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1.
Sequence-specific 1H and 13C NMR assignments have been made for residues that form the five-stranded parallel beta-sheet and the flavin mononucleotide (FMN) binding site of oxidized Anabaena 7120 flavodoxin. Interstrand nuclear Overhauser enhancements (NOEs) indicate that the beta-sheet arrangement is similar to that observed in the crystal structure of the 70% homologous long-chain flavodoxin from Anacystis nidulans [Smith et al. (1983) J. Mol. Biol. 165, 737-755]. A total of 62 NOEs were identified: 8 between protons of bound FMN, 29 between protons of the protein in the flavin binding site, and 25 between protons of bound FMN and protons of the protein. These constraints were used to determine the localized solution structure of the FMN binding site. The electronic environment and conformation of the protein-bound flavin isoalloxazine ring were investigated by determining 13C chemical shifts, one-bond 13C-13C and 15N-1H coupling constants, and three-bond 13C-1H coupling constants. The carbonyl edge of the flavin ring was found to be slightly polarized. The xylene ring was found to be nonplanar. Tyrosine 94, located adjacent to the flavin isoalloxazine ring, was shown to have a hindered aromatic ring flip rate.  相似文献   

2.
The long-chain flavodoxins, with 169-176 residues, display oxidation-reduction potentials at pH 7 that vary from -50 to -260 mV for the oxidized/semiquinone (ox/sq) equilibrium and are -400 mV or lower for the semiquinone/hydroquinone (sq/hq) equilibrium. To examine the effects of protein interactions and conformation changes on FMN potentials in the long-chain flavodoxin from Anacystis nidulans (Synechococcus PCC 7942), we have determined crystal structures for the semiquinone and hydroquinone forms of the wild-type protein and for the mutant Asn58Gly, and have measured redox potentials and FMN association constants. A peptide near the flavin ring, Asn58-Val59, reorients when the FMN is reduced to the semiquinone form and adopts a conformation ("O-up") in which O 58 hydrogen bonds to the flavin N(5)H; this rearrangement is analogous to changes observed in the flavodoxins from Clostridium beijerinckii and Desulfovibrio vulgaris. On further reduction to the hydroquinone state, the Asn58-Val59 peptide in crystalline wild-type A. nidulans flavodoxin rotates away from the flavin to the "O-down" position characteristic of the oxidized structure. This reversion to the conformation found in the oxidized state is unusual and has not been observed in other flavodoxins. The Asn58Gly mutation, at the site which undergoes conformation changes when FMN is reduced, was expected to stabilize the O-up conformation found in the semiquinone oxidation state. This mutation raises the ox/sq potential by 46 mV to -175 mV and lowers the sq/hq potential by 26 mV to -468 mV. In the hydroquinone form of the Asn58Gly mutant the C-O 58 remains up and hydrogen bonded to N(5)H, as in the fully reduced flavodoxins from C. beijerinckii and D. vulgaris. The redox and structural properties of A. nidulans flavodoxin and the Asn58Gly mutant confirm the importance of interactions made by N(5) or N(5)H in determining potentials, and are consistent with earlier conclusions that conformational energies contribute to the observed potentials.The mutations Asp90Asn and Asp100Asn were designed to probe the effects of electrostatic interactions on the potentials of protein-bound flavin. Replacement of acidic by neutral residues at positions 90 and 100 does not perturb the structure, but has a substantial effect on the sq/hq equilibrium. This potential is increased by 25-41 mV, showing that electrostatic interaction between acidic residues and the flavin decreases the potential for conversion of the neutral semiquinone to the anionic hydroquinone. The potentials and the effects of mutations in A. nidulans flavodoxin are rationalized using a thermodynamic scheme developed for C. beijerinckii flavodoxin.  相似文献   

