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1.
DPNH peroxidase is a flavin adenine dinucleotide-containing flavoprotein. Anaerobic titration of enzyme with dithionite has shown that the active site of the enzyme contains 2 mol of flavin and in addition 1 mol of a non-flavin electron acceptor that is tentatively identified as a disulfide group. Thus complete reduction of the enzyme requires 3 mol of dithionite per mole of active site. The first mole of dithionite reduces the non-flavin acceptor; complex formation between the reduced acceptor and one of the bound flavin molecules causes the formation of a long wavelength absorption band between 500 and 670 nm. The second mole of dithionite reduces the flavin that interacts with the reduced non-flavin group, and the long wavelength band disappears. The third mole of dithionite reduces the second mole of flavin. All groups are reoxidized in the presence of air. DPNH reacts with only two of the enzyme-bound electron acceptors. The first mole of DPNH reduces the non-flavin group to form an intermediate (I) that is almost identical with that formed by dithionite. The second mole of DPNH complexes with the second flavin of Intermediate I to form Intermediate II. This reaction causes a further absorbance increase in the long wavelength region; the tail of the absorption band now extends to 960 nm. The titration data (potassium phosphate, 0.05 M, pH 7.0) can be fitted with dissociation constants of 1 times 10-7 M for the formation of I, and 3 times 10-6 M for the conversion of I to II. In air, species II is oxidized to I; I is stable in air, but is oxidized stoichiometrically to oxidized enzyme by H2O2. Present evidence suggests that bound DPN-plus is responsible for the air stability of species I. Intermediate I, but not oxidized enzyme, reacts slowly with phenylmercuric acetate. This reaction causes loss of the air-stable intermediate and parallel loss in enzyme activity. The inactive enzyme cannot be reduced by DPNH to Species I; DPNH can, however, still react with the second flavin to form the autoxidizable complex. With other methods of enzyme inactivation there is also a direct correlation between residual enzyme activity and the ability of enzyme to form the air-stable intermediate. It is concluded that the air-stable intermediate is an important catalytic species.  相似文献   

2.
Hydrogen peroxide reacts with 2-thio-FAD-reconstituted p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase to yield a long wavelength intermediate (lambda max = 360, 620 nm) which can be isolated in stable form on removal of excess H2O2. The blue flavin derivative slowly decays in a second peroxide-dependent reaction to yield a new flavin product lacking long wavelength absorbance (lambda max = 408, 472 nm). This final peroxide-modified enzyme binds p-hydroxybenzoate with a 10-fold lower affinity than does the native enzyme; furthermore, substrate binding leads to the inhibition of enzyme reduction by NADPH. Trichloroacetic acid treatment of the final peroxide-modified enzyme results in the quantitative conversion of the bound flavin to free FAD. However, gel filtration of the modified enzyme in guanidine hydrochloride at neutral pH leads to the co-elution of protein and modified flavin. The nondenatured peroxide product reacts rapidly with hydroxylamine to yield 2-NHOH-substituted FAD. These observations indicate that the secondary reaction of peroxide with the blue intermediate from 2-thio-FAD p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase results in the formation of an acid-labile covalent flavin-protein linkage within the enzyme active site, involving the flavin C-2 position.  相似文献   

3.
2-Hydroxy-3-butynoate is both a substrate and an irreversible inactivator of the flavoenzyme L-lactate oxidase. The partitioning between catalytic oxidation of 2-hydroxy-3-butynoate and inactivation of the enzyme is determined by the concentration of the second substrate, O2. Rapid reaction studies show the formation of an intermediate which is common to both the oxidation and inactivation pathways. This intermediate appears to be a charge-transfer complex between enzyme-reduced flavin and 2-keto-3-butynoate. It is characterized by a long-wavelength absorbing band (gamma(max) 600 nm) and lack of fluorescence, making it easily distinguished from the subsequently formed inactivated enzyme, which has no long wavelength absorption (gamma(max) 318, 368 nm) and which is strongly fluorescent. Inactivation is also accomplished by reaction of the reduced enzyme with 2-keto-3-butynoate. The absorbance and fluorescence characteristics of the inactivated enzyme are similar to those of a model compound, C(4a), N(5)-propano-bridged FMN bound to apolactate oxidase. That the modified chromophore of the inactivated enzyme is an adduct involving both the C(4a) and N5 positions is further supported by the spectral and fluorescence changes resulting from treatment of the inactivated enzyme with borohydride.  相似文献   

