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1.
The present state of knowledge of the formation of the Compounds I of peroxidases and catalases is discussed in terms of the restrictions which must be placed upon a valid mechanism. It is likely that all Compounds I contain one oxygen atom bound to the heme-iron as in the Compound I of chloroperoxidase. Thus the formation of Compound I, obtained after molecular hydrogen peroxide and the enzyme diffuse together, involves a minimum of two bond ruptures and the formation of two new bonds. Yet this amazing reaction proceeds with an activation energy equal to or less than that for the fluidity of water. This result can only be accounted for by including at least one reversible step. Since Compound I formation requires the formation of an “inner sphere” complex, the presence or absence of water in the sixth co-ordination position of the heme-iron is of crucial importance. A comparison of the rates of ligand binding with the rate of Compound I formation indicate that the inner sphere complex leading to Compound I formation is formed by an excellent nucleophile, probably the peroxide anion, formed by a proton transfer from hydrogen peroxide. This proton cannot equilibrate with the bulk solvent. A proton derived from the active site would appear to be added to the hydroxide ion which permits a molecule of water to depart upon oxygen atom addition (or substitution) to (or at) the heme-iron. It is tentatively suggested that Compound I of catalase has a single active site per subunit molecule and that Compound I of peroxidase normally has two reactive sites.  相似文献   

2.
Two key amino acids, Thr252 and Asp251, are known to be important for dioxygen activation by cytochrome P450cam. We have solved crystal structures of a critical intermediate, the ferrous dioxygen complex (Fe(II)-O2), of the wild-type P450cam and its mutants, D251N and T252A. The wild-type dioxygen complex structure is very much the same as reported previously (Schlichting, I., Berendzen, J., Chu, K., Stock, A. M., Maves, S. A., Benson, D. E., Sweet, R. M., Ringe, D., Petsko, G. A., and Sligar, S. G. (2000) Science 287, 1615-1622) with the exception of higher occupancy and a more ordered structure of the iron-linked dioxygen and two "catalytic" water molecules that form part of a proton relay system to the iron-linked dioxygen. Due to of the altered conformation of the I helix groove these two waters are missing in the D251N dioxygen complex which explains its lower catalytic activity and slower proton transfer to the dioxygen ligand. Similarly, the T252A mutation was expected to disrupt the active site solvent structure leading to hydrogen peroxide formation rather than substrate hydroxylation. Unexpectedly, however, the two "catalytic" waters are retained in the T252A mutant. Based on these findings, we propose that the Thr(252) accepts a hydrogen bond from the hydroperoxy (Fe(III)-OOH) intermediate that promotes the second protonation on the distal oxygen atom, leading to O-O bond cleavage and compound I formation.  相似文献   

3.
Reconstitution of the endothelial nitric oxide synthase heme domain (NOS) with the catalytically noncompetent 4-aminotetrahydrobiopterin has allowed us to prepare at -40 degrees C the oxyferrous-NOS-substrate complexes of both L-arginine (Arg) and N(G)-hydroxyarginine (NOHA). We have radiolytically cryoreduced these complexes at 77 K and used EPR and ENDOR spectroscopies to characterize the initial products of reduction, as well as intermediates that arise during stepwise annealing to higher temperatures. Peroxo-ferri-NOS is the primary product of 77 K cryoreduction when either Arg or NOHA is the substrate. Proton ENDOR spectra of this state suggest that the peroxo group is H-bonded to a [guanidinium-water] network that forms because the binding of O2 to the ferroheme of NOS recruits H2O. At no stage of reaction/annealing does one observe an EPR signal from a hydroperoxo-ferri state with either substrate. Instead, peroxo-ferri-NOS-substrate complexes convert to a product-state intermediate at the extremely low temperature of 165-170 K. EPR and proton ENDOR spectra of the intermediate formed with Arg as substrate support the suggestion that the reaction involves the formation and attack of Compound I. Within the time/temperature resolution of the present experiments, samples with Arg and NOHA as substrate behave the same in the initial steps of cryoreduction/annealing, despite the different acid/base characteristics of the two substrates. This leads us to discuss the possibility that ambient-temperature catalytic conversion of both substrates is initiated by reduction of the oxy-ferroheme to the hydroperoxo-ferriheme through a coupled proton-electron transfer from a heme-pocket reductant, and that Arg may provide the stoichiometrically second proton of catalysis.  相似文献   

