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1.
Robert R. Sharp  C.F. Yocum 《BBA》1980,592(1):185-195
Proton spin-lattice relaxation rates (R1) have been measured in a variety of dark-adapted chloroplast suspensions over a range of field strengths between 1 and 15 kG (4–5 MHz). When the effects of EDTA or Tris washing on chloroplast relaxivities are compared, the pool of Mn associated with oxygen evolution is seen not to contribute significantly to relaxivity. Instead, nearly all of the observed relaxivity, which is characterized by a paramagnetic maximum near 20.7 MHz in the field dispersion profile of R1, appears to arise from contaminating non-functional Mn(II) that can be removed by EDTA during the isolation procedure. These observations, which contradict previous reports ascribing chloroplast relaxivity to the water-oxidizing system, require a reevaluation of proposed models, derived from NMR studies, of the state of Mn in the water-splitting reaction.Chloroplasts from which loosely bound non-functional Mn has been removed by EDTA washing do show an enhancement of relaxivity when exposed to NH2OH at concentrations known to inactivate water oxidation. This NH2OH-induced relaxivity is comprised of Mn(II) in two distinct paramagnetic sites. One site is chelatable by EDTA, whereas the other site is not. This finding suggests that some Mn(II) tightly bound to thylakoid membranes can contribute to relaxivity after inactivation of the oxygen-evolving reaction.  相似文献   

2.
We present evidence that the oxidation of Mn(II) in a zone above the O2/H2S interface in the water column of Saanich Inlet, British Columbia, Canada, is microbially catalyzed. We measured the uptake of 54Mn(II) in water samples under in situ conditions of pH and temperature and in the presence and absence of oxygen. Experiments in the absence of oxygen provided a measure of the exchange of the tracer between the dissolved and solid pools of Mn(II); we interpret the difference between experiments in the presence and absence of oxygen to be a measure of Mn(II) oxidation. Using this method we examined the effect of oxygen tension, Mn(II) concentration, and temperature on the initial in situ Mn(II) oxidation rate (V0). Mn(II) oxidation was almost twice as fast under conditions of 67% air saturation (V0=5.5 nM h−1) as with the in situ concentration of 15 μM (5% air saturation; V0=3.1 nM h−1). Additions of ca. 18 μM Mn(II) completely inhibited all Mn(II) oxidation at three different depths in the oxidizing zone, and there was a temperature optimum for Mn(II) oxidation of around 20°C. These results are consistent with biologically mediated Mn(II) oxidation and indicate that the rate is limited by both oxygen and the concentration of microbial binding sites in this environment.  相似文献   

3.
The spin-lattice relaxation rate of solvent protons in suspensions of chloroplast thylakoid membranes undergoes a large transient depression following illumination in white light. This change appears to require the presence of chelatable paramagnetic ions; it is absent in chloroplasts exposed to 1 mm EDTA during the homogenization step of the isolation procedure, but reappears when 50 μm MnCl2 is added to these suspensions. Conditions that inhibit light-induced R1 changes are (i) anaerobiosis, (ii) inhibition of plastocyanin function byHg+2/CN, and (iii) the presence of superoxide dismutase. These observations suggest that chemical oxidation of nonfunctional Mn (II) by superoxide ion, which is generated under aerobic conditions by autooxidizable acceptors of Photosystem I, is responsible for the phenomenon. This interpretation was confirmed by experiments involving superoxide generation in the dark, using the NADPH-driven diaphorase activity of ferredoxin-NADP-reductase with benzylviologen as an autooxidizable acceptor.  相似文献   

