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1.
 CW ENDOR (X-band) spectra for the purple mixed-valence [Cu(1.5+)...Cu(1.5+)], S = 1/2, CuA site in nitrous oxide reductase were obtained after insertion of 65Cu or both 65Cu and 15N-histidine. The 14N/15N isotopic substitution allowed for an unambiguous deconvolution of proton and nitrogen hyperfine couplings in the spectra. A single nitrogen coupling with a value of 12.9 ± 0.4 MHz for 14N was detected. Its anisotropy was characteristic for imidazole bound to copper. A spin density of 3–5% was estimated for the nitrogen donors to CuA, indicating that the ground state is 2B3u. Proton hyperfine structure was detected from four Cβ protons of coordinating cysteine residues. Their isotropic and anisotropic parts were deconvoluted by spectral simulation. From the anisotropic couplings a spin density of 16–24% was estimated for each of the cysteine thiolate donors of CuA. The [NHisCu(RS)2CuNHis]+ core structure of CuA in nitrous oxide reductase from Pseudomonas stutzeri is predicted to be similar to the crystallographically determined CuA* structure (Wilmanns M, Lappalainen P, Kelly M, Sauer-Eriksson E, Saraste M (1995) Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 92 : 11955–11959), but distinct from the CuA structure of Paracoccus denitrificans cytochrome c oxidase (Iwata S, Ostermeier C, Ludwig B, Michel H (1995) Nature 376 : 660–669). The angular dependence of the isotropic couplings as a function of the electronic ground state was calculated by the INDO/S method. The Mulliken atomic-spin populations calculated by a gradient-corrected density functional method and the semiempirical INDO/S method were compared with experimentally derived spin populations, and good agreement between theory and experiment was found for both calculations. The ground state of CuA is best represented by the resonance structures of the form [CuISSCuII↔ CuISSCuI↔ CuISSCuI↔ CuIISSCuI]. It is proposed that the Cu 4s,p as well as sulfur 3d orbitals play a role in the stabilization of this novel type of cluster. Received: 17 September 1997 / Accepted: 28 October 1997  相似文献   

2.
Multifrequency electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra of the Cu(II) site in nitrous oxide reductase (N2OR) from Pseudomonas stutzeri confirm the assignment of the low field g value at 2.18 consistent with the seven line pattern observed at 9.31 GHz, 10 K. S-band spectra at 20 K are better resolved than the X-band spectra recorded at 10 K. The features observed at 2.4, 3.4, 9.31 and 35 GHz are explained by a mixed-valence [Cu(1.5)..Cu(1.5)] S = 1/2 species with the unpaired electron delocalized between two equivalent Cu nuclei. The resemblance of the N2OR S-band spectra to the spectra for the EPR-detectable Cu of cytochrome c oxidase suggests that the S-band spectrum for cytochrome c oxidase measured below 30 K may also contain hyperfine splittings from two approximately equivalent Cu nuclei.  相似文献   

3.
Soluble ammonia monooxygenase (AMO) from Nitrosomonas europaea was purified to homogeneity and metals in the active sites of the enzyme (Cu, Fe) were analyzed by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. EPR spectra were obtained for a type 2 Cu(II) site with g|| = 2.24, A|| = 18.4 mT and g = 2.057 as well as for heme and non heme iron present in purified soluble AMO from N. europaea. A second type 2 Cu(II) EPR signal with g|| = 2.29, A|| = 16.1 mT and g = 2.03 appeared in the spectrum of the ferricyanide oxidized enzyme and was attributed to oxidation of cuprous sites. Comparison of EPR-detectable Cu2+ with total copper determined by inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) suggests that there are six paramagnetic Cu2+ and three diamagnetic Cu1+ per heterotrimeric soluble AMO (two paramagnetic and one diamagnetic Cu per αβγ-protomer). A trigonal EPR signal at g = 6.01, caused by a high-spin iron, indicative for cytochrome bound iron, and a rhombic signal at g = 4.31, characteristic of specifically bound Fe3+ was detectable. The binding of nitric oxide in the presence of reductant resulted in a ferrous S = 3/2 signal, characteristic of a ferrous nitrosyl complex. Inactivation of soluble AMO with acetylene did neither diminish the ferrous signal nor the intensity of the Cu2+-EPR signal.  相似文献   

