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1.
Purified prostaglandin H synthase (EC 1.14.99.1), reconstituted with hemin, was reacted with substrates of the cyclooxygenase and peroxidase reaction. The resulting EPR spectra were measured below 90 K. Arachidonic acid, added under anaerobic conditions, did not change the EPR spectrum of the native enzyme due to high-spin ferric heme. Arachidonic acid with O2, as well as prostaglandin G2 or H2O2, decreased the spectrum of the native enzyme and concomitantly a doublet signal at g = 2.005 was formed with maximal intensity of 0.35 spins/enzyme and a half-life of less than 20 s at -12 degrees C. From the conditions for the formation and the effect of inhibitors, this doublet signal was assigned to an enzyme intermediate of the peroxidase reaction, namely a higher oxidation state. The doublet signal with characteristic hyperfine structure was nearly identical to the signal of the tyrosyl radical in ribonucleotide reductase (EC 1.17.4.1). Hence the signal of prostaglandin H synthase was assigned to a tyrosyl radical. Electronic spectra as well as decreased power saturation of the tyrosyl radical signal indicated heme in its ferryl state which coupled to the tyrosyl radical weakly. [FeIVO(protoporphyrin IX)]...Tyr+. was suggested as the structure of this two-electron oxidized state of the enzyme. A hypothetical role for the tyrosyl radical could be the abstraction of a hydrogen at C-13 of arachidonic acid which is assumed to be the initial step of the cyclooxygenase reaction.  相似文献   

2.
The peroxidase reaction of prostaglandin endoperoxide synthase was investigated by transient state kinetics using stoichiometric amounts of substrates. The rate constants for the conversion of compound I to intermediate II determined with a stoichiometric amount of hydroperoxide were found to be lower by an order of magnitude than when an excess of hydroperoxide was used. The difference was attributed to ability of the compound I of prostaglandin endoperoxide synthase to be reduced by the excess of hydroperoxide. This suggests that the true rate constant of unimolecular conversion compound I to intermediate II at 3 degrees C is 5-10 s-1 instead of 50-200 s-1 as reported before. The latter value rather characterizes the combined process of spontaneous and hydroperoxide-dependent transformation of compound I. Stoichiometric amounts of reducing substrates significantly stimulated transformation of compound I. This effect could not be entirely explained by their reducing action, which was measured by following the oxidation kinetics. The results of the global fit of the experimental data suggest that reducing substrates, in addition to their direct action in reducing compound I to compound II, indirectly stimulate transformation of compound I to the tyrosyl radical form of intermediate II, thereby stimulating the cyclooxygenase reaction.  相似文献   

3.
Prostaglandin H synthase-1 (PGHS-1) is a bifunctional heme protein catalyzing both a peroxidase reaction, in which peroxides are converted to alcohols, and a cyclooxygenase reaction, in which arachidonic acid is converted into prostaglandin G2. Reaction of PGHS-1 with peroxide forms Intermediate I, which has an oxyferryl heme and a porphyrin radical. An intramolecular electron transfer from Tyr385 to Intermediate I forms Intermediate II, which contains two oxidants: an oxyferryl heme and the Tyr385 radical required for cyclooxygenase catalysis. Self-inactivation of the peroxidase begins with Intermediate II, but it has been unclear which of the two oxidants is involved. The kinetics of tyrosyl radical, oxyferryl heme, and peroxidase inactivation were examined in reactions of PGHS-1 reconstituted with heme or mangano protoporphyrin IX with a lipid hydroperoxide, 15-hydroperoxyeicosatetraenoic acid (15-HPETE), and ethyl hydrogen peroxide (EtOOH). Tyrosyl radical formation was significantly faster with 15-HPETE than with EtOOH and roughly paralleled oxyferryl heme formation at low peroxide levels. However, the oxyferryl heme intensity decayed much more rapidly than the tyrosyl radical intensity at high peroxide levels. The rates of reactions for PGHS-1 reconstituted with MnPPIX were approximately an order of magnitude slower, and the initial species formed displayed a wide singlet (WS) radical, rather than the wide doublet radical observed with PGHS-1 reconstituted with heme. Inactivation of the peroxidase activity during the reaction of PGHS-1 with EtOOH or 15-HPETE correlated with oxyferryl heme decay, but not with changes in tyrosyl radical intensity or EPR line shape, indicating that the oxyferryl heme, and not the tyrosyl radical, is responsible for the self-destructive peroxidase side reactions. Computer modeling to a minimal mechanism was consistent with oxyferryl heme being the source of peroxidase inactivation.  相似文献   

