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1.
The methyl carbon of ribothymidine in Loop IV of the tRNA of Streptococcus faecalis, Bacillus subtilis, and some other microorganisms is derived directly from 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate, not S-adenosylmethionine. The pure enzyme from S. faecalis also requires FADH2. We have obtained evidence that tetrahydrofolate is a product of the reaction and demonstrated that label from [5-3H]5-deazaFMNH2 is incorporated into the methyl moiety of ribothymidine. These data indicate that the enzyme uses methylenetetrahydrofolate solely as a 1-carbon donor and employs FADH2 as a reducing agent in vitro according to the following reaction: tRNA(U psi C) + CH2 = THF + FADH2 leads to tRNA(T psi C) + THF + FAD.  相似文献   

2.
Photolyases (PHRs) are blue light-activated DNA repair enzymes that maintain genetic integrity by reverting UV-induced photoproducts into normal bases. The flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) chromophore of PHRs has four different redox states: oxidized (FAD(ox)), anion radical (FAD(?-)), neutral radical (FADH(?)), and fully reduced (FADH(-)). We combined difference Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy with UV-visible spectroscopy to study the detailed photoactivation process of Xenopus (6-4) PHR. Two photons produce the enzymatically active, fully reduced PHR from oxidized FAD: FAD(ox) is converted to semiquinone via light-induced one-electron and one-proton transfers and then to FADH(-) by light-induced one-electron transfer. We successfully trapped FAD(?-) at 200 K, where electron transfer occurs but proton transfer does not. UV-visible spectroscopy following 450 nm illumination of FAD(ox) at 277 K defined the FADH(?)/FADH(-) mixture and allowed calculation of difference FTIR spectra among the four redox states. The absence of a characteristic C=O stretching vibration indicated that the proton donor is not a protonated carboxylic acid. Structural changes in Trp and Tyr are suggested by UV-visible and FTIR analysis of FAD(?-) at 200 K. Spectral analysis of amide I vibrations revealed structural perturbation of the protein's β-sheet during initial electron transfer (FAD(?-) formation), a transient increase in α-helicity during proton transfer (FADH(?) formation), and reversion to the initial amide I signal following subsequent electron transfer (FADH(-) formation). Consequently, in (6-4) PHR, unlike cryptochrome-DASH, formation of enzymatically active FADH(-) did not perturb α-helicity. Protein structural changes in the photoactivation of (6-4) PHR are discussed on the basis of these FTIR observations.  相似文献   

3.
The object of this study was to clarify the mechanism of electron transfer in the human endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) reductase domain using recombinant eNOS reductase domains; the FAD/NADPH domain containing FAD- and NADPH-binding sites and the FAD/FMN domain containing FAD/NADPH-, FMN-, and a calmodulin-binding sites. In the presence of molecular oxygen or menadione, the reduced FAD/NADPH domain is oxidized via the neutral (blue) semiquinone (FADH(*)), which has a characteristic absorption peak at 520 nm. The FAD/NADPH and FAD/FMN domains have high activity for ferricyanide, but the FAD/FMN domain has low activity for cytochrome c. In the presence or absence of calcium/calmodulin (Ca(2+)/CaM), reduction of the oxidized flavins (FAD-FMN) and air-stable semiquinone (FAD-FMNH(*)) with NADPH occurred in at least two phases in the absorbance change at 457nm. In the presence of Ca(2+)/CaM, the reduction rate of both phases was significantly increased. In contrast, an absorbance change at 596nm gradually increased in two phases, but the rate of the fast phase was decreased by approximately 50% of that in the presence of Ca(2+)/CaM. The air-stable semiquinone form was rapidly reduced by NADPH, but a significant absorbance change at 520 nm was not observed. These findings indicate that the conversion of FADH(2)-FMNH(*) to FADH(*)-FMNH(2) is unfavorable. Reduction of the FAD moiety is activated by CaM, but the formation rate of the active intermediate, FADH(*)-FMNH(2) is extremely low. These events could cause a lowering of enzyme activity in the catalytic cycle.  相似文献   