4.
Virus-like particles are powerful platforms for the development of functional hybrid materials. Here, we have grown a cross-linked polymer (cross-linked aminoethyl methacrylate) within the confines of the bacteriophage P22 capsid (P22–xAEMA) and functionalized the polymer with various loadings of paramagnetic manganese(III) protoporphyrin IX (MnPP) complexes for evaluation as a macromolecular magnetic resonance imaging contrast agent. The resulting construct (P22–xAEMA–MnPP) has r 1,particle = 7,098 mM?1 s?1 at 298 K and 2.1 T (90 MHz) for a loading of 3,646 MnPP molecules per capsid. The Solomon–Bloembergen–Morgan theory for paramagnetic relaxivity predicts conjugating MnPP to P22, a supramolecular structure, would result in an enhancement in ionic relaxivity; however, all loadings experienced low ionic relaxivities, r 1,ionic, ranging from 1.45 to 3.66 mM?1 s?1, similar to the ionic relaxivity of free MnPP. We hypothesize that intermolecular interactions between neighboring MnPP molecules block access of water to the metal site, resulting in low r 1,ionic relaxivities. We investigated the effect of MnPP interactions on relaxivity further by either blocking or exposing water binding sites on MnPP. On the basis of these results, future design strategies for enhanced r 1,ionic relaxivity are suggested. The measured r 2,ionic relaxivities demonstrated an inverse relationship between loading and relaxivity. This results in a loading-dependent r 2/r 1 behavior of these materials indicating synthetic control over the relaxivity properties, making them interesting alternatives to current magnetic resonance imaging contrast agents.  相似文献   

5.
Complexes formed between Mn(II) ion and acetohydroxamic acid (HAha), benzohydroxamic acid (HBha), N-methyl-acetohydroxamic acid (HMeAha), DFB model dihydroxamic acids (H2(3,4-DIHA), H2(3,3-DIHA), H2(2,5-DIHA), H2(2,5-H,H-DIHA), H2(2,4-DIHA), H2(2,3-DIHA)) and two trihydroxamate based natural siderophores, desferrioxamine B (H4DFB) and desferricoprogen (H3DFC) have been investigated under anaerobic condition (and some of them also under aerobic condition). The pH-potentiometric results showed the formation of well-defined complexes with moderate stability. Monohydroxamic acids not, but all of the dihydroxamic acids and trihydroxamic acids were able to hinder the hydrolysis of the metal ion up to pH ca. 11. Maximum three hydroxamates were found to coordinate to the Mn(II) ion, but presence of water molecule in the inner-sphere was also indicated by the corresponding relaxivity values even in the tris-chelated complexes. Moreover, prototropic exchange processes were found to increase the relaxation rate of the solvent water proton over the value of [Mnaqua]2+ in the protonated Mn(II)-siderophore complexes at physiological pH. The much higher stability of Mn(III)-hydroxamate (especially tris-chelated) complexes compared to the corresponding Mn(II)-containing species results in a significantly decreased formal potential compared to the Mn(III)aqua/Mn(II)aqua system. As a result, air oxygen becomes an oxidizing agent for these manganese(II)-hydroxamate complexes above pH 7.5. The oxidation processes, followed by UV-Vis spectrophotometry, were found to be stoichiometric only in the case of the tris-chelated complexes of siderophores, which predominate above pH 9. ESI-MS provided support about the stoichiometry and cyclic-voltammetry was used to determine the stability constants for the tris-chelated complexes, [Mn(HDFB)]+ and [MnDFC].  相似文献   

