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1.
Kunz RC  Dey M  Ragsdale SW 《Biochemistry》2008,47(8):2661-2667
Methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) catalyzes the terminal step in methanogenesis by using N-7-mercaptoheptanolyl-threonine phosphate (CoBSH) as the two-electron donor to reduce 2-(methylthiol)ethane sulfonate (methyl-SCoM) to methane, and producing the heterodisulfide, CoBS-SCoM. The active site of MCR includes a noncovalently bound Ni tetrapyrrolic cofactor called coenzyme F430, which is in the Ni(I) state in the active enzyme (MCRred1). Bromopropanesulfonate (BPS) is a potent inhibitor and reversible redox inactivator that reacts with MCRred1 to form an EPR-active state called MCRPS, which is an alkyl-nickel species. When MCRPS is treated with free thiol containing compounds, the enzyme is reconverted to the active MCRred1 state. In this paper, we demonstrate that the reactivation of MCRPS to MCRred1 by thiols involves formation of a thioether product. MCRPS also can be converted to active MCRred1 by treatment with sodium borohydride. Reactivation is highest with the smallest free thiol HS-. Interestingly, MCRPS can also be reductively activated with analogues of CoBSH such as CoB8SH and CoB9SH, but not CoBSH itself. Unambiguous demonstration of the formation of a methylthioether product from thiolysis of an alkyl-Ni species provides support for a methyl-Ni intermediate in the MCR-catalyzed last step in methanogenesis and the first proposed step in anaerobic methane oxidation.  相似文献   

2.
Y C Horng  D F Becker  S W Ragsdale 《Biochemistry》2001,40(43):12875-12885
Methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR), the key enzyme in methanogenesis, catalyzes methane formation from methyl-coenzyme M (methyl-SCoM) and N-7-mercaptoheptanoylthreonine phosphate (CoBSH). Steady-state and presteady-state kinetics have been used to test two mechanistic models that contrast in the role of CoBSH in the MCR-catalyzed reaction. In class 1 mechanisms, CoBSH is integrally involved in methane formation and in C-S (methyl-SCoM) bond cleavage. On the other hand, in class 2 mechanisms, methane is formed in the absence of CoBSH, which functions to regenerate active MCR after methane is released. Steady-state kinetic studies are most consistent with a ternary complex mechanism in which CoBSH binds before methane is formed, as found earlier [Bonacker et al. (1993) Eur. J. Biochem. 217, 587-595]. Presteady-state kinetic experiments at high MCR concentrations are complicated by the presence of tightly bound CoBSH in the purified enzyme. Chemical quench studies in which (14)CH(3)-SCoM is rapidly reacted with active MCRred1 in the presence versus the absence of added CoBSH indicate that CoBSH is required for a single-turnover of methyl-SCoM to methane. Similar single turnover studies using a CoBSH analogue leads to the same conclusion. The results are consistent with class 1 mechanisms in which CoBSH is integrally involved in methane formation and in C-S (methyl-SCoM) bond cleavage and are inconsistent with class 2 mechanisms in which CoBSH binds after methane is formed. These are the first reported pre-steady-state kinetic studies of MCR.  相似文献   

3.
Methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) catalyzes the final step of methanogenesis in which coenzyme B and methyl-coenzyme M are converted to methane and the heterodisulfide, CoMS-SCoB. MCR also appears to initiate anaerobic methane oxidation (reverse methanogenesis). At the active site of MCR is coenzyme F430, a nickel tetrapyrrole. This paper describes the reaction of the active MCR(red1) state with the potent inhibitor, 3-bromopropanesulfonate (BPS; I50 = 50 nM) by UV-visible and EPR spectroscopy and by steady-state and rapid kinetics. BPS was shown to be an alternative substrate of MCR in an ionic reaction that is coenzyme B-independent and leads to debromination of BPS and formation of a distinct state ("MCR(PS)") with an EPR signal that was assigned to a Ni(III)-propylsulfonate species (Hinderberger, D., Piskorski, R. P., Goenrich, M., Thauer, R. K., Schweiger, A., Harmer, J., and Jaun, B. (2006) Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. Engl. 45, 3602-3607). A similar EPR signal was generated by reacting MCR(red1) with several halogenated sulfonate and carboxylate substrates. In rapid chemical quench experiments, the propylsulfonate ligand was identified by NMR spectroscopy and high performance liquid chromatography as propanesulfonic acid after protonolysis of the MCR(PS) complex. Propanesulfonate formation was also observed in steady-state reactions in the presence of Ti(III) citrate. Reaction of the alkylnickel intermediate with thiols regenerates the active MCR(red1) state and eliminates the propylsulfonate group, presumably as the thioether. MCR(PS) is catalytically competent in both the generation of propanesulfonate and reformation of MCR(red1). These results provide evidence for the intermediacy of an alkylnickel species in the final step in anaerobic methane oxidation and in the initial step of methanogenesis.  相似文献   

