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Query: EC:4.1.99.3 (
PRE
)
1,923
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Amino-acid radicals play key roles in many enzymatic reactions. Catalysis often involves transfer of a radical character within the protein, as in class I ribonucleotide reductase where radical transfer occurs over 35 A, from a tyrosyl radical to a cysteine. It is currently debated whether this kind of long-range transfer occurs by electron transfer, followed by proton release to create a neutral radical, or by H-atom transfer, that is, simultaneous transfer of electrons and protons. The latter mechanism avoids the energetic cost of charge formation in the low dielectric protein, but it is less robust to structural changes than is electron transfer. Available experimental data do not clearly discriminate between these proposals. We have studied the mechanism of photoactivation (light-induced reduction of the flavin adenine dinucleotide cofactor) of Escherichia coli
DNA photolyase
using time-resolved absorption spectroscopy. Here we show that the excited flavin adenine dinucleotide radical abstracts an electron from a nearby
tryptophan
in 30 ps. After subsequent electron transfer along a chain of three tryptophans, the most remote
tryptophan
(as a cation radical) releases a proton to the solvent in about 300 ns, showing that electron transfer occurs before proton dissociation. A similar process may take place in photolyase-like blue-light receptors.
...
PMID:Intraprotein radical transfer during photoactivation of DNA photolyase. 1085 Jul 20
Tryptophan radicals, which are generated in the reconstitution reaction of mutants Y122F and Y177W of subunit R2 apoprotein of E. coli and mouse ribonucleotide reductase (RNR), respectively, with Fe(2+) and oxygen, are investigated by high-field EPR at 94 GHz and compared with the tyrosine radicals occurring in the respective wild-type proteins. For the first time, accurate g-values are obtained for protein-associated neutral
tryptophan
free radicals, which show only a small anisotropy. The apparent hyperfine patterns observed in frozen solutions are very similar for
tryptophan
and tyrosine radicals in mouse subunit R2 at conventional X-band EPR. The radicals can, however, be discriminated by their different g-tensors using high-field EPR. Tryptophan radicals were postulated as reaction intermediates in the proposed radical transfer pathway of RNR. Furthermore, the data obtained here for the electronic structure of protein-associated
tryptophan
neutral free radicals are important for identification and understanding of the functional important
tryptophan
radicals which occur in other enzymes, e.g.,
DNA photolyase
and cytochrome c peroxidase, where they are magnetically coupled to other radicals or to a metal center.
...
PMID:Tryptophan and tyrosine radicals in ribonucleotide reductase: a comparative high-field EPR study at 94 GHz. 1173 19
Charge separation and radical transfer in
DNA photolyase
from Escherichia coli is investigated by computing electrostatic free energies from a solution of the Poisson-Boltzmann equation. For the initial charge separation 450 meV are available. According to recent experiments [Aubert et al. Nature 2000, 405, 586-590] the flavin receives an electron from the proximal
tryptophan
W382, which consequently forms a cationic radical WH(*)(+)382. The radical state is subsequently transferred along the triad W382-W359-W306 of conserved tryptophans. The radical transfer to the intermediate
tryptophan
W359 is nearly isoenergetic (58 meV uphill); the radical transfer from the intermediate W359 to the distal W306 is 200 meV downhill in energy, funneling and stabilizing the radical state at W306. The resulting cationic radical WH(*)(+)306 is further stabilized by deprotonation, yielding the neutral radical W(*)306, which is 214 meV below WH(*)(+)306. The time scale of the charge recombination process yielding back the resting enzyme with FADH(*) is governed by reprotonation of W306, with a calculated lifetime of 1.2 ms that correlates well with the measured lifetime of 17 ms. In
photolyase
from Anacystis nidulans the radical state is partially transferred to a tyrosine [Aubert et al. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 1999, 96, 5423-5427]. In
photolyase
from Escherichia coli, there is a tyrosine (Y464) close to the distal
tryptophan
W306 that could play this role. We show that this tyrosine cannot be involved in radical transfer, because the electron transfer from tyrosine to W306 is much too endergonic (750 meV) and a direct hydrogen transfer is likely too slow. Coupling of specific charge states of the
tryptophan
triad with protonation patterns of titratable residues of
photolyase
is small.
...
