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1.
The oxidation-reduction potentials of the various prosthetic groups in the native and desulfo forms of chicken liver xanthine dehydrogenase, determined by potentiometric titration in 0.05 m potassium phosphate buffer, pH 7.8, are: Mo(VI)/Mo(V) (native), ?357 mV; Mo(VI)/Mo(V) (desulfo), ?397 mV; Mo(V)/Mo(IV) (native), ?337 mV; Mo(V)/Mo(IV) (desulfo), ?433 mV; FAD/FADH · ?345 mV; FADH · FADH2, ? 377 mV; (Fe/S)Iox/(Fe/S)Ired, ?280 mV; (Fe/S)IIox/(Fe/S)IIred, ? 275 mV. Titration at pH 6.8 revealed that the Mo and FAD centers but not the Fe/S centers are in prototropic equilibrium. Spectroscopic studies on the native and deflavinated enzymes show that environment of the flavin in xanthine dehydrogenase differs from that in bovine milk xanthine oxidase.  相似文献   

2.
Absorption and EPR spectroscopic properties of purified dimethyl sulfoxide (Me2SO) reductase from Rhodobacter sphaeroides f. sp. denitrificans have been examined. The absence of prosthetic groups other than the molybdenum center in the enzyme has made it possible to study its absorption properties. The enzyme displays multiple absorbance peaks in both the oxidized and the dithionite-reduced forms. The oxidized enzyme has absorbance peaks at 280, 350, 470, 550, and 720 nm while the dithionite-reduced enzyme has peaks at 280, 374, and 645 nm with a shoulder at 430 nm. A comparison of the absorbance spectrum of oxidized Me2SO reductase with that of the molybdenum fragment of rat liver sulfite oxidase shows that the 350 and 470 peaks are common to both proteins. EPR studies of the Mo(V) form of Me2SO reductase show a rhombic signal with g1 = 1.988, g2 = 1.977, g3 = 1.961, and g(ave) = 1.975. The signal shows evidence of coupling to an exchangeable proton with A1 = 1.05, A2 = 1.13, A3 = 0.98, and Aave = 1.05 millitesla. These parameters are similar to those of other Mo enzymes, however, the epr signal of this enzyme differs from those of other Mo hydroxylases in showing only a slight sensitivity to pH and no detectable anion effect. EPR potentiometric titrations of Me2SO reductase gave midpoint potentials of +144 mV for the Mo(VI)/Mo(V) couple and +160 mV for the Mo(V)/Mo(IV) couple at room temperature and +141 mV for the Mo(VI)/Mo(V) couple and +200 mV for the Mo(V)/Mo(IV) couple at 173 K.  相似文献   

3.
A room temperature electron paramagnetic resonance potentiometric cell has been developed for the measurement of oxidation-reduction midpoint potentials of enzymes containing paramagnetic centers. Based upon an aqueous flat cell designed for use with the Varian TM high sensitivity cavity, the apparatus combines a high degree of anaerobiosis with low volume requirements. The cell is simple in design, easily constructed, and can be adapted for use with most spectrometer cavities. Tests of the cell using xanthine oxidase, in 50 mM Bicine buffer, pH 7.7, yielded midpoint potentials of -345 and -371 mV for the Mo(VI)/Mo(V) and Mo(V)/Mo(IV) couples compared with values of -373 and -377 mV obtained by electron paramagnetic resonance analysis of frozen potentiometric samples. These values indicate that shifts, of the order of 20-40 mV, may occur upon freezing poised samples. For the Mo center of xanthine oxidase, these shifts in potential are more pronounced for the Mo(VI)/Mo(V) couple and result in a destabilization of the Mo(V) intermediate during freezing.  相似文献   