6.
The ability of micro‐organisms to oxidize manganese (Mn) from Mn(II) to Mn(III/IV) oxides transcends boundaries of biological clade or domain. Many bacteria and fungi oxidize Mn(II) to Mn(III/IV) oxides directly through enzymatic activity or indirectly through the production of reactive oxygen species. Here, we determine the oxygen isotope fractionation factors associated with Mn(II) oxidation via various biotic (bacteria and fungi) and abiotic Mn(II) reaction pathways. As oxygen in Mn(III/IV) oxides may be derived from precursor water and molecular oxygen, we use a twofold approach to determine the isotope fractionation with respect to each oxygen source. Using both 18O‐labeled water and closed‐system Rayleigh distillation approaches, we constrain the kinetic isotope fractionation factors associated with O atom incorporation during Mn(II) oxidation to ?17.3‰ to ?25.9‰ for O2 and ?1.9‰ to +1.8‰ for water. Results demonstrate that stable oxygen isotopes of Mn(III/IV) oxides have potential to distinguish between two main classes of biotic Mn(II) oxidation: direct enzymatic oxidation in which O2 is the oxidant and indirect enzymatic oxidation in which superoxide is the oxidant. The fraction of Mn(III/IV) oxide‐associated oxygen derived from water varies significantly (38%–62%) among these bio‐oxides with only weak relationship to Mn oxidation state, suggesting Mn(III) disproportionation may account for differences in the fraction of mineral‐bound oxygen from water and O2. Additionally, direct incorporation of molecular O2 suggests that Mn(III/IV) oxides contain a yet untapped proxy of of environmental O2, a parameter reflecting the integrated influence of global respiration, photorespiration, and several other biogeochemical reactions of global significance.  相似文献   

7.
The geochemical cycling of cobalt (Co) has often been considered to be controlled by the scavenging and oxidation of Co(II) on the surface of manganese [Mn(III,IV)] oxides or manganates. Because Mn(II) oxidation in the environment is often catalyzed by bacteria, we have investigated the ability of Mn(II)-oxidizing bacteria to bind and oxidize Co(II) in the absence of Mn(II) to determine whether some Mn(II)-oxidizing bacteria also oxidize Co(II) independently of Mn oxidation. We used the marine Bacillus sp. strain SG-1, which produces mature spores that oxidize Mn(II), apparently due to a protein in their spore coats (R.A. Rosson and K. H. Nealson, J. Bacteriol. 151:1027-1034, 1982; J. P. M. de Vrind et al., Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 52:1096-1100, 1986). A method to measure Co(II) oxidation using radioactive 57Co as a tracer and treatments with nonradioactive (cold) Co(II) and ascorbate to discriminate bound Co from oxidized Co was developed. SG-1 spores were found to oxidize Co(II) over a wide range of pH, temperature, and Co(II) concentration. Leucoberbelin blue, a reagent that reacts with Mn(III,IV) oxides forming a blue color, was found to also react with Co(III) oxides and was used to verify the presence of oxidized Co in the absence of added Mn(II). Co(II) oxidation occurred optimally around pH 8 and between 55 and 65°C. SG-1 spores oxidized Co(II) at all Co(II) concentrations tested from the trace levels found in seawater to 100 mM. Co(II) oxidation was found to follow Michaelis-Menten kinetics. An Eadie-Hofstee plot of the data suggests that SG-1 spores have two oxidation systems, a high-affinity-low-rate system (Km, 3.3 × 10-8 M; Vmax, 1.7 × 10-15 M · spore-1 · h-1) and a low-affinity-high-rate system (Km, 5.2 × 10-6 M; Vmax, 8.9 × 10-15 M · spore-1 · h-1). SG-1 spores did not oxidize Co(II) in the absence of oxygen, also indicating that oxidation was not due to abiological Co(II) oxidation on the surface of preformed Mn(III,IV) oxides. These results suggest that some microorganisms may directly oxidize Co(II) and such biological activities may exert some control on the behavior of Co in nature. SG-1 spores may also have useful applications in metal removal, recovery, and immobilization processes.  相似文献   

