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1.
Aerobic stopped-flow experiments have confirmed that component C is the methane monooxygenase component responsible for interaction with NADH. Reduction of component C by NADH is not the rate-limiting step for component C in the methane monooxygenase reaction. Removal and reconstitution of the redox centres of component C suggest a correlation between the presence of the FAD and Fe2S2 redox centres and NADH: acceptor reductase activity and methane monooxygenase activity respectively, consistent with the order of electron flow: NADH----FAD----Fe2S2----component A. This order suggests that component C functions as a 2e-1/1e-1 transformase, splitting electron pairs from NADH for transfer to component A via the one-electron-carrying Fe2S2 centre. Electron transfer has been demonstrated between the reductase component, component C and the oxygenase component, component A, of the methane monooxygenase complex from Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath) by three separate methods. This intermolecular electron transfer step is not rate-determining for the methane monooxygenase reaction. Intermolecular electron transfer was independent of component B, the third component of the methane monooxygenase. Component B is required to switch the oxidase activity of component A to methane mono-oxygenase activity, suggesting that the role of component B is to couple substrate oxidation to electron transfer, via the methane monooxygenase components.  相似文献   

2.
1. The roles of the three protein components of soluble methane mono-oxygenase were investigated by the use of rapid-reaction techniques. The transfer of electrons through the enzyme complex from NADH to methane/O2 was also investigated. 2. Electron transfer from protein C, the reductase component, to protein A, the hydroxylase component, was demonstrated. Protein C was shown to undergo a three-electron--one-electron catalytic cycle. The interaction of protein C with NADH was investigated. Reduction of protein C was shown to be rapid, and a charge-transfer interaction between reduced FAD and NAD+ was observed; this intermediate was also found in static titration experiments. Thus the binding of NADH, the reduction of protein C and the intramolecular transfer of electrons through protein C were shown to be much more rapid than the turnover rate of methane mono-oxygenase. 3. The rate of transfer of electrons from protein C to protein A was shown to be lower than the reduction of protein C but higher than the turnover rate of methane mono-oxygenase. Association of the proteins was not rate-limiting. The amount of protein A present in the system had a small effect on the rate of reduction of protein C, indicating some co-operativity between the two proteins. 4. Protein B was shown to prevent electron transfer between protein C and protein A in the absence of methane. On addition of saturating concentrations of methane electron transfer was restored. With saturating concentrations of methane and O2 the observed rate constant for the conversion of methane into methanol was 0.26 s-1 at 18 degrees C. 5. By the use of [2H4]methane it was demonstrated that C-H-bond breakage is likely to be the rate-limiting step in the conversion of methane into methanol.  相似文献   

3.
The membrane-bound (particulate) form of methane monooxygenase from Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath) has been solubilised using the non-ionic detergent dodecyl-beta-D-maltoside. A wide variety of detergents were tested and found to solubilise membrane proteins but did not yield methane monooxygenase in a form that could be subsequently activated. After solubilisation with dodecyl-beta-D-maltoside, enzyme activity was recovered using either egg or soya-bean lipids. Attempts to further purify the solubilized methane monooxygenaser protein into its component polypeptides were unsuccessful and resulted in complete loss of enzyme activity. The major polypeptides present in the solubilised enzyme had molecular masses of 49 kDa, 23 kDa and 22 kDa which were similar to those seen in crude extracts [Prior, S. D. & Dalton H. (1985) J. Gen. Microbiol. 131, 155-163]. Studies on substrate and inhibitor specificities indicated that the membrane-associated and solubilised forms of methane monooxygenase were quite similar to each other but differed substantially from the well-characterised soluble methane monooxygenase found in cells grown in a low copper regime and synthesised independently of the particulate methane monooxygenase.  相似文献   

