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1.
The flavoprotein p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase from Pseudomonas fluorescens was modified by several arginine-specific reagents. Modifications by 2,3-butanedione led to the loss of activity of the enzyme, but the binding of p-hydroxybenzoate and NADPH to the enzyme was little or not at all affected. However the formation of the enzyme-substrate complex of the modified enzyme was accompanied by an increase of the fluorescence of protein-bound FAD, in contrast to that of native enzyme which leads to quenching of the fluorescence. Enzyme modified by phenylglyoxal did not bind p-hydroxybenzoate nor NADPH. Quantification and protection experiments showed that two arginine residues are essential and a model is described which accounts for the results. Modification by 4-hydroxy-3-nitrophenylglyoxal reduced the affinity of the enzyme for the substrate and NADPH. The ligands offered no protection against inactivation. From this it is concluded that one arginine residue is essential at some stage of the catalysis. This residue is not associated with the substrate- or NADPH-binding site of the enzyme. Time-resolved fluorescence studies showed that the average fluorescence lifetime and the mobility of protein-bound FAD are affected by modification of the enzyme.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
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   

4.
The decay kinetics of the FAD-fluorescence in lipoamide dehydrogenase from pig heart have been reinvestigated using phase fluorometric methods and sophisticated laser pulse techniques. Both pulse and modulation methods lead to distinct heterogeneity in lifetimes. The two different techniques lead to good correspondence in the longer lifetime component of a biexponential decay model, whereas the more rapidly decaying component is distinctly shorter and has a larger amplitude using the phase technique with two available modulation frequencies (15 and 60 MHz). Lifetime measurements as a function of temperature and in the presence of D2O instead of H2O illustrate that the quenching of the FAD fluorescence in lipoamide. dehydrogenase is mainly dynamic in nature and that solvent comes into contact with the fluorophor. Mobility of the flavin itself, free and bound to the enzyme, has been measured by both differential polarized phase fluorometry and experimental fluorescence anisotropy decay after ps laser pulse excitation. By employing flavin models it has been shown that both techniques have ps time resolution. Measurements with the latter more direct method indicate a rapid subnanosecond motion of the FAD bound within the enzyme, only visible at temperatures lower than about 15°C, where the protein rotational diffusion is slowed down. The significance of rapid transient conformational fluctuations for catalysis is discussed with reference to recently developed insights reported in the literature.  相似文献   

5.
p-Hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase (EC 1.14.13.2) from Pseudomonas fluorescens is a NADPH-dependent, FAD-containing monooxygenase catalyzing the hydroxylation of p-hydroxybenzoate to form 3,4-dihydroxybenzoate in the presence of NADPH and molecular oxygen. The mechanism of this three-substrate reaction was investigated in detail at pH 6.6, 4 degrees C, by steady state kinetics, stopped flow spectrophotometry, and equilibrium binding experiments. The initial velocity patterns are consistent with a ping-pong type mechanism which involves two ternary complexes between the enzyme and substrates. The first ternary complex is formed by random addition of p-hydroxybenzoate and NADPH to the enzyme, followed by the release of the first product (NADP+). The reduced enzyme . p-hydroxybenzoate complex now reacts with oxygen, the third substrate, to form the second ternary complex. The enzyme-bound p-hydroxybenzoate then reacts with the activated oxygen to give 3,4-dihydroxybenzoate which is released regenerating the oxidized enzyme for the next cycle. The binding of p-hydroxybenzoate to the oxidized enzyme to form a 1:1 complex causes large, characteristic spectral perturbations and fluorescence quenching. The dissociation constant for the enzyme . substrate complex was obtained by titrations in which absorbance and/or fluorescence quenching was measured. The binding constants of NADPH to the enzyme with and without p-hydroxybenzoate were determined kinetically by measuring the rate of reduction of the enzyme at different concentrations of NADPH. The reduction of the enzyme proceeds extremely slowly in the absence of p-hydroxybenzoate. The presence of the substrate causes a dramatic stimulation (140,000-fold) in the rate of enzyme reduction. The anaerobic reduction of the enzyme by NADPH in the presence of p-hydroxybenzoate produces a transient charge-transfer intermediate. On the basis of the proposed mechanism, the dissociation constants for p-hydroxybenzoate and NADPH as well as the Michaelis constants for all the three substrates were calculated from the initial velocity data. The agreement obtained between various kinetic parameters from the initial rate measurements and those calculated from the individual rate constants determined in rapid reactions, strongly supports the proposed mechanism for the p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase reaction.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
Upon gradually heating a particular mutant of the flavoprotein NADH peroxidase, it was found from the peculiar time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy pattern of the flavin prosthetic group (FAD) that, at elevated temperature, FAD is released from the tetrameric enzyme. Since in this case a mixture of free and enzyme-bound FAD contributes to the time-dependent fluorescence anisotropy, its analysis can only be accomplished by an associative fitting model, in which specific fluorescence lifetimes of both species are linked to specific correlation times. In this letter the general approach to the associative polarized fluorescence decay analysis is described. The procedure can be used for other flavoproteins to determine the temperature at which the onset of thermal denaturation will start, leading to release of the flavin prosthetic group. Received: 20 November 1998 / Revised version: 6 April 1999 / Accepted: 8 April 1999  相似文献   

