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1.
A sarcosine oxidase (sarcosine: oxygen oxidoreductase (demethylating), EC 1.5.3.1) isolated from Corynebacterium sp. U-96 contains both covalently bound FAD and noncovalently bound FAD. The noncovalent FAD reacts with sarcosine, the covalent FAD with molecular oxygen (Jorns, M.S. (1985) Biochemistry 24, 3189-3194). To clarify the reaction mechanism of the enzyme, kinetic investigations were performed by the stopped-flow method as well as by analysis of the overall reaction. The absorption spectrum of the enzyme in the steady state was very similar to that of the oxidized enzyme, and no intermediate enzyme species, such as a semiquinoid flavin, was detected. The rate for anaerobic reduction of the noncovalently bound FAD and the covalently bound FAD by sarcosine were 31 and 6.7 s-1, respectively. The latter value was smaller than the value of respective Vmax/e0 obtained by the overall reaction kinetics (Vmax/e0: the maximum velocity per enzyme concentration). Both rate constants for oxidation of the two FADs by molecular oxygen were 100 s-1. A reaction scheme of sarcosine oxidase is proposed to account for the data obtained; 70% of the enzyme functions via a fully reduced enzyme, and 30% of the enzyme goes along a side-path, without forming the fully reduced enzyme. In addition, it is suggested that the reactivity of noncovalently bound FAD with sarcosine is affected by the oxidation-reduction state of the covalently bound FAD, in contrast to the reactivity of the covalently bound FAD with molecular oxygen, which is independent of the oxidation-reduction state of the noncovalently bound FAD.  相似文献   

2.
S N Ali  H D Zeller  M K Calisto  M S Jorns 《Biochemistry》1991,30(45):10980-10986
Sarcosine oxidase contains 1 mol of covalently bound plus 1 mol of noncovalently bound FAD per active site. The first phase of the anaerobic reduction of the enzyme with sarcosine converts oxidized enzyme to an equilibrium mixture of two-electron-reduced forms (EH2) and occurs at a rate (2700 min-1, pH 8.0) similar to that determined for the maximum rate of aerobic turnover in steady-state kinetic studies (2600 min-1). The second phase of the anaerobic half-reaction converts EH2 to the four-electron-reduced enzyme (EH4) and occurs at a rate (k = 350 min-1) which is 7-fold slower than aerobic turnover. Reaction of EH2 with oxygen is 1.7-fold faster (k = 4480 min-1) than aerobic turnover and 13-fold faster than the anaerobic conversion of EH2 to EH4. The results suggest that the enzyme cycles between fully oxidized and two-electron-reduced forms during turnover with sarcosine. The long wavelength absorbance observed for EH2 is attributable to a flavin biradical (FADH.FAD.-) which is generated in about 50% yield at pH 8.0 and in nearly quantitative yield at pH 7.0. The rate of biradical formation is determined by the rate of electron transfer from sarcosine to the noncovalent flavin since electron equilibration between the two flavins (k = 750 s-1 or 45,000 min-1, pH 8.0) is nearly 20-fold faster, as determined in pH-jump experiments. Only two of the three possible isoelectronic forms of EH2 are likely to transfer electrons to oxygen since the reaction is known to occur at the covalent flavin. However, equilibration among EH2 forms is probably maintained during reoxidation, consistent with the observed monophasic kinetics, since interflavin electron transfer is 10-fold faster than electron transfer to oxygen.  相似文献   

