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1.
The 2.9 A resolution structure of iron superoxide dismutase (FeSOD) (EC 1.15.1.1) from Pseudomonas ovalis complexed with the inhibitor azide was solved. Comparison of this structure with free enzyme shows that the inhibitor is bound at the open coordination position of the iron, with a bond length of 2.0 A. The metal moves by 0.4 A into the trigonal plane to produce an orthogonal geometry at the iron. Binding of the inhibitor also causes a movement of the axial ligand (histidine 26) away from the metal, a lengthening of the iron-histidine bond, and a rotation of the histidine 74 ring. The inhibitor possesses contacts in the binding pocket with a pair of conserved tryptophan residues and with the side chains of tyrosine 34 and glutamine 70. This glutamine is conserved between all FeSODs, but is absent in MnSOD. Comparisons with MnSOD show that a different glutamine which possesses the same interactions in the active site as Gln70 in FeSOD is conserved at position 154 in the overall SOD sequence, implying that while manganese and FeSODs are structural homologues in a global sense, their functional and evolutionary relationship is that of second-site mutation revertants.  相似文献   

2.
Bacterial ATP-binding cassette transport systems for high-affinity uptake of zinc and manganese use a cluster 9 solute-binding protein. Structures of four cluster 9 transport proteins have been determined previously. However, the structural determinants for discrimination between zinc and manganese remain under discussion. To further investigate the variability of metal binding sites in bacterial transporters, we have determined the structure of the zinc-bound transport protein ZnuA from Escherichia coli to 1.75 A resolution. The overall structure of ZnuA is similar to other solute-binding transporters. A scaffolding alpha-helix forms the backbone for two structurally related globular domains. The metal-binding site is located at the domain interface. The bound zinc ion is coordinated by three histidine residues (His78, His161 and His225) and one glutamate residue (Glu77). The functional role of Glu77 for metal binding is unexpected, because this residue is not conserved in previously determined structures of zinc and manganese-specific transport proteins. The observed metal coordination by four protein residues differs significantly from the zinc-binding site in the ZnuA transporter from Synechocystis 6803, which binds zinc via three histidine residues. In addition, the E. coli ZnuA structure reveals the presence of a disulfide bond in the C-terminal globular domain that is not present in previously determined cluster 9 transport protein structures.  相似文献   

3.
The structurally homologous mononuclear iron and manganese superoxide dismutases (FeSOD and MnSOD, respectively) contain a highly conserved glutamine residue in the active site which projects toward the active-site metal centre and participates in an extensive hydrogen bonding network. The position of this residue is different for each SOD isoenzyme (Q69 in FeSOD and Q146 in MnSOD of Escherichia coli). Although site-directed mutant enzymes lacking this glutamine residue (FeSOD[Q69G] and MnSOD[Q146A]) demonstrated a higher degree of selectivity for their respective metal, they showed little or no activity compared with wild types. FeSOD double mutants (FeSOD[Q69G/A141Q]), which mimic the glutamine position in MnSOD, elicited 25% the activity of wild-type FeSOD while the activity of the corresponding MnSOD double mutant (MnSOD[G77Q/Q146A]) increased to 150% (relative to wild-type MnSOD). Both double mutants showed reduced selectivity toward their metal. Differences exhibited in the thermostability of SOD activity was most obvious in the mutants that contained two glutamine residues (FeSOD[A141Q] and MnSOD[G77Q]), where the MnSOD mutant was thermostable and the FeSOD mutant was thermolabile. Significantly, the MnSOD double mutant exhibited a thermal-inactivation profile similar to that of wild-type FeSOD while that of the FeSOD double mutant was similar to wild-type MnSOD. We conclude therefore that the position of this glutamine residue contributes to metal selectivity and is responsible for some of the different physicochemical properties of these SODs, and in particular their characteristic thermostability.  相似文献   

4.
The binding of hemin to the primary site of human serum albumin (HSA) has been reinvestigated using UV-Vis, CD and NMR techniques. The major fraction of bound hemin contains a five-coordinated high-spin iron(III) center, but a minor fraction of the metal appears to be in a six-coordinated, low-spin state, where a 'distal' residue, possibly a second histidine residue, completes the coordination sphere. The reduced, iron(II) form of the adduct contains six-coordinated low-spin heme. The distal residue hinders the access to the iron(III) center of hemin-HSA to small anionic ligands like azide and cyanide and destabilizes the binding of neutral diatomics like dioxygen and carbon monoxide to the iron(II) form. In spite of these limitations, the hemin-HSA complex promotes hydrogen peroxide activation processes that bear the characteristics of enzymatic reactions and may have biological relevance. The complex is in fact capable of catalyzing peroxidative reactions on phenolic compounds related to tyrosine and hydrogen peroxide dismutation. Kinetic and mechanistic studies confirm that the low efficiency with which peroxidative processes occur depends on the limited rate of the reaction between hydrogen peroxide and the iron(III) center, to form the active species, and by the competitive peroxide degradation reaction.  相似文献   

