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1.
A protein containing a heme-binding PAS (PAS is from the protein names in which imperfect repeat sequences were first recognized: PER, ARNT, and SIM) domain from Escherichia coli has been implied a direct oxygen sensor (Ec DOS) enzyme. In the present study, we isolated cDNA for the Ec DOS full-length protein, expressed it in E. coli, and examined its structure-function relationships for the first time. Ec DOS was found to be tetrameric and was obtained as a 6-coordinate low spin ferric heme complex. Its alpha-helix content was calculated as 53% by CD spectroscopy. The redox potential of the heme was found to be +67 mV versus SHE. Mutation of His-77 of the isolated PAS domain abolished heme binding, whereas mutation of His-83 did not, suggesting that His-77 is one of the heme axial ligands. Ferrous, but not ferric, Ec DOS had phosphodiesterase (PDE) activity of nearly 0.15 min(-1) with cAMP, which was optimal at pH 8.5 in the presence of Mg(2+) and was strongly inhibited by CO, NO, and etazolate, a selective cAMP PDE inhibitor. Absorption spectral changes indicated tight CO and NO bindings to the ferrous heme. Therefore, the present study unequivocally indicates for the first time that Ec DOS exhibits PDE activity with cAMP and that this is regulated by the heme redox state.  相似文献   

2.
The cyclic dinucleotide c-di-GMP synthesized by the diadenylate cyclase domain was recently discovered as a messenger molecule for signaling DNA breaks in Bacillus subtilis. By searching bacterial genomes, we identified a family of DHH/DHHA1 domain proteins (COG3387) that co-occur with a subset of the diadenylate cyclase domain proteins. Here we report that the B. subtilis protein YybT, a member of the COG3387 family proteins, exhibits phosphodiesterase activity toward cyclic dinucleotides. The DHH/DHHA1 domain hydrolyzes c-di-AMP and c-di-GMP to generate the linear dinucleotides 5′-pApA and 5′-pGpG. The data suggest that c-di-AMP could be the physiological substrate for YybT given the physiologically relevant Michaelis-Menten constant (Km) and the presence of YybT family proteins in the bacteria lacking c-di-GMP signaling network. The bacterial regulator ppGpp was found to be a strong competitive inhibitor of the DHH/DHHA1 domain, suggesting that YybT is under tight control during stringent response. In addition, the atypical GGDEF domain of YybT exhibits unexpected ATPase activity, distinct from the common diguanylate cyclase activity for GGDEF domains. We further demonstrate the participation of YybT in DNA damage and acid resistance by characterizing the phenotypes of the ΔyybT mutant. The novel enzymatic activity and stress resistance together point toward a role for YybT in stress signaling and response.  相似文献   

3.
Eukaryotic nitric oxide (NO) signaling involves modulation of cyclic GMP (cGMP) levels through activation of the soluble isoform of guanylate cyclase (sGC). sGC is a heterodimeric hemoprotein that contains a Heme-Nitric oxide and OXygen binding (H-NOX) domain, a Per/ARNT/Sim (PAS) domain, a coiled-coil (CC) domain, and a catalytic domain. To evaluate the role of these domains in regulating the ligand binding properties of the heme cofactor of NO-sensitive sGC, we constructed chimeras by swapping the rat β1 H-NOX domain with the homologous region of H-NOX domain-containing proteins from Thermoanaerobacter tengcongensis, Vibrio cholerae, and Caenorhabditis elegans (TtTar4H, VCA0720, and Gcy-33, respectively). Characterization of ligand binding by electronic absorption and resonance Raman spectroscopy indicates that the other rat sGC domains influence the bacterial and worm H-NOX domains. Analysis of cGMP production in these proteins reveals that the chimeras containing bacterial H-NOX domains exhibit guanylate cyclase activity, but this activity is not influenced by gaseous ligand binding to the heme cofactor. The rat-worm chimera containing the atypical sGC Gcy-33 H-NOX domain was weakly activated by NO, CO, and O(2), suggesting that atypical guanylate cyclases and NO-sensitive guanylate cyclases have a common molecular mechanism for enzyme activation. To probe the influence of the other sGC domains on the mammalian sGC heme environment, we generated heme pocket mutants (Pro118Ala and Ile145Tyr) in the β1 H-NOX construct (residues 1-194), the β1 H-NOX-PAS-CC construct (residues 1-385), and the full-length α1β1 sGC heterodimer (β1 residues 1-619). Spectroscopic characterization of these proteins shows that interdomain communication modulates the coordination state of the heme-NO complex and the heme oxidation rate. Taken together, these findings have important implications for the allosteric mechanism of regulation within H-NOX domain-containing proteins.  相似文献   

