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1.
Ribonucleotide reductase induced by bacteriophage T4 in Escherichia coli contains an organic free radical necessary for enzymatic activity. Its EPR spectrum at 77K is similar to but not identical with that of the corresponding radical in the enzyme from uninfected E. coli studied previously. Isotope substitutions now show that the radical in the T4-induced enzyme also is localized to a tyrosine residue with its spin density delocalized over the aromatic ring of tyrosine. The difference between the radicals of the T4-induced and the E. coli ribonucleotide reductases, as reflected in the hyperfine patterns of their EPR spectra, is suggested to be due to slightly different radical geometries, resulting from a twist of about 10 degrees around the bond between the aromatic ring and the methylene group in the tyrosine radical. Hydroxyurea destroys the free radicals of both ribonucleotide reductases and also their catalytic activities. Both enzymes are considerably more sensitive to hydroxyurea during catalysis than in the noncatalytic state. However, when compared to the bacterial ribonucleotide reductase, the T4-induced enzyme shows an overall approximately 10 times higher sensitivity to hydroxyurea, judging from the drug concentrations needed to destroy the radicals and inhibit the activities. This result may reflect a difference in accessibility for the drug to the active sites of the enzymes.  相似文献   

2.
The flavonoid (-)-epicatechin was previously demonstrated to interfere with tyrosine nitration by peroxynitrite [Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 285 (2001) 782]. This effect was hypothesized to be based upon an interaction of epicatechin with a transiently generated tyrosyl radical. In the present study, using electron paramagnetic resonance, we demonstrate that (-)-epicatechin is capable of destabilizing the tyrosyl radical of the mouse ribonucleotide reductase R2 component. First-order rate constants for the disappearance of tyrosyl radical signals were 1 x 10(-4) and 2 x 10(-4)s(-1)for epicatechin and hydroxyurea, a well-known tyrosyl radical scavenger, respectively. In keeping with scavenging the ribonucleotide reductase tyrosyl radical, cellular production of deoxyribonucleotides and DNA synthesis were impaired by (-)-epicatechin in normal human keratinocytes and in human squamous carcinoma cells.  相似文献   

3.
Ribonucleotide reductase (RNR) of Chlamydia trachomatis is a class I RNR enzyme composed of two homodimeric components, proteins R1 and R2. In class I RNR, R1 has the substrate binding site, whereas R2 has a diferric site and normally in its active form a stable tyrosyl free radical. C. trachomatis RNR is unusual, because its R2 component has a phenylalanine in the place of the radical carrier tyrosine. Replacing the tyrosyl radical, a paramagnetic Fe(III)-Fe(IV) species (species X, normally a transient intermediate in the process leading to radical formation) may provide the oxidation equivalent needed to start the catalytic process via long range electron transfer from the active site in R1. Here EPR spectroscopy shows that in C. trachomatis RNR, species X can become essentially stable when formed in a complete RNR (R1/R2/substrate) complex, adding further weight to the possible role of this species X in the catalytic reaction.  相似文献   

4.
A C-terminally truncated form of protein B2, the homodimeric small subunit of ribonucleotide reductase from Escherichia coli, was found as the result of an apparently specific proteolysis. Truncated homodimers contain an intact binuclear iron center and a normal tyrosyl radical but have no binding capacity for the other ribonucleotide reductase subunit, protein B1, and are consequently enzymatically inactive. Heterodimers, consisting of one full-length and one truncated polypeptide, formed spontaneously during a chelation-reconstitution cycle and were easily separated from the two homodimeric variants. The heterodimeric form of B2 shows a weak interaction with the B1 subunit resulting in low enzyme activity. Using heterodimers containing deuterated tyrosine on the full-length side and protonated tyrosine on the truncated side, we could demonstrate that the tyrosyl radical was randomly generated in one or the other of the two polypeptide chains of the heterodimeric B2 subunit. The small subunit of ribonucleotide reductase thus conforms to a half-site reactivity.  相似文献   

