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1.
Intramolecular electron transfer between CuA and heme a in solubilized bacterial (Paracoccus denitrificans) cytochrome c oxidase was investigated by pulse radiolysis. CuA, the initial electron acceptor, was reduced by 1-methylnicotinamide radicals in a diffusion-controlled reaction, as monitored by absorption changes at 825 nm, followed by partial restoration of the absorption and paralleled by an increase in the heme a absorption at 605 nm. The latter observations indicate partial reoxidation of the CuA center and the concomitant reduction of heme a. The rate constants for heme a reduction and CuA reoxidation were identical within experimental error and independent of the enzyme concentration and its degree of reduction, demonstrating that a fast intramolecular electron equilibration is taking place between CuA and heme a. The rate constants for CuA --> heme a ET and the reverse heme a --> CuA process were found to be 20,400 s(-1) and 10,030 s(-1), respectively, at 25 degrees C and pH 7.5, which corresponds to an equilibrium constant of 2.0. Thermodynamic and activation parameters of these intramolecular ET reactions were determined. The significance of the results, particularly the low activation barriers, is discussed within the framework of the enzyme's known three-dimensional structure, potential ET pathways, and the calculated reorganization energies.  相似文献   

2.
In cytochrome c oxidase (CcO), exergonic electron transfer reactions from cytochrome c to oxygen drive proton pumping across the membrane. Elucidation of the proton pumping mechanism requires identification of the molecular components involved in the proton transfer reactions and investigation of the coupling between internal electron and proton transfer reactions in CcO. While the proton-input trajectory in CcO is relatively well characterized, the components of the output pathway have not been identified in detail. In this study, we have investigated the pH dependence of electron transfer reactions that are linked to proton translocation in a structural variant of CcO in which Arg481, which interacts with the heme D-ring propionates in a proposed proton output pathway, was replaced with Lys (RK481 CcO). The results show that in RK481 CcO the midpoint potentials of hemes a and a(3) were lowered by approximately 40 and approximately 15 mV, respectively, which stabilizes the reduced state of Cu(A) during reaction of the reduced CcO with O(2). In addition, while the pH dependence of the F --> O rate in wild-type CcO is determined by the protonation state of two protonatable groups with pK(a) values of 6.3 and 9.4, only the high-pK(a) group influences this rate in RK481 CcO. The results indicate that the protonation state of the Arg481 heme a(3) D-ring propionate cluster having a pK(a) of approximately 6.3 modulates the rate of internal electron transfer and may act as an acceptor of pumped protons.  相似文献   

3.
The first step in the catalytic cycle of cytochrome oxidase, the one-electron reduction of the fully oxidized enzyme, was investigated using a new photoactive binuclear ruthenium complex, [Ru(bipyrazine)2]2(quaterpyridine), (Ru2Z). The aim of the work was to examine differences in the redox kinetics resulting from pulsing the oxidase (i.e., fully reducing the enzyme followed by reoxidation) just prior to photoreduction. Recent reports indicate transient changes in the redox behavior of the metal centers upon pulsing. The new photoreductant has a large quantum yield, allowing the kinetics data to be acquired in a single flash. The net charge of +4 on Ru2Z allows it to bind electrostatically near CuA in subunit II of cytochrome oxidase. The photoexcited state Ru(II*) of Ru2Z is reduced to Ru(I) by the sacrificial electron donor aniline, and Ru(I) then reduces CuA with yields up to 60%. A stopped-flow-flash technique was used to form the pulsed state of cytochrome oxidase (the "OH" state) from several sources (bovine heart mitochondria, Rhodobacter sphaeroides, and Paracoccus denitrificans). Upon mixing the fully reduced anaerobic enzyme with oxygenated buffer containing Ru2Z, the oxidized OH state was formed within 5 ms. Ru2Z was then excited with a laser flash to inject one electron into CuA. Electron transfer from CuA --> heme a --> heme a3/CuB was monitored by optical spectroscopy, and the results were compared with the enzyme that had not been pulsed to the OH state. Pulsing had a significant effect in the case of the bovine oxidase, but this was not observed with the bacterial oxidases. Electron transfer from CuA to heme a occurred with a rate constant of 20,000 s-1 with the bovine cytochrome oxidase, regardless of whether the enzyme had been pulsed. However, electron transfer from heme a to the heme a3/CuB center in the pulsed form was 63% complete and occurred with biphasic kinetics with rate constants of 750 s-1 and 110 s-1 and relative amplitudes of 25% and 75%. In contrast, one-electron injection into the nonpulsed O form of the bovine oxidase was only 30% complete and occurred with monophasic kinetics with a rate constant of 90 s-1. This is the first indication of a difference between the fast form of the bovine oxidase and the pulsed OH form. No reduction of heme a3 is observed, indicating that CuB is the initial electron acceptor in the one-electron reduced pulsed bovine oxidase.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Intramolecular electron transfer (ET) between the CuA center and heme a in bovine cytochrome c oxidase was investigated by pulse radiolysis. CuA, the initial electron acceptor, was reduced by 1-methyl nicotinamide radicals in a diffusion-controlled reaction, as monitored by absorption changes at 830 nm. After the initial reduction phase, the 830 nm absorption was partially restored, corresponding to reoxidation of the CuA center. Concomitantly, the absorption at 445 nm and 605 nm increased, indicating reduction of heme a. The rate constants for heme a reduction and CuA reoxidation were identical within experimental error and independent of the enzyme concentration. This demonstrates that a fast intramolecular electron equilibration is taking place between CuA and heme a. The rate constants for CuA --> heme a ET and the reverse (heme a --> CuA) process were found to be 13 000 s-1 and 3700 s-1, respectively, at 25 degrees C and pH 7.4. This corresponds to an equilibrium constant of 3.4 under these conditions. Thermodynamic and activation parameters of the ET reactions were determined. The significance of these results, particularly the observed low activation barriers, are discussed within the framework of the known three-dimensional structure, ET pathways and reorganization energies.  相似文献   

