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1.
 A two-step concerted mechanism for the conversion of methane to methanol catalyzed by soluble methane monooxygenase (sMMO) is discussed. We propose that the enzymatic reaction mechanism is essentially the same as that of the gas-phase methane-methanol conversion by the bare FeO+ complex. In the initial stage of our mechanism, the ferryl (Fe—O) "iron" active site of intermediate Q and substrate methane come into contact to form the initial Q (CH4) complex with an OFe—CH4 bond. The C—H bonds of methane are significantly weakened by the formation of a five-coordinate carbon species, through orbital interactions between a C 3v - or D 2d -distorted methane and the Fe—O active site. The important transition state for an H atom abstraction exhibits a four-centered structure. The generated intermediate involves an HO—Fe—CH3 moiety, and it is then converted into the final product complex including methanol as a ligand through a methyl migration that occurs via a three-centered transition state. The two-step concerted mechanism is consistent with recent experiments on regioselectivity of enzyme-catalyzed alkane hydroxylations. Received: 15 September 1997 / Accepted: 20 December 1997  相似文献   

2.
Methane hydroxylation through methane monooxygenases (MMOs) is a key aspect due to their control of the carbon cycle in the ecology system and recent applications of methane gas in the field of bioenergy and bioremediation. Methanotropic bacteria perform a specific microbial conversion from methane, one of the most stable carbon compounds, to methanol through elaborate mechanisms. MMOs express particulate methane monooxygenase (pMMO) in most strains and soluble methane monooxygenase (sMMO) under copper-limited conditions. The mechanisms of MMO have been widely studied from sMMO belonging to the bacterial multicomponent monooxygenase (BMM) superfamily. This enzyme has diiron active sites where different types of hydrocarbons are oxidized through orchestrated hydroxylase, regulatory and reductase components for precise control of hydrocarbons, oxygen, protons, and electrons. Recent advances in biophysical studies, including structural and enzymatic achievements for sMMO, have explained component interactions, substrate pathways, and intermediates of sMMO. In this account, oxidation of methane in sMMO is discussed with recent progress that is critical for understanding the microbial applications of C-H activation in one-carbon substrates.  相似文献   

3.
Zheng H  Lipscomb JD 《Biochemistry》2006,45(6):1685-1692
The hydroxylase component (MMOH) of the soluble form of methane monooxygenase (sMMO) isolated from Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b catalyzes both the O2 activation and the CH4 oxidation reactions at the oxygen-bridged dinuclear iron cluster present in its buried active site. During the reaction cycle, the diiron cluster forms a bis-mu-oxo-(Fe(IV))2 intermediate termed compound Q (Q) that reacts directly with methane. Many adventitious substrates also react with Q, most at a relatively slow rate. We have proposed that Q reacts preferentially with CH4 because the sMMO regulatory component MMOB induces a size selective pore into the MMOH active site as the two components form a complex. Support for this proposal has come through the observation of a nonlinear Arrhenius plot for the CH4 oxidation, presumably due to a shift in rate-limiting step from substrate binding at low temperature to C-H bond cleavage at high temperature. Reactions of all substrates other than CH4 fail to exhibit a break in the Arrhenius plot because binding is always rate limiting in the temperature range explored. Here we show that it is possible to induce a break in the Arrhenius plot for the ethane reaction with Q by using an MMOB mutant termed DBL2 (S109A/T111A) in which residues at the MMOH-MMOB interface are reduced in size. We hypothesize that this increases the ethane binding rate and shifts the Arrhenius breakpoint into the observable temperature range. As a result of this shift, the kinetic and activation parameters of the C-H bond breaking reaction for both methane and ethane can be observed using the DBL2 mutant. A 2H-KIE is observed for both substrate oxidation reactions when using DBL2, whereas only CH4 oxidation exhibits an effect when using wild type MMOB, consistent with the C-H bond cleaving reaction becoming at least partially rate limiting for ethane. Analysis of the temperature dependence of the 2H-KIE for ethane and methane for reactions using both mutant and wild type forms of MMOB suggests that quantum tunneling plays a significant role in methane oxidation but not ethane oxidation.  相似文献   

