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1.
The intrinsic isotope effect on the reduction of the FAD-containing dehydrogenase electron transferase, adrenodoxin reductase, by (4S)-[2H]NADPH has been determined to be 7.1 to 7.7. The replacement of FAD by a series of FAD analogs at the active site of adrenodoxin reductase with oxidation-reduction potentials which vary over a range of 212 mV has made it possible to extrapolate to this limiting value from the variation in the observed isotope effect on Vmax with flavin midpoint potential. Stop-flow studies which allow the direct determination of the intrinsic isotope effect on the reductive half-reaction corroborate this result. During the steady state reduction of ferricyanide by the native enzyme under conditions of Vmax, this isotope effect is almost fully expressed (VH/VD = 6.7 to 6.8). In contrast, we observe a dramatic attenuation of the intrinsic isotope effect (due to hydride transfer to flavin) when the oxidative half-reaction is mediated by the natural acceptor protein, the 2Fe/2S ferredoxin, adrenodoxin. In a coupled three-protein system, the adrenodoxin-mediated reductions of both the artificial electron acceptor, cytochrome c, and the physiological electron acceptor, cytochrome P-450scc, by adrenodoxin reductase occur at similar rates and with similar kinetic isotope effects (1.9 to 2.0) when (4S)-[2H]NADPH is the reductant. We infer similar mechanisms for the reduction of both cytochromes. These results are in agreement with previous studies (Lambeth, J.D., and Kamin, H. (1979) J. Biol. Chem. 254, 2766-2774) which show that the reductive half-reaction is not solely rate-determining in adrenodoxin-mediated processes. The observation of a linear free energy relationship between Vmax and the flavin midpoint potential during steady state reduction of ferricyanide confirms that the reductive half-reaction is rate-determining in this assay. The relationship between Vmax and flavin midpoint potential in reactions which require adrenodoxin suggests that the midpoint potential of native adrenodoxin reductase has been optimized. Thus, the apoenzyme of adrenodoxin reductase tailors the midpoint potential of bound FAD in order to balance the activation energies of the reductive and oxidative half-reactions.  相似文献   

2.
Human novel reductase 1 (NR1) is an NADPH dependent diflavin oxidoreductase related to cytochrome P450 reductase (CPR). The FAD/NADPH- and FMN-binding domains of NR1 have been expressed and purified and their redox properties studied by stopped-flow and steady-state kinetic methods, and by potentiometry. The midpoint reduction potentials of the oxidized/semiquinone (-315 +/- 5 mV) and semiquinone/dihydroquinone (-365 +/- 15 mV) couples of the FAD/NADPH domain are similar to those for the FAD/NADPH domain of human CPR, but the rate of hydride transfer from NADPH to the FAD/NADPH domain of NR1 is approximately 200-fold slower. Hydride transfer is rate-limiting in steady-state reactions of the FAD/NADPH domain with artificial redox acceptors. Stopped-flow studies indicate that hydride transfer from the FAD/NADPH domain of NR1 to NADP+ is faster than hydride transfer in the physiological direction (NADPH to FAD), consistent with the measured reduction potentials of the FAD couples [midpoint potential for FAD redox couples is -340 mV, cf-320 mV for NAD(P)H]. The midpoint reduction potentials for the flavin couples in the FMN domain are -146 +/- 5 mV (oxidized/semiquinone) and -305 +/- 5 mV (semiquinone/dihydroquinone). The FMN oxidized/semiquinone couple indicates stabilization of the FMN semiquinone, consistent with (a) a need to transfer electrons from the FAD/NADPH domain to the FMN domain, and (b) the thermodynamic properties of the FMN domain in CPR and nitric oxide synthase. Despite overall structural resemblance of NR1 and CPR, our studies reveal thermodynamic similarities but major kinetic differences in the electron transfer reactions catalysed by the flavin-binding domains.  相似文献   

