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1.
We have reported that low levels of peroxynitrite (PN) can cause inactivation of the heme-thiolate protein prostacyclin (PGI2)-synthase by nitration of a tyrosine residue. To prove that iron catalysis is involved we studied the interaction of PN with microperoxidase and P450nor, a heme-thiolate protein of known structure. Spectral and kinetic analyses allow to conclude on a ferryl nitrogen dioxide complex as an intermediate which decomposes in the presence of an excess of PN under formation of dioxygen, nitrite, and nitrate. This occurs in a catalytic cycle which was more efficient with P450nor than with microperoxidase. If phenol was added to the reaction mixtures of PN and the ferric complexes the ratio of hydroxylated to nitrated phenols decreased compared to the metal-free system. Phenol competed with the formation of dioxygen indicating that the ferryl intermediate was involved in both pathways. One therefore can postulate that the ferryl complex reacts with phenol to give the phenoxyradical which is nitrated in the presence of nitrogen dioxide but does not give hydroxylated products as with metal-free PN. Alternately, the ferryl nitrogen dioxide complex can oxidize a second PN molecule to the radical, *OONO, which can decompose to dioxygen and NO. The latter forms N2O3, with the remaining *NO2 radical. A third pathway consists in the isomerization to nitrate which also is catalyzed by the heme proteins since the ratio of nitrite/nitrate does not change significantly during the catalytic reaction with excess of PN. Our data explain the mechanism of nitration of PGI2-synthase, suggest a role of P450nor as a PN scavenger, and favor heme-thiolate complexes for trapping PN.  相似文献   

2.
Peroxynitrite (PN) gains high selectivity as a physiological oxidizing and nitrating agent through catalysis by metal ions. This was established for the heme-thiolate (P450) enzyme prostacyclin synthase which was tyrosine nitrated and inhibited at low PN levels [FEBS Lett. 382 (1996) 101]. Other P450 proteins reacted in a similar manner and a ferryl species (Compound II) has been identified as an intermediate during reactions with PN [Nitric Oxide 3 (1999) 142]. Here we investigated cytochrome P450CAM and found that it catalyzes the decomposition of PN as well as an increased nitration of phenol. The latter at the expense of phenol hydroxylation is characteristic for the proton-assisted PN action. PN also caused self-nitration of P450CAM at several tyrosine residues. Two of them, Y96 and Y305 were largely protected in the presence of the ligand metyrapone. Unlike other heme-thiolate proteins P450CAM did not form distinct spectral intermediates characteristic for Compound II. We conclude that P450CAM serves as a model for the nitration of prostacyclin synthase with respect to its autocatalytic tyrosine nitration and its prevention by blocking the active site.  相似文献   

3.
Peroxynitrite (PN) is likely to be generated in vivo from nitric oxide and superoxide. We have previously shown that prostacyclin synthase, a heme-thiolate enzyme essential for regulation of vascular tone, is nitrated and inactivated by submicromolar concentrations of PN [Zou, M.-H. & Ullrich, V. (1996) FEBS Lett. 382, 101-104] and we have studied the effect of heme proteins on the PN-mediated nitration of phenolic compounds in model systems [Mehl, M., Daiber, A. & Ullrich, V. (1999) Nitric Oxide: Biol. Chem. 2, 259-269]. In the present work we show that bolus additions of PN or PN-generating systems, such as SIN-1, can induce the nitration of P450BM-3 (wild-type and F87Y variant), for which we suggest an autocatalytic mechanism. HPLC and MS-analysis revealed that the wild-type protein is selectively nitrated at Y334, which was found at the entrance of a water channel connected to the active site iron center. In the F87Y variant, Y87, which is directly located at the active site, was nitrated in addition to Y334. According to Western blots stained with a nitrotyrosine antibody, this nitration started at 0.5 microM of PN and was half-maximal between 100 and 150 microM of PN. Furthermore, PN caused inactivation of the P450BM-3 monooxygenase as well as the reductase activity with an IC50 value of 2-3 microM. As two thiol residues/protein molecule were oxidized by PN and the inactivation was prevented by GSH or dithiothreitol, but not by uric acid (a powerful inhibitor of the nitration), our data strongly indicate that the inactivation is due to thiol oxidation at the reductase domain rather then to nitration of Y residues. Stopped-flow data presented here support our previous hypothesis that ferryl-species are involved as intermediates during the reactions of P450 enzymes with PN.  相似文献   

