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Publication
Journal: Journal of Controlled Release
June/24/2014
Abstract
SN38 (7-ethyl-10-hydroxy camptothecin) is a prominent and efficacious anticancer agent. It is poorly soluble in both water and pharmaceutically approved solvents; therefore, the direct formulation of SN38 in solution form is limited. Currently, the water soluble prodrug of SN38, irinotecan (CPT-11), is formulated as a low pH solution and is approved for chemotherapy. However, CPT-11, along with most other water-soluble prodrugs shows unpredictable inter-patient conversion to SN38 in vivo, instability in the physiological environment and variable dose-related toxicities. More recently, macromolecular prodrugs (i.e. EZN-2208, IMMU-130) and nanomedicine formulations (i.e. nanoemulsions, polymeric micelles, lipid nanocapsule/nanoparticle, and liposomes) of SN38 have been investigated for improved delivery to cancer cells and tissues. Specifically, these carriers can take advantage of the EPR effect to direct drug preferentially to tumour tissues, thereby substantially improving efficacy and minimising side effects. Furthermore, oral delivery has been shown to be possible in preclinical results using nanomedicine formulations (i.e. dendrimers, lipid nanocapsules, polymeric micelles). This review summarizes the recent advances for the delivery of SN38 with a focus on macromolecular prodrugs and nanomedicines.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Biological Chemistry
April/9/2014
Abstract
The multidomain pro-apoptotic Bcl-2 family proteins BAK and BAX are believed to form large oligomeric pores in the mitochondrial outer membrane during apoptosis. Formation of these pores results in the release of apoptotic factors including cytochrome c from the intermembrane space into the cytoplasm, where they initiate the cascade of events that lead to cell death. Using the site-directed spin labeling method of electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy, we have determined the conformational changes that occur in BAK when the protein targets to the membrane and forms pores. The data showed that helices α1 and α6 disengage from the rest of the domain, leaving helices α2-α5 as a folded unit. Helices α2-α5 were shown to form a dimeric structure, which is structurally homologous to the recently reported BAX "BH3-in-groove homodimer." Furthermore, the EPR data and a chemical cross-linking study demonstrated the existence of a hitherto unknown interface between BAK BH3-in-groove homodimers in the oligomeric BAK. This novel interface involves the C termini of α3 and α5 helices. The results provide further insights into the organization of the BAK oligomeric pores by the BAK homodimers during mitochondrial apoptosis, enabling the proposal of a BAK-induced lipidic pore with the topography of a "worm hole."
Publication
Journal: Journal of Bacteriology
July/29/1998
Abstract
Two copper-binding compounds/cofactors (CBCs) were isolated from the spent media of both the wild type and a constitutive soluble methane monooxygenase (sMMOC) mutant, PP319 (P. A. Phelps et al., Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 58:3701-3708, 1992), of Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b. Both CBCs are small polypeptides with molecular masses of 1,218 and 779 Da for CBC-L1 and CBC-L2, respectively. The amino acid sequence of CBC-L1 is S?MYPGS?M, and that of CBC-L2 is SPMP?S. Copper-free CBCs showed absorption maxima at 204, 275, 333, and 356 with shoulders at 222 and 400 nm. Copper-containing CBCs showed a broad absorption maximum at 245 nm. The low-temperature electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra of copper-containing CBC-L1 showed the presence of a copper center with an EPR splitting constant between those of type 1 and type 2 copper centers (g = 2.087, g = 2.42 G, A = 128 G). The EPR spectrum of CBC-L2 was more complex and showed two spectrally distinct copper centers. One signal can be attributed to a type 2 Cu2+ center (g = 2.073, g = 2.324 G, A = 144 G) which could be saturated at higher powers, while the second shows a broad, nearly isotropic signal near g = 2.063. In wild-type strains, the concentrations of CBCs in the spent media were highest in cells expressing the pMMO and stressed for copper. In contrast to wild-type strains, high concentrations of CBCs were observed in the extracellular fraction of the sMMOC mutants PP319 and PP359 regardless of the copper concentration in the culture medium.
