首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
EPR spectroscopic and chemical analyses of spinach nitrite reductase show that the enzyme contains one reducible iron-sulfur center, and one site for binding either cyanide or nitrite, per siroheme. The heme is nearly all in the high spin ferric state in the enzyme as isolated. The extinction coefficient of the enzyme has been revised to E386 = 7.6 X 10(4) cm-1 (M heme)-1. The iron-sulfur center is reduced with difficulty by agents such as reduced methyl viologen (equilibrated with 1 atm of H2 at pH 7.7 in the presence of hydrogenase) or dithionite. Complexation of the enzyme with CO (a known ligand for nitrite reductase heme) markedly increases the reducibility of the iron-sulfur center. New chemical analyses and reinterpretation of previous data show that the enzyme contains 6 mol of iron and 4 mol of acid-labile S2-/mol of siroheme. The EPR spectrum of reduced nitrite reductase in 80% dimethyl sulfoxide establishes clearly that the enzyme contains a tetranuclear iron-sulfur (Fe4S4) center. The ferriheme and Fe4S4 centers are reduced at similar rates (k = 3 to 4 s-1) by dithionite. The dithionite-reduced Fe4S4 center is rapidly (k = 100 s-1) reoxidized by nitrite. These results indicate a role for the Fe4S4 center in catalysis.  相似文献   

2.
The redox properties of purified bisulfite reductases from Desulfovibrio gigas, D. desulfuricans (Norway) and Desulfotomaculum ruminis, containing non-heme iron and siroheme have been studied by EPR spectroscopy. Each enzyme shows ferric siroheme EPR signals which are not completely reduced by dithionite after 20 min, but are readily reduced within 1 min by dithionite plus methyl viologen. With the latter reducing system, each reductase also reveals a variable Beinert “g=1.94” type iron-sulfur signal. Reaction of each reductase with reduced methyl viologen results in reduction of only the siroheme. These results suggest different redox potentials for the iron-sulfur and siroheme moieties, and indicate that their functional properties are similar for each reductase.  相似文献   

3.
Ferredoxin-nitrite reductase (EC 1.7.7.1), an enzyme which catalyzes the 6-electron reduction of nitrite to ammonia, has been isolated from Spinacia oleracea. The isolated enzyme was homogeneous by disc electrophoresis with polyacrylamide gel. The molecular weight of the enzyme was estimated to be 86,000 by Ultrogel AcA 34 gel filtration. In the oxidized form, the enzyme had absorption maxima at 278, 388 (Soret band), 573 (α band) and 690 nm, indicating that siroheme is directly involved in the catalysis of nitrite reduction. This absorption spectrum was modified by sulfite, hydroxylamine and cyanide. The enzyme exhibited electron paramagnetic resonance signals with g values of 6.9 and 5.2, which are characteristic of a high spin Fe3+ -siroheme in the molecule. These signals disappeared upon the addition of dithionite or nitrite. This isolated enzyme also contained four moles of labile sulfide and 7 g-atoms of iron per 86,000 g of protein.  相似文献   

4.
Ferredoxin-dependent nitrite reductase of spinach has been further characterized and the relationship between this enzyme and methyl viologen-dependent nitrite reductase studied.

Purified ferredoxin nitrite reductase, having a molecular weight of 86,000, showed 2.5 times higher ferredoxin-dependent activity than methyl viologen-linked activity. Besides 4 mol of labile sulfide the enzyme contained about 2 mol of siroheme per mol. When dithionite, methyl viologen and nitrite were added, ESR signals of a heme nitrosyl complex at g = 2.14, 2.07 and 2.02 were observed. Moreover, hyperfine splitting of the signal due to 14N nuclear spin was also observed at 2.033, 2.023 and 2.013. The sole addition of hydroxylamine to the ferric enzyme also caused the same but much less intense signals with the hyperfine splitting.

