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1.
Witting PK  Mauk AG  Lay PA 《Biochemistry》2002,41(38):11495-11503
Myoglobin (Mb) catalyzes a range of oxidation reactions in the presence of hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) through a peroxidase-like cycle. C110A and Y103F variants of human Mb have been constructed to assess the effects of removing electron-rich oxidizable amino acids from the protein on the peroxidase activity of Mb: a point mutation at W14 failed to yield a viable protein. Point mutations at C110 and Y103 did not result in significant changes to structural elements of the heme pocket, as judged by low-temperature electron paramagnetic spectroscopy (EPR) studies on the ground-state ferric proteins. However, compared to the native protein, the yield of globin radical (globin*) was significantly decreased for the Y103F but not the C110A variant Mb upon reaction of the respective proteins with H(2)O(2). In contrast with our expectation that inhibiting pathways of intramolecular electron transfer may lead to enhanced Mb peroxidase activity, mutation of Y103 marginally decreased the rate constant for reaction of Mb with H(2)O(2) (1.4-fold) as judged by stopped-flow kinetic analyses. Consistent with this decrease in rate constant, steady-state analyses of Y103F Mb-derived thioanisole sulfoxidation indicated decreased V(max) and increased K(m) relative to the wild-type control. Additionally, thioanisole sulfoxidation proceeded with lower stereoselectivity, suggesting that Y103 plays a significant role in substrate binding and orientation in the heme pocket of Mb. Together, these results show that electron transfer within the globin portion of the protein is an important modulator of its stability and catalytic activity. Furthermore, the hydrogen-bonding network involving the residues that line the heme pocket of Mb is crucial to both efficient peroxidase activity and stereospecificity.  相似文献   

2.
Myoglobin (Mb) is an ideal scaffold protein for rational protein design mimicking native enzymes. We recently designed a nitrite reductase (NiR) based on sperm whale Mb by introducing an additional distal histidine (Leu29 to His29 mutation) and generating a distal tyrosine (Phe43 to Tyr43 mutation) in the heme pocket, namely L29H/F43Y Mb, to mimic the active site of cytochrome cd (1) NiR from Ps. aeruginosa that contains two distal histidines and one distal tyrosine. The molecular modeling and dynamics simulation study herein revealed that L29H/F43Y Mb has the necessary structural features of native cytochrome cd (1) NiR and can provide comparable interactions with nitrite as in native NiRs, which provides rationality for the protein design and guides the protein engineering. Additionally, the present study provides an insight into the relatively low NiR activity of Mb in biological systems.  相似文献   

3.
Manna SK  Mazumdar S 《Biochemistry》2006,45(42):12715-12722
The role of the threonine 101 residue that resides close to the heme propionic acid side chain of cytochrome P450cam on the conformational properties of the active site of the enzyme has been investigated by circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy. Site-specific mutation of the threonine by valine has been carried out that does not affect the size of the residue but significantly alters the hydropathy index. The T101V mutant of cytochrome P450cam showed distinct differences in the CD spectra near the heme region, indicating a subtle effect of the mutation on the properties of the heme active site. Thermal stabilities of the mutant and wild-type enzyme have been studied by temperature dependence of the ellipticity (intensity of the CD band) in the far-UV region for the secondary structure and at different wavelengths in the visible region that arise from the heme moiety for the tertiary structure around the prosthetic group. The thermal unfolding data from variations of the CD intensity at different wavelengths were analyzed using a generalized multistep unfolding model, and two distinct equilibrium intermediate conformational states of the enzyme were identified. The mutation of the T101 residue by valine was found to decrease the thermal stability of both the intermediates in the presence of the substrate. On the other hand, this mutation had no apparent effect on the thermal stability of the enzyme in the absence of the substrate. These results suggested that the threonine residue stabilizes the protein cavity around the heme center in the case of the substrate-bound species, possibly by hydrogen bonding with one of the propionate side chains of the heme moiety. Such hydrogen bonding of the heme propionate with threonine is absent in the substrate-free form of the enzyme.  相似文献   

