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1.
A sarcosine oxidase (sarcosine: oxygen oxidoreductase (demethylating), EC 1.5.3.1) isolated from Corynebacterium sp. U-96 contains both covalently bound FAD and noncovalently bound FAD. The noncovalent FAD reacts with sarcosine, the covalent FAD with molecular oxygen (Jorns, M.S. (1985) Biochemistry 24, 3189-3194). To clarify the reaction mechanism of the enzyme, kinetic investigations were performed by the stopped-flow method as well as by analysis of the overall reaction. The absorption spectrum of the enzyme in the steady state was very similar to that of the oxidized enzyme, and no intermediate enzyme species, such as a semiquinoid flavin, was detected. The rate for anaerobic reduction of the noncovalently bound FAD and the covalently bound FAD by sarcosine were 31 and 6.7 s-1, respectively. The latter value was smaller than the value of respective Vmax/e0 obtained by the overall reaction kinetics (Vmax/e0: the maximum velocity per enzyme concentration). Both rate constants for oxidation of the two FADs by molecular oxygen were 100 s-1. A reaction scheme of sarcosine oxidase is proposed to account for the data obtained; 70% of the enzyme functions via a fully reduced enzyme, and 30% of the enzyme goes along a side-path, without forming the fully reduced enzyme. In addition, it is suggested that the reactivity of noncovalently bound FAD with sarcosine is affected by the oxidation-reduction state of the covalently bound FAD, in contrast to the reactivity of the covalently bound FAD with molecular oxygen, which is independent of the oxidation-reduction state of the noncovalently bound FAD.  相似文献   

2.
The crystal structure of heterotetrameric sarcosine oxidase (TSOX) from Pseudomonas maltophilia has been determined at 1.85 A resolution. TSOX contains three coenzymes (FAD, FMN and NAD+), four different subunits (alpha, 103 kDa; beta, 44 kDa; gamma, 21 kDa; delta, 11 kDa) and catalyzes the oxidation of sarcosine (N-methylglycine) to yield hydrogen peroxide, glycine and formaldehyde. In the presence of tetrahydrofolate, the oxidation of sarcosine is coupled to the formation of 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate. The NAD+ and putative folate binding sites are located in the alpha-subunit. The FAD binding site is in the beta-subunit. FMN is bound at the interface of the alpha and beta-subunits. The FAD and FMN rings are separated by a short segment of the beta-subunit with the closest atoms located 7.4 A apart. Sulfite, an inhibitor of oxygen reduction, is bound at the FMN site. 2-Furoate, a competitive inhibitor with respect to sarcosine, is bound at the FAD site. The sarcosine dehydrogenase and 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate synthase sites are 35 A apart but connected by a large internal cavity (approximately 10,000 A3). An unexpected zinc ion, coordinated by three cysteine and one histidine side-chains, is bound to the delta-subunit. The N-terminal half of the alpha subunit of TSOX (alphaA) is closely similar to the FAD-binding domain of glutathione reductase but with NAD+ replacing FAD. The C-terminal half of the alpha subunit of TSOX (alphaB) is similar to the C-terminal half of dimethylglycine oxidase and the T-protein of the glycine cleavage system, proteins that bind tetrahydrofolate. The beta-subunit of TSOX is very similar to monomeric sarcosine oxidase. The gamma-subunit is similar to the C-terminal sub-domain of alpha-TSOX. The delta-subunit shows little similarity with any PDB entry. The alphaA domain/beta-subunit sub-structure of TSOX closely resembles the alphabeta dimer of L-proline dehydrogenase, a heteroctameric protein (alphabeta)4 that shows highest overall similarity to TSOX.  相似文献   