3.
In order to describe the detailed conformation of the oxidized flavodoxin from a eukaryotic red alga, Chondrus crispus, the crystal structure has been refined by a restrained least-squares method. The crystallographic R factor is 0.168 for 13,899 reflections with F greater than 2 sigma F between 6.0 and 1.8 A resolution. The refined model includes 173 amino acid residues, flavin mononucleotide (FMN) and 110 water molecules. The root-mean-square deviation in bond lengths from ideal values is 0.015 A, and the mean co-ordinate error is estimated to be 0.2 A. The FMN is located at the periphery of the molecule. The orientation of the isoalloxazine ring is such that the C-7 and C-8 methyl groups are exposed to solvent and the pyrimidine moiety is buried in the protein. Three peptide segments, T8-T13, T55-T58 and D94-C103, are involved in FMN binding. The first segment of T8-T13 enfolds the phosphate group of the FMN. The three oxygen atoms in the phosphate group form extensive hydrogen bonds with amide groups of the main chain and the O gamma atoms of the side-chains in this segment. T55 O and W56 N epsilon 1 in the second segment form hydrogen bonds with O-2 in the ribityl moiety and one of the oxygen atoms in the phosphate group, respectively. The O gamma H of T58 forms a hydrogen bond with the N-5 atom in the isoalloxazine ring, which is expected to be protonated in the semiquinone form. The third segment is in contact with the isoalloxazine ring. It appears that the hydrogen bond acceptor of the NH of Asp94 in the third segment is O-2 rather than N-1 in the isoalloxazine ring. The isoalloxazine ring is flanked by the side-chains of Trp56 and Tyr98; it forms an angle of 38 degrees with the indole ring of Trp56 and is almost parallel to the benzene ring of Tyr98. The environment of the phosphate group is conserved as in other flavodoxins whereas that of the isoalloxazine ring differs. The relationship between the hydrogen bond to the N-5 in the ring and the redox potential for the oxidized/semiquinone couple is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
The crystal structure of the oxidized form of a flavodoxin from an eukaryotic red alga, Chondrus crispus, has been determined by multiple isomorphous replacement and anomalous scattering methods. A model of the 173 residues and flavin mononucleotide (FMN) has been refined by a restrained least squares method to a crystallographic R-factor of 22.6% using 6236 reflections between 6.0 and 2.35 A with F greater than 3 sigma F. This molecule has a sheet consisting of five parallel beta-strands with two alpha-helices on one side of the sheet and three on the other side, and has a (beta alpha)5 structure. The molecule incorporates a substantial insertion in beta 5, as in Anacystis nidulans flavodoxin, which distinguishes these flavodoxins from the short-chain type. The isoalloxazine ring of FMN is sandwiched between the side chains of Trp-56 and Tyr-98, with its C-7 and C-8 methyl groups being exposed to solvent. The phosphate group of FMN is located at the N-terminal end of alpha 1, and forms extensive hydrogen bonds with the loop (T8-T13) between beta 1 and alpha 1 of the protein. Six of the total 11 lysine residues are clustered at the opposing face to the FMN-binding site, while about two-thirds of the total 35 acidic residues are located in the half of the molecule which includes the FMN-binding site. Such localization of charged residues produces a dipole within the molecule, which may be important in its recognition of the other proteins participating in electron transfer reactions.  相似文献   

5.
The influence of the amino acid residues surrounding the flavin ring in the flavodoxin of the cyanobacterium Anabaena PCC 7119 on the electron spin density distribution of the flavin semiquinone was examined in mutants of the key residues Trp(57) and Tyr(94) at the FMN binding site. Neutral semiquinone radicals of the proteins were obtained by photoreduction and examined by electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) and hyperfine sublevel correlation (HYSCORE) spectroscopies. Significant differences in electron density distribution were observed in the flavodoxin mutants Trp(57) --> Ala and Tyr(94) --> Ala. The results indicate that the presence of a bulky residue (either aromatic or aliphatic) at position 57, as compared with an alanine, decreases the electron spin density in the nuclei of the benzene flavin ring, whereas an aromatic residue at position 94 increases the electron spin density at positions N(5) and C(6) of the flavin ring. The influence of the FMN ribityl and phosphate on the flavin semiquinone was determined by reconstituting apoflavodoxin samples with riboflavin and with lumiflavin. The coupling parameters of the different nuclei of the isoalloxazine group, as detected by ENDOR and HYSCORE, were very similar to those of the native flavodoxin. This indicates that the protein conformation around the flavin ring and the electron density distribution in the semiquinone form are not influenced by the phosphate and the ribityl of FMN.  相似文献   