4.
The proton stoichiometry for the oxidation of cytochrome c peroxidase (ferrocytochrome c: hydrogen-peroxide oxidoreductase, EC 1.11.1.5) to cytochrome c peroxidase Compound I by H2O2, for the reduction of cytochrome c peroxidase Compound I to cytochrome c peroxidase Compound II by ferrocyanide, and for the reduction of cytochrome c peroxidase Compound II to the native enzyme by ferrocyanide has been determined as a function of pH between pH 4 and 8. The basic stoichiometry for the reaction is that no protons are required for the oxidation of the native enzyme to Compound I, while one proton is required for the reduction of Compound I to Compound II, and one proton is required for the reduction of Compound II to the native enzyme. Superimposed upon the basic stoichiometry is a contribution due to the perturbation of two ionizable groups in the enzyme by the redox reactions. The pKa values for the two groups are 4.9 +/- 0.3 and 5.7 +/- 0.2 in the native enzyme, 4.1 +/- 0.4 and 7.8 +/- 0.2 in Compound I, and 4.3 +/- 0.4 and 6.7 +/- 0.2 in Compound II.  相似文献   

5.
The most recently proposed mechanisms for the formation of the Compound I intermediates of the peroxidases and catalases have been based on the crystallographic elucidation of the enzyme structures. It has been assumed that these mechanisms are compatible with an earlier proposal of the formation of a reversible enzyme-substrate intermediate called Compound 0, which was based on data that pre-dated the availability of the enzyme structures. However, it is argued here that this is not the case and some modifications of the existing mechanism are proposed which reconcile the structural, kinetic and energetic data for the reactions. This paper focuses attention on horseradish peroxidase isoenzyme C and particularly on the acid-base properties of the imidazole side chain of distal histidine 42. This imidazole group has an exceptionally low pK(a) value in the resting enzyme, which is higher in Compound I and higher still in Compound II. The pK(a) value must also be greatly increased following Compound 0 formation so that the imidazole can become an effective proton acceptor. An explanation is offered in a dielectric insertion (DI) model, in which the peroxide substrate, or fragments thereof, screens the influence of the positively charged heme iron on the pK(a) value of the imidazole group. It is proposed that Compound 0 is converted to a second intermediate, Compound 0*, by intramolecular proton transfer along a pre-existing hydrogen bond, a process which reduces the energy requirements of charge separation in the deprotonation of hydrogen peroxide.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Horseradish peroxidase C (HRP; ferric) reacts with H2O2 to form Compound I, with an equilibrium constant of about 1014 M–1. Two-step reduction of Compound I to Compound II and further to the ferric enzyme occurs reversibly at Eo values of 0.90 and 0.93 V (pH 7.0), respectively. The pH dependence of Eo values for each one-electron step, ferrous ferric Compound II Compound I indicates the presence of redox-linked ionization at pKa values of 7.3 in the ferrous state, 11.0 in the ferric and 8.6 in Compound II. Zinc-substituted HRP C is oxidized to its free-radical form at an Eo value of 0.74 (pH 6.0). Comparison of oxidized zinc HRP C with Compound I shows that Compound I contains a porphyrin -cation radical. The flash photolysis study on the NO-ferric HRP C complex clearly indicates that the iron is pentacoordinated in HRP C while it is hexacoordinated in metmyoglobin. From the kinetic analysis of the acid-alkaline conversion of HRP C, the second-order rate constants of the reactions with H+ and HO are estimated to be 1.5 × 1010 and 6.7 × 104 M–1s–1, respectively. The latter rate constant greatly varies with the kind of hemoproteins. In the presence of HRP C and O2, indole-3-acetate is oxidized to its hydroperoxide form, which reacts effectively with HRP C to form Compound I and further converts Compound I to a verdohemoprotein.Abbreviations HRP horseradish peroxidase (HRP without subgroup letter denotes a classical preparation consisting of HRP B and HRP C) - EPR electron paramagnetic resonance - NMR nuclear magnetic resonance  相似文献   