8.
Manganese(II)-oxidizing bacteria play an integral role in the cycling of Mn as well as other metals and organics. Prior work with Mn(II)-oxidizing bacteria suggested that Mn(II) oxidation involves a multicopper oxidase, but whether this enzyme directly catalyzes Mn(II) oxidation is unknown. For a clearer understanding of Mn(II) oxidation, we have undertaken biochemical studies in the model marine α-proteobacterium, Erythrobacter sp. strain SD21. The optimum pH for Mn(II)-oxidizing activity was 8.0 with a specific activity of 2.5 nmol × min−1 × mg−1 and a K m = 204 μM. The activity was soluble suggesting a cytoplasmic or periplasmic protein. Mn(III) was an intermediate in the oxidation of Mn(II) and likely the primary product of enzymatic oxidation. The activity was stimulated by pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ), NAD+, and calcium but not by copper. In addition, PQQ rescued Pseudomonas putida MnB1 non Mn(II)-oxidizing mutants with insertions in the anthranilate synthase gene. The substrate and product of anthranilate synthase are intermediates in various quinone biosyntheses. Partially purified Mn(II) oxidase was enriched in quinones and had a UV/VIS absorption spectrum similar to a known quinone requiring enzyme but not to multicopper oxidases. These studies suggest that quinones may play an integral role in bacterial Mn(II) oxidation.  相似文献   

9.
A fifteen minute incubation of spinach chloroplasts with the divalent Ca2+ chelator, EGTA, in concentrations 50–250 μM, inhibits electron transport through both photosystems. All photosystem II partial reactions, including indophenol, ferricyanide and the DCMU-insensitive silicomolybdate reduction are inhibited from 70–100%. The photosystem II donor reaction, diphenyl carbazide → indophenol, is also inhibited, indicating that the inhibition site comes after the Mn2+ site, and that the first Ca2+ effect noted (site II) is not on the water oxidation enzyme, as is commonly assumed, but between the Mn2+ site and plastoquinone A pool. The other photosystem II effect of EGTA (Ca2+ site I), occurs in the region between plastoquinone A and P700 in the electron transport chain of chloroplasts. About 50% inhibition of the reaction ascorbate + TMPD → methyl viologen is given by incubation with 200 μM EGTA for 15 min. Ca2+ site II activity can be restored with 20 mM CaCl2. Ca2+ site I responds to Ca2+ and plastocyanin added jointly. More than 90% activity in the ascorbate + TMPD → methylviologen reaction can be restored. Various ways in which Ca2+ ions could affect chloroplast structure and function are discussed. Since EGTA is more likely to penetrate chloroplast membranes than EDTA, which is known to remove CF1, the coupling factor, from chloroplast membranes, and since Mg2+ ions are ineffective in restoring activity, it is concluded that Ca2+ may function in the electron transport chain of chloroplasts in a hitherto unsuspected manner.  相似文献   

10.
Direct biotic and homogeneous abiotic Fe(II) oxidation rates as well as oxidation rates of Fe(II) with MnOX were determined in laboratory experiments and compared with biotic Mn(II) oxidation rates. In groundwaters and thermal installation waters, parameters for both Fe(II) oxidation steps were studied and products of biotic and abiotic Fe(II) and Mn(II) oxidation were analyzed. Direct Fe(II) oxidation of active Leptothrix cholodnii cultures can reach first-order rates of up to 1.17 ± 0.90 h?1. Second-order rates of Fe(II) oxidation with biogenic, Leptothrix-cholodnii- and Leptothrix-discophora-SS-1-originating MnOX lead to rates comparable with those as obtained with abiotic H+-birnessite.  相似文献   

11.
The interaction between saccharose and manganese in different oxidation states was studied in alkaline media by polarographic, potentiometric, ESR spectroscopic and UV-Vis spectrophotometric methods. The results showed that stable manganese(II) and manganese(III) complexes and a complex of manganese(II,III) in a mixed oxidation state were formed with the composition [MnIIL(OH)2], [Mn2IIIL2(OH)8]2− and [MnIIMnIIIL2(OH)6], respectively. The manganese(II)-saccharose complex was shown to dimerize in alkaline media. The stability constants of the Mn(II,III) and Mn(III) complexes were determined. The oxidation of the manganese(II)-saccharose complex by a stoichiometric amount of K3 [FeCN]6 resulted in the formation of the manganese(III) and manganese(IV) complexes. However, oxidation by molecular oxygen only yielded the manganese(III) complex which reduced spontaneously in inert atmosphere to the mixed valence Mn(II,III) complex. The latter was able to be oxidized again by oxygen to the Mn(III) complex. This process proved to be reversible and could be repeated several times.  相似文献   