6.
Flavodoxin II from Azotobacter vinelandii is a "long-chain" flavodoxin and has one of the lowest E1 midpoint potentials found within the flavodoxin family. To better understand the relationship between structural features and redox potentials, the oxidized form of the C69A mutant of this flavodoxin was crystallized and its three-dimensional structure determined to a resolution of 2.25 A by molecular replacement. Its overall fold is similar to that of other flavodoxins, with a central five-stranded parallel beta-sheet flanked on either side by alpha-helices. An eight-residue insertion, compared with other long-chain flavodoxins, forms a short 3(10) helix preceding the start of the alpha3 helix. The flavin mononucleotide (FMN) cofactor is flanked by a leucine on its re face instead of the more conserved tryptophan, resulting in a more solvent-accessible FMN binding site and stabilization of the hydroquinone (hq) state. In particular the absence of a hydrogen bond to the N5 atom of the oxidized FMN was identified, which destabilizes the ox form, as well as an exceptionally large patch of acidic residues in the vicinity of the FMN N1 atom, which destabilizes the hq form. It is also argued that the presence of a Gly at position 58 in the sequence stabilizes the semiquinone (sq) form, as a result, raising the E2 value in particular.  相似文献   

7.
The flavodoxins from Megasphaera elsdenii, Clostridium MP, and Azotobacter vinelandii were studied by 13C, 15N, and 31P NMR techniques by using various selectivity enriched oxidized riboflavin 5'-phosphate (FMN) derivatives. It is shown that the pi electron distribution in protein-bound flavin differs from that of free flavin and depends also on the apoflavoprotein used. In the oxidized state Clostridium MP and M. elsdenii flavodoxins are very similar with respect to specific hydrogen bond interaction between FMN and the apoprotein and the electronic structure of flavin. A. vinelandii flavodoxin differs from these flavodoxins in both respects, but it also differs from Desulfovibrio vulgaris flavodoxin. The similarities between A. vinelandii and D. vulgaris flavodoxins are greater than the similarities with the other two flavodoxins. The differences in the pi electron distribution in the FMN of reduced flavodoxins from A. vinelandii and D. vulgaris are even greater, but the hydrogen bond patterns between the reduced flavins and the apoflavodoxins are very similar. In the reduced state all flavodoxins studied contain an ionized prosthetic group and the isoalloxazine ring is in a planar conformation. The results are compared with existing three-dimensional data and discussed with respect to the various possible mesomeric structures in protein-bound FMN. The results are also discussed in light of the proposed hypothesis that specific hydrogen bonding to the protein-bound flavin determines the specific biological activity of a particular flavoprotein.  相似文献   

8.
In Escherichia coli, flavodoxin is the physiological electron donor for the reductive activation of the enzymes pyruvate formate-lyase, anaerobic ribonucleotide reductase, and B12-dependent methionine synthase. As a basis for studies of the interactions of flavodoxin with methionine synthase, crystal structures of orthorhombic and trigonal forms of oxidized recombinant flavodoxin from E. coli have been determined. The orthorhombic form (space group P2(1)2(1)2(1), a = 126.4, b = 41.10, c = 69.15 A, with two molecules per asymmetric unit) was solved initially by molecular replacement at a resolution of 3.0 A, using coordinates from the structure of the flavodoxin from Synechococcus PCC 7942 (Anacystis nidulans). Data extending to 1.8-A resolution were collected at 140 K and the structure was refined to an Rwork of 0.196 and an Rfree of 0.250 for reflections with I > 0. The final model contains 3,224 non-hydrogen atoms per asymmetric unit, including 62 flavin mononucleotide (FMN) atoms, 354 water molecules, four calcium ions, four sodium ions, two chloride ions, and two Bis-Tris buffer molecules. The structure of the protein in the trigonal form (space group P312, a = 78.83, c = 52.07 A) was solved by molecular replacement using the coordinates from the orthorhombic structure, and was refined with all data from 10.0 to 2.6 A (R = 0.191; Rfree = 0.249). The sequence Tyr 58-Tyr 59, in a bend near the FMN, has so far been found only in the flavodoxins from E. coli and Haemophilus influenzae, and may be important in interactions of flavodoxin with its partners in activation reactions. The tyrosine residues in this bend are influenced by intermolecular contacts and adopt different orientations in the two crystal forms. Structural comparisons with flavodoxins from Synechococcus PCC 7942 and Anaebaena PCC 7120 suggest other residues that may also be critical for recognition by methionine synthase.  相似文献   

