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A combined spectroscopic/computational approach has been utilized to explore the chemical origins of the active-site pKs of the structurally homologous Fe- and Mn-dependent superoxide dismutases (SODs). Absorption, circular dichroism, magnetic circular dichroism, and variable-temperature, variable-field magnetic circular dichroism spectroscopic experiments have permitted us to determine electronic transition energies and polarizations, as well as ground-state spin Hamiltonian parameters. These experimental data have been used in conjunction with semiempirical intermediate neglect of differential overlap/spectroscopic parametrization configuration interaction (INDO/S-CI) computations for evaluating hypothetical active-site models for the high-pH species generated by density functional theory (DFT) geometry optimizations. Our experimental and computational data indicate that both reduced FeSOD and oxidized MnSOD do not bind hydroxide at high pH; rather, the active-site pK for these two species is attributed to deprotonation of a second-sphere tyrosine. Conversely, our data obtained on oxidized FeSOD indicate that hydroxide binding is responsible for the observed active-site pK for this species. Intriguingly, in the Fe-substituted form of MnSOD this identical chemical event occurs at a significantly lower pH. Overall, our results suggest an important role for second-sphere amino acids in tuning the active sites' interaction with small anions and bring into question the assumption that these homologous enzymes operate by the same molecular mechanism.  相似文献   

3.
Manganese superoxide dismutases catalyze the disproportionation of the superoxide radical anion to molecular oxygen and hydrogen peroxide. Recently, atomic-resolution crystal structures of the reduced and oxidized enzymes have been reported. They show an active site with the manganese ion bound to one aspartate, three histidine residues, and a solvent molecule. In this paper, we combine crystallographic refinement with quantum mechanical methods to show that the solvent ligand is undoubtedly a water molecule in the reduced state. However, the putative oxidized structure is to a large extent reduced during data collection, so that it contains a mixture of the Mn2+ and Mn3+ structure. The crystal structures show that the Mn-bound solvent molecule accepts a hydrogen bond from the side chain of the conserved Gln-146 residue. If the solvent ligand is water, then this could lead to a steric clash, but it is avoided by the plane of water molecule forming an angle of 72 degrees to the Mn-O bond. Such a conformation is also found outside the enzyme, giving a minimal destabilization of the reduced state. We show by molecular dynamics simulations that the suggested Mn2+-H2O and Mn3+-OH- structures are stable. Moreover, we show that the superoxide substrate may bind both in the first coordination sphere of the Mn ion, opposite to the aspartate ligand, or in the second sphere, close to the conserved Tyr-34 and His-30 residues, approximately 5 A from Mn. However, the second-sphere structures are not stable in long molecular dynamics simulations. We see no difference in the coordination between the reduced and the oxidized states of the enzyme.  相似文献   

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In Fe- and Mn-dependent superoxide dismutases (SODs), second-sphere residues have been implicated in precisely tuning the metal ion reduction potential to maximize catalytic activity (Vance, C. K.; Miller, A.-F. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1998, 120, 461-467). In the present study, spectroscopic and computational methods were used to characterize three distinct Fe-bound SOD species that possess different second-coordination spheres and, consequently, Fe(3+/2+)reduction potentials that vary by approximately 1 V, namely, FeSOD, Fe-substituted MnSOD (Fe(Mn)SOD), and the Q69E FeSOD mutant. Despite having markedly different metal ion reduction potentials, FeSOD, Fe(Mn)SOD, and Q69E FeSOD exhibit virtually identical electronic absorption, circular dichroism, and magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectra in both their oxidized and reduced states. Likewise, variable-temperature, variable-field MCD data obtained for the oxidized and reduced species do not reveal any significant electronic, and thus geometric, variations within the Fe ligand environment. To gain insight into the mechanism of metal ion redox tuning, complete enzyme models for the oxidized and reduced states of all three Fe-bound SOD species were generated using combined quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) geometry optimizations. Consistent with our spectroscopic data, density functional theory computations performed on the corresponding active-site models predict that the three SOD species share similar active-site electronic structures in both their oxidized and reduced states. By using the QM/MM-optimized active-site models in conjunction with the conductor-like screening model to calculate the proton-coupled Fe(3+/2+) reduction potentials, we found that different hydrogen-bonding interactions with the conserved second-sphere Gln (changed to Glu in Q69E FeSOD) greatly perturb the p K of the Fe-bound solvent ligand and, thus, drastically affect the proton-coupled metal ion reduction potential.  相似文献   

