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Query: KEGG:D02011 (
FAD
)
5,530
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The carboxyl-terminal region of plant ferredoxin-NADP+ reductases is formed by an invariant alpha-helix/loop/beta-strand, culminating in a conserved tyrosine that displays extensive interaction with the prosthetic group
FAD
. We have investigated the potential role of the terminal region in reductase function, by introducing mutations and deletions on pea ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase overexpressed in Escherichia coli. Replacement of the terminal tyrosine by tryptophan, phenylalanine, serine, and glycine resulted in a 2.2-, 2.0-, 22-, and 302-fold reduction, respectively, in kcat for the
diaphorase
reaction, whereas elimination of the tyrosine caused a 846-fold decrease in kcat. Km values were largely unaffected by the substitutions. Similar results were obtained when the mutants were assayed for cytochrome c reduction, indicating that aromaticity is the most important factor to the function of the tyrosine in catalysis. The presence of the phenol ring at the carboxyl-terminal position of wild-type reductase is important, but not an absolute requirement for enzyme function or
FAD
assembly. Deletion of the alpha-helix/beta-strand region prevented reductase proper folding in the bacterial host, while shortening of the terminal region by splicing 3 amino acids at the beginning of the alpha-helix produced a moderately soluble reductase, devoid of
FAD
and enzymatic activity.
...
PMID:Probing the role of the carboxyl-terminal region of ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase by site-directed mutagenesis and deletion analysis. 836 77
Nitrate reductase from the yeast Candida nitratophila was found to contain one molecule of cytochrome b557 and one atom of molybdenum per subunit.
FAD
/haem-dependent
diaphorase
activity (haem domain) was associated with a 40 kDa tryptic fragment of the subunit. The 50 amino-terminal residues of this fragment were determined, and the sequence did not show significant similarity to deduced sequences of other nitrate reductases previously published. Increasing ionic strength in vitro had a stimulatory effect on enzymic activity via stimulation of the molybdenum-dependent terminal nitrate-reducing activity. Stimulation of activity by exogenous protein (bovine serum albumin or casein) also appeared to be an ionic effect. Stimulation of catalytic activity by phosphate was a separate effect.
...
PMID:Further characterization of the assimilatory nitrate reductase from the yeast Candida nitratophila. 847 56
To investigate the functional role of the cysteine residues present in the spinach ferredoxin-NADP+ oxidoreductase, we individually replaced each of the five cysteine residues with serine using site-directed mutagenesis. All of the mutant reductases were correctly assembled in Escherichia coli except for the C42S mutant protein. C114S and C137S mutant enzymes apparently showed structural and kinetic properties very similar to those of the wild-type reductase. However, C272S and C132S mutations yielded enzymes with a decreased catalytic activity in the ferredoxin-dependent reaction (14 and 31% of the wild type, respectively). Whereas the C132S was fully competent in the
diaphorase
reaction, the C272S mutant flavoprotein showed a 35-fold reduction in catalytic efficiency with respect to the wild-type enzyme (0.4 versus 14.28 microM-1 s-1) due to a substantial decrease of kcat. NADP+ binding by the C272S mutant enzyme was apparently quantitatively the same (Kd = 37 microM) but qualitatively different, as shown by the differential spectrum. Stopped-flow experiments showed that the enzyme-
FAD
reduction rate was considerably decreased in the C272S mutant reductase, along with a much lower yield of the charge-transfer transient species. It is inferred from these data that the charge transfer (
FAD
-NADPH) between the reductase and NADPH is required for hydride transfer from the pyridine nucleotide to flavin to occur with a rate compatible with catalysis.
...