PMID:Energetics of radical transfer in DNA photolyase. 1192 68
Some molecules, particularly aromatics, have high molar extinction coefficients at wavelengths in the damaging ultraviolet radiation region of the spectrum between 200 and 400 nm. Thus, under a UV radiation flux in which these wavelengths are represented, it could be argued that a selection pressure would exist for a UV transparent biochemistry in which they were not represented. This hypothesis is explored using data made available from proteomics, focusing particularly on
tryptophan
, against which a selection pressure could exist on present-day Earth as a result of its absorbance shoulder at wavelengths greater than 290 nm. The abundance of
tryptophan
in whole proteomes is lower than expected from the degeneracy of the genetic code. A lower usage of
tryptophan
is found in the cytochrome c oxidase polypeptide I of UV-exposed organisms compared to nocturnal and subterranean organisms, but not in ATP synthase chain A. Examination of the amino acid composition of
photolyase
, an enzyme that requires exposure to light to function, shows that the
tryptophan
abundances exceed those of the total proteome of most organisms and the abundances expected from the degeneracy of the genetic code. This is also true for cytochrome c oxidase, another enzyme that makes extensive use of the electron transfer properties of
tryptophan
. We suggest that the selection pressure for the use of
tryptophan
caused, among other factors, by the uses of delocalised pi-electrons that this aromatic provides in active sites and binding motifs outweighs the selection pressure for UV transparency. This trade-off explains the lack of conclusive evidence for a UV transparent selection pressure. We suggest that this trade-off applies to the stacked pi-electrons of DNA. It offers a solution to the long-standing paradox of why the macromolecule responsible for the faithful replication of information has high absorbance in the damaging UV radiation region of the spectrum.
...
PMID:On the plausibility of a UV transparent biochemistry. 1222 30
In Escherichia coli
photolyase
, excitation of the FAD cofactor in its semireduced radical state (FADH*) induces an electron transfer over approximately 15 A from
tryptophan
W306 to the flavin. It has been suggested that two additional tryptophans are involved in an electron transfer chain FADH* <-- W382 <-- W359 <-- W306. To test this hypothesis, we have mutated W382 into redox inert phenylalanine. Ultrafast transient absorption studies showed that, in WT
photolyase
, excited FADH* decayed with a time constant tau approximately 26 ps to fully reduced flavin and a
tryptophan
cation radical. In W382F mutant
photolyase
, the excited flavin was much longer lived (tau approximately 80 ps), and no significant amount of product was detected. We conclude that, in WT
photolyase
, excited FADH* is quenched by electron transfer from W382. On a millisecond scale, a product state with extremely low yield ( approximately 0.5% of WT) was detected in W382F mutant
photolyase
. Its spectral and kinetic features were similar to the fully reduced flavin/neutral
tryptophan
radical state in WT
photolyase
. We suggest that, in W382F mutant
photolyase
, excited FADH* is reduced by W359 at a rate that competes only poorly with the intrinsic decay of excited FADH* (tau approximately 80 ps), explaining the low product yield. Subsequently, the W359 cation radical is reduced by W306. The rate constants of electron transfer from W382 to excited FADH* in WT and from W359 to excited FADH* in W382F mutant
photolyase
were estimated and related to the donor-acceptor distances.
...
PMID:Dissection of the triple tryptophan electron transfer chain in Escherichia coli DNA photolyase: Trp382 is the primary donor in photoactivation. 1283 19
We review our work on electron transfer and proton dynamics during photoactivation in
DNA photolyase
from E. coli and discuss a recent theoretical study on this issue. In addition, we present unpublished data on the charge recombination between the fully reduced FADH(-) and the neutral (deprotonated) radical of the solvent exposed
tryptophan
W306. We found a pronounced acceleration with decreasing pH and an inverse deuterium isotope effect (k(H)/k(D)=0.35 at pL 6.5) and interpret it in a model of a fast protonation equilibrium for the W306 radical. Due to this fast equilibrium, two parallel recombination channels contribute differently at different pH values: one where reprotonation of the W306 radical is followed by electron transfer from FADH(-) (electron transfer time constant tau(et) in the order of 10-50 micros), and one where electron transfer from FADH(-) (tau(et)=25 ms) is followed by reprotonation of the W306 anion.
...
