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1.
Rice allene oxide synthase-1 mutants carrying F92L, P430A or F92L/P430A amino acid substitution mutations were constructed, recombinant mutant and wild type proteins were purified and their substrate preference, UV–vis spectra and heme iron spin state were characterized. The results show that the hydroperoxide lyase activities of F92L and F92L/P430A mutants prefer 13-hydroperoxy substrate to other hydroperoxydienoic acids or hydroperoxytrienoic acids. The Soret maximum was completely red-shifted in P430A and F92L/P430A mutants, but it was partially shifted in the F92L mutant. ESR spectral data showed that wild type, F92L and P430A mutants occupied high and low spin states, while the F92L/P430A mutant occupied only low spin state. The extent of the red shift of the Soret maximum increased as the population of low spin heme iron increased, suggesting that the spectral shift reflects the high to low transition of heme iron spin state in rice allene oxide synthase-1. Relative to wild type allene oxide synthase-1, the hydroperoxide lyase activities of F92L and F92L/P430A are less sensitive to inhibition by imidazole with (13S or 9S)-hydroperoxydienoic acid as substrate and more sensitive than wild type with (13S)-hydroperoxytrienoic acid as substrate. Our results suggest that hydroperoxydienoic acid is the preferred substrate for the hydroperoxide lyase activity and (13S)-hydroperoxytrienoic acid is the preferred substrate for allene oxide synthase activity of allene oxide synthase-1.  相似文献   

2.
In order to probe the active site of the heme protein indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase, magnetic and natural circular dichroism (MCD and CD) and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) studies of the substrate (L-tryptophan)-free and substrate-bound enzyme with and without various exogenous ligands have been carried out. The MCD spectra of the ferric and ferrous derivatives are similar to those of the analogous myoglobin and horseradish peroxidase species. This provides strong support for histidine imidazole as the fifth ligand to the heme iron of indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase. The substrate-free native ferric enzyme exhibits predominantly high-spin EPR signals (g perpendicular = 6, g parallel = 2) along with weak low-spin signals (g perpendicular = 2.86, 2.28, 1.60); similar EPR, spin-state and MCD features are found for the benzimidazole adduct of ferric myoglobin. This suggests that the substrate-free ferric enzyme has a sterically hindered histidine imidazole nitrogen donor sixth ligand. Upon substrate binding, noticeable MCD and EPR spectral changes are detected that are indicative of an increased low spin content (from 30 to over 70% at ambient temperature). Concomitantly, new low spin EPR signals (g = 2.53, 2.18, 1.86) and MCD features characteristic of hydroxide complexes of histidine-ligated heme proteins appear. For almost all of the other ferric and ferrous derivatives, only small substrate effects are observed with MCD spectroscopy, while substantial substrate effects are seen with CD spectroscopy. Thus, changes in the heme coordination structure of the ferric enzyme and in the protein conformation at the active site of the ferric and ferrous enzyme are induced by substrate binding. The observed substrate effects on the ferric enzyme may correlate with the previously observed kinetic substrate inhibition of indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase activity, while such effects on the ferrous enzyme suggest the possibility that the substrate is activated during turnover.  相似文献   