6.
Density-functional calculations indicate that the second sphere of coordination around the metal centers of manganese and iron superoxide dismutases (MnSODs and FeSODs) plays an important role in the binding of O2(-). In these systems, O2(-) prefers to bind to Mn or Fe in end-on configurations. For human and E. coli MnSODs, the bound O2(-) forms hydrogen bonds with the tyrosine and glutamine amino acid residues in the second sphere of coordination. In the cases of E. coli and T. elongates FeSODs, hydrogen bonding occurs between the bound O2(-) and the tyrosine amino acid only because the glutamine is too far away for an effective bonding interaction. The manner in which the O2(-) binds to the metal center in MnSODs and FeSODs can affect the rate of subsequent protonation and determine the mechanism for the formation of H2O2. Both Mn- and Fe-containing superoxide dismutases contain a metal-bound solvent molecule that has been suggested to be involved in the uptake of a H+ upon reduction of the metal center [Bull, C.; Fee, J. A. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1985, 107, 3295; Miller, A.-F.; Padmakumar, K.; Sorkin, D. L.; Karapetian, A.; Vance, C. K. J. Inorg. Biochem. 2003, 93, 71]. Using density-functional theory, we confirm this suggestion and show the involvement of the second sphere of coordination in the process. We show that the oxidation of superoxide by Mn- or Fe-containing superoxide dismutases is facilitated by a cooperative effect between superoxide binding, protonation of the OH- bound to the metal, and electron transfer from the superoxide molecule to the oxidized metal. In particular, proton transfer through tyrosine-34 on the absence of a bound superoxide is uphill while, once superoxide is bound, the energetic barrier is lowered. It is this barrier that likely keeps the resting state (Mn(III)SOD) of the enzyme with a bound hydroxide, instead of a water. This work provides a model for the mechanism of reaction of superoxide with the oxidized form of the metal within Mn- and FeSODs.  相似文献   

7.
The problem of metal selectivity of iron/manganese superoxide dismutases (SODs) is addressed through the electronic structures of active sites using electron paramagnetic resonance and ligand field calculations. Studies of wild-type iron(III) SOD (FeSOD) from Escherichia coli and from Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum and iron-substituted manganese(III) SOD (Fe(sub)MnSOD) from E. coli and from Serratia marcescens are reported. EPR spectroscopy of wild-type enzymes shows transitions within all three Kramers doublets identified by their g values. From the temperature dependence of the observed transitions, the zero-field splitting is found to be negative, D = -2 +/- 0.2 cm-1. The electronic structure is typical of a distorted trigonal bipyramid, all the EPR features being reproduced by ligand field analysis. This unique and necessary electronic structure characterizes wild-type enzymes whatever their classification from the amino acid sequence into iron or manganese types, as E. coli FeSOD or M. thermoautotrophicum FeSOD. In iron-substituted manganese SODs, reduced catalytic activity is found. We describe how inhomogeneity of all reported substituted MnSODs might explain the activity decrease. EPR spectra of substituted enzymes show several overlapping components. From simulation of these spectra, one component is identified which shares the same electronic structure of the wild-type FeSODs, with the proportion depending on pH. Ligand field calculations were performed to investigate distortions of the active site geometry which induce variation of the excitation energy of the lowest quartet state. The corresponding coupling between the ground state and the excited state is found to be maximum in the geometry of the native SODs. We conjecture that such coupling should be considered in the electron-transfer process and in the contribution of the typical electronic structure of FeSOD to the activity.  相似文献   

8.
Superoxidedismutase(SOD,EC1.15.1.1),whichwasfoundandisolatedfrombovineerythrocytesbyMcCordandFridovichin1969[1],isanimportantmemberofthefamilyofbiologicalantioxidantstressenzymes.Thisenzymehasbeendetectedinawiderangeoflivingthingsandhasbeenimplicatedintheinter…  相似文献   