On treatment of the ferredoxin nitrite reductase (native enzyme) with DEAE-Sephadex A-50 chromatography, a modified nitrite reductase having a molecular weight of 61,000 and a protein fraction having an apparent molecular weight of 24,000 were separated. The modified enzyme contained about one mol of siroheme and 4 mol of labile sulfide per mol and showed essentially the same heme ESR signals as the native enzyme. Contrary to the native enzyme, this modified enzyme accepted electrons more efficiently from methyl viologen than ferredoxin and the reduction of nitrite to ammonia catalyzed by the modified enzyme was not stoichiometric. The observed nitrite to ammonia ratio was 1 to less than 0.6. Cyanide at concentrations between 0.02 to 0.2 mm inhibited the activity of the native enzyme almost completely but the modified enzyme was inhibited only partially.

From the results obtained, it is suggested that the native ferredoxin-linked nitrite reductase consists of two components (or subunits) and removal of the light component results in formation of a modified enzyme with increased relative affinity to methyl viologen.  相似文献   

5.
A nitrate reductase was solubilized with Triton X-100 from the membranes of Pseudomonas chlororaphis DSM 50135 grown microaerobically in the presence of nitrate. Like other membrane-bound nitrate reductases, it contains three subunits, of 129, 66 (64) and 24 kDa, referred to in the literature as alpha, beta and gamma, respectively. Electrocatalytic studies revealed that only the membrane-bound, not the solubilized form of the enzyme, can accept electrons from a menaquinone analog, menadione, whereas both forms can accept electrons from methylviologen. The isolated enzyme possesses several iron-sulfur clusters and a molybdopterin guanine dinucleotide active center. The iron-sulfur clusters can be grouped in two classes according to their redox properties, the high-potential and low-potential clusters. In the as-isolated enzyme, two forms of the molybdenum center, high- and low-pH, are detectable by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. The low-pH form shows a hyperfine splitting due to a proton, suggesting the presence of an -OHx ligand. Dithionite reduces the Mo(V) center to Mo(IV) and subsequent reoxidization with nitrate originates a new Mo(V) signal, identical to the oxidized low-pH form but lacking its characteristic hyperfine splitting. The isolated preparation also contains heme c (in a sub-stoichiometric amount) with the ability to relay electrons to the molybdenum center, suggesting that this nitrate reductase may contain heme c instead of the heme b usually found in this class of enzymes.  相似文献   

6.
Chemical analysis of the ferredoxin-dependent native form (Mr = 85,000) of spinach nitrite reductase has demonstrated a siroheme content that approaches 2 mol of siroheme/mol of enzyme. A widely studied modified (Mr = 61,000) form of nitrite reductase, that has lost much of the native enzyme's ability to use ferredoxin as an electron donor, contains approximately 1 mol of siroheme/mol of enzyme. Quantitation of the high spin ferri-siroheme EPR signals and of nitrite-binding sites of the two preparations confirmed that the native enzyme's siroheme content is approximately twice that of the modified enzyme. Plots of nitrite and cyanide binding to the native enzyme versus ligand concentration are sigmoidal, with Hill coefficients of 1.6-1.8 and 2.3-2.8, respectively. Plots of enzyme activity versus nitrite concentration for the native enzyme are sigmoidal with a Hill coefficient of 2.4. Cyanide inhibition of enzymatic activity was shown to be not competitive. Addition of cyanide to the native enzyme resulted in a diminution of the high spin ferri-siroheme EPR signal and produced EPR signals with g values of 2.71, 2.33, and 1.49 due to low spin ferri-siroheme.  相似文献   

7.
Ferredoxin-nitrite reductase (EC 1.7.7.1.) from the cyanobacteria Anabaena sp. 7119 has been purified 763-fold with a specific activity of 21.5 units/nig protein (0.358 μkatals/mg). The enzyme has a molecular mass of 52,000 daltons with a Stokes radius of 3.09 nm and a sedimentation coefficient of 4.07 S. The cellular level of nitrite reductase activity gradually increases in response to the addition of increasing amounts of iron to the culture medium.
When partially purified nitrite reductase preparations are subjected to sucrose-density-gradient centrifugation there is a dose correspondence between nitrite reductase activity and absorbance at 400 nm. This suggests the association of a heme chromophore with the enzyme. Furthermore, the presence of an iron-sulfur center is suggested by a close association of acid-labile sulfide with nitrite reductase activity. Carbon monoxide inhibits nitrite reductase activity. The nature and kinetics of this reaction are comparable to other siroheme-containing nitrite reductases.  相似文献   

