Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.7.1.4 (nitrite reductase)
1,847 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Cyanide binding to fully reduced Pseudomonas aeruginosa cd(1) nitrite reductase (Pa cd(1) NiR) has been investigated for the wild-type enzyme and a site-directed mutant in which the active-site His369 was replaced by Ala. This mutation reduces the affinity toward cyanide (by approximately 13-fold) and especially decreases the rate of binding of cyanide to the reduced d(1) heme (by approximately 100-fold). The crystal structure of wild-type reduced Pa cd(1) NiR saturated with cyanide was determined to a resolution of 2.7 A. Cyanide binds to the iron of the d(1) heme, with an Fe-C-N angle of 168 degrees for both subunits of the dimer and only His369 is within hydrogen bonding distance of the nitrogen atom of the ligand. These results suggest that in Pa cd(1) NiR the invariant distal residue His369 plays a dominant role in controlling the binding of anionic ligands and allow the discussion of the mechanism of cyanide binding to the wild-type enzyme.
...
PMID:Cyanide binding to cd(1) nitrite reductase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa: role of the active-site His369 in ligand stabilization. 1182 53

Cytochrome c(551) from Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a monomeric redox protein of 82 amino-acid residues, involved in dissimilative denitrification as the physiological electron donor of cd(1) nitrite reductase. The distribution of charged residues on the surface of c(551) is very anisotropic: one side is richer in acidic residues whereas the other shows a ring of positive side chains, mainly lysines, located at the border of an hydrophobic patch which surrounds the heme crevice. In order to map in cytochrome c(551) the surface involved in electron transfer, we have introduced specific mutations in three residues belonging to the hydrophobic patch, namely Val23-->Asp, Pro58-->Ala and Ile59-->Glu. The effect of these mutations was analyzed studying both the self-exchange rate and the electron-transfer activity towards P. aeruginosa cd(1) nitrite reductase, the physiological partner and P. aeruginosa azurin, a copper protein often used as a model redox partner in vitro. Our results show that introduction of a negative charge in the hydrophobic patch severely hampers both homonuclear and heteronuclear electron transfer.
...
PMID:Pseudomonas aeruginosa cytochrome C(551): probing the role of the hydrophobic patch in electron transfer. 1189 50

Electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) of protons at Type 2 and Type 1 cupric active sites correlates with the enzymatic pH dependence, the mutation of nearby conserved, nonligating residues, and electron transfer in heterologously expressed Rhodobacter sphaeroides nitrite reductase. Wild-type enzyme showed a pH 6 activity maximum but no kinetic deuterium isotope effect, suggesting protons are not transferred in the rate-limiting step of nitrite reduction. However, protonatable Asp129 and His287, both located near the Type 2 center, modulated enzyme activity. ENDOR of the wild-type Type 2 center at pH 6.0 revealed an exchangeable proton with large hyperfine coupling. Dipolar distance estimates indicated that this proton was 2.50-2.75 or 2.25-2.45 A from Type 2 copper in the presence or absence of nitrite, respectively. This proton may provide a properly oriented hydrogen bond to enhance water formation upon nitrite reduction. This proton was eliminated at pH 5.0 and showed a diminished coupling at pH 7.5. Mutations of Asp129 and His287 reduced enzyme activity and altered the exchangeable proton hyperfine spectra. Mutation of Asp129 prevented a pH-dependent change at the Type 1 Cys167 ligand as observed by Cys C(beta) proton ENDOR, implying there is a Type 2 and pH-dependent alteration of the Type 1 center. Mutation of the Type 1 center ligand Met182 to Thr and mutation of Asp129 increased the activation energy for nitrite reduction. Involvement of both the Type 1 center and Asp129 in modulating activation energy shows that electron transfer from the Type 1 center to a nitrite-ligated Type 2 center is rate-limiting for nitrite reduction. Mutation of Ile289 to Ala and Val caused minor perturbation to enzyme activity, but as detected by ENDOR, allowed formate binding. Thus, bulky Ile289 may exclude non-nitrite ligands from the Type 2 active site.
...
PMID:Catalytic function and local proton structure at the type 2 copper of nitrite reductase: the correlation of enzymatic pH dependence, conserved residues, and proton hyperfine structure. 1204 80

Variants of the copper-containing nitrite reductase (NiR) of Alcaligenes faecalis S6 were constructed by site-directed mutagenesis, by which the C-terminal histidine ligand (His145) of the Cu in the type-1 site was replaced by an alanine or a glycine. The type-1 sites in the NiR variants as isolated, are in the reduced form, but can be oxidized in the presence of external ligands, like (substituted) imidazoles and chloride. The reduction potential of the type-1 site of NiR-H145A reconstituted with imidazole amounts to 505 mV vs NHE (20 degrees C, pH 7, 10 mM imidazole), while for the native type-1 site it amounts to 260 mV. XRD data on crystals of the reduced and oxidized NiR-H145A variant show that in the reduced type-1 site the metal is 3-coordinated, but in the oxidized form takes up a ligand from the solution. With the fourth (exogenous) ligand in place the type-1 site is able to accept electrons at about the same rate as the wt NiR, but it is unable to pass the electron onto the type-2 site, leading to loss of enzymatic activity. It is argued that the uptake of an electron by the mutated type-1 site is accompanied by a loss of the exogenous ligand and a concomitant rise of the redox potential. This rise effectively traps the electron in the type-1 site.
...
PMID:Reconstitution of the type-1 active site of the H145G/A variants of nitrite reductase by ligand insertion. 1268 Jul 61