4.
In a series of heme and non-heme proteins the nitration of tyrosine residues was assessed by complete pronase digestion and subsequent HPLC-based separation of 3-nitrotyrosine. Bolus addition of peroxynitrite caused comparable nitration levels in all tested proteins. Nitration mainly depended on the total amount of tyrosine residues as well as on surface exposition. In contrast, when superoxide and nitrogen monoxide (NO) were generated at equal rates to yield low steady-state concentrations of peroxynitrite, metal catalysis seemed to play a dominant role in determining the sensitivity and selectivity of peroxynitrite-mediated tyrosine nitration in proteins. Especially, the heme-thiolate containing proteins cytochrome P450(BM-3) (wild type and F87Y variant) and prostacyclin synthase were nitrated with high efficacy. Nitration by co-generated NO/O(2)(-) was inhibited in the presence of superoxide dismutase. The NO source alone only yielded background nitration levels. Upon changing the NO/O(2)(-) ratio to an excess of NO, a decrease in nitration in agreement with trapping of peroxynitrite and derived radicals by NO was observed. These results clearly identify peroxynitrite as the nitrating species even at low steady-state concentrations and demonstrate that metal catalysis plays an important role in nitration of protein-bound tyrosine.  相似文献   

5.
Heme-thiolate proteins   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Cytochrome P450 was the first hemoprotein found to have a thiolate anion as the axial ligand of the heme. Several other heme-thiolate proteins, including nitric oxide synthase, were later found in animals, plants, and microorganisms. Both cytochrome P450 and nitric oxide synthase, two major members of the heme-thiolate protein family, catalyze monooxygenase reactions, but the physiological functions of other heme-thiolate proteins are apparently highly diverse. Chloroperoxidase of a mold, Caldaryomyces fumago, catalyzes a haloperoxidase reaction. CooA of a bacterium, Rhodospirillum rubrum, and heme-regulated eIF2α kinase of animals function as the sensors for carbon monoxide and nitric oxide, respectively, to elicit biological responses to these gases. The role of heme in the enzymatic activity of cystathionine β-synthase is still unknown. It is likely that more heme-thiolate proteins with diversified functions will be found in various organisms in the future.  相似文献   

6.
Treatment of bovine aortic microsomes containing active prostacyclin synthase (PGI(2) synthase) with increasing concentrations of peroxynitrite (PN) up to 250 microm of PN yielded specific staining of this enzyme on Western blots with antibodies against 3-nitrotyrosine (3-NT), whereas above 500 microm PN staining of additional proteins was also observed. Following treatment of aortic microsomes with 25 microm PN, PGI(2) synthase was about half-maximally nitrated and about half-inhibited. It was then isolated by gel electrophoresis and subjected to proteolytic digestion with several proteases. Digestion with thermolysin for 24 h provided a single specific peptide that was isolated by high performance liquid chromatography and identified as a tetrapeptide Leu-Lys-Asn-Tyr(3-nitro)-COOH corresponding to positions 427-430 of PGI(2) synthase. Its structure was established by precise mass determination using Fourier transform-ion cyclotron resonance-nanoelectrospray mass spectrometry and Edman microsequencing and ascertained by synthesis and mass spectrometric characterization of the authentic Tyr-nitrated peptide. Complete digestion by Pronase to 3-nitrotyrosine was obtained only after 72 h, suggesting that the nitrated Tyr-430 residue may be embedded in a tight fold around the heme binding site. These results provide evidence for the specific inhibition of PGI(2) synthase by nitration at Tyr-430 that may occur already at low levels of PN as a consequence of endothelial co-generation of nitric oxide and superoxide.  相似文献   

7.
A unique feature of P450 enzymes is in the presence of a thiolate ligand heme but its exact function in catalysis is a matter of debate. For P450 dependent monooxygenases the "active oxygen" complex seems to exist only as a transition state in which the thiolate ligand provides electron density in order to prevent pi-backbonding of the oxygen to the iron (-S-Fe-O(z.rad;)). The corresponding ground state (Compound I) would be a ferryl species (Fe(IV)z.dbnd6;O) with an electron hole either at the porphyrin or at the sulfur. Apart from this role we postulate that a second function is related to the electronic structure of Compound II as an electron acceptor and this property is shared among monooxygenases, thromboxane synthase, prostacyclin synthase, allene oxide synthase, P450(NOR(-)) and chloroperoxidase. As a common step in all P450 enzymes an extremely rapid electron uptake by Compound II allows that the primary substrate radicals are oxidized to cations which immediately combine with a neighbouring nucleophile. Thus "electron transfer" may substitute for "oxygen rebound" as the final step leading to product formation. The same principle also applies methane monooxygenases in which the role of the thiyl sulfur is replaced by a ferryl-oxyl entity.  相似文献   