9.
The small flavoprotein, flavodoxin, isolated from Peptostreptococcus elsdenii, has been covalently coupled to CNBr-activated Sepharose 4B. The immobilized protein replaces ferredoxin as an electron carrier in hydrogen production from dithionite or pyruvate in the presence of ferredoxin-free extracts of P. elsdenii; compared with soluble flavodoxin, its activities in these systems are 13% and 3.5% respectively. Acid treatment reversibly dissociates FMN from the immobilized protein. The dissociation constant of the complex with FMN, determined by fluorimetric titration, is 1.5 (+/- 0.4) nM, and is therefore very little different from that of soluble flavodoxin. Like soluble apoflavodoxin, the immobilized apoprotein is highly specific for flavins with an N-10 side-chain of 5 carbon atoms and a C-5' phosphate group. Approximately half of the flavin impurity in commercial preparations of FMN (12-15% of the total flavin), and similar impurity in synthetic analogues of FMN, is not separated by conventional purification procedures, but it is readily and conveniently removed by affinity chromatography with apoflavodoxin as the immobilized ligand. The immobilized protein is stable for long periods; its capacity for FMN decreases by only 20% after 15 cycles of flavin dissociation and reassociation during several months.  相似文献   

10.
Interactions between flavin mononucleotide (FMN) and apoprotein have been investigated in the reduced and oxidized states of the flavodoxin isolated from Anabaena 7120 (Mr approximately 21,000). 1H, 15N, and 31P NMR have been used to characterize the FMN-protein interactions in both redox states. These are compared with those seen in other flavodoxins. Uniformly enriched [15N]flavodoxin (greater than 95% isotopic purity) was isolated from Anabaena 7120 grown on K15NO3 as the sole nitrogen source. 15N insensitive nucleus enhanced by polarization transfer (INEPT) and nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) studies of this sample provided information regarding protein structure and dynamics. A 1H-detected 15N experiment allowed the correlation of nitrogen resonances to those of their attached protons. Over 90% of the expected N-H cross peaks could be resolved in this experiment.  相似文献   

11.
Structure of oxidized flavodoxin from Anacystis nidulans   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
The structure of oxidized flavodoxin from the cyanobacterium Anacystis nidulans has been determined at 2.5 A resolution with phases calculated from ethylmercury phosphate and dimercuriacetate derivatives. The determination of partial sequences, including a total of 85 residues, has assisted in the interpretation of the electron density. Preliminary refinement of a partial model (1072 atoms) has reduced R to 0.349 for the 10.997 reflections between 2.0 and 5.0 A with 1 greater than 2 sigma. The polypeptide backbone, which comprises 167 residues in the current model, adopts the familiar beta-alpha-beta conformation found in other flavodoxins and in the nucleotide-binding domains of the pyridine-nucleotide dehydrogenases, with five parallel strands in the central sheet. Comparison with flavodoxin from Clostridium MP (138 residues) shows that extra residues of A. nidulans flavodoxin are accommodated in a major insertion about 20 residues in length, which forms a lobe adjacent to the fifth strand of parallel sheet, and in additions to several external segments. Residues added between the fourth sheet strand and the start of the third helix alter the environment of the pyrimidine end of the flavin mononucleotide ring. The flavin mononucleotide phosphate binds to the start of helix 1, interacting with hydroxyamino acids and with main-chain amide groups. Two hydrophobic residues, both tentatively identified as Trp, enclose the isoalloxazine ring; the solvent-exposed Trp is nearly parallel to the flavin ring. The hydrophobic environment provided by these residues must be partly responsible for the pronounced vibrational resolution of the flavin spectrum near 450 nm. The flavin ring is tilted relative to its orientation in Clostridium MP flavodoxin. In addition, atoms N-3 and O-2 alpha of the isoalloxazine appear to form hydrogen bonds to the backbone at CO97 and NH99 in a conformation entirely different from that found in Clostridium MP flavodoxin but structurally analogous to Desulfovibrio vulgaris flavodoxin.  相似文献   