4.
Dey M  Kunz RC  Lyons DM  Ragsdale SW 《Biochemistry》2007,46(42):11969-11978
Methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) from methanogenic archaea catalyzes the final step in the biological synthesis of methane. Using coenzyme B (CoBSH) as the two-electron donor, MCR reduces methyl-coenzyme M (methyl-SCoM) to methane and the mixed disulfide, CoB-S-S-CoM. MCR contains coenzyme F430, an essential redox-active nickel tetrahydrocorphin, at its active site. The active form of MCR (MCRred1) contains Ni(I)-F430. When 3-bromopropane sulfonate (BPS) is incubated with MCRred1, an alkyl-Ni(III) species is formed that elicits the MCRPS EPR signal. Here we used EPR and UV-visible spectroscopy and transient kinetics to study the reaction between MCR from Methanothermobacter marburgensis and a series of brominated carboxylic acids, with carbon chain lengths of 4-16. All of these compounds give rise to an alkyl-Ni intermediate with an EPR signal similar to that of the MCRPS species. Reaction of the alkyl-Ni(III) adduct, formed from brominated acids with eight or fewer total carbons, with HSCoM as nucleophile at pH 10.0 results in the formation of a thioether coupled to regeneration of the active MCRred1 state. When reacted with 4-bromobutyrate, MCRred1 forms the alkyl-Ni(III) MCRXA state and then, surprisingly, undergoes "self-reactivation" to regenerate the Ni(I) MCRred1 state and a bromocarboxy ester. The results demonstrate an unexpected reactivity and flexibility of the MCR active site in accommodating a broad range of substrates, which act as molecular rulers for the substrate channel in MCR.  相似文献   

5.
Hybrid density functional theory has been used to investigate the catalytic mechanism of methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR), an essential enzyme in methanogenesis. In a previous study of methane formation, a scheme was suggested involving oxidation of Ni(I) in the starting square-planar coordination to the high-spin Ni(II) form in the CoM-S-Ni(II)F(430) octahedral intermediate. The methyl radical, concomitantly released by methyl-coenzyme M (CoM), is rapidly quenched by hydrogen atom transfer from the coenzyme B (CoB) thiol group, yielding methane as the first product of the reaction. The present investigation primarily concerns the second and final step of the reaction: oxidation of CoB and CoM to the CoB-S-S-CoM heterodisulfide product and reduction of nickel back to the Ni(I) square-planar form. The activation energy for the second step is found to be around 10 kcal/mol, implying that the first step of methane formation with an activation energy of 20 kcal/mol should be rate-limiting. An oxygen of the Gln147 residue, occupying the rear axial position in the oxidized Ni(II) state, is shown to stabilize the intermediate by 6 kcal/mol, thereby slightly decreasing the barrier for the preceding rate-limiting transition state. The mechanism suggested is discussed in the context of available experimental data. An analysis of the flexibility of the F(430) cofactor during the reaction cycle is also given.  相似文献   