4.
Soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) is a nitric oxide- (NO-) sensing hemoprotein that has been found in eukaryotes from Drosophila to humans. Prokaryotic proteins with significant homology to the heme domain of sGC have recently been identified through genomic analysis. Characterization of two of these proteins is reported here. The first is a 181 amino acid protein cloned from Vibrio cholerae (VCA0720) that is encoded in a histidine kinase-containing operon. The ferrous unligated form of VCA0720 is 5-coordinate, high-spin. The CO complex is low-spin, 6-coordinate, and the NO complex is high-spin and 5-coordinate. These ligand-binding properties are very similar to those of sGC. The second protein is the N-terminal 188 amino acids of Tar4 (TtTar4H), a predicted methyl-accepting chemotaxis protein (MCP) from the strict anaerobe Thermoanaerobacter tengcongensis. TtTar4H forms a low-spin, 6-coordinate ferrous-oxy complex, the first of this sGC-related family that binds O2. TtTar4H has ligand-binding properties similar to those of the heme-containing O2 sensors such as AxPDEA1. sGC does not bind O2 despite having a porphyrin with a histidyl ligand like the globins. The results reported here, with sequence-related proteins from prokaryotes but in the same family as the sGC heme domain, show that these proteins have evolved to discriminate between ligands such as NO and O2; hence, we term this family H-NOX domains (heme-nitric oxide/oxygen).  相似文献   

5.
Periplasmic sensor domains from two methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins from Geobacter sulfurreducens (encoded by genes GSU0935 and GSU0582) were expressed in Escherichia coli. The sensor domains were isolated, purified, characterized in solution, and their crystal structures were determined. In the crystal, both sensor domains form swapped dimers and show a PAS-type fold. The swapped segment consists of two helices of about 45 residues at the N terminus with the hemes located between the two monomers. In the case of the GSU0582 sensor, the dimer contains a crystallographic 2-fold symmetry and the heme is coordinated by an axial His and a water molecule. In the case of the GSU0935 sensor, the crystals contain a non-crystallographic dimer, and surprisingly, the coordination of the heme in each monomer is different; monomer A heme has His-Met ligation and monomer B heme has His-water ligation as found in the GSU0582 sensor. The structures of these sensor domains are the first structures of PAS domains containing covalently bound heme. Optical absorption, electron paramagnetic resonance and NMR spectroscopy have revealed that the heme groups of both sensor domains are high-spin and low-spin in the oxidized and reduced forms, respectively, and that the spin-state interconversion involves a heme axial ligand replacement. Both sensor domains bind NO in their ferric and ferrous forms but bind CO only in the reduced form. The binding of both NO and CO occurs via an axial ligand exchange process, and is fully reversible. The reduction potentials of the sensor domains differ by 95 mV (− 156 mV and − 251 mV for sensors GSU0582 and GSU0935, respectively). The swapped dimerization of these sensor domains and redox-linked ligand switch might be related to the mechanism of signal transduction by these chemotaxis proteins.  相似文献   