3.
Heterotetrameric (alphabetagammadelta) sarcosine oxidase from Corynebacterium sp. P-1 (cTSOX) contains noncovalently bound FAD and NAD(+) and covalently bound FMN, attached to beta(His173). The beta(His173Asn) mutant is expressed as a catalytically inactive, labile heterotetramer. The beta and delta subunits are lost during mutant enzyme purification, which yields a stable alphagamma complex. Addition of stabilizing agents prevents loss of the delta but not the beta subunit. The covalent flavin link is clearly a critical structural element and essential for TSOX activity or preventing FMN loss. The alpha subunit was expressed by itself and purified by affinity chromatography. The alpha and beta subunits each contain an NH(2)-terminal ADP-binding motif that could serve as part of the binding site for NAD(+) or FAD. The alpha subunit and the alphagamma complex were each found to contain 1 mol of NAD(+) but no FAD. Since NAD(+) binds to alpha, FAD probably binds to beta. The latter could not be directly demonstrated since it was not possible to express beta by itself. However, FAD in TSOX from Pseudomonas maltophilia (pTSOX) exhibits properties similar to those observed for the covalently bound FAD in monomeric sarcosine oxidase and N-methyltryptophan oxidase, enzymes that exhibit sequence homology with beta. A highly conserved glycine in the ADP-binding motif of the alpha(Gly139) or beta(Gly30) subunit was mutated in an attempt to generate NAD(+)- or FAD-free cTSOX, respectively. The alpha(Gly139Ala) mutant is expressed only at low temperature (t(optimum) = 15 degrees C), but the purified enzyme exhibited properties indistinguishable from the wild-type enzyme. The much larger barrier to NAD(+) binding in the case of the alpha(Gly139Val) mutant could not be overcome even by growth at 3 degrees C, suggesting that NAD(+) binding is required for TSOX expression. The beta(Gly30Ala) mutant exhibited subunit expression levels similar to those of the wild-type enzyme, but the mutation blocked subunit assembly and covalent attachment of FMN, suggesting that both processes require a conformational change in beta that is induced upon FAD binding. About half of the covalent FMN in recombinant preparations of cTSOX or pTSOX is present as a reversible covalent 4a-adduct with a cysteine residue. Adduct formation is not prevented by mutating any of the three cysteine residues in the beta subunit of cTSOX to Ser or Ala. Since FMN is attached via its 8-methyl group to the beta subunit, the FMN ring must be located at the interface between beta and another subunit that contains the reactive cysteine residue.  相似文献   

4.
Heterotetrameric sarcosine oxidase (TSOX) is a complex bifunctional flavoenzyme that contains two flavins. Most of the FMN in recombinant TSOX is present as a covalent adduct with an endogenous ligand. Enzyme denaturation disrupts the adduct, accompanied by release of a stoichiometric amount of sulfide. Enzyme containing>or=90% unmodified FMN is prepared by displacement of the endogenous ligand with sulfite, a less tightly bound competing ligand. Reaction of adduct-depleted TSOX with sodium sulfide produces a stable complex that resembles the endogenous TSOX adduct and known 4a-S-cysteinyl flavin adducts. The results provide definitive evidence for sulfide as the endogenous TSOX ligand and strongly suggest that the modified FMN is a 4a-sulfide adduct. A comparable reaction with sodium sulfide is not detected with other flavoprotein oxidases. A model of the postulated TSOX adduct suggests that it is stabilized by nearby residues that may be important in the electron transferase/oxidase function of the coenzyme.  相似文献   

5.
Heterotetrameric sarcosine oxidase from Corynebacterium sp.U-96(SO-U96) contains non-covalent and covalent flavins. Lys-358 and Lys-171 in the beta subunit is present at non-covalent flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD)- and covalent flavin monodinucleotide (FMN)-binding sites, respectively. The Lys-358 mutant, K358R showed 0.07% activity and higher apparent K(m) for sarcosine than the wild-type enzyme, but K358A and K358D mutants showed no activity, suggesting the importance of amino group of Lys358 in the sarcosine-binding to the enzyme. The Lys171 mutants, K171R, K171A and K171D showed 58, 39 and 32% activity of the wild-type enzyme, respectively. An apparent K(m) for oxygen and K(d) of enzyme-sulphite complex increased by the mutation. The rate of reduction of the FAD of K171 mutants with sarcosine did not change by the mutation. The stopped-flow photodiode array analyses of the anaerobic reduction with sarcosin of the wild-type and K171 mutant enzymes showed characteristic spectra of neutral and anionic semiquinones, especially for K171A enzyme. On the basis of these results, the reductive-half reaction of the wild-type and K171 mutant enzymes is explained by a mechanism involving the semiquinones. Low activity of K171 mutants is suggested to be derived from the low rate of oxidation of the reduced FMN in the enzyme.  相似文献   