8.
Microsomal P450s catalyze the monooxygenation of a large variety of hydrophobic compounds, including drugs, steroids, carcinogens, and fatty acids. The interaction of microsomal P450s with their electron transfer partner, NADPH-P450 reductase, during the transfer of electrons from NADPH to P450, for oxygen activation, may be important in regulating this enzyme system. Highly purified Bacillus megaterium P450BM-3 is catalytically self-sufficient and contains both the reductase and P450 domains on a single polypeptide chain of approximately 120,000 Da. The two domains of P450BM-3 appear to be analogous in their function and homologous in their sequence to the microsomal P450 system components. FAD, FMN, and heme residues are present in equimolar amounts in purified P450BM-3 and, therefore, this protein could potentially accept five electron equivalents per mole of enzyme during a reductive titration. The titration of P450BM-3 with sodium dithionite under a carbon monoxide atmosphere was complete with the addition of the expected five electron equivalents. The intermediate spectra indicate that the heme iron is reduced first, followed by the flavin residues. Titration of the protein with the physiological reductant, NADPH, also required approximately five electron equivalents when the reaction was performed under an atmosphere of carbon monoxide. Under an atmosphere of argon and in the absence of carbon monoxide, one of the flavin groups was reduced prior to the reduction of the heme group. The titration behavior of P450BM-3 with NADPH was surprising because no spectral changes characteristic of flavin semiquinone intermediates were observed. The results of the titration with NADPH can only be explained if (a) there was "rapid" intermolecular electron transfer between P450BM-3 molecules, (b) there is no kinetic barrier to the reduction of P450 by the one-electron-reduced form of the reductase, and (c) the "air-stable semiquinone" form of the reductase does not accumulate in this complex multidomain enzyme.  相似文献   

9.
Cytochromes P450 typically catalyze the monooxygenation of hydrophobic compounds resulting in the insertion of one atom of dioxygen into the organic substrate and the reduction of the other oxygen atom to water. The two electrons required for the reaction are normally provided by another redox active protein, for example cytochrome P450 reductase (CPR) in mammalian endoplasmic reticulum membranes. P450BM-3 from Bacillus megaterium is a widely studied P450 cytochrome in which the P450 is fused naturally to a diflavin reductase homologous to CPR. From the original characterization of the enzyme by Fulco's laboratory, the enzyme was shown to have a nonlinear dependence of reaction rate on enzyme concentration. In recent experiments we observed enzyme inactivation upon dilution, and the presence of substrate can diminish this inactivation. We therefore carried out enzyme kinetics, cross-linking experiments, and molecular weight determinations that establish that the enzyme is capable of dimerizing in solution. The dimer is the predominant form at higher concentrations under most conditions and is the only form with significant activity. Further experiments selectively knocking out the activity of individual domains with site-directed mutagenesis and measuring enzyme activity in heterologous dimers establish that the electron-transfer pathway in P450BM-3 passes through both protein molecules in the dimer during a single turnover, traversing from the FAD domain of one molecule into the FMN domain of the other molecule before passing to the heme domain. Analysis of our results combined with other analyses in the literature suggests that the heme domain of either monomer may accept electrons from the reduced FMN domain.  相似文献   

10.
In view of recent results from different sources, the reaction mechanisms of two heme-thiolate proteins, cytochrome P450cam and chloroperoxidase (CPO), are discussed. In this context a mechanism of CPO is proposed which includes H2O2 cleavage, subsequent formation of compound I and the identification of two elusive intermediates. The HOCl adduct of the iron(III)porpyhrin is the catalytically competent Cl+ donor chlorinating activated C-H bonds of substrates bound to the enzyme. Pulse-EPR characterization of an enzyme model of the resting state of P450cam suggests a role of the electric field of the protein for stabilizing the low-spin state of the cofactor of the enzyme. It is further suggested that the same effect of the protein may trigger the reactivity of compound I such that both concerted and two-step reactions are feasible within the concept of a Two-State-Reactivity. This review emphasizes the value of synthetic enzyme models complementing investigations of the native proteins.  相似文献   

