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1.
Structural and catalytic properties of hydrogenase from Chromatium.   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
P H Gitlitz  A I Krasna 《Biochemistry》1975,14(12):2561-2568
The enzyme hydrogenase, from the photosynthetic bacterium Chromatium, was purified to homogeneity after solubilization of the particulate enzyme with deoxycholate. The purification procedure included ammonium sulfate fractionation, treatment with manganous phosphate gel, heating at 63 degrees, DEAE-cellulose chromatography, and isoelectric focusing. The last step gave two active enzyme fractions with isoelectric points of 4.2 and 4.4. It was shown that the two fractions were different forms of the same protein. The enzyme was obtained in 23% yield and was purified 1700-fold. The enzyme had a molecular weight of 98,000, a sedimentation coefficient of 5.16 S and gave a single protein and activity band on disc gel electrophoresis. Sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis gave a single band of mol wt 50,000, suggesting that the active enzyme was composed of two subunits of the same molecular weight. The pure hydrogenase contained four atoms of iron and four atoms of acid-labile sulfide, and had a visible absorption peak at 410 nm. Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy at 10--15 K showed a free-radical signal at g' = 2.003 in the oxidized enzyme and signals at g' = 2.2 and 2.06 in the reduced enzyme. These findings suggest that Chromatium hydrogenase is an iron-sulfur protein. The pure hydrogenase catalyzed the exchange reaction between H2 and HDO or HTO, the reduction of Benzyl Viologen and Methylene Blue, and the evolution of hydrogen from reduced Methyl Viologen. The mechanism of hydrogen activation was shown to be heterolytic cleavage to an enzyme hydride and a proton. Hydrogenase could not catalyze reduction of pyridine nucleotides or ferredoxin with H2. The effect of pH and various inhibitors on the enzymatic activity has been studied.  相似文献   

2.
The binuclear iron cluster of uteroferrin in its reduced and enzymatically active pink form is sensitive to a variety or perturbants. Orthophosphate, in the presence or absence of oxygen, rapidly shifts the absorption maximum of pink uteroferrin from 510 to 545 nm, concurrently abolishing the protein's g'av = 1.74 EPR signal. Apparently, therefore, dioxygen is not required for phosphate-induced oxidation of the pink protein's ferrous iron. Pyrophosphate and arsenate produce changes which differ only in degree from those induced by phosphate, suggesting that all of these structurally similar competitive inhibitors bind to a common site. Molybdate, an inhibitor even more potent than phosphate, quantitatively converts the rhombic EPR signal of pink uteroferrin into an axial signal that remains invariant to subsequent additions of phosphate. Thus, there can be inhibition without oxidation, as further evidenced by the complex EPR spectrum of undiminished intensity produced by sulfate. Fluoride, too, induces an axial component in the EPR signal of pink uteroferrin, but at high concentration abolishes the signal entirely. Vanadate also drives the protein to its oxidized, EPR-silent state, serving as an electron acceptor itself to yield the characteristic g' = 2 signal of the vanadyl (VO2+) cation. Remarkably, however, the protein remains pink, demonstrating a dissociation between color and oxidation state. Guanidinium, in contrast, causes a sizeable red shift in the pink protein's absorption maximum without loss of EPR signal intensity, showing dissociation of color and oxidation state in a complementary way.  相似文献   

3.
Polynuclear iron complexes of Fe(III) and phosphate occur in seawater and soils and in cells where the iron core of ferritin, the iron storage protein, contains up to 4500 Fe atoms in a complex with an average composition of (FeO.OH)8FeO.OPO3H2. Although phosphate influences the size of the ferritin core and thus the availability of stored iron, little is known about the nature of the Fe(III)-phosphate interaction. In the present study, Fe-phosphate interactions were analyzed in stable complexes of Fe(III).ATP which, in the polynuclear iron form, had phosphate at interior sites. Such Fe(III).ATP complexes are important not only as models but also because they may play a role in intracellular iron transport and in iron toxicity; the complexes were studied by extended x-ray absorption fine structure, EPR, NMR spectroscopy, and measurement of proton release. Mononuclear iron complexes exhibiting a g' = 4.3 EPR signal were formed at Fe:ATP ratios less than or equal to 1:3, and polynuclear iron complexes (Fe greater than or equal to 250, EPR silent at g' = 4.3) were formed at an Fe:ATP ratio of 4:1. No NMR signals due to ATP were observed when Fe was in excess (Fe:ATP = 4:1). Extended x-ray absorption fine structure analysis of the polynuclear Fe(III).ATP complex was able to distinguish an Fe-P distance at 3.27 A in addition to the octahedral O at 1.95 A and 4-5 Fe atoms at 3.36 A. The Fe-O and Fe-Fe distances are the same as in ferritin, and the Fe-P distance is analogous to that in another metal-ATP complex. An observable Fe-P environment in such a large polynuclear iron cluster as the Fe(III).ATP (4:1) complex indicates that the phosphate is distributed throughout rather than merely on the surface, in contrast to earlier models of chelate-stabilized iron clusters. Complexes of Fe(III) and ATP similar to those described here may form in vivo either as normal components of intracellular iron metabolism or during iron excess where the consequent alteration of free nucleotide triphosphate pools could contribute to the observed toxicity of iron.  相似文献   