4.
Native DNA photolyase, as isolated from Escherichia coli, contains a neutral flavin radical (FADH.) plus a pterin chromophore (5,10-methenyltetrahydropteroylpolyglutamate) and can be converted to its physiologically significant form by reduction of FADH. to fully reduced flavin (FADH2) with dithionite or by photoreduction. Either FADH2 or the pterin chromophore in dithionite-reduced native enzyme can function as a sensitizer in catalysis. Various enzyme forms (EFADox, EFADH., EFADH2, EPteFADox, EPteFADH., EPteFADH2, EPte) containing stoichiometric amounts of FAD in either of its three oxidation states and/or 5,10-methenyltetrahydrofolate (Pte) have been prepared in reconstitution experiments. Studies with EFADox and EPte showed that these preparations retained the ability to bind the missing chromophore. The results suggest that there could be considerable flexibility in the biological assembly of holoenzyme since the order of binding of the enzyme's chromophores is apparently unimportant, the binding of FAD is unaffected by its redox state, and enzyme preparations containing only one chromophore are reasonably stable. The same catalytic properties are observed with dithionite-reduced native enzyme or EFADH2. These preparations do not exhibit a lag in catalytic assays whereas lags are observed with preparations containing FADox or FADH. in the presence or absence of pterin. Photochemical studies show that these lags can be attributed to enzyme activation under assay conditions in a reaction involving photoreduction of enzyme-bound FADox or FADH. to FADH2. EPte is catalytically inactive, but catalytic activity is restored upon reconstitution of EPte with FADox. The results show that pterin is not required for dimer repair when FADH2 acts as the sensitizer but that FADH2 is required when dimer repair is initiated by excitation of the pterin chromophore. The relative intensity of pterin fluorescence in EPte, EPteFADH., EPteFADox, or EPteFADH2 has been used to estimate the efficiency of pterin singlet quenching by FADH. (93%), FADox (90%), or FADH2 (58%). Energy transfer from the excited pterin to flavin is energetically feasible and may account for the observed quenching of pterin fluorescence and also explain why photoreduction of FADox or FADH. is accelerated by the pterin chromophore. An irreversible photobleaching of the pterin chromophore is accelerated by FADH2 in a reaction that is accompanied by a transient oxidation of FADH2 to FADH.. Both pterin bleaching and FADH2 oxidation are inhibited by substrate.  相似文献   

5.
A flavokinase preparation from Bacillus subtilis is described which catalyzes the phosphorylation of reduced, but not oxidized, riboflavin. The enzyme is distinguished from other known flavokinases also in having an unusually low Km for the flavin substrate, 50 to 100 nM. ATP is the obligatory phosphate donor; one ATP is utilized for each FMNH2 formed. Mg2+ or Zn2+ is required for the reaction; Co2+ and Mn2+ will substitute, but less effectively. The same enzyme preparation catalyzes the synthesis of FADH2 from FMNH2 and ATP, but not the synthesis of FAD from FMN and ATP. FADH2 is also formed from reduced riboflavin, presumably by sequential flavokinase and FAD synthetase action. Zn2+ cannot replace Mg2+ in FADH2 formation. The reverse reaction, formation of FMN from FAD, occurs only with reduced FAD, giving rise to FMNH2, and is dependent on the presence of inorganic pyrophosphate. The enzyme thus appears to be an FADH2 pyrophosphorylase. The two enzymatic activities, flavokinase and FADH2 pyrophosphorylase, although not separated during the purification procedure, are distinguished by differences in metal ion specificity, in concentration dependence for ATP (apparent Km for ATP = 300 microM for FADH2 synthesis and 6.5 microM for flavokinase), and in the inhibitory effects of riboflavin analogues.  相似文献   