11.
From analogy to chloroperoxidase from Caldariomyces fumago, it is believed that the electronic structure of the intermediate iron-oxo species in the catalytic cycle of cytochrome P450 corresponds to an iron(IV) porphyrin-pi-cation radical (compound I). However, our recent studies on P450cam revealed that after 8 ms a tyrosine radical and iron(IV) were formed in the reaction of ferric P450 with external oxidants in the shunt pathway. The present study on the heme domain of P450BM3 (P450BMP) shows a similar result. In addition to a tyrosine radical, a contribution from a tryptophan radical was found in the electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra of P450BMP. Here we present comparative multi-frequency EPR (9.6, 94 and 285 GHz) and M?ssbauer spectroscopic studies on freeze-quenched intermediates produced using peroxy acetic acid as oxidant for both P450 cytochromes. After 8 ms in both systems, amino acid radicals occurred instead of the proposed iron(IV) porphyrin-pi-cation radical, which may be transiently formed on a much faster time scale. These findings are discussed with respect to other heme thiolate proteins. Our studies demonstrate that intramolecular electron transfer from aromatic amino acids is a common feature in these enzymes. The electron transfer quenches the presumably transiently formed porphyrin-pi-cation radical, which makes it extremely difficult to trap compound I.  相似文献   

12.
Cytochrome P450BM-3 catalyzed the reduction of lipophilic aldehydes to alcohols efficiently. A k(cat) of ~25 min(-1) was obtained for the reduction of methoxy benzaldehyde with wild type P450BM-3 protein which was higher than in the isolated reductase domain (BMR) alone and increased in specific P450-domain variants. The reduction was caused by a direct hydride transfer from preferentially R-NADP(2)H to the carbonyl moiety of the substrate. Weak substrate-P450-binding of the aldehyde, turnover with the reductase domain alone, a deuterium incorporation in the product from NADP(2)H but not D(2)O, and no inhibition by imidazole suggests the reductase domain of P450BM-3 as the potential catalytic site. However, increased aldehyde reduction by P450 domain variants (P450BM-3 F87A T268A) may involve allosteric or redox mechanistic interactions between heme and reductase domains. This is a novel reduction of aldehydes by P450BM-3 involving a direct hydride transfer and could have implications for the metabolism of endogenous substrates or xenobiotics.  相似文献   

13.
Cytochrome P450s are a superfamily of heme containing enzymes that use molecular oxygen and electrons from reduced nicotinamide cofactors to monooxygenate organic substrates. The fatty acid hydroxylase P450BM-3 has been particularly widely studied due to its stability, high activity, similarity to mammalian P450s, and presence of a cytochrome P450 reductase domain that allows the enzyme to directly receive electrons from NADPH without a requirement for additional redox proteins. We previously characterized the substrate N-palmitoylglycine, which found extensive use in studies of P450BM-3 due to its high affinity, high turnover number, and increased solubility as compared to fatty acid substrates. Here, we report that even higher affinity substrates can be designed by acylation of other amino acids, resulting in P450BM-3 substrates with dissociation constants below 100 nM. N-Palmitoyl-l-leucine and N-palmitoyl-l-methionine were found to have the highest affinity, with dissociation constants of less than 8 nM and turnover numbers similar to palmitic acid and N-palmitoylglycine. The interactions of the amino acid side chains with a hydrophobic pocket near R47, as revealed by our crystal structure determination of N-palmitoyl-l-methionine bound to the heme domain of P450BM-3, appears to be responsible for increasing the affinity of substrates. The side chain of R47, previously shown to be important in interactions with negatively charged substrates, does not interact strongly with N-palmitoyl-l-methionine and is found positioned at the enzyme-solvent interface. These are the tightest binding substrates for P450BM-3 reported to date, and the affinity likely approaches the maximum attainable affinity for the binding of substrates of this size to P450BM-3.  相似文献   