6.
Soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) is a heterodimeric, nitric oxide (NO)-sensing hemoprotein composed of two subunits, alpha1 and beta1. NO binds to the heme cofactor in the beta1 subunit, forming a five-coordinate NO complex that activates the enzyme several hundred-fold. In this paper, the heme domain has been localized to the N-terminal 194 residues of the beta1 subunit. This fragment represents the smallest construct of the beta1 subunit that retains the ligand-binding characteristics of the native enzyme, namely, tight affinity for NO and no observable binding of O(2). A functional heme domain from the rat beta2 subunit has been localized to the first 217 amino acids beta2(1-217). These proteins are approximately 40% identical to the rat beta1 heme domain and form five-coordinate, low-spin NO complexes and six-coordinate, low-spin CO complexes. Similar to sGC, these constructs have a weak Fe-His stretch [208 and 207 cm(-)(1) for beta1(1-194) and beta2(1-217), respectively]. beta2(1-217) forms a CO complex that is very similar to sGC and has a high nu(CO) stretching frequency at 1994 cm(-)(1). The autoxidation rate of beta1(1-194) was 0.073/min, while the beta2(1-217) was substantially more stable in the ferrous form with an autoxidation rate of 0.003/min at 37 degrees C. This paper has identified and characterized the minimum functional ligand-binding heme domain derived from sGC, providing key details toward a comprehensive characterization.  相似文献   

7.
8.
The heme environments of Met(95) and His(77) mutants of the isolated heme-bound PAS domain (Escherichia coli DOS PAS) of a direct oxygen sensing protein from E. coli (E. coli DOS) were investigated with resonance Raman (RR) spectroscopy and compared with the wild type (WT) enzyme. The RR spectra of both the reduced and oxidized WT enzyme were characteristic of six-coordinate low spin heme complexes from pH 4 to 10. The time-resolved RR spectra of the photodissociated CO-WT complex had an iron-His stretching band (nu(Fe-His)) at 214 cm(-1), and the nu(Fe-CO) versus nu(CO) plot of CO-WT E. coli DOS PAS fell on the line of His-coordinated heme proteins. The photodissociated CO-H77A mutant complex did not yield the nu(Fe-His) band but gave a nu(Fe-Im) band in the presence of imidazole. The RR spectrum of the oxidized M95A mutant was that of a six-coordinate low spin complex (i.e. the same as that of the WT enzyme), whereas the reduced mutant appeared to contain a five-coordinate heme complex. Taken together, we suggest that the heme of the reduced WT enzyme is coordinated by His(77) and Met(95), and that Met(95) is displaced by CO and O(2). Presumably, the protein conformational change that occurs upon exchange of an unknown ligand for Met(95) following heme reduction may lead to activation of the phosphodiesterase domain of E. coli DOS.  相似文献   