Publication
Journal: Radiation Measurements
February/19/2017
Abstract
As a result of terrorism, accident, or war, populations potentially can be exposed to doses of ionizing radiation that could cause direct clinical effects within days or weeks. There is a critical need to determine the magnitude of the exposure to individuals so that those with significant risk have appropriate procedures initiated immediately, while those without a significant probability of acute effects can be reassured and removed from the need for further consideration in the medical/emergency system. In many of the plausible scenarios there is an urgent need to make the determination very soon after the event and while the subject is still present. In vivo EPR measurements of radiation-induced changes in the enamel of teeth is a method, perhaps the only such method, which can differentiate among doses sufficiently for classifying individuals into categories for treatment with sufficient accuracy to facilitate decisions on medical treatment. In its current state, the in vivo EPR dosimeter can provide estimates of absorbed dose with an error approximately +/- 50 cGy over the range of interest for acute biological effects of radiation, assuming repeated measurements of the tooth in the mouth of the subject. The time required for acquisition, the lower limit, and the precision are expected to improve, with improvements in the resonator and the algorithm for acquiring and calculating the dose. The magnet system that is currently used, while potentially deployable, is somewhat large and heavy, requiring that it be mounted on a small truck or trailer. Several smaller magnets, including an intraoral magnet are under development, which would extend the ease of use of this technique.
Publication
Journal: Microbiology
February/18/2008
Abstract
The human fungal pathogen Cryptococcus neoformans produces melanin in the presence of various substrates, including the L enantiomer of 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (DOPA). The enzyme laccase catalyses the formation of melanin by oxidizing L-DOPA, initiating a series of presumably spontaneous reactions that ultimately leads to the polymerization of the pigment in the yeast cell wall. There, melanin protects the cell from a multitude of environmental and host assaults. Thus, the ability of C. neoformans to produce pigments from a variety of available substrates is likely to confer a survival advantage. A number of C. neoformans isolates of different serotypes produced pigments from D-DOPA, the stereoisomer of L-DOPA. Acid-resistant particles were isolated from pigmented C. neoformans cells grown in the presence of D-DOPA. Biophysical characterization showed the particles had a stably detectable free-radical signal by EPR, and negative zeta potential, similar to L-DOPA-derived particles. No major differences were found between L- and D-DOPA ghosts in terms of binding to anti-melanin antibodies, or in overall architecture when imaged by electron microscopy. C. neoformans cells utilized L- and D-DOPA at a similar rate. Overall, our results indicate that C. neoformans shows little stereoselectivity for utilizing DOPA in melanin synthesis. The ability of C. neoformans to use both L and D enantiomers for melanization implies that this organism has access to a greater potential pool of substrates for melanin synthesis, and this could potentially be exploited in the design of therapeutic inhibitors of laccase.
Publication
Journal: Dalton Transactions
January/18/2010
Abstract
Citrate is an iron chelator and it has been shown to be the major iron ligand in the xylem sap of plants. Furthermore, citrate has been demonstrated to be an important ligand for the non-transferrin bound iron (NTBI) pool occurring in the plasma of individuals suffering from iron-overload. However, ferric citrate chemistry is complicated and a definitive description of its aqueous speciation at neutral pH remains elusive. X-Ray crystallography data indicates that the alcohol function of citrate (Cit4-) is involved in Fe(III) coordination and that deprotonation of this functional group occurs upon complex formation. The inability to include this deprotonation in the affinity constant calculations has been a major source of divergence between various reports of iron(III)-citrate affinity constants. However the recent determination of the alcoholic pKa of citric acid (H4Cit) renders the reassessment of the ferric citrate system possible. The aqueous speciation of ferric citrate has been investigated by mass spectrometry and EPR spectroscopy. It was observed that the most relevant species are a monoiron dicitrate species and dinuclear and trinuclear oligomeric complexes, the relative concentration of which depends on the solution pH value and the iron : citric acid molar ratio. Spectrophotometric titration was utilized for affinity constant determination and the formation constant for the biologically relevant [Fe(Cit)2]5- is reported for the first time.