4.
Soluble methane monooxygenase (sMMO) catalyzes the hydroxylation of methane by dioxygen to afford methanol and water, the first step of carbon assimilation in methanotrophic bacteria. This enzyme comprises three protein components: a hydroxylase (MMOH) that contains a dinuclear nonheme iron active site; a reductase (MMOR) that facilitates electron transfer from NADH to the diiron site of MMOH; and a coupling protein (MMOB). MMOR uses a noncovalently bound FAD cofactor and a [2Fe-2S] cluster to mediate electron transfer. The gene encoding MMOR was cloned from Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath) and expressed in Escherichia coli in high yield. Purified recombinant MMOR was indistinguishable from the native protein in all aspects examined, including activity, mass, cofactor content, and EPR spectrum of the [2Fe-2S] cluster. Redox potentials for the FAD and [2Fe-2S] cofactors, determined by reductive titrations in the presence of indicator dyes, are FAD(ox/sq), -176 +/- 7 mV; FAD(sq/hq), -266 +/- 15 mV; and [2Fe-2S](ox/red), -209 +/- 14 mV. The midpoint potentials of MMOR are not altered by the addition of MMOH, MMOB, or both MMOH and MMOB. The reaction of MMOR with NADH was investigated by stopped-flow UV-visible spectroscopy, and the kinetic and spectral properties of intermediates are described. The effects of pH on the redox properties of MMOR are described and exploited in pH jump kinetic studies to measure the rate constant of 130 +/- 17 s(-)(1) for electron transfer between the FAD and [2Fe-2S] cofactors in two-electron-reduced MMOR. The thermodynamic and kinetic parameters determined significantly extend our understanding of the sMMO system.  相似文献   

5.
Soluble methane monooxygenases utilize a carboxylate-bridged diiron center and dioxygen to convert methane to methanol. A diiron(IV) oxo intermediate Q is the active species for this process. Alternative substrates and theoretical studies can help elucidate the mechanism. Experimental results for reactions with derivatized methanes were previously modeled by a combination of quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical techniques and the model was extended to predict the relative reactivity of fluoromethane. We therefore studied reactions of Q with CF(n)H(4-n) (n=1-3) to test the prediction. The kinetics of single-turnover reactions of Q with these substrates were monitored by double-mixing stopped-flow optical spectroscopy. For fluoro- and difluoromethane, conversion to the alcohols occurred with second-order rate constants less than that of methane, the values being 28,700 (CH4)>25,000 (CFH3)>9300 (CF2H2) M(-1) s(-1). KIE values for C-H versus C-D activation above the classical limit were observed, requiring modification of the theoretical predictions.  相似文献   

6.
Zhang J  Lipscomb JD 《Biochemistry》2006,45(5):1459-1469
The effects of the C-terminal region of the B component (MMOB) of soluble methane monooxygenase (sMMO) from Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b on steady-state turnover, the transient kinetics of the reaction cycle, and the properties of the sMMO hydroxylase (MMOH) active site diiron cluster have been explored. MMOB is known to have many profound effects on the rate and specificity of sMMO. Past studies have revealed specific roles for the well-folded core structure of MMOB as well as the disordered N-terminal region. Here, it is shown that the disordered C-terminal region of MMOB also performs critical roles in the regulation of catalysis. Deletion mutants of MMOB missing 5, 8, and 13 C-terminal residues cause progressive decreases in the maximum steady-state turnover number, as well as lower apparent rate constants for formation of the key reaction cycle intermediate, compound Q. It is shown that this latter effect is actually due to a decrease in the rate constant for formation of an earlier intermediate, probably the hydroperoxo species, compound P. Moreover, the deletions result in substantial uncoupling at or before the P intermediate. It is proposed that this is due to competition between slow H(2)O(2) release from one of the intermediates and the reaction that carries this intermediate on to the next step in the cycle, which is slowed by the mutation. Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) studies of the hydroxylase component (MMOH) in the mixed valent state suggest that complexation with the mutant MMOBs alters the electronic properties of the diiron cluster in a manner distinct from that observed when wild-type MMOB is used. Active site structural changes are also suggested by a substantial decrease in the deuterium kinetic isotope effect for the reaction of Q with methane thought to be associated with a decrease in quantum tunneling in the C-H bond breaking reaction. Thus, the surface interactions between MMOH and MMOB that affect substrate oxidation and its regulation appear to require the complete MMOB C-terminal region for proper function.  相似文献   