4.
A novel iron-sulfur protein was purified from the extract of Desulfovibrio desulfuricans (ATCC 27774) to homogeneity as judged by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The purified protein is a monomer of 57 kDa molecular mass. It contains comparable amounts of iron and inorganic labile sulfur atoms and exhibits an optical spectrum typical of iron-sulfur proteins with maxima at 400, 305, and 280 nm. M?ssbauer data of the as-isolated protein show two spectral components, a paramagnetic and a diamagnetic, of equal intensity. Detailed analysis of the paramagnetic component reveals six distinct antiferromagnetically coupled iron sites, providing direct spectroscopic evidence for the presence of a 6Fe cluster in this newly purified protein. One of the iron sites exhibits parameters (delta EQ = 2.67 +/- 0.03 mm/s and delta = 1.09 +/- 0.02 mm/s at 140 K) typical for high spin ferrous ion; the observed large isomer shift indicates an iron environment that is distinct from the tetrahedral sulfur coordination commonly observed for the iron atoms in iron-sulfur clusters and is consistent with a penta- or hexacoordination containing N and/or O ligands. The other five iron sites are most probably high spin ferric. Three of them show parameters characteristic for tetrahedral sulfur coordination. In correlation with the EPR spectrum of the as-purified protein which shows a resonance signal at g = 15.3 and a group of signals between g = 9.8 and 5.4, this 6Fe cluster is assigned to an unusual spin state of 9/2 with zero field splitting parameters D = -1.3 cm-1 and E/D = 0.062. Other EPR signals attributable to minor impurities are also observed at the g = 4.3 and 2.0 regions. The diamagnetic M?ssbauer component represents a second iron cluster, which, upon reduction with dithionite, displays an intense S = 1/2 EPR signal with g values at 2.00, 1.83, and 1.31. In addition, an EPR signal of the S = 3/2 type is also observed for the dithionite-reduced protein.  相似文献   

5.
J R Schoonover  G Palmer 《Biochemistry》1991,30(30):7541-7550
The ability to isolate preparations of cytochrome oxidase which are highly homogeneous has facilitated a study of the effects of various reagents on the purified enzyme. The addition of either sodium formate, formamide, formaldehyde, or sodium nitrite to enzyme which reacts in a single rapid kinetic phase with cyanide causes a blue-shift of 4-6 nm of the net (cytochrome a + cytochrome a3) Soret maximum. Only the derivative prepared by adding sodium formate demonstrates measurable intensity in the g' = 12 region of the low-temperature electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectrum. This g' = 12 resonance is characteristic of cytochrome oxidase which has undergone a modification at the binuclear center and thereby reacts sluggishly with cyanide. As the site of cyanide binding in resting enzyme as been demonstrated to be CuB [Yoshikawa, S., & Caughey, W.S. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 7945-7958], it is proposed that formate can bind to CuB and the fast to slow transition is rationalized by using this proposal. The g' = 12 signal is also produced upon the addition of sodium formate to mitochondrial preparations, suggesting that the species responsible for this behavior may have possible physiological relevance. Physical properties of the formate derivative and data for other reagents reacted with the fast-reacting enzyme preparation are presented.  相似文献   

