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1.
The NADPH cytochrome P450 reductase (CPR), a diflavin enzyme, catalyzes the electron transfer (ET) from NADPH to the substrate P450. The crystal structures of mammalian and yeast CPRs show a compact organization for the two domains containing FMN (flavin mononucleotide) and FAD (flavin adenine dinucleotide), with a short interflavin distance consistent with fast ET from the NADPH-reduced FAD to the second flavin FMN. This conformation, referred as "closed", contrasts with the alternative opened or extended domain arrangements recently described for partially reduced or mutant CPR. Internal domain flexibility in this enzyme is indeed necessary to account for the apparently conflicting requirements of having FMN flavin accessible to both the FAD and the substrate P450 at the same interface. However, how interdomain dynamics influence internal and external ETs in CPR is still largely unknown. Here, we used NMR techniques to explore the global, domain-specific and residue-specific structural and dynamic properties of the nucleotide-free human CPR in solution in its oxidized state. Based on the backbone resonance assignment of this 70-kDa protein, we collected residue-specific (15)N relaxation and (1)H-(15)N residual dipolar couplings. Surprisingly and in contrast with previous studies, the analysis of these NMR data revealed that the CPR exists in a unique and predominant conformation that highly resembles the closed conformation observed in the crystalline state. Based on our findings and the previous observations of conformational equilibria of the CPR in partially reduced states, we propose that the large-scale conformational transitions of the CPR during the catalytic cycle are tightly controlled to ensure optimal electron delivery.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
Protein domain motion is often implicated in biological electron transfer, but the general significance of motion is not clear. Motion has been implicated in the transfer of electrons from human cytochrome P450 reductase (CPR) to all microsomal cytochrome P450s (CYPs). Our hypothesis is that tight coupling of motion with enzyme chemistry can signal "ready and waiting" states for electron transfer from CPR to downstream CYPs and support vectorial electron transfer across complex redox chains. We developed a novel approach to study the time-dependence of dynamical change during catalysis that reports on the changing conformational states of CPR. FRET was linked to stopped-flow studies of electron transfer in CPR that contains donor-acceptor fluorophores on the enzyme surface. Open and closed states of CPR were correlated with key steps in the catalytic cycle which demonstrated how redox chemistry and NADPH binding drive successive opening and closing of the enzyme. Specifically, we provide evidence that reduction of the flavin moieties in CPR induces CPR opening, whereas ligand binding induces CPR closing. A dynamic reaction cycle was created in which CPR optimizes internal electron transfer between flavin cofactors by adopting closed states and signals "ready and waiting" conformations to partner CYP enzymes by adopting more open states. This complex, temporal control of enzyme motion is used to catalyze directional electron transfer from NADPH→FAD→FMN→heme, thereby facilitating all microsomal P450-catalysed reactions. Motions critical to the broader biological functions of CPR are tightly coupled to enzyme chemistry in the human NADPH-CPR-CYP redox chain. That redox chemistry alone is sufficient to drive functionally necessary, large-scale conformational change is remarkable. Rather than relying on stochastic conformational sampling, our study highlights a need for tight coupling of motion to enzyme chemistry to give vectorial electron transfer along complex redox chains.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
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   