3.
H D Zeller  R Hille  M S Jorns 《Biochemistry》1989,28(12):5145-5154
Corynebacterial sarcosine oxidase contains both covalently and noncovalently bound FAD and forms complexes with various heterocyclic carboxylic acids (D-proline and 2-furoic, 2-pyrrolecarboxylic, and 2-thiophenecarboxylic acids). 2-Furoic acid, a competitive inhibitor with respect to sarcosine, selectively perturbs the absorption spectrum of the noncovalent flavin, suggesting that the enzyme has a single sarcosine binding site near the noncovalent flavin. Several heterocyclic amines have been identified as new substrates for the enzyme. Similar reactivity is observed with L-proline and L-pipecolic acid whereas L-2-azetidine-carboxylic acid is less reactive. Turnover with L-proline is slow (TN = 4.4 min-1) as compared with sarcosine (TN = 1000 min-1). Anaerobic reduction of the enzyme with heterocyclic amine substrates at pH 8.0 occurs as a biphasic reaction. A similar long-wavelength intermediate is formed in the initial fast phase of each reaction and then decays in a slower second phase to yield 1,5-dihydroFAD. The slow phase is not kinetically significant during aerobic turnover at pH 8.0 and is absent when the anaerobic reactions are conducted at pH 7.0. EPR and other studies at pH 7.0 show that the long-wavelength species is a half-reduced form of the enzyme (1 electron/substrate-reducible flavin) containing 0.9 mol of flavin radical/mol of substrate-reducible flavin. This biradical intermediate exhibits an absorption spectrum similar to that expected for a 50:50 mixture of red anionic and blue neutral flavin radicals. A similar long-wavelength species is observed during titration of the enzyme with sarcosine and other reductants. Studies with L-proline suggest that reduction of the enzyme involves initial transfer of two electrons to the noncovalent flavin. The covalent flavin is not required and can be complexed with sulfite without affecting the rate of electron transfer. The initial half-reduced form of the enzyme appears to be rapidly converted to the biradical form via comproportionation of the reduced noncovalent flavin with the oxidized covalent flavin.  相似文献   

4.
K Kvalnes-Krick  M S Jorns 《Biochemistry》1986,25(20):6061-6069
Sarcosine oxidase was purified to homogeneity from Corynebacterium sp. P-1, a soil organism isolated by a serial enrichment technique. The enzyme contains 1 mol of noncovalently bound flavin [flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD)] plus 1 mol of covalently bound flavin [8 alpha-(N3-histidyl)-FAD] per mole of enzyme (Mr 168,000). The two flavins appear to have different roles in catalysis. The enzyme has an unusual subunit composition, containing four dissimilar subunits (Mr 100,000, 42,000, 20,000, and 6000). The same subunits are detected in Western blot analysis of cell extracts prepared in the presence of trichloroacetic acid, indicating that the subunits are a genuine property of the enzyme as it exists in vivo. The presence of both covalent and noncovalent flavin in a single enzyme is extremely unusual and has previously been observed only with a sarcosine oxidase from a soil Corynebacterium isolated in Japan. The enzymes exhibit many similarities but are distinguishable in electrophoretic studies. Immunologically, the enzymes are cross-reactive but not identical. The results indicate that the synthesis of a sarcosine oxidase containing both covalent and noncovalent flavin is not a particularly unusual event in corynebacteria.  相似文献   

5.
Bacterial trimethylamine dehydrogenase contains a novel type of covalently bound flavin mononucleotide and a tetrameric iron-sulphur centre. The dehydrogenase takes up 1.5mol of dithionite/mol of enzyme and is thereby converted into the flavin quinol-reduced (4Fe-4S) form, with the expected bleaching of the visible absorption band of the flavin and the emergence of signals of typical reduced ferredoxin in the electronparamagnetic-resonance spectrum. On reduction with a slight excess of substrate, however, unusual absorption and electron-paramagnetic-resonance spectra appear quite rapidly. The latter is attributed to extensive interaction between the reduced (4Fe-4S) centre and the flavin semiquinone. The species of enzyme arising during the catalytic cycle were studied by a combination of rapid-freeze e.p.r. and stopped-flow spectophotometry. The initial reduction of the flavin to the quinol form is far too rapid to be rate-limiting in catalysis, as is the reoxidation of the substrate-reduced enzyme by phenazine methosulphate. Formation of the spin-spin-interacting species from the dihydroflavin is considerably slower, however, and it may be the rate-limiting step in the catalytic cycle, since its rate of formation agrees reasonably well with the catalytic-centre activity determined in steady-state kinetic assays. In addition to the interacting form, a second form of the enzyme was noted during reduction by trimethylamine, differing in absorption spectrum, the structure of which remains to be determined.  相似文献   