3.
EPR spectra of intestinal peroxidase are reported for the first time. The resting state of intestinal peroxidase exhibits only a high spin EPR spectrum with pH-dependent rhombicity. Addition of chloride shifts the equilibrium between an acidic and a neutral form of the enzyme. In contrast, resting lactoperoxidase shows EPR spectra of both low spin and high spin species, indicating a different heme environment between these two peroxidases. The high spin signal of lactoperoxidase consists of multiple components; the major component exhibits pH-dependent rhombicity similar to intestinal peroxidase and the equilibrium between the acidic and the neutral forms is also shifted by chloride ion. EPR features of the low spin cyanide complex of intestinal peroxidase and lactoperoxidase are compared with those of other hemeproteins, whose proximal axial ligands are known to be histidine residues. The g-values of the cyanide adducts of the mammalian peroxidases are similar. The relationship between the g-value anisotropy and imidazolate character of the proximal histidine is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectra have been recorded for beef heart cytochrome oxidase and a number of its inhibitor complexes. The resting enzyme exhibits a derivate shape Faraday C term in the Soret region, characteristic of low spin ferric heme, which accounts for 50% of the total oxidase heme a. The remaining heme a (50%) is assigned to the high spin state. MCD temperature studies, comparison with the MCD spectra of heme a-imidazole model compounds, and ligand binding (cyanide, formate) studies are consistent with these spin state assignments in the oxidized enzyme. Furthermore, the ligand binding properties and correlations between optical and MCD parameters indicate that in the resting enzyme the low spin heme a is due solely to cytochrome a3+ and the high spin heme a to cytochrome a33+. The Soret MCD of the reduced protein is interpreted as th sum of two MCD curves: an intense, asymmetric MCD band very similar to that exhibited by deoxymyoglobin which we assign to paramagnetic high spin cytochrome a3(2+) and a weaker, more symmetric MCD contribution, which is attributed to diamagnetic low spin cytochrome a2+. Temperature studies of the Soret MCD intensity support this proposed spin state heterogeneity. Ligand binding (CO, CN-) to the reduced protein eliminates the intense MCD associated with high spin cytochrome a3(2+); however, the band associated with cytochrome a2+ is observed under these conditions as well as in a number of inhibitor complexes (cyanide, formate, sulfide, azide) of the partially reduced protein. The MCD spectra of oxidized, reduced, and inhibitor-complexed cytochrome oxidase show no evidence for heme-heme interaction via spectral parameters. This conclusion is used in conjunction with the fact that ferric, high spin heme exhibits weak MCD intensity to calculate the MCD spectra for the individual cytochromes of the oxidase as well as the spectra for some inhibitor complexes of cytochrome a3. The results are most simply interpreted using the model we have recently proposed to account for the electronic and magnetic properties of cytochrome (Palmer, G., Babcock, F.T., and Vcikery, L.E. (1976) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 73, 2206-2210).  相似文献   

5.
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and optical spectra are used as probes of the heme and its ligands in ferric and ferrous leghemoglobin. The proximal ligand to the heme iron atom of ferric soybean leghemoglobin is identified as imidazole by comparison of the EPR of leghemoglobin hydroxide, azide, and cyanide with the corresponding derivatives of human hemoglobin. Optical spectra show that ferric soybean leghemoglobin near room temperature is almost entirely in the high spin state. At 77 K the optical spectrum is that of a low spin compound, while at 1.6 K the EPR is that of a low spin form resembling bis-imidazole heme. Acetate binds to ferric leghemoglobin to form a high spin complex as judged from the optical spectrum. The EPR of this complex is that of high spin ferric heme in a nearly axial environment. The complexes of ferrous leghemoglobin with substituted pyridines exhibit optical absorption maxima near 685 nm, whose absorption maxima and extinctions are strongly dependent on the nature of the substitutents of the pyridine ring; electron withdrawing groups on the pyridine ring shift the absorption maxima to lower energy. A crystal field analysis of the EPR of nicotinate derivatives of ferric leghemoblobin demonstrates that the pyridine nitrogen is also bound to the heme iron in the ferric state. These findings lead us to picture leghemoglobin as a somewhat flexible molecule in which the transition region between the E and F helices may act as a hinge, opening a small amount at higher temperature to a stable configuration in which the protein is high spin and can accommodate exogenous ligand molecules and closing at low temperature to a second stable configuration in which the protein is low spin and in which close approach of the E helix permits the distal histidine to become the principal sixth ligand.  相似文献   