4.
Hoke KR  Cobb N  Armstrong FA  Hille R 《Biochemistry》2004,43(6):1667-1674
Arsenite oxidase from Alcaligenes faecalis, an unusual molybdoenzyme that does not exhibit a Mo(V) EPR signal during oxidative-reductive titrations, has been investigated by protein film voltammetry. A film of the enzyme on a pyrolytic graphite edge electrode produces a sharp two-electron signal associated with reversible reduction of the oxidized Mo(VI) molybdenum center to Mo(IV). That reduction or oxidation of the active site occurs without accumulation of Mo(V) is consistent with the failure to observe a Mo(V) EPR signal for the enzyme under a variety of conditions and is indicative of an obligate two-electron center. The reduction potential for the molybdenum center, 292 mV (vs SHE) at pH 5.9 and 0 degrees C, exhibits a linear pH dependence for pH 5-10, consistent with a two-electron reduction strongly coupled to the uptake of two protons without a pK in this range. This suggests that the oxidized enzyme is best characterized as having an L(2)MoO(2) rather than L(2)MoO(OH) center in the oxidized state and that arsenite oxidase uses a "spectator oxo" effect to facilitate the oxo transfer reaction. The onset of the catalytic wave observed in the presence of substrate correlates well with the Mo(VI/IV) potential, consistent with catalytic electron transport that is limited only by turnover at the active site. The one-electron peaks for the iron-sulfur centers are difficult to observe by protein film voltammetry, but spectrophotometric titrations have been carried out to measure their reduction potentials: at pH 6.0 and 20 degrees C, that of the [3Fe-4S] center is approximately 260 mV and that of the Rieske center is approximately 130 mV.  相似文献   

5.
A system for expressing site-directed mutants of the molybdenum enzyme dimethyl sulfoxide reductase from Rhodobacter capsulatus in the natural host was constructed. This system was used to generate and express dimethyl sulfoxide reductase with a Y114F mutation. The Y114F mutant had an increased k(cat) and increased K(m) toward both dimethyl sulfoxide and trimethylamine N-oxide compared to the native enzyme, and the value of k(cat)/K(m) was lower for both substrates in the mutant enzyme. The Y114F mutant, as isolated, was able to oxidize dimethyl sulfide with phenazine ethosulfate as the electron acceptor but with a lower k(cat) than that of the native enzyme. The pH optimum of dimethyl sulfide:acceptor oxidoreductase activity in the Y114F mutant was shown to be shifted by +1 pH unit compared to the native enzyme. The Y114F mutant did not form a pink complex with dimethyl sulfide, which is characteristic of the native enzyme. The mutant enzyme showed a large increase in the K(d) for DMS. Direct electrochemistry showed that the Mo(V)/Mo(IV) couple was unaffected by the Y114F mutant, but the midpoint potential of the Mo(VI)/Mo(V) couple was raised by about 50 mV. These data confirm that the Y114 residue plays a critical role in oxidation-reduction processes at the molybdenum active site and in oxygen atom transfer associated with sulfoxide reduction.  相似文献   

6.
The first direct voltammetric response from a molybdenum enzyme under non-turnover conditions is reported. Cyclic voltammetry of dimethylsulfoxide reductase from Rhodobacter capsulatus reveals a reversible Mo(VI/V) response at +161 mV followed by a reversible Mo(V/IV) response at -102 mV versus NHE at pH 8. The higher potential couple exhibits a pH dependence consistent with protonation upon reduction to the Mo(V) state and we have determined the p K(a) for this semi-reduced species to be 9.0. The lower potential couple is pH independent within the range 5相似文献   