4.
Nitrous oxide reductase (N2OR), Pseudomonas stutzeri, catalyses the 2 electron reduction of nitrous oxide to di-nitrogen. The enzyme has 2 identical subunits (Mr approximately 70,000) of known amino acid sequence and contains approximately 4 Cu ions per subunit. By measurement of the optical absorption, electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and low-temperature magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectra of the oxidised state, a semi-reduced form and the fully reduced state of the enzyme it is shown that the enzyme contains 2 distinct copper centres of which one is assigned to an electron-transfer function, centre A, and the other to a catalytic site, centre Z. The latter is a binuclear copper centre with at least 1 cysteine ligand and cycles between oxidation levels Cu(II)/Cu(II) and Cu(II)/Cu(I) in the absence of substrate or inhibitors. The state Cu(II)/Cu(I) is enzymatically inactive. The MCD spectra provide evidence for a second form of centre Z, which may be enzymatically active, in the oxidised state of the enzyme. Centre A is structurally similar to that of CuA in bovine and bacterial cytochrome c oxidase and also contains copper ligated by cysteine. This centre may also be a binuclear copper complex.  相似文献   

5.
This work demonstrates the use of multiquantum EPR to study the magnetic properties of copper complexes and copper proteins. Pure absorption spectra are obtained because of the absence of field modulation. The signal intensity of 3-quantum spectra is proportional to the spin lattice relaxation time T1, while its linewidth in a frequency difference sweep is T1(-1). A change in lineshape for the EPR detectable mixed value [Cu(1.5) . . . Cu(1.5)] site in nitrous oxide reductase is attributed to suppression of the forbidden transitions. The data confirm the unusually fast relaxation time for this site, which requires temperatures of less than 100 K to resolve hyperfine structure. The T1's for the mixed valence [Cu(1.5) . . . Cu(1.5)] site in nitrous oxide reductase are very similar to T1's for the Cua site in cytochrome c oxidase. The similar relaxation properties, together with previous multifrequency EPR results, support the hypothesis that the EPR detectable sites in cytochrome c oxidase and nitrous oxide reductase are mixed valence [Cu(1.5) . . . Cu(1.5)] configurations.  相似文献   

6.
The final step of bacterial denitrification, the two-electron reduction of N2O to N2, is catalyzed by a multi-copper enzyme named nitrous oxide reductase. The catalytic centre of this enzyme is a tetranuclear copper site called CuZ, unique in biological systems. The in vitro reconstruction of the activity requires a slow activation in the presence of the artificial electron donor, reduced methyl viologen, necessary to reduce CuZ from the resting non-active state (1CuII/3CuI) to the fully reduced state (4CuI), in contrast to the turnover cycle, which is very fast. In the present work, the direct reaction of the activated form of Pseudomonas nautica nitrous oxide reductase with stoichiometric amounts of N2O allowed the identification of a new reactive intermediate of the catalytic centre, CuZ°, in the turnover cycle, characterized by an intense absorption band at 680 nm. Moreover, the first mediated electrochemical study of Ps. nautica nitrous oxide reductase with its physiological electron donor, cytochrome c-552, was performed. The intermolecular electron transfer was analysed by cyclic voltammetry, under catalytic conditions, and a second-order rate constant of (5.5 ± 0.9) × 105 M−1 s−1 was determined. Both the reaction of stoichiometric amounts of substrate and the electrochemical studies show that the active CuZ° species, generated in the absence of reductants, can rearrange to the resting non-active CuZ state. In this light, new aspects of the catalytic and activation/inactivation mechanism of the enzyme are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
The crystal structure of nitrous oxide reductase, the enzyme catalyzing the final step of bacterial denitrification in which nitrous oxide is reduced to dinitrogen, exhibits a novel catalytic site, called Cu(Z). This comprises a cluster of four copper ions bound by seven histidines and three other ligands modeled in the X-ray structure as OH(-) or H(2)O. However, elemental analyses and resonance Raman spectroscopy of isotopically labeled enzyme conclusively demonstrate that Cu(Z) has one acid-labile sulfur ligand. Thus, nitrous oxide reductase contains the first reported biological copper-sulfide cluster.  相似文献   