6.
A preliminary EPR investigation of iron accumulation in apoferritin has identified paramagnetic species generated during the early stage of iron deposition within the apoprotein shell. A featureless resonance at g' = 4.3, attributable to solitary high spin Fe3+ ions bound to the protein, is generated when Fe(II) is added to apoferritin at a level of 0.5 Fe/subunit (12 Fe/molecule) followed by air oxidation. This resonance accounts for 36% of the added iron. The remainder is EPR-silent and is probably present as oligomeric Fe3+ species. The intensity of the g' = 4.3 signal is reduced 3-fold upon anaerobic addition of 5 Fe(II)/subunit as a new iron resonance with g' values of 1.94, 1.87, and 1.80 is generated. This signal is observable only at temperatures near that of liquid helium and resists saturation at power levels of 100 milliwatts. Its distinctive g-factors, temperature dependence, and saturation characteristics suggest that it arises from a spin-coupled Fe(II)-Fe(III) dimer having a net electron spin of 1/2. In accord with this idea, the signal disappears when air is admitted, presumably because of oxidation of the Fe(II). The proposed mixed valence dimer may be an important intermediate formed during the initiation of core formation within the protein shell.  相似文献   

7.
Role of phosphate in initial iron deposition in apoferritin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Y G Cheng  N D Chasteen 《Biochemistry》1991,30(11):2947-2953
Ferritins from microorganisms to man are known to contain varying amounts of phosphate which has a pronounced effect on the structural and magnetic properties of their iron mineral cores. The present study was undertaken to gain insight into the role of phosphate in the early stages of iron accumulation by ferritin. The influence of phosphate on the initial deposition of iron in apoferritin (12 Fe/protein) was investigated by EPR, 57Fe M?ssbauer spectroscopy, and equilibrium dialysis. The results indicate that phosphate has a significant influence on iron deposition. The presence of 1 mM phosphate during reconstitution of ferritin from apoferritin, Fe(II), and O2 accelerates the rate of oxidation of the iron 2-fold at pH 7.5. In the presence or absence of phosphate, the rate of oxidation at 0 degrees C follows simple first-order kinetics with respect to Fe(II) with half-lives of 1.5 +/- 0.3 or 2.8 +/- 0.2 min, respectively, consistent with a single pathway for iron oxidation when low levels of iron are added to the apoprotein. This pathway may involve a protein ferroxidase site where phosphate may bind iron(II), shifting its redox potential to a more negative value and thus facilitating its oxidation. Following oxidation, an intermediate mononuclear Fe(III)-protein complex is formed which exhibits a transient EPR signal at g' = 4.3. Phosphate accelerates the rate of decay of the signal by a factor of 3-4, producing EPR-silent oligonuclear or polynuclear Fe(III) clusters. In 0.5 mM Pi, the signal decays according to a single phase first-order process with a half-life near 1 min.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
The cytoplasmic membrane-bound hydrogenase of the facultative anaerobe, Proteus mirabilis, has been solubilized and purified to homogeneity. The purified enzyme exhibited a maximal specific activity of about 780 mumol H2 oxidized/min per mg protein (benzyl viologen reduction). The hydrogenase has a molecular weight of 205 000 and is composed of two subunits with a molecular weight of 63 000 and two of 33 000. The absorption spectrum of the enzyme was characteristic of non-heme iron proteins. The millimolar extinction coefficients at 400 and 280 nm are 106 and 390, respectively. The hydrogenase has about 24 iron atoms and 24 acid-labile sulfide atoms/molecule. Amino acid analyses revealed the presence of 39 half-cystine residues/molecule and a preponderance of acidic amino acids. The hydrogenase in its oxidized form exhibits an EPR signal of the HiPIP-type with g values at 2.025 and 2.018. Upon reduction with either dithionite or H2 the signal disappears; no other signals were detectable.  相似文献   

