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1.
p-Hydroxyphenylacetate (HPA) 3-hydroxylase is a two-component flavin-dependent monooxygenase. Based on the crystal structure of the oxygenase component (C2), His-396 is 4.5 Å from the flavin C4a locus, whereas Ser-171 is 2.9 Å from the flavin N5 locus. We investigated the roles of these two residues in the stability of the C4a-hydroperoxy-FMN intermediate. The results indicated that the rate constant for C4a-hydroperoxy-FMN formation decreased ∼30-fold in H396N, 100-fold in H396A, and 300-fold in the H396V mutant, compared with the wild-type enzyme. Lesser effects of the mutations were found for the subsequent step of H2O2 elimination. Studies on pH dependence showed that the rate constant of H2O2 elimination in H396N and H396V increased when pH increased with pKa >9.6 and >9.7, respectively, similar to the wild-type enzyme (pKa >9.4). These data indicated that His-396 is important for the formation of the C4a-hydroperoxy-FMN intermediate but is not involved in H2O2 elimination. Transient kinetics of the Ser-171 mutants with oxygen showed that the rate constants for the H2O2 elimination in S171A and S171T were ∼1400-fold and 8-fold greater than the wild type, respectively. Studies on the pH dependence of S171A with oxygen showed that the rate constant of H2O2 elimination increased with pH rise and exhibited an approximate pKa of 8.0. These results indicated that the interaction of the hydroxyl group side chain of Ser-171 and flavin N5 is required for the stabilization of C4a-hydroperoxy-FMN. The double mutant S171A/H396V reacted with oxygen to directly form the oxidized flavin without stabilizing the C4a-hydroperoxy-FMN intermediate, which confirmed the findings based on the single mutation that His-396 was important for formation and Ser-171 for stabilization of the C4a-hydroperoxy-FMN intermediate in C2.  相似文献   

2.
3-Hydroxybenzoate 6-hydroxylase (3HB6H) from Rhodococcus jostii RHA1 is an NADH-specific flavoprotein monooxygenase that catalyzes the para-hydroxylation of 3-hydroxybenzoate (3HB) to form 2,5-dihydroxybenzoate (2,5-DHB). Based on results from stopped-flow spectrophotometry, the reduced enzyme-3HB complex reacts with oxygen to form a C4a-peroxy flavin with a rate constant of 1.13 ± 0.01 × 106 m−1 s−1 (pH 8.0, 4 °C). This intermediate is subsequently protonated to form a C4a-hydroperoxyflavin with a rate constant of 96 ± 3 s−1. This step shows a solvent kinetic isotope effect of 1.7. Based on rapid-quench measurements, the hydroxylation occurs with a rate constant of 36 ± 2 s−1. 3HB6H does not exhibit substrate inhibition on the flavin oxidation step, a common characteristic found in most ortho-hydroxylation enzymes. The apparent kcat at saturating concentrations of 3HB, NADH, and oxygen is 6.49 ± 0.02 s−1. Pre-steady state and steady-state kinetic data were used to construct the catalytic cycle of the reaction. The data indicate that the steps of product release (11.7 s−1) and hydroxylation (36 ± 2 s−1) partially control the overall turnover.  相似文献   

3.
This work describes for the first time the identification of a reaction intermediate, C4a-hydroperoxyflavin, during the oxidative half-reaction of a flavoprotein oxidase, pyranose 2-oxidase (P2O) from Trametes multicolor, by using rapid kinetics. The reduced P2O reacted with oxygen with a forward rate constant of 5.8 x 10 (4) M (-1) s (-1) and a reverse rate constant of 2 s (-1), resulting in the formation of a C4a-hydroperoxyflavin intermediate which decayed with a rate constant of 18 s (-1). The absorption spectrum of the intermediate resembled the spectra of flavin-dependent monooxygenases. A hydrophobic cavity formed at the re side of the flavin ring in the closed state structure of P2O may help in stabilizing the intermediate.  相似文献   