4.
The reduction of prostaglandin H synthase compound II to native enzyme by phenol and by hydroquinone, in the presence of diethyldithiocarbamate as a stabilizing agent, was studied by rapid scan spectrometry and transient state kinetics at 4.0 +/- 0.5 degrees C in 0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH 8.0. The plot of pseudo-first-order rate constants for the conversion of prostaglandin H synthase compound II to native enzyme versus phenol concentration was linear with a non-zero intercept. The second-order rate constant was determined from the slope to be (5.3 +/- 0.3) x 10(5) M-1 s-1. For the reduction by hydroquinone, the second-order rate constant was determined from pointwise measurements of the pseudo-first-order rate constant to be (2.1 +/- 0.4) x 10(6) M-1 s-1. Rapid scan spectrum results also showed the reduction of compound I to compound II by both phenol and hydroquinone. Thus reduction of both compound I and compound II is one electron process. Our results suggest that the tyrosyl radical, detected in the presence of oxidizing agents, is formed by intramolecular electron transfer from the tyrosyl residue to the porphyrin pi-cation radical, and this reaction tends to disappear in the presence of sufficient reducing substrate. These in vitro results support speculation that there is a role of the peroxidase component of prostaglandin H synthase in benzene-induced toxicity. In the present work, the effect of indomethacin on the reduction of prostaglandin H synthase compound II by diethyldithiocarbamate, phenol, and hydroquinone was also investigated. Results revealed, for the first time, that indomethacin is an inhibitor of the peroxidase activity of prostaglandin H synthase, although not as effectively as in its well-known inhibition of cyclooxygenase activity.  相似文献   

5.
Prostaglandin H (PGH) synthase reacts with organic hydroperoxides and fatty acid hydroperoxides on a millisecond time scale to generate an intermediate that is spectrally similar to compound I of horseradish peroxidase. Compound I of PGH synthase is converted to compound II within 170 ms. Compound II decays to resting enzyme in a few seconds. Thus, the peroxidase reaction of PGH synthase appears to involve a cycle of native enzyme, compound I, and compound II, typical of heme-containing peroxidases. The Soret absorption maximum of compound I appears to occur at 412 nm but a small amount of compound II may be present. Soret maxima occur at 420, 433, and 419 for compound II, the ferrous enzyme, and the oxyferrous enzyme (compound III), respectively. Rapid scan analysis of the reaction of PGH synthase with arachidonic acid reveals the absorbance of compound II but no evidence for ferrous or oxyferrous enzyme.  相似文献   

6.
Hydroperoxide-induced tyrosyl radicals are putative intermediates in cyclooxygenase catalysis by prostaglandin H synthase (PGHS)-1 and -2. Rapid-freeze EPR and stopped-flow were used to characterize tyrosyl radical kinetics in PGHS-1 and -2 reacted with ethyl hydrogen peroxide. In PGHS-1, a wide doublet tyrosyl radical (34-35 G) was formed by 4 ms, followed by transition to a wide singlet (33-34 G); changes in total radical intensity paralleled those of Intermediate II absorbance during both formation and decay phases. In PGHS-2, some wide doublet (30 G) was present at early time points, but transition to wide singlet (29 G) was complete by 50 ms. In contrast to PGHS-1, only the formation kinetics of the PGHS-2 tyrosyl radical matched the Intermediate II absorbance kinetics. Indomethacin-treated PGHS-1 and nimesulide-treated PGHS-2 rapidly formed narrow singlet EPR (25-26 G in PGHS-1; 21 G in PGHS-2), and the same line shapes persisted throughout the reactions. Radical intensity paralleled Intermediate II absorbance throughout the indomethacin-treated PGHS-1 reaction. For nimesulide-treated PGHS-2, radical formed in concert with Intermediate II, but later persisted while Intermediate II relaxed. These results substantiate the kinetic competence of a tyrosyl radical as the catalytic intermediate for both PGHS isoforms and also indicate that the heme redox state becomes uncoupled from the tyrosyl radical in PGHS-2.  相似文献   

