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Query: UNIPROT:O14944 (
EPR
)
13,097
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The properties of the [4Fe-4S]2+/+ cluster in wild-type and the A33Y variant of Pyrococcus furiosus ferredoxin have been investigated by the combination of
EPR
, variable-temperature magnetic circular dichroism (VTMCD) and resonance Raman (RR) spectroscopies. The A33Y variant involves the replacement of an
alanine
whose alpha-C is less than 4 A from one of the cluster iron atoms by a tyrosine residue. Although the spectroscopic results give no indication of tyrosyl cluster ligation, the presence of a tyrosine residue in close proximity to the cluster results in a 38-mV decrease in the midpoint potential of the [4Fe-4S]2+/+ couple and has a marked effect on the ground state properties of the reduced cluster. The mixed spin [4Fe-4S]+ cluster in the wild-type protein, 80% S = 3/2 (E/D = 0.22, D = +3.3 cm(-1)) and 20% S = 1/2 (g = 2.10, 1.87, 1.80), is converted into a homogeneous S = 3/2 (E/D = 0.30, D = -0.7 cm(-1)) form in the A33Y variant. As the first example of a pure S = 3/2 [4Fe-4S]+ cluster in a ferredoxin, this variant affords the opportunity for detailed characterization of the excited electronic properties via VTMCD studies and demonstrates that the protein environment can play a crucial role in determining the ground state properties of [4Fe-4S]+ clusters.
...
PMID:A pure S = 3/2 [Fe4S4]+ cluster in the A33Y variant of Pyrococcus furiosus ferredoxin. 1041 88
Determination of the color intensity of heated mixtures of L-
alanine
and carbohydrate degradation products revealed furan-2-carboxaldehyde and glycolaldehyde as by far the most effective color precursors.
EPR
studies demonstrated that furan-2-carboxaldehyde generated colored compounds exclusively via ionic mechanisms, whereas glycolaldehyde led to color development accompanied by intense radical formation. In agreement with literature data, these radicals were also detected in heated mixtures of L-
alanine
and pentoses or hexoses, respectively, and were identified as 1,4-dialkylpyrazinium radical cations by
EPR
as well as LC/MS measurements. Studies on the mechanisms of radical formation revealed that under the reaction conditions applied, glyoxal is formed as an early product in hexose/L-
alanine
mixtures prior to radical formation. Reductones then initiate radical formation upon reduction of glyoxal and/or glyoxal imines, formed upon reaction with the amino acid, into glycolaldehyde, which was found as the most effective radical precursor. LC/MS measurements gave evidence that these pyrazinium radicals cations are not stable but are easily transformed into hydroxylated 1,4-dialkyl-1, 4-dihydropyrazines upon oxidation and hydrolysis of intermediate diquarternary pyrazinium ions. Besides other types of color precursors, these intermediates might be involved in the formation of colored compounds in the Maillard reaction.
...
PMID:Studies on radical intermediates in the early stage of the nonenzymatic browning reaction of carbohydrates and amino acids. 1056 4
Proteolysis of hemoglobin provides an essential nutrient source for the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum during the intraerythrocytic stage of the parasite's lifecycle. Detoxification of the liberated heme occurs through a unique heme polymerization pathway, leading to the formation of hemozoin. Heme polymerization has been demonstrated in the presence of P. falciparum histidine-rich protein 2 (PfHRP2) [Sullivan, D. J., Gluzman, I. Y., and Goldberg, D. E. (1996) Science 271, 219-221]; however, the molecular role that PfHRP2 plays in this polymerization is currently unknown. PfHRP2 is a 30 kDa protein composed of several His-His-
Ala
-His-His-
Ala
-
Ala
-Asp repeats and is present in the parasite food vacuole, the site of hemoglobin degradation and heme polymerization. We found that, at pH 7.0, PfHRP2 forms a saturable complex with heme, with a PfHRP2 to heme stoichiometry of 1:50. Spectroscopic characterization of heme binding by electronic absorption, resonance Raman, and
EPR
has shown that bound hemes share remarkably similar heme environments as >95% of all bound hemes are six-coordinate, low-spin, and bis-histidyl ligated. The PfHRP2-ferric heme complex at pH 5.5 (pH of the food vacuole) has the same heme spin state and coordination as observed at pH 7.0; however, polymerization occurs as heme saturation is approached. Therefore, formation of a PfHRP2-heme complex appears to be a requisite step in the formation of hemozoin.