9.
In this study, the mechanism by which second-sphere residues modulate the structural and electronic properties of substrate-analogue complexes of the Fe-dependent superoxide dismutase (FeSOD) has been explored. Both spectroscopic and computational methods were used to investigate the azide (N3(-)) adducts of Fe(3+)SOD (N3-Fe(3+)SOD) and its Q69E mutant, as well as Fe(3+)-substituted MnSOD (N3-Fe(3+)(Mn)SOD) and its Y34F mutant. Electronic absorption, circular dichroism, and magnetic circular dichroism spectroscopic data reveal that the energy of the dominant N3(-)-->Fe(3+) ligand-to-metal charge transfer (LMCT) transition decreases in the order N3-Fe(3+)(Mn)SOD>N3-Fe(3+)SOD>Q69E N3-Fe(3+)SOD. Intriguingly, the LMCT transition energies correlate almost linearly with the Fe(3+/2+) reduction potentials of the corresponding Fe(3+)-bound SOD species in the absence of azide, which span a range of approximately 1 V (see the preceding paper). To explore the origin of this correlation, combined quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) geometry optimizations were performed on complete enzyme models. The INDO/S-CI computed electronic transition energies satisfactorily reproduce the experimental trend in LMCT transition energies, indicating that the QM/MM optimized active-site models are reasonable. Density functional theory calculations on these experimentally validated active-site models reveal that the differences in spectral and electronic properties among the four N 3(-) adducts arise primarily from differences in the hydrogen-bond network involving the conserved second-sphere Gln (mutated to Glu in Q69E FeSOD) and the solvent ligand. The implications of our findings with respect to the mechanism by which the second-coordination sphere modulates substrate-analogue binding as well as the catalytic properties of FeSOD are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Incorporation of 3-fluorotyrosine and site-specific mutagenesis have been used with stopped-flow spectrophotometry and pulse radiolysis to investigate the catalytic properties of human manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD). All of the nine tyrosine residues in each of the four subunits of the homotetramer of human MnSOD were replaced with 3-fluorotyrosine. Previous studies showed that the crystal structures of the unfluorinated and fluorinated human MnSOD are nearly superimposable with the root-mean-square deviation for 198 -carbon atoms at 0.3 Å. However, the catalytic activity kcat/Km of the fluorinated MnSOD at 30 μM−1 s−1 was less than unfluorinated wild type at 800 μM−1 s−1. Comparison of the values of kcat/Km for fluorinated and unfluorinated wild-type andY34F MnSOD showed that this decrease for the fluorinated enzyme was in significant part due to 3-fluorotyrosine residues distant (>7 Å) from the active-site metal, not to 3-fluorotyrosine at position 34 close (5 Å) to the metal. Although many rate constants for the catalysis are decreased by this fluorination, the rate of dissociation of the product-inhibited complex appears unchanged by the presence of fluorinated tyrosines. These results suggest that Tyr34 is not a proton donor in the release of the product-inhibited complex, which involves protonation of a peroxo complex of the metal with release of hydrogen peroxide.  相似文献   

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A new Mn(III) complex, [MnCl(H2O)(L)]·H2O·C2H5OH, where L = 2,2′-{1,2-phenylenebis[nitrilomethylylidene]}bis(6-methoxyphenolate), has been synthesized and characterized by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. There is a good agreement between calculated and experimental structural data. The complex is crystallized in orthorhombic with space group Pbca. The Mn1 atom is coordinated with one Schiff base ligand, one water molecule and one chloride anion, forming a six-coordination number. The electronic and fluorescence spectra of the complex were also studied.  相似文献   