6.
Xu L  Mu W  Ding Y  Luo Z  Han Q  Bi F  Wang Y  Song Q 《Biochemistry》2008,47(33):8736-8743
Escherichia coli DNA photolyase repairs cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer (CPD) in UV-damaged DNA through a photoinduced electron transfer mechanism. The catalytic activity of the enzyme requires fully reduced FAD (FADH (-)). After purification in vitro, the cofactor FADH (-) in photolyase is oxidized into the neutral radical form FADH (*) under aerobic conditions and the enzyme loses its repair function. We have constructed a mutant photolyase in which asparagine 378 (N378) is replaced with serine (S). In comparison with wild-type photolyase, we found N378S mutant photolyase containing oxidized FAD (FAD ox) but not FADH (*) after routine purification procedures, but evidence shows that the mutant protein contains FADH (-) in vivo as the wild type. Although N378S mutant photolyase is photoreducable and capable of binding CPD in DNA, the activity assays indicate the mutant protein is catalytically inert. We conclude that the Asn378 residue of E. coli photolyase is crucial both for stabilizing the neutral flavin radical cofactor and for catalysis.  相似文献   

7.
G Payne  P F Heelis  B R Rohrs  A Sancar 《Biochemistry》1987,26(22):7121-7127
Escherichia coli DNA photolyase is a flavoprotein that when purified is blue in color and contains a stable neutral radical FAD (E-FADH). In the presence of a suitable electron donor (i.e., thiols, tyrosine, or NADH) the radical FAD adsorbs visible light and undergoes photoreduction to the fully reduced FAD (E-FADH2). The in vitro quantum yield of dimer repair for E-FADH is 0.07 while that of E-FADH2 approaches the in vivo value of 1. Electron paramagnetic resonance studies on whole cells indicate that the in vivo form of photolyase is E-FADH2 with enzyme containing radical FAD generated predominantly during the ammonium sulfate precipitation step of the purification. Activity measurements of E-FADH using long-wavelength photoreactivating light indicate that enzyme containing FAD in the radical form is not active in dimer repair. Dimer repair observed with E-FADH at shorter wavelengths is probably photoreduction of E-FADH followed by dimer repair by E-FADH2.  相似文献   

8.
Self-regulation of the 2-oxo acid dehydrogenase complexes during catalysis was studied. Radical species as side products of catalysis were detected by spin trapping, lucigenin fluorescence and ferricytochrome c reduction. Studies of the complexes after converting the bound lipoate or FAD cofactors to nonfunctional derivatives indicated that radicals are generated via FAD. In the presence of oxygen, the 2-oxo acid, CoA-dependent production of the superoxide anion radical was detected. In the absence of oxygen, a protein-bound radical concluded to be the thiyl radical of the complex-bound dihydrolipoate was trapped by alpha-phenyl-N-tert-butylnitrone. Another, carbon-centered, radical was trapped in anaerobic reaction of the complex with 2-oxoglutarate and CoA by 5,5'-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide (DMPO). Generation of radical species was accompanied by the enzyme inactivation. A superoxide scavenger, superoxide dismutase, did not protect the enzyme. However, a thiyl radical scavenger, thioredoxin, prevented the inactivation. It was concluded that the thiyl radical of the complex-bound dihydrolipoate induces the inactivation by 1e- oxidation of the 2-oxo acid dehydrogenase catalytic intermediate. A product of this oxidation, the DMPO-trapped radical fragment of the 2-oxo acid substrate, inactivates the first component of the complex. The inactivation prevents transformation of the 2-oxo acids in the absence of terminal substrate, NAD+. The self-regulation is modulated by thioredoxin which alleviates the adverse effect of the dihydrolipoate intermediate, thus stimulating production of reactive oxygen species by the complexes. The data point to a dual pro-oxidant action of the complex-bound dihydrolipoate, propagated through the first and third component enzymes and controlled by thioredoxin and the (NAD+ + NADH) pool.  相似文献   

