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1.
W Shin  P R Stafford  P A Lindahl 《Biochemistry》1992,31(26):6003-6011
Redox titrations of carbon monoxide dehydrogenase (CODH) from Clostridium thermoaceticum were performed using the reductant CO and the oxidant thionin. Titrations were followed at 420 nm, a wavelength sensitive to redox changes of the iron-sulfur clusters in the enzyme. When CODH was oxidized by just enough thionin to maximize A420, two molecules of CO per mole of CODH dimer (4 equiv/mol) reduced the enzyme fully. Likewise, 4 equiv/mol of thionin oxidized the fully-reduced enzyme to the point where A420 maximized. The four n = 1 redox sites which titrated in this region were designated group I sites. They include at least two iron-sulfur clusters, [Fe/S]A and [Fe/S]B, and two other sites, A' and B'. The [Fe4S4]2+/1+ cluster in CODH is included in this group. [Fe/S]B and B' have reduction potentials (at pH 8) below -480 mV vs NHE; [Fe/S]A and A' have reduction potentials above that value. The reduction potential of either [Fe/S]B or B' is near to the CO/CO2 couple at pH 8 (-622 mV). When CODH was oxidized by more than enough thionin to maximize A420, some of the excess thionin oxidized the so-called group II redox sites. These sites have reduction potentials more positive than group I and do not exhibit changes at 420 nm when titrated. Titration of group II sites required 1-2 equiv/mol. EPR of reduced group II sites exhibited the gav = 1.82 signal. When these sites were oxidized, the only signal present had g values at 2.075, 2.036, and 1.983.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
Craft JL  Ludden PW  Brunold TC 《Biochemistry》2002,41(5):1681-1688
Carbon monoxide dehydrogenase (CODH) from Rhodospirillum rubrum utilizes three types of Fe-S clusters to catalyze the reversible oxidation of CO to CO(2): a novel [Ni4Fe5S] active site (C cluster) and two distinct [4Fe4S] electron-transfer sites (B and D clusters). While recent X-ray data show the geometric arrangement of the five metal centers at the C cluster, electronic structures of the various [Ni4Fe5S] oxidation states remain ambiguous. These studies report magnetic circular dichroism (MCD), variable temperature, variable field MCD (VTVH MCD), and resonance Raman (rR) spectroscopic properties of the Fe-S clusters contained in Ni-deficient CODH. Essentially homogeneous sample preparations aided in the resolution of the reduced [4Fe4S](1+) (S = (1)/(2)) B cluster and the reduced Ni-deficient C cluster (denoted C, S > (1)/(2)) by MCD. The three Fe atoms derived from the [Ni3Fe4S] cubane component appear to dominate the reduced C cluster MCD spectrum, while the presence of a fourth Fe center can be inferred from the ground state spin. The same underlying MCD features present in Ni-deficient CODH spectra are also observed for Ni-containing CODH, suggesting that both proteins contain the same C cluster Fe-S component. Overlooked in all spectroscopic studies to date, the D cluster was confirmed by rR to be a typical [4Fe4S] site with cysteinyl coordination. Together, MCD and rR data show that the D cluster remains in the oxidized [4Fe4S](2+) (S = 0) state at potentials > or = -530 mV (versus SHE), thus exhibiting an unusually low redox potential for a standard [4Fe4S](2+/1+) electron-transfer site.  相似文献   