6.
Campylobacter jejuni is a leading bacterial cause of food-borne illness in the developed world. Like most pathogens, C. jejuni requires iron that must be acquired from the host environment. Although the iron preference of the food-borne pathogen C. jejuni is not established, this organism possesses heme transport systems to acquire iron. ChaN is an iron-regulated lipoprotein from C. jejuni proposed to be associated with ChaR, an outer-membrane receptor. Mutation of PhuW, a ChaN orthologue in Pseudomonas aeruginosa, compromises growth on heme as a sole iron source. The crystal structure of ChaN, determined to 1.9 A resolution reveals that ChaN is comprised of a large parallel beta-sheet with flanking alpha-helices and a smaller domain consisting of alpha-helices. Unexpectedly, two cofacial heme groups ( approximately 3.5 A apart with an inter-iron distance of 4.4 A) bind in a pocket formed by a dimer of ChaN monomers. Each heme iron is coordinated by a single tyrosine from one monomer, and the propionate groups are hydrogen bonded by a histidine and a lysine from the other monomer. Sequence analyses reveal that these residues are conserved among ChaN homologues from diverse bacterial origins. Electronic absorption and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy are consistent with heme binding through tyrosine coordination by ChaN in solution yielding a high-spin heme iron structure in a pH-dependent equilibrium with a low-spin species. Analytical ultracentrifugation demonstrates that apo-ChaN is predominantly monomeric and that dimerization occurs with heme binding such that the stability constant for dimer formation increases by 60-fold.  相似文献   

7.
Fabian M  Jancura D  Bona M  Musatov A  Baran M  Palmer G 《Biochemistry》2006,45(13):4277-4283
Purified bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) has been extracted from aqueous solution into hexane in the presence of phospholipids and calcium ions. In extracts, CcO is in the so-called "slow" form and probably situated in reverse micelles. At low water:phospholipid molar ratios, electron transfer from reduced heme a and Cu(A) to the catalytic center is inhibited and both heme a3 and Cu(B) remain in the oxidized state. The rate of binding of cyanide to heme a3 in this oxidized catalytic center is, however, dependent on the redox state of heme a and Cu(A). When heme a and Cu(A) are reduced, the rate is increased 20-fold compared to the rate when these two centers are oxidized. The enhanced rate of binding of cyanide to heme a3 is explained by the destabilization of an intrinsic ligand, located at the catalytic site, that is triggered by the reduction of heme a and Cu(A).  相似文献   