5.
JBIC Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry - Ribonucleotide reductase (RNR) has been extensively probed as a target enzyme in the search for selective antibiotics. Here we report on the...  相似文献   

6.
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8.
Ribonucleotide reductases from Escherichia coli and from mammalian cells are heterodimeric enzymes. One of the subunits, in the bacterial enzyme protein B2 and in the mammalian enzyme protein M2, contains iron and a tyrosyl free radical that both are essential for enzyme activity. The iron center in protein B2 is an antiferromagnetically coupled pair of high-spin ferric ions. This study concerns magnetic interaction between the tyrosyl radical and the iron center in the two proteins. Studies of the temperature dependence of electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) relaxation and line shape reveal significant differences between the free radicals in proteins B2 and M2. The observed temperature-dependent enhanced EPR relaxation and line broadening of the enzyme radicals are furthermore completely different from those of a model UV-induced free radical in tyrosine. The results are discussed in terms of magnetic dipolar as well as exchange interactions between the free radical and the iron center in both proteins. The free radical and the iron center are thus close enough in space to exhibit magnetic interaction. For protein M2 the effects are more pronounced than for protein B2, indicating a stronger magnetic interaction.  相似文献   

9.
Nitric oxide (NO) has been previously shown to inhibit crude preparations of ribonucleotide reductase, a key enzyme in DNA synthesis, and to destroy the essential tyrosyl free radical in pure recombinant R2 subunit of the enzyme. In R2-overexpressing TA3 cells, a decrease in the tyrosyl radical was observed by whole-cell EPR spectroscopy, as soon as 4 h after NO synthase induction by immunological stimuli. Complete loss of the tyrosyl EPR signal occurred after 7 h in cells cultured at a high density. Disappearance of the tyrosyl radical was prevented by N omega-nitro-L-arginine, a specific inhibitor of NO synthesis, and by oxyhemoglobin, which reacts rapidly with NO. It was reproduced by S-nitrosoglutathione, a NO-releasing molecule. Stable end products of NO synthase metabolism did not affect the radical. Immunoblot analysis of the R2 subunit indicated that expression of the protein was not influenced by NO synthase activity. These results establish that NO, or a labile product of NO synthase, induces the disappearance of the R2-centered tyrosyl radical. Since the radical is necessary for ribonucleotide reductase activity, its destruction by NO would contribute markedly to the antiproliferative action exerted by macrophage-type NO synthase.  相似文献   

10.
Nitrogen dioxide radical (NO·2) is known as a toxic agent produced in the metabolism of nitrates and nitrites. By the use of the pulse radiolysis technique, the mechanism of the reaction of NO·2 radical with hydroxycinnamic acid derivatives (HCA) was studied and the rate constants have been measured. The rate constants were found to be 7.4 × 108, 7.2 × 108, 8.6 × 108 dm3 mol-1s-1 for ferulic acid, sinapic acid and caffeic acid, respectively. The reactions produce the corresponding phenoxyl radical.  相似文献   