PMID:The role of cysteine residues of spinach ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase As assessed by site-directed mutagenesis. 851 83
Incubation of either Chlorella nitrate reductase or the recombinant flavin domain of spinach nitrate reductase with reagents specific for modification of cysteine residues, such as N-ethylmaleimide, resulted in a time-dependent inactivation of NADH:ferricyanide reductase activity which could be prevented by incubation in the presence of NADH. At 25 degrees C and employing a fixed enzyme:modifier ratio, the rate of inactivation for both the Chlorella and spinach enzymes followed the order p-chloromercuribenzoate > methyl methanethiosulfonate > 2-(4'-maleimidylanilino)naphthalene-6-sulfonic acid > N-ethylmaleimide. For the spinach flavin domain, inactivation by methyl methanethiosulfonate or p-chloromercuribenzoate was found to be concentration independent suggesting the absence of nonspecific modifications. Initial rate studies of the methyl methanethiosulfonate-modified flavin domain indicated a reduction in NADH:ferricyanide activity (Vmax) from 85 to 44 micromol NADH consumed/min/nmol
FAD
and an increase in the Km for NADH from 12 to 35 microM when compared to the native enzyme, confirming a role for cysteine residue(s) in maintaining
diaphorase
activity. Site-directed mutagenesis of the four individual cysteines (residues 17, 54, 62, and 240) in the recombinant spinach flavin domain resulted in mutant proteins with visible and CD spectra very similar to those of the wild-type domain. Initial rate studies indicated that only substitutions of serine for cysteine 240 decreased
diaphorase
activity with maximal NADH:ferricyanide activity for the C240S mutant corresponding to 51 micromol NADH consumed/min/nmol
FAD
with a Km for NADH of 14 microM. Mutation of C240 to Ala or Gly resulted in greater loss of activity. The thermal stability of the four serine mutants was slightly decreased compared to the wild-type domain with the C62S mutant exhibiting the greatest instability. In contrast to the effects on
diaphorase
activity, square wave voltammetric studies indicated changes in the oxidation-reduction midpoint potential for the
FAD
/FADH2 couple in the C54S (E0'= -197 mV), C62S (E0' = -226 mV), and C240S (E0' = -219 mV) mutants compared to the wild-type domain (E0' = -268 mV). These results indicate that of the four cysteine residues in the spinach nitrate reductase flavin domain, only C240 plays a role in maintaining
diaphorase
activity, while C54 has the greatest influence on flavin redox potential and that no correlation between changes in catalytic activity and flavin redox potential was observed.
...
PMID:Thiol modification and site directed mutagenesis of the flavin domain of spinach NADH:nitrate reductase. 866 Jun 90
The leukocyte iodonitrotetrazolium violet (INT) reductase activity of disrupted bovine polymorphonuclear neutrophils is closely associated with the activation of the O2(-)-generating NADPH oxidase in a cell-free system. It is dependent upon NADPH, cytosolic factors, and amphiphiles (such as arachidonate), the same factors required for O2- generation. Both O2- generation and INT reductase activity are inhibited by phenylarsine oxide, an inhibitor of the activation of the NADPH oxidase [Li, J., & Guillory, R. J. (1997) J. Biochem. Mol. Biol. Biophys. (in press)]. In this report, the INT
diaphorase
activity of disrupted bovine polymorphonuclear neutrophils is shown to be resolved by DEAE-Sepharose chromatography into two fractions: an NADPH-cytochrome c reductase-containing fraction and a cytochrome b558-associated fraction. The
diaphorase
activity in the NADPH-cytochrome c reductase-containing portion is not dependent upon the presence of an amphiphile or phospholipid and is not associated with O2- generation. Upon incorporation into liposomes, the cytochrome b558-containing fraction demonstrates high O2- and INT reductase activities in the presence of cytosolic factors. Both O2- generation and INT reductase activities are SDS and
FAD
dependent and further stimulated by GTPgammaS. Phenylarsine oxide inhibits both O2- generation and INT reductase activities when added prior to activation by SDS. With the cytochrome b-containing liposomes, the Km values (O2- formation) for NADPH and NADH are 27.2 microM and 810 microM, and for INT reductase the Km values are 27.5 microM and 1017 microM, respectively. Under anaerobic conditions and thus in the absence of O2- formation, the NADPH-dependent INT reductase activity does not change, indicating that the dye reduction is not due to its direct reduction by O2 anion but is an intrinsic property of the superoxide-generating NADPH oxidase. Cytochrome b558 is the essential component of the NADPH oxidase and contains all the redox centers necessary for electron flow between NADPH and oxygen. The correlation of the activation and inhibition patterns for O2- generation and INT reduction by cytochrome b558 incorporated into artificial liposomes strongly indicates that the two activities are associated with the same membrane protein, cytochrome b558.