7.
C J Kay  L P Solomonson  M J Barber 《Biochemistry》1990,29(48):10823-10828
Potentiometric titrations of assimilatory nitrate reductase from Chlorella vulgaris were performed within the pH range 6.0-9.0. Mo(V) was measured by room temperature EPR spectroscopy while the reduction state of FAD was monitored by CD spectroscopy. Between pH 6 and 8.5, the line shape of the Mo(V) EPR signal was constant, exhibiting superhyperfine coupling to a single, exchangeable proton. Potentiometric titrations indicated the Em values for the Mo(VI)/Mo(V) (+61 mV, pH 6) and Mo(V)/Mo(IV) (+35 mV, pH 6) couples decreased with increasing pH by approximately -59 mV/pH unit, consistent with the uptake of a single proton upon reduction of Mo(VI) to Mo(V) and Mo(V) to Mo(IV). The pKa values for the dissociation of these redox-coupled protons appeared to lie outside the pH range studied: pKo(MoVI), pKo(MoV) less than 5.5; pKr(MoV), pKr(MoIV) greater than 9. The Em (n = 2) for FAD (-250 mV, pH 7) varied by approximately -30 mV/pH unit within the pH range 6.0-9.0. Low-temperature EPR potentiometry at the extreme pH values indicated less than 0.5% conversion of FAD to the semiquinone form at the midpoint of the titrations. In contrast, NADH-reduced enzyme exhibited approximately 3-5% of the FAD in the semiquinone form, present as the anionic (FAD.-) species, the spectrum characterized by a line width of 1.3 mT at both pH 6.0 and 9.0.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
The heterogeneity of arginases in rat tissues.   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11       下载免费PDF全文
1. The mid-point reduction potentials of the various groups in xanthine oxidase from bovine milk were determined by potentiometric titration with dithionite in the presence of dye mediators, removing samples for quantification of the reduced species by e.p.r. (electron-paramagnetic-resonance) spectroscopy. The values obtained for the functional enzyme in pyrophosphate buffer, pH8.2, are: Fe/S centre I, -343 +/- 15mV; Fe/S II, -303 +/- 15mV; FAD/FADH-; -351 +/- 20mV; FADH/FADH2, -236 +/-mV; Mo(VI)/Mo(V) (Rapid), -355 +/- 20mV; Mo(V) (Rapid)/Mo(IV), -355 +/- 20mV. 2. Behaviour of the functional enzyme is essentially ideal in Tris but less so in pyrophosphate. In Tris, the potential for Mo(VI)/Mo(V) (Rapid) is lowered relative to that in pyrophosphate, but the potential for Fe/S II is raised. The influence of buffer on the potentials was investigated by partial-reduction experiments with six other buffers. 3. Conversion of the enzyme with cyanide into the non-functional form, which gives the Slow molybdenum signal, or alkylation of FAD, has little effect on the mid-point potentials of the other centres. The potentials associated with the Slow signal are: Mo(VI)/Mo(V) (Slow), -440 +/- 25mV; Mo(V) (Slow)/Mo(IV), -480 +/- 25 mV. This signal exhibits very sluggish equilibration with the mediator system. 4. The deviations from ideal behaviour are discussed in terms of possible binding of buffer ions or anti-co-operative interactions amongst the redox centres.  相似文献   

9.
Flavodoxin from Desulfovibrio vulgaris (Hildenborough) has been expressed at a high level (3-4% soluble protein) in Escherichia coli by subcloning a minimal insert carrying the gene behind the tac promoter of plasmid pDK6. The recombinant protein was readily isolated and its properties were shown to be identical to those of the wild-type protein obtained directly from D. vulgaris, with the exception that the recombinant protein lacks the N-terminal methionine residue. Detailed measurements of the redox potentials of this flavodoxin are reported for the first time. The redox potential, E2, for the couple oxidized flavodoxin/flavodoxin semiquinone at pH 7.0 is -143 mV (25 degrees C), while the value for the flavodoxin semiquinone/flavodoxin hydroquinone couple (E1) at the same pH is -440 mV. The effects of pH on the observed potentials were examined; E2 varies linearly with pH (slope = -59 mV), while E1 is independent of pH at high pH values, but below pH 7.5 the potential becomes less negative with decreasing pH, indicating a redox-linked protonation of the flavodoxin hydroquinone. D. vulgaris apoflavodoxin binds FMN very tightly, with a value of 0.24 nM for the dissociation constant (Kd) at pH 7.0 and 25 degrees C, similar to that observed with other flavodoxins. In addition, the apoflavodoxin readily binds riboflavin (Kd = 0.72 microM; 50 mM sodium phosphate, pH 7.0, 5 mM EDTA at 25 degrees C) and the complex is spectroscopically very similar to that formed with FMN. The redox potentials for the riboflavin complex were determined at pH 6.5 (E1 = -262 mV, E2 = -193 mV; 25 degrees C) and are discussed in the light of earlier proposals that charge/charge interactions between different parts of the flavin hydroquinone play a crucial role in determining E1 in flavodoxin.  相似文献   