Publication
Journal: Biochemistry
June/14/2014
Abstract
Lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases (LPMOs), found in family 9 (previously GH61), family 10 (previously CBM33), and the newly discovered family 11 of auxiliary activities (AA) in the carbohydrate-active enzyme classification system, are copper-dependent enzymes that oxidize sp(3)-carbons in recalcitrant polysaccharides such as chitin and cellulose in the presence of an external electron donor. In this study, we describe the activity of two AA10-type LPMOs whose activities have not been described before and we compare in total four different AA10-type LPMOs with the aim of finding possible correlations between their substrate specificities, sequences, and EPR signals. EPR spectra indicate that the electronic environment of the copper varies within the AA10 family even though amino acids directly interacting with the copper atom are identical in all four enzymes. This variation seems to be correlated to substrate specificity and is likely caused by sequence variation in areas that affect substrate binding geometry and/or by variation in a cluster of conserved aromatic residues likely involved in electron transfer. Interestingly, EPR signals for cellulose-active AA10 enzymes were similar to those previously observed for cellulose-active AA9 enzymes. Mutation of the conserved phenylalanine positioned in close proximity to the copper center in AA10-type LPMOs to Tyr (the corresponding residue in most AA9-type LPMOs) or Ala, led to complete or partial inactivation, respectively, while in both cases the ability to bind copper was maintained. Moreover, substrate binding affinity and degradation ability seemed hardly correlated, further emphasizing the crucial role of the active site configuration in determining LPMO functionality.
Publication
Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
February/21/1994
Abstract
The molecular oxygen in our atmosphere is a product of a water-splitting reaction that occurs in the oxygen-evolving complex of photosystem II of oxygenic photosynthesis. The catalytic core of the oxygen-evolving complex is an ensemble of four manganese atoms arranged in a cluster of undetermined structure. The pulsed electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) technique of electron spin-echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) can be used to measure nuclear spin transitions of nuclei magnetically coupled to paramagnetic metal centers of enzymes. We report the results of ESEEM experiments on the cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC 6803 selectively labeled with 15N at the two nitrogen sites of the imidazole side chain of histidine residues. The experiments demonstrate that histidine is bound to manganese in the oxygen-evolving complex.
Publication
Journal: Biochemistry
December/20/2005
Abstract
Multiple instances of low-potential electron-transport pathway inhibitors that affect the structure of the cytochrome (cyt) bc(1) complex to varying degrees, ranging from changes in hydroquinone (QH(2)) oxidation and cyt c(1) reduction kinetics to proteolytic accessibility of the hinge region of the iron-sulfur-containing subunit (Fe/S protein), have been reported. However, no instance has been documented of any ensuing change on the environment(s) of the [2Fe-2S] cluster. In this work, this issue was addressed in detail by taking advantage of the increased spectral and spatial resolution obtainable with orientation-dependent electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopic analysis of ordered membrane preparations. For the first time, perturbation of the low-potential electron-transport pathway by Q(i)-site inhibitors or various mutations was shown to change the EPR spectra of both the cyt b hemes and the [2Fe-2S] cluster of the Fe/S protein. In particular, two interlinked effects of Q(i)-site modifications on the Fe/S subunit, one changing the local environment of its [2Fe-2S] cluster and a second affecting the mobility of this subunit, are revealed. Remarkably, different inhibitors and mutations at or near the Q(i) site induce these two effects differently, indicating that the events occurring at the Q(i) site affect the global structure of the cyt bc(1). Furthermore, occupancy of discrete Q(i)-site subdomains differently impede the location of the Fe/S protein at the Q(o) site. These findings led us to propose that antimycin A and HQNO mimic the presence of QH(2) and Q at the Q(i) site, respectively. Implications of these findings in respect to the Q(o)-Q(i) sites communications and to multiple turnovers of the cyt bc(1) are discussed.