4.
The reaction enthalpy and entropy for the one-electron reduction of the ferric heme in horse heart and sperm whale aquometmyoglobins (Mb) have been determined exploiting a spectroelectrochemical approach. Also investigated were the T67R, T67K, T67R/S92D and T67R/S92D Mb-H variants (the latter containing a protoheme-l-histidine methyl ester) of sperm whale Mb, which feature peroxidase-like activity. The reduction potential (E°′) in all species consists of an enthalpic term which disfavors Fe3+ reduction and a larger entropic contribution which instead selectively stabilizes the reduced form. This behavior differs from that of the heme redox enzymes and electron transport proteins investigated so far. The reduction thermodynamics in the series of sperm whale Mb variants show an almost perfect enthalpy–entropy compensation, indicating that the mutation-induced changes in are dominated by reduction-induced solvent reorganization effects. The modest changes in E°′ originate from the enthalpic effects of the electrostatic interactions of the heme with the engineered charged residues. The small influence that the mutations exert on the reduction potential of myoglobin suggests that the increased peroxidase activity of the variants is not related to changes in the redox reactivity of the heme iron, but are likely related to a more favored substrate orientation within the distal heme cavity.  相似文献   

5.
We have examined the effects of active site residues on ligand binding to the heme iron of mouse neuroglobin using steady-state and time-resolved visible spectroscopy. Absorption spectra of the native protein, mutants H64L and K67L and double mutant H64L/K67L were recorded for the ferric and ferrous states over a wide pH range (pH 4-11), which allowed us to identify a number of different species with different ligands at the sixth coordination, to characterize their spectroscopic properties, and to determine the pK values of active site residues. In flash photolysis experiments on CO-ligated samples, reaction intermediates and the competition of ligands for the sixth coordination were studied. These data provide insights into structural changes in the active site and the role of the key residues His64 and Lys67. His64 interferes with exogenous ligand access to the heme iron. Lys67 sequesters the distal pocket from the solvent. The heme iron is very reactive, as inferred from the fast ligand binding kinetics and the ability to bind water or hydroxyl ligands to the ferrous heme. Fast bond formation favors geminate rebinding; yet the large fraction of bimolecular rebinding observed in the kinetics implies that ligand escape from the distal pocket is highly efficient. Even slight pH variations cause pronounced changes in the association rate of exogenous ligands near physiological pH, which may be important in functional processes.  相似文献   

6.
The complexes of horse myoglobin (Mb) with the anionic surfactant sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), and with the cationic surfactants cetyltrimethylammonium chloride (CTAC) and decyltrimethylammonium bromide (DeTAB), have been studied by a combination of surface tension measurements and optical spectroscopy, including heme absorption and aromatic amino acid fluorescence. SDS interacts in a monomeric form with Mb, which suggests the existence of a specific binding site for SDS, and induces the formation of a hexacoordinated Mb heme, possibly involving the distal histidine. Fluorescence spectra display an increase of tryptophan emission. Both effects point to an increased protein flexibility. SDS micelles induce both the appearance of two more heme species, one of which has the features of free heme, and protein unfolding. Mb/CTAC complexes display a very different behavior. CTAC monomers have no effect on the absorption spectra, and only a slight effect on the fluorescence spectra, whereas the formation of CTAC aggregates on the protein strongly affects both absorption and fluorescence. Mb/DeTAB complexes behave in a very similar way as Mb/CTAC complexes. The surface activity of the different Mb/surfactant complexes, as well as the interactions between the surfactants and Mb, are discussed on the basis of their structural properties.  相似文献   