7.
 The selective oxidation of CH4 to CH3OH is a conceptually simple, yet functionally difficult, chemical transformation. In nature, this reaction is performed by methane monooxygenases, the soluble class of which employ carboxylate-bridged dinuclear iron centers to activate dioxygen. The process by which small molecules access the active site of the sMMO hydroxylase, the structures of intermediates in the catalytic reaction cycle, and mechanistic details about the attack on the C–H bond are subjects of intense investigation. In this commentary, we present our current views on exogenous ligand binding and dioxygen activation at the active site and the mechanism of alkane hydroxylation. Received: 20 October 1997 / Accepted: 26 February 1998  相似文献   

8.
Phenol hydroxylase (PH) belongs to a family of bacterial multicomponent monooxygenases (BMMs) with carboxylate-bridged diiron active sites. Included are toluene/o-xylene (ToMO) and soluble methane (sMMO) monooxygenase. PH hydroxylates aromatic compounds, but unlike sMMO, it cannot oxidize alkanes despite having a similar dinuclear iron active site. Important for activity is formation of a complex between the hydroxylase and a regulatory protein component. To address how structural features of BMM hydroxylases and their component complexes may facilitate the catalytic mechanism and choice of substrate, we determined X-ray structures of native and SeMet forms of the PH hydroxylase (PHH) in complex with its regulatory protein (PHM) to 2.3 A resolution. PHM binds in a canyon on one side of the (alphabetagamma)2 PHH dimer, contacting alpha-subunit helices A, E, and F approximately 12 A above the diiron core. The structure of the dinuclear iron center in PHH resembles that of mixed-valent MMOH, suggesting an Fe(II)Fe(III) oxidation state. Helix E, which comprises part of the iron-coordinating four-helix bundle, has more pi-helical character than analogous E helices in MMOH and ToMOH lacking a bound regulatory protein. Consequently, conserved active site Thr and Asn residues translocate to the protein surface, and an approximately 6 A pore opens through the four-helix bundle. Of likely functional significance is a specific hydrogen bond formed between this Asn residue and a conserved Ser side chain on PHM. The PHM protein covers a putative docking site on PHH for the PH reductase, which transfers electrons to the PHH diiron center prior to O2 activation, suggesting that the regulatory component may function to block undesired reduction of oxygenated intermediates during the catalytic cycle. A series of hydrophobic cavities through the PHH alpha-subunit, analogous to those in MMOH, may facilitate movement of the substrate to and/or product from the active site pocket. Comparisons between the ToMOH and PHH structures provide insights into their substrate regiospecificities.  相似文献   

9.
We present here the results of density functional theory (DFT) calculations directed toward elucidation of the CH bond activation mechanism that might be adopted by the particulate methane monooxygenase (pMMO) in the hydroxylation of methane and related small alkanes. In these calculations, we considered three of the most probable models for the transition metal active site mediating the "oxo-transfer": (i) the trinuclear copper cluster bis(mu(3)-oxo)trinuclear copper(II, II, III) complex 1, recently proposed by Chan et al. [S.I. Chan, K.H.-C. Chen, S.S.-F. Yu, C.-L. Chen, S.S.-J. Kuo, Biochemistry 43 (2004) 4421-4430.]; (ii) the most frequently used model complex, bis(mu-oxo)Cu(III)(2) complex 2; and (iii) the mixed-valence bis(mu-oxo)Cu(II)Cu(III) complex 3. The results obtained indicate that the methane hydroxylation chemistry mediated by the trinuclear copper cluster bis(mu(3)-oxo)trinuclear copper(II, II, III) complex 1 offers the most facile pathway for methane hydroxylation, and this model yields KIE values that are in good agreement with experiment. In this mechanism, the reaction proceeds along a "singlet" potential surface and a "singlet oxene" is directly inserted across a CH bond in a concerted manner. Kinetic isotope effects (k(H)/k(D) or KIE) associated with the concerted oxene insertion process mediated by complex 1 are calculated to be 5.2 at 300K when tunneling effects are included. Overall rate constants for the methane hydroxylation by the three models have been calculated as a function of temperature, and the rates are at least 5-6 orders of magnitude more facile when the chemistry is mediated by complex 1 compared to complex 2 or complex 3.  相似文献   