4.
The reduction potentials of the hydroxylase component of the soluble methane monooxygenase from Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath) have been investigated through potentiometric titrations. The potentials were determined by EPR spectroscopic quantitation of the mixed valent hydroxylase as a function of added sodium dithionite in the presence of appropriate mediators. The reduction of the oxidized Fe(III).Fe(III) form to the mixed valent Fe(II).Fe(III) form occurs at 48 mV versus NHE while the potential for the formation of the fully reduced Fe(II).Fe(II) species from the mixed valent form was determined to be -135 mV. Addition of the substrate propylene to the hydroxylase did not have a major effect on the reduction potentials. Introduction of the protein B and the reductase components, however, completely inhibited reduction of the hydroxylase at potentials as far negative as -200 mV. Addition of propylene to all three methane monooxygenase components greatly facilitated hydroxylase reduction. Under these conditions, the fully reduced form of the protein was obtained at potentials of greater than 150 mV. This high redox potential indicates that the oxidized form of the protein is highly reactive, as required for methane oxidation. The present results reveal aspects of how both protein B and substrate can regulate electron transfer into and out of the hydroxylase component of methane monooxygenase.  相似文献   

5.
Molecular genetics of methane oxidation   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
  相似文献   

6.
Following the example set by studies of the mechanistic aspects of the substrate specificity of various cytochrome P-450 enzymes, we have undertaken a parallel investigation of the soluble methane monooxygenase from Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath). Soluble methane monooxygenase is a multicomponent enzyme with a broad substrate specificity. Using substrates previously tested with cytochrome P-450 enzymes and using purified enzyme preparations, this work indicates that soluble methane monooxygenase has a similar oxidative reaction mechanism to cytochrome P-450 enzymes. The evidence suggests that soluble methane monooxygenase oxidizes substrates via a nonconcerted reaction mechanism (hydrogen abstraction preceding hydroxylation) with radical or carbocation intermediates. Aromatic hydroxylation proceeds by epoxidation followed by an NIH shift.  相似文献   

7.
The oxidation of methane to methanol in methanotrophic bacteria is catalysed by the enzyme methane monooxygenase (MM0). This multicomponent enzyme catalyses a range of oxidations including that of aliphatic and aromatic compounds and therefore has potential for commercial exploitation. This study details the molecular characterization of the soluble MMO (sMMO) genes from the Type II methanotroph Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b. The structural genes encoding the alpha, beta and gamma subunits of sMMO protein A and the structural gene encoding component B have been isolated and sequenced. These genes have been expressed and their products identified using an in vitro system. A comparative analysis of sMMO predicted sequences of M. trichosporium OB3b and the taxonomically related M. capsulatus (Bath) is also presented.  相似文献   

8.
Methane gas is produced from many natural and anthropogenic sources. As such, methane gas plays a significant role in the Earth's climate, being 25 times more effective as a greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide. As with nearly all other naturally produced organic molecules on Earth, there are also micro-organisms capable of using methane as their sole source of carbon and energy. The microbes responsible (methanotrophs) are ubiquitous and, for the most part, aerobic. Although anaerobic methanotrophs are believed to exist, so far, none have been isolated in pure culture. Methanotrophs have been known to exist for over 100 years; however, it is only in the last 30 years that we have begun to understand their physiology and biochemistry. Their unique ability to use methane for growth is attributed to the presence of a multicomponent enzyme system-methane monooxygenase (MMO)-which has two distinct forms: soluble (sMMO) and membrane-associated (pMMO); however, both convert methane into the readily assimilable product, methanol. Our understanding of how bacteria are capable of effecting one of the most difficult reactions in chemistry-namely, the controlled oxidation of methane to methanol-has been made possible by the isolation, in pure form, of the enzyme components.The mechanism by which methane is activated by sMMO involves abstraction of a hydrogen atom from methane by a high-valence iron species (FeIV or possibly FeV) in the hydroxylase component of the MMO complex to form a methyl radical. The radical combines with a captive oxygen atom from dioxygen to form the reaction product, methanol, which is further metabolized by the cell to produce multicarbon intermediates. Regulation of the sMMO system relies on the remarkable properties of an effector protein, protein B. This protein is capable of facilitating component interactions in the presence of substrate, modifying the redox potential of the diiron species at the active site. These interactions permit access of substrates to the hydroxylase, coupling electron transfer by the reductase with substrate oxidation and affecting the rate and regioselectivity of the overall reaction. The membrane-associated form is less well researched than the soluble enzyme, but is known to contain copper at the active site and probably iron.From an applied perspective, methanotrophs have enjoyed variable successes. Whole cells have been used as a source of single-cell protein (SCP) since the 1970s, and although most plants have been mothballed, there is still one currently in production. Our earlier observations that sMMO was capable of inserting an oxygen atom from dioxygen into a wide variety of hydrocarbon (and some non-hydrocarbon) substrates has been exploited to either produce value added products (e.g. epoxypropane from propene), or in the bioremediation of pollutants such as chlorinated hydrocarbons. Because we have shown that it is now possible to drive the reaction using electricity instead of expensive chemicals, there is promise that the system could be exploited as a sensor for any of the substrates of the enzyme.  相似文献   