3.
Interactions of oxaloacetate with Escherichia coli fumarate reductase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Fumarate reductase of Escherichia coli is converted to a deactivated state when tightly bound by oxaloacetate (OAA). Incubation of the inhibited enzyme with anions or reduction of the enzyme by substrate restores both the activity of the enzyme and its sensitivity to thiol reagents. In these respects the enzyme behaves like cardiac succinate dehydrogenase. Close to an order of magnitude difference was found to exist between the affinities of OAA for the oxidized (KD approximately 0.12 microM) and reduced (KD approximately 0.9 microM) forms of fumarate reductase. Redox titrations of deactivated fumarate reductase preparations have confirmed that reductive activation, as in cardiac succinate dehydrogenase (B. A. C. Ackrell, E. B. Kearney, and D. Edmondson (1975) J. Biol. Chem. 250, 7114-7119), is the result of reduction of the covalently bound FAD moiety and not the non-heme iron clusters of the enzyme. However, the processes differed for the two enzymes; activation of fumarate reductase involved 2e- and 1H+, consistent with reduction of the flavin to the anionic hydroquinone form, whereas the process requires 2e- and 2H+ in cardiac succinate dehydrogenase. The reason for the difference is not known. The redox potential of the FAD/FADH2 couple in FRD (Em approximately -55 mV) was also slightly more positive than that in cardiac succinate dehydrogenase (-90 mV).  相似文献   

4.
Ravasio S  Curti B  Vanoni MA 《Biochemistry》2001,40(18):5533-5541
Glutamate synthase is a complex iron-sulfur flavoprotein that catalyzes the reductive transfer of the L-glutamine amide group to C(2) of 2-oxoglutarate, forming two molecules of L-glutamate. The bacterial enzyme is an alphabeta protomer, which contains one FAD (on the beta subunit, approximately 50 kDa), one FMN (on the alpha subunit, approximately 150 kDa), and three different Fe-S clusters (one 3Fe-4S center on the alpha subunit and two 4Fe-4S clusters at an unknown location). To address the problem of the intramolecular electron pathway, we have measured the midpoint potential values of the flavin cofactors and of the 3Fe-4S cluster of glutamate synthase in the isolated alpha and beta subunits and in the alphabeta holoenzyme. No detectable amounts of flavin semiquinones were observed during reductive titrations of the enzyme, indicating that the midpoint potential value of each flavin(ox)/flavin(sq) couple is, in all cases, significantly more negative than that of the corresponding flavin(sq)/flavin(hq) couple. Association of the two subunits to form the alphabeta protomer does not alter significantly the midpoint potential value of the FMN cofactor and of the 3Fe-4S cluster (approximately -240 and -270 mV, respectively), but it makes that of FAD some 40 mV less negative (approximately -340 mV for the beta subunit and -300 mV for FAD bound to the holoenzyme). Binding of the nonreducible NADP(+) analogue, 3-aminopyridine adenine dinucleotide phosphate, made the measured midpoint potential value of the FAD cofactor approximately 30-40 mV less negative in the isolated beta subunit, but had no effect on the redox properties of the alphabeta holoenzyme. This result correlates with the formation of a stable charge-transfer complex between the reduced flavin and the oxidized pyridine nucleotide in the isolated beta subunit, but not in the alphabeta holoenzyme. Binding of L-methionine sulfone, a glutamine analogue, had no significant effect on the redox properties of the enzyme cofactors. On the contrary, 2-oxoglutarate made the measured midpoint potential value of the 3Fe-4S cluster approximately 20 mV more negative in the isolated alpha subunit, but up to 100 mV less negative in the alphabeta holoenzyme as compared to the values of the corresponding free enzyme forms. These findings are consistent with electron transfer from the entry site (FAD) to the exit site (FMN) through the 3Fe-4S center of the enzyme and the involvement of at least one of the two low-potential 4Fe-4S centers, which are present in the glutamate synthase holoenzyme, but not in the isolated subunits. Furthermore, the data demonstrate a specific role of 2-oxoglutarate in promoting electron transfer from FAD to the 3Fe-4S cluster of the glutamate synthase holoenzyme. The modulatory role of 2-oxoglutarate is indeed consistent with the recently determined three-dimensional structure of the glutamate synthase alpha subunit, in which several polypeptide stretches are suitably positioned to mediate communication between substrate binding sites and the enzyme redox centers (FMN and the 3Fe-4S cluster) to tightly control and coordinate the individual reaction steps [Binda, C., et al. (2000) Structure 8, 1299-1308].  相似文献   