8.
We have used EPR and FTIR spectroscopy in combination with (17)O and (15)N stable isotopes to investigate the mechanism of cytochrome c oxidase (CcO). A high-spin state of heme a(3) was found in high yield by EPR, achieved upon turning over the enzyme until it was anaerobic, and shown to be a mixture of heme with a coordinated oxygen-based ligand and five-coordinate heme. Allowing the enzyme to consume (17)O(2) for a few milliseconds before freezing, we also showed that the product H(2)(17)O exits toward the external side of the enzyme, binding to the nonredox active Mg/Mn site en route. Specific (15)N labeling of histidine, in comparison with global (15)N labeling and unlabeled samples, allowed us to more definitively assign heme and histidine peaks in the electrochemically induced FTIR difference spectrum. Additionally, the assignment of heme bands affords a reliable method of spectrum normalization between samples, providing a more accurate comparison of the spectral features of bovine with bacterial cytochrome oxidase and revealing multiple differences between the two species.  相似文献   

9.
The function of the binuclear Cu(A) center in cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) was studied using two Rhodobacter sphaeroides CcO mutants involving direct ligands of the Cu(A) center, H260N and M263L. The rapid electron-transfer kinetics of the mutants were studied by flash photolysis of a cytochrome c derivative labeled with ruthenium trisbipyridine at lysine-55. The rate constant for intracomplex electron transfer from heme c to Cu(A) was decreased from 40000 s(-1) for wild-type CcO to 16000 s(-1) and 11000 s(-1) for the M263L and H260N mutants, respectively. The rate constant for electron transfer from Cu(A) to heme a was decreased from 90000 s(-1) for wild-type CcO to 4000 s(-1) for the M263L mutant and only 45 s(-1) for the H260N mutant. The rate constant for the reverse reaction, heme a to Cu(A), was calculated to be 66000 s(-1) for M263L and 180 s(-1) for H260N, compared to 17000 s(-1) for wild-type CcO. It was estimated that the redox potential of Cu(A) was increased by 120 mV for the M263L mutant and 90 mV for the H260N mutant, relative to the potential of heme a. Neither mutation significantly affected the binding interaction with cytochrome c. These results indicate that His-260, but not Met-263, plays a significant role in electron transfer between Cu(A) and heme a.  相似文献   

10.
It has been reported that different amino acid radicals are formed following the addition of hydrogen peroxide to cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) from bovine heart or from Paracoccus denitrificans. A broad unresolved signal in the electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra of bovine CcO has been assigned to a tryptophan radical, probably Trp126 [Rigby et al. Biochemistry 2000, 39, 5921-5928]. In the P. denitrificans enzyme, a similarly broad signal but with a well-resolved hyperfine structure was shown to originate from a tyrosyl radical and was tentatively assigned to the active site Tyr280 [MacMillan et al. Biochemistry 1999, 38, 9179-9184]. We confirm that the EPR signal from P. denitrificans CcO can be simulated using spectral parameters typical for known Tyr radicals in other systems. However, the rotational conformation of the phenolic ring of Tyr280 is inconsistent with our simulation. Instead, the simulation parameters we used correspond to the rotational conformation of ring that matches very accurately the conformation found in Tyr167, a residue that is close enough ( approximately 10 A) to the binuclear centre to readily donate an electron. The broad unresolved EPR signal in the bovine oxidase has been thought previously to be inconsistent with a tyrosyl radical. However, we have simulated a hypothetical EPR spectrum arising from a Tyr129 radical (the equivalent of Tyr167 in P. denitrificans CcO) and showed that it is similar to the observed broad signal. The possibility exists, therefore, that the homological tyrosine amino acid (Tyr167/Tyr129) is responsible for the EPR spectrum in both the Paraccoccus and the bovine enzyme. This correspondence between the two enzymes at least allows the possibility that this radical may have functional importance.  相似文献   