6.
Methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) catalyses the reduction of methyl-coenzyme M (CH3-S-CoM) with coenzyme B (HS-CoB) to methane and CoM-S-S-CoB. It contains the nickel porphyrinoid F430 as prosthetic group which has to be in the Ni(I) oxidation state for the enzyme to be active. The active enzyme exhibits an axial Ni(I)-derived EPR signal MCR-red1. We report here on experiments with methyl-coenzyme M analogues showing how they affect the activity and the MCR-red1 signal of MCR from Methanothermobacter marburgensis. Ethyl-coenzyme M was the only methyl-coenzyme M analogue tested that was used by MCR as a substrate. Ethyl-coenzyme M was reduced to ethane (apparent K M=20 mM; apparent V max=0.1 U/mg) with a catalytic efficiency of less than 1% of that of methyl-coenzyme M reduction to methane (apparent K M=5 mM; apparent V max=30 U/mg). Propyl-coenzyme M (apparent K i=2 mM) and allyl-coenzyme M (apparent K i=0.1 mM) were reversible inhibitors. 2-Bromoethanesulfonate ([I]0.5 V=2 µM), cyano-coenzyme M ([I]0.5 V=0.2 mM), 3-bromopropionate ([I]0.5 V=3 mM), seleno-coenzyme M ([I]0.5 V=6 mM) and trifluoromethyl-coenzyme M ([I]0.5 V=6 mM) irreversibly inhibited the enzyme. In their presence the MRC-red1 signal was quenched, indicating the oxidation of Ni(I) to Ni(II). The rate of oxidation increased over 10-fold in the presence of coenzyme B, indicating that the Ni(I) reactivity was increased in the presence of coenzyme B. Enzyme inactivated in the presence of coenzyme B showed an isotropic signal characteristic of a radical that is spin coupled with one hydrogen nucleus. The coupling was also observed in D2O. The signal was abolished upon exposure of the enzyme to O2. 3-Bromopropanesulfonate ([I]0.5 V=0.1 µM), 3-iodopropanesulfonate ([I]0.5 V=1 µM), and 4-bromobutyrate also inactivated MCR. In their presence the EPR signal of MCR-red1 was converted into a Ni-based EPR signal MCR-BPS that resembles in line shape the MCR-ox1 signal. The signal was quenched by O2. 2-Bromoethanesulfonate and 3-bromopropanesulfonate, which both rapidly reacted with Ni(I) of MRC-red1, did not react with the Ni of MCR-ox1 and MCR-BPS. The Ni-based EPR spectra of both inactive forms were not affected in the presence of high concentrations of these two potent inhibitors.  相似文献   

7.
Methane formation in methanogenic Archaea is catalyzed by methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) and takes place via the reduction of methyl-coenzyme M (CH3-S-CoM) with coenzyme B (HS-CoB) to methane and the heterodisulfide CoM-S–S-CoB. MCR harbors the nickel porphyrinoid coenzyme F430 as a prosthetic group, which has to be in the Ni(I) oxidation state for the enzyme to be active. To date no intermediates in the catalytic cycle of MCRred1 (red for reduced Ni) have been identified. Here, we report a detailed characterization of MCRred1m (“m” for methyl-coenzyme M), which is the complex of MCRred1a (“a” for absence of substrate) with CH3-S-CoM. Using continuous-wave and pulse electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy in combination with selective isotope labeling (13C and 2H) of CH3-S-CoM, it is shown that CH3-S-CoM binds in the active site of MCR such that its thioether sulfur is weakly coordinated to the Ni(I) of F430. The complex is stable until the addition of the second substrate, HS-CoB. Results from EPR spectroscopy, along with quantum mechanical calculations, are used to characterize the electronic and geometric structure of this complex, which can be regarded as the first intermediate in the catalytic mechanism. Electronic supplementary material  The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Jeffrey Harmer (Corresponding author)Email:
  相似文献   

8.
Methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) catalyzes the formation of methane from methyl-coenzyme M and coenzyme B in methanogenic archaea. The enzyme contains tightly bound the nickel porphinoid F430. The nickel enzyme has been shown to be active only when its prosthetic group is in the Ni(I) reduced state. In this state MCR exhibits the nickel-based EPR signal red1. We report here for the MCR from Methanothermobacter marburgensis that the EPR spectrum of the active enzyme changed upon addition or removal of coenzyme M, methyl coenzyme M and/or coenzyme B. In the presence of methyl-coenzyme M the red1 signal showed a more resolved 14N-superhyperfine splitting than in the presence of coenzyme M indicating a possible axial ligation of the substrate to the Ni(I). In the presence of methyl-coenzyme M and coenzyme B the red1 signal was the same as in the presence of methyl-coenzyme M alone. However, in the presence of coenzyme M and coenzyme B a highly rhombic EPR signal, MCR-red2, was induced, which was found to be light sensitive and appeared to be formed at the expense of the MCR-red1 signal. Upon addition of methyl-coenzyme M, the red2 signal disappeared and the red1 signal increased again. The red2 signal of MCR with 61Ni-labeled cofactor was significantly broadened indicating that the signal is nickel or nickel-ligand based.  相似文献   

