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1.
Quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) methods, employing density functional theory (DFT), have been used to compute the electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) parameters of tryptophan and tyrosyl radical intermediates involved in the catalytic cycle of Pleurotus eryngii versatile peroxidase (VP) and its W164Y variant, respectively. These radicals have been previously experimentally detected and characterized both in the two-electron and one-electron activated forms of the enzymes. In this work, the well-studied W164 radical in VP has been chosen for calibration purposes because its spectroscopic properties have been extensively studied by multifrequency EPR and ENDOR spectroscopies. Using a B3LYP/CHARMM procedure, appropriately accounting for electrostatic, such as hydrogen bonding, and steric environmental interactions, a good agreement between the calculated and measured EPR parameters for both radicals has been achieved; g-tensors, hyperfine coupling constants (hfcc) and Mulliken spin densities have been correlated to changes in geometries, hydrogen bond networks and electrostatic environment, with the aim of understanding the influence of the protein surroundings on EPR properties. In addition, the present calculations demonstrate, for VP, the formation of a neutral tryptophan radical, hydrogen bonded to the nearby E243, via a stepwise electron and proton transfer with earlier involvement of a short-lived tryptophan cationic species. Instead, for W164Y, the QM/MM dynamics simulation shows that the tyrosine oxidation proceeds via a concerted electron and proton transfer and is accompanied by a significant reorganization of residues and water molecules surrounding the tyrosyl radical.  相似文献   

2.
Multifrequency (95, 190, and 285 GHz) high-field electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy has been used to characterize radical intermediates in wild-type and Trp191Gly mutant cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP). The high-field EPR spectra of the exchange-coupled oxoferryl--trytophanyl radical pair that constitutes the CcP compound I intermediate [(Fe(IV)=O) Trp*(+)] were analyzed using a spin Hamiltonian that incorporated a general anisotropic spin-spin interaction term. Perturbation expressions of this Hamiltonian were derived, and their limitations under high-field conditions are discussed. Using numerical solutions of the completely anisotropic Hamiltonian, its was possible to simulate accurately the experimental data from 9 to 285 GHz using a single set of spin parameters. The results are also consistent with previous 9 GHz single-crystal studies. The inherent superior resolution of high-field EPR spectroscopy permitted the unequivocal detection of a transient tyrosyl radical that was formed 60 s after the addition of 1 equiv of hydrogen peroxide to the wild-type CcP at 0 degrees C and disappeared after 1 h. High-field EPR was also used to characterize the radical intermediate that was generated by hydrogen peroxide addition to the W191G CcP mutant. The g- values of this radical (g(x)= 2.00660, g(y) = 2.00425, and g(z)= 2.00208), as well as the wild-type transient tyrosyl radical, are essentially identical to those obtained from the high-field EPR spectra of the tyrosyl radical generated by gamma-irradiation of crystals of tyrosine hydrochloride (g(x)= 2.00658, g(y) = 2.00404, and g(z) = 2.00208). The low g(x)-value indicated that all three of the tyrosyl radicals were in electropositive environments. The broadening of the g(x) portion of the HF-EPR spectrum further indicated that the electrostatic environment was distributed. On the basis of these observations, possible sites for the tyrosyl radical(s) are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Single crystals of the 1:1 complex of the nucleic acid base cytosine and the dipeptide N-formylglycine (C.NFG) have been irradiated at 10 and 273 K to doses of about 70 kGy and studied at temperatures between 10 and 293 K using 24 GHz (K-band) and 9.5 GHz (X-band) electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR), and ENDOR-induced EPR (EIE) spectroscopy. In this complex, the cytosine base is hydrogen bonded at positions N3 and N4 to the carboxylic group of the dipeptide, and the N3 position of cytosine has become protonated by the carboxylic group. At 10 K, two major radicals were characterized and identified. One of these (R1) is ascribed to the decarboxylated N-formylglycine one-electron oxidized species. The other (R2) is the N3-protonated cytosine one-electron reduced species. A third minority species (R3) appears to be a different conformation or protonation state of the one-electron reduced cytosine radical. Upon warming, the R2 and R3 radicals decay at about 100 K, and at 295 K, the only cytosine-centered radicals present are the C5 and C6 H-addition radicals (R5, R6). The R1 radical decays at about 150 K, and a glycine backbone radical (R4) grows in slowly. Thus, in the complex, a complete separation of initial oxidation and reduction events occurs, with oxidation localized at the dipeptide moiety, whereas reduction occurs at the nucleic acid base moiety. DFT calculations indicate that this separation is driven by large differences in electron affinities and ionization potentials between the two constituents of the complex. Once the initial oxidation and reduction products are trapped, no further electron transfer between the two constituents of the complex takes place.  相似文献   