Publication
Journal: Biochemistry
May/12/1994
Abstract
Size analysis of the cytochrome b6f complex by FPLC Superose-12 chromatography and Blue Native PAGE indicated a predominantly dimeric component with M(r) = (1.9-2.5) x 10(5). The true dimer molecular weight including bound lipid, but not detergent, was estimated to be 2.3 x 10(5). Size and shape analysis by negative-stain single-particle electron microscopy indicated that the preparation of dimeric complexes contains a major population that has a protein cross section 40% larger than the monomer, binds more negative stain, and has a geometry with a distinct 2-fold axis of symmetry compared to the monomeric complex. The dimeric species is more stable at higher ionic strength with respect to conversion to the monomeric species. SDS-PAGE of monomer and dimer preparations indicated that both contain the four major polypeptides in approximately equal stoichiometry and also contain the petG M(r) 4000 subunit. One bound chlorophyll a per monomer, part of the bound lipid, is present in monomer and dimer. The in vitro electron-transport activity (decyl-PQH2->>PC-ferricyanide) of the separated dimer was comparable to that of the isolated b6f complex and was 4-5-fold greater than that of the monomer preparation, whose activity could be attributed to residual dimer. No difference in the properties of the dimer and monomer was detected by SDS-PAGE or redox difference spectrophotometry that could account for the difference in activities. However, the concentration of the Rieske [2Fe-2S] center was found by EPR analysis of the gy = 1.90 signal to be lower in the monomer fraction by a factor of 3.5 relative to the dimer.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Publication
Journal: Biophysical Journal
October/18/1995
Abstract
We have used electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy to detect ATP- and calcium-induced changes in the structure of spin-labeled myosin heads in glycerinated rabbit psoas muscle fibers in key physiological states. The probe was a nitroxide iodoacetamide derivative attached selectively to myosin SH1 (Cys 707), the conventional EPR spectra of which have been shown to resolve several conformational states of the myosin ATPase cycle, on the basis of nanosecond rotational motion within the protein. Spectra were acquired in rigor and during the steady-state phases of relaxation and isometric contraction. Spectral components corresponding to specific conformational states and biochemical intermediates were detected and assigned by reference to EPR spectra of trapped kinetic intermediates. In the absence of ATP, all of the myosin heads were rigidly attached to the thin filament, and only a single conformation was detected, in which there was no sub-microsecond probe motion. In relaxation, the EPR spectrum resolved two conformations of the myosin head that are distinct from rigor. These structural states were virtually identical to those observed previously for isolated myosin and were assigned to the populations of the M*.ATP and M**.ADP.Pi states. During isometric contraction, the EPR spectrum resolves the same two conformations observed in relaxation, plus a small fraction (20-30%) of heads in the oriented actin-bound conformation that is observed in rigor. This rigor-like component is a calcium-dependent, actin-bound state that may represent force-generating cross-bridges. As the spin label is located near the nucleotide-binding pocket in a region proposed to be pivotal for large-scale force-generating structural changes in myosin, we propose that the observed spectroscopic changes indicate directly the key steps in energy transduction in the molecular motor of contracting muscle.
Publication
Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
February/17/2010
Abstract
We have used two complementary time-resolved spectroscopic techniques, dipolar electron-electron resonance and fluorescence resonance energy transfer to determine conformational changes in a single structural element of the myosin motor domain, the relay helix, before and after the recovery stroke. Two double-Cys mutants were labeled with optical probes or spin labels, and interprobe distances were determined. Both methods resolved two distinct structural states of myosin, corresponding to straight and bent conformations of the relay helix. The bent state was occupied only upon nucleotide addition, indicating that relay helix, like the entire myosin head, bends in the recovery stroke. However, saturation of myosin with nucleotide, producing a single biochemical state, did not produce a single structural state. Both straight and bent structural states of the relay helix were occupied when either ATP (ADP.BeF(x)) or ADP.P(i) (ADP.AlF(4)) analogs were bound at the active site. A greater population was found in the bent structural state when the posthydrolysis analog ADP.AlF(4) was bound. We conclude that the bending of the relay helix in the recovery stroke does not require ATP hydrolysis but is favored by it. A narrower interprobe distance distribution shows ordering of the relay helix, despite its bending, during the recovery stroke, providing further insight into the dynamics of this energy-transducing structural transition.
Publication
Journal: Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry
February/26/2002
Abstract
Chromium (VI) compounds are widely recognized as human carcinogens. Extensive studies in vitro and in model systems indicate that the reactive intermediate, Cr (V), generated by cellular reduction of Cr (VI), is likely the candidate for the ultimate carcinogenic form of chromium compounds. Here we review our current understanding of the in vivo reduction of Cr (VI) and its related free radical generation. Our results demonstrate that Cr (V) is indeed generated from the reduction of Cr (VI) in vivo, and that Cr (V) thus formed can mediate the generation of free radicals. Cr (V) and its related free radicals are very likely to be involved in the mechanism of Cr (VI)-induced toxicity and carcinogenesis. These studies also illustrate that in vivo EPR spectroscopy and magnetic resonance imaging can be very useful and powerful tools for studying paramagnetic metal ions in chemical and biochemical reactions occurring in intact animals.