9.
Continuous wave (cw) X-band EPR spectra at approximately 90 K were obtained for iron-transferrin-anion complexes with 18 anions. Each anion had a carboxylate group and at least one other polar moiety. As the second polar group was varied from hydroxyl to carbonyl to amine to carboxylate, the EPR spectra changed from a dominant signal at g' approximately 4.3 with a second smaller peak at g' approximately 9 to a broad signal with intensity between g' approximately 5 and 7. Computer simulation indicated that the changes in the EPR spectra were due to changes in the zero field splitting parameter ratio, E/D, from approximately 1/3 for carbonate anion to approximately 0.04 for malonate anion. Observation of iron-13C coupling in the electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) for iron transferrin [1-13C]pyruvate indicated that the carboxylate group was bound to the iron. It is proposed that all of the anions behave as bidentate ligands, with coordination to the iron through both the carboxylate and proximal groups, and the carboxyl group serves as a bridge between the iron and a positively charged group on the protein.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Properties of soluble high potential type iron-sulfur protein (HiPIP) from beef heart mitochondria were compared to those of aconitase from pig heart. The two proteins when purified to homogeneity by the criteria of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide electrophoresis show identical light absorption characteristics. EPR signals of the HiPIP type centered at g = 2.01 when oxidized, isoelectric points at pH 8.5 to 8.6, are inseparable by SDS-polyacrylamide electrophoresis, and exhibit aconitase activity when activated by reducing agents in the presence of ferrous iron. The requirement for activation goes parallel to the intensity of the signal from the oxidized iron-sulfur cluster, i.e. the cluster is reduced in the active enzyme. We conclude that the soluble mitochondrial HiPIP is identical with aconitase. The relationships of iron to labile sulfide, molecular weight and unpaired spins in the EPR signal, and implications of our findings for the role of iron in aconitase are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
In order to utilize sulfate as the terminal electron acceptor, sulfate-reducing bacteria are equipped with a complex enzymatic system in which adenylylsulfate (AdoPSO4) reductase plays one of the major roles, reducing AdoPSO4 (the activated form of sulfate) to sulfite, with release of AMP. The enzyme has been purified to homogeneity from the anaerobic sulfate reducer Desulfovibrio gigas. The protein is composed of two non-identical subunits (70 kDa and 23 kDa) and is isolated in a multimeric form (approximately 400 kDa). It is an iron-sulfur, flavin-containing protein, with one FAD moiety, eight iron atoms and a minimum molecular mass of 93 kDa. Low-temperature EPR studies were performed to characterize its redox centers. In the native state, the enzyme showed an almost isotropic signal centered at g = 2.02 and only detectable below 20 K. This signal represented a minor species (0.10-0.25 spins/mol) and showed line broadening in the enzyme isolated from 57Fe-grown cells. Addition of sulfite had a minor effect on the EPR spectrum, but caused a major decrease in the visible region of the optical spectrum (around 392 nm). Further addition of AMP induced only a minor change in the visible spectrum whereas major changes were seen in the EPR spectrum; the appearance of a rhombic signal at g values 2.096, 1.940 and 1.890 (reduced Fe-S center I) observable below 30 K and a concomitant decrease in intensity of the g = 2.02 signal were detected. Effects of chemical reductants (ascorbate, H2/hydrogenase-reduced methyl viologen and dithionite) were also studied. A short time reduction with dithionite (15 s) or reduction with methyl viologen gave rise to the full reduction of center I (with slightly modified g values at 2.079, 1.939 and 1.897), and the complete disappearance of the g = 2.02 signal. Further reduction with dithionite produces a very complex EPR spectrum of a spin-spin-coupled nature (observable below 20 K), indicating the presence of at least two iron-sulfur centers, (centers I and II). M?ssbauer studies on 57Fe-enriched D. gigas AdoPSO4 reductase demonstrated unambiguously the presence of two 4Fe clusters. Center II has a redox potential less than or equal to 400 mV and exhibits spectroscopic properties that are characteristic of a ferredoxin-type [4Fe-4S] cluster. Center I exhibits spectra with atypical M?ssbauer parameters in its reduced state and has a midpoint potential around 0 mV, which is distinct from that of a ferredoxin-type [4Fe-4S] cluster, suggesting a different structure and/or a distinct cluster-ligand environment.  相似文献   

13.
Megasphaera elsdenii hydrogenase has been purified to homogeneity using an FPLC procedure as the final step. The protein gives a single band in SDS/PAGE with an apparent molecular mass of 57-59 kDa. There is no second hydrogenase activity in the soluble fraction of M. elsdenii. The hydrodynamics of the enzyme have been compared to those of the two-subunit Fe hydrogenase from Desulfovibrio vulgaris (Hildenborough) in the analytical ultracentrifuge using the absorption of the intrinsic iron-sulfur clusters as the monitor. Sedimentation-velocity experiments indicate the M. elsdenii enzyme (s20,w = 4.95 S) to be essentially globular, while the D. vulgaris enzyme (s20,w = 4.1 S) has a less symmetric shape. From the sedimentation equilibrium measurements under a variety of conditions an average molecular mass is calculated of 58 kDa (M. elsdenii) and 54 kDa (D. vulgaris), respectively. Pure, maximally active M. elsdenii hydrogenase has A405/A280 = 0.36 and has a specific H2-production activity of 400 mumol H2.min-1.(mg protein)-1 at 30 degrees C and pH 8.0. The enzyme contains some 13-18 iron and acid-labile sulfur ions/58-kDa monomer. Eight of these Fe-S are present as two electron-transferring ferredoxin-like cubanes with Em approximately greater than -0.3 V, as indicated by pH-dependent EPR spectroscopy on the H2-reduced enzyme. In the (re)oxidized state the remainder iron gives rise to a single S = 1/2 rhombic EPR signal. Hydrogen-production activity, content of remainder iron and rhombic EPR signal intensity are mutually correlated. Purified hydrogenase appears to exist as a mixture of fully active holoenzyme and inactive protein still carrying the two cubanes but deficient in active-site iron.  相似文献   