8.
The oxidation-reduction potential of p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase (4-hydroxybenzoate, NADPH: oxygen oxidoreductase (3-hydroxylating), EC 1.14.13.2) from Pseudomonas fluorescens has been measured in the presence and absence of p-hydroxybenzoate using spectrocoulometry. The native enzyme demonstrated a two-electron midpoint potential of -129 mV during the initial reductive titration. The midpoint potential observed during subsequent oxidative and reductive titrations was -152 mV. This marked hysteresis is proposed to arise from the oxidation and reduction of the known air-sensitive thiol group on the enzyme (Van Berkel, W.J.H. and Müller, F. (1987) Eur. J. Biochem. 167, 35-46). Redox titrations of the enzyme in the presence of substrate showed a two-electron midpoint potential of -177 mV. No spectral or electrochemical evidence for the thermodynamic stabilization of any flavin semiquinone was observed in the titrations performed. These data show that the affinity of the apoenzyme for the hydroquinone form of FAD is 150-fold greater than for the oxidized flavin and that the substrate is bound to the reduced enzyme with a 3-fold lower affinity than to the oxidized enzyme. These data are consistent with the view that the stimulatory effect of substrate binding on the rate of enzyme reduction by NADPH is due to the respective geometries of the bound FAD and NADPH rather than to a large perturbation of the oxidation-reduction potential of the bound flavin coenzyme.  相似文献   

9.
We have used the flavoenzyme p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase (PHBH) to illustrate that a strongly fluorescent donor label can communicate with the flavin via single-pair F?rster resonance energy transfer (spFRET). The accessible Cys-116 of PHBH was labeled with two different fluorescent maleimides with full preservation of enzymatic activity. One of these labels shows overlap between its fluorescence spectrum and the absorption spectrum of the FAD prosthetic group in the oxidized state, while the other fluorescent probe does not have this spectral overlap. The spectral overlap strongly diminished when the flavin becomes reduced during catalysis. The donor fluorescence properties can then be used as a sensitive antenna for the flavin redox state. Time-resolved fluorescence experiments on ensembles of labeled PHBH molecules were carried out in the absence and presence of enzymatic turnover. Distinct changes in fluorescence decays of spFRET-active PHBH can be observed when the enzyme is performing catalysis using both substrates p-hydroxybenzoate and NADPH. Single-molecule fluorescence correlation spectroscopy on spFRET-active PHBH showed the presence of a relaxation process (relaxation time of 23 micros) that is related to catalysis. In addition, in both labeled PHBH preparations the number of enzyme molecules reversibly increased during enzymatic turnover indicating that the dimer-monomer equilibrium is affected.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
The flavin prosthetic group (FAD) of p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase (EC 1.14.13.2) from Pseudomonas fluorescens, was replaced by 6-hydroxy-FAD (an extra hydroxyl group on the carbon at position 6 of the isoalloxazine ring of FAD). The catalytic cycle of this modified enzyme was analyzed and compared to the function of native (FAD) enzyme. Transient state kinetic analyses of the multiple changes in the chemical state of the flavin were the principal methods used to probe the mechanism. Four known substrates of the native enzyme were used to probe the reaction. With the natural substrate, p-hydroxybenzoate, the 6-hydroxy-FAD enzyme activity was 12-15% of native enzyme, due to a slower release of product from the enzyme, and less than one product molecule was formed per NADPH oxidized, due to an increased rate of nonproductive decomposition of the transient peroxyflavin essential to the catalytic pathway. More extensive changes in mechanism were observed with the substrates, 2,4-dihydroxybenzoate and p-aminobenzoate. The results suggest that, during catalysis, when the reduced state of FAD is ready for oxygen reaction, the substrate is located below and close to the C-4a/N-5 edge of the isoalloxazine ring. The nature of the high extinction, transient state of flavin, formed upon transfer of oxygen to substrate is discussed. It is not a flavin cation, and is unlikely to be an oxygen-substituted analogue of N-3/C-4 dihydroflavin.  相似文献   