4.
Time-resolved flavin fluorescence anisotropy studies on glutathione reductase (GR) have revealed a remarkable new phenomenon: wild-type GR displays a rapid process of fluorescence depolarization, that is absent in mutant enzymes lacking a nearby tyrosine residue that blocks the NADPH-binding cleft. Fluorescence lifetime data, however, have shown a more rigid active-site structure for wild-type GR than for the tyrosine mutants. These results suggest that the rapid depolarization in wild-type GR originates from an interaction with the flavin-shielding tyrosine, and not from restricted reorientational motion of the flavin. A novel mechanism of fluorescence depolarization is proposed that involves a transient charge-transfer complex between the tyrosine and the light-excited flavin, with a concomitant change in the direction of the emission dipole moment of the flavin. This interaction is likely to result from side-chain relaxation of the tyrosine in the minor fraction of enzyme molecules in which this residue is in an unsuitable position for immediate fluorescence quenching at the moment of excitation. Support for this mechanism is provided by binding studies with NADP+ and 2'P-5'ADP-ribose that can intercalate between the flavin and tyrosine and/or block the latter. Fluorescence depolarization analyses as a function of temperature and viscosity confirm the dynamic nature of the process. A comparison with fluorescence depolarization effects in a related flavoenzyme indicates that this mechanism of flavin fluorescence depolarization is more generally applicable.  相似文献   

5.
The resonance Raman (RR) spectra of FMN, FAD, FAD in D2O, and 7,8-dimethyl-1, 10-ethyleneisoalloxazinium perchlorate have been obtained by employing KI as a collisional fluorescence-quenching agent. The spectra are very similar to those obtained recently by using the CARS technique to eliminate fluorescence. Spectra have also been obtained for several species in which flavin is known to fluoresce only weakly. We report RR spectra of protonated FMN, FMN semiquinone cation, the general fatty acyl-CoA dehydrogenase, and two "charge-transfer" complexes of fatty acyl-CoA dehydrogenase. Tentative assignment of several vibrational bands can be made on the basis of our flavin spectra. RR spectra of fatty acyl-CoA and its complexes are consistent with the previous hypothesis that visible spectral shifts observed during formation of acetoacetyl-CoA and crotonyl-CoA complexes of fatty acyl-CoA dehydrogenase result from charge-transfer interactions in which the ground state is essentially nonbonding as opposed to interactions in which complete electron transfer occurs to form FAD semiquinone. The only significant change in the RR spectrum of FAD on binding to enzyme occurs in the 1250-cm-1 region of the spectrum, a region associated with delta N--H of N-3. The position of this band in fatty acyl-CoA dehydrogenase and the other flavoproteins studied to date is discussed in terms of hydrogen bonding between flavin and protein.  相似文献   