6.
Cytochrome c1aa3 from Thermus thermophilus has optical and EPR properties similar to bovine cytochrome c oxidase. We have studied 87Fe-enriched samples with M?ssbauer spectroscopy in the fully oxidized and fully reduced states and in the oxidized state complexed with cyanide. The cytochromes a and c1 yielded spectra quite similar to those reported for the cytochromes c and b5; in the oxidized state the spectra reflect noninteracting, low spin ferric hemes, whereas the a- and c1-sites of the reduced enzyme are typical of low spin ferrous hemochromes. The spectra of the reduced enzyme show that reduced cytochrome a3 is high spin ferrous, with M?ssbauer parameters quite similar to those of deoxymyoglobin. Upon addition of cyanide to the oxidized enzyme, the a3-site exhibits in the absence of an applied magnetic field and at temperatures down to 1.3 K a quadrupole doublet with parameters typical of low spin ferric heme-CN complexes. The low temperature spectra taken in applied magnetic fields show that the electronic ground state of the a3-CN complex has integer electronic spin, suggesting ferromagnetic coupling of the low spin ferric heme (S = 1/2) to Cu2+ (S = 1/2) to yield as S = 1 ground state. We have examined the oxidized enzyme from two different preparations. Both had good activity and identical optical and EPR spectra. The M?ssbauer spectra, however, revealed that the a3-site had a substantially different electronic structure in the two preparations. Neither configuration had properties in accord with the widely accepted spin-coupling model proposed for the bovine enzyme.  相似文献   

7.
R J Krueger  L M Siegel 《Biochemistry》1982,21(12):2905-2909
Spinach ferredoxin-sulfite reductase (SiR) contains one siroheme and one Fe4S4 center per polypeptide subunit. The heme is entirely in the high-spin Fe3+ state in the oxidized enzyme. When SiR is photochemically reduced with ethylenediaminetetraacetate (EDTA)-deazaflavin, the free enzyme and its CN- and CO complexes show changes in absorption spectra associated with the heme even after the heme has been reduced from the Fe3+ to the Fe2+ state. With CO- or CN--SiR, these spectral changes are associated with the appearance of a classical "g = 1.94" type of EPR spectrum characteristic of reduced Fe4S4 centers. The line shapes and exact g values of the g = 1.94 EPR spectra vary with the nature of the ligand bound to the heme Fe. Photoreduction of free SiR results in production of a novel type of EPR signal, with g = 2.48, 2.34, and 2.08 in the fully reduced enzyme; this signal accounts for 0.6 spin per heme. (A small g = 1.94 type EPR signal, representing 0.2 spin per heme, is also found.) These data suggest the presence of a strong magnetic interaction between the siroheme and Fe4S4 centers in spinach SiR, this interaction giving rise to different EPR signals depending on the spin state of the heme Fe in the reduced enzyme.  相似文献   

8.
The Rhodococcus rhodochrous strain 11Y XplA enzyme is an unusual cytochrome P450-flavodoxin fusion enzyme that catalyzes reductive denitration of the explosive hexahydro-1,3,5-trinitro-1,3,5-triazene (RDX). We show by light scattering that XplA is a monomeric enzyme. XplA has high affinity for imidazole (K(d) = 1.6 μM), explaining previous reports of a red-shifted XplA Soret band in pure enzyme. The true Soret maximum of XplA is at 417 nm. Similarly, unusually weak XplA flavodoxin FMN binding (K(d) = 1.09 μM) necessitates its purification in the presence of the cofactor to produce hallmark flavin contributions absent in previously reported spectra. Structural and ligand-binding data reveal a constricted active site able to accommodate RDX and small inhibitory ligands (e.g. 4-phenylimidazole and morpholine) while discriminating against larger azole drugs. The crystal structure also identifies a high affinity imidazole binding site, consistent with its low K(d), and shows active site penetration by PEG, perhaps indicative of an evolutionary lipid-metabolizing function for XplA. EPR studies indicate heterogeneity in binding mode for RDX and other ligands. The substrate analog trinitrobenzene does not induce a substrate-like type I optical shift but creates a unique low spin EPR spectrum due to influence on structure around the distal water heme ligand. The substrate-free heme iron potential (-268 mV versus NHE) is positive for a low spin P450, and the elevated potential of the FMN semiquinone/hydroquinone couple (-172 mV) is also an adaptation that may reflect (along with the absence of a key Thr/Ser residue conserved in oxygen-activating P450s) the evolution of XplA as a specialized RDX reductase catalyst.  相似文献   