6.
Enzymatic breakage of the substrate C-H bond by Methylophilus methyltrophus (sp. W3A1) methylamine dehydrogenase (MADH) has been studied by stopped-flow spectroscopy. The rate of reduction of the tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ) cofactor has a large kinetic isotope effect (KIE = 16.8 +/- 0.5), and the KIE is independent of temperature. Analysis of the temperature dependence of C-H bond breakage revealed that extreme (ground state) quantum tunneling is responsible for the transfer of the hydrogen nucleus. Reaction rates are strongly dependent on temperature, indicating thermally induced, vibrational motion drives the H-transfer reaction. The data provide direct experimental evidence for enzymatic bond breakage by extreme tunneling driven by vibrational motion of the protein scaffold. The results demonstrate that classical transition state theory and its tunneling derivatives do not adequately describe this enzymatic reaction.  相似文献   

7.
The mechanism of flavin reduction in morphinone reductase (MR) and pentaerythritol tetranitrate (PETN) reductase, and flavin oxidation in MR, has been studied by stopped-flow and steady-state kinetic methods. The temperature dependence of the primary kinetic isotope effect for flavin reduction in MR and PETN reductase by nicotinamide coenzyme indicates that quantum mechanical tunneling plays a major role in hydride transfer. In PETN reductase, the kinetic isotope effect (KIE) is essentially independent of temperature in the experimentally accessible range, contrasting with strongly temperature-dependent reaction rates, consistent with a tunneling mechanism from the vibrational ground state of the reactive C-H/D bond. In MR, both the reaction rates and the KIE are dependent on temperature, and analysis using the Eyring equation suggests that hydride transfer has a major tunneling component, which, unlike PETN reductase, is gated by thermally induced vibrations in the protein. The oxidative half-reaction of MR is fully rate-limiting in steady-state turnover with the substrate 2-cyclohexenone and NADH at saturating concentrations. The KIE for hydride transfer from reduced flavin to the alpha/beta unsaturated bond of 2-cyclohexenone is independent of temperature, contrasting with strongly temperature-dependent reaction rates, again consistent with ground-state tunneling. A large solvent isotope effect (SIE) accompanies the oxidative half-reaction, which is also independent of temperature in the experimentally accessible range. Double isotope effects indicate that hydride transfer from the flavin N5 atom to 2-cyclohexenone, and the protonation of 2-cyclohexenone, are concerted and both the temperature-independent KIE and SIE suggest that this reaction also proceeds by ground-state quantum tunneling. Our results demonstrate the importance of quantum tunneling in the reduction of flavins by nicotinamide coenzymes. This is the first observation of (i) three H-nuclei in an enzymic reaction being transferred by tunneling and (ii) the utilization of both passive and active dynamics within the same native enzyme.  相似文献   

8.
Heterotetrameric sarcosine oxidase (TSOX) is a complex bifunctional enzyme that catalyzes the oxidation of the methyl group in sarcosine (N-methylglycine) and transfer of the oxidized methyl group into the one-carbon metabolic pool. In addition to four different subunits, TSOX contains three coenzymes (FAD, FMN, and NAD) and a binding site for tetrahydrofolate, the coenzyme acceptor of the oxidized methyl group from sarcosine. Based on preliminary success in crystallization of the natural enzyme, the genes encoding the subunits for TSOX from Pseudomonas maltophilia (pTSOX) were cloned by functional screening of a genomic library. Recombinant enzyme exhibiting the same specific activity as natural pTSOX could not be isolated using a similar or identical purification procedure. This difficulty was overcome by affinity purification of recombinant pTSOX containing a C-terminal (His)(6) tag on the subunit (gamma) encoded by soxG, the gene located at the 3' end of the pTSOX operon. Affinity-purified pTSOX could not be crystallized, a problem traced to microheterogeneity in the recombinant enzyme where about half of the FMN is present in a modified form that is not found in the natural enzyme and may be a biosynthetic intermediate. The modified flavin was eliminated by expression of the recombinant enzyme in the presence of sarcosine, the same reagent used to induce expression of the natural enzyme. Homogenous recombinant pTSOX was isolated from cells grown in the presence of sarcosine by chromatography on affinity and hydrophobic interaction matrices. High quality crystals that diffract to 1.85 A resolution have been obtained.  相似文献   