11.
Cheesman MR  Little PJ  Berks BC 《Biochemistry》2001,40(35):10562-10569
The SoxAX complex of the bacterium Rhodovulum sulfidophilum is a heterodimeric c-type cytochrome that plays an essential role in photosynthetic thiosulfate and sulfide oxidation. The three heme sites of SoxAX have been analyzed using electronic absorption, electron paramagnetic resonance, and magnetic circular dichroism spectroscopies. Heme-3 in the ferric state is characterized by a Large g(max) EPR signal and has histidine and methionine axial heme iron ligands which are retained on reduction to the ferrous state. Hemes-1 and -2 both have thiolate plus nitrogenous ligand sets in the ferric state and give rise to rhombic EPR spectra. Heme-1, whose ligands derive from cysteinate and histidine residues, remains ferric in the presence of dithionite ion. Ferric heme-2 exists with a preparation-dependent mixture of two different ligand sets, one being cysteinate/histidine, the other an unidentified pair with a weaker crystal-field strength. Upon reduction of the SoxAX complex with dithionite, a change occurs in the ligands of heme-2 in which the thiolate is either protonated or replaced by an unidentified ligand. Sequence analysis places the histidine/methionine-coordinated heme in SoxX and the thiolate-liganded hemes in SoxA. SoxAX is the first naturally occurring c-type cytochrome in which a thiolate-coordinated heme has been identified.  相似文献   

12.
Hmu O, a heme degradation enzyme in Corynebacterium diphtheriae, forms a stoichiometric complex with iron protoporphyrin IX and catalyzes the oxygen-dependent conversion of hemin to biliverdin, carbon monoxide, and free iron. Using a multitude of spectroscopic techniques, we have determined the axial ligand coordination of the heme-Hmu O complex. The ferric complex shows a pH-dependent reversible transition between a water-bound hexacoordinate high spin neutral pH form and an alkaline form, having high spin and low spin states, with a pK(a) of 9. (1)H NMR, EPR, and resonance Raman of the heme-Hmu O complex establish that a neutral imidazole of a histidine residue is the proximal ligand of the complex, similar to mammalian heme oxygenase. EPR of the deoxy cobalt porphyrin IX-Hmu O complex confirms this proximal histidine coordination. Oxy cobalt-Hmu O EPR reveals a hydrogen-bonding interaction between the O(2) and an exchangeable proton in the Hmu O distal pocket and two distinct orientations for the bound O(2). Mammalian heme oxygenase has only one O(2) orientation. This difference and the mixed spin states at alkaline pH indicate structural differences in the distal environment between Hmu O and its mammalian counterpart.  相似文献   

13.
The oxidized binuclear heme a3/CuB center of slow forms of bovine cytochrome oxidase exhibits a characteristic EPR signal at g' = 12. Following the (rapid) dithionite reduction of heme a and CuA, an additional EPR signal becomes apparent at g' = 2.95. As electrons enter the binuclear center this signal decays at the same slow rate as the g' = 12 signal. In the fully oxidized slow enzyme the small g' = 2.95 signal is usually masked by the g = 3 heme a signal, but it is readily detectable at low temperatures and high microwave powers. It is present in both the intrinsic and formate-ligated slow enzymes, but not in any form of fast preparation. The g' = 2.95 signal has similar temperature dependence and microwave power saturation characteristics to the g' = 12 signal. We conclude that the signal arises from the same population of binuclear centers responsible for the g' = 12 signal. The appearance of a signal at g' = 2.95 in X-band EPR is consistent with, but does not prove, the model of Hagen where the g' = 12 signal arises from a ferryl heme a3, with CuB cuprous and EPR-silent (Hagen, W. R. (1982) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 708, 82-98).  相似文献   