3.
Geometry optimization and energy calculations have been performed at the density functional B3LYP/LANL2DZ level on hydrogen sulfide (HS-), dihydrogensulfide (H2S), thiomethanolate (CH3S-), thiomethanol (CH3SH), thiophenolate (C6H5S-), methoxyde (CH3O-), methanol (CH3OH), formiate (HCOO-), acetate (CH3COO-), carbonate (CO3(2-)), hydrogen carbonate (HCO3-), iminomethane (NH=CH2), [ZnS], [ZnS2]2-, [Zn(HS)]+, [Zn(H2S)]2+, [Zn(HS)4]2-, [Zn(CH3S)]+, [Zn(CH3S)2], [Zn(CH3S)3]-, [Zn(CH3S)4]2-, [Zn(CH3SH)]2+, [Zn(CH3SCH3)]2+, [Zn(C6H5S)]+, [Zn(C6H5S)2], [Zn(C6H5S)3]-, [Zn(HS)(NH=CH2)2]+, [Zn(HS)2(NH=CH2)2], [Zn(HS)(H2O)]+, [Zn(HS)(HCOO)], [Zn(HS)2(HCOO)]-, [Zn(CH3O)]+, [Zn(CH3O)2], [Zn(CH3O)3]-, [Zn(CH3O)4]2, [Zn(CH3OH)]2+, [Zn(HCOO)]+, [Zn(CH3COO)]+, [Zn(CH3COO)2], [Zn(CH3COO)3]-, [Zn(CO3)], [Zn(HCO3)]+, and [Zn(HCO3)(Imz)]+ (Imz, 1,3-imidazole). The computed Zn-S bond distances are 2.174A for [ZnS], 2.274 for [Zn(HS)]+, 2.283 for [Zn(CH3S)]+, and 2.271 for [Zn(C6H5S)]+, showing that sulfide anion forms stronger bonds than substituted sulfides. The nature of the substituents on sulfur influences only slightly the Zn-S distance. The optimized tetra-coordinate [Zn(HS)2(NH=CH2)2] molecules has computed Zn-S and Zn-N bond distances of 2.392 and 2.154A which compare well with the experimental values at the solid state obtained via X-ray diffraction for a number of complex molecules. The computed Zn-O bond distances for chelating carboxylate derivatives like [Zn(HOCOO)]+ (1.998A), [Zn(HCOO)]+ (2.021), and [Zn(CH3COO)]+ (2.001) shows that the strength of the bond is not much influenced by the substituent on carboxylic carbon atom and that CH3- and HO- groups have very similar effects. The DFT analysis shows also that the carboxylate Ligand has a preference for the bidentate mode instead of the monodentate one, at least when the coordination number is small.  相似文献   

4.
Heme oxygenase (HO) catalyzes heme degradation by utilizing O(2) and reducing equivalents to produce biliverdin IX alpha, iron, and CO. To avoid product inhibition, the heme[bond]HO complex (heme[bond]HO) is structured to markedly increase its affinity for O(2) while suppressing its affinity for CO. We determined the crystal structures of rat ferrous heme[bond]HO and heme[bond]HO bound to CO, CN(-), and NO at 2.3, 1.8, 2.0, and 1.7 A resolution, respectively. The heme pocket of ferrous heme-HO has the same conformation as that of the previously determined ferric form, but no ligand is visible on the distal side of the ferrous heme. Fe[bond]CO and Fe[bond]CN(-) are tilted, whereas the Fe[bond]NO is bent. The structure of heme[bond]HO bound to NO is identical to that bound to N(3)(-), which is also bent as in the case of O(2). Notably, in the CO- and CN(-)-bound forms, the heme and its ligands shift toward the alpha-meso carbon, and the distal F-helix shifts in the opposite direction. These shifts allow CO or CN(-) to bind in a tilted fashion without a collision between the distal ligand and Gly139 O and cause disruption of one salt bridge between the heme and basic residue. The structural identity of the ferrous and ferric states of heme[bond]HO indicates that these shifts are not produced on reduction of heme iron. Neither such conformational changes nor a heme shift occurs on NO or N(3)(-) binding. Heme[bond]HO therefore recognizes CO and O(2) by their binding geometries. The marked reduction in the ratio of affinities of CO to O(2) for heme[bond]HO achieved by an increase in O(2) affinity [Migita, C. T., Matera, K. M., Ikeda-Saito, M., Olson, J. S., Fujii, H., Yoshimura, T., Zhou, H., and Yoshida, T. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 945-949] is explained by hydrogen bonding and polar interactions that are favorable for O(2) binding, as well as by characteristic structural changes in the CO-bound form.  相似文献   

