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Query: UMLS:C0027960 (
mole
)
21,279
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Chromatography on DEAE-cellulose and gel filtration on Sephadex revealed that pyrazon dioxygenase from pyrazon-degrading bacteria consists of three different enzyme components. No component alone oxidizes the phenyl moiety of pyrazon, only when the three components are combined can oxidation be detected. Following electron paramagnetic resonance and ultraviolet measurements the protein nature of the three components was determined: component A1 (molecular weight about 180000,red-brown in colour) is an iron-sulphur protein. The existence of approximately two moles of iron and two moles of inorganic sulphur per
mole
of protein was demonstrated. This enzyme component was purified to homogeneity in disc electrophoresis. Component A2 is a yellow protein of a molecular weight of about 67000. FAD was shown to be the prosthetic group of this protein. Component B (molecular weight about 12000, brown in colour) is a protein of the
ferredoxin
type, which was purified to homogeneity, as demonstrated by disc electrophoresis. A hypothetical scheme for the cooperation of the three components is proposed: component A2 accepts as cosubstrate NADH and functions as a ferredoxin reductase. The
ferredoxin
, component B, has the function of an electron carrier. The conversion of the substrates is effected by component A1, the terminal dioxygenase.
...
PMID:Purification and properties of pyrazon dioxygenase from pyrazon-degrading bacteria. 1 33
Two proteins (P1 and P2, with weights of 57,500 and 27,500 respectively) were isolated from Euglena gracilis. Both proteins show cyanide-insensitive superoxide dismutase activity in the "classical" superoxide dismutase assay, using xanthine-xanthine oxidase as O2.- generator. If O2.- is generated chemically (autoxidation of reduced anthraquinone), photochemically (illuminated riboflavine) or pulse radiolytically, only protein P1 but not P2 shows SOD activity. Protein P1 contains 1 g atom (determined: 0.82) iron (no Mn or Cu) per
mole
protein and may thus be defined as iron-superoxide dismutase. Protein P2, showing the spectral properties of a flavoprotein, exhibits the activities of
ferredoxin
-NADP-oxidoreductase and "diaphorase". The cyanide-insensitive SOD-activity of this Diaphorase" in the xanthine oxidase-assay for superoxide dismutase makes this classical and commonly used test unreliable for assay cyanide insensitive SOD activities. The existence of the "prokaryote-type" of superoxide dismutase (Fe-SOD) in Euglena gracilis is exceptional for an eukaryotic, autotrophically grown organisms.
...
PMID:Cyanide insensitive iron superoxide dismutase in Euglena gracilis. Comparison of the reliabilities of different test systems for superoxide dismutases. 22 43
Two techniques have been applied to the determination of the number and type (2-Fe, 4-Fe) of iron-sulfur centers in the iron-sulfur flavoprotein succinate dehydrogenase [succinate:(acceptor) oxidoreductase, EC 1.3.99.1]. One procedure uses p-CF3C6H4SH as an extrusion reagent and Fourier transform 19F nuclear magentic resonance as the method of detection and quantitation of extruded cores of these centers in the form of [Fe2S2(SRF)4]2- and [Fe4S4(SRF)4]2- (RF = p-C6H4CF3). The second procedure, interprotein core transfer, involves thiol displacement of iron-sulfur cores followed by specific core transfer to the apoproteins of Bacillus polymyxa
ferredoxin
and
adrenodoxin
. Detection and quantitation are accomplished by electron paramagnetic resonance of reduced proteins at low temperatures. Both procedures clearly show that succinate dehydrogenase contains two dimeric (Fe2S2) and one tetrameric (Fe4S4) centers per
mole
of histidyl flavin, accounting for all eight nonheme iron and eight labile sulfur atoms found by chemical analysis. These results remove uncertainties created by the less than stoichiometric amounts of binuclear centers detected by electron paramagnetic resonance after dithionite reduction and provide secure characterization of the iron-sulfur centers in this enzyme.
...