14.
The method of continuous saturation has been used to measure the electron spin relaxation parameter T1T2 at temperatures between 10 and 50 K for a variety of S = 1/2 species including: CuA and cytochrome a of cytochrome c oxidase, the type 1 copper in several blue copper proteins, the type 2 copper in laccase, inorganic Cu(II) complexes, sulfur radicals, and low spin heme proteins. The temperature dependence and the magnitude of T1T2 for all of the species examined are accounted for by assuming that the Van Vleck Raman process dominates the electron spin-lattice relaxation. Over the entire temperature range examined, the relaxation of the type 1 coppers in six to seven times faster than that of type 2 copper, inorganic copper, and sulfur radicals, in spite of the similar g-anisotropies of these species. This result may indicate that the coupling of the phonon bath to the spin center is more effective in type 1 coppers than in the other complexes studied. The relaxation of CuA of cytochrome oxidase exhibits an unusual temperature dependence relative to the other copper complexes studied, suggesting that the protein environment of this center is different from that of the other copper centers studied and/or that CuA is influenced by a magnetic dipolar interaction with another, faster-relaxing paramagnetic site in the enzyme. A comparison of the saturation characteristics of the CuA EPR signal in native and partially reduced CO complexes of the enzyme also suggests the existence of such an interaction. The implications of these results with respect to the disposition of the metal centers in cytochrome oxidase are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
The mechanism of electron coupled proton transfer in cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) is still poorly understood. The P(M)-intermediate of the catalytic cycle is an oxoferryl state whose generation requires one additional electron, which cannot be provided by the two metal centres. The missing electron has been suggested to be donated to this binuclear site by a tyrosine residue. A tyrosine radical species has been detected in the P(M) and F* intermediates (formed by addition of H2O2) of the Paraccocus denitrificans CcO using electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. From the study of conserved variants its origin was determined to be Y167 which is surprising as this residue is not part of the active site. Upon inspection of the active site it becomes evident that W272 could be the actual donor of the missing electron, which can then be replenished from Y167 or from the Y280-H276 cross link in the natural cycle. To address the question, whether such a direct electron transfer pathway to the binuclear centre exists two tryptophan 272 variants in subunit I have been generated. These variants are characterised by their turnover rates as well as using EPR and optical spectroscopy. From these experiments it is concluded, that W272 is an important intermediate in the formation of the radical species appearing in P(M) and F* intermediates produced with hydrogen peroxide. The significance of this finding for the catalytic function of the enzyme is discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Interactions of azide ion with bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) at five redox levels (IV) to (0), obtained by zero to four electron reduction of fully oxidized enzyme CcO(IV), were monitored by infrared and visible/Soret spectra. Partially reduced CcO gave three azide asymmetric stretch band at 2040, 2016, and 2004 cm-1 for CcO(III)N3 and two at 2040 and 2016 cm-1 for CcO(II)N3 and CcO(I)N3. Resting CcO(IV) reacts with N3- to give one band at 2041 cm-1 assigned to CuB2+N3 and another at 2051 cm-1 to N3- that is associated with protein but is not bound to a metal ion. At high azide concentrations the weak association of many azide molecules with non-metal protein sites was observed at all redox levels. These findings provide direct evidence for 1) N3- binding to CuB as well as Fea3 in partially reduced enzyme, but no binding to Fea3 in fully oxidized enzyme and no binding to either metal in fully reduced enzyme; 2) a long range effect of the oxidation state of Fea or CuA on ligand binding at heme a3, but not at CuB; and 3) an insensitivity of either Fea3 or CuB ligand site to changes in ligand or oxidation state at the other site. The observed independence of the Fea3 and CuB sites provides further support for Fea3(3)+ OOH, rather than Fea3(3)+ OOCuB2+, as an intermediate in the reduction of O2 to water by the oxidase.  相似文献   

17.
The reaction between cytochrome c (Cc) and Rhodobacter sphaeroides cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) was studied using a cytochrome c derivative labeled with ruthenium trisbipyridine at lysine 55 (Ru-55-Cc). Flash photolysis of a 1:1 complex between Ru-55-Cc and CcO at low ionic strength results in electron transfer from photoreduced heme c to Cu(A) with an intracomplex rate constant of k(a) = 4 x 10(4) s(-1), followed by electron transfer from Cu(A) to heme a with a rate constant of k(b) = 9 x 10(4) s(-1). The effects of CcO surface mutations on the kinetics follow the order D214N > E157Q > E148Q > D195N > D151N/E152Q approximately D188N/E189Q approximately wild type, indicating that the acidic residues Asp(214), Glu(157), Glu(148), and Asp(195) on subunit II interact electrostatically with the lysines surrounding the heme crevice of Cc. Mutating the highly conserved tryptophan residue, Trp(143), to Phe or Ala decreased the intracomplex electron transfer rate constant k(a) by 450- and 1200-fold, respectively, without affecting the dissociation constant K(D). It therefore appears that the indole ring of Trp(143) mediates electron transfer from the heme group of Cc to Cu(A). These results are consistent with steady-state kinetic results (Zhen, Y., Hoganson, C. W., Babcock, G. T., and Ferguson-Miller, S. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 38032-38041) and a computational docking analysis (Roberts, V. A., and Pique, M. E. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 38051-38060).  相似文献   