12.
p-Hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase is extensively studied as a model for single-component flavoprotein monooxygenases. It catalyzes a reaction in two parts: (1) reduction of the FAD in the enzyme by NADPH in response to binding of p-hydroxybenzoate to the enzyme and (2) oxidation of reduced FAD with oxygen in an environment free from solvent to form a hydroperoxide, which then reacts with p-hydroxybenzoate to form an oxygenated product. These different reactions are coordinated through conformational rearrangements of the protein and the isoalloxazine ring during catalysis. Until recently, it has not been clear how p-hydroxybenzoate gains access to the buried active site. In 2002, a structure of a mutant form of the enzyme without substrate was published that showed an open conformation with solvent access to the active site [Wang, J., Ortiz-Maldonado, M., Entsch, B., Massey, V., Ballou, D., and Gatti, D. L. (2002) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 99, 608-613]. The wild-type enzyme does not form high-resolution crystals without substrate. We hypothesized that the wild-type enzyme without substrate also forms an open conformation for binding p-hydroxybenzoate, but only transiently. To test this idea, we have studied the properties of two different mutant forms of the enzyme that are stabilized in the open conformation. These mutant enzymes bind p-hydroxybenzoate very fast, but with very low affinity, as expected from the open structure. The mutant enzymes are extremely inactive, but are capable of slowly forming small amounts of product by the normal catalytic pathway. The lack of activity results from the failure of the mutants to readily form the out conformation required for flavin reduction by NADPH. The mutants form a large fraction of an abnormal conformation of the reduced enzyme with p-hydroxybenzoate bound. This conformation of the enzyme is unreactive with oxygen. We conclude that transient formation of this open conformation is the mechanism for sequestering p-hydroxybenzoate to initiate catalysis. This overall study emphasizes the role that protein dynamics can play in enzymatic catalysis.  相似文献   