5.
Laccases are multicopper oxidases in which substrate oxidation takes place at the type-1 (T1) copper site. The redox potential (E (0)) significantly varies amongst members of the family and is a key parameter for substrate specificity. Despite sharing highly conserved features at the T1 copper site, laccases span a large range of E (0), suggesting that the influence of the metal secondary coordination sphere is important. In silico analysis of structural determinants modulating the E (0) of Rigidoporus lignosus and other fungal laccases indicated that different factors can be considered. First, the length of the T1 copper coordinating histidine bond is observed to be longer in high E (0) laccases than in low E (0) ones. The hydrophobic environment around the T1 copper site appeared as another important structural determinant in modulating the E (0), with a stronger hydrophobic environment correlating with higher E (0). The analysis of hydrogen bonding network (HBN) around the T1-binding pocket revealed that the amino acids building up the metal binding site strongly interact with neighbouring residues and contribute to the stabilization of the protein folds. Changes in these HBNs that modified the Cu1 preferred coordination geometry lead to an increase of E (0). The presence of axial ligands modulates the E (0) of T1 to different extent. Stacking interactions between aromatic residues located in the second coordination shell and the metal ion coordination histidine imidazole ring have also been identified as a factor that modulates the E (0). The electrostatic interactions between the T1 copper site and backbone carbonyl oxygen indicate that Cu1-CO=NH distance is longer in the high E (0) laccases. In short, the in silico study reported herein identifies several structural factors that may influence the E (0) of the examined laccases. Some of these are dependent on the nature of the coordination ligands at the T1 site, but others can be ascribed to the hydrophobic effects, HBNs, axial ligations, stacking and electrostatic interactions, not necessary directly interacting with the copper metal.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Several members of a widespread class of bacterial and archaeal metalloflavoproteins, called FprA, likely function as scavenging nitric oxide reductases (S-NORs). However, the only published X-ray crystal structure of an FprA is for a protein characterized as a rubredoxin:dioxygen oxidoreductase (ROO) from Desulfovibrio gigas. Therefore, the crystal structure of Moorella thermoacetica FprA, which has been established to function as an S-NOR, was solved in three different states: as isolated, reduced, and reduced, NO-reacted. As is the case for D. gigas ROO, the M. thermoacetica FprA contains a solvent-bridged non-heme, non-sulfur diiron site with five-coordinate iron centers bridged by an aspartate, and terminal glutamate, aspartate, and histidine ligands. However, the M. thermoacetica FprA diiron site showed four His ligands, two to each iron, in all three states, whereas the D. gigas ROO diiron site was reported to contain only three His ligands, even though the fourth His residue is conserved. The Fe1-Fe2 distance within the diiron site of M. thermoacetica FprA remained at 3.2-3.4 A with little or no movement of the protein ligands in the three different states and with conservation of the two proximal open coordination sites. Molecular modeling indicated that each open coordination site can accommodate an end-on NO. This relatively rigid and symmetrical diiron site structure is consistent with formation of a diferrous dinitrosyl as the committed catalytic intermediate leading to formation of N(2)O. These results provide new insight into the structural features that fine-tune biological non-heme diiron sites for dioxygen activation vs nitric oxide reduction.  相似文献   