8.
Oxidation-reduction properties of maize ferredoxin: sulfite oxidoreductase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Oxidation-reduction titrations have been carried out on the wild-type, ferredoxin-dependent sulfite reductase from maize and two site-specific variants of the enzyme. E(m) values have been determined for the siroheme and [4Fe-4S] cluster prosthetic groups of the enzyme, which titrate as independent, one-electron carriers. Visible-region difference spectra suggest that reduction of the [4Fe-4S] cluster significantly perturbs the spectrum of the reduced siroheme group of the enzyme. The effects of siroheme axial ligation, by either cyanide or phosphate ligands, on the redox properties of sulfite reductase have also been examined. For comparison, the effects of phosphate and cyanide on the redox properties of the ferredoxin-dependent nitrite reductase of spinach chloroplasts, an enzyme with the same prosthetic group arrangement as sulfite reductase, have been examined.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Nitrite oxidoreductase was isolated from mixotrophically grown cells of Nitrobacter hamburgensis. The enzyme purified from heat treated membranes was homogeneous by the criteria of polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and size exclusion chromatography. The monomeric form consisted of two subunits with Mr 115000 and 65000, respectively. The dimeric form of the enzyme contained 0.70 molybdenum, 23.0 iron, 1.76 zinc, and 0.89 copper. The catalytically active enzyme was investigated by visible and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy (EPR) under oxidizing (as isolated), reducing (dithionite), and turnover (nitrite) conditions. As isolated the enzyme exhibited a complex set of EPR signals between 5–75 K, originating from several ironsulfur and molybdenum (V) centers. Addition of the substrate nitrite, or the reducing agent dithionite resulted in a set of new resonances. The molybdenum and the iron-sulfur centers of nitrite oxidoreductase from Nitrobacter hamburgensis were involved in the transformation of nitrite to nitrate.Abbreviations EPR electron paramagnetic resonance - ICP-AES inductively coupled plasma-atomic emission spectrometry - NaPi sodium phosphate - PAGE polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate  相似文献   

11.
Interactions of Vibrio (formerly Achromobacter) fischeri nitrite reductase were studied by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. The spectrum of the oxidized enzyme showed a number of features which were attributed to two low-spin ferric hemes. These comprised an unusual derivative peak at g = 3.7 and a spectrum at g = 2.88, 2.26, and 1.51. Neither heme was reactive in the oxidized state with the substrate nitrite and with cyanide and azide. When frozen under turnover conditions (i.e., reduction in the presence of excess nitrite), the enzyme showed the spectrum of a nitrosyl heme derivative. The g = 2.88, 2.26, and 1.51 signals reappeared partially on reoxidation by nitrite, indicating that the nitrosyl species which remained arose from the g = 3.7 heme. The nitrosyl derivative showed a 14N nuclear hyperfine splitting, Az = 1.65 mT. The nitrosyl derivative was produced by treatment of the oxidized nitrite reductase with nitric oxide or hydroxylamine. Exchange of nitric oxide between the nitrosyl derivative and NO gas in solution was observed by using the [15N]nitrosyl compound. A possible reaction cycle for the enzyme is discussed, which involves reduction of the enzyme followed by binding of nitrite to one heme and formation of the nitrosyl intermediate.  相似文献   

