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1.
NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase (CPR) and the nitric oxide synthase (NOS) reductase domains are members of the FAD-FMN family of proteins. The FAD accepts two reducing equivalents from NADPH (dehydrogenase flavin) and FMN acts as a one-electron carrier (flavodoxin-type flavin) for the transfer from NADPH to the heme protein, in which the FMNH*/FMNH2 couple donates electrons to cytochrome P450 at constant oxidation-reduction potential. Although the interflavin electron transfer between FAD and FMN is not strictly regulated in CPR, electron transfer is activated in neuronal NOS reductase domain upon binding calmodulin (CaM), in which the CaM-bound activated form can function by a similar mechanism to that of CPR. The oxygenated form and spin state of substrate-bound cytochrome P450 in perfused rat liver are also discussed in terms of stepwise one-electron transfer from CPR. This review provides a historical perspective of the microsomal mixed-function oxidases including CPR and P450. In addition, a new model for the redox-linked conformational changes during the catalytic cycle for both CPR and NOS reductase domain is also discussed.  相似文献   

2.
In this study, we have analyzed interflavin electron transfer reactions from FAD to FMN in both the full-length inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) and its reductase domain. Comparison is made with the interflavin electron transfer in NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase (CPR). For the analysis of interflavin electron transfer and the flavin intermediates observed during catalysis we have used menadione (MD), which can accept an electron from both the FAD and FMN sites of the enzyme. A characteristic absorption peak at 630 and 520 nm can identify each FAD and FMN semiquinone species, which is derived from CPR and iNOS, respectively. The charge transfer complexes of FAD with NADP+ or NADPH were monitored at 750 nm. In the presence of MD, the air-stable neutral (blue) semiquinone form (FAD-FMNH*) was observed as a major intermediate during the catalytic cycle in both the iNOS reductase domain and full-length enzyme, and its formation occurred without any lag phase indicating rapid interflavin electron transfer following the reduction of FAD by NADPH. These data also strongly suggest that the low level reactivity of a neutral (blue) FMN semiquinone radical with electron acceptors enables one-electron transfer in the catalytic cycle of both the FAD-FMN pairs in CPR and iNOS. On the basis of these data, we propose a common model for the catalytic cycle of both CaM-bound iNOS reductase domain and CPR.  相似文献   

3.
Intersubunit intraprotein electron transfer (IET) from flavin mononucleotide (FMN) to heme is essential in nitric oxide (NO) synthesis by NO synthase (NOS). Previous crystal structures and functional studies primarily concerned an enzyme conformation, which serves as the input state for reduction of FMN by electrons from NADPH and flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) in the reductase domain. To favor the formation of the output state for the subsequent IET from FMN to heme in the oxygenase domain, a novel truncated two-domain oxyFMN construct of rat neuronal NOS (nNOS), in which only the FMN and heme domains were present, was designed and expressed. The kinetics of IET between the FMN and heme domains in the nNOS oxyFMN construct in the presence and absence of added calmodulin (CaM) were directly determined using laser flash photolysis of CO dissociation in comparative studies on partially reduced oxyFMN and single-domain heme oxygenase constructs. The IET rate constant in the presence of CaM (262 s(-)(1)) was increased approximately 10-fold compared to that in the absence of CaM (22 s(-)(1)). The effect of CaM on interdomain interactions was further evidenced by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra. This work provides the first direct evidence of the CaM control of electron transfer (ET) between FMN and heme domains through facilitation of the FMN/heme interactions in the output state. Therefore, CaM controls IET between heme and FMN domains by a conformational gated mechanism. This is essential in coupling ET in the reductase domain in NOS with NO synthesis in the oxygenase domain.  相似文献   

4.
Dunford AJ  Rigby SE  Hay S  Munro AW  Scrutton NS 《Biochemistry》2007,46(17):5018-5029
Multiple solution-state techniques have been employed in investigating the nature and control of electron transfer in the context of the proposed "domain shuffle hypothesis" for intraprotein electron transfer inferred from the crystal structure of the nitric oxide synthase reductase domain. NADPH analogues and fragments have been used to map those regions of this substrate that are important in eliciting a conformational change, observed in both the fluorescence emission of the flavin cofactors of the enzyme and the EPR spectra of the FMN flavosemiquinone state. EPR and UV-visible potentiometric methods have demonstrated a substantial calmodulin-dependent perturbation in the midpoint reduction potentials of the redox couples of both flavin cofactors, in contrast to a previous report [Noble, M. A., et al. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 16413-16418]. These studies support a model in which FMN domain mobility, triggered by Ca2+-calmodulin binding and antagonized by substrate binding, facilitates electron transfer in nitric oxide synthase through conformational change and effects a major change in the midpoint reduction potentials of the flavin redox couples. These results are discussed in light of the recent crystal structure of the NADPH-locked reductase domain.  相似文献   

