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1.
Welford RW  Lam A  Mirica LM  Klinman JP 《Biochemistry》2007,46(38):10817-10827
The mechanism of the first electron transfer from reduced cofactor to O2 in the catalytic cycle of copper amine oxidases (CAOs) remains controversial. Two possibilities have been proposed. In the first mechanism, the reduced aminoquinol form of the TPQ cofactor transfers an electron to the copper, giving radical semiquinone and Cu(I), the latter of which reduces O2 (pathway 1). The second mechanism invokes direct transfer of the first electron from the reduced aminoquinol form of the TPQ cofactor to O2 (pathway 2). The debate over these mechanisms has arisen, in part, due to variable experimental observations with copper amine oxidases from plant versus other eukaryotic sources. One important difference is the position of the aminoquinol/Cu(II) to semiquinone/Cu(I) equilibrium on anaerobic reduction with amine substrate, which varies from almost 0% to 40% semiquinone/Cu(I). In this study we have shown how protein structure controls this equilibrium by making a single-point mutation at a second-sphere ligand to the copper, D630N in Hansenula polymorpha amine oxidase, which greatly increases the concentration of the cofactor semiquinone/Cu(I) following anaerobic reduction by substrate. The catalytic properties of this mutant, including 18O kinetic isotope effects, point to a conservation of pathway 2, despite the elevated production of the cofactor semiqunone/Cu(I). Changes in kcat/Km[O2] are attributed to an impact of D630N on an increased affinity of O2 for its hydrophobic pocket. The data in this study indicate that changes in cofactor semiquinone/Cu(I) levels are not sufficient to alter the mechanism of O2 reduction and illuminate how subtle features are able to control the reduction potential of active site metals in proteins.  相似文献   

2.
Copper amine oxidases catalyze the oxidative deamination of primary amines operating through a ping-pong bi bi mechanism, divided into reductive and oxidative half-reactions. Considerable debate still exists regarding the role of copper in the oxidative half-reaction, where O2 is reduced to H2O2. Substrate-reduced amine oxidases display an equilibrium between a Cu(II) aminoquinol and a Cu(I) semiquinone, with the magnitude of the equilibrium constant being dependent upon the enzyme source. The initial electron transfer to dioxygen has been proposed to occur from either the reduced Cu(I) center or the reduced aminoquinol cofactor. In order for Cu(I) to be involved, it must be shown that the rate of electron transfer (k ET) between the aminoquinol and Cu(II) is sufficiently rapid to place the Cu(I) semiquinone moiety on the mechanistic pathway. To further explore this issue, we measured the intramolecular electron transfer rate for the Cu(II) aminoquinol ⇆ Cu(I) semiquinone equilibrium in Arthrobacter globiformis amine oxidase (AGAO) by temperature-jump relaxation techniques. The results presented herein establish that k ET is greater than the rate of catalysis (k cat) for the preferred amine substrate β-phenylethylamine at three pH values, thereby permitting the Cu(I) semiquinone to be a viable catalytic intermediate during enzymatic reoxidation in this enzyme. The data show that k ET is approximately equivalent at pH 6.2 and 7.2, being 2.5 times k cat for these pH values. At pH 8.2, however, k ET decreases, becoming comparable to k cat. Potential reasons for the decreased k ET at basic pH are presented. The implications of these results in light of a previously published study measuring reoxidation rates of substrate-reduced AGAO are also addressed.  相似文献   