8.
An atomic model of tetrameric manganese superoxide dismutase from Thermus thermophilus HB8 has been built into an electron density map at 2.4 A resolution, using chemical sequences of Mn dismutases from Thermus aquaticus and Bacillus stearothermophilus. The monomer fold is structurally very similar to the fold of iron dismutase and comprises two domains, each contributing two ligands to the metal. The Mn(III) ion is bound by protein ligands assigned as His 28, His 83, Asp 165, and His 169. Near neighbors in the metal-ligand environment include a series of hydrophobic residues, Phe 86, Trp 87, Trp 131, and Trp 167. The hydroxyl groups of two Tyr residues, at 36 and 182, are less than 7 A from the metal, as is His 32. Gln 150 forms a bridge between Tyr 36 and Trp 131. These ligands and nearby residues are strongly conserved in the known sequences of Mn dismutases. Only one of the two oxygens of Asp 165 has been assigned as a metal ligand, so that in the current model four protein atoms bind Mn(III). These ligand atoms form part of an approximate trigonal bipyramid in which water may occupy an axial position on the side opposite His 28. The conformation of the protein is unusual in the vicinity of the first ligand, His 28, as a consequence of the insertion of an extra residue in an alpha-helix. The distortion of the helix allows His 32 to stack against the ligand, His 169, and brings Tyr 36 close to the Mn ion. Across one of the dimer interfaces, the two Mn ions are separated by about 18 A, and active center residues from adjoining subunits interdigitate; Tyr 172 interacts with His 32 of the neighboring chain and Glu 168 with the backbone of 168 and with the ligand His 169 from the opposite subunit. Only one other dimer interface occurs in the tetramer; it involves residues 55-62 and sequences near 140 and 156. The center of the oligomeric molecule is filled with solvent.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Mutagenesis studies on conserved histidine residues identified as possible metal binding ligands in clavaminic acid synthase isozyme 2 were consistent with His-145 and His-280 acting as iron ligands, in support of crystallographic and previous mutagenesis studies. Mutagenesis of the four cysteines and a glutamine residue, conserved in both clavaminic acid synthase isozymes 1 and 2, demonstrated that none of these residues is essential for activity.  相似文献   

11.
Cyanobacteria are shown to be unique in containing membrane-bound manganese superoxide dismutases (MnSOD). They are homodimeric type 2 membrane proteins that protect this phototrophic organism against oxidative stress. We have determined, for the first time, the 2.0A resolution structure of the catalytic portion of the MnSOD from the filamentous cyanobacterium Anabaena PCC 7120. Within each subunit, both the N-terminal helical hairpin (His94 and His145) and the C-terminal alpha/beta domain (His232 and Asp228) contribute ligands to the catalytic manganese site. Together with a water or hydroxide ion (OH(x)) a five-coordinated trigonal bipyramidal geometry is formed, with OH(x) and His90 forming the axial ligands and manganese shifted out of the equatorial plane in the direction of OH(x). The ligands including OH(x) are tightly constrained by hydrogen bonding with surrounding residues either from the same monomer (Tyr98, Asn144, Trp194, Gln213, Val229, Trp230) or from the neighbouring subunit (Glu231, Tyr235). This underlines the important role of the symmetric dimeric structure of MnSODs in contributing elements to both the active site and the substrate funnel. The Mn cdots, three dots, centered Mn distance (18.4A) is bridged by the hydrogen-bonded His232 of one monomer with Glu231 of the other monomer. A detailed discussion of the structure, a comparison with known structures of soluble MnSODs as well as a model of the cyanobacterial membrane-bound MnSOD is presented.  相似文献   

12.
Campylobacter jejuni, a major cause of acute bacterial diarrhea in humans, expresses numerous proteins to import diverse forms of essential iron. The expression of p19 and an adjacent iron transporter homologue (ftr1) is strongly induced upon iron limitation, suggesting a function in iron acquisition. Here, we show that the loss of P19 alone is detrimental to growth on iron-restricted media. Furthermore, metal binding analysis demonstrates that recombinant P19 has distinct copper and iron binding sites. Crystal structures of P19 have been solved to 1.41 Å resolution, revealing an immunoglobulin-like fold. A P19 homodimer in which both monomers contribute ligands to two equivalent copper sites located adjacent to methionine-rich patches is observed. Copper coordination occurs via three histidine residues (His42, His95, and His132) and Met88. A solvent channel lined with conserved acidic residues leads to the copper site. Soaking crystals with a solution of manganese as iron analog reveals a second metal binding site in this solvent channel (metal-metal distance, 7.7 Å). Glu44 lies between the metal sites and displays multiple conformations in the crystal structures, suggesting a role in regulating metal-metal interaction. Dimerization is shown to be metal dependent in vitro and is detected in vivo by cross-linking.  相似文献   