7.
Unstable reaction intermediates of the cytochrome P450 catalytic cycle have been prepared at cryogenic temperatures using radiolytic one-electron reduction of the oxy-P450 CYP101 complex. Since a rate-limiting step in the catalytic cycle of the enzyme is the reduction of the ferrous oxygenated heme protein, subsequent reaction intermediates do not normally accumulate. Using (60)Co gamma-irradiation, the primary reduced oxy-P450 species at 77 K has been identified as a superoxo- or hydroperoxo-Fe(3+)-heme complex (Davydov, R., Macdonald, I. D. G., Makris, T. M., Sligar, S. G., and Hoffman, B. M. (1999) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 121, 10654-10655). The electronic absorption spectroscopy is an essential tool to characterize cytochrome P450 intermediates and complements paramagnetic methods, which are blind to important diamagnetic or antiferromagnetically coupled states. We report a method of trapping unstable states of redox enzymes using phosphorus-32 as an internal source of electrons. We determine the UV-visible optical spectra of the reduced oxygenated state of CYP101 and show that the primary intermediate, a hydroperoxo-P450, is stable below 180 K and converts smoothly to the product complex at approximately 195 K. In the course of the thermal annealing, no spectral changes indicating the presence of oxoferryl species (the so-called compound I type spectrum) was observed.  相似文献   

8.
The stoichiometry of the oxygenation reaction of cis,cis-eicosa-11,14-dienoic acid catalyzed by prostaglandin endoperoxide synthase and soybean lipoxygenase has been investigated by using steady-state initial rate measurements. The rate of product formation (conjugated diene hydroperoxy and hydroxy derivatives) was followed spectrophotometrically at 235 nm, and the rate of oxygen consumption was measured polarographically. The ratio of the two rates, d[conjugated diene]/-d[O2], is 2/1 for the prostaglandin endoperoxide synthase catalyzed reaction and 1/1 for the lipoxygenase reaction. The 2/1 ratio can be explained by two interrelated routes, each of which results in formation of the conjugated diene hydroxy derivative of the acid. One route, initiated by hydrogen atom abstraction from the acid by Compound I, results in formation of the conjugated diene hydroperoxy derivative. The latter is converted to the hydroxy derivative by regenerating Compound I from the native enzyme. The other route involves direct oxygen atom insertion into the acid by the tyrosyl radical form of Compound I. The decrease in absorbance at 235 nm obtained in the presteady-state phase suggests that during the initial contact of hydroperoxide and enzyme an epoxy-hydroxy fatty acid-enzyme complex may be formed.  相似文献   

9.
The oxidation of yeast cytochrome c peroxidase by hydrogen peroxide produces a unique enzyme intermediate, cytochrome c peroxidase Compound I, in which the ferric heme iron has been oxidized to an oxyferryl state, Fe(IV), and an amino acid residue has been oxidized to a radical state. The reduction of cytochrome c peroxidase Compound I by horse heart ferrocytochrome c is biphasic in the presence of excess ferrocytochrome c as cytochrome c peroxidase Compound I is reduced to the native enzyme via a second enzyme intermediate, cytochrome c peroxidase Compound II. In the first phase of the reaction, the oxyferryl heme iron in Compound I is reduced to the ferric state producing Compound II which retains the amino acid free radical. The pseudo-first order rate constant for reduction of Compound I to Compound II increases with increasing cytochrome c concentration in a hyperbolic fashion. The limiting value at infinite cytochrome c concentration, which is attributed to the intracomplex electron transfer rate from ferrocytochrome c to the heme site in Compound I, is 450 +/- 20 s-1 at pH 7.5 and 25 degrees C. Ferricytochrome c inhibits the reaction in a competitive manner. The reduction of the free radical in Compound II is complex. At low cytochrome c peroxidase concentrations, the reduction rate is 5 +/- 3 s-1, independent of the ferrocytochrome c concentration. At higher peroxidase concentrations, a term proportional to the square of the Compound II concentration is involved in the reduction of the free radical. Reduction of Compound II is not inhibited by ferricytochrome c. The rates and equilibrium constant for the interconversion of the free radical and oxyferryl forms of Compound II have also been determined.  相似文献   