14.
5- and 12-lipoxygenases isolated from porcine leukocytes were investigated by electron paramagnetic resonance at X-band and atomic absorption spectroscopy. For comparison potato 5-lipoxygenase was studied under identical experimental conditions. All three lipoxygenases contained between 0.7 and 0.9 Fe atoms/enzyme molecule. As isolated, both mammalian enzymes exhibited a characteristic EPR signal at low magnetic field with a maximum at g = 5.20 indicative of a high-spin ferric iron center. The signal was not affected by the oxidants 12-hydroperoxyeicosatetraenoic acid or arachidonic acid, nor was it affected by the reductant nordihydroguaiaretic acid. In the case of the potato enzyme an intense EPR signal with resonances at g = 7.50, 6.39 and 5.84 was only observed after addition of an oxidant, such as 9-hydroperoxyoctadecadienoic acid.  相似文献   

15.
A hydrogenase from a new species of sulfate reducing bacterium has been isolated and characterized. In contrast to other hydrogenases isolated from Desulfovibrio, this enzyme is found in the cytoplasmic fraction rather than in the periplasm. The specific activity of the enzyme, as measured in the hydrogen evolution assay, is twice as high as the specific activity of the hydrogenase from D. gigas. It also differentiates itself from the periplasmic Desulfovibrio hydrogenases by being more active in the hydrogen evolution rather than in the hydrogen uptake assay. The enzyme was shown to contain 0.9 atoms of nickel, 11 atoms of iron and 10 atoms of labile sulfide per mole of enzyme. It exhibits an unusually low intensity of the g = 2.31 nickel EPR signal in the isolated enzyme but shows a normal intensity for the g = 2.19 nickel EPR signal when reduced under hydrogen.  相似文献   

16.
A soluble hydrogenase from the halophilic sulfate reducing bacterium Desulfovibrio salexigens, strain British Guiana (NCIB 8403) has been purified to apparent homogeneity with a final specific activity of 760 mumoles H2 evolved/min/mg (an overall 180-fold purification with 20% recovery yield). The enzyme is composed of two non-identical subunits of molecular masses 62 and 36 kDa, respectively, and contains approximately 1 Ni, 12-15 Fe and 1 Se atoms/mole. The hydrogenase shows a visible absorption spectrum typical of an iron-sulfur containing protein (A400/A280 = 0.275) and a molar absorbance of 54 mM-1cm-1 at 400 nm. In the native state (as isolated, under aerobic conditions), the enzyme is almost EPR silent at 100 K and below. However, upon reduction under H2 atmosphere a rhombic EPR signal develops at g-values 2.22, 2.16 and around 2.0, which is optimally detected at 40 K. This EPR signal is reminiscent of the nickel signal C (g-values 2.19, 2.16 and 2.02) observed in intermediate redox states of the well characterized D. gigas nickel containing hydrogenase and assigned to nickel by 61 Ni isotopic substitution (J.J.G. Moura, M. Teixeira, I. Moura, A.V. Xavier and J. Le Gall (1984), J. Mol. Cat., 23, 305-314). Upon longer incubation with H2 the "2.22" EPR signal decreases. During the course of a redox titration under H2, this EPR signal attains a maximal intensity around--380 mV. At redox states where this "2.22" signal develops (or at lower redox potentials), low temperature studies (below 10 K) reveals the presence of other EPR species with g-values at 2.23, 2.21, 2.14 with broad components at higher fields. This new signal (fast relaxing) exhibits a different microwave power dependence from that of the "2.22" signal, which readily saturates with microwave power (slow relaxing). Also at low temperature (8 K) typical reduced iron-sulfur EPR signals are concomitantly observed with gmed approximately 1.94. The catalytic properties of the enzyme were also followed by substrate isotopic exchange D2/H+ and H2 production measurements.  相似文献   