...
PMID:Purified leukocyte cytochrome b558 incorporated into liposomes catalyzes a cytosolic factor dependent diaphorase activity. 915 36
The quaternary behaviour of DT
diaphorase
in solution has been investigated by hydrodynamics under a range of conditions. At neutral pH DT
diaphorase
is shown to exist as a tightly-associated homodimer in a dimer-tetramer equilibrium. Concentrations of the chaotropic agent potassium thiocyanate (KSCN) of greater than 200 mM result in irreversible loss of the
FAD
cofactor and denaturation of the homodimer though this agent appears to be ineffective in disrupting intermolecular association. These data conform to a model in which under extreme dissociation conditions, the folded dimer is in equilibrium with the unfolded monomer and are consistent with evidence from the X-ray structure and proposed catalytic mechanism where both monomers are catalytically interdependent.
...
PMID:DT diaphorase exists as a dimer-tetramer equilibrium in solution. 918 64
The assimilatory nitrate reductase from the phototrophic bacterium Rhodobacter capsulatus has been purified to electrophoretic homogeneity and its molecular and kinetic parameters determined. The native nitrate reductase is a dimer of 144 kDa composed of two subunits of 46 and 95 kDa. The purified enzyme catalyzes the electron transfer from NADH, reduced bromophenol blue or reduced viologens to nitrate. The nitrate reductase contains 1 mol
FAD
per mole of enzyme and also reduces cytochrome c or dichlorophenol indophenol with NADH as the electron donor. The
diaphorase
activity is located in the small subunit.
...
PMID:The assimilatory nitrate reductase from the phototrophic bacterium, Rhodobacter capsulatus E1F1, is a flavoprotein. 930 29
The petH genes encoding ferredoxin:NADP+ reductase (FNR) from two Anabaena species (PCC 7119 and ATCC 29413) were cloned and overexpressed in E. coli. Several positively charged residues (Arg, Lys) have been implicated to be involved in ferredoxin binding and electron transfer by cross-linking, chemical modification and protection experiments, and crystallographic studies. The following substitutions were introduced by site-directed mutagenesis: R153Q, K209Q, K212Q, R214Q, K275N, K430Q and K431Q in Anabaena 29413 FNR, and R153E, K209E, K212E, R214E, K275E, R401E, K427E, and K431E in Anabaena 7119 FNR. Comparison of the
diaphorase
activities, the specific rates of ferredoxin dependent NADP(+)-photoreduction and cytochrome c reduction catalyzed by FNR showed that all these amino acid residues were required for efficient electron transfer between FNR and ferredoxin. Replacement of any one of these basic residues produced a much more pronounced effect on the cytochrome c reductase activity, where FNR, reduced by NADPH, acted as electron donor, than in the reduction of NADP+ by photosystem I via FNR. A mutation involving the replacement of positive charge by a neutral amide produced in all cases a smaller inhibitory effect on the activity than a charge reversal mutation. In addition, it has been found that R214 was necessary for stable integration of the non covalently bound
FAD
-cofactor.
...