9.
The EcDos protein belongs to a group of heme-based sensors that detect their ligands with a heme-binding PAS domain. Among these various heme-PAS proteins, EcDos is unique in having its heme iron coordinated at both axial positions to residues of the protein. To achieve its high affinities for ligands, one of the axial heme-iron residues in EcDos must be readily displaceable. Here we present evidence from mutagenesis, ligand-binding measurements, and magnetic circular dichroism, resonance Raman, and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopies about the nature of the displaceable residue in the heme-PAS domain of EcDos, i.e., EcDosH. The magnetic circular dichroism spectra in the near-infrared region establish histidine-methionine coordination in met-EcDos. To determine whether in deoxy-EcDos coordination of the sixth axial position is also to methionine, methionine 95 was substituted with isoleucine. This substitution caused the ferrous heme iron to change from an exclusively hexacoordinate low-spin form (EcDosH) to an exclusively pentacoordinate high-spin form (M95I EcDosH). This was accompanied by a modest acceleration of the dissociation rates of ligands but a dramatic increase (60-1300-fold) in the association rate constants for binding of O(2), CO, and NO. As a result, the affinity for O(2) was enhanced 10-fold in M95I EcDosH, but the partition constant M = [K(d)(O(2))/K(d)(CO)] between CO and O(2) was raised to about 30 from the extraordinarily low EcDosH value of 1. Thus a major consequence of the increased O(2) affinity of this sensor was the loss of its unusually strong ligand discrimination.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Andrew CR  Green EL  Lawson DM  Eady RR 《Biochemistry》2001,40(13):4115-4122
Resonance Raman (RR) studies have been conducted on Alcaligenes xylosoxidans cytochrome c', a mono-His ligated hemoprotein which reversibly binds NO and CO but not O(2). Recent crystallographic characterization of this protein has revealed the first example of a hemoprotein which can utilize both sides of its heme (distal and proximal) for binding exogenous ligands to its Fe center. The present RR investigation of the Fe coordination and heme pocket environments of ferrous, carbonyl, and nitrosyl forms of cytochrome c' in solution fully supports the structures determined by X-ray crystallography and offers insights into mechanisms of ligand discrimination in heme-based sensors. Ferrous cytochrome c' reacts with CO to form a six-coordinate heme-CO complex, whereas reaction with NO results in cleavage of the proximal linkage to give a five-coordinate heme-NO adduct, despite the relatively high stretching frequency (231 cm(-1)) of the ferrous Fe-N(His) bond. RR spectra of the six-coordinate CO adduct indicate that CO binds to the Fe in a nonpolar environment in line with its location in the hydrophobic distal heme pocket. On the other hand, RR data for the five-coordinate NO adduct suggest a positively polarized environment for the NO ligand, consistent with its binding close to Arg 124 on the opposite (proximal) side of the heme. Parallels between certain physicochemical properties of cytochrome c' and those of heme-based sensor proteins raise the possibility that the latter may also utilize both sides of their hemes to discriminate between NO and CO binding.  相似文献   

12.
The heme-regulated phosphodiesterase, Ec DOS, is a redox sensor that uses the heme in its PAS domain to regulate catalysis. The rate of O(2) association (k(on)) with full-length Ec DOS is extremely slow at 0.0019 microM(-1) s(-1), compared with >9.5 microM(-1) s(-1) for 6-coordinated globin-type hemoproteins, as determined by the stopped-flow method. This rate is dramatically increased (up to 16-fold) in the isolated heme-bound PAS domain. Dissociation constants (K(d)) calculated from the kinetic parameters are 340 and 20 microm for the full-length wild-type enzyme and its isolated PAS domain, respectively. Mutations at Met-95 in the isolated PAS domain, which may be a heme axial ligand in the Fe(II) complex, lead to a further increase in the k(on) value by more than 30-fold, and consequently, a decrease in the K(d) value to less than 1 microM. The k(on) value for CO binding to the full-length wild-type enzyme is also very low (0.00081 microM(-1) s(-1)). The kinetics of CO binding to the isolated PAS domain and its mutants are similar to those observed for O(2). However, the K(d) values for CO are considerably lower than those for O(2).  相似文献   

13.
A direct sensor of O(2), the Dos protein, has been found in Escherichia coli. Previously, the only biological sensors known to respond to O(2) by direct and reversible binding were the FixL proteins of Rhizobia. A heme-binding region in Dos is 60% homologous to the O(2)-sensing PAS domain of the FixL protein, but the remainder of Dos does not resemble FixL. Specifically, the C-terminal domain of Dos, presumed to be a regulatory partner that couples to its heme-binding domain, is not a histidine kinase but more closely resembles a phosphodiesterase. The absorption spectra of Dos indicate that both axial positions of the heme iron are coordinated to side chains of the protein. Nevertheless, O(2) and CO bind to Dos with K(d) values of 13 and 10 microM, respectively, indicating a strong discrimination against CO binding. Association rate constants for binding of O(2) (3 mM(-)(1) s(-)(1)), CO (1 mM(-)(1) s(-)(1)) and even NO (2 mM(-)(1) s(-)(1)) are extraordinarily low and very similar. Displacement of an endogenous ligand, probably Met 95, from the heme iron in Dos triggers a conformational change that alters the activity of the enzymatic domain. This sensing mechanism differs from that of FixL but resembles that of the CO sensor CooA of Rhodospirillum rubrum. Overall the results provide evidence for a heme-binding subgroup of PAS-domain proteins whose working range, signaling mechanisms, and regulatory partners can vary considerably.  相似文献   