6.
Calmodulin (CaM) activates NO synthase (NOS) by binding to a 20 amino acid interdomain hinge in the presence of Ca (2+), inducing electrons to be transferred from the FAD to the heme of the enzyme via a mobile FMN domain. The activation process is influenced by a number of structural features, including an autoinhibitory loop, the C-terminal tail of the enzyme, and a number of phosphorylation sites. Crystallographic and other recent experimental data imply that the regulatory elements lie within the interface between the FAD- and FMN-binding domains, restricting the movement of the two cofactors with respect to each other. Arg1229 of rat neuronal NOS is a conserved residue in the FAD domain that forms one of only two electrostatic contacts between the domains. Mutation of this residue to Glu reverses its charge and is expected to induce an interdomain repulsion, allowing the importance of the interface and domain-domain motion to be probed. The charge-reversal mutation R1229E has three dramatic effects on catalysis: (i) hydride transfer from NADPH to FAD is activated in the CaM-free enzyme, (ii) FAD to FMN electron transfer is inhibited in both forms, and (iii) electron transfer from FMN to the surrogate acceptor cytochrome c is activated in the CaM-free enzyme. As a result, during steady-state turnover with cytochrome c, calmodulin now deactivates the enzyme and causes cytochrome c-dependent inhibition. Evidently, domain-domain separation is large enough in the mutant to accommodate another protein between the cofactors. The effects of this single charge reversal on three distinct catalytic events illustrate how each is differentially dependent on the enzyme conformation and support a model for catalytic motion in which steps i, ii, and iii occur in the hinged open, closed, and open states, respectively. This model is also likely to apply to related enzymes such as cytochrome P450 reductase.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Midpoint reduction potentials for the flavin cofactors in human NADPH-cytochrome P450 oxidoreductase were determined by anaerobic redox titration of the diflavin (FAD and FMN) enzyme and by separate titrations of its isolated FAD/NADPH and FMN domains. Flavin reduction potentials are similar in the isolated domains (FAD domain E(1) [oxidized/semiquinone] = -286 +/- 6 mV, E(2) [semiquinone/reduced] = -371 +/- 7 mV; FMN domain E(1) = -43 +/- 7 mV, E(2) = -280 +/- 8 mV) and the soluble diflavin reductase (E(1) [FMN] = -66 +/- 8 mV, E(2) [FMN] = -269 +/- 10 mV; E(1) [FAD] = -283 +/- 5 mV, E(2) [FAD] = -382 +/- 8 mV). The lack of perturbation of the individual flavin potentials in the FAD and FMN domains indicates that the flavins are located in discrete environments and that these environments are not significantly disrupted by genetic dissection of the domains. Each flavin titrates through a blue semiquinone state, with the FMN semiquinone being most intense due to larger separation (approximately 200 mV) of its two couples. Both the FMN domain and the soluble reductase are purified in partially reduced, colored form from the Escherichia coli expression system, either as a green reductase or a gray-blue FMN domain. In both cases, large amounts of the higher potential FMN are in the semiquinone form. The redox properties of human cytochrome P450 reductase (CPR) are similar to those reported for rabbit CPR and the reductase domain of neuronal nitric oxide synthase. However, they differ markedly from those of yeast and bacterial CPRs, pointing to an important evolutionary difference in electronic regulation of these enzymes.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
The crystal structure of NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase (CYPOR) implies that a large domain movement is essential for electron transfer from NADPH via FAD and FMN to its redox partners. To test this hypothesis, a disulfide bond was engineered between residues Asp(147) and Arg(514) in the FMN and FAD domains, respectively. The cross-linked form of this mutant protein, designated 147CC514, exhibited a significant decrease in the rate of interflavin electron transfer and large (≥90%) decreases in rates of electron transfer to its redox partners, cytochrome c and cytochrome P450 2B4. Reduction of the disulfide bond restored the ability of the mutant to reduce its redox partners, demonstrating that a conformational change is essential for CYPOR function. The crystal structures of the mutant without and with NADP(+) revealed that the two flavin domains are joined by a disulfide linkage and that the relative orientations of the two flavin rings are twisted ~20° compared with the wild type, decreasing the surface contact area between the two flavin rings. Comparison of the structures without and with NADP(+) shows movement of the Gly(631)-Asn(635) loop. In the NADP(+)-free structure, the loop adopts a conformation that sterically hinders NADP(H) binding. The structure with NADP(+) shows movement of the Gly(631)-Asn(635) loop to a position that permits NADP(H) binding. Furthermore, comparison of these mutant and wild type structures strongly suggests that the Gly(631)-Asn(635) loop movement controls NADPH binding and NADP(+) release; this loop movement in turn facilitates the flavin domain movement, allowing electron transfer from FMN to the CYPOR redox partners.  相似文献   