9.
Heterotetrameric sarcosine oxidase is a flavoprotein that catalyses the oxidative demethylation of sarcosine. It is thought that the dehydrogenated substrate is the anionic form of sarcosine. To verify this assumption, the rate of flavin-adenine dinucleotide (FAD) reduction (k(red)) was analysed using protiated and deuterated sarcosine (N-methyl-d(3)-Gly) at various pH values using stopped-flow method. By increasing the pH from 6.2 to 9.8, k(red) increased for both substrates and reached a plateau, but the pK(a) value (reflecting the ionization of the enzyme-substrate complex) was 6.8 and 7.1 for protiated and deuterated sarcosine, respectively, and the kinetic isotope effect of k(red) decreased from approximately 19 to 8, indicating deprotonation of the bound sarcosine. The k(red)/K(d) (K(d), sarcosine dissociation constant) increased with increasing pH and reached a plateau. The pK (reflecting the ionization of free enzyme or free sarcosine) was 7.0 for both substrates, suggesting deprotonation of the βLys358 residue, which has a pK(a) of 6.7, as the pK(a) of the free sarcosine amine proton was determined to be approximately 10.1. These results indicate that the amine proton of sarcosine is transferred to the unprotonated Lys residue in the enzyme-substrate complex.  相似文献   

10.
Wagner MA  Khanna P  Jorns MS 《Biochemistry》1999,38(17):5588-5595
Monomeric sarcosine oxidase (MSOX) and N-methyltryptophan oxidase (MTOX) are homologous enzymes that catalyze the oxidative demethylation of sarcosine (N-methylglycine) and N-methyl-L-tryptophan, respectively. MSOX is induced in various bacteria upon growth on sarcosine. MTOX is an E. coli enzyme of unknown metabolic function. Both enzymes contain covalently bound flavin. The covalent flavin is at the FAD level as judged by electrospray mass spectrometry. The data provide the first evidence that MTOX is a flavoprotein. The following observations indicate that 8alpha-(S-cysteinyl)FAD is the covalent flavin in MSOX from Bacillus sp. B-0618 and MTOX. FMN-containing peptides, prepared by digestion of MSOX or MTOX with trypsin, chymotrypsin, and phosphodiesterase, exhibited absorption and fluorescence properties characteristic of an 8alpha-(S-cysteinyl)flavin and could be bound to apo-flavodoxin. The thioether link in the FMN-containing peptides was converted to the sulfone by performic acid oxidation, as judged by characteristic absorbance changes and an increase in flavin fluorescence. The sulfone underwent a predicted reductive cleavage reaction upon treatment with dithionite, releasing unmodified FMN. Cys315 was identified as the covalent FAD attachment site in MSOX from B. sp. B-0618, as judged by the sequence obtained for a flavin-containing tryptic peptide (GAVCMYT). Cys315 aligns with a conserved cysteine in MSOX from other bacteria, MTOX (Cys308) and pipecolate oxidase, a homologous mammalian enzyme known to contain covalently bound flavin. There is only one conserved cysteine found among these enzymes, suggesting that Cys308 is the covalent flavin attachment site in MTOX.  相似文献   

