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1.
Using synchrotron radiation, the X-ray diffraction intensities of crystals of p-hydroxy-benzoate hydroxylase, complexed with the substrate p-hydroxybenzoate, were measured to a resolution of 1.9 A. Restrained least-squares refinement alternated with rebuilding in electron density maps yielded an atom model of the enzyme-substrate complex with a crystallographic R-factor of 15.6% for 31,148 reflections between 6.0 and 1.9 A. A total of 330 solvent molecules was located. In the final model, only three residues have deviating phi-psi angle combinations. One of them, the active site residue Arg44, has a well-defined electron density and may be strained to adopt this conformation for efficient catalysis. The mode of binding of FAD is distinctly different for the different components of the coenzyme. The adenine ring is engaged in three water-mediated hydrogen bonds with the protein, while making only one direct hydrogen bond with the enzyme. The pyrophosphate moiety makes five water-mediated versus three direct hydrogen bonds. The ribityl and ribose moieties make only direct hydrogen bonds, in all cases, except one, with side-chain atoms. The isoalloxazine ring also makes only direct hydrogen bonds, but virtually only with main-chain atoms. The conformation of FAD in p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase is strikingly similar to that in glutathione reductase, while the riboflavin-binding parts of these two enzymes have no structural similarity at all. The refined 1.9 A structure of the p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase-substrate complex was the basis of further refinement of the 2.3 A structure of the enzyme-product complex. The result was a final R-factor of 16.7% for 14,339 reflections between 6.0 and 2.3 A and an improved geometry. Comparison between the complexes indicated only small differences in the active site region, where the product molecule is rotated by 14 degrees compared with the substrate in the enzyme-substrate complex. During the refinements of the enzyme-substrate and enzyme-product complexes, the flavin ring was allowed to bend or twist by imposing planarity restraints on the benzene and pyrimidine ring, but not on the flavin ring as a whole. The observed angle between the benzene ring and the pyrimidine ring was 10 degrees for the enzyme-substrate complex and 19 degrees for the enzyme-product complex. Because of the high temperature factors of the flavin ring in the enzyme-product complex, the latter value should be treated with caution. Six out of eight peptide residues near the flavin ring are oriented with their nitrogen atom pointing towards the ring.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
The crystal structure of the reduced form of the enzyme p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase from Pseudomonas fluorescens, complexed with its substrate p-hydroxybenzoate, has been obtained by protein X-ray crystallography. Crystals of the reduced form were prepared by soaking crystals of the oxidized enzyme-substrate complex in deaerated mother liquor containing 300-400 mM NADPH. A rapid bleaching of the crystals indicated the reduction of the enzyme-bound FAD by NADPH. This was confirmed by single crystal spectroscopy. X-ray data to 2.3 A were collected on oscillation films using a rotating anode generator as an X-ray source. After data processing and reduction, restrained least squares refinement using the 1.9 A structure of the oxidized enzyme-substrate complex as a starting model, yielded a crystallographic R-factor of 14.8% for 11,394 reflections. The final model of the reduced complex contains 3,098 protein atoms, the FAD molecule, the substrate p-hydroxybenzoate and 322 solvent molecules. The structures of the oxidized and reduced forms of the enzyme-substrate complex were found to be very similar. The root-mean-square discrepancy for all atoms between both structures was 0.38 A. The flavin ring is almost completely planar in the final model, although it was allowed to bend or twist during refinement. The observed angle between the benzene and the pyrimidine ring is 2 degrees. This value should be compared with observed values of 10 degrees for the oxidized enzyme-substrate complex and 19 degrees for the enzyme-product complex. The position of the substrate is virtually unaltered with respect to its position in the oxidized enzyme. No trace of a bound NADP+ or NADPH molecule was found.  相似文献   