6.
Vanillyl-alcohol oxidase was purified 32-fold from Penicillium simplicissimum, grown on veratryl alcohol as its sole source of carbon and energy. SDS/PAGE of the purified enzyme reveals a single fluorescent band of 65 kDa. Gel filtration and sedimentation-velocity experiments indicate that the purified enzyme exists in solution as an octamer, containing 1 molecule flavin/subunit. The covalently bound prosthetic group of the enzyme was identified as 8 alpha-(N3-histidyl)-FAD from pH-dependent fluorescence quenching (pKa = 4.85) and no decrease in fluorescence upon reduction with sodium borohydride. The enzyme shows a narrow substrate specificity, only vanillyl alcohol and 4-hydroxybenzyl alcohol are substrates for the enzyme. Cinnamyl alcohol is a strong competitive inhibitor of vanillyl-alcohol oxidation. The visible absorption spectrum of the oxidized enzyme shows maxima at 354 nm and 439 nm, and shoulders at 370, 417 and 461 nm. Under anaerobic conditions, the enzyme is easily reduced by vanillyl alcohol to the two-electron reduced form. Upon mixing with air, rapid reoxidation of the flavin occurs. Both with dithionite reduction and photoreduction in the presence of EDTA and 5-deazaflavin the red semiquinone flavin radical is transiently stabilized. Opposite to most flavoprotein oxidases, vanillyl-alcohol oxidase does not form a flavin N5-sulfite adduct. Photoreduction of the enzyme in the presence of the competitive inhibitor cinnamyl alcohol gives rise to a complete, irreversible bleaching of the flavin spectrum.  相似文献   

7.
Monomeric sarcosine oxidase (MSOX) is a prototypical member of a recently recognized family of amine-oxidizing enzymes that all contain covalently bound flavin. Mutation of the covalent flavin attachment site in MSOX produces a catalytically inactive apoprotein (apoCys315Ala) that forms an unstable complex with FAD (K(d) = 100 muM), similar to that observed with wild-type apoMSOX where the complex is formed as an intermediate during covalent flavin attachment. In situ reconstitution of sarcosine oxidase activity is achieved by assaying apoCys315Ala in the presence of FAD or 8-nor-8-chloroFAD, an analogue with an approximately 55 mV higher reduction potential. After correction for an estimated 65% reconstitutable apoprotein, the specific activity of apoCys315Ala in the presence of excess FAD or 8-nor-8-chloroFAD is 14% or 80%, respectively, of that observed with wild-type MSOX. Unlike oxidized flavin, apoCys315Ala exhibits a high affinity for reduced flavin, as judged by results obtained with reduced 5-deazaFAD (5-deazaFADH(2)) where the estimated binding stoichiometry is unaffected by dialysis. The Cys315Ala.5-deazaFADH(2) complex is also air-stable but is readily oxidized by sarcosine imine, a reaction accompanied by release of weakly bound oxidized 5-deazaFAD. The dramatic difference in the binding affinity of apoCys315Ala for oxidized and reduced flavin indicates that the protein environment must induce a sizable increase in the reduction potential of noncovalently bound flavin (DeltaE(m) approximately 120 mV). The covalent flavin linkage prevents loss of weakly bound oxidized FAD and also modulates the flavin reduction potential in conjunction with the protein environment.  相似文献   

8.
H. Suzuki 《Amino acids》1994,7(1):27-43
Summary Determination of creatinine is important in the clinical laboratory. Jaffé reaction has long been used to determine creatinine, but the method suffers from various interferences. To overcome this problem, the enzymatic methods were invented and have been used widely. Sarcosine oxidase has a critical role in the enzymatic method. Of sarcosine oxidases,Corynebacterium enzyme has been studied extensively in kinetic and structural aspects. The enzyme contains noncovalently bound and covalently bound FADs, and consists of 4 non-identical subunits (A, B, C, D). The covalently bound FAD is bound to the subunit B. The rate of oxidation of sarcosine was explained by the rates of the oxidation and reduction of the bound FADs. From the chemical modification of the enzyme with iodoacetamide, the amino acid sequence around the non-covalently bound FAD is suggested and the modification changed the enzyme so that the only noncovalently bound FAD functions in the oxidation of sarcosine.  相似文献   