11.
Roitel O  Scrutton NS  Munro AW 《Biochemistry》2003,42(36):10809-10821
Cys-999 is one component of a triad (Cys-999, Ser-830, and Asp-1044) located in the FAD domain of flavocytochrome P450 BM3 that is almost entirely conserved throughout the diflavin reductase family of enzymes. The role of Cys-999 has been studied by steady-state kinetics, stopped-flow spectroscopy, and potentiometry. The C999A mutants of BM3 reductase (containing both FAD and FMN cofactors) and the isolated FAD domain are substantially compromised in their capacity to reduce artificial electron acceptors in steady-state turnover with either NADPH or NADH as electron donors. Stopped-flow studies indicate that this is due primarily to a substantially slower rate of hydride transfer from nicotinamide coenzyme to FAD cofactor in the C999A enzymes. The compromised rates of hydride transfer are not attributable to altered thermodynamic properties of the flavins. A reduced enzyme-NADP(+) charge-transfer species is populated following hydride transfer in the wild-type FAD domain, consistent with the slow release of NADP(+) from the 2-electron-reduced enzyme. This intermediate does not accumulate in the C999A FAD domain or wild-type and C999A BM3 reductases, suggesting more rapid release of NADP(+) from these enzyme forms. Rapid internal electron transfer from FAD to FMN in wild-type BM3 reductase releases NADP(+) from the nicotinamide-binding site, thus preventing the inhibition of enzyme activity through the accumulation of a stable FADH(2)-NADP(+) charge-transfer complex. Hydride transfer is reversible, and the observed rate of oxidation of the 2-electron-reduced C999A BM3 reductase and FAD domain is hyperbolically dependent on NADP(+) concentration. With the wild-type BM3 reductase and FAD domain, the rate of flavin oxidation displays an unusual dependence on NADP(+) concentration, consistent with a two-site binding model in which two coenzyme molecules bind to catalytic and regulatory regions (or sites) within a bipartite coenzyme binding site. A kinetic model is proposed in which binding of coenzyme to the regulatory site hinders sterically the release of NADPH from the catalytic site. The results are discussed in the light of kinetic and structural studies on mammalian cytochrome P450 reductase.  相似文献   

12.
NADPH-cytochrome P450 oxidoreductase (CPR) serves as the electron donor to almost all eukaryotic cytochromes P450. It belongs to a small family of diflavin proteins and is built of cofactor binding domains with high structural homology to those of bacterial flavodoxins and to ferredoxin-NADP+ oxidoreductases. CPR shuttles electrons from NADPH through the FAD and FMN-cofactors into the central heme-group of the P450s. Mobile domains in CPR are essential for electron transfer between FAD and FMN and for P450 interaction. Blast searches identified 54 full-length gene sequences encoding CPR derived from a total of 35 different plant species. CPRs from vascular plants cluster into two major phylogenetic groups. Depending on the species, plants contain one, two or three paralogs of which one is inducible. The nature of the CPR–P450 interacting domains is well conserved as demonstrated by the ability of CPRs from different species or even from different kingdoms to at least partially complement each other functionally. This makes CPR an ideal bio-brick in synthetic biology approaches to re-design or develop entirely different combinations of existing biological systems to gain improved or completely altered functionalities based on the “share your parts” principle.  相似文献   

13.
Flavocytochrome P450BM‐3 is a soluble bacterial reductase composed of two flavin (FAD/FMN) and one HEME domains. In this article, we have performed molecular dynamics simulations on both the isolated FMN and HEME domains and their crystallographic complex, with the aim to study their binding modes and to garner insight into the interdomain electron transfer (ET) mechanism. The results evidenced an interdomain conformational rearrangement that reduces the average distance between the FMN and HEME cofactors from 1.81 nm, in the crystal structure, to an average value of 1.41 ± 0.09 nm along the simulation. This modification is in agreement with previously proposed hypotheses suggesting that the crystallographic FMN/HEME complex is not in the optimal arrangement for favorable ET rate under physiological conditions. The calculation of the transfer rate along the simulation, using the Pathways Path method, demonstrated the occurrence of seven ET pathways between the two redox centers, with three of them providing ET rates (KET) comparable with the experimental one. The sampled ET pathways comprise the amino acids N319, L322, F390, K391, P392, F393, A399, C400, and Q403 of the HEME domain and M490 of the FMN domain. The values of KET closer to the experiment were found along the pathways FMN(C7) → F390 → K391 → P392 → HEME(Fe) and FMN(C8) → M490 → F393 → HEME(Fe). Finally, the analysis of the collective modes of the protein complex evidences a clear correlation of the first two essential modes with the activation of the most effective ET pathways along the trajectory. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 101: 197–209, 2014.  相似文献   

14.
NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase transfers two reducing equivalents derived from a hydride ion of NADPH via FAD and FMN to the large family of microsomal cytochrome P450 monooxygenases in one-electron transfer steps. The mechanism of electron transfer by diflavin reductases remains elusive and controversial. Here, we determined the crystal structure of truncated yeast NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase, which is functionally active toward its physiological substrate cytochrome P450, and discovered a second FMN binding site at the interface of the connecting and FMN binding domains. The two FMN binding sites have different accessibilities to the bulk solvent and different amino acid environments, suggesting stabilization of different electronic structures of the reduced flavin. Since only one FMN cofactor is required for function, a hypothetical mechanism of electron transfer is discussed that proposes shuttling of a single FMN between these two sites coupled with the transition between two semiquinone forms, neutral (blue) and anionic (red).  相似文献   