9.
The soluble methane monooxygenase system from Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath) catalyzes the oxidation of methane to methanol and water utilizing dioxygen at a non-heme, carboxylate-bridged diiron center housed in the hydroxylase (H) component. To probe the nature of the reductive activation of dioxygen in this system, reactions of an analogous molecule, nitric oxide, with the diiron(II) form of the enzyme (Hred) were investigated by both continuous and discontinuous kinetics methodologies using optical, EPR, and M?ssbauer spectroscopy. Reaction of NO with Hred affords a dinitrosyl species, designated Hdinitrosyl, with optical spectra (lambdamax = 450 and 620 nm) and M?ssbauer parameters (delta = 0.72 mm/s, DeltaEQ = 1.55 mm/s) similar to those of synthetic dinitrosyl analogues and of the dinitrosyl adduct of the reduced ribonucleotide reductase R2 (RNR-R2) protein. The Hdinitrosyl species models features of the Hperoxo intermediate formed in the analogous dioxygen reaction. In the presence of protein B, Hdinitrosyl builds up with approximately the same rate constant as Hperoxo ( approximately 26 s-1) at 4 degrees C. In the absence of protein B, the kinetics of Hdinitrosyl formation were best fit with a biphasic A --> B --> C model, indicating the presence of an intermediate species between Hred and Hdinitrosyl. This result contrasts with the reaction of Hred with dioxygen, in which the Hperoxo intermediate forms in measurable quantities only in the presence of protein B. These findings suggest that protein B may alter the positioning but not the availability of coordination sites on iron for exogenous ligand binding and reactivity.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract Acetylene was shown to be an inhibitor of cell-free methane monooxygenase (MMO) activity in Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath). Inhibition was demonstrated for both the soluble and particulate forms of the enzyme and was dependent on the presence of both NADH and oxygen. Inactivation of the enzyme complex was irreversible and was due to binding of the acetylene to specific proteins of the enzyme complex. The use of radiolabelled [14C]acetylene provided a method for visualisation of the bound inhibitor: protein complex on sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE). Acetylene was shown to bind to proteins which are associated with methane-oxidising activity and it is proposed that acetylene acts as a suicide substrate.  相似文献   

11.
Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath) uses a soluble methane monooxygenase (sMMO) to catalyse the oxidation of methane to methanol. sMMO is comprised of three components; A, B and C. Protein C (the reductase) transfers electrons from NADH to protein A (the hydroxylase) which contains the active site, and protein B regulates this electron flow. The five genes encoding the sMMO proteins and their subunits are clustered and have been cloned in Escherichia coli. A DNA fragment containing mmoB, the gene encoding protein B, was subcloned into pT7-5, a plasmid of the T7 RNA polymerase promoter expression system. Upon induction, E. coli expressed protein B which was fully functional after purification. The gene encoding protein C, mmoC, was amplified with unique restriction sites at each end using the polymerase chain reaction and then subcloned into pT7-7 (a plasmid similar to pT7-5 but containing its own ribosome-binding site and ATG start codon). Protein C expressed in E. coli was also found to be functional. This is the first report of the functional expression of methanotroph methane monooxygenase genes in a heterologous host and represents a significant step forward in our analysis of the assembly and catalysis of sMMO.  相似文献   