10.
A water molecule is coproduced with the Compound I intermediate in the reactions of native heme peroxidases and catalases with hydrogen peroxide. As a result of water release/rebinding from/to the coproduct formation site the Compound I intermediate may exist in two forms: a "wet" form, Compound I(H(2)O), in which a water molecule is present at or near the site of coproduct water formation, and Compound I, in which the coproduct water formation site is "dry." It is postulated that the absence or presence of a water molecule at this site provides the structural basis for a redox pathway switching mechanism, such that the transition states for 2-electron equivalent reduction of Compound I intermediates are accessible in the dry form, but that in the wet form only 1-electron equivalent processes are possible, unless release of water can be stimulated. This concept provides the basis of a general mechanism in which the classical functional distinction between catalases and peroxidases, as well as the more complex behavior observed in halide oxidation and halogenation reactions, appear as particular cases in which variations in the degree of retention of water at the coproduct formation site influence Compound I reactivity.  相似文献   

11.
To examine the role of the distal His42 residue in the catalytic mechanism of pea cytosolic ascorbate peroxidase, two site-directed variants were prepared in which His42 was replaced with alanine (H42A) or glutamic acid (H42E). Electronic spectra of the ferric derivatives of H42A and H42E (pH 7.0, mu = 0.10 m, 25.0 degrees C) revealed wavelength maxima [lambda(max) (nm): 397, 509, approximately equal to 540(sh), 644 (H42A); 404, 516, approximately equal to 538(sh), 639 (H42E)] consistent with a predominantly five-co-ordinate high-spin iron. The specific activity of H42E for oxidation of L-ascorbate (8.2 +/- 0.3 U.mg(-1)) was approximately equal to 30-fold lower than that of the recombinant wild-type enzyme (rAPX); the H42A variant was essentially inactive but activity could be partially recovered by addition of exogenous imidazoles. The spectra of the Compound I intermediates of H42A [lambda(max) (nm) = 403, 534, 575(sh), 645] and H42E [lambda(max) (nm) = 404, 530, 573(sh), 654] were similar to those of rAPX. Pre-steady-state data for formation of Compound I for H42A and H42E were consistent with a mechanism involving accumulation of a transient enzyme intermediate (K(d)) followed by conversion of this intermediate into Compound I (k'(1)). Values for k'(1) and K(d) were, respectively, 4.3 +/- 0.2 s(-1) and 30 +/- 2.0 mM (H42A) and 28 +/- 1.0 s(-1) and 0.09 +/- 0.01 mM (H42E). Photodiode array experiments for H42A revealed wavelength maxima for this intermediate at 401 nm, 522 nm and 643 nm, consistent with the formation of a transient [H42A-H(2)O(2)] species. Rate constants for Compound I formation for H42A were independent of pH, but for rAPX and H42E were pH-dependent [pKa = 4.9 +/- 0.1 (rAPX) and pK(a) = 6.7 +/- 0.2 (H42E)]. The results provide: (a) evidence that His42 is critical for Compound I formation in APX; (b) confirmation that titration of His42 controls Compound I formation and an assignment of the pK(a) for this group; (c) mechanistic and spectroscopic evidence for an intermediate before Compound I formation; (d) evidence that a glutamic acid residue at position 42 can act as the acid-base catalyst in ascorbate peroxidase.  相似文献   