13.
The combination of UV/visible/NIR absorption, CD and variable-temperature magnetic circular dichroism (VTMCD), EPR, and X-ray absorption (XAS) spectroscopies has been used to investigate the electronic and structural properties of the oxidized and reduced forms of Pyrococcus furiosus superoxide reductase (SOR) as a function of pH and exogenous ligand binding. XAS shows that the mononuclear ferric center in the oxidized enzyme is very susceptible to photoreduction in the X-ray beam. This observation facilitates interpretation of ground- and excited-state electronic properties and the EXAFS results for the oxidized enzyme in terms of the published X-ray crystallographic data (Yeh, A. P.; Hu, Y.; Jenney, F. E.; Adams, M. W. W.; Rees, D. C. Biochemistry 2000, 39, 2499-2508). In the oxidized state, the mononuclear ferric active site has octahedral coordination with four equatorial histidyl ligands and axial cysteinate and monodentate glutamate ligands. Fe EXAFS are best fit by one Fe-S at 2.36 A and five Fe-N/O at an average distance of 2.12 A. The EPR-determined spin Hamiltonian parameters for the high-spin (S = (5)/(2)) ferric site in the resting enzyme, D = -0.50 +/- 0.05 cm(-1) and E/D = 0.06, are consistent with tetragonally compressed octahedral coordination geometry. UV/visible absorption and VTMCD studies facilitate resolution and assignment of pi His --> Fe(3+)(t(2g)) and (Cys)S(p) --> Fe(3+)(t(2g)) charge-transfer transitions, and the polarizations deduced from MCD saturation magnetization studies indicate that the zero-field splitting (compression) axis corresponds to one of the axes with trans-histidyl ligands. EPR and VTMCD studies provide evidence of azide, ferrocyanide, hydroxide, and cyanide binding via displacement of the glutamate ligand. For azide, ferrocyanide, and hydroxide, ligand binding occurs with retention of the high-spin (S = 5/2) ground state (E/D = 0.27 and D < 0 for azide and ferrocyanide; E/D = 0.25 and D = +1.1 +/- 0.2 cm(-1) for hydroxide), whereas cyanide binding results in a low-spin (S = 1/2) species (g = 2.29, 2.25, 1.94). The ground-state and charge-transfer/ligand-field excited-state properties of the low-spin cyanide-bound derivative are shown to be consistent with a tetragonally elongated octahedral coordination with the elongation axis corresponding to an axis with trans-histidyl ligands. In the reduced state, the ferrous site of SOR is shown to have square-pyramidal coordination geometry in frozen solution with four equatorial histidines and one axial cysteine on the basis of XAS and UV and NIR VTMCD studies. Fe EXAFS are best fit by one Fe-S at 2.37 A and four Fe-N/O at an average distance of 2.15 A. VTMCD reveals a high-spin (S = 2) ferrous site with (Cys)S(p) --> Fe(2+) charge-transfer transitions in the UV region and (5)T(2g) --> (5)E(g) ligand-field transitions in the NIR region at 12400 and <5000 cm(-1). The ligand-field bands indicate square-pyramidal coordination geometry with 10Dq < 8700 cm(-1) and a large excited-state splitting, Delta (5)E(g) > 7400 cm(-1). Analysis of MCD saturation magnetization data leads to ground-state zero-field splitting parameters for the S = 2 ground state, D approximately +10 cm(-1) and E/D approximately 0.1, and complete assessment of ferrous d-orbital splitting. Azide binds weakly at the vacant coordination site of reduced SOR to give a coordination geometry intermediate between octahedral and square pyramidal with 10Dq = 9700 cm(-1) and Delta (5)E(g) = 4800 cm(-1). Cyanide binding results in an octahedral ferrous site with 10Dq = 10,900 cm(-1) and Delta (5)E(g) = 1750 cm(-1). The ability to bind exogenous ligands to both the ferrous and ferric sites of SOR is consistent with an inner-sphere catalytic mechanism involving superoxide binding at the ferrous site to yield a ferric-(hydro)peroxo intermediate. The structural and electronic properties of the SOR active site are discussed in relation to the role and bonding of the axial cysteine residue and the recent proposals for the catalytic mechanism.  相似文献   

14.
Summary A novel copper(II) complex of mixed ligands 2-acetylpyridine and N-ethylene(2-acetylpyridineimine) has been prepared by condensation and its crystal structure determined by XRD. The central copper(II) atom of the complex anion is coordinated to one oxygen of 2-acetylpyridine and four nitrogen atoms of the Schiff base in a distorted square pyramidal geometry. It has a similar coordination geometry to that found in Cu/Zn-SOD.  相似文献   