4.
Redox-active tyrosine residues play important roles in long-distance electron reactions in enzymes, including prostaglandin H synthase, galactose oxidase, ribonucleotide reductase, and photosystem II. Magnetic resonance and vibrational spectroscopy provide methods with which to study the structures of redox-active amino acids in proteins. In this report, ultraviolet photolysis was used to generate tyrosyl radicals from polycrystalline tyrosinate or dipeptides, and the structure of the radical was investigated with EPR and reaction-induced FT-IR spectroscopy at 77 K. Photolysis at 77 K is expected to generate a neutral tyrosyl radical through oxidation of the aromatic ring. EPR and FT-IR results obtained from (13)C-labeled tyrosine were consistent with that expectation. Surprisingly, labeling of the tyrosyl amino group with (15)N also resulted in isotope-shifted bands in the photolysis spectrum. The force constant of a NH deformation mode increased when the tyrosyl radical was generated. These data suggest an interaction between the pi system of the tyrosyl radical and the amino group. In spectra acquired from the dipeptides, evidence for a sequence-dependent interaction between the tyrosyl radical and the amide bond of the dipeptide was also obtained. We postulate that perturbation of the amino or the amide/imide groups may occur through a spin polarization mechanism, which is indirectly detected as a change in NH force constant. This conclusion is supported by density functional calculations, which suggest a conformationally sensitive delocalization of spin density onto the amino and carboxylate groups of the tyrosyl radical. These experiments provide a step toward a detailed spectral interpretation for protein-based tyrosyl radicals.  相似文献   

5.
We investigated electron transfer between a tyrosyl radical and cysteine residue in two systems, oxyhemoglobin (oxyHb)/peroxynitrite/5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DMPO) and myoglobin (Mb)/hydrogen peroxide/DMPO, using a combination of techniques including ESR, immuno-spin trapping (IST), and ESI/MS. These techniques show that the nitrone spin trap DMPO covalently binds to one or more amino acid radicals in the protein. Treating oxyHb with peroxynitrite and Mb with H2O2 in the presence of a low DMPO concentration yielded secondary Cys-DMPO radical adduct exclusively, whereas in the presence of high DMPO, more of the primary Tyr-DMPO radical adduct was detected. In both systems studied, we found that, at high DMPO concentrations, mainly tyrosyl radicals (Hb-Tyr42/Tyr24 and Mb-Tyr103) are trapped and the secondary electron-transfer reaction does not compete, whereas in the presence of low concentrations of DMPO, the secondary reaction predominates over tyrosyl trapping, and a thiyl radical is formed and then trapped (Hb-Cys93 or Mb-Cys110). With increasing concentrations of DMPO in the reaction medium, primary radicals have an increasing probability of being trapped. MS/MS was used to identify the specific Tyr and Cys residues forming radicals in the myoglobin system. All data obtained from this combination of approaches support the conclusion that the initial site of radical formation is a Tyr, which then abstracts an electron from a cysteine residue to produce a cysteinyl radical. This complex phenomenon of electron transfer from one radical to another has been investigated in proteins by IST, ESR, and MS.  相似文献   