Cytochromes c are typically characterized by the covalent attachment of haem to polypeptide through two thioether bonds with the cysteine residues of a Cys-Xaa-Xaa-Cys-His peptide motif. In many Gram-negative bacteria, the haem is attached to the polypeptide by the periplasmically functioning cytochrome c maturation (Ccm) proteins. Exceptionally, Hydrogenobacter thermophilus cytochrome c552 can be expressed as a stable holocytochrome both in the cytoplasm of Escherichia coli in an apparently uncatalysed reaction and also in the periplasm in a Ccm-mediated reaction. In the present study we show that a Met60-->Ala variant of c552, which does not have the usual distal methionine ligand to the haem iron of the mature cytochrome, can be made in the periplasm by the Ccm system. However, no holocytochrome could be detected when this variant was expressed cytoplasmically. These data highlight differences between the two modes of cytochrome c assembly. In addition, we report investigations of haem attachment to cytochromes altered to have the special Cys-Trp-Ser-Cys-Lys haem-binding motif, and Cys-Trp-Ser-Cys-His and Cys-Trp-Ala-Cys-His analogues, of the active-site haem of nitrite reductase NrfA.
...
PMID:Variation of the axial haem ligands and haem-binding motif as a probe of the Escherichia coli c-type cytochrome maturation (Ccm) system. 1290 20

The Neurospora crassa genome database was searched for sequence similarity to crnA, a nitrate transporter in Aspergillus nidulans. A 3.9-kb fragment (contig 3.416, subsequence 183190-187090) was cloned by PCR. The gene coding for this nitrate transporter was termed nit-10. The nit-10 gene specifies a predicted polypeptide containing 541 amino acids with a molecular mass of 57 kDa. In contrast to crnA, which is clustered together with niaD, encoding nitrate reductase, and niiA, encoding nitrite reductase, nit-10 is not linked to nit-3 (nitrate reductase), nit-6 (nitrite reductase), or to nit-2, nit-4 (both are positive regulators of nit-3), or nmr (negative regulator of nit-3) in Neurospora crassa. A nit-10 rip mutant failed to grow in the medium when nitrate (< 10 mM) was used as the sole nitrogen source, but grew similarly to wild type when nitrate concentration was 10 mM or higher. In addition, it showed strong sensitivity to cesium in the presence of nitrate and resistance to chlorate in the presence of alanine, proline, or hypoxanthine. The expression of nit-10 required nitrate induction and was subject to repression by nitrogen metabolites such as glutamine. Expression of nit-10 also required functional products of nit-2 and nit-4. The half-life of nit-10 mRNA was determined to be approximately 2.5 min.
...
PMID:Identification and characterization of a nitrate transporter gene in Neurospora crassa. 1506 36

The intermolecular electron transfer from Achromobacter cycloclastes pseudoazurin (AcPAZ) to wild-type and mutant Alcaligenes xylosoxidans nitrite reductases (AxNIRs) was investigated using steady-state kinetics and electrochemical methods. The affinity and the electron transfer reaction constant (k(ET)) are considerably lower between AcPAZ and AxNIR (K(m) = 1.34 mM and k(ET) = 0.87 x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1)) than between AcPAZ and its cognate nitrite reductase (AcNIR) (K(m) = 20 microM and k(ET) = 7.3 x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1)). A negatively charged hydrophobic patch, comprising seven acidic residues around the type 1 copper site in AcNIR, is the site of protein-protein interaction with a positively charged hydrophobic patch on AcPAZ. In AxNIR, four of the negatively charged residues (Glu-112, Glu-133, Glu-195, and Asp-199) are conserved at the corresponding positions of AcNIR, whereas the other three residues are not acidic amino acids but neutral amino acids (Ala-83, Ala-191, and Gly-198). Seven mutant AxNIRs with additional negatively charged residues surrounding the hydrophobic patch of AxNIR (A83D, A191E, G198E, A83D/A191E, A93D/G198E, A191E/G198E, and A83D/A191E/G198E) were prepared to enhance the specificity of the electron transport reaction between AcPAZ and AxNIR. The k(ET) values of these mutants become progressively larger as the number of mutated residues increases. The K(m) and k(ET) values of A83D/A191E/G198E (K(m) = 88 microM and k(ET) = 4.1 x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1)) are 15-fold smaller and 4.7-fold larger than those of wild-type AxNIR, respectively. These results suggest that the introduction of negatively charged residues into the docking surface of AxNIR facilitates both the formation of electron transport complex and the electron transfer reaction.
...
PMID:Structure-based engineering of Alcaligenes xylosoxidans copper-containing nitrite reductase enhances intermolecular electron transfer reaction with pseudoazurin. 1547 44