Authors
Publication
Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
January/4/2007
Abstract
The electronic properties of an unusually redox-rich iron system, [PhBP(R)3]Fe-Nx (where [PhBP(R)3] is [PhB(CH2PR2)3]-), are explored by Mössbauer, EPR, magnetization, and density-functional methods to gain a detailed picture regarding their oxidation states and electronic structures. The complexes of primary interest in this article are the two terminal iron(IV) nitride species, [PhBP(iPr)3]Fe[triple bond]N (3a) and [PhBP(CH2Cy)3]Fe[triple bond]N (3b), and the formally diiron(I) bridged-Fe(mu-N2)Fe species, {[PhBP(iPr)3]Fe}2(mu-N2) (4). Complex 4 is chemically related to 3a via a spontaneous nitride coupling reaction. The diamagnetic iron(IV) nitrides 3a and 3b exhibit unique electronic environments that are reflected in their unusual Mössbauer parameters, including quadrupole-splitting values of 6.01(1) mm/s and isomer shift values of -0.34(1) mm/s. The data for 4 suggest that this complex can be described by a weak ferromagnetic interaction (J/D < 1) between two iron(I) centers. For comparison, four other relevant complexes also are characterized: a diamagnetic iron(IV) trihydride [PhBP(iPr)3]Fe(H)3(PMe3) (5), an S = 3/2 iron(I) phosphine adduct [PhBP(iPr)3]FePMe3 (6), and the S = 2 iron(II) precursors to 3a, [PhBP(iPr)3]Fe-Cl and [PhBP(iPr)3]Fe-2,3:5,6-dibenzo-7-aza bicyclo[2.2.1]hepta-2,5-diene (dbabh). The electronic properties of these respective complexes also have been explored by density-functional methods to help corroborate our spectral assignments and to probe their electronic structures further.
Publication
Journal: Journal of the American Chemical Society
September/9/2007
Abstract
We report the generation and characterization of an intermediate in a mutant form of the toluene/o-xylene monooxygenase hydroxylase component from Pseudomonas stutzeri OX1. The reaction of chemically reduced I100W variant in the presence of the coupling protein, ToMOD, with dioxygen was monitored by stopped-flow UV/visible spectroscopy. Rapid-freeze quench (RFQ) samples were also generated for EPR and Mössbauer spectroscopy. A transient species is observed in the UV/visible spectrum with an absorption maximum at 500 nm. EPR and Mössbauer spectra of RFQ samples identified this species as a diiron(III,IV) cluster spin-coupled to a neutral W radical. A diamagnetic precursor to the mixed-valent diiron(III,IV) was also observed at an earlier time point, with Mössbauer parameters typical of high-spin FeIII. We have tentatively assigned this antiferromagnetically coupled diiron(III) intermediate as a peroxo-bridged cluster, and this complex has also been observed in preliminary studies of the wild-type hydroxylase.
Publication
Journal: Protein Expression and Purification
October/2/2002
Abstract
The high-level expression, purification, and characterization of recombinant membrane-bound human liver monoamine oxidase A (MAO-A) in Pichia pastoris is described. Two liters of fermentation culture produces 1170 units (660 mg) of MAO-A. The enzyme is purified in a 35% yield, is homogeneous on denaturing gel electrophoresis, and exhibits a single species (60,512 +/- 6 Da) on electrospray mass spectrometry. It contains 1 mol of 8alpha-S-cysteinyl FAD/mole of enzyme and exhibits >95% functionality. In contrast, the Saccharomyces cerevisiae-expressed enzyme is partially processed by C-terminal serine removal as demonstrated by mass spectra. The amino termini of both P. pastoris- and S. cerevisiae-expressed MAO-A are acetylated on the N-terminal methionine. The steady-state kinetic properties of P. pastoris-expressed MAO-A are similar to those of S. cerevisiae-expressed MAO-A using the following substrates: phenethylamine, p-CF(3)-benzylamine, dopamine, serotonin, and kynuramine. Reductive titrations demonstrate that the recombinant enzyme is reduced by 1 mol of substrate or dithionite as expected for the two electron equivalents required for flavin reduction. Absorption and EPR spectra show no radical species in the resting enzyme while the anionic flavin radical is formed in 50% yield during the reductive titration with dithionite. These data demonstrate significant advantages in the heterologous expression of human MAO-A in P. pastoris compared with the published S. cerevisiae system in higher expression level (329 mg/L) and in a higher level of homogeneity of the isolated enzyme.