...
PMID:Spectroscopic characterization of the heme-binding sites in Plasmodium falciparum histidine-rich protein 2. 1060 26
Human serum transferrin is an iron-binding and -transport protein which carries iron from the blood stream into various cells. Iron is held in two deep clefts located in the N- and C-lobes by coordinating to four amino acid ligands, Asp 63, Tyr 95, Tyr 188, and His 249 (N-lobe numbering), and to two oxygens from carbonate. We have previously reported the effect on the iron-binding properties of the N-lobe following mutation of the ligands Asp 63, Tyr 95, and Tyr 188. Here we report the profound functional changes which result from mutating His 249 to
Ala
, Glu, or Gln. The results are consistent with studies done in lactoferrin which showed that the histidine ligand is critical for the stability of the iron-binding site [H. Nicholson, B. F. Anderson, T. Bland, S. C. Shewry, J. W. Tweedie, and E. N. Baker (1997) Biochemistry 36, 341-346]. In the mutant H249A, the histidine ligand is disabled, resulting in a dramatic reduction in the kinetic stability of the protein toward loss of iron. The H249E mutant releases iron three times faster than wild-type protein but shows significant changes in both
EPR
spectra and the binding of anion. This appears to be the net effect of the metal ligand substitution from a neutral histidine residue to a negative glutamate residue and the disruption of the "dilysine trigger" [MacGillivray, R. T. A., Bewley, M. C., Smith, C. A., He, Q.-Y., Mason, A. B., Woodworth, R. C., and Baker, E. N. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 1211-1216]. In the H249Q mutant, Gln 249 appears not to directly contact the iron, given the similarity in the spectroscopic properties and the lability of iron release of this mutant to the H249A mutant. Further evidence for this idea is provided by the preference of both the H249A and H249Q mutants for nitrilotriacetate rather than carbonate in binding iron, probably because NTA is able to provide a third ligation partner. An intermediate species has been identified during the kinetic interconversion between the NTA and carbonate complexes of the H249A mutant. Thus, mutation of the His 249 residue does not abolish iron binding to the transferrin N-lobe but leads to the appearance of novel iron-binding sites of varying structure and stability.
...
PMID:Mutations at the histidine 249 ligand profoundly alter the spectral and iron-binding properties of human serum transferrin N-lobe. 1068 97
Resolution of the crystal structure of the mitochondrial cytochrome bc(1) complex has indicated that the extra-membranous extrinsic domain of the iron-sulfur protein containing the 2Fe2S cluster is connected by a tether to the transmembrane helix that anchors the iron-sulfur protein to the complex. To investigate the role of this tether in the cytochrome bc(1) complex, we have mutated the conserved amino acid residues
Ala
-86,
Ala
-90,
Ala
-92, Lys-93 and Glu-95 and constructed deletion mutants DeltaVLA(88-90) and DeltaAMA(90-92) and an insertion mutant I87AAA88 in the iron-sulfur protein of the yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In cells grown at 30 degrees C, enzymatic activities of the bc(1) complex were reduced 22-56% in mutants A86L, A90I, A92C, A92R and E95R, and the deletion mutants, DeltaVLA(88-90) and DeltaAMA(90-92), while activity of the insertion mutant was reduced 90%. No loss of cytochromes b or c-c(1), detected spectrally, or the iron-sulfur protein, determined by quantitative immunoblotting, was observed in these mutants with the exception of the mutants of
Ala
-92 in which the loss of activity paralleled a loss in the amount of the iron-sulfur protein.
EPR
spectroscopy revealed no changes in the iron-sulfur cluster of mutants A86L, A90I, A92R or the deletion mutant DeltaVLA(88-90). Greater losses of both protein and activity were observed in all of the mutants of
Ala
-92 as well as in A90F grown at 37 degrees C. suggesting that these conserved
alanine
residues may be involved in maintaining the stability of the iron-sulfur protein and its assembly into the bc(1) complex. By contrast, no significant loss of iron-sulfur protein was observed in the mutants of
Ala
-86 in cells grown at either 30 degrees C or 37 degrees C despite the 50-70% loss of enzymatic activity suggesting that
Ala
-86 may play a critical role in catalysis in the bc(1) complex.