12.
Bromoperoxidase Compound I has been formed in reactions between bromoperoxidase and organic peroxide substrates. The absorbance spectrum of bromoperoxidase Compound I closely resembles the Compound I spectra of other peroxidases. The pH dependence of the second order rate constant for the formation of Compound I with hydrogen peroxide demonstrates the presence of an ionizable group at the enzyme active site having a pKa of 5.3. Protonation of this acidic group inhibits the rate of Compound I formation. This pKa value is higher than that determined for other peroxidases but the overall pH rate profiles for Compound I formation are similar. The one-electron reduction of bromoperoxidase Compound I yields Compound II and a second reduction yields native enzyme. Bromoperoxidase Compound II readily forms Compound III in the presence of an excess of hydrogen peroxide. Compound III passes through an as yet uncharacterized intermediate (III) in its decay to native enzyme. Compound III is produced and accumulates in enzymatic bromination reactions to become the predominate steady state form of the enzyme. Since Compound III is inactive as catalyst for enzymatic bromination, its accumulation leads to an idling reaction pathway which displays an unusual kinetic pattern for the bromination of monochlorodimedone.  相似文献   

13.
From stereochemical considerations and model building the following conclusions were drawn for the stereochemistry of the catalytic steps of chymotrypsin and subtilisin. (1) In contrast to previous stereochemical investigations, rotation of 120° or more of the oxygen atom of the “reactive” serine residue is not possible in the course of the reaction with specific substrates. (2) During catalysis the serine oxygen atom is approximately in the position found in the crystalline enzyme, i.e. at a distance of about 3 Å from the nitrogen atom of the catalytically important histidine residue. (3) The detailed stereochemical mechanism involves the formation of a strained tetrahedral intermediate and a strained acylenzyme. The strain energy is supplied by the formation of a hydrogen bond between the enzyme and a specific substrate. (4) The geometry of proton transfers in the intimate encounter complex of chymotrypsin is slightly but significantly different from that of subtilisin.  相似文献   

14.
Previous studies on the chlorination reaction catalyzed by horseradish peroxidase using chlorite as the source of chlorine detected the formation of a chlorinating intermediate that was termed Compound X (Shahangian, S., and Hager, L.P. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 11529-11533). These studies indicated that at pH 10.7, the optical absorption spectrum of Compound X was similar to the spectrum of horseradish peroxidase Compound II. Compound X was shown to be quite stable at alkaline pH values. This study was undertaken to examine the relationship between the oxidation state of the iron protoporphyrin IX heme prosthetic group in Compound X and the chemistry of the halogenating intermediate. The experimental results show that the optical absorption properties and the oxidation state of the heme prosthetic group in horseradish peroxidase are not directly related to the presence of the activated chlorine atom in the intermediate. The oxyferryl porphyrin heme group in alkaline Compound X can be reduced to a ferric heme species that still retains the activated chlorine atom. Furthermore, the reaction of chlorite with horseradish peroxidase at acidic pH leads to the secondary formation of a green intermediate that has the spectral properties of horseradish peroxidase Compound I (Theorell, H. (1941) Enzymologia 10, 250-252). The green intermediate also retains the activated chlorine atom. By analogy to peroxidase Compound I chemistry, the heme prosthetic group in the green chlorinating intermediate must be an oxyferryl porphyrin pi-cation radical species (Roberts, J. E., Hoffman, B. M., Rutter, R. J., and Hager, L. P. (1981) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 103, 7654-7656). To be consistent with traditional peroxidase nomenclature, the red alkaline form of Compound X has been renamed Compound XII, and the green acidic form has been named Compound XI. The transfer of chlorine from the chlorinating intermediate to an acceptor molecule follows an electrophilic (rather than a free radical) path. A mechanism for the reaction is proposed in which the activated chlorine atom is bonded to a heteroatom on an active-site amino acid side chain. Transient state kinetic studies show that the initial intermediate, Compound XII, is formed in a very fast reaction. The second-order rate constant for the formation of Compound XII is approximately 1.1 x 10(7) M-1 s-1. The rate of formation of Compound XII is strongly pH-dependent. At pH 9, the second-order rate constant for the formation of Compound XII drops to 1.5 M-1 s-1. At acidic pH values, Compound XII undergoes a spontaneous first-order decay to yield Compound XI.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
When dioxygen is reduced to water by cytochrome c oxidase a sequence of oxygen intermediates are formed at the reaction site. One of these intermediates is called the "peroxy" (P) intermediate. It can be formed by reacting the two-electron reduced (mixed-valence) cytochrome c oxidase with dioxygen (called P(m)), but it is also formed transiently during the reaction of the fully reduced enzyme with oxygen (called P(r)). In recent years, evidence has accumulated to suggest that the O-O bond is cleaved in the P intermediate and that the heme a(3) iron is in the oxo-ferryl state. In this study, we have investigated the kinetic and thermodynamic parameters for formation of P(m) and P(r), respectively, in the Rhodobacter sphaeroides enzyme. The rate constants and activation energies for the formation of the P(r) and P(m) intermediates were 1.4 x 10(4) s(-1) ( approximately 20 kJ/mol) and 3 x 10(3) s(-1) ( approximately 24 kJ/mol), respectively. The formation rates of both P intermediates were independent of pH in the range 6.5-9, and there was no proton uptake from solution during P formation. Nevertheless, formation of both P(m) and P(r) were slowed by a factor of 1.4-1.9 in D(2)O, which suggests that transfer of an internal proton or hydrogen atom is involved in the rate-limiting step of P formation. We discuss the origin of the difference in the formation rates of the P(m) and P(r) intermediates, the formation mechanisms of P(m)/P(r), and the involvement of these intermediates in proton pumping.  相似文献   