4.
p-Hydroxyphenylacetate (HPA) 3-hydroxylase (HPAH) catalyzes the hydroxylation of HPA at the ortho-position to yield 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetate. The enzyme is a flavin-dependent two-component monooxygenase that consists of a reductase component and an oxygenase component (C(2)). C(2) catalyzes the hydroxylation of HPA using oxygen and reduced FMN as co-substrates. To date, the effects of pH on the oxygenation of the two-component monooxygenases have never been reported. Here, we report the reaction kinetics of C(2)·FMNH(-) with oxygen at various pH values investigated by stopped-flow and rapid quenched-flow techniques. In the absence of HPA, the rate constant for the formation of C4a-hydroperoxy-FMN (~1.1 × 10(6) m(-1)s(-1)) was unaffected at pH 6.2-9.9, which indicated that the pK(a) of the enzyme-bound reduced FMN was less than 6.2. The rate constant for the following H(2)O(2) elimination step increased with higher pH, which is consistent with a pK(a) of >9.4. In the presence of HPA, the rate constants for the formation of C4a-hydroperoxy-FMN (~4.8 × 10(4) m(-1)s(-1)) and the ensuing hydroxylation step (15-17 s(-1)) were not significantly affected by the pH. In contrast, the following steps of C4a-hydroxy-FMN dehydration to form oxidized FMN occurred through two pathways that were dependent on the pH of the reaction. One pathway, dominant at low pH, allowed the detection of a C4a-hydroxy-FMN intermediate, whereas the pathway dominant at high pH produced oxidized FMN without an apparent accumulation of the intermediate. However, both pathways efficiently catalyzed hydroxylation without generating significant amounts of wasteful H(2)O(2) at pH 6.2-9.9. The decreased accumulation of the intermediate at higher pH was due to the greater rates of C4a-hydroxy-FMN decay caused by the abolishment of substrate inhibition in the dehydration step at high pH.  相似文献   

5.
Product formation during the oxidation of xanthine oxidase has been examined directly by using cytochrome c peroxidase as a trapping agent for hydrogen peroxide and the reduction of cytochrome c as a measure of superoxide formation. When fully reduced enzyme is mixed with high concentrations of oxygen, 2 molecules of H2O2/flavin are produced rapidly, while 1 molecule of O2-/flavin is produced rapidly and another produced much more slowly. Time courses for superoxide formation and those for the absorbance changes due to enzyme oxidation were fitted successfully to the mechanism proposed earlier (Olson, J. S., Ballou, D. P., Palmer, G., and Massey, V. (1974) J. Biol. Chem. 249, 4363-4382). In this scheme, each oxidative step is initiated by the very rapid and reversible formation of an oxygen.FADH2 complex (the apparent KD = 2.2 X 10(-4) M at 20 degrees C, pH 8.3). In the cases of 6- and 4-electron-reduced enzyme, 2 electrons are transferred rapidly (ke = 60 s-1) to generate hydrogen peroxide and partially oxidized xanthine oxidase. In the case of the 2-electron-reduced enzyme, only 1 electron is transferred rapidly and superoxide is produced. The remaining electron remains in the iron-sulfur centers and is removed slowly by a second order process (ks = 1 X 10(4) M-1 s-1). When the pH is decreased from 9.9 to 6.2, both the apparent KD for oxygen binding and the rapid rate of electron transfer are decreased about 20-fold. This result is suggestive of uncompetitive inhibition and implies that proton binding to the enzyme-flavin active site affects primarily the rate of electron transfer, not the formation of the initial oxygen complex.  相似文献   