Publication
Journal: Journal of the American Chemical Society
November/12/2009
Abstract
Cryoreduction EPR/ENDOR/step-annealing measurements with substrate complexes of oxy-gsNOS (3; gsNOS is nitric oxide synthase from Geobacillus stearothermophilus) confirm that Compound I (6) is the reactive heme species that carries out the gsNOS-catalyzed (Stage I) oxidation of L-arginine to N-hydroxy-L-arginine (NOHA), whereas the active species in the (Stage II) oxidation of NOHA to citrulline and HNO/NO(-) is the hydroperoxy-ferric form (5). When 3 is reduced by tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4), instead of an externally supplied electron, the resulting BH4(+) radical oxidizes HNO/NO(-) to NO. In this report, radiolytic one-electron reduction of 3 and its complexes with Arg, Me-Arg, and NO(2)Arg was shown by EPR and (1)H and (14,15)N ENDOR spectroscopies to generate 5; in contrast, during cryoreduction of 3/NOHA, the peroxo-ferric-gsNOS intermediate (4/NOHA) was trapped. During annealing at 145 K, ENDOR shows that 5/Arg and 5/Me-Arg (but not 5/NO(2)Arg) generate a Stage I primary product species in which the OH group of the hydroxylated substrate is coordinated to Fe(III), characteristic of 6 as the active heme center. Analysis shows that hydroxylation of Arg and Me-Arg is quantitative. Annealing of 4/NOHA at 160 K converts it first to 5/NOHA and then to the Stage II primary enzymatic product. The latter contains Fe(III) coordinated by water, characteristic of 5 as the active heme center. It further contains quantitative amounts of citrulline and HNO/NO(-); the latter reacts with the ferriheme to form the NO-ferroheme upon further annealing. Stage I delivery of the first proton of catalysis to the (unobserved) 4 formed by cryoreduction of 3 involves a bound water that may convey a proton from L-Arg, while the second proton likely derives from the carboxyl side chain of Glu 248 or the heme carboxylates; the process also involves proton delivery by water(s). In the Stage II oxidation of NOHA, the proton that converts 4/NOHA to 5/NOHA likely is derived from NOHA itself, a conclusion supported by the pH invariance of the process. The present results illustrate how the substrate itself modulates the nature and reactivity of intermediates along the monooxygenase reaction pathway.
Publication
Journal: Biochimica et Biophysica Acta - General Subjects
November/17/1978
Abstract
Substituted primary hydroxamic acids were found to inhibit the catalytic activity of a number of redox enzymes. The inhibition was not related to the nature of the metal-active site of the enzyme nor to the nature of the oxygen-containing substrate. Two easily available enzymes, mushroom tyrosinase (monophenol,dihydroyphenylalanine:oxygen oxidoreductase, EC 1.14.18.1) and horseradish peroxidase (donor:hydrogen-peroxide oxidoreductase, EC 1.11.1.7), which were potently inhibited by hydroxamic acids, were chosen for more detailed study. A kinetic analysis of the inhibitory effects on the partially purified tyrosinase of mushroom (Agaricus bispora) revealed that inhibition was reversible and competiitive with respect to reducing substrate concentration, but was not competitive with respect to molecular oxygen concentration. A spectrophotometric and EPR study of the binding of salicylhydroxamic acid to horseradish peroxidase revealed that his hydroxamic acid was bound to the enzyme in the same manner as a typical substrate, hydroquinone. Spectroscopic and thermodynamic measurements of the binding reactions suggested that this binding site is close, to but, not directly onto, the heme group of the enzyme. From these results it is concluded that the mode of inhibition of hydroxamic acid need not be, as generally supposed, by metal chelation, and mechanisms involving either hydrogen bonding at the reducing substrate binding site or the formation of a charge transfer complex between hydroxamic acid and an electron-accepting group in the enzyme are considered to be more feasible. The relevance of these findings to deductions on the nature of other hydroxamic acid-inhibitable systems is discussed.