6.
The reaction of oxidized bovine cytochrome c oxidase (bCcO) with hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) was studied by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) to determine the properties of radical intermediates. Two distinct radicals with widths of 12 and 46 G are directly observed by X-band EPR in the reaction of bCcO with H(2)O(2) at pH 6 and pH 8. High-frequency EPR (D-band) provides assignments to tyrosine for both radicals based on well-resolved g-tensors. The wide radical (46 G) exhibits g-values similar to a radical generated on L-Tyr by UV-irradiation and to tyrosyl radicals identified in many other enzyme systems. In contrast, the g-values of the narrow radical (12 G) deviate from L-Tyr in a trend akin to the radicals on tyrosines with substitutions at the ortho position. X-band EPR demonstrates that the two tyrosyl radicals differ in the orientation of their β-methylene protons. The 12 G wide radical has minimal hyperfine structure and can be fit using parameters unique to the post-translationally modified Y244 in bCcO. The 46 G wide radical has extensive hyperfine structure and can be fit with parameters consistent with Y129. The results are supported by mixed quantum mechanics and molecular mechanics calculations. In addition to providing spectroscopic evidence of a radical formed on the post-translationally modified tyrosine in CcO, this study resolves the much debated controversy of whether the wide radical seen at low pH in the bovine enzyme is a tyrosine or tryptophan. The possible role of radical formation and migration in proton translocation is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Proton coupled electron transfer (PCET) reactions are important in many biological processes. Tyrosine oxidation/reduction can play a critical role in facilitating these reactions. Two examples are photosystem II (PSII) and ribonucleotide reductase (RNR). RNR is essential in DNA synthesis in all organisms. In E. coli RNR, a tyrosyl radical, Y122(?), is required as a radical initiator. Photosystem II (PSII) generates molecular oxygen from water. In PSII, an essential tyrosyl radical, YZ(?), oxidizes the oxygen evolving center. However, the mechanisms, by which the extraordinary oxidizing power of the tyrosyl radical is controlled, are not well understood. This is due to the difficulty in acquiring high-resolution structural information about the radical state. Spectroscopic approaches, such as EPR and UV resonance Raman (UVRR), can give new information. Here, we discuss EPR studies of PCET and the PSII YZ radical. We also present UVRR results, which support the conclusion that Y122 undergoes an alteration in ring and backbone dihedral angle when it is oxidized. This conformational change results in a loss of hydrogen bonding to the phenolic oxygen. Our analysis suggests that access of water is an important factor in determining tyrosyl radical lifetime and function. TOC graphic.  相似文献   

8.
Tyrosyl radicals are important in long-range electron transfer in several enzymes, but the protein environmental factors that control midpoint potential and electron-transfer rate are not well understood. To develop a more detailed understanding of the effect of protein sequence on their photophysical properties, we have studied the spectroscopic properties of tyrosyl radicals at 85 K. Tyrosyl radical was generated by UV-photolysis of pentapeptides in polycrystalline samples. The sequence of the pentapeptides was chosen to mimic peptide sequences found in redox-active tyrosine containing enzymes, ribonucleotide reductase and photosystem II. From EPR studies, we report that the EPR line shape of the tyrosyl radical depends on peptide sequence. We also present the first evidence for a component of the tyrosyl radical EPR signal, which decays on the seconds time scale at 85 K. We suggest that this transient results from a spontaneous, small conformational rearrangement in the radical. From FT-IR studies, we show that amide I vibrational bands (1680-1620 cm(-1)) and peptide bond skeletal vibrations (1230-1090 cm(-1)) are observed in the photolysis spectra of tyrosine-containing pentapeptides. From these data, we conclude that oxidation of the tyrosine aromatic ring perturbs the electronic structure of the peptide bond in tyrosine-containing oligopeptides. We also report sequence-dependent alterations in these bands. These results support the previous suggestion (J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2002, 124, 5496) that spin delocalization can occur from the tyrosine aromatic ring into the peptide bond. We hypothesize that these sequence-dependent effects are mediated either by electrostatics or by changes in conformer preference in the peptides. Our findings suggest that primary structure influences the functional properties of redox-active tyrosines in enzymes.  相似文献   