9.
The flavoprotein TrmFO methylates specifically the C5 carbon of the highly conserved uridine 54 in tRNAs. Contrary to most methyltransferases, the 1-carbon unit transferred by TrmFO derives from 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate and not from S-adenosyl-L-methionine. The enzyme also employs the FAD hydroquinone as a reducing agent of the C5 methylene U54-tRNA intermediate in vitro. By analogy with the catalytic mechanism of thymidylate synthase ThyA, a conserved cysteine located near the FAD isoalloxazine ring was proposed to act as a nucleophile during catalysis. Here, we mutated this residue (Cys-53 in Bacillus subtilis TrmFO) to alanine and investigated its functional role. Biophysical characterization of this variant demonstrated the major structural role of Cys-53 in maintaining both the integrity and plasticity of the flavin binding site. Unexpectedly, gel mobility shift assays showed that, like the wild-type enzyme, the inactive C53A variant was capable of forming a covalent complex with a 5-fluorouridine-containing mini-RNA. This result confirms the existence of a covalent intermediate during catalysis but rules out a nucleophilic role for Cys-53. To identify the actual nucleophile, two other strictly conserved cysteines (Cys-192 and Cys-226) that are relatively far from the active site were replaced with alanine, and a double mutant C53A/C226A was generated. Interestingly, only mutations that target Cys-226 impeded TrmFO from forming a covalent complex and methylating tRNA. Altogether, we propose a revised mechanism for the m(5)U54 modification catalyzed by TrmFO, where Cys-226 attacks the C6 atom of the uridine, and Cys-53 plays the role of the general base abstracting the C5 proton.  相似文献   

10.
Two radical signals with different line widths are seen in the Na+-translocating NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (Na+-NQR) from Vibrio harveyi by EPR spectroscopy. The first radical is observed in the oxidized enzyme, and is assigned as a neutral flavosemiquinone. The second radical is observed in the reduced enzyme and is assigned to be the anionic form of flavosemiquinone. The time course of Na+-NQR reduction by NADH, as monitored by stopped-flow optical spectroscopy, shows three distinct phases, the spectra of which suggest that they correspond to the reduction of three different flavin species. The first phase is fast both in the presence and absence of sodium, and is assigned to reduction of FAD to FADH2 at the NADH dehydrogenating site. The rates of the other two phases are strongly dependent on sodium concentration, and these phases are attributed to reduction of two covalently bound FMN's. Combination of the optical and EPR data suggests that a neutral FMN flavosemiquinone preexists in the oxidized enzyme, and that it is reduced to the fully reduced flavin by NADH. The other FMN moiety is initially oxidized, and is reduced to the anionic flavosemiquinone. One-electron transitions of two discrete flavin species are thus assigned as sodium-dependent steps in the catalytic cycle of Na+-NQR.  相似文献   

11.
Louie TM  Xie XS  Xun L 《Biochemistry》2003,42(24):7509-7517
4-Hydroxyphenylacetate (4HPA) 3-monooxygenase (HpaB) is a reduced flavin adenine dinucleotide (FADH(2)) utilizing monooxygenase. Its cosubstrate, FADH(2), is supplied by HpaC, an NAD(P)H-flavin oxidoreductase. Because HpaB is the first enzyme for 4HPA metabolism, FADH(2) production and utilization become a major metabolic event when Escherichia coli W grows on 4HPA. An important question is how FADH(2) is produced and used, as FADH(2) is unstable in the presence of free O(2). One solution is metabolic channeling by forming a transitory HpaB-HpaC complex. However, our in vivo and in vitro data failed to support the interaction. Further investigation pointed to an alternative scheme for HpaB to sequester FADH(2). The intracellular HpaB concentration was about 122 microM in 4HPA-growing cells, much higher than the total intracellular FAD concentration, and HpaB had a high affinity for FADH(2) (K(d) of 70 nM), suggesting that most FADH(2) is bound to HpaB in vivo. The HpaB-bound FADH(2) was either used to rapidly oxidize 4HPA or slowly oxidized by O(2) to FAD and H(2)O(2) in the absence of 4HPA. Thus, HpaB's high intracellular concentration, its high affinity for FADH(2), its property of protecting bound FADH(2) in the absence of 4HPA, and its ability to rapidly use FADH(2) to oxidize 4HPA when 4HPA is available can coordinate FADH(2) production and utilization by HpaB and HpaC in vivo. This type of coordination, in responding to demand, for production and utilization of labile metabolites has not been reported to date.  相似文献   