5.
6.
The preparation and characterization of dinuclear [M(II)(dbcat)(idpa)](2) (M[double bond]Zn (1), Cu (3); dbcat[double bond]3,5-di-tert-butylcatecholate; idpa[double bond]3,3'-iminobis(N,N-dimethylpropylamine)) complexes are described. Crystallographic characterization of the complex [Cu(II)(dbcat)(idpa)](2) has shown that the co-ordination geometry around copper(II) ions is distorted square pyramidal (triclinic, P-1, a=10.576(1) A, b=11.927(1) A, c=12.621(1) A, alpha=77.89(1) degrees, beta=88.65(1) degrees, gamma=70.21(1) degrees, V=1462.7(2) A(3), Z=2, R=0.0387). Both 1 and 3 were suitable catalysts for the catalytic oxidation of dbcatH(2) to dtbq (dtbq=3,5-di-tert-butyl-1,2-benzoquinone) with dioxygen at ambient conditions in good yields. However, on the basis of kinetic studies the copper- and zinc-catalyzed reactions showed different mechanisms. In the first case valence tautomerism [Cu(II)(dbcat)(idpa)]<==>[Cu(I)(dbsq)(idpa)] precedes the reaction with O(2), while with the zinc complex metal-bound catecholate reacts directly with O(2) with the formation of free superoxide anion.  相似文献   

7.
The chemical sequence of the [2Fe-2S] ferredoxin from the cyanobacterium AnabaenaPCC7119 (Fd7119) and its high-resolution X-ray structures in the oxidized and reduced states have been determined. The Fd7119 sequence is identical to that of the ferredoxin from the PCC7120 strain (Fd7120). X-ray diffraction data were collected at 100 K with an oxidized trigonal Fd7119 crystal, at 1.3 A resolution, and with an orthorhombic crystal, previously reduced with dithionite and flash frozen under anaerobic conditions, at 1.17 A resolution. The two molecular models were determined by molecular replacement with the [2Fe-2S] ferredoxin from the strain PCC7120 (Rypniewski, W. R., Breiter, D. R., Benning, M. M., Wesenberg, G., Oh, B.-H., Markley, J. L., Rayment, I., and Holden, H. M. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 4126-4131.) The final R-factors are 0. 140 (for the reduced crystal) and 0.138 (for the oxidized crystal). The [2Fe-2S] cluster appears as a significantly distorted lozenge in the reduced and oxidized redox states. The major conformational difference between the two redox forms concerns the peptide bond linking Cys46 and Ser47 which points its carbonyl oxygen away from the [2Fe-2S] cluster ("CO out") in the reduced molecule and toward it ("CO in") in the oxidized one. The "CO out" conformation could be the signature of the reduction of the iron atom Fe1, which is close to the molecular surface. Superposition of the three crystallographically independent molecules shows that the putative recognition site with the physiological partner (FNR) involves charged, hydrophobic residues and invariant water molecules.  相似文献   

8.
Shokes JE  Duin EC  Bauer C  Jaun B  Hedderich R  Koch J  Scott RA 《FEBS letters》2005,579(7):1741-1744
Heterodisulfide reductase (HDR) catalyzes the formation of coenzyme M (CoM-SH) and coenzyme B (CoB-SH) by the reversible reduction of the heterodisulfide, CoM-S-S-CoB. This reaction recycles the two thiol coenzymes involved in the final step of microbial methanogenesis. Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and variable-temperature magnetic circular dichroism spectroscopic experiments on oxidized HDR incubated with CoM-SH revealed a S=1/2 [4Fe-4S]3) cluster, the EPR spectrum of which is broadened in the presence of CoM-33SH [Duin, E.C., Madadi-Kahkesh, S., Hedderich, R., Clay, M.D. and Johnson, M.K. (2002) Heterodisulfide reductase from Methanothermobacter marburgensis contains an active-site [4Fe-4S] cluster that is directly involved in mediating heterodisulfide reduction. FEBS Lett. 512, 263-268; Duin, E.C., Bauer, C., Jaun, B. and Hedderich, R. (2003) Coenzyme M binds to a [4Fe-4S] cluster in the active site of heterodisulfide reductase as deduced from EPR studies with the [33S]coenzyme M-treated enzyme. FEBS Lett. 538, 81-84]. These results provide indirect evidence that the disulfide binds to the iron-sulfur cluster during reduction. We report here direct structural evidence for this interaction from Se X-ray absorption spectroscopic investigation of HDR treated with the selenium analog of coenzyme M (CoM-SeH). Se K edge extended X-ray absorption fine structure confirms a direct interaction of the Se in CoM-SeH-treated HDR with an Fe atom of the Fe-S cluster at an Fe-Se distance of 2.4A.  相似文献   