5.
Nitric-oxide synthase (NOS) is required in mammals to generate NO for regulating blood pressure, synaptic response, and immune defense. NOS is a large homodimer with well characterized reductase and oxygenase domains that coordinate a multistep, interdomain electron transfer mechanism to oxidize l-arginine and generate NO. Ca2+-calmodulin (CaM) binds between the reductase and oxygenase domains to activate NO synthesis. Although NOS has long been proposed to adopt distinct conformations that alternate between interflavin and FMN-heme electron transfer steps, structures of the holoenzyme have remained elusive and the CaM-bound arrangement is unknown. Here we have applied single particle electron microscopy (EM) methods to characterize the full-length of the neuronal isoform (nNOS) complex and determine the structural mechanism of CaM activation. We have identified that nNOS adopts an ensemble of open and closed conformational states and that CaM binding induces a dramatic rearrangement of the reductase domain. Our three-dimensional reconstruction of the intact nNOS-CaM complex reveals a closed conformation and a cross-monomer arrangement with the FMN domain rotated away from the NADPH-FAD center, toward the oxygenase dimer. This work captures, for the first time, the reductase-oxygenase structural arrangement and the CaM-dependent release of the FMN domain that coordinates to drive electron transfer across the domains during catalysis.  相似文献   

6.
《Biophysical journal》2021,120(23):5196-5206
Mechanisms that regulate nitric oxide synthase enzymes (NOS) are of interest in biology and medicine. Although NOS catalysis relies on domain motions and is activated by calmodulin (CaM) binding, the relationships are unclear. We used single-molecule fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) spectroscopy to elucidate the conformational states distribution and associated conformational fluctuation dynamics of the two NOS electron transfer domains in an FRET dye-labeled endothelial NOS reductase domain (eNOSr) and to understand how CaM affects the dynamics to regulate catalysis by shaping the spatial and temporal conformational behaviors of eNOSr. In addition, we developed and applied a new imaging approach capable of recording three-dimensional FRET efficiency versus time images to characterize the impact on dynamic conformal states of the eNOSr enzyme by the binding of CaM, which identifies clearly that CaM binding generates an extra new open state of eNOSr, resolving more detailed NOS conformational states and their fluctuation dynamics. We identified a new output state that has an extra open conformation that is only populated in the CaM-bound eNOSr. This may reveal the critical role of CaM in triggering NOS activity as it gives conformational flexibility for eNOSr to assume the electron transfer output FMN-heme state. Our results provide a dynamic link to recently reported EM static structure analyses and demonstrate a capable approach in probing and simultaneously analyzing all of the conformational states, their fluctuations, and the fluctuation dynamics for understanding the mechanism of NOS electron transfer, involving electron transfer among FAD, FMN, and heme domains, during nitric oxide synthesis.  相似文献   

7.
P450 BM3 and the nitric oxide synthases are related classes of flavocytochrome mono-oxygenase enzymes, containing NADPH-dependent FAD- and FMN-containing oxidoreductase modules fused to heme b-containing oxygenase domains. Domain-swap hybrids of these two multi-domain enzymes were created by genetic engineering of different segments of reductase and heme domains from neuronal nitric oxide synthase and P450 BM3, as a means of investigating the catalytic competence and substrate-binding properties of the fusions and the influence of tetrahydrpbiopterin and calmodulin binding regions on the electron transfer kinetics of the chimeras. Despite marked differences in hybrid stability and solubility, four catalytically functional chimeras were created that retained good reductase activity and which could be expressed successfully in Escherichia coli and purified. All of the BM3 reductase domain chimeras (chimeras I-III) exhibited inefficient flavin-to-heme inter-domain electron transfer, diminishing their oxygenase activity. However, the chimera containing the neuronal nitric oxide synthase reductase domain (chimera IV) showed good oxygenase domain activity, indicating that the flavin-to-heme electron transfer reaction is relatively efficient in this case. The data reinforce the importance of the nature of inter-domain linker constitution in multi-domain enzymes, and the difficulties posed in attempts to create chimeric enzymes with enhanced catalytic properties.  相似文献   

