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Query: UNIPROT:O14944 (EPR)
13,097 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Anaerobic reduction of the flavoprotein adrenodoxin reductase with NADPH yields a spectrum with long wavelength absorbance, 750 nm and higher. No EPR signal is observed. This spectrum is produced by titration of oxidized adrenodoxin reductase with NADPH, or of dithionite-reduced adrenodoxin reductase with NADP+. Both titrations yield a sharp endpoint at 1 NADP(H) added per flavin. Reduction with other reductants, including dithionite, excess NADH, and catalytic NADP+ with an NADPH generating system, yields a typical fully reduced flavin spectrum, without long wavelength absorbance. The species formed on NADPH reduction appears to be a two-electron-containing complex, with a low dissociation constant, between reduced adrenodoxin reductase and NADP+, designated ARH2-NADP+. Titration of dithionite-reduced adrenodoxin reductase with NADPH also produces a distinctive spectrum, with a sharp endpoint at 1 NADPH added per reduced flavin, indicating formation of a four-electron-containing complex between reduced adrenodoxin reductase and NADPH. Titration of adrenodoxin reductase with NADH, instead of NADPH, provides a curved titration plot rather than the sharp break seen with NADPH, and permits calculation of a potential for the AR/ARH2 couple of -0.291 V, close to that of NAD(P)H (-0.316 V). Oxidized adrenodoxin reductase binds NADP+ much more weakly (Kdiss=1.4 X 10(-5) M) than does reduced adrenodoxin reductase, with a single binding site. The preferential binding of NADP+ to reduced enzyme permits prediction of a more positive oxidation-reduction potential of the flavoprotein in the presence of NADP+; a change of about + 0.1 V has been demonstrated by titration with safranine T. From this alteration in potential, a Kdiss of 1.0 X 10(-8) M for binding of NADP+ to reduced adrenodoxin reductase is calculated. It is concluded that the strong binding of NADP+ to reduced adrenodoxin reductase provides the thermodynamic driving force for formation of a fully reduced flavoprotein form under conditions wherein incomplete reduction would otherwise be expected. Stopped flow studies demonstrate that reduction of adrenodoxin reductase by equimolar NADPH to form the ARH2-NADP+ complex is first order (k=28 s-1). When a large excess of NADPH is used, a second apparently first order process is observed (k=4.25 s-1), which is interpreted as replacement of NADPH for NADP+ in the ARH2-NADP+ complex. Comparison of these rate constants to catalytic flavin turnover numbers for reduction of various oxidants by NADPH, suggests an ordered sequential mechanism in which reduction of oxidant is accomplished by the ARH2-NADP+ complex, followed by dissociation of NADP+. The absolute dependence of NADPH-cytochrome c reduction on both adrenodoxin reductase and adrenodoxin is confirmed...
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PMID:Adrenodoxin reductase. Properties of the complexes of reduced enzyme with NADP+ and NADPH. 0 75

Adrenodoxin reductase and adrenodoxin have been shown (Chu, J.-W., and Kimura, T. (1973) J. Biol. Chem. 248, 5183-5187) to form a low dissociation constant, 1:1 complex when both proteins are in the oxidized form. We have found that when adrenodoxin: adrenodoxin reductase ratios are varied by increasing the adrenodoxin concentration, with adrenodoxin reductase held constant, an increasing rate of cytochrome c reduction, with NADPH as reductant, is seen up to a ratio of 1:1, indicating that cytochrome c reduction occurs via the protein-protein complex. Spectra observed during titration of this protein-protein complex with NADH were resolved into components by the linear programming method, using a computer program written in Fortran IV. Analysis of the data has shown that the flavoprotein is reduced prior to the iron sulfur protein, and that the midpoint oxidation-reduction potentials (pH 7.5) of the two proteins are -295 and -331 mV, respectively, when both are present in the complex. Complex formation does not alter the potential of adrenodoxin reductase, but changes that of adrenodoxin by -40 mV. Equilibrium constants derived from potential measurements show that the strength of the protein-protein interaction in the complex is unaltered by reduction of adrenodoxin reductase, but is decreased by about 1 kcal due to reduction of adrenodoxin. The low dissociation constants for both oxidized reduced forms of the adrenodoxin reductase-adrenodoxin complex indicate that the complex must remain associated throughout its catalytic cycle. Titration of the adrenodoxin reductase-adrenodoxin complex with the physiologic reductant, NADPH, was followed by EPR and visible spectra, and yielded an order of reduction of the components identical with that seen when NADH was used as reductant. Reduction of the protein-protein complex with NADPH yielded a ternary complex between NADP+, flavoprotein, and iron sulfur protein, with the two electrons located in a "charge transfer" complex between flavoprotein and pyridine nucleotide.
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PMID:Adrenodoxin reductase-adrenodexin complex. 1 71