13.
D E Waskiewicz  G G Hammes 《Biochemistry》1982,21(25):6489-6496
The lipoic acids of the alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase multienzyme complex from Escherichia coli have been modified with two fluorescent probes, N-(1-pyrenyl)-maleimide and 5-[[[(iodoacetyl)amino]ethyl]amino]-naphthylene-1-sulfonic acid. Time-resolved fluorescence polarization of partially labeled complexes (18-77% inhibition of enzyme activity) reveals a complex depolarization process: one component of the anisotropy is characterized by a rotational correlation time much longer than the time scale of the measurements (less than or equal to 400 ns), reflecting the overall rotation of the complex, while a second component of the anisotropy decays with a rotational correlation time of 320 (+/- 50) ns. This decay is essentially independent of viscosity and is consistent with a model in which the depolarization is due to the dissociation from and rotation of lipoic acids between binding sites on the multienzyme complex. The sum of the rate constants characterizing the association and dissociation with the binding sites is approximately 3 x 10(6) s-1. In addition, approximately 5% of the anisotropy of the N-(1-pyrenyl)maleimide-labeled complex decays with a rotational correlation time of 25 ns; this can be attributed to local motion of the probe. At high extents of N-(1-pyrenyl)maleimide labeling (90-95% inhibition of enzyme activity), the anisotropy decay can be described by a constant term plus a rotational correlation time of about 1 microseconds. The increase in the correlation time probably reflects interactions between pyrene moieties. The N-(1-pyrenyl)maleimide-labeled dihydrolipoyl transsuccinylase core of the multienzyme complex has been isolated, and the anisotropy is constant over the observed time range of 300 ns. This suggests that the native structure is necessary for observation of lipoic acid movement within the complex. Fluorescent-labeled limited trypsin digestion fragments of the alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase complex also have been isolated, and anisotropy measurements reveal substantial mobility of the label within the fragments. The time-resolved anisotropy of FAD in the native complex and in the isolated dihydrolipoyl dehydrogenase indicates some rapid local mobility of the FAD (rotational correlation time of 12 ns) that is viscosity independent, as well as a component of the anisotropy that is constant over the 35-ns time scale of the experiments.  相似文献   

14.
The role of protein residues in activating the substrate in the reaction catalyzed by the flavoprotein p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase was studied. X-ray crystallography (Schreuder, H. A., Prick, P.A.J., Wieringa, R.K., Vriend, G., Wilson, K.S., Hol, W.G. J., and Drenth, J. (1989) J. Mol. Biol. 208, 679-696) indicates that Tyr-201 and Tyr-385 form a hydrogen bond network with the 4-OH of p-hydroxybenzoate. Therefore, site directed mutants were constructed, converting each of these tyrosines into phenylalanines. Spectral (visible and fluorescence) properties, reduction potentials, and binding constants are very similar to those of wild type, indicating that there are no major structural changes in the mutants. In the absence of substrate, the mutants and wild type exhibit similar pH-dependent changes in the FAD spectrum. However, the enzyme-substrate complex of Tyr-201----Phe lacks an ionization observed in both wild type and Tyr-385----Phe, which preferentially bind the phenolate form of substrates. Tyr-201----Phe shows no preference, indicating that Tyr-201 is required to ionize the substrate. The mutants have less than 6% the activity of the wild type enzyme. The effects on catalysis were studied by stopped flow techniques. Reduction of FAD by NADPH is slower by 10-fold in Tyr-201----Phe and 100-fold in Tyr-385----Phe. When the reduced Tyr-201----Phe-p-hydroxybenzoate complex reacts with oxygen, a long-lived flavin-C(4a)-hydroperoxide is observed, which slowly eliminates H2O2 with very little hydroxylation. Thus, the role of Tyr-201 is to activate the substrate by stabilizing the phenolate. Tyr-385----Phe reacts with oxygen to form 25% oxidized enzyme, and 75% flavin hydroperoxide, which successfully hydroxylates the substrate. This mutant also hydroxylates the product (3, 4-dihydroxybenzoate) to form gallic acid.  相似文献   