16.
Catalases are ubiquitous enzymes that prevent cell oxidative damage by degrading hydrogen peroxide to water and oxygen (2H(2)O(2) → 2H(2)O+O(2)) with high efficiency. The enzyme is first oxidized to a high-valent iron intermediate, known as Compound I (Cpd I, Por(·+)-Fe(IV)=O) which, at difference from other hydroperoxidases, is reduced back to the resting state by further reacting with H(2)O(2). The normal catalase activity is reduced if Cpd I is consumed in a competing side reaction, forming a species named Cpd I*. In recent years, Density Functional Theory (DFT) methods have unraveled the electronic configuration of these high-valent iron species, helping to assign the intermediates trapped in the crystal structures of oxidized catalases. It has been demonstrated that the a priori assumption that the H(+)/H(-) type of mechanism for Cpd I reduction leads to the generation of singlet oxygen is not justified. Moreover, it has been shown by ab initio metadynamics simulations that two pathways are operative for Cpd I reduction: a His-mediated mechanism (described as H·/H(+) + e(-)) in which the distal His acts as an acid-base catalyst and a direct mechanism (described as H·/H·) in which the distal His does not play a direct role. Independently of the mechanism, the reaction proceeds by two one-electron transfers rather than one two-electron transfer, as previously assumed. Electron transfer to Cpd I, regardless of whether the electron is exogenous or endogenous, facilitates protonation of the oxoferryl group, to the point that formation of Cpd I* may be controlled by the easiness of protonation of reduced Cpd I.  相似文献   