3.
Galactose oxidase is a copper metalloenzyme containing a novel protein-derived redox cofactor in its active site, formed by cross-linking two residues, Cys228 and Tyr272. Previous studies have shown that formation of the tyrosyl-cysteine (Tyr-Cys) cofactor is a self-processing step requiring only copper and dioxygen. We have investigated the biogenesis of cofactor-containing galactose oxidase from pregalactose oxidase lacking the Tyr-Cys cross-link but having a fully processed N-terminal sequence, using both Cu(I) and Cu(II). Mature galactose oxidase forms rapidly following exposure of a pregalactose oxidase-Cu(I) complex to dioxygen (t(1/2) = 3.9s at pH7). In contrast, when Cu(II) is used in place of Cu(I) the maturation process requires several hours (t(1/2) = 5.1 h). EDTA prevents reaction of pregalactose oxidase with Cu(II) but does not interfere with the Cu(I)-dependent biogenesis reaction. The yield of cross-link corresponds to the amount of copper added, although a fraction of the pregalactose oxidase protein is unable to undergo this cross-linking reaction. The latter component, which may have an altered conformation, does not interfere with analysis of cofactor biogenesis at low copper loading. The biogenesis product has been quantitatively characterized, and mechanistic studies have been developed for the Cu(I)-dependent reaction, which forms oxidized, mature galactose oxidase and requires two molecules of O2. Transient kinetics studies of the biogenesis reaction have revealed a pH sensitivity that appears to reflect ionization of a protein group (pKa = 7.3) at intermediate pH resulting in a rate acceleration and protonation of an early oxygenated intermediate at lower pH competing with commitment to cofactor formation. These spectroscopic, kinetic, and biochemical results lead to new insights into the biogenesis mechanism.  相似文献   

4.
 The interactions of five copper-containing amine oxidases with substrates and substrate analogues in the presence of the copper ligands cyanide, azide, chloride, and 1,10-phenanthroline have been investigated. While cyanide inhibits, to varying degrees, the reaction of phenylhydrazine with porcine kidney amine oxidase (PKAO), porcine plasma amine oxidase (PPAO), bovine plasma amine oxidase (BPAO), and pea seedling amine oxidase (PSAO), it enhances the reaction of Arthrobacter P1 amine oxidase (APAO) with this substrate analogue. This indicates that cyanide exerts an indirect effect on topa quinone (TPQ) reactivity via coordination to Cu(II) rather than through cyanohydrin formation at the TPQ organic cofactor. Moreover, cyanide binding to the mechanistically relevant TPQ semiquinone form of substrate-reduced APAO and PSAO was not observable by EPR or resonance Raman spectroscopy. Hence, cyanide most likely inhibits enzyme reoxidation by binding to Cu(I) and trapping the Cu(I)-TPQ form of amine oxidases, and thus preventing the reaction of O2 with Cu(I). In contrast, ligands such as azide, chloride, and 1,10-phenanthroline, which preferentially bind to Cu(II), inhibit by stabilizing the aminoquinol Cu(II)-TPQred redox state, which is in equilibrium with Cu(I)-TPQ. Received: 12 December 1996 / Accepted: 20 March 1997  相似文献   

5.
Hirota S  Iwamoto T  Tanizawa K  Adachi O  Yamauchi O 《Biochemistry》1999,38(43):14256-14263
Carbon monoxide complexes have been generated for copper/topa quinone (TPQ)-containing amine oxidases from Arthrobactor globiformis (AGAO) and Aspergillus niger (AO-I) and characterized by various spectroscopic measurements. Addition of CO to AGAO anaerobically reduced with its substrate 2-phenylethylamine led to a slight increase of absorption bands at 440 and 470 nm derived from the semiquinone form (TPQ(sq)) of the TPQ cofactor, concomitantly giving rise to new CO-related absorption bands at 334 and 434 nm. The intensity of the TPQ(sq) radical EPR signal at g = 2.004 also increased in the presence of CO, while its hyperfine coupling structure was affected insignificantly. FT-IR measurements revealed C-O stretching bands (nu(CO)) at 2063 and 2079 cm(-1) for the CO complex of the substrate-reduced AGAO (at 2085 cm(-1) for AO-I), which shifted nearly 100 cm(-1) to lower frequencies upon using (13)C(18)O. Collectively, these results suggest that CO is bound to the Cu(I) ion in the Cu(I)/TPQ(sq) species formed in the reductive half-reaction of amine oxidation, thereby shifting the Cu(II)/aminoresorcinol right arrow over left arrow Cu(I)/semiquinone equilibrium toward the latter. When AGAO was reduced with dithionite, an intermediary form of the enzyme with Cu(II) reduced to Cu(I) but TPQ still in the oxidized state (TPQ(ox)) was produced. Dithionite reduction of AGAO in the presence of CO resulted in the immediate formation of FT-IR bands at 2064 and 2083 cm(-1), which were assigned to the nu(CO) bands of the CO bound to the TPQ(ox) enzyme. The intense 2083 cm(-1) band was then displaced by a new band at 2077 cm(-1), corresponding to the formation of the fully reduced topa. Significant variation of these nu(CO) frequencies indicates that vibrational properties of CO bound to copper amine oxidases are sensitively influenced by the coordination structure of the Cu(I) ion, which may be modulated by the chemical and redox states of the TPQ cofactor.  相似文献   