10.
G T Gassner  S J Lippard 《Biochemistry》1999,38(39):12768-12785
The soluble methane monooxygenase system of Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath) includes three protein components: a 251-kDa non-heme dinuclear iron hydroxylase (MMOH), a 39-kDa iron-sulfur- and FAD-containing reductase (MMOR), and a 16-kDa regulatory protein (MMOB). The thermodynamic stability and kinetics of formation of complexes between oxidized MMOH and MMOB or MMOR were measured by isothermal titration calorimetry and stopped-flow fluorescence spectroscopy at temperatures ranging from 3.3 to 45 degrees C. The results, in conjunction with data from equilibrium analytical ultracentrifugation studies of MMOR and MMOB, indicate that free MMOR and MMOB exist as monomers in solution and bind MMOH with 2:1 stoichiometry. The role of component interactions in the catalytic mechanism of sMMO was investigated through simultaneous measurement of oxidase and hydroxylase activities as a function of varied protein component concentrations during steady-state turnover. The partitioning of oxidase and hydroxylase activities of sMMO is highly dependent on both the MMOR concentration and the nature of the organic substrate. In particular, NADH oxidation is significantly uncoupled from methane hydroxylation at MMOR concentrations exceeding 20% of the hydroxylase concentration but remains tightly coupled to propylene epoxidation at MMOR concentrations ranging up to the MMOH concentration. The steady-state kinetic data were fit to numerical simulations of models that include both the oxidase activities of free MMOR and of MMOH/MMOR complexes and the hydroxylase activity of MMOH/MMOB complexes. The data were well described by a model in which MMOR and MMOB bind noncompetitively at distinct interacting sites on the hydroxylase. MMOB manifests its regulatory effects by differentially accelerating intermolecular electron transfer from MMOR to MMOH containing bound substrate and product in a manner consistent with its activating and inhibitory effects on the hydroxylase.  相似文献   

11.
Soluble methane monooxygenase (sMMO) catalyzes the hydroxylation of methane by dioxygen to methanol, the first step in carbon assimilation by methanotrophs. This multicomponent system transfers electrons from NADH through a reductase component to the non-heme diiron center in the hydroxylase where O(2) is activated. The reductase component comprises three distinct domains, a [2Fe-2S] ferredoxin domain along with FAD- and NADH-binding domains. We report the solution structure of the reduced 27.6 kDa FAD- and NADH-binding domains (MMOR-FAD) of the reductase from Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath). The FAD-binding domain consists of a six-stranded antiparallel beta-barrel and one alpha-helix, with the first 10 N-terminal residues unstructured. In the interface between the two domains, the FAD cofactor is tightly bound in an unprecedented extended conformation. The NADH-binding domain consists of a five-stranded parallel beta-sheet with four alpha-helices packing closely around this sheet. MMOR-FAD is structurally homologous to other FAD-containing oxidoreductases, and we expect similar structures for the FAD/NADH-binding domains of reductases that occur in other multicomponent monooxygenases.  相似文献   

12.
Sazinsky MH  Merkx M  Cadieux E  Tang S  Lippard SJ 《Biochemistry》2004,43(51):16263-16276
A three-component soluble methane monooxygenase (sMMO) enzyme system catalyzes the hydroxylation of methane to methanol at a carboxylate-bridged diiron center housed in the alpha-subunit of the hydroxylase (MMOH). Catalysis is facilitated by the presence of a regulatory protein (MMOB) and inhibited by MMOD, a protein of unknown function encoded in the sMMO operon. Both MMOB and MMOD are presumed to bind to the same region of the MMOH alpha-subunit. A colorimetric method for monitoring removal of Fe(II) from MMOH was developed using 1,10-phenanthroline and yields apo MMOH with <0.1 Fe/homodimer. With the use of this method, it was possible to investigate the X-ray structure of the apoenzyme and to perform metal reconstitution studies. Using MMOH from Methylococccus capsulatus (Bath), the effects of MMOB and MMOD on metal binding were studied and structural perturbations relevant to the function of this enzyme were identified. X-ray crystal structures of the apo, Mn(II)-soaked, and Co(II)-grown MMOH, determined to 2.3 A or greater resolution, reveal that the presence of metal ions is essential for the proper folding of helices E, F, and H of the alpha-subunit. The active sites of Mn(II)-soaked and Co(II)-grown MMOH are similar to that of reduced, native MMOH with notable differences in the metal-metal distances and ligand coordination sphere that may reflect how this dinuclear metal center might change in the presence of MMOB. MMOB and MMOD decrease the rate of removal of Fe(II) from the enzyme by 22- and 16-fold, respectively. On the basis of previous studies, it is hypothesized that MMOB, and perhaps MMOD, function to block solvent access to the MMOH active site. Finally, ITC studies and the observed disorder in helices E, F, and H in the apo and Mn(II)-soaked structures suggest that these regions of MMOH are critical for MMOB and MMOD binding.  相似文献   