12.
The oxidation-reduction potentials for the riboflavin complex of the Desulfovibrio vulgaris flavodoxin are substantially different from those of the flavin mononucleotide (FMN) containing native protein, with the midpoint potential for the semiquinone-hydroquinone couple for the riboflavin complex being 180 mV less negative. This increase has been attributed to the absence in the riboflavin complex of unfavorable electrostatic effects of the dianionic 5'-phosphate of the FMN on the stability of the flavin hydroquinone anion. In this study, 15N and 1H-15N heteronuclear single-quantum coherence nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopic studies demonstrate that when bound to the flavodoxin, (1) the N1 of the riboflavin hydroquinone remains anionic at pH 7.0 so the protonation of the hydroquinone is not responsible for this increase, (2) the N5 position is much more exposed and may be hydrogen bonded to solvent, and (3) that while the hydrogen bonding interaction at the N3H appears stronger, that at the N5H in the reduced riboflavin is substantially weaker than for the native FMN complex. Thus, the higher reduction potential of the riboflavin complex is primarily the consequence of altered interactions with the flavin ring that affect hydrogen bonding with the N5H that disproportionately destabilize the semiquinone state of the riboflavin rather than through the absence of the electrostatic effects of the 5'-phosphate on the hydroquinone state.  相似文献   

13.
Flavodoxins from Clostridium beijerinckii and from Megasphaera elsdenii with 1-carba-1-deaza-FMN substituted for FMN have been used to study flavin-protein interactions in flavodoxins. The oxidized 1-deaza analogue of FMN binds to apoflavodoxins from M. elsdenii and C. beijerinckii (a.k.a. Clostridium MP) with association constants (Ka) of 1.0 x 10(7) M-1 and 3.1 x 10(6) M-1, values about 10(2) less than the corresponding Ka values for FMN. X-ray structure analysis of oxidized 1-deaza-FMN flavodoxin from C. beijerinckii at 2.5-A resolution shows that the analogue binds with the flavin atoms in the same locations as their equivalents in FMN but that the protein moves in the vicinity of Gly 89 to accommodate the 1-CH group, undergoing displacements which increase the distance between position 1 of the flavin ring and the main-chain atoms of Gly 89 and move the peptide hydrogen of Gly 89 by about 0.6 A. The X-ray analysis implies that protonation of normal flavin at N(1), as would occur in formation of the neutral fully reduced species, would result in a similar structural perturbation. The oxidation-reduction potentials of 1-deaza-FMN flavodoxin from M. elsdenii have been determined in the pH range 4.5-9.2. The oxidized/semiquinone equilibrium (E'0 = -160 mV at pH 7.0) displays a pH dependence of -60 mV per pH unit; the semiquinone/reduced equilibrium (E'0 = -400 mV at pH 7.0) displays a pH dependence of -60 mV per pH unit at low pH and is pH independent at high pH, with a redox-linked pK of 7.4. Spectral changes of fully reduced 1-deaza-FMN flavodoxin with pH suggest that this latter pK corresponds to protonation of the flavin ring system (the pK of free reduced 1-deaza-FMN is 5.6 [Spencer, R., Fisher, J., & Walsh, C. (1977) Biochemistry 16, 3586-3593]. The pK of reduced 1-deaza-FMN flavodoxin provides an estimate of the electrostatic interaction between the protein and the bound prosthetic group; the free energy of binding neutral reduced 1-deaza-FMN is more negative than that for binding the anionic reduced 1-deaza-FMN by 2.4 kcal.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
Flavodoxin from Anacystis nidulans (Synechococcus PCC 7942) was the first member of the flavodoxin family to be characterized, and is the structural prototype for the "long-chain" flavodoxins that have molecular masses of approximately 20 kDa. Crystal structure analyses and refinements of three orthorhombic forms of oxidized A. nidulans flavodoxin are reported, and salient features of the fold and the FMN binding site are compared with other flavodoxins. The structure of form I (wild-type: P212121, a=57.08 A, b=69.24 A, c=45.55 A), determined initially by multiple isomorphous replacement, has been refined to R=0.183 and R(free)=0.211 for data from 10.0 to 1.7 A resolution. Structures of form II (wild-type: P212121, a=60.05 A, b=65.85 A, c=51.36 A) and form III (Asn58Gly: P212121, a=51.30 A, b=59.15 A, c=94.44 A) have been determined by molecular replacement and refined versus data to 2.0 A and 1.85 A, respectively; the R values for forms II and III are 0.147 and 0.150. Changes in the molecular contacts that produce the alternative packings in these crystalline forms are analyzed. Deletion of the Asn side-chain in the mutant Asn58Gly removes an intermolecular stacking interaction and allows the alternative packing found in form III crystals. The functionally important 50's loop of the FMN binding site is less restrained by intermolecular contacts in these crystals but maintains the same conformation as in oxidized wild type protein. The structures reported here provide the starting point for structure-function studies of the reduced states and of mutants, described in the accompanying paper.  相似文献   