7.
Both cyclooxygenase and peroxidase reactions of prostaglandin H synthase were studied in the presence and absence of diethyldithiocarbamate and glycerol at 4 degrees C in phosphate buffer (pH 8.0). Diethyldithiocarbamate reacts with the high oxidation state intermediates of prostaglandin H synthase; it protects the enzyme from bleaching and loss of activity by its ability to act as a reducing agent. For the reaction of diethyldithiocarbamate with compound I, the second-order rate constant k2,app, was found to fall within the range of 5.8 x 10(6) +/- 0.4 x 10(6) M-1.s-1 less than k2,app less than 1.8 x 10(7) +/- 0.1 x 10(7) M-1.s-1. The reaction of diethyldithiocarbamate with compound II showed saturation behavior suggesting enzyme-substrate complex formation, with kcat = 22 +/- 3 s-1, Km = 67 +/- 10 microM, and the second-order rate constant k3,app = 2.0 x 10(5) +/- 0.2 x 10(5) M-1.s-1. In the presence of both diethyldithiocarbamate and 30% glycerol, the parameters for compound II are kcat = 8.8 +/- 0.5 s-1, Km = 49 +/- 7 microM, and k3,app = 1.03 x 10(5) +/- 0.07 x 10(5) M-1.s-1. The spontaneous decay rate constants of compounds I and II (in the absence of diethyldithiocarbamate) are 83 +/- 5 and 0.52 +/- 0.05 s-1, respectively, in the absence of glycerol; in the presence of 30% glycerol they are 78 +/- 5 and 0.33 +/- 0.02 s-1, respectively. Neither cyclooxygenase activity nor the rate constant for compound I formation using 5-phenyl-4-pentenyl-1-hydroperoxide is altered by the presence of diethyldithiocarbamate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Prostaglandin H synthase (PGHS) is a self-activating and self-inactivating enzyme. Both the peroxidase and cyclooxygenase activities have a limited number of catalytic turnovers. Sequential stopped-flow measurements were used to analyze the kinetics of PGHS-1 peroxidase self-inactivation during reaction with several different hydroperoxides. The inactivation followed single exponential kinetics, with a first-order rate constant of 0.2-0.5 s-1 at 24 degrees C. This rate was independent of the peroxide species and concentration used, strongly suggesting that the self-inactivation process originates after formation of Compound I and probably with Intermediate II, which contains an oxyferryl heme and a tyrosyl radical. Kinetic scan and rapid scan experiments were used to monitor the heme changes during the inactivation process. The results from both experiments converged to a simple, linear, two-step mechanism in which Intermediate II is first converted in a faster step (0.5-2 s-1) to a new compound, Intermediate III, which undergoes a subsequent slower (0.01-0.05 s-1) transition to a terminal species. Rapid-quench and high pressure liquid chromatography analysis indicated that Intermediate III likely retains an intact heme group that is not covalently linked with the PGHS-1 protein.  相似文献   

9.
Prostaglandin H synthase isoforms 1 and 2 (PGHS-1 and -2) each have a peroxidase activity and also a cyclooxygenase activity that requires initiation by hydroperoxide. The hydroperoxide initiator requirement for PGHS-2 cyclooxygenase is about 10-fold lower than for PGHS-1 cyclooxygenase, and this difference may contribute to the distinct control of cellular prostanoid synthesis by the two isoforms. We compared the kinetics of the initial peroxidase steps in PGHS-1 and -2 to quantify mechanistic differences between the isoforms that might contribute to the difference in cyclooxygenase initiation efficiency. The kinetics of formation of Intermediate I (an Fe(IV) species with a porphyrin free radical) and Intermediate II (an Fe(IV) species with a tyrosyl free radical, thought to be the crucial oxidant in cyclooxygenase catalysis) were monitored at 4 degrees c by stopped flow spectrophotometry with several hydroperoxides as substrate. With 15-hydroperoxyeicosatetraenoic acid, the rate constant for Intermediate I formation (k1) was 2.3 x 10(7) M-1 s-1 for PGHS-1 and 2.5 x 10(7) M-1 s-1 for PGHS-2, indicating that the isoforms have similar initial reactivity with this lipid hydroperoxide. For PGHS-1, the rate of conversion of Intermediate I to Intermediate II (k2) became the limiting factor when the hydroperoxide level was increased, indicating a rate constant of 10(2)-10(3) s-1 for the generation of the active cyclooxygenase species. For PGHS-2, however, the transition between Intermediates I and II was not rate-limiting even at the highest hydroperoxide concentrations tested, indicating that the k2 value for PGHS-2 was much greater than that for PGHS-1. Computer modelling predicted that faster formation of the active cyclooxygenase species (Intermediate II) or increased stability of the active species increases the resistance of the cyclooxygenase to inhibition by the intracellular hydroperoxide scavenger, glutathione peroxidase. Kinetic differences between the PGHS isoforms in forming or stabilizing the active cyclooxygenase species can thus contribute to the difference in the regulation of their cellular activities.  相似文献   