17.
The carbon monoxide dehydrogenase complex from acetate-grown Methanosarcina thermophila was further studied by EPR spectroscopy. The as purified enzyme exhibited no paramagnetic species at 113 K; however, enzyme reduced with CO exhibited a complex EPR spectrum comprised of two paramagnetic species with g values of g1 = 2.089, g2 = 2.078, and g3 = 2.030 (signal I) and g1 = 2.057, g2 = 2.049, and g3 = 2.027 (signal II). Isotopic substitution with 61Ni, 57Fe, or 13CO resulted in broadening of the EPR spectra indicating a Ni-Fe-C spin-coupled complex. Pure signal II was obtained following treatment of the CO-reduced enzyme with acetyl-CoA but not by addition of acetyl phosphate or CoASH. Acetate-grown cells were highly enriched in acetate kinase (EC 2.7.2.1) and CoASH-dependent phosphotransacetylase (EC 2.3.1.8) activities. These results suggest acetyl-CoA is a physiological substrate for the carbon monoxide dehydrogenase complex synthesized in acetate-grown cells of M. thermophila.  相似文献   

18.
Ojha S  Hwang J  Kabil O  Penner-Hahn JE  Banerjee R 《Biochemistry》2000,39(34):10542-10547
Human cystathionine beta-synthase is one of two key enzymes involved in intracellular metabolism of homocysteine. It catalyzes a beta-replacement reaction in which the thiolate of homocysteine replaces the hydroxyl group of serine to give the product, cystathionine. The enzyme is unusual in its dependence on two cofactors: pyridoxal phosphate and heme. The requirement for pyridoxal phosphate is expected on the basis of the nature of the condensation reaction that is catalyzed; however the function of the heme in this protein is unknown. We have examined the spectroscopic properties of the heme in order to assign the axial ligands provided by the protein. The heme Soret peak of ferric cystathionine beta-synthase is at 428 nm and shifts to approximately 395 nm upon addition of the thiol chelator, mercuric chloride. This is indicative of 6-coordinate low-spin heme converting to a 5-coordinate high-spin heme. The enzyme as isolated exhibits a rhombic EPR signal with g values of 2.5, 2.3, and 1.86, which are similar to those of heme proteins and model complexes with imidazole/thiolate ligands. Mercuric chloride treatment of the enzyme results in conversion of the rhombic EPR signal to a g = 6 signal, consistent with formation of the high-spin ferric heme. The X-ray absorption data reveal that iron in ferric cystathionine beta-synthase is 6-coordinate, with 1 high-Z scatterer and 5 low-Z scatterers. This is consistent with the presence of 5 nitrogens and 1 sulfur ligand. Together, these data support assignment of the axial ligands as cysteinate and imidazole in ferric cystathionine beta-synthase.  相似文献   

19.
《Free radical research》2013,47(1):319-328
A cyanide-insensitive superoxide dismutase was purified to apparent homogeneity from lemon leaves (Citrus limonum R). The enzyme was isolated from leaf extracts by ammonium sulfate salting-out. and ion-exchange, gel filtration and hydroxylapatite column chromatography. The purified Fe-SOD had a specific activity of about 1.500 U/mg and represents approximately 1.6% of the total soluble protein in lemon leaf extracts. A molecular weight of 47,500 was determined for the enzyme. Analytical gel electro-focusing of the purified preparation revealed the presence of two isozymes with pl values of 5.13 and 4.98. Metal analysis showed the presence of I g-atom of iron and 0.5g-atom of manganese per mol of enzyme. The visible and UV absorption spectra of the Citrus enzyme were similar to those reported for other iron-containing SODS from different origins. The significance of the presence of Fe-SOD in higher plants is briefly discussed.  相似文献   

20.
The magnitude of the slow phase of reaction of cytochrome oxidase with cyanide has been correlated with the size of the epr signal at g' = 12. This epr signal was not found in submitochondrial particles, and significant g' = 12 epr was only observed late in the purification of solubilized enzyme. The Hartzell-Beinert procedure for the purification of cytochrome oxidase (Hartzell, C.R., and Beinert, H. (1974) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 368, 318-338) has been modified so that the purified enzyme reacts in a single rapid phase with potassium cyanide and lacks the g' = 12 epr signal. This enzyme could be converted to the slowly reacting form upon incubation at low pH and/or low enzyme concentration. No procedure for the stable reversal of the process could be found. Some physical and chemical properties of the two forms of the enzyme are compared.  相似文献   

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