9.
Human cytochrome P450 (CYP) 3A4 catalyzes the oxygen-dependent metabolism of greater than 60% of known drugs. CYP3A4 binds multiple ligands simultaneously, and this contributes to complex allosteric kinetic behavior. Substrates that bind to this enzyme change the ferric spin state equilibrium of the heme, which can be observed by optical absorbance and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. The ligand-dependent spin state equilibrium has not been quantitatively understood for any ligands that exhibit multiple binding. The CYP3A4 substrate testosterone (TST) has been shown previously by absorbance spectroscopy to induce spin state changes that are characteristic of a low spin to high spin conversion. Here, EPR was used to examine the equilibrium binding of TST to CYP3A4 at [CYP3A4] > K(D), which allows for characterization of the singly occupied state (i.e., CYP3A4.TST). We also have used absorbance spectroscopy to examine equilibrium binding, where [CYP3A4] < K(D), which allows for determination of K(D)'s. The combination of absorbance and EPR spectroscopy at different CYP3A4 concentrations relative to K(D) and curve fitting of the resultant equilibrium binding titration curves to the Adair-Pauling equations, and modifications of it, reveals that the first equivalent of TST binds with higher affinity than the second equivalent of TST and its binding is positively cooperative with respect to ligand-dependent spin state conversion. Careful analysis of the EPR and absorbance spectral results suggests that the binding of the second TST induces a shift to the high spin state and thus that the second TST binding causes displacement of the bound water. A model involving six thermodynamic states is presented and this model is related to the turnover of the enzyme.  相似文献   

10.
The oxidation-reduction potentials of the two c-type hemes of Pseudomonas aeruginosa cytochrome c peroxidase (ferrocytochrome c:hydrogen-peroxide oxidoreductase EC 1.11.1.5) have been determined and found to be widely different, about +320 and -330 mV, respectively. The EPR spectrum at temperatures below 77 K reveals only low-spin signals (gz 3.24 and 2.93), whereas optical spectra at room temperature indicate the presence of one high-spin and one low-spin heme in the enzyme. Optical absorption spectra of both resting and half-reduced enzyme at 77 K lack features of a high-spin compound. It is concluded that the heme ligand arrangement changes on cooling from 298 to 77 K with a concomitant change in the spin state. The active form of the peroxidase is the half-reduced enzyme, in which one heme is in the ferrous and the other in the ferric state (low-spin below 77 K with gz 2.84). Reaction of the half-reduced enzyme with hydrogen peroxide forms Compound I with the hemes predominantly in the ferric (gz 3.15) and the ferryl states. Compound I has a half-life of several seconds and is converted into Compound II apparently having a ferric-ferric structure, characterized by an EPR peak at g 3.6 with unusual temperature and relaxation behavior. Rapid-freeze experiments showed that Compound II is formed in a one-electron reduction of Compound I. The rates of formation of both compounds are consistent with the notion that they are involved in the catalytic cycle.  相似文献   

11.
A spectroscopic study of soybean peroxidase (SBP) has been carried out using electronic absorption, resonance Raman (RR) and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy in order to determine the effects of temperature on the heme spin state. Upon lowering the temperature a transition from high spin to low spin is induced in SBP resulting from conformational changes in the heme cavity, including a contraction of the heme core, the reorientation of the vinyl group in position 2 of the porphyrin macrocycle, and the binding of the distal His to the Fe atom. Moreover, the combined analysis of the data derived from the different techniques at both room and low temperatures demonstrates that at low temperature the quantum-mechanically admixed spin state (QS) of SBP has RR frequencies different from those observed for the QS species at room temperature.  相似文献   