6.
The interactions of cyanide with two copper-containing amine oxidases (CuAOs) from pea seedlings (PSAO) and the soil bacterium Arthrobacter globiformis (AGAO) have been investigated by spectroscopic and kinetic techniques. Previously, we rationalized the effects of azide and cyanide for several CuAOs in terms of copper coordination by these exogenous ligands and their effects on the internal redox equilibrium TPQamr-Cu(II)TPQsq-Cu(I). The mechanism of cyanide inhibition was proposed to occur through complexation to Cu(I), thereby directly competing with O2 for reoxidation of TPQ. Although cyanide readily and reversibly reacts with quinones, no direct spectroscopic evidence for cyanohydrin derivatization of TPQ has been previously documented for CuAOs. This work describes the first direct spectroscopic evidence, using both model and enzyme systems, for cyanohydrin derivatization of TPQ. Kd values for Cu(II)-CN and Cu(I)-CN, as well as the Ki for cyanide inhibition versus substrate amine, are reported for PSAO and AGAO. In spite of cyanohydrin derivatization of the TPQ cofactor in these enzymes, the uncompetitive inhibition of amine oxidation is determined to arise almost exclusively through CN complexation of Cu(I).Abbreviations AGAO Arthrobacter globiformis amine oxidase - APAO Arthrobacter P1 amine oxidase - APT attached proton test - BPAO bovine plasma amine oxidase - CuAO quinone-copper containing amine oxidase - LTQ lysyl tyrosylquinone - MAO monoamine oxidase - PKAO porcine kidney amine oxidase - PPAO porcine plasma amine oxidase - PSAO pea seedling amine oxidase - TPQ 2,4,5-trihydroxyphenylalaninequinone - TPQamr TPQ aminoresorcinol - TPQimq TPQ iminoquinone - TPQox TPQ oxidized - TPQsq TPQ semiquinone - WT wild-typeE.M. Shepard and G.A. Juda contributed equally to this workThis revised version was published online in February 2004: Hansenula polymorpha was not italicised at the end of the Introduction, Equation 3 appeared twice, and the resolution of Scheme 3 was insufficient.An erratum to this article can be found at  相似文献   

7.
 The reaction with substrates and carbonyl reagents of native lentil Cu-amine oxidase and its modified forms, i.e. Cu-fully-depleted, Cu-half-reconstituted, Cu-fully-reconstituted, Co-substituted, Ni-substituted and Zn-substituted, has been studied. Upon removal of only one of the two Cu ions, the enzyme loses 50% of its enzymatic activity. Using several substrates, Co-substituted lentil amine oxidase is shown to be active but the k c value is different from that of native or Cu-fully-reconstituted enzyme, while K m is similar. On the other hand, the Ni- and Zn-substituted forms are catalytically inactive. Enzymatic activity measurements and optical spectroscopy show that only in the Co-substituted enzyme is the organic cofactor 6-hydroxydopa quinone reactive and the enzyme catalytically competent, although less efficient. The Co-substituted amine oxidase does not form the semiquinone radical as an intermediate of the catalytic reaction. While devoid or reduced of catalytic activity, all the enzyme preparations are still able to oxidise two moles of substrate and to release two moles of aldehyde per mole of dimeric enzyme. The results obtained show that although Co-substituted amine oxidase is catalytically competent, copper is essential for the catalytic mechanism. Received: 5 March 1999 / Accepted: 22 July 1999  相似文献   