The reaction process of adrenodoxin reductase with NADPH and NADH were investigated. The appearance of new intermediate with a broad absorption band at around 520 nm has been detected by rapid-scan stopped-flow spectrophotometry. Although the formation of this intermediate is more rapid with NADPH than with NADH, the rates of the subsequent decay to the fully reduced state are almost identical (Kobs values were 20.5 and 16.0s-1). These results indicate that the new intermediate is the complex formed between the oxidized enzyme and reduced pyridine nucleotide (enzyme-substrate complex), and that subsequent decay of the intermidiate is caused by a two-electron transfer process from the reduced pyridine nucleotide to the enzyme flavin. On the other hand, spectral and kinetic properties in the steady state of the reoxidation reaction of the enzyme reduced with NADPH and NADH were somewhat different. The rate of reoxidation of the enzyme under aerobic conditions from the reduced state to the oxidized state was 6.5 times faster when a 10-fold molar excess of NADH was used than when NADPH of the same concentration was used. This result is consistent with the fact that the NADH-dependent oxidase activity was 6.4 times greater than that dependent on NADPH. During reoxidation of the reduced enzyme under aerobic conditions in the presence of an excess of NADPH or NADH, the EPR spectra indicated the formation of the flavin semiquinone radical species. Similarly, the formation of semiquinone was observed in the absorption spectrum with either NADPH or NADH under the same conditions as in the EPR measurement. The intensity of the semiquinone signal on EPR was considerably smaller with NADH than with NADPH. These results suggest that NADP+ complex with the enzyme semiquinone protects the radical from oxidation by oxygen to a greater extent than NAD+, and consequently the semiquinone is easier to detect with NADPH than with NADH.
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PMID:Differences between the reactivities of two pyridine nucleotides in the rapid reduction process and the reoxidation process of adrenodoxin reductase. 3 65