17.
We have studied the structures of adducts formed between subtilisin BPN' and both benzeneboronic acid and 2-phenylethaneboronic acid by x-ray diffraction techniques. Electron density and difference maps at 2.5 A resolution were computed with phases calculated from a partially refined structure of the native enzyme (R = 0.23 at 2.0 A). Both adducts contain a covalent bond between Ogamma of the catalytic Ser-221 and the inhibitor boron atom. The boron atom is coordinated tetrahedrally, with one of the two additional boronic acid oxygen atoms lying in the "oxyanion hole" and the other at the leaving group site identified in previous studies (ROBERTUS, J.D., Kraut, J. ALDEN, R.A., and BIRKTOFT, J.J. (1972) Biochemistry 11, 4293-4303). Moreover, the previously postulated structure of the tetrahedral intermediate for substrate hydrolysis is isosteric with these boronic acid adducts, which can therefore be considered good models for the transition state complex (KOEHLER, K.K., and LIENHARD, G.E. (1972) Biochemistry 10, 2477-2483). These observations further support the suggestion that an important contribution to stabilization of this transition state complex, relative to both the Michaelis complex and the acyl intermediate, occurs as a consequence of hydrogen bond donation to the substrate carbonyl oxygen atom from the side chain amido group of Asn-155 and from the backbone amido group of Ser-221.  相似文献   

18.
Z Y Zhang  R L Van Etten 《Biochemistry》1991,30(37):8954-8959
The kcat and Km values for the bovine heart low molecular weight phosphotyrosyl protein phosphatase catalyzed hydrolysis of 16 aryl phosphate monoesters and of five alkyl phosphate monoesters having the structure Ar(CH2)nOPO3H2 (n = 1-5) were measured at pH 5.0 and 37 degrees C. With the exception of alpha-naphthyl phosphate and 2-chlorophenyl phosphate, which are subject to steric effects, the values of kcat are effectively constant for the aryl phosphate monoesters. This is consistent with the catalysis being nucleophilic in nature, with the existence of a common covalent phosphoenzyme intermediate, and with the breakdown of this intermediate being rate-limiting. In contrast, kcat for the alkyl phosphate monoesters is much smaller and the rate-limiting step for these substrates is interpreted to be the phosphorylation of the enzyme. A single linear correlation is observed for a plot of log (kcat/Km) vs leaving group pKa for both classes of substrates at pH 5.0: log (kcat/Km) = -0.28pKa + 6.88 (n = 19, r = 0.89), indicating a uniform catalytic mechanism for the phosphorylation event. The small change in effective charge (-0.28) on the departing oxygen of the substrate is similar to that observed in the specific acid catalyzed hydrolysis of monophosphate monoanions (-0.27) and is consistent with a strong electrophilic interaction of the enzyme with this oxygen atom in the transition state. The D2O solvent isotope effect and proton inventory experiments indicate that only one proton is "in flight" in the transition state of the phosphorylation process and that this proton transfer is responsible for the reduction of effective charge on the leaving oxygen.  相似文献   

19.
Picolinate binds to a reduced form of D-amino acid oxidase, and the complex formed has a broad absorption band around 600 nm as in the case of the purple intermediate of the enzyme with a substrate. The dissociation constant at 25 degrees C was 35 microns at pH 7.0. The pH dependence (pH 8.3-pH 6.4) of the dissociation constant indicates that one proton is associated with the complex formation, and picolinate protonated at the N atom binds to the reduced enzyme. Resonance Raman spectra of the complex support that picolinate in the complex is a cationic form protonated at the N atom. Nicotinate also binds to the reduced enzyme, but isonicotinate does not.  相似文献   

20.
The endogenous calcium ion (Ca2+) in horseradish peroxidase (HRP) was removed to cause substantial changes in the proton NMR spectra of the enzyme in various oxidation/spin states. The spectral changes were interpreted as arising from the substantial alterations in the heme environments, most likely the heme proximal and distal sides. The comparative kinetic and redox studies revealed that these conformational changes affect the reduction process of compound II, resulting in the decrease of the enzymatic activity of HRP. It is also revealed from the ESR spectrum and the temperature dependences of the NMR and optical absorption spectra of the Ca2+-free enzyme that the heme iron atom of the Ca2+-free enzyme is in a thermal spin mixing between ferric high and low spin states, in contrast to that of the native enzyme. These results show that Ca2+ functions in maintaining the protein structure in the heme environments as well as the spin state of the heme iron, in favor of the enzymatic activity of HRP.  相似文献   

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