PMID:Characterization of the iron-sulfur centers in succinate dehydrogenase. 22 82
The Co- and Ru-substituted derivatives of adrenal iron-sulfur protein (
adrenodoxin
) were prepared from its apoprotein in the presence of urea, dithiothreitol, Na2S, and metal ions. Both metal-substituted proteins had 2 g-atoms each of metal and labile sulfur per
mole
of protein. The Co derivative had optical absorption maxima at 257, 264, 470, and 1430 nm with shoulders at 275, 280, 300, and 380 nm. The molar extinction coefficient per Co atom was 2.200 M-1 cm-1 at 470 nm. The Ru derivative had a broad maximum at 500 nm with a molar extinction coefficient of approximately 100 M-1 cm-1 per Ru atom. The visible chromophore of the Co- and Ru-substituted proteins with mercurials revealed that the saturation levels are 8.6 and 8.4 mol of mercurial/mol of protein. The values agree with that of the native protein within experimental errors. The tyrosyl residue at position 82 displayed a broad anomalous emission at 335 and 331 nm for the Co- and Ru-substituted proteins, respectively, as well as in the case of the native protein. There was no electron paramagnetic resonance signal of the Co derivative in a wide magnetic field at 77 degrees K. Additionally, the Co and Ru derivatives had no enzymatic activity toward NADPH-cytochrome c reduction in the presence of adrenal diaphorase (adrenodoxin reductase). There was no indication that Mn, Ni, Cu, and Os are incorporated into the apoprotein in the presence of urea. Incorporation of Fe into the protein was examined in the presence of Co or Ru. In a system containing both Fe and Ru, Fe was exclusively incorporated into the protein. In contrast to this, the reaction products from a system containing both Fe and Co were found to consist of both Fe and Co derivatives at approximately equimolar quantity.
...
PMID:Cobalt and ruthenium replacement for iron in adrenal iron-sulfur protein (adrenodoxin). Preparation and some properties. 23 19
The acetylation of spinach
ferredoxin
by acetic anhydride modified about four moles of amino groups. The absorption spectra, CD spectra, the fluorescence of sole tryptophan residue and the biological activity of acetylated
ferredoxin
were investigated. An equilibrium existed between two different states, D- and N-form, of the acetylated
ferredoxin
and was dependent on the cation concentration. D-form completely reverted to N-form upon the binding of one
mole
of cation, Na+ or Mg2+. Although the N-form was indistinguishable from native
ferredoxin
in every property tested, the D-form was significantly different from the N-form or native
ferredoxin
and was very unstable, especially at low salt concentrations. It is suggested that the amino groups might be important in maintaining the protein conformation by forming salt linkages, but may not be essential for the activity. Furthermore, since the D-form, unlike the N-form and native
ferredoxin
, was inactive in the ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase [EC 1.6.7.1] assay system and had no inhibitory effect in this system, it was considered to be incapable of forming a complex with ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase. On the other hand, the N-form of the modified
ferredoxin
was as active as native
ferredoxin
. It is suggested that amino groups of spinach
ferredoxin
are not essential for the redox reaction of
ferredoxin
or for complex formation with the reductase.
...
PMID:Chemical modification of spinach ferredoxin. Properties of acetylated spinach ferredoxin. 84 28
We have isolated an iron-sulfur proteins from a Pseudomonas species grown on glucose. This protein has different properties from the two known iron-sulfur proteins isolated from other Pseudomonas species: rubredoxin and putidaredoxin. The iron-sulfur protein was purified to homogeneity by DEAE-cellulose column chromatography and Sephadex G-75 gel filtration. The absorption spectrum of the oxidized iron-sulfur protein shows a peak at 283 nm with shoulders at about 290, 320, and 410 nm. The protein contains 4 g atoms of iron and 4 moles of labile sulfur per
mole
of protein, and has a molecular weight of approximately 14,000. The amino acid composition of the protein shows a predominance of acidic amino acids. The Pseudomonas protein was found to be active for both photosynthetic nicotinamide nucleotide reduction by chloroplasts and cytochrome c reduction by spinach ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase [EC 1.6.7.1]. On the basis of these results, this protein appears to be unique among all known ferredoxins. From an evolutionary point of view, it appears to be more closely related to Azotobacter
ferredoxin
than to Desulfovibrio
ferredoxin
.
...
PMID:Purification and properties of a four iron-four sulfur protein from a Pseudomonas species. 95 44
A
ferredoxin
has been purified from Streptomyces griseus grown in soybean flour-containing medium. The homogeneous protein has a molecular weight near 14,000 as determined by both PAGE and size exclusion chromatography. The iron and labile sulfide content is 6-7 atoms/
mole
protein. EPR spectroscopy of native S. griseus
ferredoxin
shows an isotropic signal at g = 2.01 which is typical of [3Fe-4S]1+ clusters and which quantitates to 0.9 spin/
mole
. Reduction of the
ferredoxin
by excess dithionite at pH 8.0 produces an EPR silent state with a small amount of a g = 1.95 type signal. Photoreduction in the presence of deazaflavin generates a signal typical of [4Fe-4S]1+ clusters at much higher yields (0.4-0.5 spin/
mole
) with major features at g-values of 2.06, 1.94, 1.90 and 1.88. This latter EPR signal is most similar to that seen for reduced 7Fe ferredoxins, which contain both a [3Fe-4S] and [4Fe-4S] cluster. In vitro reconstitution experiments demonstrate the ability of the S. griseus
ferredoxin
to couple electron transfer between spinach ferredoxin reductase and S. griseus cytochrome P-450soy for NADPH-dependent substrate oxidation. This represents a possible physiological function for the S. griseus
ferredoxin
, which if true, would be the first functional role demonstrated for a 7Fe
ferredoxin
.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of a 7Fe ferredoxin from Streptomyces griseus. 215 56
A [2Fe-2S]
ferredoxin
was found in Pseudomonas ovalis which was grown in a medium supplemented with glucose and ammonium sulfate. The molecular weight of the 2Fe
ferredoxin
was estimated to be 13,000. It contained 2.2 gramatoms of non-heme iron and 2.3 gramatoms of acid-labile sulfur per
mole
protein. The absorption and circular dichroism spectra were characteristic of those of [2Fe-2S] type ferredoxins, especially
adrenodoxin
and putidaredoxin. The electron paramagnetic resonance spectrum of the reduced protein showed an axial symmetry (g = 2.020, g = 1.939). The amino acid composition was determined.