8.
Nitrous oxide reductase from Wolinella succinogenes, an enzyme containing one heme c and four Cu atoms/subunit of Mr = 88,000, was studied by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) at 9.2 GHz from 6 to 80 K. In the oxidized state, low spin ferric cytochrome c was observed with gz = 3.10 and an axial Cu resonance was observed with g parallel = 2.17 and g perpendicular = 2.035. No signals were detected at g values greater than 3.10. For the Cu resonance, six hyperfine lines each were observed in the g parallel and g perpendicular regions with average separations of 45.2 and 26.2 gauss, respectively. The hyperfine components are attributed to Cu(I)-Cu(II) S = 1/2 (half-met) centers. Reduction of the enzyme with dithionite caused signals attributable to heme c and Cu to disappear; exposure of that sample to N2O for a few min caused the reappearance of the g = 3.10 component and a new Cu signal with g parallel = 2.17 and g perpendicular = 2.055 that lacked the simple hyperfine components attributed to a single species of half-met center. The enzyme lost no activity as the result of this cycle of reduction and reoxidation. EPR provided no evidence for a Cu-heme interaction. The EPR detectable Cu in the oxidized and reoxidized forms of the enzyme comprised about 23 and 20% of the total Cu, respectively, or about one spin/subunit. The enzyme offers the first example of a nitrous oxide reductase which can have two states of high activity that present very different EPR spectra of Cu. These two states may represent enzyme in two different stages of the catalytic cycle.  相似文献   

9.
Multifrequency electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra of the Cu(II) site in bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase (COX) and nitrous oxide reductase (N2OR) from Pseudomonas stutzeri confirm the existence of Cu-Cu interaction in both enzymes. C-band (4.5 GHz) proves to be a particularly good frequency complementing the spectra of COX and N2OR recorded at 2.4 and 3.5 GHz. Both the high and low field region of the EPR spectra show the presence of a well-resolved 7-line pattern consistent with the idea of a binuclear Cu center in COX and N2OR. Based on this assumption consistent g-values are calculated for gz and gx at four frequencies. No consistent g-values are obtained with the assumption of a 4-line pattern indicative for a mononuclear Cu site.  相似文献   

10.
CuA is a binuclear copper center that functions as an electron transfer agent, cycling between a reduced Cu(I)Cu(I) state and an oxidized mixed-valence Cu(+1.5)···Cu(+1.5) state. The copper ions are bridged by two cysteine thiolate ligands and form a copper–copper bond, the first reported of its kind in Nature. Such a “diamond-core” Cu2S(Cys)2 structure allows an unpaired electron to be completely delocalized over the two copper ions and contributes to its highly efficient electron transfer properties. This review provides accounts of how the CuA center was structurally characterized and highlights its salient spectroscopic properties. In the process, it introduces the CuA center in four different systems—native protein systems, soluble protein truncates of native proteins, synthetic models using organic molecules, and biosynthetic models using proteins as ligands—with a greater emphasis on biosynthetic models of CuA, especially on new, deeper insights gained from their studies.  相似文献   

11.
Cupric insulin was modified by the addition of cross-linking disulphide bridges between hexamers. The electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectrum of this freeze-dried material was compared with that of freeze-dried unmodified cupric insulin containing various amounts of copper and added water. The modified insulin was found to have cupric ion sites magnetically very similar to that of native insulin containing two cupric ions per hexamer. Native hexamer produced in the presence of 2 Cu(II) ions per hexamer gave, after freeze-drying, an EPR spectrum with ACu=16.5 mT, g=2.285 and g=2.059 (site 1). The use of 4 or 6 Cu(II) ions per hexamer resulted in spectra with two components-a major component with the same ACu and g values as the sample containing 2 Cu(II) ions (site 1) and an additional minor component (site 2). These sites have been identified with the analogous zinc binding site within the hexamer formed by three B-10 histidine residues (site 1) [1, 2] and the site formed by the B-1 α-amino and A-17 glutamyl-γ-barboxylic acid functions where excess zinc is bound (site 2) [3, 4]. The addition of water to native hexamer containing 2, 4, or 6 Cu(II) ions resulted in the appearance of three distinct EPR absorptions, one of which had the same parameters as the freeze-dried native insulin containing 2 Cu(II) ions per hexamer (site 1). Two further sites appeared (3 and 4) with the following parameters: ACu=15.0 mT, g=2.353, and g=2.07; ACu=16.5 mT, g=2.315, and g=2.07, respectively.  相似文献   

