The role of electrostatic interactions in the association of P450s with their nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate- (NADPH) dependent flavoprotein reductases was studied by fluorescence resonance energy transfer. The fluorescent probe 7-(ethylamino)-3-(4'-maleimidylphenyl)-4-methylcoumarin maleimide (coumarylphenylmaleimide, CPM) was introduced into the flavoprotein molecule at a 1:1 molar ratio. The interaction of P450 2B4 and NADPH-P450 reductase (CPR) from rabbit liver microsomes was compared with that of the isolated heme domain (BMP) and the flavoprotein domain (BMR) of P450BM-3. The cross-pairs of the components were also studied. Increasing ionic strength (0.05-0.5 M) was shown to result in the dissociation of the CPR-P450 2B4 complex with the dissociation constant increasing from 0.01 to 0.09 microM. This behavior is consistent with the assumption that charge pairing between CPR and P450 2B4 is involved in their association. In contrast, the electrostatic component of the interaction of the partners in P450BM-3 was shown to have an opposite sign. The isolated BMP and BMR domains have very low affinity for each other and the dissociation constant of their complex decreases from 8 to 3 microM with increasing ionic strength (0.05-0.5 M). Importantly, the BMP-CPR and P450 2B4-BMR "mixed", heterogeneous pairs behave similarly to the pairs of BMP and P450 2B4 with their native electron donors. Therefore, the observed difference in the interaction mechanisms between these two systems is determined mainly by the different structure of the heme proteins rather than their flavoprotein counterparts. P450BM-3 is extremely efficient and highly coupled, with the reductase and the P450 domains tethered to one another. Therefore, in contrast to P450 2B4-CPR binding, very tight binding between the P450BM-3 redox partners would be of no value in the synchronization of complex formation during catalytic turnover.
We describe a new approach to the study of protein-protein interaction using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR). This approach is based on the combination of FTIR technique with both protein titration experiments and the principal component analysis (factor analysis) of the IR absorption spectra in the 1500-1800 cm(-1) region for the protein mixtures. We have applied this approach to the interaction of the heme domain with the FMN domain of bacterial monooxygenase cytochrome P450BM-3 (CYP102A1). The analysis reveals that the first principal component reflects the protein-protein complex formation because the loading factors show a clear systematic dependence on the concentration of the heme domain according to a titration curve with a dissociation constant of approximately 5 microM. The spectrum of the first principal component has been assigned to structural changes in the secondary structure (increase of beta-sheet and alpha-helix and decrease of turn structures), amino acid side chains (protonation of aspartate and C-terminal COO group), and deprotonation of a propionic acid COOD group in the heme.
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