14.
Ec DOS is a heme-based gas sensor enzyme that catalyzes conversion from cyclic-di-GMP to linear-di-GMP in response to gas molecules, such as oxygen, CO and NO. Ec DOS contains an N-terminal heme-binding PAS domain and C-terminal phosphodiesterase domain. Based on crystal structures of the isolated heme-binding domain, it is suggested that the FG loop is involved in intra-molecular signal transduction to the catalytic domain. We generated nine full-length proteins mutated at ionic and non-ionic polar residues between positions 83 and 96 corresponding to the F-helix and FG loop, and examined the heme binding properties, autoxidation rates, and catalytic activities of mutant proteins. N84A and R85A mutant proteins displayed lower heme binding affinities, consistent with the finding that Asn84 interacts with propionate of protoporphyrin IX, and Arg85 with Asp40 on the heme proximal side. Autoxidation rates (0.058-0.54 min−1) of R91A, S96A and K89A/R91A/E93A mutant proteins were significantly higher than that (0.0053 min−1) of wild-type protein, suggesting that these residues in the FG loop form heme distal architecture conferring stability to the Fe(II)-O2 complex. Catalytic activities of N84A and R85A mutant proteins with low heme affinity were significantly higher than those of wild-type protein in the absence of gas molecules. Accordingly, we propose that loss of heme binding enhances basal catalysis without the gas molecule, consistent with previous reports on heme inhibition of Ec DOS catalysis.  相似文献   

15.
Resonance Raman spectra are reported for both the heme domain and holoenzyme of cytochrome P450BM3 in the resting state and for the ferric NO, ferrous CO, and ferrous NO adducts in the absence and presence of the substrate, palmitate. Comparison of the spectrum of the palmitate-bound form of the heme domain with that of the holoenzyme indicates that the presence of the flavin reductase domain alters the structure of the heme domain in such a way that water accessibility to the distal pocket is greater for the holoenzyme, a result that is consistent with analogous studies of cytochrome P450cam. The data for the exogenous ligand adducts are compared to those previously reported for corresponding derivatives of cytochrome P450cam and document significant and important differences for the two proteins. Specifically, while the binding of substrate induces relatively dramatic changes in the nu(Fe-XY) modes of the ferrous CO, ferric NO, and ferrous NO derivatives of cytochrome P450cam, no significant changes are observed for the corresponding derivatives of cytochrome P450BM3 upon binding of palmitate. In fact, the spectral data for substrate-free cytochrome P450BM3 provide evidence for distortion of the Fe-XY fragment, even in the absence of substrate. This apparent distortion, which is nonexistent in the case of substrate-free cytochrome P450cam, is most reasonably attributed to interaction of the Fe-XY fragment with the F87 phenylalanine side chain. This residue is known to lie very close to the heme iron in the substrate-free derivative of cytochrome P450BM3 and has been suggested to prevent hydroxylation of the terminal, omega, position of long-chain fatty acids.  相似文献   