3.
Structural and kinetic studies have revealed two flavin conformations in p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase (PHBH), the in-position and the out-position. Conversion between these two conformations is believed to be essential during catalysis. Although substrate hydroxylation occurs while the flavin in PHBH is in the in-conformation, the position of the flavin during reduction by NADPH is uncertain. To investigate the catalytic importance of the out-conformation of the flavin and to clarify the mechanism of flavin reduction in PHBH, we report quantitative structure-reactivity relationships (QSAR) using PHBH substituted separately with nine derivatives of FAD modified in the 8-position and four dihydronicotinamide analogues as reducing agents. The 8-position of the FAD isoalloxazine ring was chosen for modification because in PHBH it has minimal interactions with the protein and is accessible to solvent. The chemical sequence of events during catalysis by PHBH was not altered when using any of the modified flavins, and normal products were obtained. Although the rate of reduction of PHBH reconstituted with flavin derivatives is expected to be dependent on the redox potential of the flavin, no strict correlation was observed. Instead, the rate of reduction correlated with the kappa-substituent constant, which is based on size and hydrophobicity of the 8-substituent on the FAD. Substituents that sterically hinder attainment of the out-conformation decreased the rate of flavin reduction much more than expected on the basis of the redox potential of the flavin. The results of this QSAR analysis are consistent with the hypothesis that the flavin in PHBH must move to the out-conformation for proper formation of the charge-transfer complex between NADPH and FAD that is necessary for rapid flavin reduction.  相似文献   

4.
Acyl-CoA oxidase (ACO) catalyzes the first and rate-determining step of the peroxisomal beta-oxidation of fatty acids. The crystal structure of ACO-II, which is one of two forms of rat liver ACO (ACO-I and ACO-II), has been solved and refined to an R-factor of 20.6% at 2.2-A resolution. The enzyme is a homodimer, and the polypeptide chain of the subunit is folded into the N-terminal alpha-domain, beta-domain, and C-terminal alpha-domain. The X-ray analysis showed that the overall folding of ACO-II less C-terminal 221 residues is similar to that of medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (MCAD). However, the N-terminal alpha- and beta-domains rotate by 13 with respect to the C-terminal alpha-domain compared with those in MCAD to give a long and large crevice that accommodates the cofactor FAD and the substrate acyl-CoA. FAD is bound to the crevice between the beta- and C-terminal domains with its adenosine diphosphate portion interacting extensively with the other subunit of the molecule. The flavin ring of FAD resides at the active site with its si-face attached to the beta-domain, and is surrounded by active-site residues in a mode similar to that found in MCAD. However, the residues have weak interactions with the flavin ring due to the loss of some of the important hydrogen bonds with the flavin ring found in MCAD. The catalytic residue Glu421 in the C-terminal alpha-domain seems to be too far away from the flavin ring to abstract the alpha-proton of the substrate acyl-CoA, suggesting that the C-terminal domain moves to close the active site upon substrate binding. The pyrimidine moiety of flavin is exposed to the solvent and can readily be attacked by molecular oxygen, while that in MCAD is protected from the solvent. The crevice for binding the fatty acyl chain is 28 A long and 6 A wide, large enough to accommodate the C23 acyl chain.  相似文献   

5.
5-DeazaFAD bound to a hydrophobic site in apophotolyase and formed a stable reconstituted enzyme, similar to that observed with FAD. Although stoichiometric incorporation was observed, the flavin ring modification in 1-deazaFAD interfered with normal binding, decreased protein stability, and prevented formation of a stable flavin radical, unlike that observed with FAD. The results suggest that an important hydrogen bond is formed between the protein and N (1) in FAD, but not N (5), and that there is sufficient space at the normal flavin binding site near N (5) to accommodate an additional hydrogen but not near N (1). Catalytic activity was observed with enzyme containing 5-deazaFADH2 (42% of native enzyme) or 1-deazaFADH2 (11% of native enzyme) as its only chromophore, but no activity was observed with the corresponding oxidized flavins, similar to that observed with FAD and consistent with a mechanism where dimer cleavage is initiated by electron donation from excited reduced flavin to substrate. The protein environment in photolyase selectively enhanced photochemical reactivity in the fully reduced state, as evidenced by comparison with results obtained in model studies with the corresponding free flavins. Phosphorescence was observed with free or photolyase-bound 5-deazaFADH2, providing the first example of a flavin that exhibits phosphorescence in the fully reduced state. Formation of an enzyme-substrate complex resulted in a nearly identical extent of quenching of 5-deazaFADH2 phosphorescence (85.1%) and fluorescence (87.5%). The data are consistent with a mechanism involving exclusive reaction of substrate with the excited singlet state of 5-deazaFADH2, analogous to that proposed for FADH2 in native enzyme. Direct evidence for singlet-singlet energy transfer from enzyme-bound 5-deazaFADH2 to 5,10-CH(+)-H4folate was provided by the fact that pterin fluorescence was observed upon excitation of 5-deazaFADH2, accompanied by a decrease in 5-deazaFADH2 fluorescence. On the other hand, the fluorescence of enzyme-bound pterin was quenched by 5-deazaFADox, consistent with energy transfer from pterin to 5-deazaFADox. In each case, the spectral properties of the chromophores were consistent with the observed direction of energy transfer and indicated that transfer in the opposite direction was energetically unlikely. Unlike 5-deazaFAD, energy transfer from pterin to FAD is energetically feasible with FADH2 or FADox. The results indicate that the direction of flavin-pterin energy transfer at the active site of photolyase can be manipulated by changes in the flavin ring or redox state which alter the energy level of the flavin singlet.  相似文献   