As determined by EPR, malic enzyme from pigeon liver binds Mn2+ with a half-site stoichiometry of two tight binding sites (KD=6 to 10 mum) per enzyme tetramer and at two to four weak binding sites (KD=0.43 to 1.34 mM). The activation of malic enzyme by Mn2+ at high levels of L-malate shows biphasic kinetics yielding two activator constants for Mn2+. The dissociation constants of Mn2+ for both classes of sites are of the same order as the kinetically determined activator constants of Mn2+, indicating active site binding at both classes of binding sites. The binding of Mn2+ to the tight sites enhances the paramagnetic effect of Mn2+ on 1/T1 of water protons by a factor (epsilon) of 17, while binding at the weak sites yields a smaller epsilon of 11. The coenzymes TPN and TPNH have no effects on epsilon, while the carboxylic acid substrates L-malate and pyruvate and the inhibitors D-malate and oxalate significantly decrease epsilon. TPNH causes a 38-fold tightening of binding of the substrate L-malate to the enzyme-Mn2+ complex, consistent with the previously described highly ordered kinetic scheme, but only a 2-fold tightening of binding of the competitive inhibitor D-malate. The dissociation constant of L-malate from the quaternary E-Mn2+-TPNH-L-malate complex (32 muM) agrees with the Km of L-malate (25 muM), indicating active site binding. The dissociation constants of pyruvate from the ternary E-Mn2+-pyruvate complex (12 mM) and from the quaternary E-Mn2+-TPN-pyruvate complex (20 mM) are similar to the Km of pyruvate (5 mM), also indicating active site binding and a less highly ordered kinetic scheme for the reactions of pyruvate than for those of L-malate. Analysis of the frequency dependence of 1/T1 of water protons indicates that two fast exchanging water ligands remain coordinated to Mn2+ in the binary E-Mn2+ complex. The binding of the substrates L-malate and pyruvate and of the transition state analog oxalate to the E-Mn2+ complex decrease the number of fast exchanging water ligands on Mn2+ by approximately 1, but the binding of D-malate has no significant effect on this parameter, indicating the occlusion or replacement of a water ligand of the enzyme-bound Mn2+ by a properly oriented substituent on C-2 of the substrate. Occlusion rather than replacement of a water ligand by pyruvate is established by studies of 1/T1 of 13COO- and 13CO-enriched pyruvate which indicate second sphere Mn2+ to pyruvate distances of 4.6 A (COO-) and 4.8 A (CO) in the ternary enzyme-Mn2+-pyruvate complex. Formation of the quaternary complex with TPN increases these distances by 0.8 A, indicating the participation of a second sphere enzyme-Mn2+-(H2O)-pyruvate complex in catalysis. Thus, malic enzyme, like five other enzymes which utilize metals to polarize carbonyl groups, forms a second sphere complex with its substrate.
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PMID:Mechanism of malic enzyme from pigeon liver. Magnetic resonance and kinetic studies of the role of Mn2+. 98 26

The green sulfur bacterium Chlorobium vibrioforme was cultured in the presence of ethylene to selectively inhibit the synthesis of the chlorosome antenna BChl d. Use of these cells as starting material simplified the isolation of a photoactive antenna-depleted membrane fraction without the use of high concentrations of detergents. The preparation had a BChl alpha/P840 of 50, and the spectral properties were similar to those of preparations isolated from cells grown with a normal complement of chlorosomes. The membrane preparation was active in NADP+ photoreduction. This indicated that the fraction contained reaction centers with complete electron-transfer sequences which were then characterized further by flash kinetic spectrophotometry and EPR. We confirmed that cytochrome c553 is the endogenous donor to P840+, and at room temperature we observed a recombination reaction between the reduced terminal acceptor and P840+ with a t1/2 = 7 ms. Oxidative degradation of iron-sulfur centers using low concentrations of chaotropic salts introduced a faster recombination reaction of t1/2 = 50 microseconds which was lost at higher concentrations of chaotrope, indicating the participation of another iron-sulfur redox center earlier than the terminal acceptor. Cluster insertion using ferric chloride and sodium sulfide in the presence of 2-mercaptoethanol restored both the 50-microseconds and 7-ms recombination reactions, allowing definitive assignments of these centers as iron-sulfur centers. Following the suggestion of Nitschke et al. [(1990) Biochemistry 29, 3834-3842], we associate these two kinetic phases to back-reactions between P840+ and iron-sulfur centers FX and FAFB, respectively. The iron-sulfur cluster degradation and reconstitution protocols also led to inhibition and restoration of NADP+ photoreduction by the membrane preparation, providing unequivocal evidence for the function of the centers FX and FAFB in the physiological electron-transfer sequence on the acceptor side of the Chlorobium reaction center. At 77 K we observed a recombination reaction of t1/2 = 20 ms that we suggest occurs between Fx- and P840+. Degradation of the iron-sulfur clusters resulted in replacement of the 20-ms phase with a faster reaction of t1/2 = 80 microseconds that was most likely a recombination between the early acceptor A1- and P840+ or decay of 3P840. Analysis of the iron-sulfur centers in the preparation by EPR at cryogenic temperature supports the optical measurements. EPR signals originating from the terminal acceptor(s) were not observed following treatment of the membrane preparation by chaotropes, and a modified signal was restored following cluster reinsertion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Photosynthetic electron-transfer reactions in the green sulfur bacterium Chlorobium vibrioforme: evidence for the functional involvement of iron-sulfur redox centers on the acceptor side of the reaction center. 131 61