12.
The membrane-bound NO reductase from the hyperthermophilic denitrifying archaeon Pyrobaculum aerophilum was purified to homogeneity. The enzyme displays MQH2:NO oxidoreductase (qNOR) activity, consists of a single subunit, and contains heme and nonheme iron in a 2:1 ratio. The combined results of EPR, resonance Raman, and UV-visible spectroscopy show that one of the hemes is bis-His-coordinated low spin (gz = 3.015; gy = 2.226; gx = 1.45), whereas the other heme adopts a high spin configuration. The enzyme also contains one nonheme iron center, which in the oxidized enzyme is antiferromagnetically coupled to the high spin heme. This binuclear high spin heme/nonheme iron center is EPR-silent and the site of NO reduction. The reduced high spin heme is bound to a neutral histidine and can bind CO to form of a low spin complex. The oxidized high spin heme binds NO, yielding a ferric nitrosyl complex, the intermediate causing the commonly found substrate inhibition in NO reductases (Ki(NO) = 7 microm). The qNOR as present in the membrane is, in contrast to the purified enzyme, quite thermostable, incubation at 100 degrees C for 86 min leading to 50% inhibition. The pure enzyme lacks heme b and instead contains stoichiometric amounts of hemes Op1 and Op2, ethenylgeranylgeranyl and hydroxyethylgeranylgeranyl derivatives of heme b, respectively. The archaeal qNOR is the first example of a NO reductase, which contains modified hemes reminiscent of cytochrome bo3 and aa3 oxidases. This report is the first describing the purification and structural and spectroscopic properties of a thermostable NO reductase.  相似文献   

13.
The effects of lowering pH from 7 to 5 on the absorption, circular dichroism (MCD) and EPR spectra were studied for Paracoccus halodenitrificans nitric oxide reductase (NOR). Intensities of the characteristic bands for the high spin heme b, that at 592 nm in the absorption spectrum and those at 591 (+) and 606 (-) in the MCD spectrum decreased considerably. Concomitant cryogenic EPR spectrum indicated a drastic increase in the signal intensity due to the high spin heme b at g approximately 6, of which less than 5% had been EPR detectable at pH 7. Cyanide (x40) bound to the high spin heme b center in the reduced NOR irrespective of pH, while a much larger amount of azide (x1000) was necessary to bind to the reduced NOR at an acidic pH, ca. 5. Based on these results the structure and function of the high spin heme b center as the active site of NOR was discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Nitrous oxide reductase from Wolinella succinogenes, an enzyme containing one heme c and four Cu atoms/subunit of Mr = 88,000, was studied by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) at 9.2 GHz from 6 to 80 K. In the oxidized state, low spin ferric cytochrome c was observed with gz = 3.10 and an axial Cu resonance was observed with g parallel = 2.17 and g perpendicular = 2.035. No signals were detected at g values greater than 3.10. For the Cu resonance, six hyperfine lines each were observed in the g parallel and g perpendicular regions with average separations of 45.2 and 26.2 gauss, respectively. The hyperfine components are attributed to Cu(I)-Cu(II) S = 1/2 (half-met) centers. Reduction of the enzyme with dithionite caused signals attributable to heme c and Cu to disappear; exposure of that sample to N2O for a few min caused the reappearance of the g = 3.10 component and a new Cu signal with g parallel = 2.17 and g perpendicular = 2.055 that lacked the simple hyperfine components attributed to a single species of half-met center. The enzyme lost no activity as the result of this cycle of reduction and reoxidation. EPR provided no evidence for a Cu-heme interaction. The EPR detectable Cu in the oxidized and reoxidized forms of the enzyme comprised about 23 and 20% of the total Cu, respectively, or about one spin/subunit. The enzyme offers the first example of a nitrous oxide reductase which can have two states of high activity that present very different EPR spectra of Cu. These two states may represent enzyme in two different stages of the catalytic cycle.  相似文献   