9.
Redox thermodynamic data provide a detailed insight into control of the reduction potential E degrees' of the [Fe(S-Cys)4] site in rubredoxin. Mutant forms were studied in which specific structural changes were made in both the primary and secondary coordination spheres. Those changes have been probed by resonance Raman spectroscopy. The decrease of approximately 200 mV in E degrees' observed for the [Fe(S-Cys)3(O-Ser)]-/2- couples in the surface ligand mutants C9S and C42S is essentially enthalpic in origin and associated with the substitution of ligand thiolate by ligand olate. However, the pH dependence of the potentials below characteristic pKa(red) approximately equals 7 is an entropic contribution, plausibly associated with increased conformational flexibility induced by a longer Fe(II)-O(H)-Ser bond in the reduced form. The presence of a second surface Ser ligand in the new double mutant protein C9S/C42S affects the enthalpic term primarily for pH>pKa(red) > or = 9.3, but for pHpKa approximately 9: [Fe(III)(S-Cys)3(OH)]- + e- --> [Fe(II)(S-Cys)3(OH)]2-. pH [Fe(II)(S-Cys)3(OH2)]-.  相似文献   

10.
Two monofunctional NiFeS carbon monoxide (CO) dehydrogenases, designated CODH I and CODH II, were purified to homogeneity from the anaerobic CO-utilizing eubacterium Carboxydothermus hydrogenoformans. Both enzymes differ in their subunit molecular masses, N-terminal sequences, peptide maps, and immunological reactivities. Immunogold labeling of ultrathin sections revealed both CODHs in association with the inner aspect of the cytoplasmic membrane. Both enzymes catalyze the reaction CO + H(2)O --> CO(2) + 2 e(-) + 2 H(+). Oxidized viologen dyes are effective electron acceptors. The specific enzyme activities were 15,756 (CODH I) and 13,828 (CODH II) micromol of CO oxidized min(-1) mg(-1) of protein (methyl viologen, pH 8.0, 70 degrees C). The two enzymes oxidize CO very efficiently, as indicated by k(cat)/K(m) values at 70 degrees C of 1.3. 10(9) M(-1) CO s(-1) (CODH I) and 1.7. 10(9) M(-1) CO s(-1) (CODH II). The apparent K(m) values at pH 8.0 and 70 degrees C are 30 and 18 microM CO for CODH I and CODH II, respectively. Acetyl coenzyme A synthase activity is not associated with the enzymes. CODH I (125 kDa, 62.5-kDa subunit) and CODH II (129 kDa, 64.5-kDa subunit) are homodimers containing 1.3 to 1.4 and 1.7 atoms of Ni, 20 to 22 and 20 to 24 atoms of Fe, and 22 and 19 atoms of acid-labile sulfur, respectively. Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy revealed signals indicative of [4Fe-4S] clusters. Ni was EPR silent under any conditions tested. It is proposed that CODH I is involved in energy generation and that CODH II serves in anabolic functions.  相似文献   