6.
Anaerobic reduction of the flavoprotein adrenodoxin reductase with NADPH yields a spectrum with long wavelength absorbance, 750 nm and higher. No EPR signal is observed. This spectrum is produced by titration of oxidized adrenodoxin reductase with NADPH, or of dithionite-reduced adrenodoxin reductase with NADP+. Both titrations yield a sharp endpoint at 1 NADP(H) added per flavin. Reduction with other reductants, including dithionite, excess NADH, and catalytic NADP+ with an NADPH generating system, yields a typical fully reduced flavin spectrum, without long wavelength absorbance. The species formed on NADPH reduction appears to be a two-electron-containing complex, with a low dissociation constant, between reduced adrenodoxin reductase and NADP+, designated ARH2-NADP+. Titration of dithionite-reduced adrenodoxin reductase with NADPH also produces a distinctive spectrum, with a sharp endpoint at 1 NADPH added per reduced flavin, indicating formation of a four-electron-containing complex between reduced adrenodoxin reductase and NADPH. Titration of adrenodoxin reductase with NADH, instead of NADPH, provides a curved titration plot rather than the sharp break seen with NADPH, and permits calculation of a potential for the AR/ARH2 couple of -0.291 V, close to that of NAD(P)H (-0.316 V). Oxidized adrenodoxin reductase binds NADP+ much more weakly (Kdiss=1.4 X 10(-5) M) than does reduced adrenodoxin reductase, with a single binding site. The preferential binding of NADP+ to reduced enzyme permits prediction of a more positive oxidation-reduction potential of the flavoprotein in the presence of NADP+; a change of about + 0.1 V has been demonstrated by titration with safranine T. From this alteration in potential, a Kdiss of 1.0 X 10(-8) M for binding of NADP+ to reduced adrenodoxin reductase is calculated. It is concluded that the strong binding of NADP+ to reduced adrenodoxin reductase provides the thermodynamic driving force for formation of a fully reduced flavoprotein form under conditions wherein incomplete reduction would otherwise be expected. Stopped flow studies demonstrate that reduction of adrenodoxin reductase by equimolar NADPH to form the ARH2-NADP+ complex is first order (k=28 s-1). When a large excess of NADPH is used, a second apparently first order process is observed (k=4.25 s-1), which is interpreted as replacement of NADPH for NADP+ in the ARH2-NADP+ complex. Comparison of these rate constants to catalytic flavin turnover numbers for reduction of various oxidants by NADPH, suggests an ordered sequential mechanism in which reduction of oxidant is accomplished by the ARH2-NADP+ complex, followed by dissociation of NADP+. The absolute dependence of NADPH-cytochrome c reduction on both adrenodoxin reductase and adrenodoxin is confirmed...  相似文献   

7.
The apoprotein of hog kidney D-amino acid oxidase was reconstituted with 5-deazaflavin adenine dinucleotide (5-deazaFAD) to yield a protein which contains 1.5 mol of 5-deazaFAD/mol of enzyme. The deazaFAD-containing enzyme forms complexes with benzoate, 2-amino benzoate, and 4-aminobenzoate which are both qualitatively and quantitatively similar to those observed with native enzyme. The complex with 2-aminobenzoate exhibits a new long wavelength absorption band characteristic of a flavin charge-transfer complex. The reconstituted enzyme exhibits no activity when assayed by D-alanine oxidation. However, the bound chromophore can be reduced by alanine, phenylalanine, proline, methionine, and valine, but not by glutamate or aspartate, indicating the deazaFAD enzyme retains the substrate specificity of the native enzyme. Reduction of the enzyme by D-alanine exhibits a 1.6-fold deuterium isotope effect. Reoxidation of the reduced enzyme occurred in the presence of pyruvate plus ammonia, but not with pyruvate alone or ammonia alone. beta-Phenylpyruvate and alpha-ketobutyrate, but not alpha-ketoglutarate could replace pyruvate. Reduced enzyme isolated following reaction with [alpha-3H]alanine was found to contain 0.5 mol of tritium/mol of deazaFADH2. After denaturation of the tritium-labeled enzyme, the radioactivity was identified as deazaFADH2. Reaction of the reduced tritium-labeled enzyme with pyruvate plus ammonia prior to denaturation yields [alpha-3H]alanine and unlabeled deazaFAD. These results suggest that reduction and reoxidation of enzyme-bound deazaFAD involves the stereo-specific transfer of alpha-hydrogen from substrate to deazaFAD.  相似文献   