6.
Zheng Y  Dong J  Palfey BA  Carey PR 《Biochemistry》1999,38(51):16727-16732
X-ray crystallographic studies of several complexes involving FAD bound to p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase (PHBH) have revealed that the isoalloxazine ring system of FAD is capable of adopting in two positions on the protein. In one, the "in" form, the ring is surrounded by protein groups and has little contact with solvent; in the second, "out" form, the ring is largely solvent exposed. Using Raman difference spectroscopy, it has been possible to obtain Raman spectra for the flavin ring in both conformational states for different complexes in solution. The spectra consist of a rich assortment of isoalloxazine ring modes whose normal mode origin can be assigned by using density functional theory and ab initio calculations. Further insight into the sensitivity of these modes to changes in environment is provided by the Raman spectra of lumiflavin in the solid state, in DMSO and in aqueous solution. For the protein complexes, the Raman difference spectra of flavin bound to wt PHBH and wt PHBH plus substrate, p-hydroxybenzoate, provided examples of the "in" conformation. These data are compared to those for flavin bound to wt PHBH plus 2,4-dihydroxybenzoate, where X-ray analysis show that the flavin is "out". There are several spectral regions where characteristic differences exist for flavin in the "in" or "out" conformation, these occur near 1700, 1500, 1410, 1350, 1235, and 1145 cm(-)(1). These spectral features can be used as empirical marker bands to determine the populations of "in" and "out" for any complex of PHBH and to monitor changes in those populations with perturbations to the system, e.g., by changing temperature or pH. Thus, it will now be possible to determine the conformational state of the flavin in PHBH for those complexes that have resisted X-ray crystallographic analysis. Raman difference data are also presented for the Tyr222Phe mutant. The Raman data show that the isoalloxazine ring is predominantly "out" for Tyr222Phe. However, in the presence of the substrate p-hydroxybenzoate there is clear evidence from the Raman marker bands that a mixed population of "in" and "out" exists with the majority being in the "out" state. This is consistent with the conclusions drawn from crystallographic studies on this complex (Gatti, D. L., Palfey, B. A., Lah, M. S., Entsch, B., Massey, V., Ballou, D. P., and Ludwig, M. L. (1994) Science, 266, 110-114).  相似文献   

7.
The flavin prosthetic group (FAD) of p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase from Pseudomonas fluorescens was replaced by a stereochemical analog, which is spontaneously formed from natural FAD in alcohol oxidases from methylotrophic yeasts. Reconstitution of p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase from apoprotein and modified FAD is a rapid process complete within seconds. Crystals of the enzyme-substrate complex of modified FAD-containing p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase diffract to 2.1 A resolution. The crystal structure provides direct evidence for the presence of an arabityl sugar chain in the modified form of FAD. The isoalloxazine ring of the arabinoflavin adenine dinucleotide (a-FAD) is located in a cleft outside the active site as recently observed in several other p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase complexes. Like the native enzyme, a-FAD-containing p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase preferentially binds the phenolate form of the substrate (pKo = 7.2). The substrate acts as an effector highly stimulating the rate of enzyme reduction by NADPH (kred > 500 s-1). The oxidative part of the catalytic cycle of a-FAD-containing p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase differs from native enzyme. Partial uncoupling of hydroxylation results in the formation of about 0.3 mol of 3,4-dihydroxybenzoate and 0.7 mol of hydrogen peroxide per mol NADPH oxidized. It is proposed that flavin motion in p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase is important for efficient reduction and that the flavin "out" conformation is associated with the oxidase activity.  相似文献   