9.
Methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) catalyses the formation of methane from methyl-coenzyme M (CH3-S-CoM) and coenzyme B (HS-CoB) in methanogenic archaea. The enzyme has an 222 subunit structure forming two structurally interlinked active sites each with a molecule F430 as a prosthetic group. The nickel porphinoid must be in the Ni(I) oxidation state for the enzyme to be active. The active enzyme exhibits an axial Ni(I)-based electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) signal and a UV–vis spectrum with an absorption maximum at 385 nm. This state is called the MCR-red1 state. In the presence of coenzyme M (HS-CoM) and coenzyme B the MCR-red1 state is in part converted reversibly into the MCR-red2 state, which shows a rhombic Ni(I)-based EPR signal and a UV–vis spectrum with an absorption maximum at 420 nm. We report here for MCR from Methanothermobacter marburgensis that the MCR-red2 state is also induced by several coenzyme B analogues and that the degree of induction by coenzyme B is temperature-dependent. When the temperature was lowered below 20°C the percentage of MCR in the red2 state decreased and that in the red1 state increased. These changes with temperature were fully reversible. It was found that at most 50% of the enzyme was converted to the MCR-red2 state under all experimental conditions. These findings indicate that in the presence of both coenzyme M and coenzyme B only one of the two active sites of MCR can be in the red2 state (half-of-the-sites reactivity). On the basis of this interpretation a two-stroke engine mechanism for MCR is proposed.  相似文献   

10.
Methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR), which catalyses the reduction of methyl-coenzyme M (CH(3)-S-CoM) with coenzyme B (H-S-CoB) to CH(4) and CoM-S-S-CoB, contains the nickel porphinoid F430 as prosthetic group. The active enzyme exhibits the Ni(I)-derived axial EPR signal MCR(red1) both in the absence and presence of the substrates. When the enzyme is competitively inhibited by coenzyme M (HS-CoM) the MCR(red1) signal is partially converted into the rhombic EPR signal MCR(red2). To obtain deeper insight into the geometric and electronic structure of the red2 form, pulse EPR and ENDOR spectroscopy at X- and Q-band microwave frequencies was used. Hyperfine interactions of the four pyrrole nitrogens were determined from ENDOR and HYSCORE data, which revealed two sets of nitrogens with hyperfine couplings differing by about a factor of two. In addition, ENDOR data enabled observation of two nearly isotropic (1)H hyperfine interactions. Both the nitrogen and proton data indicate that the substrate analogue coenzyme M is axially coordinated to Ni(I) in the MCR(red2) state.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) catalyzes the formation of methane from methyl-coenzyme M and coenzyme B in methanogenic archaea. The enzyme has two structurally interlinked active sites embedded in an α2β2γ2 subunit structure. Each active site has the nickel porphyrinoid F430 as a prosthetic group. In the active state, F430 contains the transition metal in the Ni(I) oxidation state. The active enzyme exhibits an axial Ni(I)-based continuous wave (CW) electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) signal, called red1a in the absence of substrates or red1c in the presence of coenzyme M. Addition of coenzyme B to the MCR-red1 state can partially and reversibly convert it into the MCR-red2 form, which shows a rhombic Ni(I)-based EPR signal (at X-band microwave frequencies of approximately 9.4 GHz). In this report we present evidence from high-field/high-frequency CW EPR spectroscopy (W-band, microwave frequency of approximately 94 GHz) that the red2 state consists of two substates that could not be resolved by EPR spectroscopy at X-band frequencies. At W-band it becomes apparent that upon addition of coenzyme B to MCR in the red1c state, two red2 EPR signals are induced, not one as was previously believed. The first signal is the well-characterized (ortho)rhombic EPR signal, thus far called red2, while the second previously unidentified signal is axial. We have named the two substates MCR-red2r and MCR-red2a after their rhombic and axial signals, respectively. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.  相似文献   