11.
Heo J  Staples CR  Halbleib CM  Ludden PW 《Biochemistry》2000,39(27):7956-7963
Radiolabeling studies support the existence of a nonsubstrate CO ligand (CO(L)) to the Fe atom of the proposed [FeNi] cluster of carbon monoxide dehydrogenase (CODH) from Rhodospirillum rubrum. Purified CODH has variable amounts of CO(L) dissociated depending on the extent of handling of the proteins. This dissociated CO(L) can be restored by incubation of CODH with CO, resulting in a 30-40% increase in initial activity relative to as-isolated purified CODH. A similar amount of CO(L) binding is observed when as-isolated purified CODH is incubated with (14)CO: approximately 0.33 mol of CO binds per 1 mol of CODH. Approximately 1 mol of CO was released from CO-preincubated CODH upon denaturation of the protein. No CO could be detected upon denaturation of CODH that had been incubated with cyanide. CO(L) binds to both Ni-containing and Ni-deficient CODH, indicating that CO(L) is liganded to the Fe atom of the proposed [FeNi] center. Furthermore, the Ni in the CO(L)-deficient CODH can be removed by treatment with a Ni-specific chelator, dimethylglyoxime. CO preincubation protects the dimethylglyoxime-labile Ni, indicating that CO(L) is also involved in the stability of Ni in the proposed [FeNi] center.  相似文献   

12.
A new octanuclear copper(II) complex has been synthesized and structurally characterized by X-ray crystallography: [Cu(8)(HL)(4)(OH)(4)(H(2)O)(2)(ClO(4))(2)].(ClO(4))(2).2H(2)O (1) (H(3)L=2,6-bis(hydroxyethyliminoethyl)-4-methyl phenol). The complex is formed by the linkage of two terminal bimetallic cationic units and a tetranuclear mu(3)-hydroxo bridged dicubane core by a very short intramolecular hydrogen bond (O-H...O, 1.48(3)A and the angle 175 degrees). The coordination sphere of the terminal copper atoms is square pyramidal, the apical positions being occupied by water and a perchlorate ion. Complex 1 self-assembles to form a new type of water-perchlorate helical network [(H(2)O)(2)(ClO(4))](infinity) involving oxygen atoms of coordinated perchlorate ion and the two lattice water molecules through hydrogen-bonding interaction. The variable temperature-dependent susceptibility measurement (2-300K) of 1 reveals a strong antiferromagnetic coupling, J(1)=-220cm(-1) and J(2)=-98cm(-1) (J(1) and J(2) representing the exchange constant within [Cu(2+)](4) and [Cu(2+)](2) units, respectively). The complex binds to double-stranded supercoiled plasmid DNA giving a K(app) value of 1.2x10(7)M(-1) and displays efficient oxidative cleavage of supercoiled DNA in the presence of H(2)O(2) following a hydroxyl radical pathway.  相似文献   

13.
The density functional theory (DFT) calculations are carried out to study the mechanism details and the ensemble effect of methanol dehydrogenation over Pt(3) and PtAu(2) clusters, which present the smallest models of pure Pt clusters and bimetallic PtAu clusters. The energy diagrams are drawn out along both the initial O-H and C-H bond scission pathways via the four sequential dehydrogenation processes, respectively, i.e., CH(3)OH → CH(2)OH → CH(2)O → CHO → CO and CH(3)OH → CH(3)O → CH(2)O → CHO → CO, respectively. It is revealed that the reaction kinetics over PtAu(2) is significantly different from that over Pt(3). For the Pt(3)-mediated reaction, the C-H bond scission pathway, where an ensemble composed of two Pt atoms is required to complete methanol dehydrogenation, is energetically more favorable than the O-H bond scission pathway, and the maximum barrier along this pathway is calculated to be 12.99 kcal mol(-1). In contrast, PtAu(2) cluster facilitates the reaction starting from the O-H bond scission, where the Pt atom acts as the active center throughout each elementary step of methanol dehydrogenation, and the initial O-H bond scission with a barrier of 21.42 kcal mol(-1) is the bottom-neck step of methanol decomposition. Importantly, it is shown that the complete dehydrogenation product of methanol, CO, can more easily dissociate from PtAu(2) cluster than from Pt(3) cluster. The calculated results over the model clusters provide assistance to some extent for understanding the improved catalytic activity of bimetal PtAu catalysts toward methanol oxidation in comparison with pure Pt catalysts.  相似文献   