12.
The reduction of N5,N10-methylenetrahydromethanopterin (CH2 = H4MPT) to N5-methyltetrahydromethanopterin (CH3-H4MPT) is an intermediate step in methanogenesis from CO2 and H2. The reaction is catalyzed by CH2 = H4MPT reductase. The enzyme from Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum (strain Marburg) was found to be specific for reduced coenzyme F420 as electron donor; neither NADH or NADPH nor reduced viologen dyes could substitute for the reduced 5-deazaflavin. The reductase was purified over 100-fold to apparent homogeneity. Sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed only one protein band at the 36-kDa position. The apparent molecular mass of the native enzyme was determined by gel filtration to be in the order of 150 kDa. The purified enzyme was colourless. It did not contain flavin or iron. The ultraviolet visible spectrum was almost identical to that of albumin, suggesting the absence of a chromophoric prosthetic group. Reciprocal plots of the enzyme activity versus the substrate concentration at different constant concentrations of the second substrate yielded straight lines intersecting at one point on the abscissa to the left of the vertical axis. This intersecting pattern is characteristic of a ternary complex catalytic mechanism. The Km for CH2 = H4MPT and for the reduced coenzyme F420 were determined to be 0.3 mM and 3 microM, respectively. Vmax was 6000 mumol.min-1.mg protein-1 (kcat = 3600 s-1). The CH2 = H4MPT reductase was stable in the presence of air; at 4 C less than 10% activity was lost within 24 h.  相似文献   

13.
R S Lipman  M S Jorns 《Biochemistry》1992,31(3):786-791
The active form of native Escherichia coli DNA photolyase contains 1,5-dihydro-FAD (FADH2) plus 5,10-methenyltetrahydropteroylpolyglutamate [5,10-CH(+)-H4Pte(Glu)n]. Enzyme containing FADH2 and/or 5,10-methyltetrahydrofolate (5,10-CH(+)-H4folate) can be prepared in reconstitution experiments. Fluorescence quantum yield measurements at various wavelengths with native or reconstituted enzyme provide a simple method for detecting singlet-singlet energy transfer from pterin to FADH2, a key step in the proposed catalytic mechanism. The data satisfy the following criteria: (1) Wavelength-independent quantum yield values are observed for 5,10-CH(+)-H4folate in the absence (0.434) or presence (3.57 X 10(-2)) of FADH2, for 5,10-CH(+)-H4Pte(Glu)n in the presence of FADH2 (5.58 X 10(-2)) and for FADH2 in the absence of pterin (5.34 X 10(-3)); (2) The observed decrease in pterin fluorescence quantum yield in the presence of FADH2 can be used to estimate the efficiency of pterin fluorescence quenching (EQ = 0.918 or 0.871 with 5,10-CH(+)-H4folate or 5,10-CH(+)-H4Pte(Glu)n, respectively); (3) The fluorescence quantum yield of FADH2 is increased in the presence of pterin and varies depending on the excitation wavelength, in agreement with the predicted effect of energy transfer on acceptor fluorescence quantum yield [phi acceptor (+ donor)/phi acceptor (alone) = 1 + EET(epsilon donor/epsilon acceptor), where EET is the efficiency of the energy transfer process]. With 5,10-CH(+)-H4Pte(Glu)n in native enzyme the value obtained for EET (0.92) is similar to EQ, whereas with 5,10-CH(+)-H4folate in reconstituted enzyme the value obtained for EET (0.46) is 2-fold smaller than EQ.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
Yeh E  Cole LJ  Barr EW  Bollinger JM  Ballou DP  Walsh CT 《Biochemistry》2006,45(25):7904-7912
The flavin-dependent halogenase RebH catalyzes chlorination at the C7 position of tryptophan as the initial step in the biosynthesis of the chemotherapeutic agent rebeccamycin. The reaction requires reduced FADH(2) (provided by a partner flavin reductase), chloride ion, and oxygen as cosubstrates. Given the similarity of its sequence to those of flavoprotein monooxygenases and their common cosubstrate requirements, the reaction of FADH(2) and O(2) in the halogenase active site was presumed to form the typical FAD(C4a)-OOH intermediate observed in monooxygenase reactions. By using stopped-flow spectroscopy, formation of a FAD(C4a)-OOH intermediate was detected during the RebH reaction. This intermediate decayed to yield a FAD(C4a)-OH intermediate. The order of addition of FADH(2) and O(2) was critical for accumulation of the FAD(C4a)-OOH intermediate and for subsequent product formation, indicating that conformational dynamics may be important for protection of labile intermediates formed during the reaction. Formation of flavin intermediates did not require tryptophan, nor were their rates of formation affected by the presence of tryptophan, suggesting that tryptophan likely does not react directly with any flavin intermediates. Furthermore, although final oxidation to FAD occurred with a rate constant of 0.12 s(-)(1), quenched-flow kinetic data showed that the rate constant for 7-chlorotryptophan formation was 0.05 s(-)(1) at 25 degrees C. The kinetic analysis establishes that substrate chlorination occurs after completion of flavin redox reactions. These findings are consistent with a mechanism whereby hypochlorite is generated in the RebH active site from the reaction of FADH(2), chloride ion, and O(2).  相似文献   