8.
To study the interaction between D-amino acid oxidase [EC 1.4.3.3] and quasi-substrates such as benzoate and o-, m-, and p-aminobenzoate, visible circular dichroism spectra (CD spectra) were measured and the binding rate and affinity of o-aminobenzoate to the enzyme were observed by following the absorption changes at various wavelengths. We found a new CD band around 560 nm, corresponding to the charge-transfer complexes which result from the formation of aminobenzoate complexes with the enzyme. The ellipticity of this band was positive for the p-aminobenzoate complex, but negative for the o- and m-aminobenzoate complexes. Crossover points in CD spectra were observed at 470 nm for the m-aminobenzoate complex and at 475 nm for the o-aminobenzoate complex. They probably resulted from overlapping of the positive CD band of FAD bound with the enzyme and the negative CD band of the charge-transfer complex. We propose that the amino group in aminobenzoate, not the pi-electrons of the benzene ring, is the electron donor in the charge-transfer complex and that the position of the amino group is very important for the charge-transfer interaction. The binding rate and affinity of o-aminobenzoate to the enzyme were determined using the absorption changes at 370 nm (380 nm), caused by the modification of electronic states of FAD bound with the enzyme, and at 550 nm (565 nm), caused by the formation of the charge-transfer complex of o-aminobenzoate with the enzyme. No differences between these parameters with wavelength were observed. This independence of wavelength simplifies discussion of the experimental data obtained from absorption changes.  相似文献   

9.
Picolinate binds to the anionic semiquinoid form of D-amino acid oxidase (DAO), and the complex formed has a broad absorption band in the long-wavelength region extending beyond 800 nm, which is reminiscent of a charge transfer interaction. The binding has a stoichiometry of 1:1 with respect to the enzyme. The dissociation constant at 25 degrees C was 30 microM at pH 7.0. The pH dependence (pH 7.0-8.3) of the dissociation constant indicates that one proton is associated with the complex formation, and suggests that picolinate able to bind to the anionic semiquinoid enzyme is in the cationic form protonated at the nitrogen atom. By adding dithionite to the oxidized DAO solution containing pyruvate and various amines, a similar anionic semiquinoid DAO complex having a broad long-wavelength absorption band, appeared. Resonance Raman spectra with excitation at 623.8 nm of the anionic semiquinoid DAO complex formed in the presence of pyruvate and methylamine indicate that the complex consists of the anionic semiquinoid DAO and N-methyl-alpha-iminopropionate produced from pyruvate and methylamine, and that the imino group must be protonated. This supports the proposal that the presence of a positively charged group in the vicinity of flavin is required for the stabilization of the anionic semiquinoid flavin. The results also suggest that the broad absorption band is derived from the charge transfer interaction between the anionic semiquinoid flavin and the imino acid, in which the flavin C(4a)-N(5) locus and the locus containing (Formula: see text) of the amino acid are important for the interaction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Palfey BA  Björnberg O  Jensen KF 《Biochemistry》2001,40(14):4381-4390
Dihydroorotate dehydrogenase (DHOD) oxidizes dihydroorotate (DHO) to orotate in the only redox reaction of pyrimidine biosynthesis. The enzyme from Escherichia coli is a membrane-bound FMN-containing enzyme that is thought to use ubiquinone as the oxidizing substrate. The chemistry of the reduction of the flavin in DHOD from E. coli by the substrate dihydroorotate (DHO) was studied at 4 degrees C in anaerobic stopped-flow experiments conducted over a broad range of pH values. A Michaelis complex that was characterized by a approximately 20 nm red-shift of the oxidized flavin absorbance formed within the dead-time of the stopped-flow instrument ( approximately 1 ms) upon mixing with DHO. The flavin of the intermediate was reduced by DHO, forming a reduced flavin-orotate charge-transfer complex. The rate constant for the flavin reduction reaction increased with pH, from a value of 1 s(-1) at pH 6.5 to approximately 360 s(-1) at pH values greater than an observed pK(a) of 9.5 which was ascribed to Ser175, the active-site base. At all pH values, the reduced flavin-orotate charge-transfer complex dissociated too slowly to be catalytically relevant. Therefore, the oxidizing quinone substrate must bind to the reduced enzyme-orotate complex at a site distinct from the substrate binding site, in agreement with steady-state kinetic studies [Bj?rnberg, O., Grüner, A.-C., Roepstorff, P., and Jensen, K. F. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 2899-2908]. Menadione was used as a model quinone substrate to oxidize dithionite-reduced DHOD. The reduced enzyme-orotate complex reacted rapidly with menadione (180 s(-1)), demonstrating that the reduced enzyme-orotate complex is a catalytically competent intermediate.  相似文献   