8.
Human novel reductase 1 (NR1) is an NADPH dependent diflavin oxidoreductase related to cytochrome P450 reductase (CPR). The FAD/NADPH- and FMN-binding domains of NR1 have been expressed and purified and their redox properties studied by stopped-flow and steady-state kinetic methods, and by potentiometry. The midpoint reduction potentials of the oxidized/semiquinone (-315 +/- 5 mV) and semiquinone/dihydroquinone (-365 +/- 15 mV) couples of the FAD/NADPH domain are similar to those for the FAD/NADPH domain of human CPR, but the rate of hydride transfer from NADPH to the FAD/NADPH domain of NR1 is approximately 200-fold slower. Hydride transfer is rate-limiting in steady-state reactions of the FAD/NADPH domain with artificial redox acceptors. Stopped-flow studies indicate that hydride transfer from the FAD/NADPH domain of NR1 to NADP+ is faster than hydride transfer in the physiological direction (NADPH to FAD), consistent with the measured reduction potentials of the FAD couples [midpoint potential for FAD redox couples is -340 mV, cf-320 mV for NAD(P)H]. The midpoint reduction potentials for the flavin couples in the FMN domain are -146 +/- 5 mV (oxidized/semiquinone) and -305 +/- 5 mV (semiquinone/dihydroquinone). The FMN oxidized/semiquinone couple indicates stabilization of the FMN semiquinone, consistent with (a) a need to transfer electrons from the FAD/NADPH domain to the FMN domain, and (b) the thermodynamic properties of the FMN domain in CPR and nitric oxide synthase. Despite overall structural resemblance of NR1 and CPR, our studies reveal thermodynamic similarities but major kinetic differences in the electron transfer reactions catalysed by the flavin-binding domains.  相似文献   

9.
Neuronal nitric-oxide synthase (nNOS) is activated by the Ca(2+)-dependent binding of calmodulin (CaM) to a characteristic polypeptide linker connecting the oxygenase and reductase domains. Calmodulin binding also activates the reductase domain of the enzyme, increasing the rate of reduction of external electron acceptors such as cytochrome c. Several unusual structural features appear to control this activation mechanism, including an autoinhibitory loop, a C-terminal extension, and kinase-dependent phosphorylation sites. Pre-steady state reduction and oxidation time courses for the nNOS reductase domain indicate that CaM binding triggers NADP(+) release, which may exert control over steady-state turnover. In addition, the second order rate constant for cytochrome c reduction in the absence of CaM was found to be highly dependent on the presence of NADPH. It appears that NADPH induces a conformational change in the nNOS reductase domain, restricting access to the FMN by external electron acceptors. CaM binding reverses this effect, causing a 30-fold increase in the second order rate constant. The results show a startling interplay between the two ligands, which both exert control over the conformation of the domain to influence its electron transfer properties. In the full-length enzyme, NADPH binding will probably close the conformational lock in vivo, preventing electron transfer to the oxygenase domain and the resultant stimulation of nitric oxide synthesis.  相似文献   

10.
The nitric oxide synthase of Drosophila melanogaster (dNOS) participates in essential developmental and behavioral aspects of the fruit fly, but little is known about dNOS catalysis and regulation. To address this, we expressed a construct comprising the dNOS reductase domain and its adjacent calmodulin (CaM) binding site (dNOSr) and characterized the protein regarding its catalytic, kinetic, and regulatory properties. The Ca2+ concentration required for CaM binding to dNOSr was between that of the mammalian endothelial and neuronal NOS enzymes. CaM binding caused the cytochrome c reductase activity of dNOSr to increase 4 times and achieve an activity comparable to that of mammalian neuronal NOS. This change was associated with decreased shielding of the FMN cofactor from solvent and an increase in the rate of NADPH-dependent flavin reduction. Flavin reduction in dNOSr was relatively slow following the initial 2-electron reduction, suggesting a slow inter-flavin electron transfer, and no charge-transfer complex was observed between bound NADP+ and reduced FAD during the process. We conclude that dNOSr catalysis and regulation is most similar to the mammalian neuronal NOS reductase domain, although differences exist in their flavin reduction behaviors. The apparent conservation between the fruit fly and mammalian enzymes is consistent with dNOS operating in various signal cascades that involve NO.  相似文献   