18.
Proton and electron transfer events during the reaction of solubilized fully reduced bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase with molecular oxygen were investigated using the flow-flash technique. Time-resolved spectral changes resulting from ligand binding and electron transfer events were detected simultaneously with pH changes in the bulk. The kinetics and spectral changes in the visible region (450-750 nm) were probed by optical multichannel detection, allowing high spectral resolution on time scales from 50 ns to 50 ms. Experiments were carried out in the presence and absence of pH-sensitive dyes (carboxyfluorescein at pH 6.5, phenol red at pH 7.5, and m-cresol purple at pH 8.5) which permitted separation of spectral changes due to proton transfer from those caused by ligand binding and electron transfer. The transient spectra recorded in the absence of dye were analyzed by singular-value decomposition and multiexponential fitting. Five apparent lifetimes (0.93 microseconds, 10 microseconds, 36 microseconds, 90 microseconds, and 1.3 ms at pH 7.5) could consistently be distinguished and provided a basis for a reaction mechanism consistent with our most recent kinetic model [Sucheta, A., Szundi, I., and Einarsdóttir, O. (1999) Biochemistry 37, 17905-17914]. The dye response indicated that proton uptake occurred concurrently with the two slowest electron transfer steps, in agreement with previous results based on single-wavelength detection [Hallén, S., and Nilsson, T. (1992) Biochemistry 31, 11853-11859]. The stoichiometry of the proton uptake reactions was approximately 1.3 +/- 0.3, 1.4 +/- 0.3, and 1.6 +/- 0.5 protons per enzyme at pH 6.5, 7.5, and 8.5, respectively. The electron transfer between heme a and CuA was limited by proton uptake on a 90 microseconds time scale. We have established the lower limit of the true rate constant for the electron transfer between CuA and heme a to be approximately 2 x 10(5) s-1.  相似文献   

19.
Antalik M  Jancura D  Palmer G  Fabian M 《Biochemistry》2005,44(45):14881-14889
Internal electron transfer (ET) to heme a(3) during anaerobic reduction of oxidized bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) was studied under conditions where heme a and Cu(A) were fully reduced by excess hexaamineruthenium. The data show that ET to heme a(3) is controlled by the state of ionization of a single protolytic residue with a pK(a) of 6.5 +/- 0.2. On the basis of the view that ET to the catalytic site is limited by coupled proton transfer, this pK(a) was attributed to Glu60 which is located at the entrance of the proton-conducting K channel on the matrix side of CcO. It is proposed that Glu60 controls proton entry into the channel. However, even with this channel open, there is the second factor that regulates ET, and this is ascribed to the rate of proton diffusion in the channel. In addition, it is concluded that proton transfer in the K channel is reversibly inhibited by the detergent Triton X-100. It is also found that the rate of ET to heme a(3) in the as-isolated resting enzyme and in CcO "activated" by reaction of fully reduced enzyme with O(2) is the same, implying that the catalytic sites of these two forms of oxidized enzyme are essentially identical.  相似文献   

20.
The CuA center is a dinuclear Cu2S2(Cys) electron transfer center found in cytochrome c oxidase and nitrous oxide reductase. In a previous investigation of the equatorial histidine ligands' effect on the reduction potential, electron transfer and spectroscopic properties of the CuA center, His120 in the engineered CuA azurin was mutated to Asn, Asp, and Ala. The identical absorption and EPR spectra of these mutants indicate that a common ligand is bound to the copper center. To identify this replacement ligand, the His120Gly CuA azurin mutant was constructed and purified. Absorption and X-band EPR spectra show that His120Gly is similar to the other His120X (X = Asn, Asp, Ala) mutant proteins. Titrations with chloride, imidazole, and azide suggest that the replacement ligand is not exchangeable with exogenous ligands. The possibility of an internal amino acid acting as the replacement ligand for His120 in the His120X mutant proteins was investigated by analyzing the CuA azurin crystal structure and then converting the likely internal ligand, Asn 119, to Asp, Ser, or Ala in the His120Gly mutant. The double mutants H120G/Asn 119X (X = Asp, Ser, or Ala) displayed UV-Vis absorption and EPR spectra that are identical to His120Gly and the other His120X mutants, indicating that Asn119 is not the internal ligand replacing His120 in the His120X mutant proteins. These results demonstrate the remarkable stability of the dinuclear His120 mutants of CuA azurin.  相似文献   

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