11.
Basran J  Fullerton S  Leys D  Scrutton NS 《Biochemistry》2006,45(37):11151-11161
Residues His-225 and Tyr-259 are located close to the FAD in the dehydrogenase active site of the bifunctional dimethylglycine oxidase (DMGO) of Arthrobacter globiformis. We have suggested [Leys, D., Basran, J., and Scrutton, N. S. (2003) EMBO J. 22, 4038-4048] that these residues are involved in abstraction of a proton from the substrate amine group of dimethylglycine prior to C-H bond breakage and FAD reduction. To investigate this proposal, we have isolated two mutant forms of DMGO in which (i) His-225 is replaced with Gln-225 (H225Q mutant) and (ii) Tyr-259 is replaced with Phe-259 (Y259F mutant). Both mutant enzymes retain the ability to oxidize substrate, but the steady-state turnover of the Y259F mutant is attenuated more than 200-fold. Only modest changes in kinetic parameters are observed for the H225Q mutant during steady-state turnover. Stopped-flow studies indicate that the rate of FAD reduction in the Y259F enzyme is substantially impaired by a factor of approximately 1500 compared with that of the wild-type enzyme, suggesting a key role for this residue in the reductive half-reaction of the enzyme. The kinetics of FAD reduction in the H225Q enzyme are complex and involve three discrete kinetic phases that are attributed to different conformational states of this mutant, evidence for which is provided by crystallographic analysis. Neither the H225Q enzyme nor the Y259F enzyme stabilizes the FADH(2)-iminium charge-transfer complex observed previously in stopped-flow studies with the wild-type enzyme. Our studies are consistent with a key role for Tyr-259, but not His-225, in deprotonation of the substrate amine group prior to FAD reduction. We infer that residue His-225 is likely to modulate the acid-base properties of Tyr-259 by perturbing the pK(a) of Tyr-259 and thus fine-tunes the reaction chemistry to facilitate proton abstraction under physiological conditions. Our data are discussed in the context of the crystallographic data for DMGO and also in relation to contemporary mechanisms for flavoprotein-catalyzed oxidation of amine substrates.  相似文献   

12.
The reactions of several mutants at position 244 and 261 of bacterial glycine oxidase (GO) were studied by stopped-flow and steady-state kinetic methods. Substituting H244 with phenylalanine, glutamate, and glutamine and M261 with histidine and tyrosine did not affect the expression of GO and the physicochemical properties of bound FAD. All the H244 and M261 mutants of GO we prepared retained activity in both steady-state and stopped-flow kinetic studies, indicating they do not serve as key elements in glycine and sarcosine oxidation. We demonstrated that the substitution of H244 significantly affected the rate of flavin reduction with glycine even if this change did not modify the turnover number, which is frequently increased compared to wild-type GO. However, substitution of M261 affected the interaction with substrates/inhibitors and the rate of flavin reduction with sarcosine and resulted in a decrease in turnover number and efficiency with all the substrates tested. The considerable decrease in the rate of flavin reduction changed the conditions such that it was partially rate-limiting in the catalytic cycle compared to the wild-type GO. Our studies show some similarities, but also major differences, in the catalytic mechanism of GO and other flavooxidases also active on glycine and sarcosine and give insight into the mode of modulation of catalysis and substrate specificities.  相似文献   

13.
H. Suzuki 《Amino acids》1994,7(1):27-43
Summary Determination of creatinine is important in the clinical laboratory. Jaffé reaction has long been used to determine creatinine, but the method suffers from various interferences. To overcome this problem, the enzymatic methods were invented and have been used widely. Sarcosine oxidase has a critical role in the enzymatic method. Of sarcosine oxidases,Corynebacterium enzyme has been studied extensively in kinetic and structural aspects. The enzyme contains noncovalently bound and covalently bound FADs, and consists of 4 non-identical subunits (A, B, C, D). The covalently bound FAD is bound to the subunit B. The rate of oxidation of sarcosine was explained by the rates of the oxidation and reduction of the bound FADs. From the chemical modification of the enzyme with iodoacetamide, the amino acid sequence around the non-covalently bound FAD is suggested and the modification changed the enzyme so that the only noncovalently bound FAD functions in the oxidation of sarcosine.  相似文献   