15.
The FAD of p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase (PHBH) is known to exist in two conformations. The FAD must be in the in-position for hydroxylation of p-hydroxybenzoate (pOHB), whereas the out-position is essential for reduction of the flavin by NADPH. In these investigations, we have used 8-mercapto-FAD and 8-hydroxy-FAD to probe the movement of the flavin in catalysis. Under the conditions employed, 8-mercapto-FAD (pK(a) = 3.8) and 8-hydroxy-FAD (pK(a) = 4.8) are mainly anionic. The spectral characteristics of the anionic forms of these flavins are very sensitive to their environment, making them sensitive probes for detecting movement of the flavin during catalysis. With these flavin analogues, the enzyme hydroxylates pOHB efficiently, but at a rate much slower than that of enzyme with FAD. Reaction of oxygen with reduced forms of these modified enzymes in the absence of substrate appears to proceed through the formation of the flavin-C4a-hydroperoxide intermediate, as with normal enzyme, but the decay of this intermediate is so fast compared to its formation that very little accumulates during the reaction. However, after elimination of H2O2 from the flavin-C4a-hydroperoxide, a perturbed oxidized enzyme spectrum is observed (Eox*), and this converts slowly to the spectrum of the resting oxidized form of the enzyme (Eox). In the presence of pOHB, PHBH reconstituted with 8-mercapto-FAD also shows the additional oxidized intermediate (Eox*) after the usual oxygenated C4a-intermediates have formed and decayed in the course of the hydroxylation reaction. This Eox* to Eox step is postulated to be due to flavin movement. Furthermore, binding of pOHB to resting (Eox) follows a three-step equilibrium mechanism that is also consistent with flavin movement being the rate-limiting step. The rate for the slowest step during pOHB binding is similar to that observed for the conversion of Eox* to Eox during the oxygen reaction in the absence or presence of substrate. Steady-state kinetic analysis of PHBH substituted with 8-mercapto-FAD demonstrated that the apparent k(cat) is also similar to the rate of Eox* conversion to Eox. Presumably, the protein environment surrounding the flavin in Eox* differs slightly from that of the final resting form of the enzyme (Eox).  相似文献   

16.
H A Schreuder  W G Hol  J Drenth 《Biochemistry》1990,29(12):3101-3108
The flavoprotein p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase has been studied extensively by biochemical techniques by others and in our laboratory by X-ray crystallography. As a result of the latter investigations, well-refined crystal structures are known of the enzyme complexed (i) with its substrate p-hydroxybenzoate and (ii) with its reaction product 3,4-dihydroxybenzoate and (iii) the enzyme with reduced FAD. Knowledge of these structures and the availability of the three-dimensional structure of a model compound for the reactive flavin 4a-hydroperoxide intermediate has allowed a detailed analysis of the reaction with oxygen. In the model of this reaction intermediate, fitted to the active site of p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase, all possible positions of the distal oxygen were surveyed by rotating this oxygen about the single bond between the C4a and the proximal oxygen. It was found that the distal oxygen is free to sweep an arc of about 180 degrees in the active site. The flavin 4a-peroxide anion, which is formed after reaction of molecular oxygen with reduced FAD, might accept a proton from an active-site water molecule or from the hydroxyl group of the substrate. The position of the oxygen to be transferred with respect to the substrate appears to be almost ideal for nucleophilic attack of the substrate onto this oxygen. The oxygen is situated above the 3-position of the substrate where the substitution takes place, at an angle of about 60 degrees with the aromatic plane, allowing strong interactions with the pi electrons of the substrate. Polarization of the peroxide oxygen-oxygen bond by the enzyme may enhance the reactivity of flavin 4a-peroxide.  相似文献   

17.
Meneely KM  Lamb AL 《Biochemistry》2007,46(42):11930-11937
Pyoverdin is the hydroxamate siderophore produced by the opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa under the iron-limiting conditions of the human host. This siderophore includes derivatives of ornithine in the peptide backbone that serve as iron chelators. PvdA is the ornithine hydroxylase, which performs the first enzymatic step in preparation of these derivatives. PvdA requires both flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) for activity; it was found to be a soluble monomer most active at pH 8.0. The enzyme demonstrated Michaelis-Menten kinetics in an NADPH oxidation assay, but a hydroxylation assay indicated substrate inhibition at high ornithine concentration. PvdA is highly specific for both substrate and coenzyme, and lysine was shown to be a nonsubstrate effector and mixed inhibitor of the enzyme with respect to ornithine. Chloride is a mixed inhibitor of PvdA with respect to ornithine but a competitive inhibitor with respect to NADPH, and a bulky mercurial compound (p-chloromercuribenzoate) is a mixed inhibitor with respect to ornithine. Steady-state experiments indicate that PvdA/FAD forms a ternary complex with NADPH and ornithine for catalysis. PvdA in the absence of ornithine shows slow substrate-independent flavin reduction by NADPH. Biochemical comparison of PvdA to p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase (PHBH, from Pseudomonas fluorescens) and flavin-containing monooxygenases (FMOs, from Schizosaccharomyces pombe and hog liver microsomes) leads to the hypothesis that PvdA catalysis proceeds by a novel reaction mechanism.  相似文献   