11.
Ribonucleotide reductase (RNR) catalyzes the rate limiting step in DNA synthesis where ribonucleotides are reduced to the corresponding deoxyribonucleotides. Class Ib RNRs consist of two homodimeric subunits: R1E, which houses the active site; and R2F, which contains a metallo cofactor and a tyrosyl radical that initiates the ribonucleotide reduction reaction. We studied the R2F subunit of B. cereus reconstituted with iron or alternatively with manganese ions, then subsequently reacted with molecular oxygen to generate two tyrosyl-radicals. The two similar X-band EPR spectra did not change significantly over 4 to 50 K. From the 285 GHz EPR spectrum of the iron form, a g 1-value of 2.0090 for the tyrosyl radical was extracted. This g 1-value is similar to that observed in class Ia E. coli R2 and class Ib R2Fs with iron-oxygen cluster, suggesting the absence of hydrogen bond to the phenoxyl group. This was confirmed by resonance Raman spectroscopy, where the stretching vibration associated to the radical (C-O, ν7a = 1500 cm−1) was found to be insensitive to deuterium-oxide exchange. Additionally, the 18O-sensitive Fe-O-Fe symmetric stretching (483 cm−1) of the metallo-cofactor was also insensitive to deuterium-oxide exchange indicating no hydrogen bonding to the di-iron-oxygen cluster, and thus, different from mouse R2 with a hydrogen bonded cluster. The HF-EPR spectrum of the manganese reconstituted RNR R2F gave a g 1-value of ∼2.0094. The tyrosyl radical microwave power saturation behavior of the iron-oxygen cluster form was as observed in class Ia R2, with diamagnetic di-ferric cluster ground state, while the properties of the manganese reconstituted form indicated a magnetic ground state of the manganese-cluster. The recent activity measurements (Crona et al., (2011) J Biol Chem 286: 33053–33060) indicates that both the manganese and iron reconstituted RNR R2F could be functional. The manganese form might be very important, as it has 8 times higher activity.  相似文献   

12.
Native ribonucleotide reductase from Escherichia coli exhibits a resonance-enhanced Raman mode at 1498 cm-1 that is characteristic of a tyrosyl radical. The Raman frequency as well as the absorption maximum at 410 nm identifies the radical as being in a deprotonated state. The B2 subunit of ribonucleotide reductase shows an additional resonance Raman mode at 493 cm-1 that has been assigned to the symmetric stretch of an Fe-O-Fe moiety. When samples of active B2 or metB2 are exposed to a tightly focused laser beam at 406.7 nm, there is a loss of intensity at 493 cm-1 and the appearance of a new peak at 595 cm-1. Although the 595-cm-1 feature was previously assigned to an Fe-OH vibration on the basis of its 23-cm-1 shift to lower energy in H2(18)O and the apparent dependence of its intensity on pH [Sj?berg, B. M., Loehr, T. M., & Sanders-Loehr, J. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 4242], the present studies indicate that the intensity of this mode is dependent primarily on input laser power. The peak at 595 cm-1 is more plausibly assigned to a new vs(Fe-O-Fe) mode in view of its lack of the deuterium isotope dependence expected for an Fe-OH mode and its resonant scattering cross section which is comparable to that of the 493-cm-1 mode. This new species has a calculated Fe-O-Fe angle of approximately 113 degrees compared to approximately 138 degrees calculated for the Fe-O-Fe unit in unmodified protein B2. One possible explanation for the photoinduced vibrational mode is that a bridging solvent molecule has been inserted in place of a bridging carboxylate.  相似文献   

13.
The reaction of the functional tyrosyl radical in protein R2 of ribonucleotide reductase from E. coli and mouse with the enzyme inhibitor hydroxyurea has been studied by EPR stopped-flow techniques at room temperature. The rate of disappearance of the tyrosyl radical in E. coli protein R2 is k2 = 0.43 M-1 s-1 at 25 degrees C. The reaction follows pseudo-first-order kinetics up to 450 mM hydroxyurea indicating that no saturation by hydroxyurea takes place even at this high concentration. Transient nitroxide-like radicals from hydroxyurea have been detected for the first time in the reaction of hydroxyurea with protein R2 from E. coli and mouse, indicating that 1-electron transfer from hydroxyurea to the tyrosyl radical is the dominating mechanism in the inhibitor reaction. The hydroxyurea radicals appear in low steady-state concentrations during 2-3 half-decay times of the tyrosyl radical and disappear thereafter.  相似文献   