13.
The soluble methane monooxygenase (sMMO) hydroxylase is a prototypical member of the class of proteins with non-heme carboxylate-bridged diiron sites. The sMMO subclass of enzyme systems has several distinguishing characteristics, including the ability to catalyze hydroxylation or epoxidation chemistry, a multisubunit hydroxylase containing diiron centers in its alpha subunits, and the requirement of a coupling protein for optimal activity. Sequence homology alignment of known members of the sMMO family was performed in an effort to identify protein regions giving rise to these unique features. DNA sequencing of the Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath) sMMO genes confirmed previously identified sequencing errors and corrected two additional errors, each of which was confirmed by at least one independent method. Alignments of homologous proteins from sMMO, phenol hydroxylase, toluene 2-, 3-, and 4-monooxygenases, and alkene monooxygenase systems revealed an interesting set of absolutely conserved amino-acid residues, including previously unidentified residues located outside the diiron active site of the hydroxylase. By mapping these residues on to the M. capsulatus (Bath) sMMO hydroxylase crystal structure, functional and structural roles were proposed for the conserved regions. Analysis of the active site showed a highly conserved hydrogen-bonding network on one side of the diiron cluster but little homology on the opposite side, where substrates are presumed to bind. It is suggested that conserved residues on the hydroxylase surface may be important for protein-protein interactions with the reductase and coupling ancillary proteins and/or serve as part of an electron-transfer pathway. A possible way by which binding of the coupling protein at the surface of the hydroxylase might transfer information to the diiron active site at the interior is proposed.  相似文献   

14.
Chan SI  Chen KH  Yu SS  Chen CL  Kuo SS 《Biochemistry》2004,43(15):4421-4430
The particulate methane monooxygenase (pMMO) is a complex membrane protein complex that has been difficult to isolate and purify for biochemical and biophysical characterization because of its instability in detergents used to solubilize the enzyme. In this perspective, we summarize the progress recently made toward obtaining a purified pMMO-detergent complex and characterizing the enzyme in pMMO-enriched membranes. The purified pMMO is a multi-copper protein, with ca. 15 copper ions sequestered into five trinuclear copper clusters: two for dioxygen chemistry and alkane hydroxylation (catalytic or C-clusters) and three to provide a buffer of reducing equivalents to re-reduce the C-clusters following turnover (electron transfer or E-clusters). The enzyme is functional when all the copper ions are reduced. When the protein is purified under ambient aerobic conditions in the absence of a hydrocarbon substrate, only the C-clusters are oxidized; there is an apparent kinetic barrier for electron transfer from the E-cluster copper ions to the C-clusters under these conditions. Evidence is provided in support of both C-clusters participating in the dioxygen chemistry, but only one C-cluster supporting alkane hydroxylation. Acetylene modification of the latter C-cluster in the hydrophobic pocket of the active site lowers or removes the kinetic barrier for electron transfer from the E-clusters to the C-clusters so that all the copper ions could be fully oxidized by dioxygen. A model for the hydroxylation chemistry when a hydrocarbon substrate is bound to the active site of the hydroxylation C-cluster is presented. Unlike soluble methane monooxygenase (sMMO), pMMO exhibits limited substrate specificity, but the hydroxylation chemistry is highly regioselective and stereoselective. In addition, the hydroxylation occurs with total retention of configuration of the carbon center that is oxidized. These results are consistent with a concerted mechanism involving direct side-on insertion of an active singlet "oxene" from the activated copper cluster across the "C-H" bond in the active site. Finally, in our hands, both the purified pMMO-detergent complex and pMMO-enriched membranes exhibit high NADH-sensitive as well as duroquinol-sensitive specific activity. A possible role for the two reductants in the turnover of the enzyme is proposed.  相似文献   