...
PMID:Mutations in the tether region of the iron-sulfur protein affect the activity and assembly of the cytochrome bc(1) complex of yeast mitochondria. 1069 48
The CuA center is a dinuclear Cu2S2(Cys) electron transfer center found in cytochrome c oxidase and nitrous oxide reductase. In a previous investigation of the equatorial histidine ligands' effect on the reduction potential, electron transfer and spectroscopic properties of the CuA center, His120 in the engineered CuA azurin was mutated to Asn, Asp, and
Ala
. The identical absorption and
EPR
spectra of these mutants indicate that a common ligand is bound to the copper center. To identify this replacement ligand, the His120Gly CuA azurin mutant was constructed and purified. Absorption and X-band
EPR
spectra show that His120Gly is similar to the other His120X (X = Asn, Asp,
Ala
) mutant proteins. Titrations with chloride, imidazole, and azide suggest that the replacement ligand is not exchangeable with exogenous ligands. The possibility of an internal amino acid acting as the replacement ligand for His120 in the His120X mutant proteins was investigated by analyzing the CuA azurin crystal structure and then converting the likely internal ligand, Asn 119, to Asp, Ser, or
Ala
in the His120Gly mutant. The double mutants H120G/Asn 119X (X = Asp, Ser, or
Ala
) displayed UV-Vis absorption and
EPR
spectra that are identical to His120Gly and the other His120X mutants, indicating that Asn119 is not the internal ligand replacing His120 in the His120X mutant proteins. These results demonstrate the remarkable stability of the dinuclear His120 mutants of CuA azurin.
...
PMID:Ligand replacement study at the His120 site of purple CuA azurin. 1071 10
A cytochrome P450 2B4 (CYP2B4) model was used to select key residues supposed to serve in interactions with NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase (P450R). Eight amino acid residues located on the surface of the hemoprotein were chosen for mutagenesis experiments with CYP2B4(Delta2-27) lacking the NH(2)-terminal signal anchor sequence. The mutated proteins were expressed in Escherichia coli, purified, and characterized by
EPR
- and CD-spectral analysis. Replacement of histidine 226 with
alanine
caused a 3.8-fold fall in the affinity for P450R with undisturbed reductive capacity of the system. Similarly, the K225A, R232A, and R253A variants exhibited P450R-directed activity that was depressed to about half that of the control enzyme, suggesting that the deletion of positive charges on the surface of CYP2B4(Delta2-27) resulted in impaired electrostatic contacts with complementary amino acids on the P450R protein. While the Y235A mutant did not show appreciably perturbed reduction activity, the conservative substitution with
alanine
of the phenylalanine residues at positions 223 and 227 gave a 2.1- to 6. 1-fold increase in the K(m) values with unchanged V(max); this was attributed to the disruption of hydrophobic forces rather than to global structural rearrangement(s) of the engineered pigments. Measurement of the stoichiometry of aerobic NADPH consumption and H(2)O(2) formation revealed the oxyferrous forms of the F223A, H226A, and F227A mutants to autoxidize more readily owing to less efficient coupling of the systems. Noteworthy, the F244A enzyme did not exhibit significant reduction activity, suggesting a pivotal role of Phe-244 in the functional coupling of P450R. The residue was predicted to constitute part of an obligatory electron transfer conduit through pi-stacking with Phe-296 located close to the heme unit. All of the residues examined reside in the putative G helix of CYP2B4, so that this domain obviously defines part of the binding site for P450R.
...
PMID:Identification of key residues in rabbit liver microsomal cytochrome P450 2B4: importance in interactions with NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase. 1073 79
The hemin complex of Hmu O, a 24-kDa soluble heme degradation enzyme in Corynebacterium diphtheriae, is coordinated axially to a neutral imidazole of a proximal histidine residue in Hmu O. To identify which of the eight histidines in Hmu O is the proximal heme ligand, we have constructed and expressed the plasmids for eight His -->
Ala
Hmu O mutants. Reconstituted with hemin, the active site structures and enzymatic activity of these mutants have been examined by
EPR
, resonance Raman, and optical absorption spectroscopy.