9.
The primary products of the photoreduction reaction of 3,6-dit-butyl-o-quinone in single crystals of 3,6-di-t-butyl-pyrocatechol are studied by EPR spectroscopy. Ion radical and neutral radical pairs are identified distinctly. In the case of the same o-quinone in single crystals of 2-6-dit-butyl-4-methylphenol the primary product is the radical pair composed of the two hydroxyphenoxyl radicals of phenol. This indicates the possibility of transfer of two hydrogen atoms in a single elementary photochemical event.  相似文献   

10.
In sodium guanosine dihydrate single crystals, the guanine moiety is deprotonated at N1 due to growth from high-pH (>12) solutions. Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) studies of crystals X-irradiated at 10 K detected evidence for three radical forms. Radical R1, characterized by two proton and two nitrogen hyperfine interactions, was identified as the product of net hydrogenation at N7 of the N1-deprotonated guanine unit. R1 exhibited an unusually distorted structure leading to net positive isotropic components of the hydrogen alpha-couplings. Radical R2, characterized by one proton and one nitrogen hyperfine coupling, was identified as the primary electron-loss product. This product is equivalent to that of deprotonation at N1 by the guanine cation and represents the first ENDOR characterization of that product. Radical R3, characterized by a single hydrogen hyperfine coupling, was identified as the product of net dehydrogenation at C1' of the ribose moiety. The identification of radicals R1-R3 was supported by density functional theory (DFT) calculations on several possible structures using the B3LYP/6-311G(2df,p)//6-31G(d,p) approach. Radical R4, detected after warming the crystals to room temperature, was identified as the well-known product of net hydrogenation of C8 of the (N1-deprotonated) guanine component. Radical R1, evidently formed by protonation of the primary electron addition product, was present as roughly 60% of the total radicals detected at 10 K. Radical R2 was present as roughly 27% of the total yield, and the concentration of R3 contributed the remaining 13%. R3 is evidently the product of one-electron oxidation followed by deprotonation; thus, the balance of oxidation and reduction products is approximately equal within experimental uncertainty.  相似文献   

11.
Beta-D-fructose single crystals were in situ X-irradiated at 80 K and measured using electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) and ENDOR-induced EPR (EIE) techniques at Q-band (34 GHz) microwave frequencies. The measurements revealed the presence of at least four carbon-centered radicals stable at 80 K. By means of ENDOR angular variations in the three principal crystallographic planes, six proton hyperfine coupling tensors could be determined and were assigned to four different radicals by the aid of EIE. Two of the radicals exhibit only beta-proton hyperfine couplings and reveal almost identical EIE spectra. For the other two radicals, the major hyperfine splitting originates from a single alpha-proton hyperfine coupling and their EIE spectra were also quite similar. The similarity of the EIE spectra and hyperfine tensors led to the assumption that there are only two essentially different radical structures. The radical exhibiting only beta-proton hyperfine couplings was assigned to a C3 centered radical arising from H3 abstraction and the other radical suggested to be an open-ring species with a disrupted C2-C3 bond and a double C2-O2 bond. A possible formation mechanism for the latter open-ring radical is presented. By means of cluster density functional theory (DFT) calculations, the structures of the two radicals were determined and a fairly good agreement between the calculated and experimental hyperfine tensors was found.  相似文献   

12.
Single crystals of L-cysteic acid monohydrate were X-irradiated and studied at 295 K using EPR, ENDOR, and EIE techniques. Three spectroscopically different radicals were observed. These were a deamination radical reduction product (R1), and two oxidation products formed by hydrogen abstraction (radicals R2, R3). R2 and R3 were shown to exhibit the same chemical structure while exhibiting very different geometrical conformations. Cluster DFT calculations at the 6-31G(d,p) level of theory supported the experimental observations for radicals R1 and R2. It was not possible to simulate the R3 radical in any attempted cluster; hence, for this purpose a single molecule approach was used. The precursor radicals for R1, R2, and R3, identified in the low-temperature work on L-cysteic acid monohydrate by Box and Budzinski, were also investigated using DFT calculations. The experimentally determined EPR parameters for the low-temperature decarboxylated cation could only be reproduced correctly within the cluster when the carboxyl group remained in the proximity of the radical. Only one of the two observed low-temperature carboxyl anions (stable at 4 and 48 K) could be successfully simulated by the DFT calculations. Evidence is presented in support of the conclusions that the carboxyl reduction product already is protonated at 4 K and that the irreversible conversion between the two reduction products is brought forward by an umbrella-type inversion of the carboxyl group.  相似文献   