13.
Methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) catalyzes the final step in methane biosynthesis by methanogenic archaea and contains a redox-active nickel tetrahydrocorphin, coenzyme F430, at its active site. Spectroscopic and computational methods have been used to study a novel form of the coenzyme, called F330, which is obtained by reducing F430 with sodium borohydride (NaBH4). F330 exhibits a prominent absorption peak at 330 nm, which is blue shifted by 100 nm relative to F430. Mass spectrometric studies demonstrate that the tetrapyrrole ring in F330 has undergone reduction, on the basis of the incorporation of protium (or deuterium), upon treatment of F430 with NaBH4 (or NaBD4). One- and two-dimensional NMR studies show that the site of reduction is the exocyclic ketone group of the tetrahydrocorphin. Resonance Raman studies indicate that elimination of this pi-bond increases the overall pi-bond order in the conjugative framework. X-ray absorption, magnetic circular dichroism, and computational results show that F330 contains low-spin Ni(II). Thus, conversion of F430 to F330 reduces the hydrocorphin ring but not the metal. Conversely, reduction of F430 with Ti(III) citrate to generate F380 (corresponding to the active MCR(red1) state) reduces the Ni(II) to Ni(I) but does not reduce the tetrapyrrole ring system, which is consistent with other studies [Piskorski, R., and Jaun, B. (2003) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 125, 13120-13125; Craft, J. L., et al. (2004) J. Biol. Inorg. Chem. 9, 77-89]. The distinct origins of the absorption band shifts associated with the formation of F330 and F380 are discussed within the framework of our computational results. These studies on the nature of the product(s) of reduction of F430 are of interest in the context of the mechanism of methane formation by MCR and in relation to the chemistry of hydroporphinoid systems in general. The spectroscopic and time-dependent DFT calculations add important insight into the electronic structure of the nickel hydrocorphinate in its Ni(II) and Ni(I) valence states.  相似文献   

14.
Methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) is a nickel tetrahydrocorphinoid (coenzyme F430) containing enzyme involved in the biological synthesis and anaerobic oxidation of methane. MCR catalyzes the conversion of methyl-2-mercaptoethanesulfonate (methyl-SCoM) and N-7-mercaptoheptanoylthreonine phosphate (CoB7SH) to CH4 and the mixed disulfide CoBS-SCoM. In this study, the reaction of MCR from Methanothermobacter marburgensis, with its native substrates was investigated using static binding, chemical quench, and stopped-flow techniques. Rate constants were measured for each step in this strictly ordered ternary complex catalytic mechanism. Surprisingly, in the absence of the other substrate, MCR can bind either substrate; however, only one binary complex (MCR·methyl-SCoM) is productive whereas the other (MCR·CoB7SH) is inhibitory. Moreover, the kinetic data demonstrate that binding of methyl-SCoM to the inhibitory MCR·CoB7SH complex is highly disfavored (Kd = 56 mm). However, binding of CoB7SH to the productive MCR·methyl-SCoM complex to form the active ternary complex (CoB7SH·MCR(NiI)·CH3SCoM) is highly favored (Kd = 79 μm). Only then can the chemical reaction occur (kobs = 20 s−1 at 25 °C), leading to rapid formation and dissociation of CH4 leaving the binary product complex (MCR(NiII)·CoB7S·SCoM), which undergoes electron transfer to regenerate Ni(I) and the final product CoBS-SCoM. This first rapid kinetics study of MCR with its natural substrates describes how an enzyme can enforce a strictly ordered ternary complex mechanism and serves as a template for identification of the reaction intermediates.  相似文献   

15.
Methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) catalyzes the reduction of methyl-coenzyme M (CH(3)-S-CoM) to methane. The enzyme contains as a prosthetic group the nickel porphinoid F(430) which in the active enzyme is in the EPR-detectable Ni(I) oxidation state. Crystal structures of several inactive Ni(II) forms of the enzyme but not of the active Ni(I) form have been reported. To obtain structural information on the active enzyme-substrate complex we have now acquired X-ray absorption spectra of active MCR in the presence of either CH(3)-S-CoM or the substrate analog coenzyme M (HS-CoM). For both MCR complexes the results are indicative of the presence of a five-coordinate Ni(I), the five ligands assigned as four nitrogen ligands from F(430) and one oxygen ligand. Analysis of the spectra did not require the presence of a sulfur ligand indicating that CH(3)-S-CoM and HS-CoM were not coordinated via their sulfur atom to nickel in detectable amounts. As a control, X-ray absorption spectra were evaluated of three enzymatically inactive MCR forms, MCR-silent, MCR-ox1-silent and MCR-ox1, in which the nickel is known to be six-coordinate. Comparison of the edge position of the X-ray absorption spectra revealed that the Ni(I) in the active enzyme is more reduced than the Ni in the two EPR-silent Ni(II) states. Surprisingly, the edge position of the EPR-active MCR-ox1 state was found to be the same as that of the two silent states indicating similar electron density on the nickel.  相似文献   