6.
Aspergillus fumigatus siderophore A (Af SidA) is a flavin-dependent monooxygenase that catalyzes the hydroxylation of ornithine, producing N(5)-hydroxyornithine. This is the first step in the biosynthesis of hydroxamate-containing siderophores in A. fumigatus. Af SidA is essential for virulence, validating this enzyme as a drug target. Af SidA can accept reducing equivalents from either NADPH or NADH and displays similar kinetic parameters when using either coenzyme. When the enzyme is reduced with NADPH and reacted with molecular oxygen, a C4a-hydroperoxyflavin intermediate is observed. When the enzyme is reduced with NADH, the intermediate is 2-fold less stable. Steady-state kinetic isotope effect values of 3 and 2 were determined for NADPH and NADH, respectively. The difference in the isotope effect values is due to differences in the rate of flavin reduction by these coenzymes. A difference in the binding mode between these coenzymes was observed by monitoring flavin fluorescence. Limited proteolysis studies show that NADP(+), and not NAD(+), protects Af SidA from proteolysis, suggesting that it induces conformational changes upon binding. Together, these results are consistent with NADPH having a role in flavin reduction and in the modulation of conformational changes, which positions NADP(+) to also play a role in stabilization of the C4a-hydroperoxyflavin.  相似文献   

7.
Flavoprotein monooxygenases are involved in a wide variety of biological processes including drug detoxification, biodegradation of aromatic compounds in the environment, biosynthesis of antibiotics and siderophores, and many others. The reactions use NAD(P)H and O2 as co-substrates and insert one atom of oxygen into the substrate. The flavin-dependent monooxygenases utilize a general cycle in which NAD(P)H reduces the flavin, and the reduced flavin reacts with O2 to form a C4a-(hydro)peroxyflavin intermediate, which is the oxygenating agent. This complicated catalytic process has diverse requirements that are difficult to be satisfied by a single site. Two general strategies have evolved to satisfy these requirements. para-Hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase, the paradigm for the single-component flavoprotein monooxygenases, is one of the most thoroughly studied of all enzymes. This enzyme undergoes significant protein and flavin dynamics during catalysis. There is an open conformation that gives access of substrate and product to solvent, and a closed or in conformation for the reaction with oxygen and the hydroxylation to occur. This closed form prevents solvent from destabilizing the hydroperoxyflavin intermediate. Finally, there is an out conformation achieved by movement of the isoalloxazine toward the solvent, which exposes its N5 for hydride delivery from NAD(P)H. The protein coordinates these dynamic events during catalysis. The second strategy uses a reductase to catalyze the reduction of the flavin and an oxygenase that uses the reduced flavin as a substrate to react with oxygen and hydroxylate the organic substrate. These two-component systems must be able to transfer reduced flavin from the reductase to the oxygenase and stabilize a C4a-peroxyflavin until a substrate binds to be hydroxylated, all before flavin oxidation and release of H2O2. Again, protein dynamics are important for catalytic success.  相似文献   