10.
Oxidation-reduction midpoint potentials for the molybdenum center in assimilatory NADH:nitrate reductase isolated from spinach (Spinacia oleracea) have been determined at pH 7.0 in the presence of dye mediators using EPR spectroscopy to monitor formation of Mo(V). Values for the Mo(VI)/Mo(V) and Mo(V)/Mo(IV) couples were determined to be -8 and -42 mV, respectively.  相似文献   

11.
Redox potentials for the various centres in the enzyme xanthine dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.37) from turkey liver determined by potentiometric titration in the presence of mediator dyes, with low-temperature electron-paramagnetic-resonance spectroscopy. Values at 25 degrees C in pyrophosphate buffer, pH 8.2, are: Mo(VI)/Mo(V)(Rapid),-350 +/- 20mV; Mo(V) (Rapid)/Mo(IV), -362 +/- 20mV; Fe-S Iox./Fe-S Ired., -295 +/- 15mV; Fe-S IIox./Fe-S IIred., -292 +/- 15mV; FAD/FADH,-359+-20mV; FADH/FADH2, -366 +/- 20mV. This value of the FADH/FADH2 potential, which is 130mV lower than the corresponding one for milk xanthine oxidase [Cammack, Barber & Bray (1976) Biochem. J. 157, 469-478], accounts for many of the differences between the two enzymes. When allowance is made for some interference by desulpho enzyme, then differences in the enzymes' behaviour in titration with xanthine [Barber, Bray, Lowe & Coughlan (1976) Biochem. J. 153, 297-307] are accounted for by the potentials. Increases in the molybdenum potentials of the enzymes caused by the binding of uric acid are discussed. Though the potential of uric acid/xanthine (-440mV) is favourable for full reduction of the dehydrogenase, nevertheless, during turnover, for kinetic reasons, only FADH and very little FADH2 is produced from it. Since only FADH2 is expected to react with O2, lack of oxidase activity by the dehydrogenase is explained. Reactivity of the two enzymes with NAD+ as electron acceptor is discussed in relation to the potentials.  相似文献   

12.
Resonance Raman spectra were investigated for the sulfo and desulfo forms of cow's milk xanthine oxidase, with various visible excitation lines between 400 and 650 nm, and Mo(VI)-ligand vibrations were observed for the first time. The Mo(VI)=S stretch was identified at 474 and 462 cm(-1 )for the (32)S- and (34)S-sulfo forms, respectively, but was absent in the reduced state and in the desulfo form. The Mo(VI)=O stretch was weakly observed at 899 cm(-1 )for the sulfo form and shifted to 892 cm(-1) with very weak intensity for the dioxo desulfo form. In measurements of an excitation profile, the two bands at 474 and 899 cm(-1) showed maximum intensity at similar excitation wavelengths, suggesting that the Raman intensity of the metal-ligand modes is due to the Mo(VI)<--S charge transfer transition, and that this is the origin of the intrinsically weak features of the Mo(VI)-ligand Raman bands. When the sulfo form was regenerated from the desulfo form, the 899 cm(-1) band reappeared. However, the band at 899 cm(-1) showed no frequency shift when regeneration was conducted in H(2)(18)O, or after several turnovers in the presence of xanthine in H(2)(18)O. When the sulfo form was reduced and reoxidized in H(2)(18)O buffer, the 899 cm(-1) band reappeared without any frequency shift. These observations suggest that the oxo oxygen in the Mo center of xanthine oxidase is not labile. Low-frequency vibrations of the Mo center were observed together with those of the Fe(2)S(2) center with some overlaps, while FAD modes were observed clearly. The absence of dithiolene modes in XO is in contrast to the Mo(VI) centers of DMSO reductase and sulfite oxidase.  相似文献   