14.
The R2 protein of class I ribonucleotide reductase (RNR) generates and stores a tyrosyl radical, located next to a diferric iron center, which is essential for ribonucleotide reduction and thus DNA synthesis. X-ray structures of class Ia and Ib proteins from various organisms served as bases for detailed mechanistic suggestions. The active site tyrosine in R2F of class Ib RNR of Salmonella typhimurium is located at larger distance to the diiron site, and shows a different side chain orientation, as compared with the tyrosine in R2 of class Ia RNR from Escherichia coli.No structural information has been available for the active tyrosyl radical in R2F. Here we report on high field EPR experiments of single crystals of R2F from S. typhimurium, containing the radical Tyr-105*. Full rotational pattern of the spectra were recorded, and the orientation of the g-tensor axes were determined, which directly reflect the orientation of the radical Tyr-105* in the crystal frame. Comparison with the orientation of the reduced tyrosine Tyr-105-OH from the x-ray structure reveals a rotation of the tyrosyl side chain, which reduces the distance between the tyrosyl radical and the nearest iron ligands toward similar values as observed earlier for Tyr-122* in E. coli R2. Presence of the substrate binding subunit R1E did not change the EPR spectra of Tyr-105*, indicating that binding of R2E alone induces no structural change of the diiron site. The present study demonstrates that structural and functional information about active radical states can be obtained by combining x-ray and high-field-EPR crystallography.  相似文献   

15.
Characterization of the free radical of mammalian ribonucleotide reductase   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Mouse fibroblast 3T6 cells, selected for resistance to hydroxyurea, were shown to overproduce protein M2, one of the two nonidentical subunits of mammalian ribonucleotide reductase. Packed resistant cells gave an EPR signal at 77 K very much resembling the signal given by the tyrosine-free radical of the B2 subunit of Escherichia coli ribonucleotide reductase. Also, the M2-specific free radical was shown to be located at a tyrosine residue. Of the known tyrosine-free radicals of ribonucleotide reductases from E. coli, bacteriophage T4 infected E. coli and pseudorabies virus infected mouse L cells, the M2-specific EPR signal is most closely similar to the signal of the T4 radical. The small differences in the low temperature EPR signals between these four highly conserved tyrosine-free radical structures can be explained by slightly different angles of the beta-methylene group in relation to the plane of the aromatic ring of tyrosine, reflecting different conformations of the polypeptide chain around the tyrosines. The pronounced difference in microwave saturation between the E. coli B2 tyrosine radical EPR signal and the M2 signal could be due to their different interactions with unspecific paramagnetic ions or with the antiferromagnetically coupled iron pair, shown to be present in the E. coli enzyme and postulated also for the mammalian enzyme. A difference in the iron-radical center between the bacterial and mammalian ribonucleotide reductase is also observed in the ability to regenerate the free radical structure. In contrast to the B2 radical, the M2 tyrosine free radical could be regenerated by merely adding dithiothreitol in the presence of O2 to a cell extract where the radical had previously been destroyed by hydroxyurea treatment.  相似文献   

16.
Ribonucleotide reductases (RNRs) catalyze all new production in nature of deoxyribonucleotides for DNA synthesis by reducing the corresponding ribonucleotides. The reaction involves the action of a radical that is produced differently for different classes of the enzyme. Class I enzymes, which are present in eukaryotes and microorganisms, use an iron center to produce a stable tyrosyl radical that is stored in one of the subunits of the enzyme. The other classes are only present in microorganisms. Class II enzymes use cobalamin for radical generation and class III enzymes, which are found only in anaerobic organisms, use a glycyl radical. The reductase activity is in all three classes contained in enzyme subunits that have similar structures containing active site cysteines. The initiation of the reaction by removal of the 3′-hydrogen of the ribose by a transient cysteinyl radical is a common feature of the different classes of RNR. This cysteine is in all RNRs located on the tip of a finger loop inserted into the center of a special barrel structure. A wealth of structural and functional information on the class I and class III enzymes can now give detailed views on how these enzymes perform their task. The class I enzymes demonstrate a sophisticated pattern as to how the free radical is used in the reaction, in that it is only delivered to the active site at exactly the right moment. RNRs are also allosterically regulated, for which the structural molecular background is now starting to be revealed.  相似文献   