16.
Methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) catalyzes the reversible reduction of methyl-coenzyme M (CH3-S-CoM) and coenzyme B (HS-CoB) to methane and heterodisulfide CoM-S-S-CoB (HDS). MCR contains the hydroporphinoid nickel complex coenzyme F430 in its active site, and the Ni center has to be in its Ni(I) valence state for the enzyme to be active. Until now, no in vitro method that fully converted the inactive MCRsilent-Ni(II) form to the active MCRred1-Ni(I) form has been described. With the potential use of recombinant MCR in the production of biofuels and the need to better understand this enzyme and its activation process, we studied its activation under nonturnover conditions and achieved full MCR activation in the presence of dithiothreitol and protein components A2, an ATP carrier, and A3a. It was found that the presence of HDS promotes the inactivation of MCRred1, which makes it essential that the activation process is isolated from the methane formation assay, which tends to result in minimal activation rates. Component A3a is a multienzyme complex that includes the mcrC gene product, an Fe-protein homolog, an iron-sulfur flavoprotein, and protein components involved in electron bifurcation. A hypothetical model for the cellular activation process of MCR is presented.  相似文献   

17.
Methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) catalyzes the final reaction of the energy conserving pathway of methanogenic archaea in which methylcoenzyme M and coenzyme B are converted to methane and the heterodisulfide CoM-S-S-CoB. It operates under strictly anaerobic conditions and contains the nickel porphinoid F430 which is present in the nickel (I) oxidation state in the active enzyme. The known crystal structures of the inactive nickel (II) enzyme in complex with coenzyme M and coenzyme B (MCR-ox1-silent) and in complex with the heterodisulfide CoM-S-S-CoB (MCR-silent) were now refined at 1.16 A and 1.8 A resolution, respectively. The atomic resolution structure of MCR-ox1-silent describes the exact geometry of the cofactor F430, of the active site residues and of the modified amino acid residues. Moreover, the observation of 18 Mg2+ and 9 Na+ ions at the protein surface of the 300 kDa enzyme specifies typical constituents of binding sites for either ion. The MCR-silent and MCR-ox1-silent structures differed in the occupancy of bound water molecules near the active site indicating that a water chain is involved in the replenishment of the active site with water molecules. The structure of the novel enzyme state MCR-red1-silent at 1.8 A resolution revealed an active site only partially occupied by coenzyme M and coenzyme B. Increased flexibility and distinct alternate conformations were observed near the active site and the substrate channel. The electron density of the MCR-red1-silent state aerobically co-crystallized with coenzyme M displayed a fully occupied coenzyme M-binding site with no alternate conformations. Therefore, the structure was very similar to the MCR-ox1-silent state. As a consequence, the binding of coenzyme M induced specific conformational changes that postulate a molecular mechanism by which the enzyme ensures that methylcoenzyme M enters the substrate channel prior to coenzyme B as required by the active-site geometry. The three different enzymatically inactive enzyme states are discussed with respect to their enzymatically active precursors and with respect to the catalytic mechanism.  相似文献   