18.
Fluorescence as well as fluorescence anisotropy decay parameters have been obtained from NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase by time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy. The two flavins in the enzyme, FMN and FAD, are slightly fluorescent and exhibit heterogeneous fluorescence lifetimes, as observed with other flavoproteins. The time-dependent anisotropy is also multiexponential and is wavelength-dependent. The anisotropy decay is biexponential with two correlation times when the enzyme is excited at the red edge of the first absorption band (514 nm). When the enzyme is excited in the light absorption maximum (458 nm), an additional shorter correlation time is found, which contains information about the rate of energy transfer between the two flavins present in the enzyme. FMN-depleted NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase shows also only two correlation times, as does the enzyme in the "air-stable" semiquinone state when excited at 458 nm. Wavelength-dependent steady-state anisotropy measurements of native and FMN-depleted protein show that the former exhibits lower values than the latter in the region of the first absorption band, but when the red edge of the absorption band is reached, the anisotropy becomes equal in both preparations. A similar situation is encountered in model compounds, monomeric and dimeric flavins, immobilized in poly(methyl methacrylate). Both in the models and in the flavoprotein this can be attributed to failure of energy transfer at the red edge of the absorption band. From the results we were able to derive both geometric parameters and dynamic properties of both flavins in the NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
The tryptophyl fluorescence of ribonuclease T1 decays monoexponentially at pH 5.5, tau = 4.04 ns but on increasing pH, a second short-lived component of 1.5 ns appears with a midpoint between pH 6.5 and 7.0. Both components have the same fluorescence spectrum. Acrylamide quenches both fluorescence components, and the short-lived component is quenched fivefold faster than the predominant long component. Binding of the substrate analogue 2'-guanylic acid at pH 5.5 quenches the fluorescence by 20% and introduces a second decay component, tau = 1.16 ns. Acrylamide quenches both tryptophyl decay components, with similar quenching rates. The fluorescence anisotropy decay of ribonuclease T1 was consistent with a molecule the size of ribonuclease T1 surrounded by a single layer of water at pH 7.4, even though the anisotropy decay at pH 5.5 deviated from Stokes-Einstein behavior. The fluorescence data were interpreted with a model where the tryptophyl residue exists in two conformations, remaining in a hydrophobic pocket. The acrylamide quenching is interpreted with electron transfer theory and suggests that one conformer has the nearest atom approximately 3 A from the protein surface, and the other, approximately 2 A.  相似文献   

20.
In the crystal structure of native p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase, Ser212 is within hydrogen bonding distance (2.7 A) of one of the carboxylic oxygens of p-hydroxybenzoate. In this study, we have mutated residue 212 to alanine to study the importance of the serine hydrogen bond to enzyme function. Comparisons between mutant and wild type (WT) enzymes with the natural substrate p-hydroxybenzoate showed that this residue contributes to substrate binding. The dissociation constant for this substrate is 1 order of magnitude higher than that of WT, but the catalytic process is otherwise unchanged. When the alternate substrate, 2,4-dihydroxybenzoate, is used, two products are formed (2,3,4-trihydroxybenzoate and 2,4, 5-trihydroxybenzoate), which demonstrates that this substrate can be bound in two orientations. Kinetic studies provide evidence that the intermediate with a high extinction coefficient previously observed in the oxidative half-reaction of the WT enzyme with this substrate is composed of contributions from both the dienone form of the product and the C4a-hydroxyflavin. During the reduction of the enzyme-2,4-dihydroxybenzoate complex by NADPH with 2, 4-dihydroxybenzoate, a rapid transient increase in flavin absorbance is observed prior to hydride transfer from NADPH to FAD. This is direct evidence for movement of the flavin before reduction occurs.  相似文献   

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