17.
We demonstrate herein that nitric oxide (*NO) and nitrogen dioxide (*NO2) both react with the tyrosyl radical formed in sperm whale myoglobin (swMb) by reaction with hydrogen peroxide. The tyrosyl radical was detected by Western blotting using a novel anti-5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DMPO) polyclonal antiserum that specifically recognizes protein radical-derived DMPO nitrone adducts. In the presence of DMPO, hydrogen peroxide reacts with swMb to form the DMPO tyrosyl radical as is known from both electron spin resonance and immuno-spin trapping investigations. Both *NO and NO2- significantly suppressed DMPO-Mb formation under the physiological oxygen tension of 30 mm Hg. If this inhibition of DMPO trapping of the tyrosyl radical is due, at least in part, to the reaction of the tyrosyl radical with *NO and *NO2, then nitrotyrosine should be formed. In line with this expectation, swMb treated with low concentrations of *NO or NO2- formed nitrotyrosine when hydrogen peroxide was added under 30 mm Hg oxygen tension as detected by Western blotting. The amount of nitrotyrosine generated with *NO was higher than with NO2-, implying that there are two different peroxynitrite-independent nitrotyrosine formation mechanisms and that *NO is not just a source of *NO2.  相似文献   

18.
The small subunit of iron-dependent ribonucleotide reductases contains a stable organic free radical, which is essential for enzyme activity and which is localized to a tyrosine residue. Tyrosine-122 in the B2 subunit of Escherichia coli ribonucleotide reductase has been changed into a phenylalanine. The mutation was introduced with oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis in an M13 recombinant and verified by DNA sequencing. Purified native and mutant B2 protein were found to have the same size, iron content and iron-related absorption spectrum. The sole difference observed is that the mutant protein lacks tyrosyl radical and enzymatic activity. These results identify Tyr122 of E. coli protein B2 as the tyrosyl radical residue. An expression vector was constructed for manipulation and expression of ribonucleotide reductase subunits. It contains the entire nrd operon with its own promoter in a 2.3-kb fragment from pBR322. Both the B1 and the B2 subunits were expressed at a 25-35 times higher level as compared to the host strain.  相似文献   

19.
Each R2 subunit of mammalian ribonucleotide reductase contains a pair of high spin ferric ions and a tyrosyl free radical essential for activity. To study the mechanism of tyrosyl radical formation, substoichiometric amounts of Fe(II) were added to recombinant mouse R2 apoprotein under strictly anaerobic conditions and then the solution was exposed to air. Low temperature EPR spectroscopy showed that the signal from the generated tyrosyl free radical correlated well with the quantity of the Fe(II) added with a stoichiometry of 3 Fe(II) needed to produce 1 tyrosyl radical: 3 Fe(II) + P + O2 + Tyr-OH + H+----Fe(III)O2-Fe(III)-P + H2O. + Tyr-O. + Fe(III), where P is an iron-binding site of protein R2 and Tyr-OH is the active tyrosyl residue. The O-O bond of a postulated intermediate O2(2-)-Fe(III)2-P state is cleaved by the extra electron provided by Fe(II) leading to formation of OH., which in turn reacts with Tyr-OH to give Tyr-O.. In the presence of ascorbate, added to reduce the monomeric Fe(III) formed, 80% of the Fe(II) added produced a radical. The results strongly indicate that each dimeric Fe(III) center during its formation can generate a tyrosyl-free radical and that iron binding to R2 apoprotein is highly cooperative.  相似文献   

20.
Ribonucleotide reductase from Escherichia coli consists of two nonidentical subunits, proteins B1 and B2. The active site of the enzyme is made up from both subunits. Protein B2 contributes inter alia an organic free radical which gives a characteristic EPR signal. This radical was now located by isotope substitution experiments to the beta position of a tyrosine residue. The EPR spectrum of protein B2 from bacteria grown in a completely deuterated medium was drastically changed. The change was reversed by the addition of other protonated amino acids. The involvement in radical formation of the beta position of tyrosine was demonstrated from EPR spectra of protein B2 from bacteria grown in the presence of specifically deuterated tyrosine.  相似文献   

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