...
PMID:Purification and some properties of a 2Fe ferredoxin in Pseudomonas ovalis. 254 8
Covalent modification of cytochrome P-450scc (purified from bovine adrenocortical mitochondria) with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP) was found to cause inhibition of the electron-accepting ability of this enzyme from its physiological electron donor,
adrenodoxin
, without conversion to the "P-420" form. Reaction conditions leading to the modification level of 0.82 and 2.85 PLP-Lys residues per cytochrome P-450scc molecule resulted in 60% and 98% inhibition, respectively, of electron-transfer rate from
adrenodoxin
to cytochrome P-450scc (with beta-NADPH as an electron donor via NADPH-adrenodoxin reductase and with phenyl isocyanide as the exogenous heme ligand of the cytochrome). It was found that covalent PLP modification caused a drastic decrease of cholesterol side-chain cleavage activity when the cholesterol side-chain cleavage enzyme system was reconstituted with native (or PLP-modified) cytochrome P-450scc,
adrenodoxin
, and NADPH-adrenodoxin reductase. Approximately 60% of the original enzymatic activity of cytochrome P-450scc was protected against inactivation by covalent PLP modification when 20%
mole
excess
adrenodoxin
was included during incubation with PLP. Binding affinity of substrate (cholesterol) to cytochrome P-450scc was found to be increased slightly upon covalent modification with PLP by analyzing a substrate-induced spectral change. The interaction of
adrenodoxin
with cytochrome P-450scc in the absence of substrate (cholesterol) was analyzed by difference absorption spectroscopy with a four-cuvette assembly, and the apparent dissociation constant (Ks) for
adrenodoxin
binding was found to be increased from 0.38 microM (native) to 33 microM (covalently PLP modified).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Inhibition of electron transfer from adrenodoxin to cytochrome P-450scc by chemical modification with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate: identification of adrenodoxin-binding site of cytochrome P-450scc. 281 41
Highly purified cytochrome P-450 11 beta-/18-hydroxylase and the electron carriers
adrenodoxin
and adrenodoxin reductase were prepared from porcine adrenal. When the enzyme was incubated with the electron carriers, 11-deoxycorticosterone (DOC) and NADPH, the following products were isolated and measured by HPLC: corticosterone, 18-hydroxy-11-deoxycorticosterone (18-hydroxyDOC), 18-hydroxycorticosterone and aldosterone. All of the DOC consumed by the enzyme can be accounted for by the formation of these four steroids. Aldosterone was identified by mass spectroscopy and by preparing [3H]aldosterone from [3H]corticosterone followed by recrystallization at constant specific activity after addition of authentic aldosterone. Corticosterone and 18-hydroxycorticosterone were also converted to aldosterone. Conversion of corticosterone and 18-hydroxycorticosterone to aldosterone required P-450, both electron carriers, NADPH and substrate. The reaction is inhibited by CO and metyrapone. Moreover, all three activities of the purified enzyme decline at the same rate when the enzyme is kept at room temperature for various periods of time and when the enzyme is treated with increasing concentrations of anti-11 beta-hydroxylase (IgG) before assay. It is concluded that cytochrome P-450 11 beta-/18-hydroxylase can convert DOC to aldosterone via corticosterone and 18-hydroxycorticosterone. The stoichiometry of this conversion was found to be 3 moles of NADPH, 3 moles of H+ and 3 moles of oxygen per
mole
of aldosterone produced.
...
PMID:Conversion of 11-deoxycorticosterone and corticosterone to aldosterone by cytochrome P-450 11 beta-/18-hydroxylase from porcine adrenal. 338 33
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