15.
The combination of Monte Carlo, ab initio, and DFT computational studies of ethylene glycol (EG) and EG-water hydrogen-bonding complexes indicate that experimental vibrational spectra of EG and EG-water solution surfaces have contributions from numerous conformations of both EG and EG-water. The computed spectra, derived from harmonic vibrational frequency calculations and a theoretical Boltzmann distribution, show similarity to the experimental surface vibrational spectra of EG taken by broad-bandwidth sum frequency generation (SFG) spectroscopy. This similarity suggests that, at the EG and aqueous EG surfaces, there are numerous coexisting conformations of stable EG and EG-water complexes. A blue shift of the CH2 symmetric stretch peak in the SFG spectra was observed with an increase in the water concentration. This change indicates that EG behaves as a hydrogen-bond acceptor when solvated by additional water molecules. This also suggests that, in aqueous solutions of EG, EG-EG aggregates are unlikely to exist. The experimental blue shift is consistent with the results from the computational studies.  相似文献   

16.
2-Indanol in its most stable form is stabilized by internal hydrogen bonding, which exists between the hydroxyl hydrogen atom and the pi-cloud of the benzene ring. A comprehensive ab initio calculation using the MP2/cc-pVTZ level of theory showed that 2-indanol can exist in four possible conformations, which can interchange through the ring-puckering vibration and the internal rotation of the OH group on the five-membered ring. A potential energy surface in terms of these two vibrational coordinates was calculated. Density functional theory calculations were used to predict the vibrational frequencies and to help in normal mode assignments. Fluorescence excitation spectra of 2-indanol confirm the presence of the four conformers in the electronic ground and excited states. The spectral intensities indicate that, at 90 degrees C, 82% of the molecules exist in its most stable form with the intramolecular hydrogen bonding. The other isomers are present at approximately 11, 5, and 3%. The MP2/6-311++G(d,p) calculation predicts a distribution of 70, 13, 9, and 8% at 90 degrees C, the experimental sample temperature.  相似文献   

17.
Two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (2-D PAGE) is a powerful tool to separate thousands of polypeptides and to highlight the modification of protein expression in malignant diseases. By applying 2-D PAGE to ten normal human kidney and ten homologous renal cell carcinoma (RCC) tissues, we found two peptides in all ten normal tissues but not in RCCs and, conversely, two peptides were detected in all RCCs but not in normal tissues. Using matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF-MS) and internal sequence analysis, the two first peptides were identified as two isoforms of plasma glutathione peroxidase (GPxP). The two other peptides isolated in all RCCs but not in normal tissues were identified by N-terminal sequence analysis as multimeric forms of manganese superoxide dismutase (Mn-SOD). No multimeric Mn-SODs and only two monomeric forms were detected in normal tissues. GPxP and Mn-SOD are metallo-enzymes encoded on chromosome 5q32 and on chromosome 6p25, respectively. Their regions are within the locus 5q21-->qter and 6q21-6q27 on which deletions and translocations are described in some cytogenetic studies of RCC transformation. Therefore, our results might suggest a correlation between the modified expression of GPxP and Mn-SOD in tumor tissues and chromosomal modifications, and that the two proteins may be putative markers for diagnosis of RCC.  相似文献   

18.
The four-coordinate Ni(+) complex [PhTt(t)(Bu)]Ni(I)CO, where PhTt(t)()(Bu) = phenyltris((tert-buthylthio)methyl)borate (a tridentate thioether donor ligand), serves as a possible model for key Ni-CO reaction intermediates in the acetyl-CoA synthase (ACS) catalytic cycle. Resonance Raman, electronic absorption, magnetic circular dichroism (MCD), variable-temperature variable-field MCD, and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopies were utilized in conjunction with density functional theory and semiemperical INDO/S-CI calculations to investigate the ground and excited states of [PhTt(t)()(Bu)]Ni(I)CO. These studies reveal extensive Ni(+) --> CO pi-back-bonding interactions, as evidenced by a low C-O stretching frequency (1995 cm(-)(1)), a calculated C-O stretching force constant of 15.5 mdyn/A (as compared to k(CO)(free CO) = 18.7 mdyn/A), and strong Ni(+) --> CO charge-transfer absorption intensities. Calculations reveal that this high degree of pi-back-bonding is due to the fact that the Ni(+) 3d orbitals are in close energetic proximity to the CO pi acceptor orbitals. In the ACS "paramagnetic catalytic cycle", the high degree of pi-back-bonding in the putative Ni(+)-CO intermediate (the NiFeC species) is not expected to preclude methyl transfer from CH(3)-CoFeSP.  相似文献   

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