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11.
Hydrogenases are essential for H(2) cycling in microbial metabolism and serve as valuable blueprints for H(2)-based biotechnological applications. However, most hydrogenases are extremely oxygen sensitive and prone to inactivation by even traces of O(2). The O(2)-tolerant membrane-bound [NiFe]-hydrogenase of Ralstonia eutropha H16 is one of the few examples that can perform H(2) uptake in the presence of ambient O(2). Here we show that O(2) tolerance is crucially related to a modification of the internal electron-transfer chain. The iron-sulfur cluster proximal to the active site is surrounded by six instead of four conserved coordinating cysteines. Removal of the two additional cysteines alters the electronic structure of the proximal iron-sulfur cluster and renders the catalytic activity sensitive to O(2) as shown by physiological, biochemical, spectroscopic and electrochemical studies. The data indicate that the mechanism of O(2) tolerance relies on the reductive removal of oxygenic species guided by the unique architecture of the electron relay rather than a restricted access of O(2) to the active site.  相似文献   
12.
Phytochelatins (PCs) are cysteine-rich peptides that chelate heavy metal ions, thereby mediating heavy metal tolerance in plants, fission yeast, and Caenorhabditis elegans. They are synthesized from glutathione by PC synthase, a specific dipeptidyltransferase. While Saccharomyces cerevisiae synthesizes PCs upon exposure to heavy metal ions, the S. cerevisiae genome does not encode a PC synthase homologue. How PCs are synthesized in yeast is unclear. This study shows that the vacuolar serine carboxypeptidases CPY and CPC are responsible for PC synthesis in yeast. The finding of a PCS-like activity of these enzymes in vivo discloses another route for PC biosynthesis in eukaryotes.  相似文献   
13.
Detoxification of xenobiotic compounds and heavy metals is a pivotal capacity of organisms, in which glutathione (GSH) plays an important role. In plants, electrophilic herbicides are conjugated to the thiol group of GSH, and heavy metal ions form complexes as thiolates with GSH-derived phytochelatins (PCs). In both detoxification processes of plants, phytochelatin synthase (PCS) emerges as a key player. The enzyme is activated by heavy metal ions and catalyzes PC formation from GSH by transferring glutamylcysteinyl residues (gamma-EC) onto GSH. In this study with Arabidopsis, we show that PCS plays a role in the plant-specific catabolism of glutathione conjugates (GS-conjugates). In contrast to animals, breakdown of GS-conjugates in plants can be initiated by cleavage of the carboxyterminal glycine residue that leads to the generation of the corresponding gamma-EC-conjugate. We used the xenobiotic bimane in order to follow GS-conjugate turnover. Functional knockout of the two PCS of Arabidopsis, AtPCS1 and AtPCS2, revealed that AtPCS1 provides a major activity responsible for conversion of the fluorescent bimane-GS-conjugate (GS-bimane) into gamma-EC-bimane. AtPCS1 deficiency resulted in a gamma-EC-bimane deficiency. Transfection of PCS-deficient cells with AtPCS1 recovered gamma-EC-bimane levels. The level of the gamma-EC-bimane conjugate was enhanced several-fold in the presence of Cd2+ ions in the wild type, but not in the PCS-deficient double mutant, consistent with a PCS-catalyzed GS-conjugate turnover. Thus AtPCS1 has two cellular functions: mediating both heavy metal tolerance and GS-conjugate degradation.  相似文献   
14.
A recently discovered subgroup of class I ribonucleotide reductase (RNR) found in the infectious bacterium Chlamydia trachomatis (C. trachomatis) was shown to exhibit a high-valent Fe(III)Fe(IV) center instead of the tyrosyl radical observed normally in all class I RNRs. The X-ray structure showed that C. trachomatis WT RNR has a phenylalanine at the position of the active tyrosine in Escherichia coli RNR. In this paper the X-ray structure of variant F127Y is presented, where the tyrosine is restored. Using (1)H- and (57)Fe-ENDOR spectroscopy it is shown, that in WT and variants F127Y and Y129F of C. trachomatis RNR, the Fe(III)Fe(IV) center is virtually identical with the short-lived intermediate X observed during the iron oxygen reconstitution reaction in class I RNR from E. coli. The experimental data are consistent with a recent theoretical model for X, proposing two bridging oxo ligands and one terminal water ligand. A surprising extension of the lifetime of the Fe(III)Fe(IV) state in C. trachomatis from a few seconds to several hours at room temperature was observed under catalytic conditions in the presence of substrate. These findings suggest a possible new role for the Fe(III)Fe(IV) state also in other class I RNR, during the catalytic radical transfer reaction, by which the substrate turnover is started.  相似文献   
15.