8.
Resonance Raman (RR) spectra were obtained in H2O or D2O solution for the purple intermediates of D-amino acid oxidase (DAO) with isotopically labeled substrates, i.e., [1-13C]-, [2-13C]-, [3-13C]-, [15N]-, and [3,3,3-D3]alanine; [carboxyl-13C]- and [15N]proline. RR spectra were also measured for the intermediates of DAO reconstituted with isotopically labeled FAD's, i.e., [4a-13C]-, [4,10a-13C2]-, [2-13C]-, [5-15N]-, and [1,3-15N2]FAD in D2O. The isotopic shift of the 1692 cm-1 band upon [15N]- or [2-13C]-substitution of alanine indicates that the band is due to the C = N stretching mode of an imino acid derived from D-alanine, i.e., alpha-iminopropionate. The 1658 cm-1 band with D-proline was also assigned to the C = N stretching mode of an imino acid derived from D-proline, i.e., delta 1-pyrrolidine-2-carboxylate, since the band shifts to 1633 cm-1 upon [15N]-substitution and its stretching frequency is generally found in this frequency region. Since the band shifts to low frequency in D2O, the imino acid should have a protonated imino group such as the C = N+1H form. The intense band at 1363 cm-1 with D-alanine was assigned to a mixing of the CO2- symmetric stretching and CH3 symmetric deformation modes in alpha-iminopropionate, based on the isotope effects. The 1359 cm-1 band with D-proline has probably contributions of CO2- symmetric stretching and CH2 wagging, considering the isotope effects with [carboxyl-13C]proline. The 1359 cm-1 band with D-proline was split into 1371 cm-1 and 1334 cm-1 bands in D2O. As this splitting of the 1359 cm-1 band with D-proline in D2O can not be interpreted only by the replacement of the C = N+1-H proton by deuterium, the carboxylate of the imino acid probably interacts with the enzyme through some proton(s) exchangeable by deuterium(s) in D2O. The bands around 1605 cm-1 which shift upon [4a-13C]- and [4,10a-13C2]-labeling of FAD are derived from a fully reduced flavin, because the isotopic shifts of the band are very different from those of the bands of oxidized or semiquinoid flavin observed near 1605 cm-1.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Dihydrofolate reductase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MtDHFR) catalyzes the NAD(P)-dependent reduction of dihydrofolate, yielding NAD(P)(+) and tetrahydrofolate, the primary one-carbon unit carrier in biology. Tetrahydrofolate needs to be recycled so that reactions involved in dTMP synthesis and purine metabolism are maintained. In this work, we report the kinetic characterization of the MtDHFR. This enzyme has a sequential steady-state random kinetic mechanism, probably with a preferred pathway with NADPH binding first. A pK(a) value for an enzymic acid of approximately 7.0 was identified from the pH dependence of V, and the analysis of the primary kinetic isotope effects revealed that the hydride transfer step is at least partly rate-limiting throughout the pH range analyzed. Additionally, solvent and multiple kinetic isotope effects were determined and analyzed, and equilibrium isotope effects were measured on the equilibrium constant. (D(2)O)V and (D(2)O)V/K([4R-4-(2)H]NADH) were slightly inverse at pH 6.0, and inverse values for (D(2)O)V([4R-4-(2)H]NADH) and (D(2)O)V/K([4R-4-(2)H]NADH) suggested that a pre-equilibrium protonation is occurring before the hydride transfer step, indicating a stepwise mechanism for proton and hydride transfer. The same value was obtained for (D)k(H) at pH 5.5 and 7.5, reaffirming the rate-limiting nature of the hydride transfer step. A chemical mechanism is proposed on the basis of the results obtained here.  相似文献   

10.
Ubiquitin-activating enzyme (UAE or E1) activates ubiquitin via an adenylate intermediate and catalyzes its transfer to a ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme (E2). MLN4924 is an adenosine sulfamate analogue that was identified as a selective, mechanism-based inhibitor of NEDD8-activating enzyme (NAE), another E1 enzyme, by forming a NEDD8-MLN4924 adduct that tightly binds at the active site of NAE, a novel mechanism termed substrate-assisted inhibition (Brownell, J. E., Sintchak, M. D., Gavin, J. M., Liao, H., Bruzzese, F. J., Bump, N. J., Soucy, T. A., Milhollen, M. A., Yang, X., Burkhardt, A. L., Ma, J., Loke, H. K., Lingaraj, T., Wu, D., Hamman, K. B., Spelman, J. J., Cullis, C. A., Langston, S. P., Vyskocil, S., Sells, T. B., Mallender, W. D., Visiers, I., Li, P., Claiborne, C. F., Rolfe, M., Bolen, J. B., and Dick, L. R. (2010) Mol. Cell 37, 102-111). In the present study, substrate-assisted inhibition of human UAE (Ube1) by another adenosine sulfamate analogue, 5'-O-sulfamoyl-N(6)-[(1S)-2,3-dihydro-1H-inden-1-yl]-adenosine (Compound I), a nonselective E1 inhibitor, was characterized. Compound I inhibited UAE-dependent ATP-PP(i) exchange activity, caused loss of UAE thioester, and inhibited E1-E2 transthiolation in a dose-dependent manner. Mechanistic studies on Compound I and its purified ubiquitin adduct demonstrate that the proposed substrate-assisted inhibition via covalent adduct formation is entirely consistent with the three-step ubiquitin activation process and that the adduct is formed via nucleophilic attack of UAE thioester by the sulfamate group of Compound I after completion of step 2. Kinetic and affinity analysis of Compound I, MLN4924, and their purified ubiquitin adducts suggest that both the rate of adduct formation and the affinity between the adduct and E1 contribute to the overall potency. Because all E1s are thought to use a similar mechanism to activate their cognate ubiquitin-like proteins, the substrate-assisted inhibition by adenosine sulfamate analogues represents a promising strategy to develop potent and selective E1 inhibitors that can modulate diverse biological pathways.  相似文献   