8.
The FAD of p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase (PHBH) is known to exist in two conformations. The FAD must be in the in-position for hydroxylation of p-hydroxybenzoate (pOHB), whereas the out-position is essential for reduction of the flavin by NADPH. In these investigations, we have used 8-mercapto-FAD and 8-hydroxy-FAD to probe the movement of the flavin in catalysis. Under the conditions employed, 8-mercapto-FAD (pK(a) = 3.8) and 8-hydroxy-FAD (pK(a) = 4.8) are mainly anionic. The spectral characteristics of the anionic forms of these flavins are very sensitive to their environment, making them sensitive probes for detecting movement of the flavin during catalysis. With these flavin analogues, the enzyme hydroxylates pOHB efficiently, but at a rate much slower than that of enzyme with FAD. Reaction of oxygen with reduced forms of these modified enzymes in the absence of substrate appears to proceed through the formation of the flavin-C4a-hydroperoxide intermediate, as with normal enzyme, but the decay of this intermediate is so fast compared to its formation that very little accumulates during the reaction. However, after elimination of H2O2 from the flavin-C4a-hydroperoxide, a perturbed oxidized enzyme spectrum is observed (Eox*), and this converts slowly to the spectrum of the resting oxidized form of the enzyme (Eox). In the presence of pOHB, PHBH reconstituted with 8-mercapto-FAD also shows the additional oxidized intermediate (Eox*) after the usual oxygenated C4a-intermediates have formed and decayed in the course of the hydroxylation reaction. This Eox* to Eox step is postulated to be due to flavin movement. Furthermore, binding of pOHB to resting (Eox) follows a three-step equilibrium mechanism that is also consistent with flavin movement being the rate-limiting step. The rate for the slowest step during pOHB binding is similar to that observed for the conversion of Eox* to Eox during the oxygen reaction in the absence or presence of substrate. Steady-state kinetic analysis of PHBH substituted with 8-mercapto-FAD demonstrated that the apparent k(cat) is also similar to the rate of Eox* conversion to Eox. Presumably, the protein environment surrounding the flavin in Eox* differs slightly from that of the final resting form of the enzyme (Eox).  相似文献   