12.
Neurospora crassa nitrite reductase (Mr = 290,000) catalyzes the NAD(P)H-dependent 6-electron reduction of nitrite to ammonia via flavin and siroheme prosthetic groups. Homogeneous N. crassa nitrite reductase has been prepared employing conventional purification methods followed by affinity chromatography on blue dextran-Sepharose 4B. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of homogeneous nitrite reductase reveals a single subunit band of Mr = 140,000. Isoelectric focusing of dissociated enzyme followed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis in the second dimension yields a single subunit spot with an isoelectric point at pH 6.8-6.9. Two-dimensional thin layer chromatography of acid-hydrolyzed nitrite reductase treated with 5-dimethylaminoaphthalene-1-sulfonyl chloride yields a single reactive NH2-terminal corresponding to glycine. An investigation of the prosthetic groups of nitrite reductase reveals little or no flavin associated with the purified protein, although exogenously added FAD is required for activity in vitro. An iron content of 9-10 Fe eq/mol suggests the presence of nonheme iron in addition to the siroheme moieties. Amino acid analysis yields 43 cysteinyl residues and sulfhydryl reagents react with 50 thiol eq/mol of nitrite reductase. The non-cysteinyl sulfur content, determined as 8.1 acid-labile sulfide eq/mol, is presumably associated with nonheme iron to form iron-sulfur centers. We conclude that N. crassa nitrite reductase is a homodimer of large molecular weight subunits housing an electron transfer complex of FAD, iron-sulfur centers, and siroheme to mediate the reduced pyridine nucleotide-dependent reduction of nitrite to ammonia.  相似文献   

13.
Assimilatory ferredoxin-nitrite reductase (EC 1.7.7.1, ammonia: ferredoxin oxidoreductase) has been purified 5300-fold with a specific activity of 625 units/mg protein from the filamentous non-heterocystous cyanobacterium Phormidium laminosum. The enzyme was soluble and consisted of a single polypeptidic chain of 54 kDa. It catalyzed the reduction of nitrite to ammonia using ferredoxin or flavodoxin as electron donor. Methyl and benzyl viologens were also effective as electron donors but neither flavins nor NAD(P)H were. The apparent Michaelis constants for nitrite, ferredoxin and methyl viologen were 40, 22 and 215 microM, respectively. Nitrite reductase activity was inhibited effectively by cyanide and thiol reagents. The enzyme exhibited absorption maxima at 281, 391 (Soret), 570 (alpha) and 695 nm, with epsilon 391 of 4.3 x 10(4) M-1 cm-1, and an absorbance ratio A281/A391 of 1.95, suggesting the presence of siroheme as prosthetic group. These results show that this enzyme is similar to those of eukaryotic organisms.  相似文献   

14.
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra were recorded of whole filaments of the cyanobacteria Nostoc muscorum and Anabaena cylindrica. Signals due to manganese were removed by freezing and thawing the cells in EDTA. EPR spectra were assigned on the basis of their g values, linewidths, temperature dependence and response to dithionite and light treatments. The principal components identified were: (i) rhombic Fe3+ (signal at g = 4.3), probably a soluble storage form of iron; (ii) iron-sulfur centers A and B of Photosystem I; (iii) the photochemical electron acceptor ‘X’ of Photosystem I; this component was also observed for the first time in isolated heterocysts; (iv) soluble ferredoxin which was present at a concentration of 1 molecule per 140 ± 20 chlorophyll molecules; (v) a membrane-bound iron-sulfur protein (g = 1.92). A signal g = 6 in the oxidized state was probably due to an unidentified heme compound. During deprivation of iron the rhombic Fe3+, centers A, B and X of Photosystem I, and soluble ferredoxin were all observed to decrease.  相似文献   