14.
Eight Ni proteins are known and three of these, CO dehydrogenase (CODH), acetyl-CoA synthase (ACS), and hydrogenase, are Ni-Fe-S proteins. In the last three years, the long-awaited structures of CODH and ACS have been solved. The bioinorganic community was shocked, as the structures of the active sites of CODH and ACS, the C- and A-cluster, respectively, which each had been predicted to consist of a [Fe4S4] cluster bridged to a single Ni, revealed unexpected compositions and arrangements. Crystal structures of ACS revealed major differences in protein conformation and in A-cluster composition; for example, a [Fe4S4] cluster bridged to a binuclear center in which one of the metal binding sites was occupied by Ni, Cu, or Zn. Recent studies have revealed Ni-Ni to be the active state, unveiled the source of the heterogeneity that had plagued studies of CODH/ACS for decades, and produced a metal-replacement strategy to generate highly active and nearly homogeneous enzyme.Abbreviations CFeSP corrinoid iron-sulfur protein - CH3H4folate methyltetrahydrofolate - CODH/ACS carbon monoxide dehydrogenase/acetyl-CoA synthases - ENDOR electron nuclear double resonance - MeTr methyltransferase  相似文献   

15.
The hydroxo-bridged dinuclear copper (II)/phen complex [Cu(2)(phen)(2)(OH)(2)(H(2)O)(2)][Cu(2)(phen)(2)(OH)(2)Cl(2)]Cl(2).6H(2)O (phen=1,10-phenanthroline) has been prepared and characterized by single crystal X-ray diffraction. The coordinated area of the complex shows two distorted [CuN(2)O(2)O(w)] and [CuN(2)O(2)Cl] square-pyramidal and one strictly planar configuration CuO(2)Cu involving two O atoms of hydroxo-bridged, Cu(2+) cations, N atoms of two phen ligands and disorder solvate water and chlorine anions. In the presence of H(2)O(2), the complex of mono(1,10-phenanthroline)copper exhibits higher activity as a nuclease than bis(1,10-phenanthroline)copper.  相似文献   

16.
The final steps in the synthesis of acetyl-CoA by CO dehydrogenase (CODH) have been studied by following the exchange reaction between CoA and the CoA moiety of acetyl-CoA. This reaction had been studied earlier (Pezacka, E., and Wood, H. G. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 1609-1615 and Ramer, W. E., Raybuck, S. A., Orme-Johnson, W. H., and Walsh, C. T. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 4675-4680). The CoA/acetyl-CoA exchange activity was determined at various controlled redox potentials and was found to be activated by a one-electron reduction with half-maximum activity occurring at -486 mV. There is approximately 2000-fold stimulation of the exchange by performing the reaction at -575 mV relative to the rate at -80 mV. Binding of CoA to CODH is not sensitive to the redox potential; therefore, the reductive activation affects some step other than association/dissociation of CoA. We propose that a metal center on CODH with a midpoint reduction potential of less than or equal to -486 mV is activated by a one-electron reduction to cleave the carbonyl-sulfur bond and/or bind the acetyl group of acetyl-CoA. Based on a comparison of the redox dependence of this reaction with that for methylation of CODH (Lu, W-P., Harder, S. R., and Ragsdale, S. W. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 3124-3133) and CO2 reduction and formation of the Ni-Fe-C EPR signal (Lindahl, P. A., Münck, E., and Ragsdale, S. W. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 3873-3879), we propose that the assembly of the acetyl group of acetyl-CoA, i.e. binding the methyl group of the methylated corrinoid/iron-sulfur protein, binding CO, and methyl migration to form the acetyl-CODH intermediate, occur at the novel Ni-Fe3-4-containing site in CODH. CO has two effects on the CoA/acetyl-CoA exchange: it activates the reaction due to its reductive capacity and its acts as a noncompetitive inhibitor. We also discovered that the CoA/acetyl-CoA exchange was inhibited by nitrous oxide via an oxidative mechanism. In the presence of a low-potential electron donor, CODH becomes a nitrous oxide reductase which catalytically converts N2O to N2. This study combined with earlier results (Lu, W-P., Harder, S. R., and Ragsdale, S. W. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 3124-3133) establishes that the two-subunit form of CODH is completely active in all reactions known to be catalyzed by CODH.  相似文献   