9.
The oxygen transfer to p-hydroxybenzoate catalyzed by p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase (PHBH) has been shown to occur via a C4a-hydroperoxide of the flavin. Two factors are likely to be important in facilitating the transfer of oxygen from the C4a-hydroperoxide to the substrate. (a) The positive electrostatic potential of the active site partially stabilizes the negative charge centered on the oxygen of the flavin-C4a-alkoxide leaving group during the transition state [Ortiz-Maldonado, M., Ballou, D. P., and Massey, V. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 8124-8137]. (b) The hydrogen-bonding network ionizes the substrate to promote its nucleophilic attack on the electrophilic C4a-hydroperoxide intermediate [Entsch, B., Palfey, B. A., Ballou, D. P., and Massey, V. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 17341-17349]. This ionization is also aided by the positive electrostatic potential of the active site [Moran, G. R., Entsch, B., Palfey, B. A., and Ballou, D. P. (1997) Biochemistry 36, 7548-7556]. Substituents on the flavin can specifically affect the stability of the alkoxide leaving-group, whereas changes to specific enzyme residues can affect the charge in the active site and the hydrogen-bonding network. We have used wild-type (WT) PHBH and several mutant forms, all with normal FAD and with 8-Cl-FAD substituted for FAD, to assess the relative contributions of the two effects. Lys297Met and Asn300Asp have decreased positive charge in the active site, and these variants engender approximately 35-fold slower hydroxylation rates than the WT enzyme. Substitution of 8-Cl-FAD in these mutant forms gives approximately 1.8-fold increases in hydroxylation rates, compared with a > or =4.8-fold increase for WT with this flavin. The hydroxylation catalyzed by Tyr385Phe, a mutant enzyme form with a disrupted hydrogen-bonding network that compromises the ionization of the substrate without changing the positive charge of the active site, is stimulated 1.5-fold by substituting the enzyme with 8-Cl-FAD. The substrate, tetrafluoro-p-hydroxybenzoate, is fully ionized in WT PHBH, but this phenolate is a poor nucleophile because of the electron-withdrawing effects of the fluorine substituents. With tetrafluoro-p-hydroxybenzoate as the substrate, substitution of FAD with 8-Cl-FAD in the WT enzyme stabilizes the leaving alkoxide and leads to a 2.3-fold increase in the hydroxylation rate compared to that with FAD. Either the use of substrates that do not communicate with the proton network or the mutation of amino acid residues that perturb this interaction may prevent a necessary conformational change that allows proper orientation between reactants during the hydroxylation reaction or permits the essential protonation of the initially formed nascent flavin-C4a-peroxide anion. Thus, both activation of substrate by the proton network and stabilization of the leaving alkoxide appear to be important for oxygen transfer catalyzed by PHBH. The full effect of the substituents on the flavin (4.8-fold) can only be realized when the optimal transition state can be achieved, and this optimal state is not fully realized with the mutant forms.  相似文献   

10.
Structural changes in Escherichia coli DNA photolyase induced by binding of a (cis,syn)-cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer (CPD) are studied by continuous-wave electron paramagnetic resonance and electron-nuclear double resonance spectroscopies, using the flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) cofactor in its neutral radical form as a naturally occurring electron spin probe. The electron paramagnetic resonance/electron-nuclear double resonance spectral changes are consistent with a large distance (> or =0.6 nm) between the CPD lesion and the 7,8-dimethyl isoalloxazine ring of FAD, as was predicted by recent model calculations on photolyase enzyme-substrate complexes. Small shifts of the isotropic proton hyperfine coupling constants within the FAD's isoalloxazine moiety can be understood in terms of the cofactor binding site becoming more nonpolar because of the displacement of water molecules upon CPD docking to the enzyme. Molecular orbital calculations of hyperfine couplings using density functional theory, in conjunction with an isodensity polarized continuum model, are presented to rationalize these shifts in terms of the changed polarity of the medium surrounding the FAD cofactor.  相似文献   

11.
Frederick KK  Palfey BA 《Biochemistry》2005,44(40):13304-13314
p-Hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase (PHBH) is an FAD-dependent monooxygenase that catalyzes the hydroxylation of p-hydroxybenzoate (pOHB) to 3,4-dihydroxybenzoate in an NADPH-dependent reaction. Two structural features are coupled to control the reactivity of PHBH with NADPH: a proton-transfer network that allows protons to be passed between the sequestered active site and solvent and a flavin that adopts two positions: "in", where the flavin is near pOHB, and "out", where the flavin is near NADPH. PHBH uses the proton-transfer network to test for the presence of a suitable aromatic substrate before allowing the flavin to adopt the NADPH-accessible conformation. In this work, kinetic analysis of the His72Asn mutant, with a disrupted proton-transfer network, showed that flavin movement could occur in the presence or absence of NADPH but that NADPH stimulated movement to the reactive conformation required for hydride transfer. Substrate and solvent isotope effects on the transient kinetics of reduction of the His72Asn mutant showed that proton transfer was linked to flavin movement and that the conformational change occurred in a step separate from that of hydride transfer. Proton transfers during the reductive half-reaction were observed directly in the wild-type enzyme by performing experiments in the presence of a fluorescent pH-indicator dye in unbuffered solutions. NADPH binding caused rapid proton release from the enzyme, followed by proton uptake after flavin reduction. Solvent and substrate kinetic isotope effects showed that proton-coupled flavin movement and reduction also occurred in different steps in wild-type PHBH. These results allow a detailed kinetic scheme to be proposed for the reductive half-reaction of the wild-type enzyme. Three kinetic models considered for substrate-induced isomerization are analyzed in the Appendix.  相似文献   