12.
Protein A of soluble methane monooxygenase (EC 1.14.13.25) of Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath) is the hydroxylase component of the enzyme complex, capable of inserting an atom of oxygen into methane. The protein possesses an unusual non-heme iron center consisting of two mu-hydroxo-bridged antiferromagnetically coupled iron atoms. It was possible to remove the iron center of protein A by subjecting the protein to freeze/thaw cycles or by dialysis against 8-hydroxyquinoline. Incubation of iron-depleted protein A with iron-EDTA and dithiothreitol resulted in the reassembly of the iron center of protein A as judged by restoration of enzyme activity (typically approximately 3 times the original activity) and by ESR spectroscopic methods. Reconstitution was inhibited by a number of metal ions, but none of the metals tested proved capable of replacing iron in the oxidation of methane. A number of iron-chelating agents exhibited weak inhibition of reconstitution. The KM(app) for iron in the reconstitution reaction was 133 microM. In vitro translation of total RNA isolated from M. capsulatus (Bath) produced protein A subunits equal to the native molecular weight, suggesting that there is no precursor form of this protein. Addition of the in vitro translated protein A to the reconstitution system resulted in low levels of hydroxylase activity suggesting that the subunits of protein A are self-assembling, a supposition supported by the presence of only one protein band on nondenaturing gels. Taken together, these data suggest that the subunits of protein A are synthesized in their native, mature form and self-assemble into an apoprotein A, into which the iron center is inserted.  相似文献   

13.
Using 4-methoxybenzoate monooxygenase from Pseudomonas putida, the substrate deuterium isotope effect on product formation and the solvent isotope effect on the stoichiometry of oxygen uptake, NADH oxidation, product and/or H2O2 (D2O2) formation for tight couplers, partial uncouplers, and uncouplers as substrates were measured. These studies revealed for the true, intrinsic substrate deuterium isotope effect on the oxygenation reaction a k1H/k2H ratio of < 2.0, derived from the inter- and intramolecular substrate isotope effects. This value favours a concerted oxygenation mechanism of the substrate. Deuterium substitution in a tightly coupling substrate initiated a partial uncoupling of oxygen reduction and substrate oxygenation, with release of H2O2 corresponding to 20% of the overall oxygen uptake. This H2O2 (D2O2) formation (oxidase reaction) almost completely disappeared when the oxygenase function was increased by deuterium substitution in the solvent. The electron transfer from NADH to oxygen, however, was not affected by deuterium substitution in the substrate and/or the solvent. With 4-trifluoromethylbenzoate as uncoupling substrate and D2O as solvent, a reduction (peroxidase reaction) of the active oxygen complex was initiated in consequence of its extended lifetime. These additional two electron-transfer reactions to the active oxygen complex were accompanied by a decrease of both NADH oxidation and oxygen uptake rates. These findings lead to the following conclusions: (a) under tightly coupling conditions the rate-limiting step must be the formation time and lifetime of an active transient intermediate within the ternary complex iron/peroxo/substrate, rather than an oxygenative attack on a suitable C-H bond or electron transfer from NADH to oxygen. Water is released after the monooxygenation reaction; (b) under uncoupling conditions there is competition in the detoxification of the active oxygen complex between its protonation (deuteronation), with formation of H2O2 (D2O2) and its further reduction to water. The additional two electron-transfer reactions onto the active oxygen complex then become rate limiting for the oxygen uptake rate.  相似文献   

14.
A mixed culture of bacteria grown in a bioreactor with methane as a carbon and energy source rapidly oxidized trichloroethylene and chloroform. The most abundant organism was a crescent-shaped bacterium that bound the fluorescent oligonucleotide signature probes that specifically hybridize to serine pathway methylotrophs. The 5S rRNA from this bacterium was found to be 93.5% homologous to the Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b 5S RNA sequence. A type II methanotrophic bacterium, isolated in pure culture from the bioreactor, synthesized soluble methane monooxygenase during growth in a copper-limited medium and was also capable of rapid trichloroethylene oxidation. The bacterium contained the gene that encodes the soluble methane monooxygenase B component on an AseI restriction fragment identical in size to a restriction fragment present in AseI digests of DNA from bacteria in the mixed culture. The sequence of the 16S rRNA from the pure culture was found to be 92 and 94% homologous to the 16S rRNAs of M. trichosporium OB3b and M. sporium, respectively. Both the pure and mixed cultures oxidized naphthalene to naphthol, indicating the presence of soluble methane monooxygenase. The mixed culture also synthesized soluble methane monooxygenase, as evidenced by the presence of proteins that cross-reacted with antibodies prepared against purified soluble methane monooxygenase components from M. trichosporium OB3b on Western blots (immunoblots). It was concluded that a type II methanotrophic bacterium phylogenetically related to Methylosinus species synthesizes soluble methane monooxygenase and is responsible for trichloroethylene oxidation in the bioreactor.  相似文献   