10.
Self-inactivation imposes an upper limit on bioactive prostanoid synthesis by prostaglandin H synthase (PGHS). Inactivation of PGHS peroxidase activity has been found to begin with Intermediate II, which contains a tyrosyl radical. The structure of this radical is altered by cyclooxygenase inhibitors, such as indomethacin and flurbiprofen, and by replacement of heme by manganese protoporphyrin IX (forming MnPGHS-1). Peroxidase self-inactivation in inhibitor-treated PGHS-1 and MnPGHS-1 was characterized by stopped-flow spectroscopic techniques and by chromatographic and mass spectrometric analysis of the metalloporphyrin. The rate of peroxidase inactivation was about 0.3 s(-)1 in inhibitor-treated PGHS-1 and much slower in MnPGHS-1 (0.05 s(-)1); as with PGHS-1 itself, the peroxidase inactivation rates were independent of peroxide concentration and structure, consistent with an inactivation process beginning with Intermediate II. The changes in metalloporphyrin absorbance spectra during inactivation of inhibitor-treated PGHS-1 were similar to those observed with PGHS-1 but were rather distinct in MnPGHS-1; the kinetics of the spectral transition from Intermediate II to the next species were comparable to the inactivation kinetics in each case. In contrast to the situation with PGHS-1 itself, significant amounts of heme degradation occurred during inactivation of inhibitor-treated PGHS-1, producing iron chlorin and heme-protein adduct species. Structural perturbations at the peroxidase site (MnPGHS-1) or at the cyclooxygenase site (inhibitor-treated PGHS-1) thus can influence markedly the kinetics and the chemistry of PGHS-1 peroxidase inactivation.  相似文献   

11.
Spectral intermediates of prostaglandin hydroperoxidase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Microsomes from ram seminal vesicles or purified prostaglandin H synthase supplemented with either arachidonic acid or prostaglandin G2 formed an unstable spectral intermediate with maxima at 430 nm, 525 nm and 555 nm and minima at 410 nm, 490 nm and 630 nm. At -15 degrees C the band at 430 nm disappeared within 4 min whereas the trough at 410 nm increased three fold. At higher temperatures (10-37 degrees C) spectral complex formation and decay were observed in less than 1 s. An apparent KS-value of about 3 microM was determined for the titration of purified prostaglandin synthase with prostaglandin G2 at -20 degrees C. Substrates for cooxidation reactions of prostaglandin synthase such as phenol, hydroquinone and reduced glutathione as well as the peroxidase inhibitors cyanide and azide inhibited the prostaglandin G2-induced spectral complex formation. The oxene donor iodosobenzene and hydrogen peroxide formed a spectral intermediate analogous to the complex observed with prostaglandin G2 or arachidonic acid in ram seminal vesicle microsomes as well as with the purified prostaglandin synthase. These results are interpreted as the formation of a ferryl-oxo complex (FeO)3+ of the heme of prostaglandin synthase with prostaglandin G2 analogous to the formation of compound I of horseradish peroxidase.  相似文献   