15.
Cytochrome P450 reductase, which delivers electrons from NADPH to microsomal P450s, consists of a single polypeptide that contains both FAD and FMN. The bacterial P450cin utilizes a similar electron transport system except the FAD/FMN reductase consists of two separate polypeptides where the FMN protein, cindoxin, shuttles electrons between the FAD-containing cindoxin reductase and P450cin. Here we characterize the kinetics and specificity of electron transfer between cindoxin and P450cin as well as discuss the influence of possible binding surface interactions using homology models.  相似文献   

16.
The NADPH‐cytochrome P450 oxidoreductase (CYPOR) enzyme is a membrane‐bound protein and contains both FAD and FMN cofactors. The enzyme transfers two electrons, one at a time, from NADPH to cytochrome P450 enzymes to function in the enzymatic reactions. We previously expressed in Escherichia coli the membrane‐bound CYPOR (flAnCYPOR) from Anopheles minimus mosquito. We demonstrated the ability of flAnCYPOR to support the An. minimus CYP6AA3 enzyme activity in deltamethrin degradation in vitro. The present study revealed that the flAnCYPOR purified enzyme, analyzed by a fluorometric method, readily lost its flavin cofactors. When supplemented with exogenous flavin cofactors, the activity of flAnCYPOR‐mediated cytochrome c reduction was increased. Mutant enzymes containing phenylalanine substitutions at leucine residues 86 and 219 were constructed and found to increase retention of FMN cofactor in the flAnCYPOR enzymes. Kinetic study by measuring cytochrome c–reducing activity indicated that the wild‐type and mutant flAnCYPORs followed a non‐classical two‐site Ping‐Pong mechanism, similar to rat CYPOR. The single mutant (L86F or L219F) and double mutant (L86F/L219F) flAnCYPOR enzymes, upon reconstitution with the An. minimus cytochrome P450 CYP6AA3 and a NADPH‐regenerating system, increased CYP6AA3‐mediated deltamethrin degradation compared to the wild‐type flAnCYPOR enzyme. The increased enzyme activity could illustrate a more efficient electron transfer of AnCYPOR to CYP6AA3 cytochrome P450 enzyme. Addition of extra flavin cofactors could increase CYP6AA3‐mediated activity supported by wild‐type and mutant flAnCYPOR enzymes. Thus, both leucine to phenylalanine substitutions are essential for flAnCYPOR enzyme in supporting CYP6AA3‐mediated metabolism. © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

17.
M J Paine  S Ayivor  A Munro  P Tsan  L Y Lian  G C Roberts  C R Wolf 《Biochemistry》2001,40(45):13439-13447
NADPH-cytochrome P450 oxidoreductase (P450 reductase, EC 1.6.2.4) is an essential component of the P450 monooxygenase complex and binds FMN, FAD, and NADPH cofactors. Residues Tyr140 and Tyr178 are known to be involved in FMN binding. A third aromatic side chain, Phe181, is also located in the proximity of the FMN ring and is highly conserved in FMN-binding proteins, suggesting an important functional role. This role has been investigated by site-directed mutagenesis. Substitution of Phe181 with leucine or glutamine decreased the cytochrome c reductase activity of the enzyme by approximately 50%. Ferricyanide reductase activity was unaffected, indicating that the FAD domain was unperturbed. The mutant FMN domains were expressed in Escherichia coli, and the redox potentials and binding energies of their complexes with FMN were determined. The affinity for FMN was decreased approximately 50-fold in the Leu181 and Gln181 mutants. Comparison of the binding energies of the wild-type and mutant enzymes in the three redox states of FMN suggests that Phe181 stabilizes the FMN-apoprotein complex. The amide 1H and 15N resonances of the Phe181Leu FMN domain were assigned; comparison of their chemical shifts with those of the wild-type domain indicated that the effect of the substitution on FMN affinity results from perturbation of two loops which form part of the FMN binding site. The results indicate that Phe181 cooperates with Tyr140 and Tyr178 to play a major role in the binding and stability of FMN.  相似文献   