9.
Wagner MA  Khanna P  Jorns MS 《Biochemistry》1999,38(17):5588-5595
Monomeric sarcosine oxidase (MSOX) and N-methyltryptophan oxidase (MTOX) are homologous enzymes that catalyze the oxidative demethylation of sarcosine (N-methylglycine) and N-methyl-L-tryptophan, respectively. MSOX is induced in various bacteria upon growth on sarcosine. MTOX is an E. coli enzyme of unknown metabolic function. Both enzymes contain covalently bound flavin. The covalent flavin is at the FAD level as judged by electrospray mass spectrometry. The data provide the first evidence that MTOX is a flavoprotein. The following observations indicate that 8alpha-(S-cysteinyl)FAD is the covalent flavin in MSOX from Bacillus sp. B-0618 and MTOX. FMN-containing peptides, prepared by digestion of MSOX or MTOX with trypsin, chymotrypsin, and phosphodiesterase, exhibited absorption and fluorescence properties characteristic of an 8alpha-(S-cysteinyl)flavin and could be bound to apo-flavodoxin. The thioether link in the FMN-containing peptides was converted to the sulfone by performic acid oxidation, as judged by characteristic absorbance changes and an increase in flavin fluorescence. The sulfone underwent a predicted reductive cleavage reaction upon treatment with dithionite, releasing unmodified FMN. Cys315 was identified as the covalent FAD attachment site in MSOX from B. sp. B-0618, as judged by the sequence obtained for a flavin-containing tryptic peptide (GAVCMYT). Cys315 aligns with a conserved cysteine in MSOX from other bacteria, MTOX (Cys308) and pipecolate oxidase, a homologous mammalian enzyme known to contain covalently bound flavin. There is only one conserved cysteine found among these enzymes, suggesting that Cys308 is the covalent flavin attachment site in MTOX.  相似文献   

10.
2-Nitropropane dioxygenase, purified to homogeneity from Hansenula mrakii (IFO 0895), has a molecular weight of approximately 62,000 and consists of two subunits nonidentical in molecular weight (39,000 and 25,000). Stoichiometrical studies and the results obtained with 18O2 showed that 2 atoms of molecular oxygen are incorporated into 2 molecules of acetone formed from 2-nitropropane. In addition to 2-nitropropane, nitroethane, 3-nitro-2-pentanol, and 1-nitropropane are oxidatively dentrified. The enzyme, which exhibits absorption maxima at 274, 370, 415, and 440 nm and a shoulder at 470 nm, contains 1 mol of FAD and 1 g atom of non-heme iron per mol of enzyme. The enzyme-bound FAD is reduced by 2-nitropropane under anaerogic conditions, but the enzyme-bound Fe3+ is not affected. The introduction of oxygen to the reduced form of enzyme causes reoxidation of the enzyme. The bound FAD and Fe3+ are reduced by the addition of nitromethane, which is not a substrate, under anaerobic conditions. The aerobic dialysis of the enzyme treated with nitromethane causes reoxidation of only the Fe2+. Sodium dithionite also reduces both the enzyme-bound FAD and Fe3+ under anaerobic conditions. When the enzyme is dialyzed against 10 mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH 7.0) immediately after reduction by dithionite, the absorption spectrum similar to that of the native enzyme appeared with concomitant restoration of approximately 80% of the activity. The enzyme activity is significantly inhibited by pyrocatechol-3,5-disulfonate disodium salt, 8-hydroxyquinoline, reducing agents such as 2-mercaptoethanol, and HgCl2. The Michaelis constants are as follows: 2-nitropropane (2.13 X 10(-2) M), nitroethane (2.43 X 10(-2) M), 3-nitro-2-pentanol (6.8 X 10(-3) M), 1-nitropropane (2.56 X 10(-2) M), and oxygen (3.03 X 10(-4) M, with 2-nitropropane).  相似文献   