14.
The use of three mechanism-based probes to investigate the topology and function of fatty acid hydroxylases is discussed. 1) The observation of protein rather than heme alkylation in the reaction of cytochrome P4504A1 with 10-undecynoic acid supports the argument that the enzyme circumvents the inherent preference for omega-1 hydroxylation by restricting access to the ferryl oxygen. 2) The regiochemistry of the ferricyanide-mediated iron-to-nitrogen shift of the cytochrome P450102 (P450BM-3) phenyl-iron complex indicates that the active site of this bacterial fatty acid hydroxylase is open primarily above pyrrole ring A of the prosthetic heme group, 3) Inhibition of clofibrate-mediated peroxisome proliferation in cultured rat hepatocytes by inactivation of cytochrome P4504A1 indicates that omega-hydroxylation of fatty acids provides a signal for peroxisome proliferation.  相似文献   

15.
Nitric-oxide synthase (NOS), the enzyme responsible for mammalian NO generation, is no cytochrome P450, but there are striking similarities between both enzymes. First and foremost, both are heme-thiolate proteins, employing the same prosthetic group to perform similar chemistry. Moreover, they share the same redox partner, a diflavoprotein reductase, which in the case of NOS is incorporated with the oxygenase in one polypeptide chain. There are, however, also conspicuous differences, such as the presence in NOS of the additional cofactor tetrahydrobiopterin, which is applied as an auxiliary electron donor to prevent decay of the oxyferrous complex to ferric heme and superoxide. In this review similarities and differences between NOS and cytochrome P450 are analyzed in an attempt to explain why NOS requires BH4 and why NO synthesis is not catalyzed by a member of the cytochrome P450 family.  相似文献   

16.
Cytochromes P450 constitute a broad class of heme monooxygenase enzymes with more than 11,500 isozymes which have been identified in organisms from all biological kingdoms [1]. These enzymes are responsible for catalyzing dozens chemical oxidative transformations such as hydroxylation, epoxidation, N-demethylation, etc., with very broad range of substrates [2] and [3]. Historically these enzymes received their name from ‘pigment 450’ due to the unusual position of the Soret band in UV–vis absorption spectra of the reduced CO-saturated state [4] and [5]. Despite detailed biochemical characterization of many isozymes, as well as later discoveries of other ‘P450-like heme enzymes’ such as nitric oxide synthase and chloroperoxidase, the phenomenological term ‘cytochrome P450’ is still commonly used as indicating an essential spectroscopic feature of the functionally active protein which is now known to be due to the presence of a thiolate ligand to the heme iron [6]. Heme proteins with an imidazole ligand such as myoglobin and hemoglobin as well as an inactive form of P450 are characterized by Soret maxima at 420 nm [7]. This historical perspective highlights the importance of spectroscopic methods for biochemical studies in general, and especially for heme enzymes, where the presence of the heme iron and porphyrin macrocycle provides rich variety of specific spectroscopic markers available for monitoring chemical transformations and transitions between active intermediates of catalytic cycle.  相似文献   

17.
Previous spectroscopic studies of chloroperoxidase have provided evidence for endogenous thiolate sulfur donor ligation to the central heme iron of the enzyme. This conclusion is further supported by recent DNA sequence data which revealed the existence of a third cysteine residue (in addition to a disulfide pair detected earlier) in the protein available for coordination to the heme iron. Thus, chloroperoxidase shares many spectroscopic properties with cytochrome P-450, the only other known thiolate-ligated heme protein. Surprisingly, a previous electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) study of low-spin ferric chloroperoxidase-ligand complexes (Hollenberg, P.F., Hager, L.P., Blumberg, W.E. and Peisach, J. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 4801-4807) was unable to provide clear support for the presence of a thiolate ligand, although sulfur coordination was implicated. This was, in part, because an insufficient number of complexes was examined. In this work, we have significantly expanded upon the previous EPR study by using an extensive variety of over twenty exogenous ligands including carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorus and sulfur donors. Crystal field analysis, using the procedure of Blumberg and Peisach, of the present data in comparison with data for analogous complexes of cytochrome P-450-CAM, thiolate-ligated heme model systems, and myoglobin, is clearly indicative of endogenous thiolate ligation for chloroperoxidase. In addition, the UV-visible absorption and EPR spectral data suggest that a carboxylate ligand is a possible candidate for the endogenous sixth ligand to the heme iron that is responsible for the reversible conversion of ferric chloroperoxidase from high-spin to low-spin at low temperatures (less than 200 K).  相似文献   