14.
Monomeric sarcosine oxidase (MSOX) is a prototypical member of a recently recognized family of amine-oxidizing enzymes that all contain covalently bound flavin. Mutation of the covalent flavin attachment site in MSOX produces a catalytically inactive apoprotein (apoCys315Ala) that forms an unstable complex with FAD (K(d) = 100 muM), similar to that observed with wild-type apoMSOX where the complex is formed as an intermediate during covalent flavin attachment. In situ reconstitution of sarcosine oxidase activity is achieved by assaying apoCys315Ala in the presence of FAD or 8-nor-8-chloroFAD, an analogue with an approximately 55 mV higher reduction potential. After correction for an estimated 65% reconstitutable apoprotein, the specific activity of apoCys315Ala in the presence of excess FAD or 8-nor-8-chloroFAD is 14% or 80%, respectively, of that observed with wild-type MSOX. Unlike oxidized flavin, apoCys315Ala exhibits a high affinity for reduced flavin, as judged by results obtained with reduced 5-deazaFAD (5-deazaFADH(2)) where the estimated binding stoichiometry is unaffected by dialysis. The Cys315Ala.5-deazaFADH(2) complex is also air-stable but is readily oxidized by sarcosine imine, a reaction accompanied by release of weakly bound oxidized 5-deazaFAD. The dramatic difference in the binding affinity of apoCys315Ala for oxidized and reduced flavin indicates that the protein environment must induce a sizable increase in the reduction potential of noncovalently bound flavin (DeltaE(m) approximately 120 mV). The covalent flavin linkage prevents loss of weakly bound oxidized FAD and also modulates the flavin reduction potential in conjunction with the protein environment.  相似文献   

15.
B Sherry  R H Abeles 《Biochemistry》1985,24(11):2594-2605
Methanol oxidase isolated from Hansenula polymorpha contains two distinct flavin cofactors in approximately equal amounts. One has been identified as authentic FAD and the other as a modified form of FAD differing only in the ribityl portion of the ribityldiphosphoadenosine side chain. The significance of this finding is as yet unknown. Previous studies have shown that cyclopropanol irreversibly inactivates methanol oxidase [Mincey, T., Tayrien, G., Mildvan, A. S., & Abeles, R. H. (1980) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 77, 7099-7101]. We have now established that inactivation is accompanied by covalent modification of the flavin cofactor. The stoichiometry of this reaction is 1 mol of cyclopropanol/mol of active flavin. The structure of the covalent adduct was determined by NMR, IR, and UV spectral studies to be an N5,C4a-cyclic 4a,5-dihydroflavin. Reduction of the covalent adduct with NaBH4 at pH 9.0 before removal from the enzyme converted it to the 1-(ribityldiphosphoadenosine)-substituted 4-(3-hydroxypropyl)-2,3-dioxoquinoxaline. Cyclopropyl ring cleavage accompanies inactivation, and covalent bond formation occurs between a methylene carbon of cyclopropanol and N5 of flavin. Methanol oxidase was also reconstituted with 5-deazaflavin adenine dinucleotide (dFAD). Reconstituted enzyme did not catalyze the oxidation of alcohols to the corresponding aldehydes, nor did reduced reconstituted enzyme catalyze the reverse reaction. Incubation of reconstituted enzyme with cyclopropanol resulted in an absorbance decrease at 399 nm, but no irreversible covalent modification of the deazaflavin cofactor. A reversible addition complex between cyclopropanol and dFAD is formed. The structure of that complex was not definitively established, but it is likely that it is formed through the addition of cyclopropoxide to C5 of dFAD. The failure of dFAD-reconstituted methanol oxidase to catalyze the oxidation of substrate, as well as the lack of reaction with cyclopropanol, supports a radical mechanism for alcohol oxidation and cyclopropanol inactivation. Methanol oxidase catalyzes the oxidation of cyclopropylcarbinol to the corresponding aldehyde. No ring-opened products were detected. The failure to form ring-opened products has been used as an argument against radical processes [MacInnes, I., Nonhebel, D. C., Orsculik, S. T., & Suckling, C. J. (1982) J. Chem. Soc., Chem. Commun., 121-122]. We present arguments against this interpretation.  相似文献   