15.
Soluble methane monooxygenase (sMMO) can degrade many chlorinated and aromatic pollutants. It is produced by certain methanotrophs such as Methylosinus trichosporium when grown on methane under copper limitation but, due to its low aqueous solubility, methane cannot support dense biomass growth. Since it is water soluble, methanol may be a more attractive growth substrate, but it is widely believed that sMMO is not produced on methanol. In this study, when the growth-limiting substrate was switched from methane to methanol, in the presence of the particulate MMO inhibitor, allylthiourea, growth of M. trichosporium OB3b continued unabated and sMMO activity was completely retained. When allylthiourea was then removed, sMMO activity was maintained for an additional 24 generations, albeit at a slightly lower level due to the presence of 0.70 microM of Cu(2+) in the feed medium. While a biomass density of only 2 g l(-1) could be obtained on methane, 7.4 g l(-1) was achieved by feeding methanol exponentially, and 29 g l(-1) was obtained using a modified feeding strategy employing on-line carbon dioxide production measurement. It was concluded that methanol can be employed to produce large amounts of M. trichosporium biomass containing sMMO.  相似文献   

16.
Soluble methane monooxygenase (sMMO) has been studied intensively to understand the mechanism by which it catalyzes the remarkable oxidation of methane to methanol. The cluster of genes that encode for the three characterized protein components of sMMO (MMOH, MMOB, and MMOR) contains an additional open reading frame (orfY) of unknown function. In the present study, MMOD, the protein encoded by orfY, was overexpressed as a fusion protein in Escherichia coli. Pure MMOD was obtained in high yields after proteolytic cleavage and a two-step purification procedure. Western blot analysis of Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath) soluble cell extracts showed that MMOD is expressed in the native organism although at significantly lower levels than the other sMMO proteins. The cofactorless MMOD protein is a potent inhibitor of sMMO activity and binds to the hydroxylase protein (MMOH) with an affinity similar to that of MMOB and MMOR. The addition of up to 2 MMOD per MMOH results in changes in the optical spectrum of the hydroxylase that suggest the formation of a (micro-oxo)diiron(III) center in a fraction of the MMOH-MMOD complexes. Possible functions for MMOD are discussed, including a role in the assembly of the MMOH diiron center similar to that suggested for DmpK, a protein that shares some properties with MMOD.  相似文献   

17.
Mechanistic aspects of oxidation of methane to methanol by methanotrophic bacteria via methane monooxygenase (MMO) is still not well understood. Elucidating how various molecules pertinent to methane oxidation interact with each other at the MMO active site offers critical insights on low-temperature activation of methane, which is one of the greatest technical challenges in hydrocarbon chemistry. In this review, most recent contributions to the area are analyzed comparing soluble (sMMO) and particulate (pMMO) forms. Initially, the taxonomical, morphological and physiological differences of different methanotrophs are discussed. Then, the structural and functional differences of sMMO and pMMO are analyzed while considering substrate/product-cofactor-active site interactions. A docking analysis was performed using Autodock Vina to uncover interactions between cofactors and corresponding enzymes. With natural gas becoming a significant contributor to the energy continuum, this literature analysis and molecular simulations conducted brings new insights to low-temperature activation of methane.  相似文献   

18.
High-valent iron in chemical and biological oxidations   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Various aspects of the reactivity of iron(IV) in chemical and biological systems are reviewed. Accumulated evidence shows that the ferryl species [Fe(IV)O](2+) can be formed under a variety of conditions including those related to the ferrous ion-hydrogen peroxide system known as Fenton's reagent. Early evidence that such a species could hydroxylate typical aliphatic C-H bonds included regioselectivities and stereospecificities for cyclohexanol hydroxylation that could not be accounted for by a freely diffusing hydroxyl radical. Iron(IV) porphyrin complexes are also found in the catalytic cycles of cytochrome P450 and chloroperoxidase. Model oxo-iron(IV) porphyrin complexes have shown reactivity similar to the proposed enzymatic intermediates. Mechanistic studies using mechanistically diagnostic substrates have implicated a radical rebound scenario for aliphatic hydroxylation by cytochrome P450. Likewise, several non-heme diiron hydroxylases, AlkB (Omega-hydroxylase), sMMO (soluble methane monooxygenase), XylM (xylene monooxygenase) and T4moH (toluene monooxygenase) all show clear indications of radical rearranged products indicating that the oxygen rebound pathway is a ubiquitous mechanism for hydrocarbon oxygenation by both heme and non-heme iron enzymes.  相似文献   