8.
Medda R  Mura A  Longu S  Anedda R  Padiglia A  Casu M  Floris G 《Biochimie》2006,88(7):827-835
Plant copper/quinone amine oxidases are homodimeric enzymes containing Cu(II) and a quinone derivative of a tyrosyl residue (2,4,5-trihydroxyphenylalanine, TPQ) as cofactors. These enzymes catalyze the oxidative deamination of primary amines by a classical ping-pong mechanism, i.e. two distinct half-reactions, enzyme reduction by substrate followed by its re-oxidation by molecular oxygen. In the first half-reaction two forms of the reduced TPQ have been observed, the colorless Cu(II)-aminoquinol and the yellow Cu(I)-semiquinolamine radical so that this enzyme may be referred to as a "protein-radical enzyme". The interaction of xenon, in aqueous solutions, with the copper/TPQ amine oxidase from lentil (Lens esculenta) seedlings has been investigated by NMR and optical spectroscopy. NMR data indicate that xenon binds to the protein. Under 10 atm gaseous xenon and in the absence of substrates more than 60% native enzyme is converted into Cu(I)-semiquinolamine radical species, showing for the first time that both monomers in the dimer can generate the radical. Under the same experimental conditions the copper-free lentil enzyme is able to generate an intermediate absorbing at about 360 nm, which is assigned to the product Schiff base quinolaldimine which, to the best of our knowledge, has never been observed during the catalytic mechanism of plant amine oxidases. A possible role of the lysine residue responsible for the formation of Cu(I)-semiquinolamine and quinolaldimine, is proposed.  相似文献   

9.
The catalytic reaction of copper amine oxidase proceeds through a ping-pong mechanism comprising two half-reactions. In the initial half-reaction, the substrate amine reduces the Tyr-derived cofactor, topa quinone (TPQ), to an aminoresorcinol form (TPQamr) that is in equilibrium with a semiquinone radical (TPQsq) via an intramolecular electron transfer to the active-site copper. We have analyzed this reductive half-reaction in crystals of the copper amine oxidase from Arthrobacter globiformis. Anerobic soaking of the crystals with an amine substrate shifted the equilibrium toward TPQsq in an “on-copper” conformation, in which the 4-OH group ligated axially to the copper center, which was probably reduced to Cu(I). When the crystals were soaked with substrate in the presence of halide ions, which act as uncompetitive and noncompetitive inhibitors with respect to the amine substrate and dioxygen, respectively, the equilibrium in the crystals shifted toward the “off-copper” conformation of TPQamr. The halide ion was bound to the axial position of the copper center, thereby preventing TPQamr from adopting the on-copper conformation. Furthermore, transient kinetic analyses in the presence of viscogen (glycerol) revealed that only the rate constant in the step of TPQamr/TPQsq interconversion is markedly affected by the viscogen, which probably perturbs the conformational change. These findings unequivocally demonstrate that TPQ undergoes large conformational changes during the reductive half-reaction.  相似文献   