11.
2-Hydroxybiphenyl 3-monooxygenase (EC 1.14.13.44) from Pseudomonas azelaica HBP1 is an FAD-dependent aromatic hydroxylase that catalyzes the conversion of 2-hydroxybiphenyl to 2, 3-dihydroxybiphenyl in the presence of NADH and oxygen. The catalytic mechanism of this three-substrate reaction was investigated at 7 degrees C by stopped-flow absorption spectroscopy. Various individual steps associated with catalysis were readily observed at pH 7.5, the optimum pH for enzyme turnover. Anaerobic reduction of the free enzyme by NADH is a biphasic process, most likely reflecting the presence of two distinct enzyme forms. Binding of 2-hydroxybiphenyl stimulated the rate of enzyme reduction by NADH by 2 orders of magnitude. The anaerobic reduction of the enzyme-substrate complex involved the formation of a transient charge-transfer complex between the reduced flavin and NAD(+). A similar transient intermediate was formed when the enzyme was complexed with the substrate analog 2-sec-butylphenol or with the non-substrate effector 2,3-dihydroxybiphenyl. Excess NAD(+) strongly stabilized the charge-transfer complexes but did not give rise to the appearance of any intermediate during the reduction of uncomplexed enzyme. Free reduced 2-hydroxybiphenyl 3-monooxygenase reacted rapidly with oxygen to form oxidized enzyme with no appearance of intermediates during this reaction. In the presence of 2-hydroxybiphenyl, two consecutive spectral intermediates were observed which were assigned to the flavin C(4a)-hydroperoxide and the flavin C(4a)-hydroxide, respectively. No oxygenated flavin intermediates were observed when the enzyme was in complex with 2, 3-dihydroxybiphenyl. Monovalent anions retarded the dehydration of the flavin C(4a)-hydroxide without stabilization of additional intermediates. The kinetic data for 2-hydroxybiphenyl 3-monooxygenase are consistent with a ternary complex mechanism in which the aromatic substrate has strict control in both the reductive and oxidative half-reaction in a way that reactions leading to substrate hydroxylation are favored over those leading to the futile formation of hydrogen peroxide. NAD(+) release from the reduced enzyme-substrate complex is the slowest step in catalysis.  相似文献   