5.
Thioredoxin is a small oxidation-reduction (redox) mediator protein. Its reduction by NADPH is catalyzed by the flavoenzyme thioredoxin reductase. Site-directed mutagenesis has provided forms of the reductase in which Cys135 and Cys138 have each been changed to a serine residue (Prongay, A. J., Engelke, D. R., and Williams, C. H., Jr. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 2656-2664). Cys135 and Cys138 form the redox-active disulfide in the oxidized enzyme. The redox properties of the two altered forms of Escherichia coli thioredoxin reductase have been determined from pH 6.0 to 9.0. Photoreduction of TRR(Ser135,Cys138) produces the blue, neutral semiquinone species, which disproportionates (Kf = 0.73) to an apparent maximum of 29% of the total enzyme as the semiquinone. In contrast, the semiquinone formed on TRR(Cys135,Ser138) during a photoreductive titration does not disproportionate and 70% of the enzyme is stabilized as the semiquinione. Reductive titrations have demonstrated that 1 mol of sodium dithionite (2 electrons)/mol of FAD is required to fully reduce TRR(Ser135,Cys138) whereas 2 mol of dithionite/mol of FAD are required to fully reduce TRR(Cys135,Ser138). The oxidation-reduction midpoint potentials for the 1-electron and 2-electron reductions of TRR(Ser135,Cys138) have been determined by NADH/NAD+ titrations in the presence of a mediator, benzyl viologen. The midpoint potential for the 2-electron reduction of TRR(Ser135,Cys138) is -280 mV, at pH 7.0 and 20 degrees C. Thus, the redox potential is similar to that of the FAD/FADH2 couple in the dithiol form of wild type enzyme, -270 mV (corrected to 20 degrees C) (O'Donnell, M. E., and Williams, C. H., Jr. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 13795-13805). The delta Em/delta pH is -57.1 mV, which corresponds to a proton stoichiometry of 2 H+/2 e-.A maximum of 19% of the enzyme forms a stable semiquinone species during the titration, and the potentials for the oxidized enzyme/semiquinone couple, E2, and the semiquinone/reduced enzyme couple, E1, are -306 and -256 mV, respectively, at pH 7.0 and 20 degrees C. These studies provide evidence that the residue at position 138 exerts a greater effect on the FAD than does the residue at position 135.  相似文献   

6.
Hydrogen peroxide reacts with 2-thio-FAD-reconstituted p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase to yield a long wavelength intermediate (lambda max = 360, 620 nm) which can be isolated in stable form on removal of excess H2O2. The blue flavin derivative slowly decays in a second peroxide-dependent reaction to yield a new flavin product lacking long wavelength absorbance (lambda max = 408, 472 nm). This final peroxide-modified enzyme binds p-hydroxybenzoate with a 10-fold lower affinity than does the native enzyme; furthermore, substrate binding leads to the inhibition of enzyme reduction by NADPH. Trichloroacetic acid treatment of the final peroxide-modified enzyme results in the quantitative conversion of the bound flavin to free FAD. However, gel filtration of the modified enzyme in guanidine hydrochloride at neutral pH leads to the co-elution of protein and modified flavin. The nondenatured peroxide product reacts rapidly with hydroxylamine to yield 2-NHOH-substituted FAD. These observations indicate that the secondary reaction of peroxide with the blue intermediate from 2-thio-FAD p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase results in the formation of an acid-labile covalent flavin-protein linkage within the enzyme active site, involving the flavin C-2 position.  相似文献   