10.
Copper, a mediator of redox chemistries in biology, is often found in enzymes that bind and reduce dioxygen. Among these, the copper amine oxidases catalyze the oxidative deamination of primary amines utilizing a type(II) copper center and 2,4,5-trihydroxyphenylalanine quinone (TPQ), a covalent cofactor derived from the post-translational modification of an active site tyrosine. Previous studies established the dependence of TPQ biogenesis on Cu(II); however, the dependence of cofactor formation on the biologically relevant Cu(I) ion has remained untested. In this study, we demonstrate that the apoform of the Hansenula polymorpha amine oxidase readily binds Cu(I) under anaerobic conditions and produces the quinone cofactor at a rate of 0.28 h(-1) upon subsequent aeration to yield a mature enzyme with kinetic properties identical to the protein product of the Cu(II)-dependent reaction. Because of the change in magnetic properties associated with the oxidation of copper, electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy was employed to investigate the nature of the rate-limiting step of Cu(I)-dependent cofactor biogenesis. Upon aeration of the unprocessed enzyme prebound with Cu(I), an axial Cu(II) electron paramagnetic resonance signal was found to appear at a rate equivalent to that for the cofactor. These data provide strong evidence for a rate-limiting release of superoxide from a Cu(II)(O(2)(.)) complex as a prerequisite for the activation of the precursor tyrosine and its transformation for TPQ. As copper is trafficked to intracellular protein targets in the reduced, Cu(I) state, these studies offer possible clues as to the physiological significance of the acquisition of Cu(I) by nascent H. polymorpha amine oxidase.  相似文献   

11.
The catalytic reaction of copper/topa quinone (TPQ) containing amine oxidase consists of the initial, well-characterized, reductive half-reaction and the following, less studied, oxidative half-reaction. We have analyzed the oxidative half-reaction catalyzed by phenylethylamine oxidase from Arthrobacter globiformis (AGAO) by rapid-scan stopped-flow measurements. Upon addition of dioxygen to the substrate-reduced AGAO at pH 8.2, the absorption bands derived from the semiquinone (TPQ(sq)) and aminoresorcinol forms of the TPQ cofactor disappeared within the dead time (<1 ms) of the measurements, indicating that the reaction of the substrate-reduced enzyme with dioxygen is very rapid. Concomitantly, an early intermediate exhibiting an absorption band at about 410 nm was formed, which then decayed with a rate constant of 390 +/- 50 s(-1). This intermediate was detected more prominently in the reaction in D2O buffer (pD 8.1) and was assigned to a Cu(II)-peroxy species. The assignment was based on the observation that addition of H2O2 to the substrate-reduced AGAO under anaerobic conditions led to the formation of a new band at about 415 nm, accompanied by partial quenching of absorption bands derived from TPQ(sq). Other intermediates exhibiting absorption bands at about 310 and 340 nm were also observed in the oxidative half-reaction. Kinetics of the disappearance of these latter bands did not correspond with that of the Cu(II)-peroxy band at 410 nm but did well with that of the increase of the 480 nm absorption band due to the reoxidized TPQ. Rapid increase of the absorption in the 320-370 nm region was also observed for the reaction of the substrate-reduced, Ni-substituted enzyme with dioxygen. On the basis of these results, a possible mechanism is proposed for the oxidative half-reaction of the bacterial copper amine oxidase.  相似文献   

12.
The electrochemical behavior of redox centers in the active site of amine oxidases from lentil seedlings and Euphorbia characias latex was investigated using a mercury film electrode. Tyrosine-derived 6-hydroxydopa quinone (TPQ) and copper ions in the active site are redox centers of these amine oxidases. The enzymes undergo two reduction processes at negative potentials related to the reduction of the TPQ cofactor to the corresponding hydroquinones and the reduction of copper ions, (Cu(II)-->Cu(I)). Copper depleted enzymes, prepared by reduction with dithionite followed by dialysis against cyanide, undergo only one reduction process. Nyquist diagrams, recorded at potentials corresponding to the reduction of cofactors as dc-offset, represent charge transfer impedance followed by a Warburg-type line at low frequencies, indicating the occurrence of a diffusion controlled process in the rate-limiting step of the reduction process.  相似文献   