12.
Abe I  Kashiwagi K  Noguchi H 《FEBS letters》2000,483(2-3):131-134
Gallic acid and its esters were evaluated as enzyme inhibitors of recombinant p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase (PHBH), a NADPH-dependent flavin monooxygenase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa. n-Dodecyl gallate (DG) (IC(50)=16 microM) and (-)-epigallocatechin-3-O-gallate (EGCG) (IC(50)=16 microM), a major component of green tea polyphenols, showed the most potent inhibition, while product-like gallic acid did not inhibit the enzyme significantly (IC(50)>250 microM). Inhibition kinetics revealed that both DG and EGCG inhibited PHBH in a non-competitive manner (K(I)=18.1 and 14.0 microM, respectively). The enzyme inhibition was caused by specific binding of the antioxidative gallate to the enzyme, and by scavenging reactive oxygen species required for the monooxygenase reaction. Molecular modeling predicted that EGCG binds to the enzyme in the proximity of the FAD binding site via formation of three hydrogen bonds.  相似文献   

13.
Archaeal membrane lipids consist of branched, saturated hydrocarbons distinct from those found in bacteria and eukaryotes. Digeranylgeranylglycerophospholipid reductase (DGGR) catalyzes the hydrogenation process that converts unsaturated 2,3-di-O-geranylgeranylglyceryl phosphate to saturated 2,3-di-O-phytanylglyceryl phosphate as a critical step in the biosynthesis of archaeal membrane lipids. The saturation of hydrocarbon chains confers the ability to resist hydrolysis and oxidation and helps archaea withstand extreme conditions. DGGR is a member of the geranylgeranyl reductase family that is also widely distributed in bacteria and plants, where the family members are involved in the biosynthesis of photosynthetic pigments. We have determined the crystal structure of DGGR from the thermophilic heterotrophic archaea Thermoplasma acidophilum at 1.6 Å resolution, in complex with flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) and a bacterial lipid. The DGGR structure can be assigned to the well-studied, p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase (PHBH) SCOP superfamily of flavoproteins that include many aromatic hydroxylases and other enzymes with diverse functions. In the DGGR complex, FAD adopts the IN conformation (closed) previously observed in other PHBH flavoproteins. DGGR contains a large substrate-binding site that extends across the entire ligand-binding domain. Electron density corresponding to a bacterial lipid was found within this cavity. The cavity consists of a large opening that tapers down to two, narrow, curved tunnels that closely mimic the shape of the preferred substrate. We identified a sequence motif, PxxYxWxFP, that defines a specificity pocket in the enzyme and precisely aligns the double bond of the geranyl group with respect to the FAD cofactor, thus providing a structural basis for the substrate specificity of geranylgeranyl reductases. DGGR is likely to share a common mechanism with other PHBH enzymes in which FAD switches between two conformations that correspond to the reductive and oxidative half cycles. The structure provides evidence that substrate binding likely involves conformational changes, which are coupled to the two conformational states of the FAD.  相似文献   

14.
The flavin prosthetic group (FAD) of p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase (EC 1.14.13.2) from Pseudomonas fluorescens, was replaced by 6-hydroxy-FAD (an extra hydroxyl group on the carbon at position 6 of the isoalloxazine ring of FAD). The catalytic cycle of this modified enzyme was analyzed and compared to the function of native (FAD) enzyme. Transient state kinetic analyses of the multiple changes in the chemical state of the flavin were the principal methods used to probe the mechanism. Four known substrates of the native enzyme were used to probe the reaction. With the natural substrate, p-hydroxybenzoate, the 6-hydroxy-FAD enzyme activity was 12-15% of native enzyme, due to a slower release of product from the enzyme, and less than one product molecule was formed per NADPH oxidized, due to an increased rate of nonproductive decomposition of the transient peroxyflavin essential to the catalytic pathway. More extensive changes in mechanism were observed with the substrates, 2,4-dihydroxybenzoate and p-aminobenzoate. The results suggest that, during catalysis, when the reduced state of FAD is ready for oxygen reaction, the substrate is located below and close to the C-4a/N-5 edge of the isoalloxazine ring. The nature of the high extinction, transient state of flavin, formed upon transfer of oxygen to substrate is discussed. It is not a flavin cation, and is unlikely to be an oxygen-substituted analogue of N-3/C-4 dihydroflavin.  相似文献   