7.
The flavin prosthetic group (FAD) of p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase from Pseudomonas fluorescens was replaced by a stereochemical analog, which is spontaneously formed from natural FAD in alcohol oxidases from methylotrophic yeasts. Reconstitution of p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase from apoprotein and modified FAD is a rapid process complete within seconds. Crystals of the enzyme-substrate complex of modified FAD-containing p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase diffract to 2.1 A resolution. The crystal structure provides direct evidence for the presence of an arabityl sugar chain in the modified form of FAD. The isoalloxazine ring of the arabinoflavin adenine dinucleotide (a-FAD) is located in a cleft outside the active site as recently observed in several other p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase complexes. Like the native enzyme, a-FAD-containing p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase preferentially binds the phenolate form of the substrate (pKo = 7.2). The substrate acts as an effector highly stimulating the rate of enzyme reduction by NADPH (kred > 500 s-1). The oxidative part of the catalytic cycle of a-FAD-containing p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase differs from native enzyme. Partial uncoupling of hydroxylation results in the formation of about 0.3 mol of 3,4-dihydroxybenzoate and 0.7 mol of hydrogen peroxide per mol NADPH oxidized. It is proposed that flavin motion in p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase is important for efficient reduction and that the flavin "out" conformation is associated with the oxidase activity.  相似文献   

8.
p-Hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase is a flavoprotein monooxygenase that catalyzes a reaction in two parts: reduction of the enzyme cofactor FAD by NADPH in response to binding p-hydroxybenzoate to the enzyme and reaction of reduced FAD with oxygen to form a hydroperoxide, which then oxygenates p-hydroxybenzoate. Three different reactions, each with specific requirements, are achieved by moving the position of the isoalloxazine ring in the protein structure. In this paper, we examine the operation of protein conformational changes and the significance of charge-transfer absorption bands associated with the reduction of FAD by NADPH when the substrate analogue, 5-hydroxypicolinate, is bound to the enzyme. It was discovered that the enzyme with picolinate bound was reduced at a rate similar to that with p-hydroxybenzoate bound at high pH. However, there was a large effect of pH upon the rate of reduction in the presence of picolinate with a pK(a) of 7.4, identical to the pK(a) of picolinate bound to the enzyme. The intensity of charge-transfer bands observed between FAD and NADPH during the reduction process correlated with the rate of flavin reduction. We conclude that high rates of reduction of the enzyme require (a) the isoalloxazine of the flavin be held by the protein in a solvent-exposed position and (b) the movement of a loop of protein so that the pyridine ring of NADPH can move into position to form a complex with the isoalloxazine that is competent for hydride transfer and that is indicated by a strong charge-transfer interaction.  相似文献   

9.
Potentiometric titrations of pig liver electron-transfer flavoprotein (ETF) were performed at pH 7.5 and 4 degrees C, both in the reductive and oxidative directions. Reduction of ETF to the hydroquinone form required a total of two reducing equivalents/mol of ETF with the formation of sub-stoichiometric amounts of anionic semiquinone as an intermediate. The oxidation-reduction potentials for the two one-electron couples, oxidized ETF/ETF semiquinone and ETF semiquinone/fully reduced ETF, are +4 mV and -50 mV respectively. The overall midpoint potential for the two-electron couple (oxidized ETF/fully reduced ETF) is -23 mV.  相似文献   