16.
FAD in monomeric sarcosine oxidase (MSOX) is covalently linked to the protein by a thioether linkage between its 8alpha-methyl group and Cys315. Covalent flavinylation of apoMSOX has been shown to proceed via an autocatalytic reaction that requires only FAD and is blocked by a mutation of Cys315. His45 and Arg49 are located just above the si-face of the flavin ring, near the site of covalent attachment. His45Ala and His45Asn mutants contain covalently bound FAD and exhibit catalytic properties similar to wild-type MSOX. The results rule out a significant role for His45 in covalent flavinylation or sarcosine oxidation. In contrast, Arg49Ala and Arg49Gln mutants are isolated as catalytically inactive apoproteins. ApoArg49Ala forms a stable noncovalent complex with reduced 5-deazaFAD that exhibits properties similar to those observed for the corresponding complex with apoCys315Ala. The results show that elimination of a basic residue at position 49 blocks covalent flavinylation but does not prevent noncovalent flavin binding. The Arg49Lys mutant contains covalently bound FAD, but its flavin content is approximately 4-fold lower than wild-type MSOX. However, most of the apoprotein in the Arg49Lys preparation is reconstitutable with FAD in a reaction that exhibits kinetic parameters similar to those observed for flavinylation of wild-type apoMSOX. Although covalent flavinylation is scarcely affected, the specific activity of the Arg49Lys mutant is only 4% of that observed with wild-type MSOX. The results show that a basic residue at position 49 is essential for covalent flavinylation of MSOX and suggest that Arg49 also plays an important role in sarcosine oxidation.  相似文献   

17.
Zhao G  Bruckner RC  Jorns MS 《Biochemistry》2008,47(35):9124-9135
Monomeric sarcosine oxidase (MSOX) catalyzes the oxidation of N-methylglycine and contains covalently bound FAD that is hydrogen bonded at position N(5) to Lys265 via a bridging water. Lys265 is absent in the homologous but oxygen-unreactive FAD site in heterotetrameric sarcosine oxidase. Isolated preparations of Lys265 mutants contain little or no flavin but can be covalently reconstituted with FAD. Mutation of Lys265 to a neutral residue (Ala, Gln, Met) causes a 6000- to 9000-fold decrease in apparent turnover rate whereas a 170-fold decrease is found with Lys265Arg. Substitution of Lys265 with Met or Arg causes only a modest decrease in the rate of sarcosine oxidation (9.0- or 3.8-fold, respectively), as judged by reductive half-reaction studies which show that the reactions proceed via an initial enzyme.sarcosine charge transfer complex and a novel spectral intermediate not detected with wild-type MSOX. Oxidation of reduced wild-type MSOX (k = 2.83 x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1)) is more than 1000-fold faster than observed for the reaction of oxygen with free reduced flavin. Mutation of Lys265 to a neutral residue causes a dramatic 8000-fold decrease in oxygen reactivity whereas a 250-fold decrease is observed with Lys265Arg. The results provide definitive evidence for Lys265 as the site of oxygen activation and show that a single positively charged amino acid residue is entirely responsible for the rate acceleration observed with wild-type enzyme. Significantly, the active sites for sarcosine oxidation and oxygen reduction are located on opposite faces of the flavin ring.  相似文献   

18.
Chen ZW  Zhao G  Martinovic S  Jorns MS  Mathews FS 《Biochemistry》2005,44(47):15444-15450
Monomeric sarcosine oxidase (MSOX) is a flavoprotein that contains covalently bound FAD [8a-(S-cysteinyl)FAD] and catalyzes the oxidation of sarcosine (N-methylglycine) and other secondary amino acids, such as l-proline. Our previous studies showed that N-(cyclopropyl)glycine (CPG) acts as a mechanism-based inactivator of MSOX [Zhao, G., et al. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 14341-14347]. The reaction results in the formation of a modified reduced flavin that can be further reduced and stabilized by treatment with sodium borohydride. The borohydride-reduced CPG-modified enzyme exhibits a mass increase of 63 +/- 2 Da as compared with native MSOX. The crystal structure of the modified enzyme, solved at 1.85 A resolution, shows that FAD is the only site of modification. The modified FAD contains a fused five-membered ring, linking the C(4a) and N(5) atoms of the flavin ring, with an additional oxygen atom bound to the carbon atom attached to N(5) and a tetrahedral carbon atom at flavin C(4) with a hydroxyl group attached to C(4). On the basis of the crystal structure of the borohydride-stabilized adduct, we conclude that the labile CPG-modified flavin is a 4a,5-dihydroflavin derivative with a substituent derived from the cleavage of the cyclopropyl ring in CPG. The results are consistent with CPG-mediated inactivation in a reaction initiated by single electron transfer from the amine function in CPG to FAD in MSOX, followed by collapse of the radical pair to yield a covalently modified 4a,5-dihydroflavin.  相似文献   