12.
The reaction kinetics of the peroxidase activity of prostaglandin H synthase have been examined with 15-hydroperoxyeicosatetraenoic acid and hydrogen peroxide as substrates and tetramethylphenylenediamine as cosubstrate. The apparent Km and Vmax values for both hydroperoxides were found to increase linearly with the cosubstrate concentration. The overall reaction kinetics could be interpreted in terms of an initial reaction of the synthase with hydroperoxide to form an intermediate equivalent to horseradish peroxidase Compound I, followed by reduction of this intermediate by cosubstrate to regenerate the resting enzyme. The rate constants estimated for the generation of synthase Compound I were 7.1 X 10(7) M-1 s-1 with the lipid hydroperoxide and 9.1 X 10(4) M-1 s-1 with hydrogen peroxide. The rate constants estimated for the rate-determining step in the regeneration of resting enzyme by cosubstrate were 9.2 X 10(6) M-1 s-1 in the case of the reaction with lipid hydroperoxide and 3.5 X 10(6) M-1 s-1 in the case of reaction with hydrogen peroxide. The intrinsic affinities of the synthase peroxidase for substrate (Ks) were estimated to be on the order of 10(-8) M for lipid hydroperoxide and 10(-5) M for hydrogen peroxide. These affinities are quite similar to the reported affinities of the synthase for these hydroperoxides as activators of the cyclooxygenase. The peroxidase activity was found to be progressively inactivated during the peroxidase reaction. The rate of inactivation of the peroxidase was increased by increases in hydroperoxide level, and decreased by increases in peroxidase cosubstrate. The inactivation of the peroxidase appeared to occur by a hydroperoxide-dependent process, originating from synthase Compound I or Compound II.  相似文献   

13.
Previous studies on the chlorination reaction catalyzed by horseradish peroxidase using chlorite as the source of chlorine detected the formation of a chlorinating intermediate that was termed Compound X (Shahangian, S., and Hager, L.P. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 11529-11533). These studies indicated that at pH 10.7, the optical absorption spectrum of Compound X was similar to the spectrum of horseradish peroxidase Compound II. Compound X was shown to be quite stable at alkaline pH values. This study was undertaken to examine the relationship between the oxidation state of the iron protoporphyrin IX heme prosthetic group in Compound X and the chemistry of the halogenating intermediate. The experimental results show that the optical absorption properties and the oxidation state of the heme prosthetic group in horseradish peroxidase are not directly related to the presence of the activated chlorine atom in the intermediate. The oxyferryl porphyrin heme group in alkaline Compound X can be reduced to a ferric heme species that still retains the activated chlorine atom. Furthermore, the reaction of chlorite with horseradish peroxidase at acidic pH leads to the secondary formation of a green intermediate that has the spectral properties of horseradish peroxidase Compound I (Theorell, H. (1941) Enzymologia 10, 250-252). The green intermediate also retains the activated chlorine atom. By analogy to peroxidase Compound I chemistry, the heme prosthetic group in the green chlorinating intermediate must be an oxyferryl porphyrin pi-cation radical species (Roberts, J. E., Hoffman, B. M., Rutter, R. J., and Hager, L. P. (1981) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 103, 7654-7656). To be consistent with traditional peroxidase nomenclature, the red alkaline form of Compound X has been renamed Compound XII, and the green acidic form has been named Compound XI. The transfer of chlorine from the chlorinating intermediate to an acceptor molecule follows an electrophilic (rather than a free radical) path. A mechanism for the reaction is proposed in which the activated chlorine atom is bonded to a heteroatom on an active-site amino acid side chain. Transient state kinetic studies show that the initial intermediate, Compound XII, is formed in a very fast reaction. The second-order rate constant for the formation of Compound XII is approximately 1.1 x 10(7) M-1 s-1. The rate of formation of Compound XII is strongly pH-dependent. At pH 9, the second-order rate constant for the formation of Compound XII drops to 1.5 M-1 s-1. At acidic pH values, Compound XII undergoes a spontaneous first-order decay to yield Compound XI.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
The electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and M?ssbauer properties of native horseradish peroxidase have been compared with those of a synthetic derivative of the enzyme in which a mesohemin residue replaces the natural iron protoporphyrin IX heme prosthetic group. The oxyferryl pi cation radical intermediate, compound I, has been formed from both the native and synthetic enzyme, and the magnetic properties of both intermediates have been examined. The optical absorption characteristics of compound I prepared from mesoheme-substituted horseradish peroxidase are different from those of the compound I prepared from native enzyme [DiNello, R. K., & Dolphin, D. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 6903-6912]. By analogy to model-compound studies, it has been suggested that these optical absorption differences are due to the formation of an A2u and an A1u pi cation radical species, respectively. However, the EPR and M?ssbauer properties of the native and synthetic enzyme and of their oxidized intermediates are quite similar, if not identical, and the data favor an A2u radical for both compounds I.  相似文献   