15.
Interactions of ferredoxin-linked nitrite reductase (NiR) from spinach with its substrate were studied by spectrophotometry and electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy. Siroheme was extractable from NiR with 2.5% (W/V) trichloroacetic acid (TCA) and with acetone containing 0.01 N HCl. The addition of nitrite or sulfite to these extracts resulted in shifts of the absorption spectra of siroheme. The HCl-acetone extract showed ESR signals of symmetrical high spin heme, which disappeared on addition of nitrite. Spectral titration indicated a high affinity of extracted siroheme to nitrite and sulfite. The addition of nitrite or sulfite to protoheme dissolved in 0.01 N HCl-acetone did not cause a shift of the absorption spectrum. The extractability of siroheme with 0.01 N HCl-acetone was suppressed by the addition of nitrite to the NiR preparation. Moreover, a substrate-induced difference spectrum with peaks at about 295 and 287 nm was observed on addition of nitrite to NiR. These observations indicated an intrinsic strong affinity of siroheme to nitrite and sulfite, formation of rhombicity of siroheme by binding to the protein moiety, and also a probable conformational change of NiR on binding to the substrate. In agreement with previous reports, ESR signals of the heme-NO complex were observed with NiR in the presence of nitrite, methyl viologen (MV), and dithionite. In the present study, the same signals of similar intensity were also observed on omission of MV, under which conditions no catalytic reduction of nitrite occurred. Furthermore, the signal of the heme-NO complex was not observed when MV was replaced by spinach ferredoxin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
A strain of Pseudomonas putida grown on 4-methoxybenzoate as sole carbon source contains an enzyme system for the O-demethylation of this substrate. The enzyme system is purifiable and can be separated into two components: an NADH-dependent reductase and an iron-containing and acid-labile-sulfur-containing monooxygenase. The reductase, of molecular weight 42000 and containing two chromophores, an FMN and an iron-sulfur complex (EPR at g = 1.95), reduces both one-electron and two-electron acceptors (i.e., ferricyanide, 2,6-dichloroindophenol, cytochrome c, and cytochrome b5) at an optimum pH of 8.0. Increasing ionic strength affects these activities differently. The absolute spectrum of the oxidized displays distinct absorption peaks at 409 and 463 nm and a small shoulder between 538 and 554 nm. Treatment with dithionite or NADH reduces the absorbance throughout the visible range, yielding a spectrum with small maxima at 402 and 538 nm. Spectroscopic characteristics of the reductase indicate a tight coupling between its two chromophores. The iron-containing and acid-labile-sulfur-containing monooxygenase, which has a molecular weight of about 120000, contains an iron-sulfur chromophore with an EPR signal at g = 1.90. This protein is a dimer whose subunits each have a molecular weight of about 50000 and are perhaps identical. The optical absorption properties are somewhat unusual. In contrast to other iron-sulfur proteins, there is no significant peak near 415 nm in the absorption spectrum of the oxidized protein, but rather one at 455 nm. The presence of the substrate 4-methoxybenzoate increases both the NADH-dependent reductase. Hydroxylation can be achieved by the monooxygenase also in absence of the reductase with artifical reductants. This enzyme opens a new group of oxygenases within the classification scheme, i.e., iron-containing and labile-sulfur-containing monooxygenases. From the reported data, a scheme for the interaction of the isolated pigments and their relationship to various acceptors is proposed.  相似文献   

17.
Escherichia coli NADPH-sulfite reductase is a complex hemoflavoprotein with an alpha 8 beta 4 subunit structure. The beta-subunits each contain one siroheme and a tetranuclear iron-sulfur center (Fe4S4). Isolated beta-monomers can catalyze the 6-electron reduction of sulfite to sulfide. We have studied the beta-monomers with M?ssbauer and EPR spectroscopy. The data show conclusively that the siroheme and the Fe4S4 cluster are strongly exchange-coupled. This is proven by the observations that (a) the two chromophores share a single electronic spin and (b) the addition of 1 electron to oxidized sulfite reductase changes the environments of 5 iron atoms. Spin-sharing is demonstrated in oxidized and 2-electron-reduced sulfite reductase and strongly implicated in 1-electron-reduced material. Thus, sulfite reductase provides the first example of an active site where a heme and an iron-sulfur cluster are closely linked as a functional unit, probably via a common bridging ligand.  相似文献   