19.
The covalently bound FAD in native monomeric sarcosine oxidase (MSOX) is attached to the protein by a thioether bond between the 8alpha-methyl group of the flavin and Cys315. Large amounts of soluble apoenzyme are produced by controlled expression in a riboflavin-dependent Escherichia coli strain. A time-dependent increase in catalytic activity is observed upon incubation of apoMSOX with FAD, accompanied by the covalent incorporation of FAD to approximately 80% of the level observed with the native enzyme. The spectral and catalytic properties of the reconstituted enzyme are otherwise indistinguishable from those of native MSOX. The reconstitution reaction exhibits apparent second-order kinetics (k = 139 M(-)(1) min(-)(1) at 23 degrees C) and is accompanied by the formation of a stoichiometric amount of hydrogen peroxide. A time-dependent reduction of FAD is observed when the reconstitution reaction is conducted under anaerobic conditions. The results provide definitive evidence for autoflavinylation in a reaction that proceeds via a reduced flavin intermediate and requires only apoMSOX and FAD. Flavinylation of apoMSOX is not observed with 5-deazaFAD or 1-deazaFAD, an outcome attributed to a decrease in the acidity of the 8alpha-methyl group protons. Covalent flavin attachment is observed with 8-nor-8-chloroFAD in an aromatic nucleophilic displacement reaction that proceeds via a quininoid intermediate but not a reduced flavin intermediate. The reconstituted enzyme contains a modified cysteine-flavin linkage (8-nor-8-S-cysteinyl) as compared with native MSOX (8alpha-S-cysteinyl), a difference that may account for its approximately 10-fold lower catalytic activity.  相似文献   

20.
To investigate the roles of tyrosyl residues located near the covalent 8alpha-S-cysteinyl FAD in monoamine oxidase A (MAO A) and to test the suggestion that MAO A and plant polyamine oxidase may have structural homology, tyrosyl to phenylalanyl mutants of MAO A at positions 377, 402, 407, 410, 419, and 444 were constructed and expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. All mutant enzymes were expressed and exhibited lower specific activities as compared to WT MAO A using kynuramine as substrate. The lowest specific activities in this assay are exhibited by the Y407F and Y444F mutant enzymes. On purification and further characterization, these two mutants were found to each contain covalent FAD. Both mutant enzymes are irreversibly inhibited by the MAO A inhibitor clorgyline and exhibit binding stoichiometries of 0.54 (Y407F) and 0.95 (Y444F) as compared to 1.05 for WT MAO A. Y444F MAO A oxidizes kynuramine with a k(cat) <2% of WT enzyme and is greater than 100-fold slower in catalyzing the oxidation of phenylethylamine or of serotonin. In contrast, Y444F MAO A oxidizes p-CF(3)-benzylamine at a rate 25% that of WT enzyme. Steady state and reductive half-reaction stopped-flow data using a series of para-substituted benzylamine analogues show Y444F MAO A exhibits quantitative structure activity relationships (QSAR) properties on analogue binding and rates of substrate oxidation very similar to that exhibited by the WT enzyme (Miller and Edmondson (1999) Biochemistry 38, 13670): log K(d) = -(0.37 +/- ()()0.07)V(W)(x0.1) - 4.5 +/- 0.1; log k(red) = +(2.43 +/- 0.19)sigma + 0.17 +/- 0.05. The Y444F MAO A mutant also exhibits similar QSAR properties on the binding of phenylalkyl side chain amine analogues as WT enzyme: log K(i) = (4.37 +/- 0.51)E(S) + 1.21 +/- 0.77. These data show that mutation of Y444F in MAO A results in a mutant that has lost its ability to efficiently oxidize serotonin (its physiological substrate) but, however, exhibits unaltered quantitative structure-activity parameters in the binding and rate of benzylamine analogues. The mechanism of C-H abstraction is therefore unaltered. The suggestion that polyamine oxidase and monoamine oxidase may have structural homology appears to be valid as regards Y444 in MAO A and Y439 in plant polyamine oxidase.  相似文献   

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