11.
As a model of flavin-dependent biological dehydrogenation, flavin-sensitized photodehydrogenation and photodecarboxylation were studied by variation of substrate, flavin, pH and solvent. Evidence for the following rules is given. (1) When the reactive site of a photosubstrate is an alpha-carbon atom of the type CH-CO2-, decarboxylation is preferred over dehydrogenation, whereas the reverse is true for the neutral CH-CO2H. (2) Consequently these reactions do not exhibit a measurable isotope effect with C2H-CO2-, in contrast with the findings by Penzer, Radda, Taylor & Taylor [(1970) Vitam. Horm. (N.Y.) 28, 441--466], which could not be reproduced. When the substate does not contain a carboxylate group, isotope effects occur, in verification of previous reports, e.g. for benzyl alcohol C6H5-C2H20H. (3) The mechanism of flavin-sensitized substrate photodecarboxylation is assumed to consist in a primary carbanion fixation at the flavin nucleus (position 4a, 5 or 8) with concomitant liberation of CO2. This step is followed by rapid fragmentation of the adduct CH-Fl-red., provided that the substrate contains a functional and electron-donating group X, e.g. X = OH, OCH3 or NH2 (but not NH3+ !) in X CH-CO2-. (4) The minimal requirement for flavin-sensitized C-H dehydrogenation is the presence of a hydroxyl group. For example, methanol as substrate and solvent is dehydrogenated at pH sufficiently alkaline for detection of the presence of the active species CH3O-, whereas at more acidic pH substrate dehydrogenation is competing with flavin autophotolysis, which depends on the substituents in the flavin nucleus.  相似文献   

12.
Xu D  Enroth C  Lindqvist Y  Ballou DP  Massey V 《Biochemistry》2002,41(46):13627-13636
An active site residue in phenol hydroxylase (PHHY), Pro364, was mutated to serine to investigate its role in enzymatic catalysis. In the presence of phenol, the reaction between the reduced flavin of P364S and oxygen is very fast, but only 13% of the flavin is utilized to hydroxylate the substrate, compared to nearly 100% for the wild-type enzyme. The oxidative half-reaction of PHHY using m-cresol as a substrate is similarly affected by the mutation. Pro364 was suggested to be important in stabilizing the transition state of the oxygen transfer step by forming a hydrogen bond between its carbonyl oxygen and the C4a-hydroperoxyflavin [Ridder, L., Mullholland, A. J., Rietjens, I. M. C. M., and Vervoort, J. (2000) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 122, 8728-8738]. The P364S mutation may weaken this interaction by increasing the flexibility of the peptide chain; hence, the transition state would be destabilized to result in a decreased level of hydroxylation of phenol. However, when the oxidative half-reaction was studied using resorcinol as a substrate, the P364S mutant form was not significantly different from the wild-type enzyme. The rate constants for all the reaction steps as well as the hydroxylation efficiency (coupling between NADPH oxidation and resorcinol consumption) are comparable to those of the wild-type enzyme. It is suggested that the function of Pro364 in catalysis, stabilization of the transition state, is not as important in the reaction with resorcinol, possibly because the position of hydroxylation is different with resorcinol than with phenol and m-cresol.  相似文献   