15.
The conserved U54 in tRNA is often modified to 5-methyluridine (m5U) and forms a reverse Hoogsteen base pair with A58 that stabilizes the L-shaped tRNA structure. In Gram-positive and some Gram-negative eubacteria, m5U54 is produced by folate/FAD-dependent tRNA (m5U54) methyltransferase (TrmFO). TrmFO utilizes N5,N10-methylenetetrahydrofolate (CH2THF) as a methyl donor. We previously reported an in vitro TrmFO assay system, in which unstable [14C]CH2THF was supplied from [14C]serine and tetrahydrofolate by serine hydroxymethyltransferase. In the current study, we have improved the TrmFO assay system by optimization of enzyme and substrate concentrations and introduction of a filter assay system. Using this assay, we have focused on the tRNA recognition mechanism of TrmFO. 42 tRNA mutant variants were prepared, and experiments with truncated tRNA and microhelix RNAs revealed that the minimum requirement of TrmFO exists in the T-arm structure. The positive determinants for TrmFO were found to be the U54U55C56 sequence and G53-C61 base pair. The gel mobility shift assay and fluorescence quenching showed that the affinity of TrmFO for tRNA in the initial binding process is weak. The inhibition experiments showed that the methylated tRNA is released before the structural change process. Furthermore, we found that A38 prevents incorrect methylation of U32 in the anticodon loop. Moreover, the m1A58 modification clearly accelerates the TrmFO reaction, suggesting a synergistic effect of the m5U54, m1A58, and s2U54 modifications on m5s2U54 formation in Thermus thermophilus cells. The docking model of TrmFO and the T-arm showed that the G53-C61 base pair is not able to directly contact the enzyme.  相似文献   