13.
The oxidation of linoleic acid yields isomeric acyl hydroperoxides. In order to clarify the relation between the lipid peroxide-derived radicals and the toxicity of the lipid peroxide, identification of the lipid-derived radicals is essential. In this paper, high performance liquid chromatography/electron spin resonance/mass spectrometry (HPLC/EPR/MS) analysis of the radicals was performed for the reaction mixture containing 9-hydroperoxy-(10E,12E)-octadeca-10,12-dienoic acid (9EE-OOH) [or 13-hydroperoxy-(9Z,11E)-octadeca-9,11-dienoic acid (13ZE-OOH)] under an aerobic condition or an anaerobic condition. Following radicals were identified from 9EE-OOH (or 13EZ-OOH) by using high performance liquid chromatography/electron spin resonance spectrometry (HPLC/EPR) and HPLC/EPR/MS: pentyl radical and isomers of epoxylinoleic acid radicals from 13EZ-OOH under an anaerobic condition; 7-carboxyheptyl radical and pentyl radical from 13EZ-OOH under an aerobic condition; 7-carboxyheptyl radical and pentyl radical from 9EE-OOH under an aerobic condition; 7-carboxyheptyl radical from 9EE-OOH under an anaerobic condition. These results showed that the formation of the respective radical species depends on oxygen concentration in the reaction mixtures to a great extent.  相似文献   

14.
Time-resolved magnetic resonance experiments (TREPR and CIDNP) are used to investigate previously unobserved redox chemistry of the surfactant dioctyl sulfosuccinate ester (AOT) using the photoexcited triplet state of anthraquinone 2,6-disulfonate (3AQDS*). Several different free radicals resulting from two independent oxidation pathways (electron transfer and hydrogen abstraction) are observed. These include the radical ions of AQDS and sulfite from electron-transfer processes, carbon-centered radicals from H-atom abstraction reactions, and an additional carbon-centered radical formed by electron transfer from the AOT sulfonate head group followed by the loss of SO3. The radicals exhibit intense chemically induced dynamic electron spin polarization (CIDEP) in their TREPR spectra. The intensity ratios of the observed TREPR signals for each radical depend on the water pool size and temperature, which in turn affect the predominant CIDEP mechanism. All signal carriers are accounted for by simulation, and CIDNP results provide strong supporting evidence for the assignments.  相似文献   

15.
The high-temperature (>120C) electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectrum of solutions of polyphenylacetylene have been deconvoluted into the spectra of two separate radicals, a delocalized π radical, whose EPR spectrum consists of a single 15-G wide Gaussian line comprising about 90% of the total signal and a second, more localized π radical exhibiting complex hyperfine structure in its EPR spectrum. Some possible structures for the minor component radical are suggested and their hyperfine splitting constants calculated using molecular orbital theory.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract Sesamolyl and related phenoxyl radicals were studied by conventional and time-resolved electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopic techniques. Continuous UV irradiation of sesamol in benzene produces two types of radicals. Based on the hyperfine coupling values obtained we determined that one is the neutral sesamolyl radical and the others are the dimer radicals. Comparison was made with related compounds, especially 3,4-dime-thoxyphenol. We found that the 3,4-dimethoxyphenoxyl radical had a shorter lifetime than the neutral sesamolyl radical. The EPR results obtained suggest that a near perpendicular orientation of the oxygen p -orbitals with respect to the benzene ring of sesamol makes the radical more stable. This stability may be important for the antioxidant properties.  相似文献   