13.
Structural and chemical properties of a flavodoxin from Anabaena PCC 7119   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Structural and chemical properties of a flavodoxin from Anabaena PCC 7119 are described. The first 36 residues of the amino-terminal amino acid sequence have been determined and show extensive homology with flavodoxins isolated from other sources. Anabaena flavodoxin exhibits a net negative change (-3) in the helix-1 segment as found with other cyanobacterial flavodoxins Synechococcus 6301 (Anacystis nidulans) and Nostoc MAC, but in contrast to the net positive charge found in this region in the case of flavodoxins isolated from nitrogen-fixing bacteria (Azotobacter and Klebsiella). The FMN cofactor can be reversibly resolved from the apoprotein by trichloroacetic acid treatment. Apoflavodoxin, thus prepared, binds FMN with a Kd value of 0.1 nM and binds riboflavin with a decreased affinity (Kd = 5 microM) at pH 7.2. The apoprotein is stable in dilute solutions at pH values around 7 but readily denatures at pH 8 as judged from loss in flavin-binding ability and by ultraviolet circular dichroism spectroscopy. Oxidation-reduction potential studies at pH values of 7 and 8 show OX/SQ couples of -195 mV and -255 mV, respectively, and show SQ/HQ couples of -390 mV and -418 mV, respectively. From these data, the binding constant for the FMN semiquinone is calculated to be approx. 5-fold tighter and the binding of the FMN hydroquinone is approx. 10(5)-fold weaker than that of the oxidized FMN to the apoprotein. Anabaena flavodoxin functions as an effective mediator of electron transfer from ferredoxin-NADP(+)-reductase to cytochrome c with a turnover number [4.5-5) x 10(3) min-1); a values similar to that determined for Anabaena ferredoxin. The flavodoxin binds tightly to the reductase with Kd values of 6.4 and 8.5 microM at pH values of 7.0 and 8.0, respectively.  相似文献   

14.
The interaction of bisulfite with milk xanthine oxidase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Bisulfite ion competitively inhibits xanthine oxidase activity. The ability of HSO3- to bind at the molybdenum center is controlled by pH due to a pKa of 6.91 for SO3(2-)/HSO3-. The Kd for the enzyme-bisulfite complex is 4.5 x 10(-5) M at pH 7.0 and 25 degrees C. The relative magnitude of extinction changes in the optical absorption spectra, the number of inhibitor ions reversibly bound, and the number of electrons required for complete bleaching of the visible spectrum of the milk xanthine oxidase-HSO3- complex were all dependent on the percentage of fully functional xanthine oxidase. Binding of HSO3- causes perturbations of the visible spectrum: the maximum extinction changes at 320 and 422 nm were calculated to be -4300 and -2150 M-1 cm-1, respectively. The stoichiometry of reversible binding was determined to be one molecule of HSO3-/active molybdenum center. Combined optical and EPR analyses of anaerobic dithionite titrations revealed that the relative redox potentials of the Mo6+/5+ and Mo5+/4+ couples decreased by approximately 35 and 45 mV on binding bisulfite, respectively. The finding that bisulfite has a profound effect on the redox properties of xanthine oxidase necessitates a re-evaluation of dithionite titrations previously carried out with this enzyme at neutral and low pH values since bisulfite produced as an oxidation product of dithionite binds to the enzyme during the course of titration.  相似文献   