15.
The NAD(P)H:flavin oxidoreductase from Escherichia coli, named Fre, is a monomer of 26.2 kDa that catalyzes the reduction of free flavins using NADPH or NADH as electron donor. The enzyme does not contain any prosthetic group but accommodates both the reduced pyridine nucleotide and the flavin in a ternary complex prior to oxidoreduction. The specificity of the flavin reductase for the pyridine nucleotide was studied by steady-state kinetics using a variety of NADP analogs. Both the nicotinamide ring and the adenosine part of the substrate molecule have been found to be important for binding to the polypeptide chain. However, in the case of NADPH, the 2'-phosphate group destabilized almost completely the interaction with the adenosine moiety. Moreover, NADPH and NMNH are very good substrates for the flavin reductase, and we have shown that both these molecules bind to the enzyme almost exclusively by the nicotinamide ring. This provides evidence that the flavin reductase exhibits a unique mode for recognition of the reduced pyridine nucleotide. In addition, we have shown that the flavin reductase selectively transfers the pro-R hydrogen from the C-4 position of the nicotinamide ring and is therefore classified as an A-side-specific enzyme.  相似文献   

16.
Flavin‐dependent halogenases require reduced flavin adenine dinucleotide (FADH2), O2, and halide salts to halogenate their substrates. We describe the crystal structures of the tryptophan 6‐halogenase Thal in complex with FAD or with both tryptophan and FAD. If tryptophan and FAD were soaked simultaneously, both ligands showed impaired binding and in some cases only the adenosine monophosphate or the adenosine moiety of FAD was resolved, suggesting that tryptophan binding increases the mobility mainly of the flavin mononucleotide moiety. This confirms a negative cooperativity between the binding of substrate and cofactor that was previously described for other tryptophan halogenases. Binding of substrate to tryptophan halogenases reduces the affinity for the oxidized cofactor FAD presumably to facilitate the regeneration of FADH2 by flavin reductases.  相似文献   

17.
The catabolism of toxic phenols in the thermophilic organism Bacillus thermoglucosidasius A7 is initiated by a two-component enzyme system. The smaller flavin reductase PheA2 component catalyzes the NADH-dependent reduction of free FAD according to a ping-pong bisubstrate-biproduct mechanism. The reduced FAD is then used by the larger oxygenase component PheA1 to hydroxylate phenols to the corresponding catechols. We have determined the x-ray structure of PheA2 containing a bound FAD cofactor (2.2 A), which is the first structure of a member of this flavin reductase family. We have also determined the x-ray structure of reduced holo-PheA2 in complex with oxidized NAD (2.1 A). PheA2 is a single domain homodimeric protein with each FAD-containing subunit being organized around a six-stranded beta-sheet and a capping alpha-helix. The tightly bound FAD prosthetic group (K(d) = 10 nm) binds near the dimer interface, and the re face of the FAD isoalloxazine ring is fully exposed to solvent. The addition of NADH to crystalline PheA2 reduced the flavin cofactor, and the NAD product was bound in a wide solvent-accessible groove adopting an unusual folded conformation with ring stacking. This is the first observation of an enzyme that is very likely to react with a folded compact pyridine nucleotide. The PheA2 crystallographic models strongly suggest that reactive exogenous FAD substrate binds in the NADH cleft after release of NAD product. Nanoflow electrospray mass spectrometry data indeed showed that PheA2 is able to bind one FAD cofactor and one FAD substrate. In conclusion, the structural data provide evidence that PheA2 contains a dual binding cleft for NADH and FAD substrate, which alternate during catalysis.  相似文献   