12.
S N Ali  H D Zeller  M K Calisto  M S Jorns 《Biochemistry》1991,30(45):10980-10986
Sarcosine oxidase contains 1 mol of covalently bound plus 1 mol of noncovalently bound FAD per active site. The first phase of the anaerobic reduction of the enzyme with sarcosine converts oxidized enzyme to an equilibrium mixture of two-electron-reduced forms (EH2) and occurs at a rate (2700 min-1, pH 8.0) similar to that determined for the maximum rate of aerobic turnover in steady-state kinetic studies (2600 min-1). The second phase of the anaerobic half-reaction converts EH2 to the four-electron-reduced enzyme (EH4) and occurs at a rate (k = 350 min-1) which is 7-fold slower than aerobic turnover. Reaction of EH2 with oxygen is 1.7-fold faster (k = 4480 min-1) than aerobic turnover and 13-fold faster than the anaerobic conversion of EH2 to EH4. The results suggest that the enzyme cycles between fully oxidized and two-electron-reduced forms during turnover with sarcosine. The long wavelength absorbance observed for EH2 is attributable to a flavin biradical (FADH.FAD.-) which is generated in about 50% yield at pH 8.0 and in nearly quantitative yield at pH 7.0. The rate of biradical formation is determined by the rate of electron transfer from sarcosine to the noncovalent flavin since electron equilibration between the two flavins (k = 750 s-1 or 45,000 min-1, pH 8.0) is nearly 20-fold faster, as determined in pH-jump experiments. Only two of the three possible isoelectronic forms of EH2 are likely to transfer electrons to oxygen since the reaction is known to occur at the covalent flavin. However, equilibration among EH2 forms is probably maintained during reoxidation, consistent with the observed monophasic kinetics, since interflavin electron transfer is 10-fold faster than electron transfer to oxygen.  相似文献   

13.
The kinetics of sulfite adduct formation with the bound flavin in flavocytochromes c from the purple phototrophic bacterium Chromatium vinosum and the green phototrophic bacterium Chlorobium thiosulfatophilum have been investigated as a function of pH. Both species of flavocytochrome c rapidly react with sulfite to form a flavin sulfite adduct (k = 10(3)-10(5) M-1 s-1) which is bleached at 450-475 nm and has associated charge-transfer absorbance at 660 nm. The rate constant for adduct formation in flavocytochrome c is 2-4 orders of magnitude faster than for model flavins of comparable redox potential and is likely to be due to a basic residue near the N-1 position of the flavin, which not only raises the redox potential but also stabilizes the negatively charged adduct. There is a pK for adduct formation at 6.5, which suggests that the order of magnitude larger rate constant at pH 5 as compared to pH 10 in flavocytochrome c is due the influence of another positive charge, possibly a protonated histidine residue. The adduct is indefinitely stable at pH 5 but decomposes (the flavin recolors) in a first-order process accelerating above pH 6 (at pH 10, k = 0.1 s-1). The pK for recoloring is 8.5, which is suggestive of a cysteine sulfhydryl. On the basis of the observed pK and available chemical information, we believe that recoloring is due to a secondary effect of the reaction of sulfite with a protein cystine disulfide, which is adjacent to the flavin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
Resonance Raman (RR) spectra of the complex of pig kidney medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase with acetoacetyl-CoA and of the purple complex formed upon the addition of octanoyl-CoA to the dehydrogenase were obtained. RR spectra were also measured for the complexes prepared by using isotopically labeled compounds, i.e., [3-13C]-, [1,3-13C]-, and [2,4-13C2]acetoacetyl-CoA; [1-13C]octanoyl-CoA; the dehydrogenase reconstituted with [4a-13C]- and [4,10a-13C2]FAD. Both bands of oxidized flavin and acetoacetyl-CoA were resonance-enhanced in the 632.8 nm excited spectra of the acetoacetyl-CoA complex; this confirms that the broad long-wavelength absorption band is a charge-transfer absorption band between oxidized flavin and acetoacetyl-CoA. The 1,622 cm-1 band was assigned to the C(3)=O stretching mode coupling with the C(2)-H bending mode of the enolate form of acetoacetyl-CoA and the bands at 1,483 and 1,119 cm-1 were assigned to bands associated with the C(2)=C(1)-O- moiety. Both bands of fully reduced flavin and the substrate were resonance-enhanced in the 632.8 nm excited spectra of the purple complex. As the enzyme is already reduced, the substrate must be oxidized to octenoyl-CoA; the complex is a charge-transfer complex between the reduced enzyme and octenoyl-CoA. The low frequency value of the 1,577 cm-1 band, which is associated with the C(2)-C(1)=O moiety of the octenoyl-CoA, suggests that the enzyme-bound octenoyl-CoA has an appreciable contribution of C(2)=C(1)-O-.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
The reactions between cellobiose and cellobiose oxidase were investigated by stopped-flow spectrophotometry. Under anaerobic conditions rapid reduction of the associated flavin is followed by slower reduction of cytochrome b. The kinetic difference spectra are reported. The rate of flavin reduction depends on the cellobiose concentration (with an apparent second-order rate constant of approx. 10(5) M-1.s-1) but reaches a rate limit of approx. 20 s-1. In contrast, the rate of cytochrome b reduction decreases at high cellobiose concentrations. Kinetic titrations of the flavin and cytochrome b moieties yield the stoichiometries of the separate reactions, i.e. the number of moles of cellobiose needed to fully reduce 1 mole of each redox component. The rate constant for cytochrome b reduction, unlike that for flavin reduction, increased with enzyme concentration, prompting the conclusion that any given cytochrome b centre is reduced preferentially by flavin groups in different molecules rather than by its partner flavin within the same monomer. These data are discussed in the context of a scheme that rationalizes them and accounts for the overall stoichiometry in which three two-electron donors (cellobiose molecules) reduce two three-electron acceptors (the flavin-cytochrome b of cellobiose oxidase).  相似文献   