7.
Ozaki S  Hara I  Matsui T  Watanabe Y 《Biochemistry》2001,40(4):1044-1052
The F43W and F43W/H64L myoglobin (Mb) mutants have been constructed to investigate effects of an electron rich oxidizable amino acid residue in the heme vicinity on oxidation activities of Mb. The Phe-43 --> Trp mutation increases the rate of one-electron oxidation of guaiacol by 3-4-fold; however, the peroxidase activity for F43W/H64L Mb is less than that of the F43W single mutant because the absence of histidine, a general acid-base catalyst, in the distal heme pocket suppresses compound I formation. More than 15-fold improvement versus wild-type Mb in the two-electron oxidation of thioanisole and styrene is observed with the Phe-43 --> Trp mutation. Our results indicate that Trp-43 in the mutants enhances both one- and two-electron oxidation activities (i.e., F43W Mb > wild-type Mb and F43W/H64L Mb > H64L Mb). The level of (18)O incorporation from H2(18)O2 into the epoxide product for the wild type is 31%; however, the values for F43W and F43W/H64L Mb are 75 and 73%, respectively. Thus, Trp-43 in the mutants does not appear to be utilized as a major protein radical site to form a peroxy protein radical in the oxygenation. The enhanced peroxygenase activity might be explained by the increase in the reactivity of compound I. However, the oxidative modification of F43W/H64L Mb in compound I formation with mCPBA prevents us from determining the actual reactivity of the catalytic species for the intact protein. The Lys-C achromobacter digestion of the modified F43W/H64L mutant followed by FPLC and mass analysis shows that the Trp-43-Lys-47 fragment gains a mass by 30 Da, which could correspond two oxygen atoms and loss of two protons.  相似文献   

8.
The changes in the heme environment and overall structure occurring during reversible thermal inactivation and in denaturant guanidinium of Euphorbia characias latex peroxidase (ELP) were investigated in the presence and absence of calcium ions. Native active enzyme had an absorption spectrum typical of a quantum-mixed spin ferric heme protein. After 40 min at 60 degrees C ELP was fully inactivated showing the spectroscopic behavior of a pure hexacoordinate low-spin protein. The addition of Ca2+ to the thermally inactivated enzyme restored its native activity and its spectroscopic features, but did not increase the stability of the protein in guanidinium. It is concluded that, in Euphorbia peroxidase, Ca2+ ion play a key role in conferring structural stability to the heme environment and in retaining active site geometry.  相似文献   

9.
A heme domain of coral allene oxide synthase (cAOS) catalyzes the formation of allene oxide from fatty acid hydroperoxide. Although cAOS has a similar heme active site to that of catalase, cAOS is completely lacking in catalase activity. A close look at the hydrogen-bonding possibilities around the distal His in cAOS suggested that the imidazole ring is rotated by 180 degrees relative to that of catalase because of the hydrogen bond between Thr-66 and the distal His-67. This could contribute to the functional differences between cAOS and catalase, and to examine this possibility, we mutated Thr-66 in cAOS to Val, the corresponding residue in catalase. In contrast to the complete absence of catalase activity in wild type (WT) cAOS, T66V had a modest catalase activity. On the other hand, the mutation suppressed the native enzymatic activity of the formation of allene oxide to 14% of that of WT cAOS. In the resonance Raman spectrum, whereas WT cAOS has only a 6-coordinate/high spin heme, T66V has a 5-coordinate/high spin heme as a minor species. Because catalase adopts a 5-coordinate/high spin structure, probably the 5-coordinate/high spin portion of T66V showed the catalase activity. Furthermore, in accord with the fact that the CN affinity of catalase is higher than that of WT cAOS, the CN affinity of T66V was 8-fold higher than that of WT cAOS, indicating that the mutation could mimic the heme active site in catalase. We, therefore, propose that the hydrogen bond between Thr-66 and distal His-67 could modulate the orientation of distal His, thereby regulating the enzymatic activity in cAOS.  相似文献   