17.
The electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra of gamma irradiated single crystals of alpha-benzoinoxime (ABO) have been examined between 120 and 440 K. Considering the dependence on temperature and the orientation of the spectra of single crystals in the magnetic field, we identified two different radicals formed in irradiated ABO single crystals. To theoretically determine the types of radicals, the most stable structure of ABO was obtained by molecular mechanic and B3LYP/6-31G(d,p) calculations. Four possible radicals were modeled and EPR parameters were calculated for the modeled radicals using the B3LYP method and the TZVP basis set. Calculated values of two modeled radicals were in strong agreement with experimental EPR parameters determined from the spectra. Additional simulated spectra of the modeled radicals, where calculated hyperfine coupling constants were used as starting points for simulations, were well matched with experimental spectra.  相似文献   

18.
The radicals obtained in trehalose dihydrate single crystals after 77 K X-irradiation have been investigated at the same temperature using X-band electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR), and ENDOR-induced EPR (EIE) techniques. Five proton hyperfine coupling tensors were unambiguously determined from the ENDOR measurements and assigned to three carbon-centered radical species (T1, T1*, and T2) based on the EIE spectra. EPR angular variations revealed the presence of four additional alkoxy radical species (T3 to T6) and allowed determination of their g tensors. Using periodic density functional theory (DFT) calculations, T1/T1*, T2, and T3 were identified as H-loss species centered at C4, C1', and O2', respectively. The T4 radical is proposed to have the unpaired electron at O4, but considerable discrepancies between experimental and calculated HFC values indicate it is not simply the (net) H-loss species. No suitable models were found for T5 and T6. These exhibit a markedly larger g anisotropy than T3 and T4, which were not reproduced by any of our DFT calculations.  相似文献   

19.
Stable free radical formation in fructose single crystals X-irradiated at room temperature was investigated using Q-band electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR), and ENDOR induced EPR (EIE) techniques. ENDOR angular variations in the three main crystallographic planes allowed an unambiguous determination of 12 proton HFC tensors. From the EIE studies, these hyperfine interactions were assigned to six different radical species, labeled F1-F6. Two of the radicals (F1 and F2) were studied previously by Vanhaelewyn et al. [Vanhaelewyn, G. C. A. M.; Pauwels, E.; Callens, F. J.; Waroquier, M.; Sagstuen, E.; Matthys, P. J. Phys. Chem. A 2006, 110, 2147.] and Tarpan et al. [Tarpan, M. A.; Vrielinck, H.; De Cooman, H.; Callens, F. J. J. Phys. Chem. A 2009, 113, 7994.]. The other four radicals are reported here for the first time and periodic density functional theory (DFT) calculations were used to aid their structural identification. For the radical F3 a C3 carbon centered radical with a carbonyl group at the C4 position is proposed. The close similarity in HFC tensors suggests that F4 and F5 originate from the same type of radical stabilized in two slightly different conformations. For these radicals a C2 carbon centered radical model with a carbonyl group situated at the C3 position is proposed. A rather exotic C2 centered radical model is proposed for F6.  相似文献   

20.
A theoretical study is performed on the radiation-induced radicals in crystalline alpha-l-rhamnose, using density functional theory (DFT) calculations. Irrespective of earlier structural assignments, a host of possible radical models is examined in search for a structure that accurately reproduces experimental electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) properties. A cluster approach is followed, incorporating all hydrogen bond interactions between radical and crystalline environment. Hyperfine coupling tensors as well as g tensors are determined and a comparison is made with available experimental data. Three carbon-centered hydroxyalkyl radicals are validated, in accordance with experimental suggestions for their structure. The occurrence of a carbon-centered oxygen anion radical for one of the radical species is rejected on theoretical grounds, and instead an altered hydroxyalkyl structure is suggested. Our cluster calculations are able to determine g and hyperfine tensors for the oxygen-centered alkoxy radical in rhamnose, in accordance with one of the two measurements for this species. For all radical models, quantitative agreement with experimental hyperfine tensors is obtained by performing full cluster DFT calculations. The inclusion of the molecular environment for the determination of this EPR property proved to be essential.  相似文献   

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