15.
The spectral behavior of the enzyme prostaglandin H synthase was studied in the Soret region under conditions that permitted comparison of enzyme intermediates involved in peroxidase and cyclooxygenase activities. First, the peroxidase activity was examined. The enzyme's spectral behavior upon reacting with 5-phenyl-pent-4-enyl-1-hydroperoxide was different depending on the presence or absence of the reducing substrate, phenol. In the reaction of prostaglandin H synthase with the peroxide in the absence of phenol, formation of the enzyme intermediate compound I is observed followed by partial conversion to compound II and then by enzyme bleaching. In the reaction with both peroxide and phenol the absorbance decreases and a steady-state spectrum is observed which is a mixture of native enzyme and compound II. The steady state is followed by an increase in absorbance back to that of the native enzyme with no bleaching. The difference can be explained by the reactivity of phenol as a reducing substrate with the prostaglandin H synthase intermediate compounds. Cyclooxygenase activity with arachidonic acid could not be examined in the absence of diethyldithiocarbamate because extensive bleaching occurred. In the presence of diethyldithiocarbamate, enzyme spectral behavior similar to that seen in the reaction of the peroxide and phenol was observed. The similarity of the spectra strongly suggests that the enzyme intermediates involved in both the peroxidase and cyclooxygenase reactions are the same.  相似文献   

16.
For the first time, the enzymatic one-electron oxidation of several naturally occurring and synthetic water-soluble porphyrins by peroxidases was investigated by ESR and optical spectroscopy. The ESR spectra of the free radical metabolites of the porphyrins were singlets (g = 2.0024, delta H = 2-3 G), which we assigned to their respective porphyrin pi-cation free radicals. Several porphyrins were investigated and ranked by the intensity of their ESR spectra (coproporphyrin III greater than coproporphyrin I greater than deuteroporphyrin IX greater than mesoporphyrin IX greater than Photofrin II greater than protoporphyrin IX greater than uroporphyrin I greater than uroporphyrin III greater than hematoporphyrin IX). The porphyrins were oxidized by several peroxidases (horseradish peroxidase, lactoperoxidase, and myeloperoxidase), yielding the same type of ESR spectra. From these results, we conclude that porphyrins are substrates for peroxidases. The changes in the visible absorbance spectra of the porphyrins during enzymatic oxidation were monitored. The two-electron oxidation product, which was assigned to the dihydroxyporphyrin, was detected as an intermediate of the oxidation process. The optical spectrum of the porphyrin pi-cation free radical was not detected, probably due to its low steady-state concentration.  相似文献   

17.
Peroxide compounds of manganese protoporphyrin IX and its complexes with apo-horseradish peroxidase and apocytochrome-c peroxidase were characterized by electronic absorption and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopies. An intermediate formed upon titration of Mn(III)-horseradish peroxidase with hydrogen peroxide exhibited a new electron paramagnetic resonance absorption at g = 5.23 with a definite six-lined 55Mn hyperfine (AMn = 8.2 mT). Neither a porphyrin pi-cation radical nor any other radical in the apoprotein moiety could be observed. The reduced form of Mn-horseradish peroxidase, Mn(II)-horseradish peroxidase, reacted with a stoichiometric amount of hydrogen peroxide to form a peroxide compound whose electronic absorption spectrum was identical with that formed from Mn(III)-horseradish peroxidase. The electronic state of the peroxide compound of manganese horseradish peroxidase was thus concluded to be Mn(IV), S = 3/2. Mn(III)-cytochrome-c peroxidase reacted with stoichiometry quantities of hydrogen peroxide to form a catalytically active intermediate. The electronic absorption spectrum was very similar to that of a higher oxidation state of manganese porphyrin, Mn(V). Since the peroxide compound of manganese cytochrome-c peroxidase retained two oxidizing equivalents per mol of the enzyme (Yonetani, T. and Asakura, T. (1969) J. Biol. Chem. 244, 4580-4588), this peroxide compound might contain an Mn(V) center.  相似文献   