13.
Copper amine oxidases (CAOs) catalyze the two-electron oxidation of primary amines to aldehydes, utilizing molecular oxygen as a terminal electron acceptor. To accomplish this transformation, CAOs utilize two cofactors: a mononuclear copper, and a unique redox cofactor, 2,4,5-trihydroxyphenylalanine quinone (TPQ or TOPA quinone). TPQ is derived via posttranslational modification of a specific tyrosine residue within the protein itself. In this study, the structure of an amine oxidase from Hansenula polymorpha has been solved to 2.5 A resolution, in which the precursor tyrosine is unprocessed to TPQ, and the copper site is occupied by zinc. Significantly, the precursor tyrosine directly ligands the metal, thus providing the closest analogue to date of an intermediate in TPQ production. Besides this result, the rearrangement of other active site residues (relative to the mature enzyme) proposed to be involved in the binding of molecular oxygen may shed light on how CAOs efficiently use their active site to carry out both cofactor formation and catalysis.  相似文献   

14.
CopC is a periplasmic copper carrier that, in contrast to cytoplasmic copper chaperones, has a beta-barrel fold and two metal-binding sites distinct for Cu(II) and Cu(I). The copper sites are located in each end of the molecule: the Cu(I) site involves His and Met coordination whereas the Cu(II) site consists of charged residues. To reveal biophysical properties of this protein, we have explored the effects of the cofactors on CopC unfolding in vitro. We demonstrate that Cu(II) coordination affects both protein stability and unfolding pathway, whereas Cu(I) has only a small effect on stability. Apo-CopC unfolds in a two-state reaction between pH 4 and 7.5 with maximal stability at pH 6. In contrast, Cu(II)-CopC unfolds in a three-state reaction at pH6 that involves a partly folded intermediate that retains Cu(II). This intermediate exhibits high thermal and chemical stability. Unique energetic and structural properties of different metalated CopC forms may help facilitate metal transport to many partners in vivo.  相似文献   

15.
A model (NADH-phenazine methosulfate-O2) formally similar to pyridine nucleotide-dependent flavoprotein hydroxylases catalyzed the hydroxylation of several aromatic compounds. The hydroxylation was maximal at acid pH and was inhibited by ovine Superoxide dismutase, suggesting that perhydroxyl radicals might be intermediates in this process. The stoichiometry of the reaction indicated that a univalent reduction of oxygen was occurring. The correlation between the concentration of semiquinone and hydroxylation, and the inhibition of hydroxylation by ethanol which inhibited semiquinone oxidation, suggested the involvement of phenazine methosulfate-semiquinone. Activation of hydroxylation by Fe3+ and Cu2+ supported the contention that univalently reduced species of oxygen was involved in hydroxylation. Catalase was without effect on the hydroxylation by the model, ruling out H2O2 as an intermediate. A reaction sequence, involving a two-electron reduction of phenazine methosulfate to reduced phenazine methosulfate followed by disproportionation with phenazine methosulfate to generate the semiquinone, was proposed. The semiquinone could donate an electron to O2 to generate O2 which could be subsequently protonated to form the perhydroxyl radical.  相似文献   

16.
The role of the active site aspartate base in the aminotransferase mechanism of the copper amine oxidase from the yeast Hansenula polymorpha has been probed by site-directed mutagenesis. The D319E mutant catalyzes the oxidation of methylamine and phenethylamine, but not that of benzylamine. kcat/Km for methylamine is found to be 80-fold reduced compared to that of the wild type. Viscosogen and substrate and solvent deuteration have no effect on this parameter for D319E, which is suggestive of limitation of kcat/Km by a conformational change. This conformational change is proposed to be the movement of the cofactor into a productive orientation upon the binding of substrate. In the absence of substrate, a flipped cofactor orientation is likely, on the basis of resonance Raman evidence that the C5 carbonyl of the cofactor is less solvent accessible than the C3 hydrogen. kcat for D319E methylamine oxidase is reduced 200-fold compared to that of the wild type and is unaffected by substrate deuteration, but displays a substantial solvent isotope effect. A 428 nm absorbance is evident under conditions of saturating methylamine and oxygen with D319E. The D319N mutant is observed to produce a similar absorbance at 430 nm when treated with ammonia despite the fact that this mutant has no amine oxidase activity. Resonance Raman spectroscopy indicates the formation of a covalent ammonia adduct and identifies it as the deprotonated iminoquinone. In contrast, when the D319E mutant is reacted with ammonia, it gives predominantly a 340-350 nm species. This absorbance is ascribed to a localization of the cofactor oxyanion induced by binding of the cation at the active site and not to covalent adduct formation. Resonance Raman spectroscopic examination of the steady state species of D319E methylamine oxidation, in combination with the kinetic data, indicates that the 428 nm species is the deprotonated iminoquinone produced upon reoxidation of the reduced cofactor. A model is proposed in which a central role of the active site base is to position the free cofactor and several enzyme intermediates for optimal activity.  相似文献   