16.
DNA photolyase from the cyanobacterium Anacystis nidulans contains two chromophores, flavin adenine dinucleotide (FADH2) and 8-hydroxy-5-deazaflavin (8-HDF) (Eker, A. P. M., Kooiman, P., Hessels, J. K. C., and Yasui, A. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 8009-8015). While evidence exists that the flavin chromophore (in FADH2 form) can catalyze photorepair directly and that the 8-HDF chromophore is the major photosensitizer in photoreactivation it was not known whether 8-HDF splits pyrimidine dimer directly or indirectly through energy transfer to FADH2 at the catalytic center. We constructed a plasmid which over-produces the A. nidulans photolyase in Escherichia coli and purified the enzyme from this organism. Apoenzyme was prepared and enzyme containing stoichiometric amounts of either or both chromophores was reconstituted. The substrate binding and catalytic activities of the apoenzyme (apoE), E-FADH2, E-8-HDF, E-FAD(ox)-8-HDF, and E-FADH2-8-HDF were investigated. We found that FAD is required for substrate binding and catalysis and that 8-HDF is not essential for binding DNA, and participates in catalysis only through energy transfer to FADH2. The quantum yields of energy transfer from 8-HDF to FADH2 and of electron transfer from FADH2 to thymine dimer are near unity.  相似文献   

17.
Acetohydroxy acid synthases (AHAS) are thiamin diphosphate- (ThDP-) and FAD-dependent enzymes that catalyze the first common step of branched-chain amino acid biosynthesis in plants, bacteria, and fungi. Although the flavin cofactor is not chemically involved in the physiological reaction of AHAS, it has been shown to be essential for the structural integrity and activity of the enzyme. Here, we report that the enzyme-bound FAD in AHAS is reduced in the course of catalysis in a side reaction. The reduction of the enzyme-bound flavin during turnover of different substrates under aerobic and anaerobic conditions was characterized by stopped-flow kinetics using the intrinsic FAD absorbance. Reduction of enzyme-bound FAD proceeds with a net rate constant of k' = 0.2 s(-1) in the presence of oxygen and approximately 1 s(-1) under anaerobic conditions. No transient flavin radicals are detectable during the reduction process while time-resolved absorbance spectra are recorded. Reconstitution of the binary enzyme-FAD complex with the chemically synthesized intermediate 2-(hydroxyethyl)-ThDP also results in a reduction of the flavin. These data provide evidence for the first time that the key catalytic intermediate 2-(hydroxyethyl)-ThDP in the carbanionic/enamine form is not only subject to covalent addition of 2-keto acids and an oxygenase side reaction but also transfers electrons to the adjacent FAD in an intramolecular redox reaction yielding 2-acetyl-ThDP and reduced FAD. The detection of the electron transfer supports the idea of a common ancestor of acetohydroxy acid synthase and pyruvate oxidase, a homologous ThDP- and FAD-dependent enzyme that, in contrast to AHASs, catalyzes a reaction that relies on intercofactor electron transfer.  相似文献   

18.
B Gomes  G Fendrich  R H Abeles 《Biochemistry》1981,20(6):1481-1490
Glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase, a flavoprotein, catalyzes the reaction -OOCCH3CH2--CH2COSR (FAD leads to FADH2) leads to CH3CH = CHCOSR + CO2 (SR = CoA or pantetheine). With the isolated enzyme, a dye serves as the final electron acceptor. The enzyme from Pseudomonas fluorescens (ATCC 11250) has been purified to homogeneity. It was established with appropriate isotopic substitutions that the proton which is added to the gamma position of the product, subsequent to decarboxylation, is not derived from the solvent but is derived from the alpha position of the substrate. Under conditions where no net conversion of substrate occurs, i.e., in the absence of electron acceptor, the enzyme catalyzes the exchange of the beta hydrogen of the substrate with solvent protons. Butyryl-CoA dehydrogenase (M. elsedenii), which catalyzes an analogous reaction, catalyzes the exchange of both the alpha and beta hydrogens with solvent protons in the absence of electron acceptor. Glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase and butyryl-CoA dehydrogenase are irreversibly inactivated by the substrate analogues 3-butynoylpantetheine and 3-pentynoylpantetheine. These inactivators do not form an adduct with the flavin and probably react with a nucleophile at the active site. Upon inactivation, the spectrum of the enzyme-bound flavin is essentially unchanged, and the flavin can be reduced by Na2S2O4. We suggest that inactivation involves intermediate allene formation. We proposed that these results support an oxidation mechanism for glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase and butyryl-CoA dehydrogenase which is initiated by proton abstraction. With glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase, the base, which abstracts the substrate alpha proton, is shielded from the solvent and is then used to protonate the carbanion (CH2--CH--CHCOSCoA) formed after oxidation and decarboxylation.  相似文献   