15.
Oxidation-reduction midpoint potentials for flavin, heme, and molybdenum-pterin prosthetic groups of assimilatory nitrate reductase (NR) from Chlorella vulgaris were measured at room temperature by using CD and EPR potentiometry. The CD changes accompanying reduction of each prosthetic group were determined by using enzyme fragments containing either FAD or heme and molybdenum prosthetic groups, obtained by limited proteolysis, and by poising the enzyme at various redox potentials in the presence of dye mediators. Limited proteolysis did not appear to alter the environment of the prosthetic groups, as judged by their CD spectra. Also, CD potentiometric titration of FAD in intact NR (Em' = -272 mV, n = 2) gave a similar value (Em' = -286 mV) to the FAD of the flavin-containing proteolytic domain, determined by visible spectroscopy. Less than 1% of the flavin semiquinone was detected by EPR spectroscopy, indicating that Em' (FAD/FAD.-) may be more than 200 mV lower than Em' (FAD.-/FADH-). Reduction of heme resulted in splitting of both Soret and alpha CD bands into couplets. The heme Em' was -162 mV (n = 1) determined by both CD and visible spectroscopy. Reduction of Mo-pterin was followed by CD at 333 nm, and Mo(V) was monitored by room temperature EPR spectroscopy. Most of the change in the Mo-pterin CD spectrum was due to the Mo(VI)/Mo(V) transition. The Em' values determined for Mo(VI)/Mo(V) were +26 mV by CD and +16 mV by EPR, whereas Mo(V)/Mo(IV) values were -40 mV by CD and -26 mV by EPR.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Potentiometric titrations of pig liver electron-transfer flavoprotein (ETF) were performed at pH 7.5 and 4 degrees C, both in the reductive and oxidative directions. Reduction of ETF to the hydroquinone form required a total of two reducing equivalents/mol of ETF with the formation of sub-stoichiometric amounts of anionic semiquinone as an intermediate. The oxidation-reduction potentials for the two one-electron couples, oxidized ETF/ETF semiquinone and ETF semiquinone/fully reduced ETF, are +4 mV and -50 mV respectively. The overall midpoint potential for the two-electron couple (oxidized ETF/fully reduced ETF) is -23 mV.  相似文献   

17.
The effects of arsenite on the reaction of reduced xanthine oxidase with oxygen are determined. The kinetics of the reaction monitoring the return of enzyme absorbance are investigated as are the kinetics and stoichiometries of peroxide and superoxide formation. Although some of the effects of arsenite are qualitatively consistent with expectations based on the known perturbation of the molybdenum midpoint potentials by arsenite, several results cannot be so easily explained. Specifically, arsenite introduces a very rapid phase (kobs = 110 s-1 at 125 microM oxygen) to the oxidative half-reaction which is not observed with the native enzyme. Arsenite also diminishes the amount of superoxide produced and eliminates one-electron reduced enzyme as a detectable kinetic intermediate in the reoxidation pathway. These differences appear to result from the ability of arsenite to greatly enhance the oxygen- and/or superoxide-reactivity of the reduced molybdenum center. This is reflected in the observation that reduced forms of arsenite-complexed xanthine oxidase lacking functional FAD (iodoacetamide-alkylated enzyme and deflavo enzyme) react relatively rapidly with oxygen whereas these reactions are quite slow in the absence of arsenite.  相似文献   

18.
R C Bray  S Gutteridge 《Biochemistry》1982,21(23):5992-5999
The effect of using [17O]water (24-50% enriched) as solvent on the Mo(V) electron paramagnetic resonance spectra of different reduced forms of xanthine oxidase has been investigated. All the Mo(V) signals are affected. Procedures are described, based on the use of difference spectral techniques, that facilitate interpretation of such spectra. The number of coupled oxygen atoms may be determined by estimation of the fraction of the spectrum that remains unchanged by the isotope at a known enrichment. For a species having two coupled oxygen atoms, the use of two different isotope enrichments permits elimination from the difference spectra of the contribution of the two singly substituted species. From the application of these methods, it is concluded that not only the strength of the hyperfine coupling of oxygen ligands of molybdenum but also their number and their exchangeability with the solvent vary from one reduced form of the enzyme to another. The inhibited species from active xanthine oxidase has been studied in the most detail. It has two weakly coupled oxygen atoms [A(17O)av = 0.1-0.2 mT] that do not exchange with the solvent. A cyclic structure is proposed for this species in which two oxygen ligands of molybdenum are bonded to the carbon of the formaldehyde or other alcohol or aldehyde molecule that reacted in producing the signal. Structures of the other signal-giving species from active xanthine oxidase (Very Rapid and Rapid types 1 and 2) are discussed, as is corresponding information on species from the desulfo enzyme and from sulfite oxidase.  相似文献   