11.
Monomeric sarcosine oxidase (MSOX) is an inducible bacterial flavoenzyme that catalyzes the oxidative demethylation of sarcosine (N-methylglycine) and contains covalently bound FAD [8alpha-(S-cysteinyl)FAD]. This paper describes the spectroscopic and thermodynamic properties of MSOX as well as the X-ray crystallographic characterization of three new enzyme.inhibitor complexes. MSOX stabilizes the anionic form of the oxidized flavin (pK(a) = 8.3 versus 10.4 with free FAD), forms a thermodynamically stable flavin radical, and stabilizes the anionic form of the radical (pK(a) < 6 versus pK(a) = 8.3 with free FAD). MSOX forms a covalent flavin.sulfite complex, but there appears to be a significant kinetic barrier against complex formation. Active site binding determinants were probed in thermodynamic studies with various substrate analogues whose binding was found to perturb the flavin absorption spectrum and inhibit MSOX activity. The carboxyl group of sarcosine is essential for binding since none is observed with simple amines. The amino group of sarcosine is not essential, but binding affinity depends on the nature of the substitution (CH(3)XCH(2)CO(2)(-), X = CH(2) < O < S < Se < Te), an effect which has been attributed to differences in the strength of donor-pi interactions. MSOX probably binds the zwitterionic form of sarcosine, as judged by the spectrally similar complexes formed with dimethylthioacetate [(CH(3))(2)S(+)CH(2)CO(2)(-)] and dimethylglycine (K(d) = 20.5 and 17.4 mM, respectively) and by the crystal structure of the latter. The methyl group of sarcosine is not essential but does contribute to binding affinity. The methyl group contribution varied from -3.79 to -0.65 kcal/mol with CH(3)XCH(2)CO(2)(-) depending on the nature of the heteroatom (NH(2)(+) > O > S) and appeared to be inversely correlated with heteroatom electron density. Charge-transfer complexes are formed with MSOX and CH(3)XCH(2)CO(2)(-) when X = S, Se, or Te. An excellent linear correlation is observed between the energy of the charge transfer bands and the one-electron reduction potentials of the ligands. The presence of a sulfur, selenium, or telurium atom identically positioned with respect to the flavin ring is confirmed by X-ray crystallography, although the increased atomic radius of S < Se < Te appears to simultaneously favor an alternate binding position for the heavier atoms. Although L-proline is a poor substrate, aromatic heterocyclic carboxylates containing a five-membered ring and various heteroatoms (X = NH, O, S) are good ligands (K(d, X=NH) = 1.37 mM) and form charge-transfer complexes with MSOX. The energy of the charge-transfer bands (S > O > NH) is linearly correlated with the one-electron ionization potentials of the corresponding heterocyclic rings.  相似文献   

12.
Zhao G  Bruckner RC  Jorns MS 《Biochemistry》2008,47(35):9124-9135
Monomeric sarcosine oxidase (MSOX) catalyzes the oxidation of N-methylglycine and contains covalently bound FAD that is hydrogen bonded at position N(5) to Lys265 via a bridging water. Lys265 is absent in the homologous but oxygen-unreactive FAD site in heterotetrameric sarcosine oxidase. Isolated preparations of Lys265 mutants contain little or no flavin but can be covalently reconstituted with FAD. Mutation of Lys265 to a neutral residue (Ala, Gln, Met) causes a 6000- to 9000-fold decrease in apparent turnover rate whereas a 170-fold decrease is found with Lys265Arg. Substitution of Lys265 with Met or Arg causes only a modest decrease in the rate of sarcosine oxidation (9.0- or 3.8-fold, respectively), as judged by reductive half-reaction studies which show that the reactions proceed via an initial enzyme.sarcosine charge transfer complex and a novel spectral intermediate not detected with wild-type MSOX. Oxidation of reduced wild-type MSOX (k = 2.83 x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1)) is more than 1000-fold faster than observed for the reaction of oxygen with free reduced flavin. Mutation of Lys265 to a neutral residue causes a dramatic 8000-fold decrease in oxygen reactivity whereas a 250-fold decrease is observed with Lys265Arg. The results provide definitive evidence for Lys265 as the site of oxygen activation and show that a single positively charged amino acid residue is entirely responsible for the rate acceleration observed with wild-type enzyme. Significantly, the active sites for sarcosine oxidation and oxygen reduction are located on opposite faces of the flavin ring.  相似文献   