19.
M D Distefano  K G Au  C T Walsh 《Biochemistry》1989,28(3):1168-1183
Mercuric reductase, a flavoenzyme that possess a redox-active cystine, Cys135Cys140, catalyzes the reduction of Hg(II) to Hg(0) by NADPH. As a probe of mechanism, we have constructed mutants lacking a redox-active disulfide by eliminating Cys135 (Ala135Cys140), Cys140 (Cys135Ala140), or both (Ala135Ala140). Additionally, we have made double mutants that lack Cys135 (Ala135Cys139Cys140) or Cys140 (Cys135Cys139Ala140) but introduce a new Cys in place of Gly139 with the aim of constructing dithiol pairs in the active site that do not form a redox-active disulfide. The resulting mutant enzymes all lack redox-active disulfides and are hence restricted to FAD/FADH2 redox chemistry. Each mutant enzyme possesses unique physical and spectroscopic properties that reflect subtle differences in the FAD microenvironment. These differences are manifested in a 23-nm range in enzyme-bound FAD lambda max values, an 80-nm range in thiolate to flavin charge-transfer absorbance maxima, and a ca. 100-mV range in FAD reduction potential. Preliminary evidence for the Ala135Cys139Cys140 mutant enzyme suggests that this protein forms a disulfide between the two adjacent Cys residues. Hg(II) titration experiments that correlate the extent of charge-transfer quenching with Hg(II) binding indicate that the Ala135Cys140 protein binds Hg(II) with substantially less avidity than does the wild-type enzyme. All mutant mercuric reductases catalyze transhydrogenation and oxygen reduction reactions through obligatory reduced flavin intermediates at rates comparable to or greater than that of the wild-type enzyme. For these activities, there is a linear correlation between log kappa cat and enzyme-bound FAD reduction potential. In a sensitive Hg(II)-mediated enzyme-bound FADH2 reoxidation assay, all mutant enzymes were able to undergo at least one catalytic event at rates 50-1000-fold slower than that of the wild-type enzyme. We have also observed the reduction of Hg(II) by free FADH2. In multiple-turnover assays which monitored the production of Hg(0), two of the mutant enzymes were observed to proceed through at least 30 turnovers at rates ca. 1000-fold slower than that of wild-type mercuric reductase. We conclude that the Cys135 and Cys140 thiols serve as Hg(II) ligands that orient the Hg(II) for subsequent reduction by a reduced flavin intermediate.  相似文献   

20.
We have analyzed the mechanism of one-electron reduction of adriamycin (Adr) using recombinant full-length human neuronal nitric-oxide synthase and its flavin domains. Both enzymes catalyzed aerobic NADPH oxidation in the presence of Adr. Calcium/calmodulin (Ca(2+)/CaM) stimulated the NADPH oxidation of Adr. In the presence or absence of Ca(2+)/CaM, the flavin semiquinone radical species were major intermediates observed during the oxidation of the reduced enzyme by Adr. The FAD-NADPH binding domain did not significantly catalyze the reduction of Adr. Neither the FAD semiquinone (FADH*) nor the air-stable semiquinone (FAD-FMNH*) reacted rapidly with Adr. These data indicate that the fully reduced species of FMN (FMNH(2)) donates one electron to Adr, and that the rate of Adr reduction is stimulated by a rapid electron exchange between the two flavins in the presence of Ca(2+)/CaM. Based on these findings, we propose a role for the FAD-FMN pair in the one-electron reduction of Adr.  相似文献   

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