13.
14.
An extensive computational analysis of available sequence and crystal structure data was used to identify functionally important residue interactions within the motor domain of the kinesin molecular motor. Principal component analysis revealed that all current kinesin crystal structures reside in one of two main conformations, which differ at the active site, and in the position of a microtubule-binding sub-domain relative to a rigid central core. This sub-domain consists of secondary structure elements alpha4-loop12-alpha5-loop13 and contains a conserved hydrophilic surface patch that may be involved in strong binding to microtubules. A hinge point for the sub-domain motion lies near a conserved glycine at position 292. Statistical coupling analysis revealed a network of co-evolving positions that link this region to the nucleotide-binding site, via a highly conserved histidine in the switch I loop. The data are consistent with a model in which the nucleotide status of the active site shifts kinesin between weak and strong binding conformations via reconfiguration of the identified sub-domain. Our data provide a statistically supported framework for further examination of this and other structure-function relationships in the kinesin family.  相似文献   

15.
Heme oxygenases catalyze the oxidation of heme to biliverdin, CO, and free iron. For pathogenic microorganisms, heme uptake and degradation are critical mechanisms for iron acquisition that enable multiplication and survival within hosts they invade. Here we report the first crystal structure of the pathogenic Escherichia coli O157:H7 heme oxygenase ChuS in complex with heme at 1.45 A resolution. When compared with other heme oxygenases, ChuS has a unique fold, including structural repeats and a beta-sheet core. Not surprisingly, the mode of heme coordination by ChuS is also distinct, whereby heme is largely stabilized by residues from the C-terminal domain, assisted by a distant arginine from the N-terminal domain. Upon heme binding, there is no large conformational change beyond the fine tuning of a key histidine (His-193) residue. Most intriguingly, in contrast to other heme oxygenases, the propionic side chains of heme are orientated toward the protein core, exposing the alpha-meso carbon position where O(2) is added during heme degradation. This unique orientation may facilitate presentation to an electron donor, explaining the significantly reduced concentration of ascorbic acid needed for the reaction. Based on the ChuS-heme structure, we converted the histidine residue responsible for axial coordination of the heme group to an asparagine residue (H193N), as well as converting a second histidine to an alanine residue (H73A) for comparison purposes. We employed spectral analysis and CO measurement by gas chromatography to analyze catalysis by ChuS, H193N, and H73A, demonstrating that His-193 is the key residue for the heme-degrading activity of ChuS.  相似文献   

16.
Superoxide dismutases (SODs) are a family of metalloenzymes that catalyze the dismutation of superoxide anion radicals into molecular oxygen and hydrogen peroxide. Iron superoxide dismutases (FeSODs) are only expressed in some prokaryotes and plants. A new and highly active FeSOD with an unusual subcellular localization has recently been isolated from the plant Vigna unguiculata (cowpea). This protein functions as a homodimer and, in contrast to the other members of the SOD family, is localized to the cytosol. The crystal structure of the recombinant enzyme has been solved and the model refined to 1.97 A resolution. The superoxide anion binding site is located in a cleft close to the dimer interface. The coordination geometry of the Fe site is a distorted trigonal bipyramidal arrangement, whose axial ligands are His43 and a solvent molecule, and whose in-plane ligands are His95, Asp195, and His199. A comparison of the structural features of cowpea FeSOD with those of homologous SODs reveals subtle differences in regard to the metal-protein interactions, and confirms the existence of two regions that may control the traffic of substrate and product: one located near the Fe binding site, and another in the dimer interface. The evolutionary conservation of reciprocal interactions of both monomers in neighboring active sites suggests possible subunit cooperation during catalysis.  相似文献   

17.
The crystal structure of a medium-chain NAD(H)-dependent alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) from an archaeon has been solved by multiwavelength anomalous diffraction, using a selenomethionine-substituted enzyme. The protein (SsADH), extracted from the hyperthermophilic organism Sulfolobus solfataricus, is a homo-tetramer with a crystallographic 222 symmetry. Despite the low level of sequence identity, the overall fold of the monomer is similar to that of the other homologous ADHs of known structure. However, a significant difference is the orientation of the catalytic domain relative to the coenzyme-binding domain that results in a larger interdomain cleft. At the bottom of this cleft, the catalytic zinc ion is coordinated tetrahedrally and lacks the zinc-bound water molecule that is usually found in ADH apoform structures. The fourth coordination position is indeed occupied by a Glu residue, as found in bacterial tetrameric ADHs. Other differences are found in the architecture of the substrate pocket whose entrance is more restricted than in other ADHs. SsADH is the first tetrameric ADH X-ray structure containing a second zinc ion playing a structural role. This latter metal ion shows a peculiar coordination, with a glutamic acid residue replacing one of the four cysteine ligands that are highly conserved throughout the structural zinc-containing dimeric ADHs.  相似文献   