18.
NADPH-cytochrome P450 oxidoreductase (CYPOR) catalyzes the transfer of electrons to all known microsomal cytochromes P450. A CYPOR variant, with a 4-amino acid deletion in the hinge connecting the FMN domain to the rest of the protein, has been crystallized in three remarkably extended conformations. The variant donates an electron to cytochrome P450 at the same rate as the wild-type, when provided with sufficient electrons. Nevertheless, it is defective in its ability to transfer electrons intramolecularly from FAD to FMN. The three extended CYPOR structures demonstrate that, by pivoting on the C terminus of the hinge, the FMN domain of the enzyme undergoes a structural rearrangement that separates it from FAD and exposes the FMN, allowing it to interact with its redox partners. A similar movement most likely occurs in the wild-type enzyme in the course of transferring electrons from FAD to its physiological partner, cytochrome P450. A model of the complex between an open conformation of CYPOR and cytochrome P450 is presented that satisfies mutagenesis constraints. Neither lengthening the linker nor mutating its sequence influenced the activity of CYPOR. It is likely that the analogous linker in other members of the diflavin family functions in a similar manner.NADPH-cytochrome P450 oxidoreductase (CYPOR)4 is a ∼78-kDa, multidomain, microsomal diflavin protein that shuttles electrons from NADPH → FAD → FMN to members of the ubiquitous cytochrome P450 superfamily (1, 2). In humans, the cytochromes P450 (cyt P450) are one of the most important families of proteins involved in the biosynthesis and degradation of a vast number of endogenous compounds and the detoxification and biodegradation of most foreign compounds. CYPOR also donates electrons to heme oxygenase (3), cytochrome b5 (4), and cytochrome c (5).The FAD receives a hydride anion from the obligate two electron donor NADPH and passes the electrons one at a time to FMN. The FMN then donates electrons to the redox partners of CYPOR, again one electron at a time. Cyt P450 accepts electrons at two different steps in its complex reaction cycle. Ferric cyt P450 is reduced to the ferrous protein, and oxyferrous cyt P450 receives the second of the two electrons to form the peroxo (Fe+3OO)2- cyt P450 intermediate (6). In vivo, CYPOR cycles between the one- and three-electron reduced forms (7, 8). Although the one-electron reduced form is an air-stable, neutral blue semiquinone (FMNox/sq, -110 mV), it is the FMN hydroquinone (FMNsq/hq, -270 mV), not the semiquinone, that donates an electron to its redox partners (811). CYPOR is the prototype of the mammalian diflavin-containing enzyme family, which includes nitric-oxide synthase (12), methionine synthase reductase (13, 14), and a novel reductase expressed in the cytoplasm of certain cancer cells (15). CYPOR is also a target for anticancer therapy, because it reductively activates anticancer prodrugs (16).CYPOR consists of an N-terminal single α-helical transmembrane anchor (∼6 kDa) responsible for its localization to the endoplasmic reticulum and the soluble cytosolic portion (∼66 kDa) capable of reducing cytochrome c. Crystal structures of the soluble form of the wild-type and several mutant CYPORs are available (17, 18). The first ∼170 amino acids of the soluble domain are highly homologous to flavodoxin and bind FMN (FMN domain), whereas the C-terminal portion of the soluble protein consists of a FAD- and NADPH-binding domain with sequence and structural similarity to ferredoxin-NADP+ oxidoreductase (FAD domain). A connecting domain, possessing a unique sequence and structure, joins the FMN and FAD domains and is partly responsible for the relative orientation of the FMN and FAD domains. In the crystal structure, a convex anionic surface surrounds FMN. In the wild-type crystal structure, the two flavin isoalloxazine rings are in van der Waals contact, poised for efficient interflavin electron transfer (17). Based on the juxtaposition of the two flavins, an extrinsic electron transfer rate of ∼1010 s-1 is predicted (19). However, the experimentally observed electron transfer rate between the two flavins is 30–55 s-1 (20, 21). This modest rate and slowing of electron transfer in a viscous solvent (75% glycerol) suggest that interflavin electron transfer is likely conformationally gated. Moreover, the “closed” crystal structure, in which the flavins are in contact, is difficult to reconcile with mutagenesis studies that indicate the acidic amino acid residues on the surface near FMN are involved in interacting with cyt P450 (22). The first structural insight into how cyt P450 might interact with the FMN domain of CYPOR was provided by the crystal structure of a complex between the heme and FMN-containing domains of cyt P450 BM3 (23). In this complex, the methyl groups of FMN are oriented toward the heme on the proximal surface of cyt P450 BM3. Considered together, these three observations, the slow interflavin electron transfer, the mutagenesis data, and the structure of the complex between the heme and FMN domains of cyt P450 BM3, suggest that CYPOR will undergo a large conformational rearrangement in the course of shuttling electrons from NADPH to cyt P450. In addition, crystal structures of various CYPOR variants indicate that the FMN domain is highly mobile with respect to the rest of the molecule (18).Consideration of how the reductase would undergo a reorientation to interact with its redox partners led us to hypothesize the existence of a structural element in the reductase that would regulate the conformational changes and the relative dynamic motion of the domains. Our attention focused on the hinge region between the FMN and the connecting domain, because it is often disordered and highly flexible in the crystal structure (supplemental Fig. S1). The length and sequence of the hinge have been altered by site-directed mutagenesis, and the effects of the mutations on the catalytic properties of each mutant have been determined. The results demonstrate that lengthening the linker or altering its sequence do not modify the properties of CYPOR. In contrast, deletion of four amino acids markedly disrupts electron transfer from FAD to FMN, whereas the ability of the FMN domain to donate electrons to cyt P450 remains intact. The hinge deletion variant has been crystallized in three “open” conformations capable of interacting with cyt P450.  相似文献   