EPR
of the NO-bound ferrous heme-Hmu O mutant complexes reveals His(20) as the proximal heme ligand in Hmu O, and this is confirmed by resonance Raman results from the ligand-free ferrous heme-H20A. All eight His -->
Ala
mutants bind hemin stoichiometrically, proving that none of the histidines is essential for hemin-Hmu O formation. However, His(20) is crucial to Hmu O catalysis. Its absence by point mutation has inhibited the conversion of hemin to biliverdin. The ferric heme-H20A complex is pentacoordinate. Resonance Raman of the CO-bound ferrous heme-H20A corroborates this and reveals an Fe-C-O bending mode, delta(Fe-C-O), the first reported for a pentacoordinate CO-bound hemeprotein. The appearance of delta(Fe-C-O) in C. diphtheriae Hmu O H20A but not mammalian HO-1 mutant H25A indicates that the heme environment between the two heme oxygenases is different.
...
PMID:Histidine 20, the crucial proximal axial heme ligand of bacterial heme oxygenase Hmu O from Corynebacterium diphtheriae. 1075 93
Proton-translocating NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) is the largest and least understood enzyme of the respiratory chain. Complex I from bovine mitochondria consists of more than forty different polypeptides. Subunit PSST has been suggested to carry iron-sulfur center N-2 and has more recently been shown to be involved in inhibitor binding. Due to its pH-dependent midpoint potential, N-2 has been proposed to play a central role both in ubiquinone reduction and proton pumping. To obtain more insight into the functional role of PSST, we have analyzed site-directed mutants of conserved acidic residues in the PSST homologous subunit of the obligate aerobic yeast Yarrowia lipolytica. Mutations D136N and E140Q provided functional evidence that conserved acidic residues in PSST play a central role in the proton translocating mechanism of complex I and also in the interaction with the substrate ubiquinone. When Glu(89), the residue that has been suggested to be the fourth ligand of iron-sulfur center N-2 was changed to glutamine,
alanine
, or cysteine, the
EPR
spectrum revealed an unchanged amount of this redox center but was shifted and broadened in the g(z) region. This indicates that Glu(89) is not a ligand of N-2. The results are discussedin the light of structural similarities to the homologous [NiFe] hydrogenases.
...
PMID:Function of conserved acidic residues in the PSST homologue of complex I (NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase) from Yarrowia lipolytica. 1081 5
The reaction of [VO(CH3COO)2(phen)] (phen = 1,10-phenanthroline) with the sulfhydryl-containing pseudopeptides (scp), N-(2-mercaptopropionyl)glycine (H3mpg), N-(2-mercaptopropionyl)cysteine (H4m2pc), N-(3-mercaptopropionyl)cysteine (H4m3pc) and the dipeptides glycylglycine (H2glygly) and glycyl-L-
alanine
(H2glyala), in the presence of triethylamine, results in the formation of the compounds Et3NH[VO(mpg)(phen)] (1), (Et3NH)2[VO(m2pc)] (4), [(Et3NH)2[VO(m3pc) (5), [VO(glygly)(phen)] x 2CH3OH (2 x 2CH3OH) and [VO(glyala)(phen)] x CH3OH (3 x CH3OH). Evidence for the molecular connectivity in 2 x CH3OH was established by X-ray crystallography, showing the vanadium(IV) atom ligated to a tridentate glygly2- ligand at the N(amine), N(peptide) and O(carboxylato) atoms. Combination of the correlation plot of the
EPR
parameters gz versus Az, together with the additivity relationship supported the prediction of the equatorial donor atom sets of the V(IV)O2+ center at various pH values for the V(IV)O2+-glutathione system considered in this study. Model NMR studies (interaction of vanadium(V) with the scp H3mpg) showed that there is a possibility of vanadium(V) ligation to glutathione.
...
PMID:Synthetic analogs for oxovanadium(IV/V)-glutathione interaction: an NMR, EPR, synthetic and structural study of oxovanadium(IV/V) compounds with sulfhydryl-containing pseudopeptides and dipeptides. 1083 Aug 61
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