10.
Cytoglobin (Cgb) and neuroglobin (Ngb) are the first examples of hexacoordinated globins from humans and other vertebrates in which a histidine (His) residue at the sixth position of the heme iron is an endogenous ligand in both the ferric and ferrous forms. Static and time-resolved resonance Raman and FT-IR spectroscopic techniques were applied in examining the structures in the heme environment of these globins. Picosecond time-resolved resonance Raman (ps-TR3) spectroscopy of transient five-coordinate heme species produced by the photolysis of carbon monoxide (CO) adducts of Cgb and Ngb showed Fe-His stretching (nu(Fe-His)) bands at 229 and 221 cm(-1), respectively. No time-dependent shift in the nu(Fe-His) band of Cgb and Ngb was detected in the 20-1000 ps time domain, in contrast to the case of myoglobin (Mb). These spectroscopic data, combined with previously reported crystallographic data, suggest that the structure of the heme pocket in Cgb and Ngb is altered upon CO binding in a manner different from that of Mb and that the scales of the structural alteration are different for Cgb and Ngb. The structural property of the heme distal side of the ligand-bound forms was investigated by observing the sets of (nu(Fe-CO), nu(C-O), delta(Fe-C-O)) and (nu(Fe-NO), nu(N-O), delta(Fe-N-O)) for the CO and nitric oxide (NO) complexes of Cgb and Ngb. A comparison of the spectra of some distal mutants of Cgb (H81A, H81V, R84A, R84K, and R84T) and Ngb (H64A, H64V, K67A, K67R, and K67T) showed that the CO adducts of Cgb and Ngb contained three conformers and that the distal His (His81 in Cgb and His64 in Ngb) mainly contributes to the interconversion of the conformers. These structural characteristics of Cgb and Ngb are discussed in relation to their ligand binding and physiological properties.  相似文献   

11.
The ligand photodissociation of sperm whale carboxymyoglobin (MbCO) at low temperature (15 K-100 K) under extended illumination has been studied by X-ray Absorption Near Edge Structure (XANES) spectroscopy using the dispersive technique. XANES simulations through the multiple scattering (MS) approach allow one to interpret the spectroscopic data in structural terms, and to investigate the Fe site structure configurations of the states that follow the CO photodissociation as a function of temperature. The Fe site in the photoproduct is unbound, with an overall structure similar to the deoxy-form (Mb) of the protein. The Fe site structure changes from T < 30 K (Mb*) to T>50 K (Mb**), revealing the existence of a slower unbound state Mb**. A model is proposed which includes the faster state (Mb*) as a planar porphyrin ring with a displacement of Fe from the heme plane of less than 0.3 Å, and the slower state (Mb**) with a domed heme. Correspondence to: S. Della Longa  相似文献   

12.
Du J  Huang X  Sun S  Wang C  Lebioda L  Dawson JH 《Biochemistry》2011,50(38):8172-8180
Dehaloperoxidase (DHP), discovered in the marine terebellid polychaete Amphitrite ornata, is the first heme-containing globin with a peroxidase activity. The sequence and crystal structure of DHP argue that it evolved from an ancient O(2) transport and storage globin. Thus, DHP retains an oxygen carrier function but also has the ability to degrade halophenol toxicants in its living environment. Sperm whale myoglobin (Mb) in the ferric state has a peroxidase activity ~10 times lower than that of DHP. The catalytic activity enhancement observed in DHP appears to have been generated mainly by subtle changes in the positions of the proximal and distal histidine residues that appeared during DHP evolution. Herein, we report investigations into the mechanism of action of DHP derived from examination of "peroxidase-like" Mb mutants and "Mb-like" DHP mutants. The dehalogenation ability of wild-type Mb is augmented in the peroxidase-like Mb mutants (F43H/H64L, G65T, and G65I Mb) but attenuated in the Mb-like T56G DHP variant. X-ray crystallographic data show that the distal His residues in G65T Mb and G65I are positioned ~0.3 and ~0.8 ?, respectively, farther from the heme iron compared to that in the wild-type protein. The H93K/T95H double mutant Mb with the proximal His shifted to the "DHP-like" position has an increased peroxidase activity. In addition, a better dehaloperoxidase (M86E DHP) was generated by introducing a negative charge near His89 to enhance the imidazolate character of the proximal His. Finally, only minimal differences in dehalogenation activities are seen among the exogenous ligand-free DHP, the acetate-bound DHP, and the distal site blocker L100F DHP mutant. Thus, we conclude that binding of halophenols in the internal binding site (i.e., distal cavity) is not essential for catalysis. This work provides a foundation for a new structure-function paradigm for peroxidases and for the molecular evolution of the dual-function enzyme DHP.  相似文献   