15.
Towards a unified mechanism of biological methane oxidation   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Abstract The biological oxidation of methane to methanol is catalysed by soluble and particulate forms of the enzyme methane monooxygenase. Little information is available regarding the structure and mechanism of the particulate enzyme whereas much is known about the soluble form of the enzyme. This review concentrates on current knowledge of the structure of the components of the soluble methane monooxygenase and draws together these results with those on the kinetics and substrate specificity of the enzyme in a possible chemical mechanism for enzymatic methane oxidation.  相似文献   

16.
A mixed culture of bacteria grown in a bioreactor with methane as a carbon and energy source rapidly oxidized trichloroethylene and chloroform. The most abundant organism was a crescent-shaped bacterium that bound the fluorescent oligonucleotide signature probes that specifically hybridize to serine pathway methylotrophs. The 5S rRNA from this bacterium was found to be 93.5% homologous to the Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b 5S RNA sequence. A type II methanotrophic bacterium, isolated in pure culture from the bioreactor, synthesized soluble methane monooxygenase during growth in a copper-limited medium and was also capable of rapid trichloroethylene oxidation. The bacterium contained the gene that encodes the soluble methane monooxygenase B component on an AseI restriction fragment identical in size to a restriction fragment present in AseI digests of DNA from bacteria in the mixed culture. The sequence of the 16S rRNA from the pure culture was found to be 92 and 94% homologous to the 16S rRNAs of M. trichosporium OB3b and M. sporium, respectively. Both the pure and mixed cultures oxidized naphthalene to naphthol, indicating the presence of soluble methane monooxygenase. The mixed culture also synthesized soluble methane monooxygenase, as evidenced by the presence of proteins that cross-reacted with antibodies prepared against purified soluble methane monooxygenase components from M. trichosporium OB3b on Western blots (immunoblots). It was concluded that a type II methanotrophic bacterium phylogenetically related to Methylosinus species synthesizes soluble methane monooxygenase and is responsible for trichloroethylene oxidation in the bioreactor.  相似文献   

17.
Nitrogenase reactivity: methyl isocyanide as substrate and inhibitor   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
We have examined the interaction of methyl isocyanide with the purified component proteins of Azotobacter vinelandii nitrogenase (Av1 and Av2). CH3NC was shown to be a potent reversible inhibitor (Ki = 158 microM) of total electron flow, apparently uncoupling magnesium adenosine 5'-triphosphate hydrolysis from electron transfer to substrate. CH3NC is a substrate (Km = 0.688 mM at Av2/Av1 = 8), and extrapolation of the data indicates that at high enough CH3NC concentration, H2 evolution can be eliminated. The products are methane plus methylamine (six electrons) and dimethylamine (four electrons). There is an excess (relative to methane) of methylamine formed, which may arise by hydrolysis of a two-electron intermediate. A rapid high-performance liquid chromatography/fluorescence method was developed for methylamine determination. The products C2H4 and C2H6 appear to be formed via a reduction followed by an insertion mechanism. CH3NC appears to be reduced at an enzyme state more oxidized than the one responsible for H2 evolution or N2 reduction. Other substrates (C2H2 greater than N2 congruent to azide greater than N2O) all both relieve CH3NC inhibition and inhibit CH3NC reduction. Both effects occur in the same relative order, implying productive (substrate) and nonproductive (inhibitor) modes of binding of CH3NC to the same site.  相似文献   