PMID:Intraprotein electron transfer and proton dynamics during photoactivation of DNA photolyase from E. coli: review and new insights from an "inverse" deuterium isotope effect. 1510 18
Transient absorption spectroscopy is used to demonstrate that the electric dipole moment of the substrate cyclobutane thymine dimer affects the charge recombination reaction between fully reduced flavin adenine dinucleotide (FADH-) and the neutral radical
tryptophan
306 (Trp306*) in Escherichia coli
DNA photolyase
. At pH 7.4, the charge recombination is slowed by a factor of 1.75 in the presence of substrate, but not at pH 5.4. Photolyase does bind substrate at pH 5.4, and it seems that this pH effect originates from the conversion of FADH- to FADH2 at lower pH. The free-energy changes calculated from the electric field parameters and from the change in electron transfer rate are in good agreement and support the idea that the substrate electric dipole is responsible for the observed change in electron transfer rate. It is expected that the substrate electric field will also modify the physiologically important from excited 1FADH- to the substrate in the DNA repair reaction.
...
PMID:Substrate electric dipole moment exerts a pH-dependent effect on electron transfer in Escherichia coli photolyase. 1514 2
Cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer (CPD) photolyases, which contain FAD as a cofactor, use light to repair CPDs. We performed structural analyses of the catalytic site of the Thermus thermophilus CPD
photolyase
-DNA complex, using FAD-induced paramagnetic relaxation enhancement (PRE). The distances between the
tryptophan
residues and the FAD calculated from the PRE agree well with those observed in the x-ray structure (with an error of <3 A). Subsequently, a single-stranded DNA containing 13C-labeled CPD was prepared, and the FAD-induced PRE of the NMR resonances from the CPD lesion in complex with the CPD
photolyase
was investigated. The distance between the FAD and the CPD calculated from the PRE is 16 +/- 3 A. The FAD-induced PRE was also observed in the CPD
photolyase
-double-stranded DNA complex. Based on these results, a model of the CPD
photolyase
-DNA complex was constructed, and the roles of Arg-201, Lys-240, Trp-247, and Trp-353 in the CPD-repair reaction are discussed.
...
PMID:NMR study of repair mechanism of DNA photolyase by FAD-induced paramagnetic relaxation enhancement. 1546 18
The resonance Raman spectrum of the
tryptophan
neutral radical in a protein, Escherichia coli
photolyase
, is reported for the first time. The data compare very well to a solution study and computational predictions, and tentative assignments are made for the observed vibrations. This important new result demonstrates the potential of time-resolved resonance Raman spectroscopy as a powerful tool to investigate these radicals in protein electron-transfer processes and in enzymatic reactions in real time.
...
PMID:Resonance Raman spectroscopy of the neutral radical Trp306 in DNA photolyase. 1546 69
The coupling of electron and proton transfer is an important controlling factor in radical proteins, such as photosystem II, ribinucleotide reductase, cytochrome oxidases, and
DNA photolyase
. This was investigated in model complexes in which a tyrosine or
tryptophan
residue was oxidized by a laser-flash generated trisbipyridine-Ru(III) moiety in an intramolecular, proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) reaction. The PCET was found to proceed in a competition between a stepwise reaction, in which electron transfer is followed by deprotonation of the amino acid radical (ETPT), and a concerted reaction, in which both the electron and proton are transferred in a single reaction step (CEP). Moreover, we found that we could analyze the kinetic data for PCET by Marcus' theory for electron transfer. By altering the solution pH, the strength of the Ru(III) oxidant, or the identity of the amino acid, we could induce a switch between the two mechanisms and obtain quantitative data for the parameters that control which one will dominate. The characteristic pH-dependence of the CEP rate (M. Sjodin et al. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2000, 122, 3932) reflects the pH-dependence of the driving force caused by proton release to the bulk. For the pH-independent ETPT on the other hand, the driving force of the rate-determining ET step is pH-independent and smaller. On the other hand, temperature-dependent data showed that the reorganization energy was higher for CEP, while the pre-exponential factors showed no significant difference between the mechanisms. Thus, the opposing effect of the differences in driving force and reorganization energy determines which of the mechanisms will dominate. Our results show that a concerted mechanism is in general quite likely and provides a low-barrier reaction pathway for weakly exoergonic reactions. In addition, the kinetic isotope effect was much higher for CEP (kH/kD > 10) than for ETPT (kH/kD = 2), consistent with significant changes along the proton reaction coordinate in the rate-determining step of CEP.
...
PMID:Switching the redox mechanism: models for proton-coupled electron transfer from tyrosine and tryptophan. 1577 21
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