13.
Directed evolution can be a powerful tool to predict antibiotic resistance. Resistance involves the accumulation of mutations beneficial to the pathogen while maintaining residue interactions and core packing that are critical for preserving function. The constraint of maintaining stability, while increasing activity, drastically reduces the number of possible mutational combination pathways. To test this theory, TEM-1 beta-lactamase was evolved using a hypermutator E. coli-based directed evolution technique with cefotaxime selection. The selected mutants were compared to two previous directed evolution studies and a database of clinical isolates. In all cases, evolution resulted in the generation of the E104K/M182T/G238S combination of mutations ( approximately 500-fold increased resistance), which is equivalent to clinical isolate TEM-52. The structure of TEM-52 was determined to 2.4 A. G238S widens access to the active site by 2.8 A whereas E104K stabilizes the reorganized topology. The M182T mutation is located 17 A from the active site and appears to be a global suppressor mutation that acts to stabilize the new enzyme structure. Our results demonstrate that directed evolution coupled with structural analysis can be used to predict future mutations that lead to increased antibiotic resistance.  相似文献   

14.
The heme-globin and dimer-tetramer equilibria of ferric recombinant human hemoglobins with site-specific beta chain mutations at the heme pocket or at either the a1beta1 or the alpha1beta2 interfaces have been determined. The heme pocket mutation V67T leads to a marked stabilization of the beta chain heme and does not affect the dimer-tetramer association constant, K2,4. In the C112 mutants, the intrinsic rate of beta chain heme loss with respect to recombinant HbA (HbA-wt) is significantly increased only in C112G with some heme released also from the alpha chains. Gel filtration experiments indicate that the K2,4 value is essentially unaltered in C112G and C112L, but is increased in C112V and decreased in C112N. Substitution of cysteine 93 with A or M leads to a slight decrease of the rate of beta chain heme release, whereas the obvserved K2,4 value is similar to that obtained for HbA-wt. Modifications in oxygen affinity were observed in all the mutant hemoglobins with the exception of V67T, C93A, and C112G. The data indicate that there is no correlation between tetramer stability, beta chain heme affinity, and hemoglobin functionality and therefore point to a separate regulation of these properties.  相似文献   

