (S = 1/2). Complete crystallographic data at 2.4 A indicate that Cu(A) is a binuclear site (similar to the site found in cytochrome c oxidase) and Cu(Z) is a novel tetracopper cluster [Brown, K., et al. (2000) Nat. Struct. Biol. (in press)]. The complete amino acid sequence of the enzyme was determined and comparisons made with sequences of other nitrous oxide reductases, emphasizing the coordination of the centers. A 10.3 kDa peptide copurified with both forms of nitrous oxide reductase shows strong homology with proteins of the heat-shock GroES chaperonin family.  相似文献   

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