12.
 The non-covalent interaction between human serum albumin (HSA) and DOTA-like Gd(III) complexes containing hydrophobic benzyloxymethyl (BOM) substituents has been thoroughly investigated by measuring the solvent proton relaxation rates of their aqueous solutions. The binding association constants (K A) to HSA are directly related to the number of hydrophobic substituents present on the surface of the complexes. Furthermore, an estimation of ΔH° and ΔS° has been obtained by the temperature dependence of K A. Assays performed with the competitor probes warfarin and ibuprofen established that the complexes interact with HSA through two nearly equivalent binding sites located in the subdomains IIA and IIIA of the protein. Strong relaxation enhancements, promoted by the formation of slowly tumbling paramagnetic adducts, have been measured at 20 MHz for complexes containing two and three hydrophobic substituents. The macromolecular adduct with the latter species has a relaxivity of 53.2±0.7 mM–1 s–1, which represents the highest value so far reported for a Gd(III) complex. The temperature dependence of the relaxivity for the paramagnetic adducts with HSA indicates long exchange lifetimes for the water molecules dipolarly interacting with the paramagnetic centre. This is likely to be related to the formation, upon hydrophobic interaction of the complexes with HSA, of a clathrate-like, second-coordination-sphere arrangement of water molecules. Besides affecting the dissociative pathway of the coordinated water molecule, this water arrangement may itself significantly contribute to enhancement of the bulk solvent relaxation rate. Received: 6 November 1995 / Accepted: 17 April 1996  相似文献   

13.
The investigation of new Mn(II)-based MRI/Molecular Imaging probes responsive to the enzyme tyrosinase for potential diagnostic applications is herein described. The expression of the enzyme tyrosinase, an oxidoreductase, is up-regulated in melanoma cancer cells. Three novel ligands (L1, L2 and L3) were designed as modified acyclic polyaminocarboxylate chelates by introducing an l-tyrosine residue in place of an aminoacetate unit. The corresponding Mn(II) complexes were fully characterised by 1H NMR relaxometric techniques in aqueous media. The responsive activity towards the expression of tyrosinase was then assessed by monitoring the 1H 1/T1 relaxivity changes during incubation experiments in buffered solutions containing tyrosinase at different concentrations and in B16F10 melanoma cell homogenate. New insight on the mechanism of action of these systems was gained by measuring the magnetic field dependence of the relaxivity and ESR spectra of the incubated solutions. The systems developed showed responsive activity to tyrosinase with a relaxation enhancement spanning from 50% (MnL1) to 350% (MnL3) which augurs well for the development of diagnostic probes to detect melanoma cancer.  相似文献   

14.
The synthesis, structure and characterization of the dinuclear Mn(II) complex [Mn2(LO)(μ-OAc)2](ClO4) (1) where LOH = 2,6-bis{bis(2-(2-pyridyl)ethyl)aminomethyl)}-4-methylphenol are reported. The reaction of Mn(ClO4)2 · 6H2O with the dinucleating ligand LOH and H3CCOONa in the presence of NEt3 in dry, degassed methanol and under an argon atmosphere, yields 1 as a colorless powder. The crystal structure of 1, determined by X-ray diffraction methods, shows a dinuclear Mn(II) complex in which two Mn(II) ions, each in six-coordinate approximate octahedral coordination, are bridged by the phenolate oxygen of LO and by two acetate ions in a syn,syn-1,3-bridging mode. The Mn-Mn distance is 3.557(1) Å and Mn-Ophenolate-Mn angle is 112.50(9)°. Cyclic voltammetry of 1 in acetonitrile solution shows a quasi-reversible wave at E1/2 = 0.65 V, for the Mn2(II,II)/Mn2(II,III) redox process, and an irreversible oxidation peak at Ep,c = 1.22 V versus Ag/AgCl for the Mn2(II,III) to Mn2(III,III) oxidation process. Controlled potential electrolysis of 1 in acetonitrile solution at 0.85 V (versus Ag/AgCl) takes up 1 F of charge per mole of 1 to yield a brown solution of the Mn2(II,III) state of the complex, which, however, is unstable and reverts back to the Mn2(II,II) state in solution at room temperature. Least square fitting of the variable temperature magnetic susceptibility measurements on powdered sample of 1 is obtained with g = 1.888, J = −2.75 cm−1, Par = 0.008, TIP = 0. The low −J value and the room temperature calculated magnetic moment of the complex (5.30 BM per Mn(II)), which is less than the spin-only moment of Mn(II), show that the two Mn(II) ions are weakly antiferromagnetically coupled.  相似文献   