19.
Soluble methane monooxygenase (sMMO) from methane-oxidizing bacteria is a multicomponent nonheme oxygenase that naturally oxidizes methane to methanol and can also cooxidize a wide range of adventitious substrates, including mono- and diaromatic hydrocarbons. Leucine 110, at the mouth of the active site in the alpha subunit of the hydroxylase component of sMMO, has been suggested to act as a gate to control the access of substrates to the active site. Previous crystallography of the wild-type sMMO has indicated at least two conformations of the enzyme that have the "leucine gate" open to different extents, and mutagenesis of homologous enzymes has indicated a role for this residue in the control of substrate range and regioselectivity with aromatic substrates. By further refinement of the system for homologous expression of sMMO that we developed previously, we have been able to prepare a range of site-directed mutations at position 110 in the alpha subunit of sMMO. All the mutants (with Gly, Cys, Arg, and Tyr, respectively, at this position) showed relaxations of regioselectivity compared to the wild type with monoaromatic substrates and biphenyl, including the appearance of new products arising from hydroxylation at the 2- and 3- positions on the benzene ring. Mutants with the larger Arg and Trp residues at position 110 also showed shifts in regioselectivity during naphthalene hydroxylation from the 2- to the 1- position. No evidence that mutagenesis of Leu 110 could allow very large substrates to enter the active site was found, however, since the mutants (like the wild type) were inactive toward the triaromatic hydrocarbons anthracene and phenanthrene. Thus, our results indicate that the "leucine gate" in sMMO is more important in controlling the precision of regioselectivity than the sizes of substrates that can enter the active site.  相似文献   

20.
Methane monooxygenase (MMO), found in aerobic methanotrophic bacteria, catalyzes the O2-dependent conversion of methane to methanol. The soluble form of the enzyme (sMMO) consists of three components: a reductase, a regulatory "B" component (MMOB), and a hydroxylase component (MMOH), which contains a hydroxo-bridged dinuclear iron cluster. Two genera of methanotrophs, termed Type X and Type II, which differ markedly in cellular and metabolic characteristics, are known to produce the sMMO. The structure of MMOH from the Type X methanotroph Methylococcus capsulatus Bath (MMO Bath) has been reported recently. Two different structures were found for the essential diiron cluster, depending upon the temperature at which the diffraction data were collected. In order to extend the structural studies to the Type II methanotrophs and to determine whether one of the two known MMOH structures is generally applicable to the MMOH family, we have determined the crystal structure of the MMOH from Type II Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b (MMO OB3b) in two crystal forms to 2.0 A resolution, respectively, both determined at 18 degrees C. The crystal forms differ in that MMOB was present during crystallization of the second form. Both crystal forms, however, yielded very similar results for the structure of the MMOH. Most of the major structural features of the MMOH Bath were also maintained with high fidelity. The two irons of the active site cluster of MMOH OB3b are bridged by two OH (or one OH and one H2O), as well as both carboxylate oxygens of Glu alpha 144. This bis-mu-hydroxo-bridged "diamond core" structure, with a short Fe-Fe distance of 2.99 A, is unique for the resting state of proteins containing analogous diiron clusters, and is very similar to the structure reported for the cluster from flash frozen (-160 degrees C) crystals of MMOH Bath, suggesting a common active site structure for the soluble MMOHs. The high-resolution structure of MMOH OB3b indicates 26 consecutive amino acid sequence differences in the beta chain when compared to the previously reported sequence inferred from the cloned gene. Fifteen additional sequence differences distributed randomly over the three chains were also observed, including D alpha 209E, a ligand of one of the irons.  相似文献   

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