10.
The crystal structure of the reduced form of the enzyme p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase from Pseudomonas fluorescens, complexed with its substrate p-hydroxybenzoate, has been obtained by protein X-ray crystallography. Crystals of the reduced form were prepared by soaking crystals of the oxidized enzyme-substrate complex in deaerated mother liquor containing 300-400 mM NADPH. A rapid bleaching of the crystals indicated the reduction of the enzyme-bound FAD by NADPH. This was confirmed by single crystal spectroscopy. X-ray data to 2.3 A were collected on oscillation films using a rotating anode generator as an X-ray source. After data processing and reduction, restrained least squares refinement using the 1.9 A structure of the oxidized enzyme-substrate complex as a starting model, yielded a crystallographic R-factor of 14.8% for 11,394 reflections. The final model of the reduced complex contains 3,098 protein atoms, the FAD molecule, the substrate p-hydroxybenzoate and 322 solvent molecules. The structures of the oxidized and reduced forms of the enzyme-substrate complex were found to be very similar. The root-mean-square discrepancy for all atoms between both structures was 0.38 A. The flavin ring is almost completely planar in the final model, although it was allowed to bend or twist during refinement. The observed angle between the benzene and the pyrimidine ring is 2 degrees. This value should be compared with observed values of 10 degrees for the oxidized enzyme-substrate complex and 19 degrees for the enzyme-product complex. The position of the substrate is virtually unaltered with respect to its position in the oxidized enzyme. No trace of a bound NADP+ or NADPH molecule was found.  相似文献   

11.
Human methionine synthase reductase (MSR) is a protein containing both FAD and FMN, and it reactivates methionine synthase that has lost activity due to oxidation of cob(I)alamin to cob(II)alamin. In this study, anaerobic redox titrations were employed to determine the midpoint reduction potentials for the flavin cofactors in two highly prevalent polymorphic variants of MSR, I22/L175 and M22/S175. The latter is a genetic determinant of plasma homocysteine levels and has been linked to premature coronary artery disease, Down's syndrome, and neural tube defects. The I22/L175 polymorphism has been described in a homocystinuric patient. Interestingly, this polymorphism is in the extended linker region between the two flavin domains, which may mediate or facilitate interaction with methionine synthase. In MSR I22/L175, the FMN potentials are -103 mV (oxidized/semiquinone) and -175 mV (semiquinone/hydroquinone) at pH 7.0 and 25 degrees C, and the corresponding FAD potentials are -252 and -285 mV, respectively. For the M22/S175 variants, the values of the four midpoint potentials are -114 mV (FMN oxidized/semiquinone), -212 mV (FMN semiquinone/hydroquinone), -236 mV (FAD oxidized/semiquinone), and -264 mV (FAD semiquinone/hydroquinone). The midpoint potential values in the two variants are generally comparable to those originally determined for the MSR I22/S175 variant [Wolthers, K. R. (2003) Biochemistry 42, 3911-3920], with relatively minor variations in the different redox couples. In each case, blue neutral flavin semiquinone species are stabilized on both flavins, and are characterized by a broad absorption band in the long wavelength region. In addition, stopped-flow absorption and fluorescence spectroscopy were used to study the pre-steady state reduction kinetics by NADPH of the two polymorphic variants. The reversible kinetic model proposed for wild-type MSR was validated for the I22/L175 and M22/S175 variants. Thus, the biochemical penalties associated with these polymorphisms, which result in less effective methionine synthase activation, do not appear to result from differences in their reduction kinetics. It is likely that differences in their relative affinities for the redox partner, methionine synthase, underlie the differences in the relative efficiencies of reductive activation exhibited by the variants.  相似文献   