The anaerobic archaebacterium, Pyrococcus furiosus, grows optimally at 100 degrees C by a fermentative-type metabolism in which H2, CO2, and organic acids are end products. The growth of this organism is stimulated by tungsten, and, from it, a novel, red-colored, tungsten-iron-sulfur protein, abbreviated RTP, has been purified (Mukund, S., and Adams, M. W. W. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 11508-11516). RTP (Mr approximately 85,000) contained approximately 1W, 7Fe, and 5 acid-labile sulfide atoms/molecule and exhibited unique EPR properties. The physiological function of the protein, however, was unknown. We show here that RTP is an inactive form of an aldehyde ferredoxin oxidoreductase (AOR). The active enzyme was obtained by rapid purification under anaerobic conditions using buffers containing dithiothreitol and glycerol. AOR catalyzed the oxidation of a range of aliphatic aldehydes with an optimum temperature for activity above 90 degrees C, but it did not oxidize glucose or glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate, nor reduce NAD(P), and its activity was independent of CoA. The active (AOR) and inactive (RTP) forms of the enzyme were indistinguishable in their contents of metals and acid-labile sulfide and in their EPR properties. The latter are though to originate from two nonidentical and spin-coupled iron-sulfur clusters, whereas the tungsten in this enzyme, which was not detectable by EPR, appears to be present as a novel pterin cofactor. Inhibition and activation studies indicated that AOR contains a catalytically essential W-SH group that is not present in RTP, the inactive form. AOR is a new type of aldehyde-oxidizing enzyme and is the first aldehyde oxidoreductase to be purified from an archaebacterium or a nonactogenic anaerobic bacterium. Its physiological role in P. furiosus is proposed as the oxidation of glyceraldehyde to glycerate in a unique, partially nonphosphorylated, glycolytic pathway that generates acetyl-CoA from glucose without the participation of nicotinamide nucleotides.
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PMID:The novel tungsten-iron-sulfur protein of the hyperthermophilic archaebacterium, Pyrococcus furiosus, is an aldehyde ferredoxin oxidoreductase. Evidence for its participation in a unique glycolytic pathway. 190 73

A method for the quantitation of the superoxide radical generation rate (V) in murine liver nuclei by the oxidation of 1-hydroxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-4-oxo-piperidine O2-. radicals with the formation of a stable nitroxyl radical recorded by the EPR method, has been developed. It was shown that NADP- and NADPH-dependent superoxide radical generation is suppressed by superoxide dismutase (approximately by 90%). The Km values for NADH and NADPH are 1.5 x 10(-6) and 4.4 x 10(-7) M, respectively; the maximal rate (0.2 nmol.min-1.mg protein-1) is equal for both substrates. Cyanide (greater than 2 mM) causes a practically complete inhibition of the O2-. generation by both substrates. It is suggested that there exists a single readily autooxidized site of O2-. generation by both substrates for NADH- and NADPH-dependent site of the electron transport chain in nuclear membranes.
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PMID:[NADH- and NADPH-dependent formation of superoxide radicals in liver nuclei]. 255 93