15.
Rita Khanna  S. Rajan  H.S. Gutowsky 《BBA》1983,725(1):10-18
Measurements were made of the water proton relaxation rate (T?12 = R2), electron spin resonance (ESR) six-line signal of ‘free’ Mn2+, and O2-evolution activity in thylakoid membranes from pea leaves. The main results are: (1) Aging of thylakoids at 35°C causes a parallel decrease in O2-evolution activity, in R2 and in the content of bound Mn, suggesting that R2 may be related to the loosely bound Mn involved in O2 evolution. (2) Treatment of thylakoids with tetraphenylboron (TPB) at [TPB] > 2 mM produces a 2-fold increase in R2, without release of Mn2+. The titration curve exhibits three sharp end points. The first end point occurs at a [TPB][chlorophyll] of 1.25, at which the O2 evolution is completely inhibited. (3) Treatment of thylakoids with NH2OH also increases R2 by nearly 2-fold, either by the reduction of the higher oxidation states of Mn to Mn2+ and / or by exposing the Mn to solvent protons. Also, progressive release of bound Mn occurs at [NH2OH] ≥ 1 mM as shown by an increase increase in the Mn2+ ESR signal and a decrease in R2. (4) Addition of H2O2 (0.1–1.0%) to thylakoids causes an enhancement of R2 similar to that by NH2OH, but without the release of Mn2+. (5) Heat treatment of thylakoids at 40–50°C releases Mn2+ and increases R2. Conversely, pH values of 7 to 4 release Mn2+ without changing R2 while pH values of 7–9 increase R2 without releasing Mn2+. Thus, both high and low pH values as well as the heat treatment cause structural changes enhancing the relaxivity of the bound Mn or of other paramagnetic species.  相似文献   

16.
Multicopper oxidases (MCOs) are a family of enzymes that use copper ions as cofactors to oxidize various substrates. Previous research has demonstrated that several MCOs such as MnxG, MofA and MoxA can act as putative Mn(II) oxidases. Meanwhile, the endospore coat protein CotA from Bacillus species has been confirmed as a typical MCO. To study the relationship between CotA and the Mn(II) oxidation, the cotA gene from a highly active Mn(II)-oxidizing strain Bacillus pumilus WH4 was cloned and overexpressed in Escherichia coli strain M15. The purified CotA contained approximately four copper atoms per molecule and showed spectroscopic properties typical of blue copper oxidases. Importantly, apart from the laccase activities, the CotA also displayed substantial Mn(II)-oxidase activities both in liquid culture system and native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The optimum Mn(II) oxidase activity was obtained at 53°C in HEPES buffer (pH 8.0) supplemented with 0.8 mM CuCl2. Besides, the addition of o-phenanthroline and EDTA both led to a complete suppression of Mn(II)-oxidizing activity. The specific activity of purified CotA towards Mn(II) was 0.27 U/mg. The Km, Vmax and kcat values towards Mn(II) were 14.85±1.17 mM, 3.01×10−6±0.21 M·min−1 and 0.32±0.02 s−1, respectively. Moreover, the Mn(II)-oxidizing activity of the recombinant E. coli strain M15-pQE-cotA was significantly increased when cultured both in Mn-containing K liquid medium and on agar plates. After 7-day liquid cultivation, M15-pQE-cotA resulted in 18.2% removal of Mn(II) from the medium. Furthermore, the biogenic Mn oxides were clearly observed on the cell surfaces of M15-pQE-cotA by scanning electron microscopy. To our knowledge, this is the first report that provides the direct observation of Mn(II) oxidation with the heterologously expressed protein CotA, Therefore, this novel finding not only establishes the foundation for in-depth study of Mn(II) oxidation mechanisms, but also offers a potential biocatalyst for Mn(II) removal.  相似文献   