15.
The tertiary structure of the non-crystallizable two-electron-reduced Megasphaera elsdenii flavodoxin (15 kDa, 137 amino acid residues) has been determined using nuclear Overhauser enhancement restraints extracted from two-dimensional 1H-NMR spectra. A tertiary structure satisfying the experimental restraints very well (maximum NOE violation of 66 pm) was obtained with use of restrained molecular dynamics, using 509 distance restraints (including one non-NOE) on a starting structure modeled from the crystal structure of one-electron-reduced Clostridium MP flavodoxin. The protein consists of a central parallel beta-sheet surrounded on both sides by two alpha-helices. The flavin is positioned at the periphery of the molecule. The tertiary structure of the protein is highly defined with the exception of the flavin. The latter is expected to result from performing the restrained molecular dynamics simulation without water molecules and without proper charges on the flavin. The flavin, including the phosphate, the ribityl side chain and the isoalloxazine ring, is solvent accessible under the experimental conditions used and evidenced by a two-dimensional amide exchange experiment. This accessibility is expected to be important in the redox potential regulation of the semiquinone/hydroquinone couple of the protein. The amide exchange against deuterons and several typical line shapes in the two-dimensional NMR spectra are consistent with the structure generated. The structure is discussed in detail.  相似文献   

16.
F C Chang  R P Swenson 《Biochemistry》1999,38(22):7168-7176
In the Clostridium beijerinckii flavodoxin, the reduction of the flavin mononucleotide (FMN) cofactor is accompanied by a local conformation change in which the Gly57-Asp58 peptide bond "flips" from primarily the unusual cis O-down conformation in the oxidized state to the trans O-up conformation such that a new hydrogen bond can be formed between the carbonyl group of Gly57 and the proton on N(5) of the neutral FMN semiquinone radical [Ludwig, M. L., Pattridge, K. A., Metzger, A. L., Dixon, M. M., Eren, M., Feng, Y., and Swenson, R. P. (1997) Biochemistry 36, 1259-1280]. This interaction is thought to contribute to the relative stabilization of the flavin semiquinone and may be at least partially responsible for the substantial separation of the midpoint potentials of the two one-electron reduction steps. Through a series of amino acid substitutions, the above cited study demonstrated the critical role of the often conserved glycine residue in this process. However, it has not been directly established experimentally as to whether these substitutions brought about the changes in the midpoint potentials by altering the strength of this hydrogen-bonding interaction as proposed. In this study, the relative strengths of the FMN N(5)H.O57 hydrogen bond in wild type and the G57A, G57N, and G57T mutants were evaluated by measuring the temperature dependency of the chemical shift for the proton on N(5) of the fully reduced cofactor by 1H-15N HSQC nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Based on the established correlation between the temperature coefficient of amide protons and the strength of hydrogen bonding in small peptides, the apparent strength of the N(5)H.O57 interaction was found to depend on the properties of the side chain at position 57. The glycine residue found in the wild-type flavodoxin appears to provide the strongest interaction while the beta-branched side chain in the G57T mutant provides the weakest. A good correlation was noted between the temperature coefficients of N(5)H and the one-electron reduction potential for the ox/sq couple as well as the binding free energy of the FMN semiquinone in this group of mutants. These results provide more direct quantitative evidence that support the previous hypothesis that this conformation change and the associated formation of the hydrogen bonding interaction with N(5)H of the reduced FMN represent an important means of stabilizing the neutral semiquinone and in modulating the oxidation-reduction potentials of the flavin cofactor in this and perhaps other flavodoxins.  相似文献   

17.
The amino acid sequence of the constitutive flavodoxin from the red alga Chondrus crispus was determined from the analyses of peptide fragments derived by enzymic digestions of the carboxymethylated protein. This is the first sequence reported for a flavodoxin from a eukaryote. The protein is composed of 173 amino acid residues and is a member of the longer-chain group of flavodoxins. The extent of sequence homology to the three other flavodoxins in the group for which sequences are available is in the range 36-39%, with the most strongly conserved regions being those implicated in binding of the FMN, the redox-active prosthetic group. Nevertheless, Chondrus crispus flavodoxin stands apart in a number of respects, in particular the possession of an unusually high content of proline, with these residues distributed more or less regularly along the peptide chain.  相似文献   