16.
Mammalian NO synthases catalyze the monooxygenation of L-arginine (L-Arg) to N-hydroxyarginine (NOHA) and the subsequent monooxygenation of this to NO and citrulline. Both steps proceed via formation of an oxyferrous heme complex and may ultimately lead to a ferrous NO complex, from which NO must be released. Electrochemical reduction of NO-bound neuronal nitricoxide synthase (nNOS) oxygenase domain was used to form the ferrous heme NO complex, which was found to be stable only in the presence of low NO concentrations, due to catalytic degradation of NO at the nNOS heme site. The reduction potential for the heme-NO complex was approximately -140 mV, which shifted to 0 mV in the presence of either L-Arg or NOHA. This indicates that the complex is stabilized by 14 kJ mol(-1) in the presence of substrate, consistent with a strong H-bonding interaction between NO and the guanidino group. Neither substrate influenced the reduction potential of the ferrous heme CO complex, however. Both L-Arg and NOHA appear to interact with bound NO in a similar way, indicating that both bind as guanidinium ions. The dissociation constant for NO bound to ferrous heme in the presence of l-Arg was determined electrochemically to be 0.17 nM, and the rate of dissociation was estimated to be 10(-4) s(-1), which is much slower than the rate of catalysis. Stopped-flow kinetic analysis of oxyferrous formation and decay showed that both l-Arg and NOHA also stabilize the ferrous heme dioxy complex, resulting in a 100-fold decrease in its rate of decay. Electron transfer from the active-site cofactor tetrahydrobiopterin (H4B) has been proposed to trigger the monoxygenation process. Consistent with this, substitution by the analogue/inhibitor 4-amino-H4B stabilized the oxyferrous complex by a further two orders of magnitude. H4B is required, therefore, to break down both the oxyferrousand ferrous nitrosyl complexes of nNOS during catalysis. The energetics of these processes necessitates an electron donor/acceptor operating within a specific reduction potential range, defining the role of H4B.  相似文献   

17.
The heme-PAS is a specialized domain with which a broad class of signal-transducing heme proteins detect physiological heme ligands. Such domains exhibit a wide range of ligand binding parameters, yet they are all expected to feature an alpha-beta heme binding fold and a predominantly hydrophobic heme distal pocket without a distal histidine. We have compared, for the first time, the resonance Raman spectra of several heme-PASs: the heme-binding domains of Bradyrhizobium japonicum FixL, Escherichia coli Dos, Acetobacter xylinum PDEA1, and Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum Dos. In all cases, the nu(Fe)-(CO) and nu(C-O) values of the carbonmonoxy forms were consistent with coordination of the heme iron to histidine on the proximal side and binding of the CO without electrostatic interaction with the heme distal pocket. EcDos was unusual in having predominantly hexacoordinate heme iron in the deoxy and met forms. Despite an evident lack of CO interaction with the EcDos heme pocket, relatively low Fe-O(2) (562 cm(-1)) and N-O (1576 cm(-1)) stretching frequencies indicated that strong polar interactions with that heme distal pocket are possible for highly bent ligands such as O(2) or NO. None of the newly studied NO adducts exhibited evidence of the Fe-His rupture and pentacoordination previously noted for Sinorhizobium meliloti FixL. A low Fe-His stretching frequency, formerly interpreted as a strained Fe-His bond, and the slow association of O(2) with S. meliloti FixL failed to correlate with the newly studied proteins having low association rate or low equilibrium association constants for binding of O(2). We conclude that although heme-PASs share some features, they represent distinct signal transduction mechanisms.  相似文献   

18.
DevS is the sensor of the DevS-DevR two-component regulatory system of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. This system is thought to be responsible for initiating entrance of this bacterium into the nonreplicating persistent state in response to NO and anaerobiosis. DevS is modular in nature and consists of two N-terminal GAF domains and C-terminal histidine kinase and ATPase domains. The first GAF domain (GAF A) binds heme, and this cofactor is thought to be responsible for sensing environmental stimuli, but the function of the second GAF domain (GAF B) is unknown. Here we report the RR characterization of full-length DevS (FL DevS) as well as truncated proteins consisting of the single GAF A domain (GAF A DevS) and both GAF domains (GAF A/B) in both oxidation states and bound to the exogenous ligands CO, NO, and O2. The results indicate that the GAF B domain increases the specificity with which the distal heme pocket of the GAF A domain interacts with CO and NO as opposed to O2. Specifically, while two comparable populations of CO and NO adducts are observed in GAF A DevS, only one of these two conformers is present in significant concentration in the GAF A/B and FL DevS proteins. In contrast, hydrogen bond interactions at the bound oxygen in the oxy complexes are conserved in all DevS constructs. The comparison of the data obtained with the O2 complexes with those of the CO and NO complexes suggests a model for ligand discrimination which relies on a specific hydrogen-bonding network with bound O2. It also suggests that interactions between the two GAF domains are responsible for transduction of structural changes at the heme domain that accompany ligand binding/dissociation to modulate activity at the kinase domain.  相似文献   