15.
Ligand binding to heme proteins: connection between dynamics and function   总被引:18,自引:0,他引:18  
Ligand binding to heme proteins is studied by using flash photolysis over wide ranges in time (100 ns-1 ks) and temperature (10-320 K). Below about 200 K in 75% glycerol/water solvent, ligand rebinding occurs from the heme pocket and is nonexponential in time. The kinetics is explained by a distribution, g(H), of the enthalpic barrier of height H between the pocket and the bound state. Above 170 K rebinding slows markedly. Previously we interpreted the slowing as a "matrix process" resulting from the ligand entering the protein matrix before rebinding. Experiments on band III, an inhomogeneously broadened charge-transfer band near 760 nm (approximately 13,000 cm-1) in the photolyzed state (Mb*) of (carbonmonoxy)myoglobin (MbCO), force us to reinterpret the data. Kinetic hole-burning measurements on band III in Mb* establish a relation between the position of a homogeneous component of band III and the barrier H. Since band III is red-shifted by 116 cm-1 in Mb* compared with Mb, the relation implies that the barrier in relaxed Mb is 12 kJ/mol higher than in Mb*. The slowing of the rebinding kinetics above 170 K hence is caused by the relaxation Mb*----Mb, as suggested by Agmon and Hopfield [(1983) J. Chem. Phys. 79, 2042-2053]. This conclusion is supported by a fit to the rebinding data between 160 and 290 K which indicates that the entire distribution g(H) shifts. Above about 200 K, equilibrium fluctuations among conformational substates open pathways for the ligands through the protein matrix and also narrow the rate distribution. The protein relaxations and fluctuations are nonexponential in time and non-Arrhenius in temperature, suggesting a collective nature for these protein motions. The relaxation Mb*----Mb is essentially independent of the solvent viscosity, implying that this motion involves internal parts of the protein. The protein fluctuations responsible for the opening of the pathways, however, depend strongly on the solvent viscosity, suggesting that a large part of the protein participates. While the detailed studies concern MbCO, similar data have been obtained for MbO2 and CO binding to the beta chains of human hemoglobin and hemoglobin Zürich. The results show that protein dynamics is essential for protein function and that the association coefficient for binding from the solvent at physiological temperatures in all these heme proteins is governed by the barrier at the heme.  相似文献   

16.
Nitration in proteins is a physiologically relevant process and the formation of 3-nitrotyrosine was first proposed as an in vivo marker of the production of reactive nitrogen species in oxidative stress. No studies have been published on structural changes associated with nitration of myoglobin. To address this deficiency the electrochemical nitration of equine skeletal muscle (Mb) at amino acid tyrosine 103 has been investigated for the evaluation and characterization of structural and thermal stability changes. Y103 in Mb is one of the most exposed tyrosine residues and it is also close to the heme group. Effects of Y103 nitration on the secondary and tertiary structure of Y103 have been studied by UV–Vis, circular dichroism, fluorescence and NMR spectroscopy and by electrochemical studies. At physiological pH, subtle changes were observed involving slight loosening of the tertiary structure and conformational exchange processes. Thermal stability of the nitrated protein was found to be reduced by 5 °C for the nitrated Mb compared with the native Mb at physiological pH. Altogether, NMR data indicates that nitrated Mb has a very similar tertiary structure to that of native Mb, although with a slightly open conformation.  相似文献   

17.
We have generated the Lys67Glu mutant form of neuroglobin. Experimental spectral studies are consistent with a six coordinate heme in which the distal histidine bond is stretched compared to the wild type protein. Carbon monoxide binding to the ferrous form of the mutant follows a hyperbolic concentration dependence limiting at the histidine dissociation rate of 0.7 s(-1). Further analysis indicates a significantly lowered histidine binding constant. Oxygen binding kinetic studies confirm the higher heme ligand dissociation level and indicate a p50 value for oxygen binding<1 mmHg. The ferrous form of the protein yields an oxygenated intermediate on reaction with oxygen. The rate of oxidation, by oxygen, follows a complex concentration dependence, consistent with the presence of two distinct oxidation mechanisms. A quantitative model for the two oxidation processes has been developed, which is consistent with a lowered distal histidine binding constant in the mutant form of the protein. These data suggest that the protein structure surrounding the heme site in neuroglobin limits access to external ligands and provides an energy barrier to the structural changes following ligand binding in this protein. However, the mutation does not appear to affect reactivity with cytochrome c and the anti-apoptotic activity of the mutant in human cells of neuronal origin is increased as compared to the wild type protein.  相似文献   