18.
Methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) catalyzes the methane-forming step in methanogenic archaea. It contains the nickel porphinoid F430, a prosthetic group that has been proposed to be directly involved in the catalytic cycle by the direct binding and subsequent reduction of the substrate methyl-coenzyme M. The active enzyme (MCRred1) can be generated in vivo and in vitro by reduction from MCRox1, which is an inactive form of the enzyme. Both the MCRred1 and MCRox1 forms have been proposed to contain F430 in the Ni(I) oxidation state on the basis of EPR and ENDOR data. In order to further address the oxidation state of the Ni center in F430, variable-temperature, variable-field magnetic circular dichroism (VTVH MCD), coupled with parallel absorption and EPR studies, have been used to compare the electronic and magnetic properties of MCRred1, MCRox1, and various EPR silent forms of MCR, with those of the isolated penta-methylated cofactor (F430M) in the +1, +2 and +3 oxidation states. The results confirm Ni(I) assignments for MCRred1 and MCRred2 forms of MCR and reveal charge transfer transitions involving the Ni d orbitals and the macrocycle orbitals that are unique to Ni(I) forms of F430. Ligand field transitions associated with S=1 Ni(II) centers are assigned in the near-IR MCD spectra of MCRox1-silent and MCR-silent, and the splitting in the lowest energy d–d transition is shown to correlate qualitatively with assessments of the zero-field splitting parameters determined by analysis of VTVH MCD saturation magnetization data. The MCD studies also support rationalization of MCRox1 as a tetragonally compressed Ni(III) center with an axial thiolate ligand or a coupled Ni(II)-thiyl radical species, with the reality probably lying between these two extremes. The reinterpretation of MCRox1 as a formal Ni(III) species rather than an Ni(I) species obviates the need to invoke a two-electron reduction of the F430 macrocyclic ligand on reductive activation of MCRox1 to yield MCRred1.Electronic Supplementary Material Supplementary material is available in the online version of this article at http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00775-004-0549-9Abbreviations F430 cofactor 430 - F430M penta-methylated form of cofactor 430 - Ni(I)F430M F430M with the nickel atom in the +1 oxidation state - Ni(II)F430M F430M with the nickel atom in the +2 oxidation state - Ni(III)F430M F430M with the nickel atom in the +3 oxidation state - MCR methyl-coenzyme M reductase - MCRox1 MCR exhibiting the MCR-ox1 EPR signal - MCRox1-silent EPR silent form of MCR obtained from the MCRox1 form - MCRred1 MCR exhibiting the EPR signals red1c and/or red1m - MCRred1c MCRred1 in the presence of coenzyme M - MCRred1m MCRred1 in the presence of methyl-coenzyme M - MCRred2 MCR exhibiting both the red1 and red2 EPR signals - MCRred1-silent EPR silent form of MCR obtained from the MCRred1 form - MCRsilent EPR silent form of MCR  相似文献   

19.
The nickel enzyme methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) catalyzes the terminal step of methane formation in the energy metabolism of all methanogenic archaea. In this reaction methyl-coenzyme M and coenzyme B are converted to methane and the heterodisulfide of coenzyme M and coenzyme B. The crystal structures of methyl-coenzyme M reductase from Methanosarcina barkeri (growth temperature optimum, 37 degrees C) and Methanopyrus kandleri (growth temperature optimum, 98 degrees C) were determined and compared with the known structure of MCR from Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum (growth temperature optimum, 65 degrees C). The active sites of MCR from M. barkeri and M. kandleri were almost identical to that of M. thermoautotrophicum and predominantly occupied by coenzyme M and coenzyme B. The electron density at 1.6 A resolution of the M. barkeri enzyme revealed that four of the five modified amino acid residues of MCR from M. thermoautotrophicum, namely a thiopeptide, an S-methylcysteine, a 1-N-methylhistidine and a 5-methylarginine were also present. Analysis of the environment of the unusual amino acid residues near the active site indicates that some of the modifications may be required for the enzyme to be catalytically effective. In M. thermoautotrophicum and M. kandleri high temperature adaptation is coupled with increasing intracellular concentrations of lyotropic salts. This was reflected in a higher fraction of glutamate residues at the protein surface of the thermophilic enzymes adapted to high intracellular salt concentrations.  相似文献   

20.
What stabilizes the unique Ni(I) state of the active form of coenzyme F(430) and of methylcoenzyme M reductase, the enzyme responsible for the last methane-evolving step of biological methanogenesis? A survey of F(430) model compounds suggests that the monoanionic nature of the F(430) ligand goes a long way toward explaining the stability of Ni(I) F(430). Second, nature appears to have manipulated the stereochemistry of the macrocycle, particularly that of the 12- and 13- substituents, so that the cofactor is sterically constrained against ruffling and forced to adopt a relatively planar conformation with long Ni--N distances. Third, the carbonyl substituent at the 15-meso position electronically stabilizes the Ni(I) state of the cofactor. With regard to the mechanism of methylcoenzyme M reductase, the most reasonable mechanism, in our opinion, involves a Ni(I)-mediated homolytic cleavage of the S--CH(3) bond in methylcoenzyme M, followed immediately by the quenching of the methyl radical by coenzyme B (a thiol) to produce methane.  相似文献   

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