13.
D-amino acid oxidase (DAAO) from pig has been reported to catalyze the β-elimination of Cl(-) from βCl-D-alanine via abstraction of the substrate α-H as H(+) ("carbanion mechanism") (Walsh, C. T., Schonbrunn, A., and Abeles, R. H. (1971) J. Biol. Chem. 246, 6855-6866). In view of the fundamental mechanistic importance of this reaction and of the recent reinterpretation of the DAAO dehydrogenation step as occurring via a hydride mechanism, we reinvestigated the elimination reaction using yeast DAAO. That enzyme catalyzes the same reactions as the pig enzyme but with a much higher efficiency and a substantially different kinetic behavior. The reaction is initiated by a very rapid and fully reversible dehydrogenation step. This leads to an equilibrium (k(on) ≈ k(reverse)) between the complexes of oxidized enzyme-βCl-D-alanine and reduced enzyme-βCl-iminopyruvate. In the presence of O(2) the latter complex can partition between an oxidative half-reaction and elimination of Cl(-), which proceeds at a rate of ≈50 s(-1). This step forms a complex between oxidized enzyme and enamine that is characterized by a charge transfer absorption (which describes its rates of formation and decay). A minimal scheme that lists relevant steps of the reductive and oxidative half-reactions and elimination pathways along with the estimate of the corresponding rate constants is presented. β-Elimination of Cl(-) is proposed to originate at the locus of the enzyme-βCl-iminopyruvate complex. A chemical mechanism that can account for elimination is discussed in detail.  相似文献   

14.
The oxidative half-reaction of phenol hydroxylase has been studied by stopped-flow spectrophotometry. Three flavin-oxygen intermediates can be detected when the substrate is thiophenol, or m-NH2, m-OH, m-CH3, m-Cl, or p-OH phenol. Intermediate I, the flavin C(4a)-hydroperoxide, has an absorbance maximum at 380-390 nm and an extinction coefficient approximately 10,000 M-1 cm-1. Intermediate III, the flavin C(4a)-hydroxide, has an absorbance maximum at 365-375 nm and an extinction coefficient approximately 10,000 M-1 cm-1. Intermediate II has absorbance maxima of 350-390 nm and extinction coefficients of 10,000-16,000 M-1 cm-1 depending on the substrate. A Hammett plot of the logarithm of the rates of the oxygen transfer step, the conversion of intermediate I to intermediate II, gives a straight line with a slope -0.5. Fluoride ion is a product of the enzymatic reaction when 2,3,5,6-tetrafluorophenol is the substrate. These results are consistent with an electrophilic substitution mechanism for oxygen transfer. The conversions of I to II and II to III are acid-catalyzed. A kinetic isotope effect of 8 was measured for the conversion of II to III using deuterated resorcinol as substrate. The conversion of III to oxidized enzyme is base-catalyzed, suggesting that the reaction depends on the removal of the flavin N(5) proton. Product release occurs at the same time as the formation of intermediate III, or rapidly thereafter. The results are interpreted according to the ring-opened model of Entsch et al. (Entsch, B., Ballou, D. P., and Massey, V. (1976) J. Biol. Chem. 251, 2550-2563).  相似文献   