11.
Nitric oxide synthase (NOS) is the primary generator of nitric oxide signals controlling diverse physiological processes such as neurotransmission and vasodilation. NOS activation is contingent on Ca2 +/calmodulin binding at a linker between its oxygenase and reductase domains to induce large conformational changes that orchestrate inter-domain electron transfer. However, the structural dynamics underlying activation of full-length NOS remain ambiguous. Employing hydrogen–deuterium exchange mass spectrometry, we reveal mechanisms underlying neuronal NOS activation by calmodulin and regulation by phosphorylation. We demonstrate that calmodulin binding orders the junction between reductase and oxygenase domains, exposes the FMN subdomain, and elicits a more dynamic oxygenase active site. Furthermore, we demonstrate that phosphorylation partially mimics calmodulin activation to modulate neuronal NOS activity via long-range allostery. Calmodulin binding and phosphorylation ultimately promote a more dynamic holoenzyme while coordinating inter-domain communication and electron transfer.  相似文献   

12.
Human methionine synthase reductase (MSR), a diflavin oxidoreductase, plays a vital role in methionine and folate metabolism by sustaining methionine synthase (MS) activity. MSR catalyzes the oxidation of NADPH and shuttles electrons via its FAD and FMN cofactors to inactive MS-cob(II)alamin. A conserved aromatic residue (Trp697) positioned next to the FAD isoalloxazine ring controls nicotinamide binding and catalysis in related flavoproteins. We created four MSR mutants (W697S, W697H, S698Δ, and S698A) and studied their associated kinetic behavior. Multiwavelength stopped-flow analysis reveals that NADPH reduction of the C-terminal Ser698 mutants occurs in three resolvable kinetic steps encompassing transfer of a hydride ion to FAD, semiquinone formation (indicating FAD to FMN electron transfer), and slow flavin reduction by a second molecule of NADPH. Corresponding experiments with the W697 mutants show a two-step flavin reduction without an observable semiquinone intermediate, indicating that W697 supports FAD to FMN electron transfer. Accelerated rates of FAD reduction, steady-state cytochrome c(3+) turnover, and uncoupled NADPH oxidation in the S698Δ and W697H mutants may be attributed to a decrease in the energy barrier for displacement of W697 by NADPH. Binding of NADP(+), but not 2',5'-ADP, is tighter for all mutants than for native MSR. The combined studies demonstrate that while W697 attenuates hydride transfer, it ensures coenzyme selectivity and accelerates FAD to FMN electron transfer. Moreover, analysis of analogous cytochrome P450 reductase (CPR) variants points to key differences in the driving force for flavin reduction and suggests that the conserved FAD stacking tryptophan residue in CPR also promotes interflavin electron transfer.  相似文献   

13.
Mammalian nitric-oxide synthases are large modular enzymes that evolved from independently expressed ancestors. Calmodulin-controlled isoforms are signal generators; calmodulin activates electron transfer from NADPH through three reductase domains to an oxygenase domain. Structures of the reductase unit and its homologs show FMN and FAD in contact but too isolated from the protein surface to permit exit of reducing equivalents. To study states in which FMN/heme electron transfer is feasible, we designed and produced constructs including only oxygenase and FMN binding domains, eliminating strong internal reductase complex interactions. Constructs for all mammalian isoforms were expressed and purified as dimers. All synthesize NO with peroxide as the electron donor at rates comparable with corresponding oxygenase constructs. All bind cofactors nearly stoichiometrically and have native catalytic sites by spectroscopic criteria. Modest differences in electrochemistry versus independently expressed heme and FMN binding domains suggest interdomain interactions. These interactions can be convincingly demonstrated via calmodulin-induced shifts in high spin ferriheme EPR spectra and through mutual broadening of heme and FMNH. radical signals in inducible nitric-oxide synthase constructs. Blue neutral FMN semiquinone can be readily observed; potentials of one electron couple (in inducible nitric-oxide synthase oxygenase FMN, FMN oxidized/semiquinone couple = +70 mV, FMN semiquinone/hydroquinone couple = -180 mV, and heme = -180 mV) indicate that FMN is capable of serving as a one electron heme reductant. The construct will serve as the basis for future studies of the output state for NADPH derived reducing equivalents.  相似文献   