18.
Chan SI  Chen KH  Yu SS  Chen CL  Kuo SS 《Biochemistry》2004,43(15):4421-4430
The particulate methane monooxygenase (pMMO) is a complex membrane protein complex that has been difficult to isolate and purify for biochemical and biophysical characterization because of its instability in detergents used to solubilize the enzyme. In this perspective, we summarize the progress recently made toward obtaining a purified pMMO-detergent complex and characterizing the enzyme in pMMO-enriched membranes. The purified pMMO is a multi-copper protein, with ca. 15 copper ions sequestered into five trinuclear copper clusters: two for dioxygen chemistry and alkane hydroxylation (catalytic or C-clusters) and three to provide a buffer of reducing equivalents to re-reduce the C-clusters following turnover (electron transfer or E-clusters). The enzyme is functional when all the copper ions are reduced. When the protein is purified under ambient aerobic conditions in the absence of a hydrocarbon substrate, only the C-clusters are oxidized; there is an apparent kinetic barrier for electron transfer from the E-cluster copper ions to the C-clusters under these conditions. Evidence is provided in support of both C-clusters participating in the dioxygen chemistry, but only one C-cluster supporting alkane hydroxylation. Acetylene modification of the latter C-cluster in the hydrophobic pocket of the active site lowers or removes the kinetic barrier for electron transfer from the E-clusters to the C-clusters so that all the copper ions could be fully oxidized by dioxygen. A model for the hydroxylation chemistry when a hydrocarbon substrate is bound to the active site of the hydroxylation C-cluster is presented. Unlike soluble methane monooxygenase (sMMO), pMMO exhibits limited substrate specificity, but the hydroxylation chemistry is highly regioselective and stereoselective. In addition, the hydroxylation occurs with total retention of configuration of the carbon center that is oxidized. These results are consistent with a concerted mechanism involving direct side-on insertion of an active singlet "oxene" from the activated copper cluster across the "C-H" bond in the active site. Finally, in our hands, both the purified pMMO-detergent complex and pMMO-enriched membranes exhibit high NADH-sensitive as well as duroquinol-sensitive specific activity. A possible role for the two reductants in the turnover of the enzyme is proposed.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract Purification of the regulatory protein B of the soluble methane monooxygenase complex from Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath) has revealed that the organism contains two forms of this protein, one of which appears to be a carboxy-terminal truncate. Protein sequencing has confirmed the identity of these two proteins and allowed the identification of the gene encoding protein B on the methane monooxygenase gene cluster.  相似文献   

20.
The present article reviews the history of research on the hydroxylation of steroid hormones as catalyzed by enzymes present in mammalian tissues. The report describes how studies of steroid hormone synthesis have played a central role in the discovery of the monooxygenase functions of the cytochrome P450s. Studies of steroid hydroxylation reactions can be credited with showing that: (a) the adrenal mitochondrial enzyme catalyzing the 11beta-hydroxylation of deoxycorticosterone was the first mammalian enzyme shown by O18 studies to be an oxygenase; (b) the adrenal microsomal enzyme catalyzing the 21-hydroxylation of steroids was the first mammalian enzyme to show experimentally the proposed 1:1:1 stoichiometry (substrate:oxygen:reduced pyridine nucleotide) of a monooxygenase reaction; (c) application of the photochemical action spectrum technique for reversal of carbon monoxide inhibition of the 21-hydroxylation of 17alpha-OH progesterone was the first demonstration that cytochrome P450 was an oxygenase; (d) spectrophotometric studies of the binding of 17alpha-OH progesterone to bovine adrenal microsomal P450 revealed the first step in the cyclic reaction scheme of P450, as it catalyzes the "activation" of oxygen in a monooxygenase reaction; (e) purified adrenodoxin was shown to function as an electron transport component of the adrenal mitochondrial monooxygenase system required for the activity of the 11beta-hydroxylase reaction. Adrenodoxin was the first iron-sulfur protein isolated and purified from mammalian tissues and the first soluble protein identified as a reductase of a P450; (f) fractionation of adrenal mitochondrial P450 and incubation with adrenodoxin and a cytosolic (flavoprotein) fraction were the first demonstration of the reconstitution of a mammalian P450 monooxygenase reaction.  相似文献   

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