Chlorophyll and bacteriochlorophyll biosynthesis requires the two-electron reduction of protochlorophyllide a ringDbya protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase to form chlorophyllide a. A light-dependent (light-dependent Pchlide oxidoreductase (LPOR)) and an unrelated dark operative enzyme (dark operative Pchlide oxidoreductase (DPOR)) are known. DPOR plays an important role in chlorophyll biosynthesis of gymnosperms, mosses, ferns, algae, and photosynthetic bacteria in the absence of light. Although DPOR shares significant amino acid sequence homologies with nitrogenase, only the initial catalytic steps resemble nitrogenase catalysis. Substrate coordination and subsequent [Fe-S] cluster-dependent catalysis were proposed to be unrelated. Here we characterized the first cyanobacterial DPOR consisting of the homodimeric protein complex ChlL(2) and a heterotetrameric protein complex (ChlNB)(2). The ChlL(2) dimer contains one EPR active [4Fe-4S] cluster, whereas the (ChlNB)(2) complex exhibited EPR signals for two [4Fe-4S] clusters with differences in their g values and temperature-dependent relaxation behavior. These findings indicate variations in the geometry of the individual [4Fe-4S] clusters found in (ChlNB)(2). For the analysis of DPOR substrate recognition, 11 synthetic derivatives with altered substituents on the four pyrrole rings and the isocyclic ring plus eight chlorophyll biosynthetic intermediates were tested as DPOR substrates. Although DPOR tolerated minor modifications of the ring substituents on rings A-C, the catalytic target ring D was apparently found to be coordinated with high specificity. Furthermore, protochlorophyllide a, the corresponding [8-vinyl]-derivative and protochlorophyllide b were equally utilized as substrates. Distinct differences from substrate binding by LPOR were observed. Alternative biosynthetic routes for cyanobacterial chlorophyll biosynthesis with regard to the reduction of the C8-vinyl group and the interconversion of a chlorophyll a/b type C7 methyl/formyl group were deduced.  相似文献   
16.
The respiratory activity of distinct sapwood and heartwood annual rings of the stem of Robinia pseudoacacia L. has been investigated. The oxygen uptake and the carbon dioxide release in the inner parts of the sapwood is enhanced in comparison with that in the outer parts. The heartwood rings have no measureable gas exchange.  相似文献   
17.
Klaus Lendzian  James A. Bassham 《BBA》1975,396(2):260-275
The activity of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.49) from spinach chloroplasts is strongly regulated by the ratio of NADPH/NADP+, with the extent of this regulation controlled by the concentration of ribulose 1,5-diphosphate. Other metabolites of the reductive pentose phosphate cycle are far less effective in mediating the regulation of the enzyme activity by NADPH/NADP+ ratio. With a ratio of NADPH/NADP+ of 2, and a concentration of ribulose 1,5-diphosphate of 0.6 mM, the activity of the enzyme is completely inhibited.This level of ribulose 1,5-diphosphate is well within the concentration range which has been reported for unicellular green algae photosynthesizing in vivo. Ratios of NADPH/NADP+ of 2.0 have been measured for isolated spinach chloroplasts in the light and under physiological conditions.Since ribulose 1,5-diphosphate is a metabolite unique to the reductive pentose phosphate cycle and inhibits glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase in the presence of NADPH/NADP+ ratios found in chloroplasts in the light, it is proposed that regulation of the oxidative pentose phosphate cycle is accomplished in vivo by the levels of ribulose 1,5-diphosphate, NADPH, and NADP+.It already has been shown that several key reactions of the reductive pentose phosphate cycle in chloroplasts are regulated by levels of NADPH/NADP+ or other electron-carrying cofactors, and at least one key-regulated step, the carboxylation reaction is strongly affected by 6-phosphogluconate, the metabolite unique to the oxidative pentose phosphate cycle. Thus there is an interesting inverse regulation system in chloroplasts, in which reduced/oxidized coenzymes provide a general regulatory mechanism. The reductive cycle is activated at high NADPH/NADP+ ratios where the oxidative cycle is inhibited, and ribulose 1,5-diphosphate and 6-phosphogluconate provide further control of the cycles, each regulating the cycle in which it is not a metabolite.  相似文献   
18.