13.
DPNH peroxidase is a flavin adenine dinucleotide-containing flavoprotein. Anaerobic titration of enzyme with dithionite has shown that the active site of the enzyme contains 2 mol of flavin and in addition 1 mol of a non-flavin electron acceptor that is tentatively identified as a disulfide group. Thus complete reduction of the enzyme requires 3 mol of dithionite per mole of active site. The first mole of dithionite reduces the non-flavin acceptor; complex formation between the reduced acceptor and one of the bound flavin molecules causes the formation of a long wavelength absorption band between 500 and 670 nm. The second mole of dithionite reduces the flavin that interacts with the reduced non-flavin group, and the long wavelength band disappears. The third mole of dithionite reduces the second mole of flavin. All groups are reoxidized in the presence of air. DPNH reacts with only two of the enzyme-bound electron acceptors. The first mole of DPNH reduces the non-flavin group to form an intermediate (I) that is almost identical with that formed by dithionite. The second mole of DPNH complexes with the second flavin of Intermediate I to form Intermediate II. This reaction causes a further absorbance increase in the long wavelength region; the tail of the absorption band now extends to 960 nm. The titration data (potassium phosphate, 0.05 M, pH 7.0) can be fitted with dissociation constants of 1 times 10-7 M for the formation of I, and 3 times 10-6 M for the conversion of I to II. In air, species II is oxidized to I; I is stable in air, but is oxidized stoichiometrically to oxidized enzyme by H2O2. Present evidence suggests that bound DPN-plus is responsible for the air stability of species I. Intermediate I, but not oxidized enzyme, reacts slowly with phenylmercuric acetate. This reaction causes loss of the air-stable intermediate and parallel loss in enzyme activity. The inactive enzyme cannot be reduced by DPNH to Species I; DPNH can, however, still react with the second flavin to form the autoxidizable complex. With other methods of enzyme inactivation there is also a direct correlation between residual enzyme activity and the ability of enzyme to form the air-stable intermediate. It is concluded that the air-stable intermediate is an important catalytic species.  相似文献   

14.
Zhao G  Qu J  Davis FA  Jorns MS 《Biochemistry》2000,39(46):14341-14347
Monomeric sarcosine oxidase (MSOX) catalyzes the oxidative demethylation of sarcosine (N-methylglycine) and contains covalently bound flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD). The present study demonstrates that N-(cyclopropyl)glycine (CPG) is a mechanism-based inhibitor. CPG forms a charge transfer complex with MSOX that reacts under aerobic conditions to yield a covalently modified, reduced flavin (lambda(max) = 422 nm, epsilon(422) = 3.9 mM(-1) cm(-1)), accompanied by a loss of enzyme activity. The CPG-modified flavin is converted at an 8-fold slower rate to 1,5-dihydro-FAD (EFADH(2)), which reacts rapidly with oxygen to regenerate unmodified, oxidized enzyme. As a result, CPG-modified MSOX reaches a CPG-dependent steady-state concentration under aerobic conditions and reverts back to unmodified enzyme upon removal of excess reagent. No loss of activity is observed under anaerobic conditions where EFADH(2) is formed in a reaction that goes to completion at low CPG concentrations. Aerobic denaturation of CPG-modified enzyme yields unmodified, oxidized flavin at a rate similar to the anaerobic denaturation reaction, which yields 1,5-dihydro-FAD. The CPG-modified flavin can be reduced with borohydride, a reaction that blocks conversion to unmodified flavin upon removal of excess CPG or enzyme denaturation. The possible chemical mechanism of inactivation and structure of the CPG-modified flavin are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
S T Olson  V Massey 《Biochemistry》1979,18(21):4714-4724
A pyridine nucleotide independent D-lactate dehydrogenase has been purified to apparent homogeneity from the anaerobic bacterium Megasphaera elsdenii. The enzyme has a molecular weight of 105 000 by sedimentation equilibrium analysis with a subunit molecular weight of 55 000 by sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis and is thus probably a dimer of identical subunits. It contains approximately 1 mol of FAD and 1 g-atom of Zn2+ per mol of protein subunit, and the flavin exhibits a fluorescence 1.7 times that of free FAD. An earlier purification [Brockman, H. L., & Wood, W. A. (1975 J. Bacteriol. 124, 1454--1461] results in substantial loss of the enzyme's zinc, which is required for catalytic activity. The new purification yields greater than 5 times the amount of enzyme previously isolated. The enzyme is specific for D-lactate, and no inhibition is observed with L-lactate. Surprisingly, the enzyme has a significant oxidase activity, which depends on the ionic strength. Vmax values of 190 and 530 min-1 were obtained at a gamma/2 of 0.224 and 0.442, respectively. Except for this atypically high oxygen reactivity, D-lactate dehydrogenase resembles other flavoenzyme dehydrogenases in that the flavin does not react with sulfite, the tryptophan content is low, and a neutral blue semiquinone is formed upon photochemical reduction. The enzyme flavin is reduced either by dithionite, by oxalate plus catalytic 5-deazaflavin in the presence of light, or by D-lactate. Two electrons per flavin were consumed in a dithionite titration, implyine with varying ratios of D-lactate and pyruvate, an Em7 of -0.219 +/- 0.007 V at 20 degrees C was calculated for the flavin. The enzyme requires dithiothreitol for stability. Rapid inactivation results when the enzyme is incubated with a substoichiometric level of Cu2+. This inactivation can be reversed by dithiothreitol. It is proposed that the enzyme possesses a pair of cysteine residues capable of facile disulfide formation.  相似文献   