17.
Photosynthesis involves the conversion of light into chemical energy through a series of electron transfer reactions within membrane-bound pigment/protein complexes. The Photosystem II (PSII) complex in plants, algae and cyanobacteria catalyse the oxidation of water to molecular O2. The complexity of PSII has thus far limited attempts to chemically replicate its function. Here we introduce a reverse engineering approach to build a simple, light-driven photo-catalyst based on the organization and function of the donor side of the PSII reaction centre. We have used bacterioferritin (BFR) (cytochrome b1) from Escherichia coli as the protein scaffold since it has several, inherently useful design features for engineering light-driven electron transport. Among these are: (i.) a di-iron binding site; (ii.) a potentially redox-active tyrosine residue; and (iii.) the ability to dimerise and form an inter-protein heme binding pocket within electron tunnelling distance of the di-iron binding site. Upon replacing the heme with the photoactive zinc-chlorin e6 (ZnCe6) molecule and the di-iron binding site with two manganese ions, we show that the two Mn ions bind as a weakly coupled di-nuclear Mn2II,II centre, and that ZnCe6 binds in stoichiometric amounts of 1:2 with respect to the dimeric form of BFR. Upon illumination the bound ZnCe6 initiates electron transfer, followed by oxidation of the di-nuclear Mn centre possibly via one of the inherent tyrosine residues in the vicinity of the Mn cluster. The light dependent loss of the MnII EPR signals and the formation of low field parallel mode Mn EPR signals are attributed to the formation of MnIII species. The formation of the MnIII is concomitant with consumption of oxygen. Our model is the first artificial reaction centre developed for the photo-catalytic oxidation of a di-metal site within a protein matrix which potentially mimics water oxidation centre (WOC) photo-assembly.  相似文献   

18.
 A novel heptacoordinating ligand consisting of a thirteen-membered tetraazamacrocycle containing the pyridine ring and bearing three methylenephosphonate groups (PCTP-[13]) has been synthesized. Its Gd(III) complex displays a remarkably high longitudinal water proton relaxivity (7.7 mM–1 s–1 at 25  °C, 20 MHz and pH 7.5) which has been accounted for in terms of contributions arising from (1) one water molecule bound to the metal ion, (2) hydrogen-bonded water molecules in the second coordination sphere, or (3) water molecules diffusing near the paramagnetic chelate. Variable-temperature 17O-NMR transverse relaxation data indicate that the residence lifetime of the metal-bound water molecule is very short (8.0 ns at 25  °C) with respect to the Gd(III) complexes currently considered as contrast agents for magnetic resonance imaging. Furthermore, GdPCTP-[13] interacts with human serum albumin (HSA), likely through electrostatic forces. By comparing water proton relaxivity data for the GdPCTP-[13]-HSA adduct, measured as a function of temperature and magnetic field strength, with those for the analogous adduct with GdDOTP (a twelve-membered tetraaza macrocyclic tetramethylenephosphonate complex lacking a metal-bound water molecule), it has been possible to propose a general picture accounting for the main determinants of the relaxation enhancement observed when a paramagnetic Gd(III) complex is bound to HSA. Basically, the relaxation enhancement in these systems arises from (1) water molecules in the hydration shell of the macromolecule and protein exchangeable protons which lie close to the interaction site of the paramagnetic complex and (2) the metal bound water molecule(s). As far as the latter contribution is concerned, the interaction with the protein causes an elongation of the residence lifetime of the metal-bound water molecule, which limits, to some extent, the potential relaxivity enhancement expected upon the binding of the paramagnetic complex to HSA. Received: 27 January 1997 / Accepted: 12 May 1997  相似文献   