19.
The oxidation-reduction potentials of ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase and flavodoxin from the cyanobacterium Anabaena PCC 7119 were determined by potentiometry. The potentials at pH 7 for the oxidized flavodoxin/flavodoxin semiquinone couple (E2) and the flavodoxin semiquinone/hydroquinone couple (E1) were -212 mV and -436 mV, respectively. E1 was independent of pH above about pH 7, but changed by approximately -60 mV/pH below about pH 6, suggesting that the fully reduced protein has a redox-linked pKa at about 6.1, similar to those of certain other flavodoxins. E2 varied by -50 mV/pH in the range pH 5-8. The redox potential for the two-electron reduction of ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase was -344 mV at pH 7 (delta Em = -30 mV/pH). In the 1:1 electrostatic complex of the two proteins titrated at pH 7, E2 was shifted by +8 mV and E1 was shifted by -25 mV; the shift in potential for the reductase was +4 mV. The potentials again shifted following treatment of the electrostatic complex with a carbodiimide, to covalently link the two proteins. By comparison with the separate proteins at pH 7, E2 for flavodoxin shifted by -21 mV and E1 shifted by +20 mV; the reductase potential shifted by +2 mV. The potentials of the proteins in the electrostatic and covalent complexes showed similar pH dependencies to those of the individual proteins. Qualitatively similar changes occurred when ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase from Anabaena variabilis was complexed with flavodoxin from Azotobacter vinelandii. The shifts in redox potential for the complexes were used with previously determined values for the dissociation constant (Kd) of the electrostatic complex of the two oxidised proteins, in order to estimate Kd values for the interaction of the different redox forms of the proteins. The calculations showed that the electrostatic complexes, formed when the proteins differ in their redox states, are stronger than those formed when both proteins are fully oxidized or fully reduced.  相似文献   

20.
4-Hydroxybenzoyl-CoA reductase (4-HBCR) is a key enzyme in the anaerobic metabolism of phenolic compounds. It catalyzes the reductive removal of the hydroxyl group from the aromatic ring yielding benzoyl-CoA and water. The subunit architecture, amino acid sequence, and the cofactor/metal content indicate that it belongs to the xanthine oxidase (XO) family of molybdenum cofactor-containing enzymes. 4-HBCR is an unusual XO family member as it catalyzes the irreversible reduction of a CoA-thioester substrate. A radical mechanism has been proposed for the enzymatic removal of phenolic hydroxyl groups. In this work we studied the spectroscopic and electrochemical properties of 4-HBCR by EPR and M?ssbauer spectroscopy and identified the pterin cofactor as molybdopterin mononucleotide. In addition to two different [2Fe-2S] clusters, one FAD and one molybdenum species per monomer, we also identified a [4Fe-4S] cluster/monomer, which is unique among members of the XO family. The reduced [4Fe-4S] cluster interacted magnetically with the Mo(V) species, suggesting that the centers are in close proximity, (<15 A apart). Additionally, reduction of the [4Fe-4S] cluster resulted in a loss of the EPR signals of the [2Fe-2S] clusters probably because of magnetic interactions between the Fe-S clusters as evidenced in power saturation studies. The Mo(V) EPR signals of 4-HBCR were typical for XO family members. Under steady-state conditions of substrate reduction, in the presence of excess dithionite, the [4Fe-4S] clusters were in the fully oxidized state while the [2Fe-2S] clusters remained reduced. The redox potentials of the redox cofactors were determined to be: [2Fe-2S](+1/+2) I, -205 mV; [2Fe-2S] (+1/+2) II, -255 mV; FAD/FADH( small middle dot)/FADH, -250 mV/-470 mV; [4Fe-4S](+1/+2), -465 mV and Mo(VI)/(V)/(VI), -380 mV/-500 mV. A catalytic cycle is proposed that takes into account the common properties of molybdenum cofactor enzymes and the special one-electron chemistry of dehydroxylation of phenolic compounds.  相似文献   

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