18.
BACKGROUND: Streptococcus mutans pyrophosphatase (Sm-PPase) is a member of a relatively uncommon but widely dispersed sequence family (family II) of inorganic pyrophosphatases. A structure will answer two main questions: is it structurally similar to the family I PPases, and is the mechanism similar? RESULTS: The first family II PPase structure, that of homodimeric Sm-PPase complexed with metal and sulfate ions, has been solved by X-ray crystallography at 2.2 A resolution. The tertiary fold of Sm-PPase consists of a 189 residue alpha/beta N-terminal domain and a 114 residue mixed beta sheet C-terminal domain and bears no resemblance to family I PPase, even though the arrangement of active site ligands and the residues that bind them shows significant similarity. The preference for Mn2+ over Mg2+ in family II PPases is explained by the histidine ligands and bidentate carboxylate coordination. The active site is located at the domain interface. The C-terminal domain is hinged to the N-terminal domain and exists in both closed and open conformations. CONCLUSIONS: The active site similiarities, including a water coordinated to two metal ions, suggest that the family II PPase mechanism is "analogous" (not "homologous") to that of family I PPases. This is a remarkable example of convergent evolution. The large change in C-terminal conformation suggests that domain closure might be the mechanism by which Sm-PPase achieves specificity for pyrophosphate over other polyphosphates.  相似文献   

19.
Ishida M  Dohmae N  Shiro Y  Oku T  Iizuka T  Isogai Y 《Biochemistry》2004,43(30):9823-9833
Natural c-type cytochromes are characterized by the consensus Cys-X-X-Cys-His heme-binding motif (where X is any amino acid) by which the heme is covalently attached to protein by the addition of the sulfhydryl groups of two cysteine residues to the vinyl groups of the heme. In this work, the consensus sequence was used for the heme-binding site of a designed four-helix bundle, and the apoproteins with either a histidine residue or a methionine residue positioned at the sixth coordination site were synthesized and reacted with iron protoporphyrin IX (protoheme) under mild reducing conditions in vitro. These polypeptides bound one heme per helix-loop-helix monomer via a single thioether bond and formed four-helix bundle dimers in the holo forms as designed. They exhibited visible absorption spectra characteristic of c-type cytochromes, in which the absorption bands shifted to lower wavelengths in comparison with the b-type heme binding intermediates of the same proteins. Unexpectedly, the designed cytochromes c with bis-His-coordinated heme iron exhibited oxidation-reduction potentials similar to those of their b-type intermediates, which have no thioether bond. Furthermore, the cytochrome c with His and Met residues as the axial ligands exhibited redox potentials increased by only 15-30 mV in comparison with the cytochrome with the bis-His coordination. These results indicate that highly positive redox potentials of natural cytochromes c are not only due to the heme covalent structure, including the Met ligation, but also due to noncovalent and hydrophobic environments surrounding the heme. The covalent attachment of heme to the polypeptide in natural cytochromes c may contribute to their higher redox potentials by reducing the thermodynamic stability of the oxidized forms relatively against that of the reduced forms without the loss of heme.  相似文献   

20.
The three-dimensional structure of the manganese-dependent superoxide dismutase (MnSOD) from Escherichia coli has been determined by X-ray crystallography at 2.1?Å resolution. The protein crystallizes with two homodimers in the asymmetric unit, and a model comprising 6528 protein atoms (residues 1–205 of all four monomers), four manganese ions and 415 water molecules has been refined to an R factor of 0.188 (R free 0.218). The structure shows a high degree of similarity with other MnSOD and FeSOD enzymes. The Mn centres are 5-coordinate, trigonal bipyramidal, with His26 and a solvent molecule, probably a hydroxide ion, as apical ligands, and His81, Asp167 and His171 as equatorial ligands. The coordinated solvent molecule is linked to a network of hydrogen bonds involving the non-coordinated carboxylate oxygen of Asp167 and a conserved glutamine residue, Gln146. The MnSOD dimer is notable for the way in which the two active sites are interconnected and a "bridge" comprising His171 of one monomer and Glu170 of the other offers a route for inter-site communication. Comparison of E. coli MnSOD and FeSOD (a) reveals some differences in the dimer interface, (b) yields no obvious explanation for their metal specificities, and (c) provides a structural basis for differences in DNA binding, where for MnSOD the groove formed by dimerization is complementary in charge and surface contour to B-DNA.  相似文献   

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