18.
The pre-steady-state kinetics of the prostaglandin endoperoxide synthase oxygenase reaction with eicosadienoic acids and the cyclooxygenase reaction with arachidonic acid were investigated by stopped-flow spectrophotometry at 426 nm, an isosbestic point between native enzyme and compound I. A similar reaction mechanism for both types of catalysis is defined from combined kinetic experiments and numerical simulations. In the first step a fatty acid hydroperoxide reacts with the native enzyme to form compound I and the fatty acid hydroxide. In the second step the fatty acid reduces compound I to compound II and a fatty acid carbon radical is formed. This is followed by two fast steps: (1) the addition of either one molecule of oxygen (the oxygenase reaction) or two molecules of oxygen (the cyclooxygenase reaction) to the fatty acid carbon radical to form the corresponding hydroperoxyl radical, and (2) the reaction of the hydroperoxyl radical with compound II to form the fatty acid hydroperoxide and a compound I-protein radical. A unimolecular reaction of the compound I-protein radical to reform the native enzyme is assumed for the last step in the cycle. This is a slow reaction not significantly affecting steps 1 and 2 under pre-steady-state conditions. A linear dependence of the observed pseudo-first-order rate constant, k(obs), on fatty acid concentration is quantitatively reproduced by the model for both the oxygenase and cyclooxygenase reactions. The simulated second order rate constants for the conversion of native enzyme to compound I with arachidonic or eicosadienoic acids hydroperoxides as a substrate are 8 x 10(7) and 4 x 10(7) M(-1) s(-1), respectively. The simulated and experimentally obtained second-order rate constants for the conversion of compound I to compound II with arachidonic and eicosadienoic acids as a substrate are 1.2 x 10(5) and 3.0 x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1), respectively.  相似文献   

19.
Upon photoirradiation under aerobic conditions, the porphyrin prosthetic group in Mg-substituted horseradish peroxidase was oxidized to a mixture of its pi-cation radical and an oxidized product with an absorption band at 448 nm. The 448 nm compound was then converted to a 489 nm compound in the dark and the activation energy for the conversion was 19.3 kcal/mol. About 1 mol of O2 was consumed per mol of the 448 nm compound formed and no O2 consumption was seen in the dark reaction. The substitution of ethyl groups (meso) and hydroxyethyl groups (hemato) for the vinyl groups in protoporphyrin IX did not have an effect on the result. Under anaerobic conditions and in the presence of a suitable electron acceptor, the only photooxidation product of porphyrin was its pi-cation radical. The formation of hydroxyl radicals during irradiation under aerobic conditions was confirmed by the spin-trapping method. The formation of the above two radicals could be followed by ESR spectroscopy separately at a fixed magnetic field which was set to maximize each ESR signal. The rate of hydroxyl radical formation depended linearly on the concentration of Mg peroxidase. The photooxidation of porphyrin was slow and gave nonspecific product(s) when Mg protoporphyrin IX was present in the heme crevice of apomyoglobin or free in solution.  相似文献   

20.
The reactions of the NAD radical (NAD.) with ferric horseradish peroxidase and with compounds I and II were investigated by pulse radiolysis. NAD. reacted with the ferric enzyme and with compound I to form the ferrous enzyme and compound II with second-order rate constants of 8 X 10(8) and 1.5 X 10(8) M-1 s-1, respectively, at pH 7.0. In contrast, no reaction of NAD. with native compound II at pH 10.0 nor with diacetyldeutero-compound II at pH 5.0-8.0 could be detected. Other reducing species generated by pulse radiolysis, such as hydrated electron (eaq-), superoxide anion (O2-), and benzoate anion radical, could not reduce compound II of the enzyme to the ferric state, although the methylviologen radical reduced it. The results are discussed in relation to the mechanism of catalysis of the one-electron oxidation of substrates by peroxidase.  相似文献   

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