17.
Copper amine oxidases (CAOs) are a large family of proteins that use molecular oxygen to oxidize amines to aldehydes with the concomitant production of hydrogen peroxide and ammonia. CAOs utilize two cofactors for this reaction: topaquinone (TPQ) and a Cu(II) ion. Two mechanisms for oxygen reduction have been proposed for these enzymes. In one mechanism (involving inner-sphere electron transfer to O2), Cu(II) is reduced by TPQ, forming Cu(I), to which O2 binds, forming a copper–superoxide complex. In an alternative mechanism (involving outer-sphere electron transfer to O2), O2 is directly reduced by TPQ, without reduction of Cu(II). Substitution of Cu(II) with Co(II) has been used to distinguish between the two mechanisms in several CAOs. Because it is unlikely that Co(II) could be reduced to Co(I) in this environment, an inner-sphere mechanism, as described above, is prevented. We adapted metal replacement methods used for other CAOs to the amine oxidase from pea seedlings (PSAO). Cobalt-substituted PSAO (CoPSAO) displayed nominal catalytic activity: k cat is 4.7% of the native k cat, and K M (O2) for CoPSAO is substantially (22-fold) higher. The greatly reduced turnover number for CoPSAO suggests that PSAO uses the inner-sphere mechanism, as has been predicted from 18O isotope effect studies (Mukherjee et al. in J Am Chem Soc 130:9459–9473, 2008), and is catalytically compromised when constrained to operate via outer-sphere electron transfer to O2. This study, together with previous work, provides strong evidence that CAOs use both proposed mechanisms, but each homolog may prefer one mechanism over the other.  相似文献   

18.
The reactivity of nitrite towards the copper(II) and copper(I) centers of a series of complexes with tridentate nitrogen donor ligands has been investigated. The ligands are bis[(1-methylbenzimidazol-2-yl)methyl]amine (1-bb), bis[2-(1-methylbenzimidazol-2-yl)ethyl]amine (2-bb), and bis[2-(3,5-dimethyl-1-pyrazolyl)ethyl]amine (ddah) and carry two terminal benzimidazole (1-bb, 2-bb) or pyrazole (ddah) rings and a central amine donor residue. While 2-bb and ddah form two adjacent six-membered chelate rings on metal coordination, 1-bb forms two smaller rings of five members. The binding affinity of nitrite and azide to the Cu(II) complexes (ClO4 as counterion) has been determined in solution. The association constants for the two ligands are similar, but nitrite is a slightly stronger ligand than azide when it binds as a bidentate donor. The X-ray crystal structure of the nitrite complex [Cu(ddah)(NO2)]ClO4 (final R=0.056) has been determined: triclinic P1ˉspace group, a=8.200(2) ?, b=9.582(3) ?, c=15.541(4) ?. It may be described as a perchlorate salt of a “supramolecular” species resulting from the assembly of two complex cations and one sodium perchlorate unit. The copper stereochemistry in the complex is intermediate between SPY and TBP, and nitrite binds to Cu(II) asymmetrically, with Cu-O distances of 2.037(2) and 2.390(3) ? and a nearly planar CuO2N cycle. On standing, solutions of [Cu(ddah)(NO2)]ClO4 in methanol produce the dinuclear complex [Cu(ddah)(OMe)]2(ClO4)2, containing dibridging methoxy groups. In fact the crystal structure analysis (final R=0.083) showed that the crystals are built up by dinuclear cations, arranged on a crystallographic symmetry center, and perchlorate anions. Electrochemical analysis shows that binding of nitrite to the Cu(II) complexes of 2-bb and ddah shifts the reduction potential of the Cu(II)/Cu(I) couple towards negative values by about 0.3 V. The thermodynamic parameters of the Cu(II)/Cu(I) electron transfer have also been analyzed. The mechanism of reductive activation of nitrite to nitric oxide by the Cu(I) complexes of 1-bb, 2-bb, and ddah has been studied. The reaction requires two protons per molecule of nitrite and Cu(I). Kinetic experiments show that the reaction is first order in [Cu(I)] and [H+] and exhibits saturation behavior with respect to nitrite concentration. The kinetic data show that [Cu(2-bb)]+ is more efficient than [Cu(1-bb)]+ and [Cu(ddah)]+ in reducing nitrite. Received: 19 November 1999 / Accepted: 20 January 2000  相似文献   