15.
The effects of the chaotropic agent, guanidine HCl, on the chlorinating activity, optical absorption, EPR, and resonance Raman spectra of myeloperoxidase have been studied. In the presence of the agent the Soret optical absorption of the reduced enzyme (lambda max = 474 nm) is blue shifted to 448 nm, a position similar to heme alpha-containing enzymes. The chlorinating activity of the enzyme disappears, and EPR spectra show a loss of intensity of the rhombic high spin heme signals (gx = 6.9; gy = 5.4) and the appearance of a more axial high spin signal (gx = gy = 6.0). Surprisingly the effects of guanidine HCl are partly reversible. Upon decreasing the concentration of the chaotropic agents by dilution, both the chlorinating activity and the original optical spectrum of native reduced enzyme (lambda max = 474 nm) are partly restored. The resonance Raman spectra of denatured cyanomyeloperoxidase are less complicated than those of native myeloperoxidase, which have been interpreted previously to suggest an iron chlorin chromophore. The multiple lines in the oxidation state marker region are not seen in the spectra of the denatured species. The changes suggest that upon denaturation the macrocycle is converted into a more symmetric structure. Since the effects on the optical absorption spectrum are reversible we speculate that, in the native enzyme, an apparent porphyrin macrocycle undergoes a reversible interaction with amino acid residues in the protein which creates an asymmetry in the electronic distribution of the macrocycle. Comparison of the Raman spectra of denatured cyanomyeloperoxidase with those of analogous heme alpha model complexes suggests the presence of a formyl group in the denatured species; our data, however, demonstrate that the chromophore structure is not identical to heme alpha and may contain a different C beta substitution on the ring macrocycle.  相似文献   

16.
We have proposed that the "doublet" EPR spectra observed during catalysis by a number of coenzyme B12-requiring enzymes arises from a weak electrostatic exchange interaction between an organic free radical and low spin Co(II), B12r. By varying the magnitude of the exchange of coupling we have quite accurately simulated the published EPR spectra from the enzyme systems: diol dehydrase, glycerol dehydrase, ribonucleotide reductase, and ethanolamine ammon-ia lyase. A dipolar model was shown to be incompatible with the observed properties of these systems.  相似文献   

17.
Electronic absorption and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopic examinations revealed that a freshly prepared cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP) contains a penta-coordinated high spin ferric protoheme group. The penta-coordinated high spin state of fresh CCP is maintained in a remarkably wide range of pH (4-8). The freezing of fresh CCP induces the reversible coordination of an internal strong field ligand to the heme iron to form a hexa-coordinated low spin compound, which shows EPR extrema at gx = 2.70, gy = 2.20 and gz = 1.78. In the presence of glycerol the freezing-induced artifacts are eliminated and the fresh enzyme exhibits an EPR spectrum of rhombically distorted axial symmetry with EPR extrema at gx = 6.4, gy = 5.3, and gz = 1.97 at 10 K, characteristic of the penta-coordinated high spin enzyme. Upon aging CCP is converted to a hexa-coordinated high spin state due to the coordination of an internal weak field ligand to the heme iron. This conversion is accelerated at acidic pH values, and its reversibility varies from fully reversible to irreversible depending on the degree of enzyme aging. The aging-induced hexa-coordinated CCP is unreactive with hydrogen peroxide and exhibits an EPR spectrum of purely axial symmetry with extrema at g = 6 and g = 2 and an electronic absorption spectrum with an intensified Soret band at 408 nm (epsilon 408 nm = 120 mM-1 cm-1) and a blue-shifted charge-transfer band at 620 nm. Spectroscopic properties of different coordination and spin states of fresh and aged CCPs are compiled in order to formulate a generalized spectroscopic characterization of penta- and hexa-coordinated high spin ferric hemoproteins.  相似文献   