18.
Park J  Kim J  Lee T  Lim M 《Biophysical journal》2008,94(11):L84-L86
Femtosecond vibrational spectroscopy was used to probe a functionally important dynamics and residual structure of myoglobin unfolded by 4 M guanidine HCl. The spectra of the dissociated CO indicated that the residual structure of unfolded myoglobin (Mb) forms a few hydrophobic cavities that could accommodate the dissociated ligand. Geminate rebinding (GR) of CO to the unfolded Mb is three-orders-of-magnitude faster and more efficient than the native Mb but similar to a model heme in a viscous solvent, suggesting that the GR of CO to heme is accelerated by the longer retention of the dissociated ligand near the Fe atom by the poorly-structured protein matrix of the unfolded Mb or viscous solvent. The inefficient GR of CO in native Mb, while dissociated CO is trapped in the primary heme pocket located near the active binding site, indicates that the tertiary structure of the pocket in native Mb plays a functionally significant role.  相似文献   

19.
Myoglobin (Mb) is used as a model system for other heme proteins and the reactions they catalyze. The latest novel function to be proposed for myoglobin is a P450 type hydroxylation activity of aromatic carbons (Watanabe, Y., and Ueno, T. (2003) Bull. Chem. Soc. Jpn. 76, 1309-1322). Because Mb does not contain a specific substrate binding site for aromatic compounds near the heme, an engineered tryptophan in the heme pocket was used to model P450 hydroxylation of aromatic compounds. The monooxygenation product was not previously isolated because of rapid subsequent oxidation steps (Hara, I., Ueno, T., Ozaki, S., Itoh, S., Lee, K., Ueyama, N., and Watanabe, Y. (2001) J. Biol. Chem. 276, 36067-36070). In this work, a Mb variant (F43W/H64D/V68I) is used to characterize the monooxygenated intermediate. A modified (+16 Da) species forms upon the addition of 1 eq of H2O2. This product was digested with chymotrypsin, and the modified peptide fragments were isolated and characterized as 6-hydroxytryptophan using matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight tandem mass spectroscopy and 1H NMR. This engineered Mb variant represents the first enzyme to preferentially hydroxylate the indole side chain of Trp at the C6 position. Finally, heme extraction was used to demonstrate that both the formation of the 6-hydroxytryptophan intermediate (+16 Da) and subsequent oxidation to form the +30 Da final product are catalyzed by the heme cofactor, most probably via the compound I intermediate. These results provide insight into the mechanism of hydroxylation of aromatic carbons by heme proteins, demonstrating that non-thiolate-ligated heme enzymes can perform this function. This establishes Mb compound I as a model for P450 type aromatic hydroxylation chemistry.  相似文献   

20.
Peroxiredoxins (Prxs) make up a ubiquitous class (proposed EC 1.11.1.15) of cysteine-dependent peroxidases with roles in oxidant protection and signal transduction. An intriguing biophysical property of typical 2-Cys Prxs is the redox-dependent modulation of their oligomeric state between decamers and dimers at physiological concentrations. The functional consequences of this linkage are unknown, but on the basis of structural considerations, we hypothesized that decamer-building (dimer-dimer) interactions serve to stabilize a loop that forms the peroxidatic active site. Here, we address this important issue by studying mutations of Thr77 at the decamer-building interface of AhpC from Salmonella typhimurium. Ultracentrifugation studies revealed that two of the substitutions (T77I and T77D) successfully disrupted the decamer, while the third (T77V) actually enhanced decamer stability. Crystal structures of the decameric forms of all three mutant proteins provide a rationale for their properties. A new assay allowed the first ever measurement of the true k(cat) and K(m) values of wild-type AhpC with H(2)O(2), placing the catalytic efficiency at 4 x 10(7) M(-)(1) s(-)(1). T77V had slightly higher activity than wild-type enzyme, and both T77I and T77D exhibited ca. 100-fold lower catalytic efficiency, indicating that the decameric structure is quite important for, but not essential to, activity. The interplay between decamer formation and active site loop dynamics is emphasized by a decreased susceptibility of T77I and T77D to peroxide-mediated inactivation, and by an increase in the crystallographic B-factors in the active site loop, rather than at the site of the mutation, in the T77D variant.  相似文献   

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