19.
The spectra of the absorbance changes due to the turnover of the so-called S-states of the oxygen-evolving apparatus were determined. The changes were induced by a series of saturating flashes in dark-adapted Photosystem II preparations, isolated from spinach chloroplasts. The electron acceptor was 2,5-dichloro-p-benzoquinone. The fraction of System II centers involved in each S-state transition on each flash was calculated from the oscillation pattern of the 1 ms absorbance transient which accompanies oxygen release. The difference spectrum associated with each S-state transition was then calculated from the observed flash-induced difference spectra. The spectra were found to contain a contribution by electron transfer at the acceptor side, which oscillated during the flash series approximately with a periodicity of two and was apparently modulated to some extent by the redox state of the donor side. At the donor side, the S0 → S1, S1 → S2 and S2 → S3 transitions were all three accompanied by the same absorbance difference spectrum, attributed previously to an oxidation of Mn(III) to Mn(IV) (Dekker, J.P., Van Gorkom, H.J., Brok, M. and Ouwehand, L. (1984) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 764, 301–309). It is concluded that each of these S-state transitions involves the oxidation of an Mn(III) to Mn(IV). The spectrum and amplitude of the millisecond transient were in agreement with its assignment to the reduction of the oxidized secondary donor Z+ and the three Mn(IV) ions.  相似文献   

20.
Boris K. Semin  Michael Seibert 《BBA》2006,1757(3):189-197
The role of carboxylic residues at the high-affinity, Mn-binding site in the ligation of iron cations blocking the site [Biochemistry 41 (2000) 5854] was studied, using a method developed to extract the iron cations blocking the site. We found that specifically bound Fe(III) cations can be extracted with citrate buffer at pH 3.0. Furthermore, citrate can also prevent the photooxidation of Fe(II) cations by YZ. Participation of a COOH group(s) in the ligation of Fe(III) at the high-affinity site was investigated using 1-ethyl-3-[(3-dimethylamino)propyl] carbodiimide (EDC), a chemical modifier of carboxylic amino acid residues. Modification of the COOH groups inhibits the light-induced oxidation of exogenous Mn(II) cations by Mn-depleted photosystem II (PSII[−Mn]) membranes. The rate of Mn(II) oxidation saturates at ≥10 μM in PSII(−Mn) membranes and ≥500 μM in EDC-treated PSII (−Mn) samples. Intact PSII(−Mn) membranes have only one site for Mn(II) oxidation via YZ (dissociation constant, Kd = 0.64 μM), while EDC-treated PSII(−Mn) samples have two sites (Kd = 1.52 and 22 μM; the latter is the low-affinity site). When PSII(−Mn) membranes were incubated with Fe(II) before modifier treatment (to block the high-affinity site) and the blocking iron cations were extracted with citrate (pH 3.0) after modification, the membranes contained only one site (Kd = 2.3 μM) for exogenous Mn(II) oxidation by YZ radical. In this case, the rate of electron donation via YZ saturated at a Mn(II) concentration ≥15 μM. These results indicate that the carboxylic residue participating in Mn(II) coordination and the binding of oxidized manganese cations at the HAZ site is protected from the action of the modifier by the iron cations blocking the HAZ site. We concluded that the carboxylic residue (D1 Asp-170) participating in the coordination of the manganese cation at the HAZ site (Mn4 in the tetranuclear manganese cluster [Science 303 (2004) 1831]) is also involved in the ligation of the Fe cation(s) blocking the high-affinity Mn-binding site.  相似文献   

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