18.
Hyperfine broadening is observable in the EPR spectrum of Brevibacterium fuscum protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase after lyophilization and rehydration in 17O-enriched water, demonstrating H2O ligation to the active site iron. Lack of detectable broadening in the sharp features of the spectra of three substrate complexes suggests that H2O is displaced by substrate. Water is bound in the monodentate complex with the competitive inhibitor 3-hydroxybenzoate which binds directly to the iron showing that two iron ligation sites can be occupied by nonprotein ligands. Ketonized substrate analogs which mimic a proposed transition state of the reaction cycle, 2-hydroxyisonicotinic acid N-oxide (2-OHINO) and 6-hydroxynicotinic acid N-oxide (6-OH NNO), have H2O bound in their final, bleached enzyme complexes, suggesting that these complexes are also monodentate. In contrast, a transient, initial complex of 6-OH NNO which is spectrally similar to the substrate complex, apparently does not have H2O bound. Cyanide binding occurs in two steps. The active site Fe3+ of the initial, rapidly formed, violet complex is high spin while that of the second, slowly formed, green complex is low spin; a unique state for mononuclear non-heme iron enzymes. The data suggest that the Fe-CN- and Fe-(CN-)2 complexes form sequentially. CN- binds to enzyme complexes with 2-OH INO and 6-OH NNO in one step to yield high spin Fe3+ species. In contrast, preformed substrate complexes prevent CN- binding. CN- binding eliminates the broadening due to 17O-water in the EPR spectra of both native enzyme and the enzyme-ketonized analog complexes. A model is proposed in which H2O is displaced by bidentate binding of the substrate but can potentially rebind after a subsequent substrate ketonization. The proximity of the vacatable H2O-binding site of the iron to the site of oxygen insertion suggests, however, that this site may serve to stabilize an oxygenated intermediate during the reaction cycle.  相似文献   

19.
Helmut Beinert  Robert W. Shaw 《BBA》1977,462(1):121-130
In oxidized, resting cytochrome c oxidase (EC 1.9.3.1) and under most conditions of partial reduction ? 50% of the heme components are detected by EPR spectroscopy. When the enzyme is fully reduced in the presence of equimolar quantities of cytochrome c, anaerobic reoxidation by an excess of a chemical oxidant (ferricyanide, porphyrexide) produces intense high and low spin heme signals simultaneously. The time range in which maximal high spin signals are observed is 0.1–2 s after mixing. Under these conditions 35–50% of the total heme a is accounted for by the low spin heme signal and 35–40% by the high spin signals, with the rhombic component accounting for 30–35% of the total heme. It is concluded that under these conditions, the major portion of both heme components must be EPR detectable. Thus, if the generally accepted assignment of the low spin signal to cytochrome a is adopted, it follows that in the experiments described, cytochrome a3 is represented in the rhombic high spin signal. The quantities of heme represented in the axial high spin signal are too small for a definitive assignment; these signals could originate from either heme. When after formation of high spin signals as described, O2 is admitted, the rhombic signal is eliminated within 4 ms. In the presence of the strongest rhombic high spin signals, the absorption band at 655 nm is only ? 25% developed. The implications of these findings are discussed in the context of present hypotheses concerning the state and interactions of cytochrome c oxidase components during oxidation-reduction.  相似文献   

20.
Two-subunit SoxB-type cytochrome c oxidase in Bacillus stearothermophilus was over-produced, purified, and examined for its active site structures by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and resonance Raman (RR) spectroscopies. This is cytochrome bo3 oxidase containing heme B at the low-spin heme site and heme O at the high-spin heme site of the binuclear center. EPR spectra of the enzyme in the oxidized form indicated that structures of the high-spin heme O and the low-spin heme B were similar to those of SoxM-type oxidases based on the signals at g=6.1, and g=3.04. However, the EPR signals from the CuA center and the integer spin system at the binuclear center showed slight differences. RR spectra of the oxidized form showed that heme O was in a 6-coordinated high-spin (nu3 = 1472 cm(-1)), and heme B was in a 6-coordinated low-spin (nu3 = 1500 cm(-1)) state. The Fe2+-His stretching mode was observed at 211 cm(-1), indicating that the Fe2+-His bond strength is not so much different from those of SoxM-type oxidases. On the contrary, both the Fe2+-CO stretching and Fe2+-C-O bending modes differed distinctly from those of SoxM-type enzymes, suggesting some differences in the coordination geometry and the protein structure in the proximity of bound CO in cytochrome bo3 from those of SoxM-type enzymes.  相似文献   

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