18.
Bradley LH  Swenson RP 《Biochemistry》2001,40(30):8686-8695
The role of the hydrogen bonding interaction with the N(3)H of the flavin cofactor in the modulation of the redox properties of flavoproteins has not been extensively investigated. In the flavodoxin from Clostridium beijerinckii, the gamma-carboxylate group of glutamate-59 serves as a dual hydrogen bond acceptor with the N(3)H of flavin mononucleotide (FMN) cofactor and the amide hydrogen of the adjacent polypeptide backbone in all three oxidation states. This "bridging" interaction serves to anchor the FMN in the binding site, which, based on the E59Q mutant, indirectly affects the stability of the neutral flavin semiquinone by facilitating a strong and critical interaction at the FMN N(5)H [Bradley, L. H., and Swenson, R. P. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 12377-12386]. In this study, the specific role of the N(3)H interaction itself was investigated through the systematic replacement of Glu59 by aspartate, asparagine, and alanine in an effort to weaken, disrupt, and/or eliminate this interaction, respectively. Just as for the E59Q mutant, each replacement significantly weakened the binding of the cofactor, particularly for the semiquinone state, affecting the midpoint potentials of each one-electron couple in opposite directions. (1)H-(15)N HSQC nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopic studies revealed that not only was the N(3)H interaction weakened as anticipated, but so also was the hydrogen bonding interaction with the N(5)H. Using the temperature coefficients of the N(5)H to quantify and correct for changes in this interaction, the contribution of the N(3)H hydrogen bond to the binding of each redox state of the FMN was isolated and estimated. Based on this analysis, the N(3)H hydrogen bonding interaction appears to contribute primarily to the stability of the oxidized state (by as much as 2 kcal/mol) and to a lesser extent the reduced states. It is concluded that this interaction contributes only modestly (<45 mV) to the modulation of the midpoint potential for each redox couple in the flavodoxin. These conclusions are generally consistent with ab initio calculations and model studies on the non-protein-bound cofactor.  相似文献   

19.
The Escherichia coli ChrR enzyme is an obligatory two-electron quinone reductase that has many applications, such as in chromate bioremediation. Its crystal structure, solved at 2.2 Å resolution, shows that it belongs to the flavodoxin superfamily in which flavin mononucleotide (FMN) is firmly anchored to the protein. ChrR crystallized as a tetramer, and size exclusion chromatography showed that this is the oligomeric form that catalyzes chromate reduction. Within the tetramer, the dimers interact by a pair of two hydrogen bond networks, each involving Tyr128 and Glu146 of one dimer and Arg125 and Tyr85 of the other; the latter extends to one of the redox FMN cofactors. Changes in each of these amino acids enhanced chromate reductase activity of the enzyme, showing that this network is centrally involved in chromate reduction.  相似文献   

20.
Flavodoxins are proteins with an alpha/beta doubly wound topology that mediate electron transfer through a non-covalently bound flavin mononucleotide (FMN). The FMN moiety binds strongly to folded flavodoxin (K(D)=0.1 nM, oxidized FMN). To study the effect of this organic cofactor on the conformational stability, we have characterized apo and holo forms of Desulfovibrio desulfuricans flavodoxin by GuHCl-induced denaturation. The unfolding reactions for both holo- and apo-flavodoxin are reversible. However, the unfolding curves monitored by far-UV circular dichroism and fluorescence spectroscopy do not coincide. For both apo- and holo-flavodoxin, a native-like intermediate (with altered tryptophan fluorescence but secondary structure as the folded form) is present at low GuHCl concentrations. There is no effect on the flavodoxin stability imposed by the presence of the FMN cofactor (DeltaG=20(+/-2) and 19(+/-1) kJ/mol for holo- and apo-flavodoxin, respectively). A thermodynamic cycle, connecting FMN binding to folded and unfolded flavodoxin with the unfolding free energies for apo- and holo-flavodoxin, suggests that the binding strength of FMN to unfolded flavodoxin must be very high (K(D)=0.2 nM). In agreement, we discovered that the FMN remains coordinated to the polypeptide upon unfolding.  相似文献   

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