18.
M?ssbauer and EPR spectroscopy were used to characterize the heme prosthetic groups of the nitrite reductase isolated from Desulfovibrio desulfuricans (ATCC 27774), which is a membrane-bound multiheme cytochrome capable of catalyzing the 6-electron reduction of nitrite to ammonia. At pH 7.6, the as-isolated enzyme exhibited a complex EPR spectrum consisting of a low-spin ferric heme signal at g = 2.96, 2.28, and 1.50 plus several broad resonances indicative of spin-spin interactions among the heme groups. EPR redox titration studies revealed yet another low-spin ferric heme signal at g = 3.2 and 2.14 (the third g value was undetected) and the presence of a high-spin ferric heme. M?ssbauer measurements demonstrated further that this enzyme contained six distinct heme groups: one high-spin (S = 5/2) and five low-spin (S = 1/2) ferric hemes. Characteristic hyperfine parameters for all six hemes were obtained through a detailed analysis of the M?ssbauer spectra. D. desulfuricans nitrite reductase can be reduced by chemical reductants, such as dithionite or reduced methyl viologen, or by hydrogenase under hydrogen atmosphere. Addition of nitrite to the fully reduced enzyme reoxidized all five low-spin hemes to their ferric states. The high-spin heme, however, was found to complex NO, suggesting that the high-spin heme could be the substrate binding site and that NO could be an intermediate present in an enzyme-bound form.  相似文献   

19.
The Neurospora crassa assimilatory nitrite reductase (EC 1.6.6.4) catalyzes the NADPH-dependent reduction of nitrite to ammonia, a 6-electron transfer reaction. Highly purified preparations of this enzyme exhibit absorption spectra which suggest the presence of a heme component (wavelength maxima for oxidized senzyme: 390 and 578 nm). There is a close correspondence between nitrite reductase activity and absorbance at 400 nm when partially purified nitrite reductase preparations are subjected to sucrose gradient centrifugation. In addition, a role for an iron component in the formation of active nitrite reductase is indicated by the fact that nitrate-induced production of nitrite reductase activity in Neurospora mycelia in vivo requires the presence of iron in the induction medium. The heme chromophore present in Neurospora nitrite reductase preparations is reducible by NADPH. Complete reduction, however, requires the presence of added FAD. The NADPH-nitrite reductase activity of the enzyme is also dependent upon addition of FAD. A spectrally unique complex is formed between the heme chromophore and nitrite (or a reduction product thereof) when nitrite is added to NADPH-reducted enzyme. Carbon monoxide forms a complex with the heme chromophore of nitrite reductase with an intense alpha-band maximum at 590 nm and a beta-band of lower intensity at 550 nm. CO is an inhibitor of NADPH-nitrite reductase activity. Spectrophotometrically detectable CO complex formation and Co inhibition of enzyme activity share the following properties...  相似文献   

20.
The ferredoxin component (ferredoxinBPH) of biphenyl 2,3-dioxygenase was purified to homogeneity from crude cell extract of Pseudomonas sp strain LB400 using ion exchange, hydrophobic interaction and gel filtration column chromatography. The protein was a monomer with a molecular weight of 15000 and contained 2 gram-atoms each of iron and acid-labile sulfur. Ultraviolet-visible absorbance spectroscopy showed peaks at 325 nm and 460 nm with a broad shoulder around 575 nm. The spectrum was partially bleached in the visible region upon reduction by reductaseBPH with NADPH as the source of electrons. Electron paramagnetic resonance spectrometry showed no signals for the oxidized protein. Upon reduction with sodium dithionite, signals with gx = 1.82, gy = 1.92 and gz = 2.02 were detected. These results indicate that the protein contains a Rieske-type (2Fe-2S) iron-sulfur center. FerredoxinBPH was required for the oxidation of biphenyl by the terminal oxygenase component of the enzyme and is probably involved in the transfer of reducing equivalents from reductaseBPH to the terminal oxygenase during catalysis. Received 01 November 1996/ Accepted in revised form 27 May 1997  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号