12.
The aerobic purification of Pseudomonas nautica 617 nitrous oxide reductase yielded two forms of the enzyme exhibiting different chromatographic behaviors. The protein contains six copper atoms per monomer, arranged in two centers named Cu(A) and Cu(Z). Cu(Z) could be neither oxidized nor further reduced under our experimental conditions, and exhibits a 4-line EPR spectrum (g(x)=2.015, A(x)=1.5 mT, g(y)=2.071, A(y)=2 mT, g(z)=2.138, A(z)=7 mT) and a strong absorption at approximately 640 nm. Cu(A) can be stabilized in a reduced EPR-silent state and in an oxidized state with a typical 7-line EPR spectrum (g(x)=g(y)= 2.021, A(x) = A(y)=0 mT, g(z) = 2.178, A(z)= 4 mT) and absorption bands at 480, 540, and approximately 800 nm. The difference between the two purified forms of nitrous oxide reductase is interpreted as a difference in the oxidation state of the Cu(A) center. In form A, Cu(A) is predominantly oxidized (S = (1)/(2), Cu(1.5+)-Cu(1.5+)), while in form B it is mostly in the one-electron reduced state (S = 0, Cu(1+)-Cu(1+)). In both forms, Cu(Z) remains reduced (S = 1/2). Complete crystallographic data at 2.4 A indicate that Cu(A) is a binuclear site (similar to the site found in cytochrome c oxidase) and Cu(Z) is a novel tetracopper cluster [Brown, K., et al. (2000) Nat. Struct. Biol. (in press)]. The complete amino acid sequence of the enzyme was determined and comparisons made with sequences of other nitrous oxide reductases, emphasizing the coordination of the centers. A 10.3 kDa peptide copurified with both forms of nitrous oxide reductase shows strong homology with proteins of the heat-shock GroES chaperonin family.  相似文献   

13.
The structural features of cytochrome oxidases are reviewed in light of their evolution. The substrate specificity (quinol vs. cytochromec) is reflected in the presence of a unique copper centre (Cu A ) in cytochromec oxidases. In several lines of evolution, quinol oxidases have independently lost this copper. Also, the most primitive cytochromec oxidases do not contain this copper, and electron entry takes place viac-type haems. These enzymes, exemplified by the rhizobial FixN complex, probably remind the first oxidases. They are related to the denitrification enzyme nitric oxide reductase.  相似文献   

14.
The results of studies performed in the author’s laboratory are surveyed, with particular emphasis on demonstrating the value of a multidisciplinary synthetic modeling approach for discovering new and unusual chemistry helpful for understanding the properties of the active sites of copper proteins or assessing the feasibility of mechanistic pathways they might follow during catalysis. The discussion focuses on the progress made to date toward comprehending the nitrite reductase catalytic site and mechanism, the electronic structures of copper thiolate electron transfer centers, the sulfido-bridged “CuZ” site in nitrous oxide reductase, and the processes of dioxygen binding and activation by mono- and dicopper centers in oxidases and oxygenases.  相似文献   

15.
The terminal oxidoreductase of nitrous oxide respiration in the marine, denitrifying bacterium, Pseudomonas perfectomarinus, was identified as multi-copper protein and purified to electrophoretic homogeneity. The enzyme reduced N2O to N2 with hydrogen, clostridial hydrogenase, and methyl viologen as electron-donating system. The copper content of the reductase corresponded to ~ 8 copper atoms/120 000 Mr. The subunit structure was dimeric with two peptides of equal size. Manganese, iron and zinc were absent, or were not found in stoichiometric amounts. The oxidized chromophore had absorption maxima at 350, 480, 530, 620 and 780 nm; addition of dithionite produced a blue protein form with maxima at 470, 635 and 740 nm. Both forms of the enzyme were paramagnetic. The same copper protein was also isolated from Pseudomonas stutzeri.  相似文献   