K. J. Lendzian 《Planta》1978,141(1):105-110
Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.49) from spinach chloroplasts is strongly affected by interactions between Mg2+, proton, and substrate concentrations. Mg2+ activates the enzyme to different degrees; however, it is not essential for enzyme activity. The Mg2+-dependent activation follows a maximum curve, magnitude and position of the maximum being dependent on pH and NADPH/NADP+ ratios. At a ratio of zero and pH 7.2, maximum activity is observed at 10 mM Mg2+. Increasing the NADPH/NADP+ ratio up to 1.7 (a ratio measured in the stroma during a light period), maximum activity is shifted to much lower Mg2+ concentrations. At pH 8.2 (corresponding to the pH of the stroma in the light) and at a high NADPH/NADP+ ratio, enzyme activity is not affected by the Mg2+ ion. The results are discussed in relation to dark-light-dark regulation of the oxidative pentose phosphate cycle in spinach chloroplasts.Abbreviations DTT dithiothreitol - G-6-P glucose-6-phosphate - G-6-PDH glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.49) - PPC pentose phosphate cycle  相似文献   
19.
Ribonucleotide reductases (RNRs) catalyze the production of deoxyribonucleotides, which are essential for DNA synthesis and repair in all organisms. The three currently known classes of RNRs are postulated to utilize a similar mechanism for ribonucleotide reduction via a transient thiyl radical, but they differ in the way this radical is generated. Class I RNR, found in all eukaryotic organisms and in some eubacteria and viruses, employs a diferric iron center and a stable tyrosyl radical in a second protein subunit, R2, to drive thiyl radical generation near the substrate binding site in subunit R1. From extensive experimental and theoretical research during the last decades, a general mechanistic model for class I RNR has emerged, showing three major mechanistic steps: generation of the tyrosyl radical by the diiron center in subunit R2, radical transfer to generate the proposed thiyl radical near the substrate bound in subunit R1, and finally catalytic reduction of the bound ribonucleotide. Amino acid- or substrate-derived radicals are involved in all three major reactions. This article summarizes the present mechanistic picture of class I RNR and highlights experimental and theoretical approaches that have contributed to our current understanding of this important class of radical enzymes.  相似文献   
20.
This short review compiles high-field electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) studies on different intermediate amino acid radicals, which emerge in wild-type and mutant class I ribonucleotide reductase (RNR) both in the reaction of protein subunit R2 with molecular oxygen, which generates the essential tyrosyl radical, and in the catalytic reaction, which involves a radical transfer between subunits R2 and R1. Recent examples are presented, how different amino acid radicals (tyrosyl, tryptophan, and different cysteine-based radicals) were identified, assigned to a specific residue, and their interactions, in particular hydrogen bonding, were investigated using high-field EPR and ENDOR spectroscopy. Thereby, unexpected diiron-radical centers, which emerge in mutants of R2 with changed iron coordination, and an important catalytic cysteine-based intermediate in the substrate turnover reaction in R1 were identified and characterized. Experiments on the essential tyrosyl radical in R2 single crystals revealed the so far unknown conformational changes induced by formation of the radical. Interesting structural differences between the tyrosyl radicals of class Ia and Ib enzymes were revealed. Recently accurate distances between the tyrosyl radicals in the protein dimer R2 could be determined using pulsed electron-electron double resonance (PELDOR), providing a new tool for docking studies of protein subunits. These studies show that high-field EPR and ENDOR are important tools for the identification and investigation of radical intermediates, which contributed significantly to the current understanding of the reaction mechanism of class I RNR.  相似文献   
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