19.
9-Hydrazinoacridine irreversibly labeled pig plasma amine oxidase by covalent attachment to the active carbonyl cofactor. The visible absorption spectrum of the modified protein displays new absorption bands at 495 and 525 nm. Its emission spectrum exhibited maxima at 415 and 440 nm. In addition, both absorption and emission spectra were insensitive to pH changes between 6 and 10. Phase modulation fluorometry was used to determine fluorescence lifetimes of Zn2+- and Co2+-substituted acridinyl plasma amine oxidase. Energy transfer efficiency was 22%; the distance separating the Co2+ ion (in the copper binding site) and the acridine moiety (the amine substrate binding site) ranges between 11.7 and 14.7 A. This work defines the proximity of the metal and substrate (and hence the carbonyl cofactor) and precludes any direct interaction between Cu2+ and pyrroloquinoline quinone or between Cu2+ and the substrate.  相似文献   

20.
Ribonucleotide reductases (RNRs) catalyze the conversion of ribonucleotides to deoxyribonucleotides, and represent the only de novo pathway to provide DNA building blocks. Three different classes of RNR are known, denoted I-III. Class I RNRs are heteromeric proteins built up by α and β subunits and are further divided into different subclasses, partly based on the metal content of the β-subunit. In subclass Ib RNR the β-subunit is denoted NrdF, and harbors a manganese-tyrosyl radical cofactor. The generation of this cofactor is dependent on a flavodoxin-like maturase denoted NrdI, responsible for the formation of an active oxygen species suggested to be either a superoxide or a hydroperoxide. Herein we report on the magnetic properties of the manganese-tyrosyl radical cofactor of Bacillus anthracis NrdF and the redox properties of B. anthracis NrdI. The tyrosyl radical in NrdF is stabilized through its interaction with a ferromagnetically coupled manganese dimer. Moreover, we show through a combination of redox titration and protein electrochemistry that in contrast to hitherto characterized NrdIs, the B. anthracis NrdI is stable in its semiquinone form (NrdIsq) with a difference in electrochemical potential of ∼110 mV between the hydroquinone and semiquinone state. The under anaerobic conditions stable NrdIsq is fully capable of generating the oxidized, tyrosyl radical-containing form of Mn-NrdF when exposed to oxygen. This latter observation strongly supports that a superoxide radical is involved in the maturation mechanism, and contradicts the participation of a peroxide species. Additionally, EPR spectra on whole cells revealed that a significant fraction of NrdI resides in its semiquinone form in vivo, underscoring that NrdIsq is catalytically relevant.  相似文献   

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