15.
Sheng D  Ballou DP  Massey V 《Biochemistry》2001,40(37):11156-11167
Cyclohexanone monooxygenase (CHMO), a bacterial flavoenzyme, carries out an oxygen insertion reaction on cyclohexanone to form a seven-membered cyclic product, epsilon-caprolactone. The reaction catalyzed involves the four-electron reduction of O2 at the expense of a two-electron oxidation of NADPH and a two-electron oxidation of cyclohexanone to form epsilon-caprolactone. Previous studies suggested the participation of either a flavin C4a-hydroperoxide or a flavin C4a-peroxide intermediate during the enzymatic catalysis [Ryerson, C. C., Ballou, D. P., and Walsh, C. (1982) Biochemistry 21, 2644-2655]. However, there was no kinetic or spectral evidence to distinguish between these two possibilities. In the present work we used double-mixing stopped-flow techniques to show that the C4a-flavin-oxygen adduct, which is formed rapidly from the reaction of oxygen with reduced enzyme in the presence of NADP, can exist in two states. When the reaction is carried out at pH 7.2, the first intermediate is a flavin C4a-peroxide with maximum absorbance at 366 nm; this intermediate becomes protonated at about 3 s(-1) to form what is believed to be the flavin C4a-hydroperoxide with maximum absorbance at 383 nm. These two intermediates can be interconverted by altering the pH, with a pK(a) of 8.4. Thus, at pH 9.0 the flavin C4a-peroxide persists mainly in the deprotonated form. Further kinetic studies also demonstrated that only the flavin C4a-peroxide intermediate could oxygenate the substrate, cyclohexanone. The requirement in catalysis of the deprotonated flavin C4a-peroxide, a nucleophile, is consistent with a Baeyer-Villiger rearrangement mechanism for the enzymatic oxygenation of cyclohexanone. In the course of these studies, the Kd for cyclohexanone to the C4a-peroxyflavin form of CHMO was determined to be approximately 1 microM. The rate-determining step in catalysis was shown to be the release of NADP from the oxidized enzyme.  相似文献   

16.
p-Hydroxyphenylacetate (HPA) 3-hydroxylase from Acinetobacter baumannii consists of a reductase component (C(1)) and an oxygenase component (C(2)). C(1) catalyzes the reduction of FMN by NADH to provide FMNH(-) as a substrate for C(2). The rate of reduction of flavin is enhanced ~20-fold by binding HPA. The N-terminal domain of C(1) is homologous to other flavin reductases, whereas the C-terminal domain (residues 192-315) is similar to MarR, a repressor protein involved in bacterial antibiotic resistance. In this study, three forms of truncated C(1) variants and single site mutation variants of residues Arg-21, Phe-216, Arg-217, Ile-246, and Arg-247 were constructed to investigate the role of the C-terminal domain in regulating C(1). In the absence of HPA, the C(1) variant in which residues 179-315 were removed (t178C(1)) was reduced by NADH and released FMNH(-) at the same rates as wild-type enzyme carries out these functions in the presence of HPA. In contrast, variants with residues 231-315 removed behaved similarly to the wild-type enzyme. Thus, residues 179-230 are involved in repressing the production of FMNH(-) in the absence of HPA. These results are consistent with the C-terminal domain in the wild-type enzyme being an autoinhibitory domain that upon binding the effector HPA undergoes conformational changes to allow faster flavin reduction and release. Most of the single site variants investigated had catalytic properties similar to those of the wild-type enzyme except for the F216A variant, which had a rate of reduction that was not stimulated by HPA. F216A could be involved with HPA binding or in the required conformational change for stimulation of flavin reduction by HPA.  相似文献   

17.
S Ghisla  S T Olson  V Massey  J M Lhoste 《Biochemistry》1979,18(21):4733-4742
The Zn-dependent flavoenzyme D-lactate dehydrogenase from Megasphaera elsdenii is irreversibly inactivated by the D form of the suicide substrate 2-hydroxy-3-butynoic acid. The process of inactivation involves formation of a new pink chromophore, which can be released in intact form from the protein and which was purified to homogeneity by affinity chromatography. Inactivation involves covalent addition of the suicide substrate to the flavin coenzyme. The optical spectra indicate an elongation of the flavin chromophore, and the chemical reactivity suggests a derivative of reduced flavin. The structure of this adduct was deduced from Fourier transform NMR, from the chemical properties, and from comparison with appropriate models, which were synthesized chemically. This structure involves the covalent linkage of the acetylenic inhibitor to positions N(5) and C(6) of the flavin coenzyme via carbon atoms 2 and 4 of the inhibitor to form an additional fused aromatic ring. The pink adduct can be reconverted to an isoalloxazine chromophore by reduction with borohydride and subsequent reoxidation with oxygen. This new isoalloxazine has the spectral properties of an isoflavin, and it is proposed to carry the moiety of the inactivator molecule as substituent at position C(6). The structure of the pink chromophore representing a cyclic adduct to the flavin positions N(5) and C(6) is compared to that of the adduct obtained from L-lactate oxidase from Mycobacterium smegmatis and the L form of the same inhibitor [C(4a)--N(5) cyclic adduct; Schonbrunn, A., Abeles, R. H., Walsh, C. T., Ghisla, S., Ogata, H., and Massey, V. (1976) Biochemistry 15, 1978]. This comparison allows deductions about the relative orientation of substrate, coenzyme, and active center functional groups in the two enzymes.  相似文献   