16.
Human glutathione reductase (NADPH + GSSG + H+ in equilibrium with NADP+ + 2 GSH) is a suitable enzyme for correlating spectroscopic properties and chemical reactivities of protein-bound FAD analogues with structural data. FAD, the prosthetic group of the enzyme, was replaced by FAD analogues, which were modified at the positions 8, 1, 2, 4, 5 and 6, respectively, of the isoalloxazine ring. When compared with a value of 100% for native glutathione reductase, the specific activities of most enzyme species ranged from 40% to 17%, in the order of the prosthetic groups 8-mercapto-FAD greater than 8-azido-FAD = 8-F-FAD = 8-C1-FAD greater than 4-thio-FAD = 1-deaza-FAD greater than 2-thio-FAD. The enzymic activities indicate a correct orientation of the bound analogues. The enzyme species containing 5-deaza-FAD and 6-OH-FAD, respectively, had no more glutathione reductase activity than the FAD-free apoenzyme. 5-Deaza-FAD X glutathione reductase was crystallized for X-ray diffraction analysis. Detailed studies were focussed on position 8 of the flavin. 8-Cl-FAD X glutathione reductase and 8-F-FAD X glutathione reductase reacted only poorly with HS- to give 8-mercapto-FAD X glutathione reductase, which suggests that the region around Val61 hinders the halogen anion from leaving the tetrahedral intermediate. Other experiments showed that position 8 is accessible to certain solvent-borne reagents. 8-Mercapto-FAD X glutathione reductase, for instance, reacted readily and stoichiometrically with the thiol reagent methylmethanethiosulfonate. 8-Mercapto-FAD X glutathione reductase does not exhibit a long wavelength charge transfer absorption band upon reduction, as it is the case for the 2-electron-reduced FAD-containing enzyme. This behaviour indicates that the charge transfer interaction between flavin and the thiolate of Cys63 in the native enzyme is not per se essential for catalysis. The absorption spectrum of the blue anionic 8-mercapto-FAD bound to glutathione reductase suggests that the protein concurs to the stabilization of a negative charge in the pyrimidine subnucleus. In light of the protein structure this effect is attributed to the dipole moment of alpha-helix 338-354 which starts out close to the N(1)/C(2)/O(2 alpha) region of the flavin. 1-Deaza-FAD binds as tightly as FAD to the apoenzyme. The resulting holoenzyme was found to be enzymically active but structurally unstable. In this respect 1-deaza-FAD . glutathione reductase mimics the properties of the enzyme species found in inborn glutathione reductase deficiency.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
p-Hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase is a flavoprotein monooxygenase that catalyzes a reaction in two parts: reduction of the enzyme cofactor FAD by NADPH in response to binding p-hydroxybenzoate to the enzyme and reaction of reduced FAD with oxygen to form a hydroperoxide, which then oxygenates p-hydroxybenzoate. Three different reactions, each with specific requirements, are achieved by moving the position of the isoalloxazine ring in the protein structure. In this paper, we examine the operation of protein conformational changes and the significance of charge-transfer absorption bands associated with the reduction of FAD by NADPH when the substrate analogue, 5-hydroxypicolinate, is bound to the enzyme. It was discovered that the enzyme with picolinate bound was reduced at a rate similar to that with p-hydroxybenzoate bound at high pH. However, there was a large effect of pH upon the rate of reduction in the presence of picolinate with a pK(a) of 7.4, identical to the pK(a) of picolinate bound to the enzyme. The intensity of charge-transfer bands observed between FAD and NADPH during the reduction process correlated with the rate of flavin reduction. We conclude that high rates of reduction of the enzyme require (a) the isoalloxazine of the flavin be held by the protein in a solvent-exposed position and (b) the movement of a loop of protein so that the pyridine ring of NADPH can move into position to form a complex with the isoalloxazine that is competent for hydride transfer and that is indicated by a strong charge-transfer interaction.  相似文献   