We report (1) the amino acid sequence of Hyphomicrobium denitrificans nitrite reductase (HdNIR), containing two type 1 Cu sites and one type 2 Cu site; (2) the expression and preparation of wild-type HdNIR and two mutants replacing the Cys ligand of each type 1 Cu with Ala; and (3) their spectroscopic and functional characterization. The open-reading frame of 50-kDa HdNIR is composed of the 15-kDa N-terminal domain having a type 1 Cu-binding motif like cupredoxins and the 35-kDa C-terminal domain having type 1 Cu-binding and type 2 Cu-binding motifs such as common nitrite reductases (NIRs). Moreover, the amino acid sequences of the N- and C-terminal domains are homologous to those of plastocyanins and NIRs, respectively. The point mutation of the Cys ligand of each type 1 Cu with Ala gives two mutants, C114A and C260A, possessing one type 1 Cu and one type 2 Cu. The spectroscopic data of C114A reveal that the C-terminal NIR-like domain has the green type 1 Cu (type 1 Cu(C)), showing two intense absorption peaks at 455 (epsilon = 2600 M(-1) cm(-1)) and 600 nm (epsilon = 2800 M(-1) cm(-1)) and a rhombic EPR signal like those of the green type 1 Cu of Achromobacter cycloclastes NIR (AcNlR). The spectroscopic data of C260A elucidate that the N-terminal Pc-like domain in HdNIR contains the blue type 1 Cu (type 1 Cu(N)), exhibiting an intense absorption band at 605 nm (epsilon = 2900 M(-1) cm(-1)) and an axial EPR signal like those of the blue type 1 Cu of Alcaligenes xylosoxidans NIR (AxNIR). The sum of the visible absorption or EPR spectra of C114A and C260A is almost equal to the corresponding spectrum of wild-type HdNIR. The spectroscopic characterization of the type 1 Cu indicates that the geometries of the type 1 Cu(N) and Cu(C) sites are slightly distorted tetrahedral (or axially elongated bipyramidal) and flattened tetrahedral, respectively. In the cyclic voltammograms, the midpoint potentials (E(1/2)), probably because of the type 1 Cu ions of C114A and C260A, are observed at +321 and +336 mV versus normal hydrogen electrode (NHE) at pH 7.0, respectively. These values, which are close to each other, are more positive than those ( approximately +0.24-0.28 V at pH 7.0) of the type 1 Cu sites of AcNIR and AxNIR. The electron-accepting capability of C114A from cytochrome c(550) is almost similar to that of wild-type HdNIR, whereas that of C260A is very low. This suggests that the type 1 Cu(C) in the C-terminal domain is essential for the enzyme functions of HdNIR.
...
PMID:Characterization of two type 1 Cu sites of Hyphomicrobium denitrificans nitrite reductase: a new class of copper-containing nitrite reductases. 1551 68

We present high-resolution crystal structures and functional analysis of T1Cu centre mutants of nitrite reductase that perturb the redox potential and the Cys130-His129 "hard-wired" bridge through which electron transfer to the catalytic T2Cu centre occurs. These data provide insight into how activity can be altered through mutational manipulation of the electron delivery centre (T1Cu). The alteration of Cys to Ala results in loss of T1Cu and enzyme inactivation with azurin as electron donor despite the mutant enzyme retaining full nitrite-binding capacity. These data establish unequivocally that no direct transfer of electrons occurs from azurin to the catalytic type 2 Cu centre. The mutation of the axial ligand Met144 to Leu increases both the redox potential and catalytic activity, establishing that the rate-determining step of catalysis is the intermolecular electron transfer from azurin to nitrite reductase.
...
PMID:High resolution structural studies of mutants provide insights into catalysis and electron transfer processes in copper nitrite reductase. 1592 1

A pulsed electron paramagnetic resonance study has been performed on the type 2 copper site of nitrite reductase (NiR) from Alcaligenes faecalis. The H145A mutant, in which histidine 145 is replaced by alanine, was studied by ESEEM and HYSCORE experiments at 9 GHz on frozen solutions. This mutant contains a reduced type 1 copper site which allowed a selective investigation of the type 2 site of H145A and of its nitrite-bound form H145A (NO2(-)). The experiments yielded hyperfine and quadrupole parameters of the remote nitrogens of two of the histidines in the type 2 copper site of the protein and revealed the changes of these values induced by substrate binding (14NO2(-) and 15NO2(-)). The HYSCORE experiments displayed a signal of 15NO2(-) bound to H145A, from which hyperfine parameters of the nitrite nitrogen were estimated. The small isotropic hyperfine coupling, 0.36 MHz, of the nitrite nitrogen (14N) suggests that the substrate binds in an axial position to the copper in the type 2 site and that the molecular orbital containing the unpaired electron extends onto the substrate. This and other changes in the EPR parameters occurring after nitrite binding suggest a change in electronic structure of the site, which most likely prepares the site for the catalytic reaction. We propose that this change is essential for the reaction to occur.
...
PMID:The substrate-bound type 2 copper site of nitrite reductase: the nitrogen hyperfine coupling of nitrite revealed by pulsed EPR. 1628 22


<< Previous 1 2 3 Next >>