12.
Redox titration of all optically detectable prosthetic groups of Na(+)-translocating NADH:quinone oxidoreductase (Na(+)-NQR) at pH 7.5 showed that the functionally active enzyme possesses only three titratable flavin cofactors, one noncovalently bound FAD and two covalently bound FMN residues. All three flavins undergo different redox transitions during the function of the enzyme. The noncovalently bound FAD works as a "classical" two-electron carrier with a midpoint potential (E(m)) of -200 mV. Each of the FMN residues is capable of only one-electron reduction: one from neutral flavosemiquinone to fully reduced flavin (E(m) = 20 mV) and the other from oxidized flavin to flavosemiquinone anion (E(m) = -150 mV). The lacking second half of the redox transitions for the FMNs cannot be reached under our experimental conditions and is most likely not employed in the catalytic cycle. Besides the flavins, a [2Fe-2S] cluster was shown to function in the enzyme as a one-electron carrier with an E(m) of -270 mV. The midpoint potentials of all the redox transitions determined in the enzyme were found to be independent of Na(+) concentration. Even the components that exhibit very strong retardation in the rate of their reduction by NADH at low sodium concentrations experienced no change in the E(m) values when the concentration of the coupling ion was changed 1000 times. On the basis of these data, plausible mechanisms for the translocation of transmembrane sodium ions by Na(+)-NQR are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
Lei B  Wang H  Yu Y  Tu SC 《Biochemistry》2005,44(1):261-267
Vibrio harveyi NADPH:FMN oxidoreductase P (FRP(Vh)) is a homodimeric enzyme having a bound FMN per enzyme monomer. The bound FMN functions as a cofactor of FRP(Vh) in transferring reducing equivalents from NADPH to a flavin substrate in the absence of V. harveyi luciferase but as a substrate for FRP(Vh) in the luciferase-coupled bioluminescent reaction. As part of an integral plan to elucidate the regulation of functional coupling between FRP(Vh) and luciferase, this study was carried out to characterize the equilibrium bindings, reductive potential, and the reversibility of the reduction of the bound FMN in the reductive half-reaction of FRP(Vh). Results indicate that, in addition to NADPH binding, NADP(+) also bound to FRP(Vh) in either the oxidized (K(d) 180 microM) or reduced (K(d) 230 microM) form. By titrations with NADP(+) and NADPH and by an isotope exchange experiment, the reduction of the bound FMN by NADPH was found to be readily reversible (K(eq) = 0.8). Hence, the reduction of FRP(Vh)-bound FMN is not the committed step in coupling the NADPH oxidation to bioluminescence. To our knowledge, such an aspect of flavin reductase catalysis has only been clearly established for FRP(Vh). Although the reductive potentials and some other properties of a R203A variant of FRP(Vh) and an NADH/NADPH-utilizing flavin reductase from Vibrio fischeri are quite similar to that of the wild-type FRP(Vh), the reversal of the reduction of bound FMN was not detected for either of these two enzymes.  相似文献   

14.
Paracoccus denitrificans synthesizes a methylamine dehydrogenase that contains a covalently bound form of pyrroloquinoline quinone as a prosthetic group [Husain, M., & Davison, V.L. (1987) J. Bacteriol. 169, 1712-1717]. Anaerobic reductive titration of this enzyme with dithionite proceeded through a semiquinone intermediate with spectral properties quite distinct from those of the oxidized and reduced species. From these data the molar extinction coefficients were calculated at various wavelengths for the three redox states of this enzyme. The semiquinone was slowly reoxidized under aerobic conditions. The fully reduced enzyme was stable in the presence of oxygen and slowly reoxidized by ferricyanide. Reductive titration of methylamine dehydrogenase with methylamine proceeded directly to the fully reduced form of the enzyme without detectable formation of the semiquinone. Electrochemical titrations of the enzyme yielded an overall midpoint potential value for the two-electron couple (fully oxidized/fully reduced) of 100 +/- 4 mV and an n value of 2.15 +/- 0.15.  相似文献   