17.
The bifunctional CO dehydrogenase/acetyl-CoA synthase (CODH/ACS) plays a central role in the Wood-Ljungdahl pathway of autotrophic CO(2) fixation. One structure of the Moorella thermoacetica enzyme revealed that the active site of ACS (the A-cluster) consists of a [4Fe-4S] cluster bridged to a binuclear CuNi center with Cu at the proximal metal site (M(p)) and Ni at the distal metal site (M(d)). In another structure of the same enzyme, Ni or Zn was present at M(p). On the basis of a positive correlation between ACS activity and Cu content, we had proposed that the Cu-containing enzyme is active [Seravalli, J., et al. (2003) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 100, 3689-3694]. Here we have reexamined this proposal. Enzyme preparations with a wider range of Ni (1.6-2.8) and Cu (0.2-1.1) stoichiometries per dimer were studied to reexamine the correlation, if any, between the Ni and Cu content and ACS activity. In addition, the effects of o-phenanthroline (which removes Ni but not Cu) and neocuproine (which removes Cu but not Ni) on ACS activity were determined. EXAFS results indicate that these chelators selectively remove M(p). Multifrequency EPR spectra (3-130 GHz) of the paramagnetic NiFeC state of the A-cluster were examined to investigate the electronic state of this proposed intermediate in the ACS reaction mechanism. The combined results strongly indicate that the CuNi enzyme is inactive, that the NiNi enzyme is active, and that the NiNi enzyme is responsible for the NiFeC EPR signal. The results also support an electronic structure of the NiFeC-eliciting species as a [4Fe-4S](2+) (net S = 0) cluster bridged to a Ni(1+) (S = (1)/(2)) at M(p) that is bridged to planar four-coordinate Ni(2+) (S = 0) at M(d), with the spin predominantly on the Ni(1+). Furthermore, these studies suggest that M(p) is inserted during cell growth. The apparent vulnerability of the proximal metal site in the A-cluster to substitution with different metals appears to underlie the heterogeneity observed in samples that has confounded studies of CODH/ACS for many years. On the basis of this principle, a protocol to generate nearly homogeneous preparations of the active NiNi form of ACS was achieved with NiFeC signals of approximately 0.8 spin/mol.  相似文献   