16.
Brevibacterium sterolicum possesses two forms of cholesterol oxidase, one containing noncovalently bound FAD, the second containing a FAD covalently linked to His(69) of the protein backbone. The functional role of the histidyl-FAD bond in the latter cholesterol oxidase was addressed by studying the properties of the H69A mutant in which the FAD is bound tightly, but not covalently, and by comparison with native enzyme. The mutant retains catalytic activity, but with a turnover rate decreased 35-fold; the isomerization step of the intermediate 3-ketosteroid to the final product is also preserved. Stabilization of the flavin semiquinone and binding of sulfite are markedly decreased, this correlates with a lower midpoint redox potential (-204 mV compared with -101 mV for wild-type). Reconstitution with 8-chloro-FAD led to a holoenzyme form of H69A cholesterol oxidase with a midpoint redox potential of -160 mV. In this enzyme form, flavin semiquinone is newly stabilized, and a 3.5-fold activity increase is observed, this mimicking the thermodynamic effects induced by the covalent flavin linkage. It is concluded that the flavin 8alpha-linkage to a (N1)histidine is a pivotal factor in the modulation of the redox properties of this cholesterol oxidase to increase its oxidative power.  相似文献   

17.
对一株从土壤中分离到的芽胞杆菌Bacillus sp.BSD-8菌株所产生的热稳定性较高的肌氨酸氧化酶进行纯化,并对该酶的特性进行了研究。通过硫酸铵分级沉淀、DEAE-纤维素离子交换柱、Toyopearl疏水层析柱和Sephadex G-75分子筛层析,使酶提纯25倍,比活力达到5.3U/mg。研究了纯化后的酶的生化特性,确定了该酶的主要特性:该酶为黄素蛋白,与黄素以非共价键的方式结合,由单一亚基组成,其亚基分子量为51kDa。酶的最适反应温度及pH分别为60℃与8.5。该酶在60℃及pH8.0~10.0条件下稳定。以Lineveaver-Burk作图法求得该酶米氏常数Km值为3.1mmol/L。Ag+、Hg2+、SDS及Tween80对该酶有强抑制作用,而Tween20和Triton X-100对酶活性无影响。该肌氨酸氧化酶在耐热性质上比以前所报道的肌氨酸氧化酶有很大的提高,在酶法肌酐测定应用中有明显的优势。  相似文献   