18.
The role of electrostatic interactions in the association of P450s with their nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate- (NADPH) dependent flavoprotein reductases was studied by fluorescence resonance energy transfer. The fluorescent probe 7-(ethylamino)-3-(4'-maleimidylphenyl)-4-methylcoumarin maleimide (coumarylphenylmaleimide, CPM) was introduced into the flavoprotein molecule at a 1:1 molar ratio. The interaction of P450 2B4 and NADPH-P450 reductase (CPR) from rabbit liver microsomes was compared with that of the isolated heme domain (BMP) and the flavoprotein domain (BMR) of P450BM-3. The cross-pairs of the components were also studied. Increasing ionic strength (0.05-0.5 M) was shown to result in the dissociation of the CPR-P450 2B4 complex with the dissociation constant increasing from 0.01 to 0.09 microM. This behavior is consistent with the assumption that charge pairing between CPR and P450 2B4 is involved in their association. In contrast, the electrostatic component of the interaction of the partners in P450BM-3 was shown to have an opposite sign. The isolated BMP and BMR domains have very low affinity for each other and the dissociation constant of their complex decreases from 8 to 3 microM with increasing ionic strength (0.05-0.5 M). Importantly, the BMP-CPR and P450 2B4-BMR "mixed", heterogeneous pairs behave similarly to the pairs of BMP and P450 2B4 with their native electron donors. Therefore, the observed difference in the interaction mechanisms between these two systems is determined mainly by the different structure of the heme proteins rather than their flavoprotein counterparts. P450BM-3 is extremely efficient and highly coupled, with the reductase and the P450 domains tethered to one another. Therefore, in contrast to P450 2B4-CPR binding, very tight binding between the P450BM-3 redox partners would be of no value in the synchronization of complex formation during catalytic turnover.  相似文献   

19.
Protein tyrosine nitration is a post-translational modification associated with numerous pathological conditions. The biological consequences of this modification strongly depend on the site selectivity. Unfortunately, to date there is still no reliable model for predicting the selectivity of protein tyrosine nitration. Previously, we found that amyloid beta (Aβ) changed the selectivity of enolase tyrosine nitration upon binding to heme. It seemed that there was a link between the hydrophilicity of Aβ and the site-specific tyrosine nitration. We further investigated the role of the hydrophilicity of the molecules that bind to heme in the selectivity of protein tyrosine nitration. We found that Aβ(1-16), Aβ(1-20), and Aβ(1-40), upon binding to heme and interacting with glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) in a site-specific manner, differently modulated the site selectivity of heme-catalyzed GAPDH tyrosine nitration. The modulation is associated with the hydrophilicity of the Aβ peptides, which changed the surrounding environment of the heme. At the same time, the Aβ-heme complexes were found to be more effective at inactivating GAPDH than heme alone, and the selective tyrosine nitration that was catalyzed by Aβ-heme played an important role. These findings suggest an alternative mechanism for the selectivity of protein tyrosine nitration, which may lead to a better understanding of the factors that influence protein tyrosine nitration selectivity and the important roles of Aβ and heme in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease, where Aβ accumulation and Aβ-dependent protein nitration play central roles.  相似文献   

20.
Schelvis JP  Berka V  Babcock GT  Tsai AL 《Biochemistry》2002,41(18):5695-5701
We report the first low-frequency resonance Raman spectra of ferric endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) holoenzyme, including the frequency of the Fe-S vibration in the presence of the substrate L-arginine. This is the first direct measurement of the strength of the Fe-S bond in NOS. The Fe-S vibration is observed at 338 cm(-1) with excitation at 363.8 nm. The assignment of this band to the Fe-S stretching vibration was confirmed by the observation of isotopic shifts in eNOS reconstituted with 54Fe- and 57Fe-labeled hemin. Furthermore, the frequency of this vibration is close to those observed in cytochrome P450(cam) and chloroperoxidase (CPO). The frequency of this vibration is lower in eNOS than in P450(cam) and CPO, which can be explained by differences in hydrogen bonding to the proximal cysteine heme ligand. On addition of substrate to eNOS, we also observe several low-frequency vibrations, which are associated with the heme pyrrole groups. The enhancement of these vibrations suggests that substrate binding results in protein-mediated changes of the heme geometry, which may provide the protein with an additional tuning element for the redox potential of the heme iron. The implications of our findings for the function of eNOS will be discussed by comparison with P450(cam) and model compounds.  相似文献   

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