Reduced pyridine nucleotide dependent glutamate synthase [L-glutamate: NADP+ oxidoreductase (transaminating); EC 1.4.1.13] was purified to homogeneity from Bacillus subtilis PCI 219. The molecular weight of the enzyme was 210,000, and the enzyme was composed of two nonidentical subunits with molecular weights of 160,000 and 56,000. The absorption and CD spectra of the enzyme indicated that the enzyme is an iron-sulfur flavoprotein. The enzyme was found to contain 1:1:7.4:8.7 mol of FMN, FAD, iron atoms, and acid-labile sulfur atoms per mol (MW 210,000). EPR measurements of the NADPH-reduced enzyme at 77K revealed the formation of a stable flavin semiquinone intermediate; however, none of the signals originating from the iron-sulfur cluster was observed. Still at 4.2K the EPR signals in the region of g = 2, which may originate from the paramagnetic iron-sulfur cluster, were clearly observed for both the isolated and dithionite-reduced states of the enzyme. The enzyme exhibited a wide coenzyme specificity, and either NADPH or NADH could be used as electron donor, although the latter was less effective. The enzyme activity was also expressed when ammonium chloride was substituted for L-glutamine. The optimum pHs for NADPH-Gln-, NADH-Gln-, and NADPH-NH3-dependent reactions were 7.8, 6.9, and 9.4, respectively. The apoenzyme exhibited substantial inactivation of the Gln-dependent activities but still retained the NH3-dependent activities. Enzyme reduction-oxidation experiments, initial velocity experiments, and product inhibition patterns revealed that both the NADPH-Gln- and NADH-Gln-dependent reactions coincided with the two-site ping-pong uni-uni bi-bi kinetic mechanism, while the NADPH-NH3-dependent reaction deviated from Michaelis-Menten kinetics. The Gln-dependent activities were inhibited by several TCA cycle members, especially L-malate and fumarate, as well as L-methionine-SR-sulfoximine, pyridoxal-5'-phosphate, and pCMB. The regulation of the glutamate synthase, glutamine synthetase [EC 6.3.1.2], and glutamate dehydrogenase [EC 1.4.1.3] activities was examined with cultures of cells grown with various nitrogen and carbon sources.
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PMID:Glutamate synthase from Bacillus subtilis PCI 219. 301 66

Two different fractions were present in crystalline bovine liver catalase, and could be resolved using dye-ligand affinity chromatography with Red-A Matrex gel containing Procion HE 3B. The major part (alpha) was not adsorbed on this gel. The second fraction (beta) was firmly adsorbed to the gel, and could be eluted either by high salt or by NADPH in the micromolar range. Elution of catalase beta was also obtained with NADH, NADP+, and ADP at higher concentration. Fractions alpha and beta displayed no detectable difference in specific activity, stability to heat, and light absorption data. It is suggested that the difference in behavior between alpha and beta is related to the binding of NADPH to the mammalian catalase [H. N. Kirkman and G. F. Gaetani (1984) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 81, 4343-4347], and that the beta fraction corresponds to the enzyme molecules that have at least one free site for NADPH binding. Modifications of catalase molecules in the presence of dithioerythritol (DTE) were examined using light absorption and EPR data. Thiol induced changes that corresponded to the formation of catalase complex II. They were partially reversed by NADPH at very low level, and the dinucleotide appeared to be oxidized in this process. DTE-treated bovine catalase was totally adsorbed on the Red-A Matrex columns, and could be eluted as fraction beta. Similar spectral changes in the presence of DTE and NADPH were displayed by a bacterial catalase from Proteus mirabilis. This enzyme was also able to oxidize NADPH, but was not adsorbed by Red-A Matrex. This work suggests that dye-affinity chromatography provides a very convenient tool for isolating dinucleotide-depleted catalase from bovine liver, facilitating further study of the physiological function of this cofactor within the enzyme.
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PMID:Interaction between pyridine adenine dinucleotides and bovine liver catalase: a chromatographic and spectral study. 301 30

The effects of two molecular forms of water-soluble ferredoxin (Fd I and Fd II) on the kinetics of electron transport in bean chloroplasts (class B) were studied. The light-induced redox transitions of the photosystem I reaction center P700 were measured by the intensity of the EPR signal I produced by P700+. Both forms of ferredoxin, Fd I and Fd II, when added to the chloroplasts in catalytic amounts, stimulate the light-induced electron transfer from P700 to NADP+. Nevertheless, Fd I is a better mediator of the back reactions from NADPH to P700+. This electron transfer pathway is sensitive to the cyclic electron transport inhibitor, antimycin A, and to DCMU inhibitor of electron transport between photosystem II and plastoquinone. It may be concluded that the two molecular forms of ferredoxin, Fd I and Fd II, differ in their ability to catalyze cyclic electron transport in photosystem I. The role of Fd I and Fd II in regulation of electron transport at the acceptor site of photosystem I is discussed.
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PMID:[Two molecular forms of pea ferredoxin in the electron transport chain of chloroplasts]. 629 14


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