14.
Nitric oxide (NO) is a physiological mediator synthesized by NO synthases (NOS). Despite their structural similarity, endothelial NOS (eNOS) has a 6-fold lower NO synthesis activity and 6-16-fold lower cytochrome c reductase activity than neuronal NOS (nNOS), implying significantly different electron transfer capacities. We utilized purified reductase domain constructs of either enzyme (bovine eNOSr and rat nNOSr) to investigate the following three mechanisms that may control their electron transfer: (i) the set point and control of a two-state conformational equilibrium of their FMN subdomains; (ii) the flavin midpoint reduction potentials; and (iii) the kinetics of NOSr-NADP+ interactions. Although eNOSr and nNOSr differed in their NADP(H) interaction and flavin thermodynamics, the differences were minor and unlikely to explain their distinct electron transfer activities. In contrast, calmodulin (CaM)-free eNOSr favored the FMN-shielded (electron-accepting) conformation over the FMN-deshielded (electron-donating) conformation to a much greater extent than did CaM-free nNOSr when the bound FMN cofactor was poised in each of its three possible oxidation states. NADPH binding only stabilized the FMN-shielded conformation of nNOSr, whereas CaM shifted both enzymes toward the FMN-deshielded conformation. Analysis of cytochrome c reduction rates measured within the first catalytic turnover revealed that the rate of conformational change to the FMN-deshielded state differed between eNOSr and nNOSr and was rate-limiting for either CaM-free enzyme. We conclude that the set point and regulation of the FMN conformational equilibrium differ markedly in eNOSr and nNOSr and can explain the lower electron transfer activity of eNOSr.  相似文献   

15.
Nitric oxide synthase (NOS) is a multidomain enzyme that catalyzes the production of nitric oxide (NO) by oxidizing l ‐Arg to NO and L‐citrulline. NO production requires multiple interdomain electron transfer steps between the flavin mononucleotide (FMN) and heme domain. Specifically, NADPH‐derived electrons are transferred to the heme‐containing oxygenase domain via the flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) and FMN containing reductase domains. While crystal structures are available for both the reductase and oxygenase domains of NOS, to date there is no atomic level structural information on domain interactions required for the final FMN‐to‐heme electron transfer step. Here, we evaluate a model of this final electron transfer step for the heme–FMN–calmodulin NOS complex based on the recent biophysical studies using a 105‐ns molecular dynamics trajectory. The resulting equilibrated complex structure is very stable and provides a detailed prediction of interdomain contacts required for stabilizing the NOS output state. The resulting equilibrated complex model agrees well with previous experimental work and provides a detailed working model of the final NOS electron transfer step required for NO biosynthesis.  相似文献   

16.
NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase (CPR), a diflavin reductase, plays a key role in the mammalian P450 mono-oxygenase system. In its crystal structure, the two flavins are close together, positioned for interflavin electron transfer but not for electron transfer to cytochrome P450. A number of lines of evidence suggest that domain motion is important in the action of the enzyme. We report NMR and small-angle x-ray scattering experiments addressing directly the question of domain organization in human CPR. Comparison of the 1H-15N heteronuclear single quantum correlation spectrum of CPR with that of the isolated FMN domain permitted identification of residues in the FMN domain whose environment differs in the two situations. These include several residues that are solvent-exposed in the CPR crystal structure, indicating the existence of a second conformation in which the FMN domain is involved in a different interdomain interface. Small-angle x-ray scattering experiments showed that oxidized and NADPH-reduced CPRs have different overall shapes. The scattering curve of the reduced enzyme can be adequately explained by the crystal structure, whereas analysis of the data for the oxidized enzyme indicates that it exists as a mixture of approximately equal amounts of two conformations, one consistent with the crystal structure and one a more extended structure consistent with that inferred from the NMR data. The correlation between the effects of adenosine 2′,5′-bisphosphate and NADPH on the scattering curve and their effects on the rate of interflavin electron transfer suggests that this conformational equilibrium is physiologically relevant.  相似文献   