19.
The heme-regulated phosphodiesterase from Escherichia coli (Ec DOS), which is a heme redox-dependent enzyme, is active with a ferrous heme but inactive with a ferric heme. Global structural changes including axial ligand switching and a change in the rigidity of the FG loop accompanying the heme redox change may be related to the dependence of Ec DOS activity on the redox state. Axial ligands such as CO, NO, and O2 act as inhibitors of Ec DOS because they interact with the ferrous heme complex. The X-ray crystal structure of the isolated heme-bound domain (Ec DosH) shows that Leu99, Phe113 and Leu115 indirectly and directly form a hydrophobic triad on the heme plane and that they should be located at or near the ligand access channel of the heme iron. We generated L99T, L99F, L115T, and L115F mutants of Ec DosH and examined their physicochemical characteristics, including auto-oxidation rates, O2 and CO binding kinetics, and redox potentials. The Fe(III) complex of the L115F mutant was unstable and had a Soret absorption spectrum located 5 nm lower than those of the wild-type and other mutants. Auto-oxidation rates of the mutants (0.049-0.33 min(-1)) were much higher than that of the wild-type (0.0063 min(-1)). Furthermore, the redox potentials of the former three mutants (23.1-34.6 mV versus SHE) were also significantly lower than that of the wild-type (63.9 mV versus SHE). Interaction between O2 and the L99F mutant was different from that in the wild-type, whereas CO binding rates of the mutants were similar to those of the wild-type. Thus, it appears that Leu99 and Leu115 are critical for determining the characteristics of heme iron. Finally, we discuss the roles of these amino-acid residues in the heme electronic states.  相似文献   

20.
Heme-regulated phosphodiesterase from Escherichia coli (Ec DOS) is a gas-sensor enzyme that hydrolyzes cyclic dinucleotide-GMP, and it is activated by O(2) or CO binding to the Fe(II) heme. In contrast to other well known heme-regulated gas-sensor enzymes or proteins, Ec DOS is not specific for a single gas ligand. Because Arg(97) in the heme distal side in Ec DOS interacts with the O(2) molecule and Met(95) serves as the axial ligand on the distal side of the Fe(II) heme-bound PAS domain of Ec DOS, we explored the effect of mutating these residues on the activity and gas specificity of Ec DOS. We found that R97A, R97I, and R97E mutations do not significantly affect regulation of the phosphodiesterase activities of the Fe(II)-CO and Fe(II)-NO complexes. The phosphodiesterase activities of the Fe(II)-O(2) complexes of the mutants could not be detected due to rapid autoxidation and/or low affinity for O(2). In contrast, the activities even of the gas-free M95A and M95L mutants were similar to that of the gas-activated wild-type enzyme. Interestingly, the activity of the M95H mutant was partially activated by O(2), CO, and NO. Spectroscopic analysis indicated that the Fe(II) heme is in the 5-coordinated high-spin state in the M95A and M95L mutants but that in the M95H mutant, like wild-type Ec DOS, it is in the 6-coordinated low-spin state. These results suggest that Met(95) coordination to the Fe(II) heme is critical for locking the system and that global structural changes around Met(95) caused by the binding of the external ligands or mutations at Met(95) releases the catalytic lock and activates catalysis.  相似文献   

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