15.
Oxidation-reduction potentials of butyryl-CoA dehydrogenase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
In order to obtain butyryl-CoA dehydrogenase from Megasphaera elsdenii in pure enough form to perform redox studies, the existing purification procedures first had to be modified and clarified [Engel, P. (1981) Methods Enzymol. 71, 359-366]. These modifications are described, and the previously unpublished spectral properties of the electrophoretically pure CoA-free butyryl-CoA dehydrogenase are presented. In our spectral reductive titration of pure enzyme, we show that although blue neutral flavin radical is stabilized in nonquantitative amounts in dithionite titrations (19%) or in electrochemical reductions mediated by methylviologen (5%), it is not thermodynamically stabilized; therefore, only a midpoint potential for butyryl-CoA dehydrogenase is obtained. The electron-transfer behavior from pH 5.5 to pH 7.0 indicates reversible two-electron transfer accompanied by one proton: EFlox + 2e- + H+ = EFlredH- Em7 = -0.079 V vs. SHE where EFlox is oxidized butyryl-CoA dehydrogenase, EFlredH- is two electron reduced enzyme, and Em7 is the midpoint potential at pH 7.0 at 25 degrees C. Redox data and activity data both indicate that the enzyme loses activity rapidly at pH values above 7.0. The Em7 of the butyryl-CoA dehydrogenase is 40 mV positive of the Em7 of the butyryl-CoA/crotonyl-CoA couple [Gustafson, W. G., Feinberg, B. A., & McFarland, J. T. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 7733-7741]. Binding of substrate analogue acetoacetyl-CoA caused the potential of butyryl-CoA dehydrogenase to shift 100 mV negative of the free enzyme. The negative shift in potential makes electron transfer from enzyme to substrate more probable, which is consistent with the direction of electron transfer in the bacterial system.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Midpoint reduction potentials for the flavin cofactors in the reductase domain of rat neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) in calmodulin (CaM)-free and -bound forms have been determined by direct anaerobic titration. In the CaM-free form, the FMN potentials are -49 +/- 5 mV (oxidized/semiquinone) -274 +/- 5 mV (semiquinone/reduced). The corresponding FAD potentials are -232 +/- 7, and -280 +/- 6 mV. The data indicate that each flavin can exist as a blue (neutral) semiquinone. The accumulation of blue semiquinone on the FMN is considerably higher than seen on the FAD due to the much larger separation (225 mV) of its two potentials (cf. 48 mV for FAD). For the CaM-bound form of the protein, the midpoint potentials are essentially identical: there is a small alteration in the FMN oxidized/semiquinone potential (-30 +/- 4 mV); the other three potentials are unaffected. The heme midpoint potentials for nNOS [-239 mV, L-Arg-free; -220 mV, L-Arg-bound; Presta, A., Weber-Main, A. M., Stankovich, M. T., and Stuehr, D. J. (1998) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 120, 9460-9465] are poised such that electron transfer from flavin domain is thermodynamically feasible. Clearly, CaM binding is necessary in eliciting conformational changes that enhance flavin to flavin and flavin to heme electron transfers rather than causing a change in the driving force.  相似文献   

17.
T Iyanagi 《Biochemistry》1977,16(12):2725-2730
Hepatic NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase was reduced by 1 mol of dithionite or NADH per mol of enzyme-bound FAD, without forming a stable semiquinone or intermediate during the titrations. However, the addition of NAD+ to the partially reduced enzyme or illumination in the presence of both NAD+ and EDTA yielded a new intermediate. The intermediate had an absorption band at 375 nm and the optical spectrum resembled anionic semiquinones seen on reduction of other flavin enzymes. Electron paramagnetic resonance measurements confirmed the free-radical nature of the species. To explain the results, a disproportionation reaction between the oxidized and reduced NAD+ complexes (E-FAD-NAD+ + E-FADH2-NAD+ in equilibrium 2E-FADH.-NAD+) is assumed. Potentiometric titration of NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase at pH 7.0 with dithionite gave a midpoint potential of -258 mV; titration with NADH gave -160 mV. This difference may be due to a difference in the relative affinity of NAD+ for the reduced and oxidized forms of the enzyme. The effects of pH on the midpoint potential of the NAD+-free enzyme were very similar to those which have been measured with free FAD. At pH 7.0, midpoint potentials of trypsin-solubilized and detergent-solubilized cytochrome b5 were 13 and 0 mV, respectively.  相似文献   

18.
Brevibacterium sterolicum possesses two forms of cholesterol oxidase, one containing noncovalently bound FAD, the second containing a FAD covalently linked to His(69) of the protein backbone. The functional role of the histidyl-FAD bond in the latter cholesterol oxidase was addressed by studying the properties of the H69A mutant in which the FAD is bound tightly, but not covalently, and by comparison with native enzyme. The mutant retains catalytic activity, but with a turnover rate decreased 35-fold; the isomerization step of the intermediate 3-ketosteroid to the final product is also preserved. Stabilization of the flavin semiquinone and binding of sulfite are markedly decreased, this correlates with a lower midpoint redox potential (-204 mV compared with -101 mV for wild-type). Reconstitution with 8-chloro-FAD led to a holoenzyme form of H69A cholesterol oxidase with a midpoint redox potential of -160 mV. In this enzyme form, flavin semiquinone is newly stabilized, and a 3.5-fold activity increase is observed, this mimicking the thermodynamic effects induced by the covalent flavin linkage. It is concluded that the flavin 8alpha-linkage to a (N1)histidine is a pivotal factor in the modulation of the redox properties of this cholesterol oxidase to increase its oxidative power.  相似文献   