19.
The nitric-oxide synthases (NOSs) are comprised of an oxygenase domain and a reductase domain bisected by a calmodulin (CaM) binding region. The NOS reductase domains share approximately 60% sequence similarity with the cytochrome P450 oxidoreductase (CYPOR), which transfers electrons to microsomal cytochromes P450. The crystal structure of the neuronal NOS (nNOS) connecting/FAD binding subdomains reveals that the structure of the nNOS-connecting subdomain diverges from that of CYPOR, implying different alignments of the flavins in the two enzymes. We created a series of chimeric enzymes between nNOS and CYPOR in which the FMN binding and the connecting/FAD binding subdomains are swapped. A chimera consisting of the nNOS heme domain and FMN binding subdomain and the CYPOR FAD binding subdomain catalyzed significantly increased rates of cytochrome c reduction in the absence of CaM and of NO synthesis in its presence. Cytochrome c reduction by this chimera was inhibited by CaM. Other chimeras consisting of the nNOS heme domain, the CYPOR FMN binding subdomain, and the nNOS FAD binding subdomain with or without the tail region also catalyzed cytochrome c reduction, were not modulated by CaM, and could not transfer electrons into the heme domain. A chimera consisting of the heme domain of nNOS and the reductase domain of CYPOR reduced cytochrome c and ferricyanide at rates 2-fold higher than that of native CYPOR, suggesting that the presence of the heme domain affected electron transfer through the reductase domain. These data demonstrate that the FMN subdomain of CYPOR cannot effectively substitute for that of nNOS, whereas the FAD subdomains are interchangeable. The differences among these chimeras most likely result from alterations in the alignment of the flavins within each enzyme construct.  相似文献   

20.
Electrons utilized in the heme oxygenase (HO) reaction are provided by NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase (CPR). To investigate the electron transfer pathway from CPR to HO, we examined the reactions of heme and verdoheme, the second intermediate in the heme degradation, complexed with rat HO-1 (rHO-1) using a rat FMN-depleted CPR; the FMN-depleted CPR was prepared by dialyzing the CPR mutant, Y140A/Y178A, against 2 m KBr. Degradation of heme in complex with rHO-1 did not occur with FMN-depleted CPR, notwithstanding that the FMN-depleted CPR was able to associate with the heme-rHO-1 complex with a binding affinity comparable with that of the wild-type CPR. Thus, the first electron to reduce the ferric iron of heme complexed with rHO-1 must be transferred from FMN. In contrast, verdoheme was converted to the ferric biliverdin-iron chelate with FMN-depleted CPR, and this conversion was inhibited by ferricyanide, indicating that electrons are certainly required for conversion of verdoheme to a ferric biliverdin-iron chelate and that they can be supplied from the FMN-depleted CPR through a pathway not involving FMN, probably via FAD. This conclusion was supported by the observation that verdoheme dimethyl esters were accumulated in the reaction of the ferriprotoporphyrin IX dimethyl ester-rHO-1 complex with the wild-type CPR. Ferric biliverdin-iron chelate, generated with the FMN-depleted CPR, was converted to biliverdin by the addition of the wild-type CPR or desferrioxamine. Thus, the final electron for reducing ferric biliverdin-iron chelate to release ferrous iron and biliverdin is apparently provided by the FMN of CPR.  相似文献   

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