18.
Schwartz B  Dove JE  Klinman JP 《Biochemistry》2000,39(13):3699-3707
A detailed kinetic analysis of oxygen consumption during TPQ biogenesis has been carried out on a yeast copper amine oxidase. O(2) is consumed in a single, exponential phase, the rate of which responds linearly to dissolved oxygen concentration. This behavior is observed up to conditions of maximally obtainable oxygen concentrations. In contrast, no viscosity effect is observed on rate, implicating a high K(m) for O(2). Binding of oxygen appears to occur faster than its consumption and to result in displacement of the precursor tyrosine onto copper to form a charge-transfer species, described in the the preceding paper of this issue [Dove, J. E., Schwartz, B., Williams, N. K., and Klinman, J. P. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 3690-3698). Reaction between this intermediate and O(2) is proposed to occur in a rate-limiting step, and to proceed more rapidly when the tyrosine is deprotonated. This rate-limiting step in cofactor biogenesis does not display a solvent isotope effect and is, thus, uncoupled from proton transfer. Comparisons are drawn between the proposed biogenesis mechanism and that for the oxidation of reduced cofactor during catalytic turnover in the mature enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
D-amino acid oxidase from Rhodotorula gracilis is a FAD-containing enzyme that belongs to the oxidase class that is characterized by the ability of the reduced flavin to react quickly with oxygen, yielding hydrogen peroxide and the oxidized cofactor. Hydrogen peroxide, necessary for the production of glutaryl-7-ACA from cephalosporin C had a deleterious effect on the enzyme. H(2)O(2) induced the oxidation of tryptophan and cysteine residues of the protein that could be involved in the dimerization process, required for the attainment of a fully competent enzyme. H(2)O(2) had also a kinetic effect on the reaction catalyzed by D-amino acid oxidase. It was a pure noncompetitive inhibitor; the corresponding inhibition constants were K(is) = 0.52 mM and K(ii) = 0.70 mM.  相似文献   

20.
Oxidative stress is implicated in a variety of disorders including neurodegenerative diseases, and H(2)O(2) is important in the generation of reactive oxygen and oxidative stress. In this study, we have examined the rate of extracellular H(2)O(2) elimination and relevant enzyme activities in cultured astrocytes and C6 glioma cells and have analyzed the results based on a mathematical model. As compared with other types of cultured cells, astrocytes showed higher activity of glutathione peroxidase (GPx) but lower activities for GSH recycling. C6 cells showed relatively low GPx activity, and treatment of C6 cells with dibutyryl-cAMP, which induces astrocytic differentiation, increased catalase activity and H(2)O(2) permeation rate but exerted little effect on other enzyme activities. A mathematical model [N. Makino, K. Sasaki, N. Hashida, Y. Sakakura, A metabolic model describing the H(2)O(2) elimination by mammalian cells including H(2)O(2) permeation through cytoplasmic and peroxisomal membranes: comparison with experimental data, Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1673 (2004) 149-159.], which includes relevant enzymes and H(2)O(2) permeation through membranes, was found to be fitted well to the H(2)O(2) concentration dependences of removal reaction with the permeation rate constants as variable parameters. As compared with PC12 cells as a culture model for neuron, H(2)O(2) removal activity of astrocytes was considerably higher at physiological H(2)O(2) concentrations. The details of the mathematical model are presented in Appendix.  相似文献   

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