18.
The reactions of RO(2)* radicals with Fe(H(2)O)(6)(2+) were studied, R[double bond]H; CH(3); CH(2)COOH; CH(2)CN; CH(2)C(CH(3))(2)OH; CH(2)OH; CHCl(2)/CCl(3). All these processes involve the following reactions: Fe(H(2)O)(6)(2+)+RO(2)*<==>(H(2)O)(5)Fe(III)[bond]OOR(2+) K(1) approximately 250 M(-1); (H(2)O)(5)Fe(III)[bond]OOR(2+)+H(3)O(+)/H(2)O-->Fe(H(2)O)(6)(3+)+ROOH+H(2)O/OH(-); (H(2)O)(5)Fe(III)[bond]OOR(2+)+2Fe(H(2)O)(6)(2+)-->3Fe(H(2)O)(6)(3+)+ROH; 2 RO(2)*-->Products; RO(2)*+(H(2)O)(5)Fe(III)[bond]OOR(2+)-->Fe(H(2)O)(6)(2+)+products. The values of k(1) and k(3) [reaction is clearly not an elementary reaction] approach the ligand exchange rate of Fe(H(2)O)(6)(2+), i.e. these reactions follow an inner sphere mechanism and the rate determining step is the ligand exchange step. The rate of reaction is several orders of magnitude faster than that of the Fenton reaction. Surprisingly enough the K(1) values are nearly independent of the redox potential of the radical and are considerably higher than calculated from the relevant redox potentials. These results indicate that the ROO(-) ligands considerably stabilise the Fe(III) complex, this stabilisation is smaller for radicals with electron withdrawing groups which raise the redox potential of the radical but decrease the basicity of the ROO(-) ligands, two effects which seem to nearly cancel each other. Finally, the results clearly indicate that reaction (5) is relatively fast and affects the nature of the final products. The contribution of these reactions to oxidation processes involving 'Fenton-like' processes is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
This study presents the first detailed examination by resonance Raman (RR) spectroscopy of the rates of solvent exchange for the C5 and C3 positions of the TPQ cofactor in several wild-type copper-containing amine oxidases and mutants of the amine oxidase from Hansenula polymorpha (HPAO). On the basis of crystal structure analysis and differing rates of C5 [double bond] O and C3 [bond] H exchange within the enzyme systems, but equally rapid rates of C5 [double bond] O and C3 [bond] H exchange in a TPQ model compound, it is proposed that these data can be used to determine the TPQ cofactor orientation within the active site of the resting enzyme. A rapid rate of C5 [double bond] O exchange (t(1/2) < 30 min) and a slow (t(1/2) = 6 h) to nonexistent rate of C3 [bond] H exchange was observed for wild-type HPAO, the amine oxidase from Arthrobacter globiformis, pea seedling amine oxidase at pH 7.1, and the E406Q mutant of HPAO. This pattern is ascribed to a productive TPQ orientation, with the C5 [double bond] O near the substrate-binding site and the C3 [bond] H near the Cu. In contrast, a slow rate of C5 [double bond] O exchange (t(1/2) = 1.6-3.3 h) coupled with a fast rate of C3 [bond] H exchange (t(1/2) < 30 min) was observed for the D319E and D319N catalytic base mutants of HPAO and for PSAO at pH 4.6 (t(1/2) = 4.5 h for C5 [double bond] O exchange). This pattern identifies a flipped orientation, involving 180 degrees rotation about the C alpha-C beta bond, which locates the C3 [bond] H near the substrate-binding site and the C5 double bond] O near the Cu. Finally, fast rates of both C5 [double bond] O and C3 [bond] H exchange (t(1/2) < 30 min) were observed for the amine oxidase from Escherichia coli and the N404A mutant of HPAO, suggesting a mobile cofactor, with multiple TPQ orientations between productive and flipped. These results demonstrate that opposing sides of the TPQ ring possess different degrees of solvent accessibility and that the rates of C5 [double bond] O and C3 [bond] H exchange can be used to predict the TPQ cofactor orientation in the resting forms of these enzymes.  相似文献   

20.
Single crystal structures of host-guest peptides, (Pro-Hyp-Gly)(4)-Leu-Hyp-Gly-(Pro-Hyp-Gly)(5) (LOG1) and (Pro-Hyp-Gly)(4)- (Leu-Hyp-Gly)(2)-(Pro-Hyp-Gly)(4) (LOG2), have been determined at 1.6 A and 1.4 A resolution, respectively. In these crystals, the side chain conformations of the Leu residues were (+)gauche-trans. This conformational preference for the Leu side chain in the Leu-Hyp-Gly sequence was explained by stereochemical considerations together with statistical analysis of Protein Data Bank data. In the (+)gauche-trans conformation, the Leu side chain can protrude along the radial direction of the rod-like triple-helical molecule. One strong hydrophobic interaction of the Leu residue was observed between adjacent molecules in the LOG2 crystal. Because the Leu-Hyp-Gly sequence is one of the most frequently occurring triplets in Type I collagen, this strong hydrophobic interaction can be expected in a fibrillar structure of native collagen. All the Leu residues in the asymmetric unit of the LOG1 and LOG2 crystals had water molecules hydrogen bonded to their NH. These water molecules made three additional hydrogen bonds with the Hyp OH, the Gly O[double bond]C, and a water molecule in the second hydration shell, forming a tetrahedral coordination of hydrogen bonds, which allows a smaller mean-square displacement factor of this water oxygen atom than those of other water molecules. These hydrogen bonds stabilize the molecular and packing structures by forming one O[double bond]C(Gly)---W---OH(Hyp) intra-molecular linkage and two NH(Leu)---W---O[double bond]C(Gly) and NH(Leu)---W---OH(Hyp) inter-molecular linkages.  相似文献   

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