19.
The pH dependence of the redox behavior of salicylate hydroxylase from Pseudomonas cepacia as well as the effects of salicylate, benzoate, and chloride binding is described. At pH 7.6 in 0.02 M potassium phosphate buffer E1(0')(EFl ox/EFl.-) is -0.150 V and E2(0')(EFl.-/EFl red H-) is -0.040 V versus the standard hydrogen electrode (SHE). A maximum of 5% of FAD anion semiquinone is thermodynamically stabilized under these conditions. However, in coulometric and dithionite titrations more semiquinone is kinetically formed, indicating slow transfer of the second electron. The potential/pH dependence is consistent with a two-electron, one-proton transfer. Upon salicylate binding the midpoint potential is shifted 0.020 V negative from -0.094 to -0.114 V vs SHE at pH 7.6. A maximum of 7% of the neutral semiquinone is stabilized both in potentiometric and coulometric titrations. This small potential shift indicates that the substrate is bound nearly to the same extent to all three oxidation states of the enzyme. It is clear that the substrate binding does not make the reduction of the flavin thermodynamically more favorable. In contrast to salicylate, the potential shift caused by the effector, benzoate, is much more significant. (A maximum potential shift of -0.07 V is calculated.) Benzoate binds most tightly to the oxidized form and is least tightly bound to the two-electron-reduced form of the enzyme. For the reduction of the free enzyme the transfer of the second electron or the transfer of the proton is rate limiting, as is shown by the kinetic formation of the anionic semiquinone.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
para-Hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase is a flavoprotein monooxygenase that catalyses a reaction in two parts: reduction of the flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) in the enzyme by reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) in response to binding p-hydroxybenzoate to the enzyme and oxidation of reduced FAD with oxygen to form a hydroperoxide, which then oxygenates p-hydroxybenzoate. These different reactions are coordinated through conformational rearrangements of the protein and isoalloxazine ring during catalysis. Earlier research showed that reduction of FAD occurs when the isoalloxazine of the FAD moves to the surface of the protein to allow hydride transfer from NADPH. This move is coordinated with protein rearrangements that are triggered by deprotonation of buried p-hydroxybenzoate through a H-bond network that leads to the surface of the protein. In this paper, we examine the involvement of this same H-bond network in the oxygen reactions-the initial formation of a flavin-C4a-hydroperoxide from the reaction between oxygen and reduced flavin, the electrophilic attack of the hydroperoxide upon the substrate to form product, and the elimination of water from the flavin-C4a-hydroxide to form oxidized enzyme in association with product release. These reactions were measured through absorbance and fluorescence changes in the FAD during the reactions. Results were collected over a range of pH for the reactions of wild-type enzyme and a series of mutant enzymes with the natural substrate and substrate analogues. We discovered that the rate of formation of the flavin hydroperoxide is not influenced by pH change, which indicates that the proton required for this reaction does not come from the H-bond network. The rate of the hydroxylation reaction increases with pH in a manner consistent with a pK(a) of 7.1. We conclude that the H-bond network abstracts the phenolic proton from p-hydroxybenzoate in the transition state of oxygen transfer. The rate of formation of oxidized enzyme increases with pH in a manner consistent with a pK(a) of 7.1, indicating the involvement of the H-bond network. We conclude that product deprotonation enhances the rate of a specific conformational change required for both product release and the elimination of water from C4a-OH-FAD.  相似文献   

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