PMID:Interaction of positively charged amino acid residues of recombinant, cyanobacterial ferredoxin:NADP+ reductase with ferredoxin probed by site directed mutagenesis. 951 8
Recently a newly discovered pyridine nucleotide-disulfide oxidoreductase was reported to be essential for the degradation of epoxyalkanes by the Xanthobacter Py2 [Swaving, J., De Bont, J. A. M., Westphal, A. & De Kok, A. (1996) J. Bacteriol. 178, 6644-6646]. The disulfide oxidoreductase has now been purified from propene-grown Xanthobacter Py2. This enzyme (component II) is a NADPH-dependent
FAD
-containing homodimeric protein. The physiological substrate for this enzyme is unknown. The enzyme was active with the following dithiol substrates in decreasing order: 1,3-propanedithiol, reduced lipoamide and dithiothreitol, and inactive with glutathione and monothiols. In the reversed direction, only activity with 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoate) could be measured. Compared with other disulfide reductases it has a high activity with 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoate) and a low
diaphorase
and oxidase activity. Steady-state kinetic studies at pH 8.5 with 1,3-propanedithiol show that the enzyme operates by a ternary complex mechanism in the direction of NADP+ reduction. Anaerobic incubation of the enzyme with 1,3-propanedithiol resulted in slow reduction of the enzyme to yield the thiolate-
FAD
charge-transfer complex, the rate depending on the pH. At pH 7, where reduction was not detectable within 2 h, rapid mixing of NADP+ with the enzyme-propanedithiol mixture resulted in the formation of a complex between the reduced enzyme and NADP+ within the dead time of the instrument (5.6 ms). This is followed by slow formation of NADPH, concomitant with the appearance of the flavin C(4a)-thiol adduct, as judged from the spectral changes. This suggests that the rate-limiting step is the transfer of a hydride ion from the half-reduced enzyme to NADP+. Stopped-flow experiments involving reduction by NADPH show a biphasic behavior. The rapid formation (k(obs) = 40 s(-1)) of a transient intermediate with little absorption decrease at 460 nm and long wavelength absorption was followed by the slow formation (k(obs) = 4 s(-1)) of a species characterized as the thiolate-
FAD
charge-transfer complex with bound NADP+. Some formation of the
FAD
C(4a)-thiol adduct was also observed. Photoreduction in the presence of deazaflavin results in rapid bleaching at 450 nm, followed by the slow formation of a stable semiquinone. Full reduction could not be achieved, either by photoreduction or with NADPH, and was incomplete even with dithionite or NADPH in the presence of arsenite. The results indicate a low redox potential of the
FAD
and a slow rate of electron transfer from the pyridine nucleotide to the redox active disulfide and vice versa. From a sequence alignment with other disulfide reductases, it appears that the active site His-Glu diad is absent in this enzyme. The kinetic and spectral features described above will be discussed in this context.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of a flavoprotein involved in the degradation of epoxyalkanes by Xanthobacter Py2. 979 15
A specific dehydrogenase, different from nicotinic acid hydroxylase, was induced during growth of Eubacterium barkeri on xanthine. The protein designated as xanthine dehydrogenase was enriched 39-fold to apparent homogeneity using a three-step purification scheme. It exhibited an NADP-dependent specific activity of 164 micromol xanthine oxidized per min and per mg of protein. In addition it showed an NADPH-dependent oxidase and
diaphorase
activity. A molecular mass of 530 kDa was determined for the native enzyme and SDS/PAGE revealed three types of subunits with molecular masses of 17.5, 30 and 81 kDa indicating a dodecameric native structure. Molybdopterin was identified as the molybdenum-complexing cofactor using activity reconstitution experiments and fluorescence measurements after KI/I2 oxidation. The molecular mass of the cofactor indicated that it is of the dinucleotide type. The enzyme contained iron, acid-labile sulfur, molybdenum, tungsten, selenium and
FAD
at molar ratios of 17.5, 18.4, 2.3, 1.1, 0.95 and 2.8 per mol of native enzyme. Xanthine dehydrogenase was inactivated upon incubation with arsenite, cyanide and different purine analogs. Reconstitution experiments of xanthine dehydrogenase activity by addition of selenide and selenite performed with cyanide-inactivated enzyme and with chloramphenicol-treated cells, respectively, indicated that selenium is not attached to the protein in a covalently bound form such as selenocysteine.
...
PMID:Selenium-containing xanthine dehydrogenase from Eubacterium barkeri. 1049 Nov 34
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