18.
Lactate oxygenase from Mycobacterium phlei (lactate oxidative decarboxylase) catalyzes the oxygenative conversion of l-lactate to acetate, but acts as an l-lactate dehydrogenase under anaerobic conditions, producing a stoichiometric amount of pyruvate.In an effort to obtain further information on the reaction mechanism, a stopped-flow spectrophotometric technique has been applied to both aerobic and anaerobic reactions of the enzyme. The flavin moiety (FMN) of the enzyme proceeds in a highly oxidized state during the steady state at low lactate and high oxygen concentrations. If the aerobic steady state is maintained at high lactate and low oxygen concentrations, a new spectral species, clearly distinguishable from that of the oxidized state, is visible partially. During anaerobic reduction of the flavin moiety with l-lactate, another species with a weak absorption band at a long wavelength region appears. The significance of these findings in terms of the catalytic reaction mechanism is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Fumarate reductase is a membrane-bound terminal oxidase which is induced when Escherichia coli is grown anaerobically. The purified enzyme is composed of two polypeptide chains of 69,000 and 24,000 daltons and contains 1 mol of covalently bound flavin adenine dinucleotide per mol of enzyme. Fluorescence scanning of SDS-polyacrylamide gels of the protein shows that the flavin is attached to the large subunit. The hypsochromic shift of the 372 nm band of riboflavin to 350 nm in both native fumarate reductase and a flavin peptide released by proteolytic digestion indicates that the flavin is attached via position 8 alpha of riboflavin. Based on the spectral properties and pH-fluorescence dependence we have identified the linkage as 8 alpha-[N(3)-histidyl]FAD.  相似文献   

20.
The flavoenzyme pig kidney general acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (EC 1.3.99.3) is inactivated by cyclohexane-1,2-dione in borate buffer in a reaction that exhibits pseudo-first-order kinetics. Strong protection is afforded by the substrate octanoyl-CoA, as well as by heptadecyl-CoA, a potent competitive inhibitor of the dehydrogenase that does not reduce enzyme flavin. Enzyme exhibiting 10% residual activity in borate buffer contains about 1.3 modified arginine residues per flavin molecule. Very little reduction of the modified enzyme in borate buffer occurs at high concentrations of octanoyl-CoA, in marked contrast with the stoicheiometric reduction of the native enzyme. However, in phosphate buffer alone, the modified enzyme exhibits 55% residual activity and, although binding of substrate is still seriously impaired (apparent Kd=14 microM), excess substrate effects the formation of the characteristic reduced flavin X enoyl-CoA charge-transfer complex. These results suggest that the susceptible arginine residue, though not catalytically essential, is probably within the acyl-CoA-binding site of general acyl-CoA dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

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