17.
The nitric oxide synthases (NOSs) consist of a flavin-containing reductase domain, linked to a heme-containing oxygenase domain, by a calmodulin (CaM) binding sequence. The flavin-containing reductase domains of the NOS isoforms possess close sequence homology to NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase (CPR). Additionally, the oxygenase domains catalyze monooxygenation of L-arginine through a cytochrome P450-like cysteine thiolate-liganded heme bound in the active site. With these considerations in mind, we conducted studies in an attempt to gain insight into the intermediates involved in flavoprotein-to-heme electron transfer in the NOSs. Static, steady-state, and stopped-flow kinetic studies indicated that nNOS must be reduced to a more than one-electron-reduced intermediate before efficient electron transfer can occur. Therefore, the possibility exists that the oxygenase domains of the NOS isoforms may receive their electrons from the reductase domains by a mechanism resembling the CPR-P450 interaction. Furthermore, the rate-limiting step in electron transfer appears to be the transfer of electrons from the flavoprotein to the oxygenase domain facilitated by the binding of CaM at increased intracellular Ca(2+) concentrations. Thus, modulation of electron transfer rates appears to be regulated at the level of the flavoprotein domains of the NOS isoforms.  相似文献   

18.
Neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) is composed of an oxygenase domain that binds heme, (6R)-tetrahydrobiopterin, and Arg, coupled to a reductase domain that binds FAD, FMN, and NADPH. Activity requires dimeric interaction between two oxygenase domains and calmodulin binding between the reductase and oxygenase domains, which triggers electron transfer between flavin and heme groups. We constructed four different nNOS heterodimers to determine the path of calmodulin-induced electron transfer in a nNOS dimer. A predominantly monomeric mutant of rat nNOS (G671A) and its Arg binding mutant (G671A/E592A) were used as full-length subunits, along with oxygenase domain partners that either did or did not contain the E592A mutation. The E592A mutation prevented Arg binding to the oxygenase domain in which it was present. It also prevented NO synthesis when it was located in the oxygenase domain adjacent to the full-length subunit. However, it had no effect when present in the full-length subunit (i.e. the subunit containing the reductase domain). The active heterodimer (G671A/E592A full-length subunit plus wild type oxygenase domain subunit) showed remarkable similarity with wild type homodimeric nNOS in its catalytic responses to five different forms and chimeras of calmodulin. This reveals an active involvement of calmodulin in supporting transelectron transfer between flavin and heme groups on adjacent subunits in nNOS. In summary, we propose that calmodulin functions to properly align adjacent reductase and the oxygenase domains in a nNOS dimer for electron transfer between them, leading to NO synthesis by the heme.  相似文献   

19.
Oxygenase and reductase domains in nitric oxide synthase are linked by a peptide region that binds calmodulin. Here we study the effects of modifying the length of the interdomain linker in a deletion mutant lacking 15 amino acids (residues 503-517) in bovine eNOS. The kinetics of CO ligation with the mutant were determined in the presence and absence of tetrahydrobiopterin and arginine and compared with the CO binding kinetics of wild-type eNOS and the eNOS oxygenase domain. In the mutant, electron flow is interrupted. The association kinetics of CO with both mutant and wild-type eNOS can be approximated with two kinetic phases, but the relative proportions change in the mutant. Both the abrogation of electron flow in the mutant and the differences in CO binding may be explained by an alteration in the docking of the FMN domain to the heme domain. We propose that the calmodulin binding residues form a helix that is critical for the proper alignment of the adjacent reductase and oxygenase domains within the active eNOS dimer in achieving proper electron transfer between them.  相似文献   

20.
Diflavin reductases are enzymes which emerged as a gene fusion of ferredoxin (flavodoxin) reductase and flavodoxin. The enzymes of this family tightly bind two flavin cofactors, FAD and FMN, and catalyze transfer of the reducing equivalents from the two-electron donor NADPH to a variety of one-electron acceptors. Cytochrome P450 reductase (P450R), a flavoprotein subunit of sulfite reductase (SiR), and flavoprotein domains of naturally occurring flavocytochrome fusion enzymes like nitric oxide synthases (NOS) and the fatty acid hydroxylase from Bacillus megaterium are some of the enzymes of this family. In this review the results of the last decade of research are summarized, and some earlier results are reevaluated as well. The kinetic mechanism of cytochrome c reduction is analyzed in light of other results on flavoprotein interactions with nucleotides and cytochromes. The roles of the binding sites of the isoalloxazine rings of the flavin cofactors and conformational changes of the protein in electron transfer are discussed. It is proposed that minor conformational changes during catalysis can potentiate properties of the redox centers during the catalytic turnover. A function of the aromatic residue that shields the isoalloxazine ring of the FAD is also proposed.  相似文献   

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