Publication
Journal: Biochemistry
May/24/2005
Abstract
In an effort to probe the structure of a group Bb metallo-beta-lactamase, Co(II)-substituted ImiS was prepared and characterized by electronic absorption, NMR, and EPR spectroscopies. ImiS containing 1 equiv of Co(II) (Co(II)(1)-ImiS) was shown to be catalytically active. Electronic absorption studies of Co(II)(1)-ImiS revealed the presence of two distinct features: (1) an intense sulfur to Co(II) ligand to metal charge transfer band and (2) less intense, Co(II) ligand field transitions that suggest 4-coordinate Co(II) in Co(II)(1)-ImiS. (1)H NMR studies of Co(II)(1)-ImiS suggest that one histidine, one aspartic acid, and one cysteine coordinate the metal ion in Co(II)(1)-ImiS. The addition of a second Co(II) to Co(II)(1)-ImiS did not result in any additional solvent-exchangeable NMR resonances, strongly suggesting that the second Co(II) does not bind to a site with histidine ligands. EPR studies reveal that the metal ion in Co(II)(1)-ImiS is 4-coordinate and that the second Co(II) is 5/6 coordinate. Taken together, these data indicate that the catalytic site in ImiS is the consensus Zn(2) site, in which Co(II) (and by extrapolation Zn(II)) is 4-coordinate and bound by Cys221, His263, Asp120, and probably one solvent water molecule. These studies also show that the second, inhibitory metal ion does not bind to the consensus Zn(1) site and that the metal ion binds at a site significantly removed from the active site. These results give the first structural information on metallo-beta-lactamase ImiS and suggest that the second metal binding site in ImiS may be targeted for inhibitors.
Publication
Journal: Biochimica et Biophysica Acta - General Subjects
October/11/1982
Abstract
In agreement with others (Myllylä, R., Kuutti-Savolainen, E.-R. and Kivirikko, K.I. (1978) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 83, 441-448), it was found that, in the absence of ascorbate, prolyl 4-hydroxylase (prolyl-glycyl-peptide, 2-oxoglutarate:oxygen oxidoreductase (4-hydroxylating), EC 1.14.11.2) catalyses the hydroxylation of peptidyl proline, stoicheiometrically coupled to the oxidative decarboxylation of 2-oxoglutarate, at a high initial rate. Under these conditions the enzyme becomes inactivated by at least 90% within 1 min in the presence of 400 microM 2-oxoglutarate, in the presence or absence of the peptide substrate (Pro-Pro-Gly)10. The enzyme can be partly reactivated by ascorbate, but not by Fe2+. Addition of a stoicheiometric amount of iron to the enzyme gives rise to a small EPR signal at g = 4.3, which is typical of a high-spin d 5 ion in a rhombic environment. After subsequent incubation for 30 s at 37 degrees C in the presence of 2-oxoglutarate, the amplitude of the EPR signal at g = 4.3 increases 3-4-fold and corresponds to virtually all of the iron added. In addition, an EPR signal at g = 2.0 is formed under these conditions. The signal at g = 4.3 decreases after subsequent addition of ascorbate. It is concluded that in the presence of 2-oxoglutarate enzyme-bound Fe2+ is rapidly converted to Fe3+, leading to inactivation of the enzyme. Enzyme-bound Fe3+ can be reduced again by ascorbate, thus reactivating the enzyme, or, in the absence of 2-oxoglutarate, by Fe2+.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Biological Chemistry
April/10/1985
Abstract
The thermodynamic and EPR characteristics of the iron-sulfur clusters of NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase have been examined in various subfractions and subunits of the enzyme. These were obtained by fragmentation of the enzyme with chaotropic agents and detergent and salt fractionation. We provide evidence for the presence of three tetranuclear clusters and five or six binuclear clusters, accounting well for the chemically determined iron content of this enzyme (22-24 atoms/molecule of FMN). Some of the clusters can be identified with EPR-detectable species in intact NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase and, by combining information on subunit topography and spin-spin interactions between redox centers in the native enzyme, we propose a tentative scheme for the spatial organization of these iron-sulfur clusters in the enzyme and in the membrane.