18.
The degradation of the toxic phenol p-cresol by Pseudomonas bacteria occurs by way of the protocatechuate metabolic pathway. The first enzyme in this pathway, p-cresol methylhydroxylase (PCMH), is a flavocytochrome c. The enzyme first catalyzes the oxidation of p-cresol to p-hydroxybenzyl alcohol, utilizing one atom of oxygen derived from water, and yielding one molecule of reduced FAD. The reducing electron equivalents are then passed one at a time from the flavin cofactor to the heme cofactor by intramolecular electron transfer, and subsequently to cytochrome oxidase within the periplasmic membrane via one or more soluble electron carrier proteins. The product, p-hydroxybenzyl alcohol, can also be oxidized by PCMH to yield p-hydroxybenzaldehyde. The fully refined X-ray crystal structure of PCMH in the native state has been obtained at 2. 5 A resolution on the basis of the gene sequence. The structure of the enzyme-substrate complex has also been refined, at 2.75 A resolution, and reveals significant conformational changes in the active site upon substrate binding. The active site for substrate oxidation is deeply buried in the interior of the PCMH molecule. A route for substrate access to the site has been identified and is shown to be governed by a swinging-gate mechanism. Two possible proton transfer pathways, that may assist in activating the substrate for nucleophilic attack and in removal of protons generated during the reaction, have been revealed. Hydrogen bonding interactions between the flavoprotein and cytochrome subunits that stabilize the intramolecular complex and may contribute to the electron transfer process have been identified.  相似文献   

19.
p-Hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase from Pseudomonas fluorescens and salicylate hydroxylase from Pseudomonas putida have been reconstituted with 13C- and 15N-enriched FAD. The protein preparations were studied by 13C-NMR, 15N-NMR and 31P-NMR techniques in the oxidized and in the two-electron-reduced states. The chemical shift values are compared with those of free flavin in water or chloroform. It is shown that the pi electron distribution in oxidized free p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase is comparable to free flavin in water, and it is therefore suggested that the flavin ring is solvent accessible. Addition of substrate has a strong effect on several resonances, e.g. C2 and N5, which indicates that the flavin ring becomes shielded from solvent and also that a conformational change occurs involving the positive pole of an alpha-helix microdipole. In the reduced state, the flavin in p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase is bound in the anionic form, i.e. carrying a negative charge at N1. The flavin is bound in a more planar configuration than when free in solution. Upon binding of substrate the resonances of N1, C10a and N10 shift upfield. It is suggested that these upfield shifts are the result of a conformational change similar, but not identical, to the one observed in the oxidized state. The 13C chemical shifts of FAD bound to apo(salicylate hydroxylase) indicate that in the oxidized state the flavin ring is also fairly solvent accessible in the free enzyme. Addition of substrate has a strong effect on the hydrogen bond formed with O4 alpha. It is suggested that this is due to the exclusion of water from the active site by the binding of substrate. In the reduced state, the flavin is anionic. Addition of substrate forces the flavin ring to adopt a more planar configuration, i.e. a sp2-hybridized N5 atom and a slightly sp3-hybridized N10 atom. The NMR results are discussed in relation to the reaction catalyzed by the enzymes.  相似文献   

20.
Rapid reaction kinetics of the flavoprotein anthranilate hydroxylase from Trichosporon cutaneum were examined for reactions involving anthranilate, the native substrate. As was reported earlier for the nonhydroxylated substrate analogue, salicylate, some reactions in the first turnover with anthranilate occur slower than those in subsequent turnovers (Powlowski, J., Massey, V., and Ballou, D. P. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 5606-5612). Evidence is presented for slow conformational changes that occur both on binding of the aromatic ligand and on reduction of the enzyme. These changes are apparently important for rapid anthranilate binding to occur in turnovers subsequent to the first. Moreover, bound anthranilate is required for rapid reduction of enzyme-bound FAD by NADPH. Studies to probe the accessibility of reagents to modified flavins that had been incorporated into the apoenzyme indicate that anthranilate binding causes a conformational change in the protein, allowing increased access to the benzene ring moiety of the flavin. An unusual isotope effect with (R)-NADPD (4(R)-2H] NADPH) is observed on Kd rather than on kred, which is consistent with a model involving slow interconversion of enzyme-substrate complexes before productive binding of NADPH and reduction of the enzyme flavin.  相似文献   

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