18.
Redox titration of all optically detectable prosthetic groups of Na(+)-translocating NADH:quinone oxidoreductase (Na(+)-NQR) at pH 7.5 showed that the functionally active enzyme possesses only three titratable flavin cofactors, one noncovalently bound FAD and two covalently bound FMN residues. All three flavins undergo different redox transitions during the function of the enzyme. The noncovalently bound FAD works as a "classical" two-electron carrier with a midpoint potential (E(m)) of -200 mV. Each of the FMN residues is capable of only one-electron reduction: one from neutral flavosemiquinone to fully reduced flavin (E(m) = 20 mV) and the other from oxidized flavin to flavosemiquinone anion (E(m) = -150 mV). The lacking second half of the redox transitions for the FMNs cannot be reached under our experimental conditions and is most likely not employed in the catalytic cycle. Besides the flavins, a [2Fe-2S] cluster was shown to function in the enzyme as a one-electron carrier with an E(m) of -270 mV. The midpoint potentials of all the redox transitions determined in the enzyme were found to be independent of Na(+) concentration. Even the components that exhibit very strong retardation in the rate of their reduction by NADH at low sodium concentrations experienced no change in the E(m) values when the concentration of the coupling ion was changed 1000 times. On the basis of these data, plausible mechanisms for the translocation of transmembrane sodium ions by Na(+)-NQR are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
The kinetic properties of glycine oxidase from Bacillus subtilis were investigated using glycine, sarcosine, and d-proline as substrate. The turnover numbers at saturating substrate and oxygen concentrations were 4.0 s(-1), 4.2 s(-1), and 3.5 s(-1), respectively, with glycine, sarcosine, and D-proline as substrate. Glycine oxidase was converted to a two-electron reduced form upon anaerobic reduction with the individual substrates and its reductive half-reaction was demonstrated to be reversible. The rates of flavin reduction extrapolated to saturating substrate concentration, and under anaerobic conditions, were 166 s(-1), 170 s(-1), and 26 s(-1), respectively, with glycine, sarcosine, and D-proline as substrate. The rate of reoxidation of reduced glycine oxidase with oxygen in the absence of product (extrapolated rate approximately 3 x 10(4) M(-1) x s(-1)) was too slow to account for catalysis and thus reoxidation started from the reduced enzyme:imino acid complex. The kinetic data are compatible with a ternary complex sequential mechanism in which the rate of product dissociation from the reoxidized enzyme form represents the rate-limiting step. Although glycine oxidase and D-amino acid oxidase differ in substrate specificity and amino acid sequence, the kinetic mechanism of glycine oxidase is similar to that determined for mammalian D-amino acid oxidase on neutral D-amino acids, further supporting a close similarity between these two amine oxidases.  相似文献   

20.
Chen ZW  Zhao G  Martinovic S  Jorns MS  Mathews FS 《Biochemistry》2005,44(47):15444-15450
Monomeric sarcosine oxidase (MSOX) is a flavoprotein that contains covalently bound FAD [8a-(S-cysteinyl)FAD] and catalyzes the oxidation of sarcosine (N-methylglycine) and other secondary amino acids, such as l-proline. Our previous studies showed that N-(cyclopropyl)glycine (CPG) acts as a mechanism-based inactivator of MSOX [Zhao, G., et al. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 14341-14347]. The reaction results in the formation of a modified reduced flavin that can be further reduced and stabilized by treatment with sodium borohydride. The borohydride-reduced CPG-modified enzyme exhibits a mass increase of 63 +/- 2 Da as compared with native MSOX. The crystal structure of the modified enzyme, solved at 1.85 A resolution, shows that FAD is the only site of modification. The modified FAD contains a fused five-membered ring, linking the C(4a) and N(5) atoms of the flavin ring, with an additional oxygen atom bound to the carbon atom attached to N(5) and a tetrahedral carbon atom at flavin C(4) with a hydroxyl group attached to C(4). On the basis of the crystal structure of the borohydride-stabilized adduct, we conclude that the labile CPG-modified flavin is a 4a,5-dihydroflavin derivative with a substituent derived from the cleavage of the cyclopropyl ring in CPG. The results are consistent with CPG-mediated inactivation in a reaction initiated by single electron transfer from the amine function in CPG to FAD in MSOX, followed by collapse of the radical pair to yield a covalently modified 4a,5-dihydroflavin.  相似文献   

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