16.
Carbon monoxide dehydrogenase from the bacterium Oligotropha carboxidovorans catalyzes the oxidation of CO to CO2 at a unique [CuSMoO2] cluster. In the bacteria the cluster is assembled post-translational. The integration of S, and particularly of Cu, is rate limiting in vivo, which leads to CO dehydrogenase preparations containing the mature and fully functional enzyme along with forms of the enzyme deficient in one or both of these elements. The active sites of mature and immature forms of CO dehydrogenase were converted into a [MoO3] centre by treatment with potassium cyanide. We have established a method, which rescues 50% of the CO dehydrogenase activity by in vitro reconstitution of the active site through the supply of sulphide first and subsequently of Cu(I) under reducing conditions. Immature forms of CO dehydrogenase isolated from the bacterium, which were deficient in S and/or Cu at the active site, were similarly activated. X-ray crystallography and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy indicated that the [CuSMoO2] cluster was properly reconstructed. However, reconstituted CO dehydrogenase contains mature along with immature forms. The chemical reactions of the reconstitution of CO dehydrogenase are summarized in a model, which assumes resulphuration of the Mo-ion at both equatorial positions at a 1:1 molar ratio. One equatorial Mo–S group reacts with Cu(I) in a productive fashion yielding a mature, functional [CuSMoO2] cluster. The other Mo–S group reacts with Cu(I), then Cu2S is released and an oxo group is introduced from water, yielding an inactive [MoO3] centre.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Summary The kinetics of electron entry in beef heart cytochromec oxidase have been studied by stopped-flow spectroscopy following chemical modification of the CuA site with mercurials. In this derivative CuA is no longer reducible by cytochrome c while cytochromea may accept electrons from the latter with rates comparable to the native enzyme. The results indicate that CuA is not the exclusive electron entry site in cytochromec oxidase.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Vitreoscilla contained a homodimeric bacterial hemoglobin (VtHb). The purification of this protein yielded VtmetHb which exhibited electronic and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra, showing that it existed predominantly in a high-spin ferric form, both axial and rhombic components being present. The preparations also contained variable amounts of low-spin components. There was no evidence that these high-spin and low-spin forms were in equilibrium. The former were reducible by NADH catalyzed by the NADH-metVtHb reductase, and the latter were not. High ionic strength and high pH led to the formation of low-spin metVtHb; both treatments were reversible. Cyanide and imidazole liganded to VtHb resulted in the conversion of high-spin to low-spin ferric heme centers, each with characteristic electronic and EPR spectra. Some preparations of VtHb exhibited EPR signals consistent with a sulfur ligand bound to the ferric site. When VtHb was treated with NADH plus the reductase in the presence of oxygen, the intensity of the high-spin EPR signals decreased significantly. No reduction occurred in the absence of oxygen, suggesting a possible role for the superoxide anion. Dithionite treatment of VtHb resulted in a slow reduction, but the main product of the reaction of dithionite-reduced VtHb with oxygen was VtmetHb, not VtHbO2. EPR spectra of whole cells ofVitreoscilla exhibited a variety of intense signals at low and high magnetic field, theg-values being consistent with the presence of high-spin ferric heme proteins, in addition to an iron-containing superoxide dismutase (FeSOD) and iron-sulfur proteins. EPR spectra of the cytosol fraction ofVitreoscilla showed the expected resonances for VtmetHb and FeSOD.Abbreviations A absorbance - DEAE diethylaminoethyl - EDTA ethylenediamine tetraacetate - EPR electron paramagnetic resonance - HiPIP high-potential iron protein - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate - SOD superoxide dismutase - VtHb Vitreoscilla hemoglobin - VtmetHb oxidizedVitreoscilla hemoglobin - VtHbO2 oxygenatedVitreoscilla hemoglobin  相似文献   

20.
The cupredoxin fold, a Greek key beta-barrel, is a common structural motif in a family of small blue copper proteins and a subdomain in many multicopper oxidases. Here we show that a cupredoxin domain is present in subunit II of cytochrome c and quinol oxidase complexes. In the former complex this subunit is thought to bind a copper centre called CuA which is missing from the latter complex. We have expressed the C-terminal fragment of the membrane-bound CyoA subunit of the Escherichia coli cytochrome o quinol oxidase as a water-soluble protein. Two mutants have been designed into the CyoA fragment. The optical spectrum shows that one mutant is similar to blue copper proteins. The second mutant has an optical spectrum and redox potential like the purple copper site in nitrous oxide reductase (N2OR). This site is closely related to CuA, which is the copper centre typical of cytochrome c oxidase. The electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra of both this mutant and the entire cytochrome o complex, into which the CuA site has been introduced, are similar to the EPR spectra of the native CuA site in cytochrome oxidase. These results give the first experimental evidence that CuA is bound to the subunit II of cytochrome c oxidase and open a new way to study this peculiar copper site.  相似文献   

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