Publication
Journal: Journal of the American Chemical Society
September/12/2001
Abstract
As part of our work on models of the iron(III) site of Fe-containing nitrile hydratase, a designed ligand PyPSH(4) with two carboxamide and two thiolate donor groups has been synthesized. Reaction of (Et(4)N)[FeCl(4)] with the deprotonated form of the ligand in DMF affords the mononuclear iron(III) complex (Et(4)N)[Fe(III)(PyPS)] (1) in high yield. The iron(III) center is in a trigonal bipyramidal geometry with two deprotonated carboxamido nitrogens, one pyridine nitrogen, and two thiolato sulfurs as donors. Complex 1 is stable in water and binds a variety of Lewis bases at the sixth site at low temperature to afford green solutions with a band around 700 nm. The iron(III) centers in these six-coordinate species are low-spin and exhibit EPR spectra much like the enzyme. The pK(a) of the water molecule in [Fe(III)(PyPS)(H(2)O)](-) is 6.3 +/- 0.4. The iron(III) site in 1 with ligated carboxamido nitrogens and thiolato sulfurs does not show any affinity toward nitriles. It thus appears that at physiological pH, a metal-bound hydroxide promotes hydration of nitriles nested in close proximity of the iron center in the enzyme. Redox measurements demonstrate that the carboxamido nitrogens prefer Fe(III) to Fe(II) centers. This fact explains the absence of any redox behavior at the iron site in nitrile hydratase. Upon exposure to limited amount of dioxygen, 1 is converted to the bis-sulfinic species. The structure of the more stable O-bonded sulfinato complex (Et(4)N)[Fe(III)(PyP[SO(2)](2))] (2) has been determined. Six-coordinated low-spin cyanide adducts of the S-bonded and the O-bonded sulfinato complexes, namely, Na(2)[Fe(III)(PyP[SO(2)](2))(CN)] (4) and (Et(4)N)(2)[Fe(III)(PyP[SO(2)](2))(CN)] (5), afford green solutions in water and other solvents. The iron(II) complex (Et(4)N)(2)[Fe(II)(PyPS)] (3) has also been isolated and structurally characterized.
Publication
Journal: Biochemistry
January/15/2008
Abstract
The Anthracis repressor (AntR) is a Mn(II)-activated DNA binding protein that is involved in the regulation of Mn(II) homeostasis in Bacillus anthracis. AntR is structurally and functionally homologous to Mn(II)-activated repressor from Bacillus subtillis (MntR). Our studies on AntR focus on metal-regulated activation of the protein. Line shape analysis of continuous wave electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra showed that metal binding resulted in a general reduction of backbone dynamics and that there were no further changes in backbone motion upon DNA binding. Double electron-electron resonance (DEER) pulsed EPR spectroscopy was used to measure distances between nitroxide spin labels strategically placed in dimeric AntR. The DEER data were analyzed assuming Gaussian distributions for discrete populations of spins. A structural model for AntR was built from homology to MntR, and the experimentally measured distances were simulated to distinguish between spin label and backbone motions. Together with the computational analysis, the DEER results for apo-AntR indicated relatively narrow conformational distributions for backbone residues at the dimer interface and near the metal binding site. No significant changes were observed on these sites in the presence of metal or DNA. On the other hand, the distribution of the conformers and the distances between the putative DNA binding helices decreased upon metal binding. These results suggest that the DNA binding region of AntR shows large amplitude backbone motions in the absence of metal, which may preclude sequence-specific binding to promoter sites. Metal binding narrows the range of conformations accessible in this region and shortens the mean distance between the DNA binding helices, probably resulting in alignment that optimizes promoter recognition and binding.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Biological Chemistry
October/17/1990
Abstract
We report an optical and EPR spectral study of three hemoglobins, Hb I, II, and III, from the gill of the clam Lucina pectinata. Hemoglobin I reacts much more avidly with hydrogen sulfide than do Hbs II and III. The proximal ligand to the heme iron of each hemoglobin is histidyl imidazole. The acid/alkaline transition of ferric Hb I occurs with pK 9.6; those of ferric Hbs II and III with pK 6.6 and 5.9, respectively. At their acid limits each ferric hemoglobin exists as aquoferric hemoglobin. Broadening of the g = 6 resonance suggests that the bound water enjoys great positional freedom. Ferric Hb I, at the alkaline limit (pH 11), exists as ferric hemoglobin hydroxide. Ferric Hbs II and III, at their alkaline limit (pH 7.5), each exist as equal mixtures of two species. The low spin species with optical maxima near 541 and 576 nm and g values of 2.61, 2.20, and 1.82, are identified as ferric hemoglobin hydroxide. The high spin species, with optical maxima near 486 and 603 nm and g values of 6.71, 5.87, and 5.06, resemble Dicrocoelium hemoglobin and hemoglobin MSaskatoon. Here we show that Hbs II and III resemble hemoglobin MSaskatoon in which a distal tyrosinate oxygen ligated to the ferric heme iron at alkaline pH is displaced by water at acid pH. The H2S product of ferric Hb I is identified as ferric hemoglobin sulfide.
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