Interaction of Zn2؉ with the two-electron-reduced enzyme was directly detected in anaerobic stopped-flow experiments. Lipoamide dehydrogenase also catalyzes NADH oxidation by oxygen, yielding hydrogen peroxide as the major product and superoxide radical as a minor product. Zn 2؉ accelerates the oxidase reaction up to 5-fold with an activation constant of 0.09 ؎ 0.02 M. Activation is a consequence of Zn 2؉ binding to the reduced catalytic thiols, which prevents delocalization of the reducing equivalents between catalytic disulfide and FAD. A kinetic scheme that satisfactorily describes the observed effects has been developed and applied to determine a number of enzyme kinetic parameters in the oxidase reaction. The distinct effects of Zn 2؉ on different LADH activities represent a novel example of a reversible switch in enzyme specificity that is modulated by metal ion binding. These results suggest that Zn 2؉ can interfere with mitochondrial antioxidant production and may also stimulate production of reactive oxygen species by a novel mechanism.
The kinetics of reduction of indigocarmine-dye-oxidized Fe protein of nitrogenase from Klebsiella pneumoniae (Kp2ox) by sodium dithionite in the presence and absence of MgADP were studied by stopped-flow spectrophotometry at 23 degrees C and at pH 7.4. Highly co-operative binding of 2MgADP (composite K greater than 4 X 10(10) M-2) to Kp2ox induced a rapid conformation change which caused the redox-active 4Fe-4S centre to be reduced by SO2-.(formed by the predissociation of dithionite ion) with k = 3 X 10(6) M-1.s-1. This rate constant is at least 30 times lower than that for the reduction of free Kp2ox (k greater than 10(8) M-1.s-1). Two mechanisms have been considered and limits obtained for the rate constants for MgADP binding/dissociation and a protein conformation change. Both mechanisms give rate constants (e.g. MgADP binding 3 X 10(5) less than k less than 3 X 10(6) M-1.s-1 and protein conformation change 6 X 10(2) less than k less than 6 X 10(3) s-1) that are similar to those reported for creatine kinase (EC 2.7.3.2). The kinetics also show that in the catalytic cycle of nitrogenase with sodium dithionite as reductant replacement of 2MgADP by 2MgATP occurs on reduced and not oxidized Kp2. Although the Kp2ox was reduced stoichiometrically by SO2-. and bound two equivalents of MgADP with complete conversion into the less-reactive conformation, it was only 45% active with respect to its ability to effect MgATP-dependent electron transfer to the MoFe protein.
Indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) is a powerful plant growth regulator. The oxidative decarboxylation of IAA by plant peroxidases is thought to be a major degradation reaction involved in controlling the in vivo level of IAA. Horseradish peroxidase isoenzyme C and an anionic tobacco peroxidase isolated from transgenic Nicotiana sylvestris have been used in experiments in vitro designed to determine the mechanism of IAA oxidation. In particular, the initial reduction of ferric to ferrous enzyme, a key step in previously proposed mechanisms, has been investigated by rapid-scan stopped-flow spectrophotometry under strictly anaerobic conditions and at defined oxygen concentrations. The data provide the first evidence for a ternary complex comprising peroxidase, IAA and oxygen that is kinetically competent both at the initiation stage and during the catalytic cycle of IAA oxidation. A general scheme describing the oxidative cycles of both anionic and cationic peroxidases is proposed that includes native ferric enzyme and compound II as kinetically competent intermediates. For anionic peroxidases, addition of hydrogen peroxide switches on the oxidative cycle thereby promoting IAA oxidation. 2-Methyl-IAA is not a substrate of the oxidase reaction, suggesting a specific interaction between plant peroxidases and IAA.
Indol-3-yl acetic acid (IAA, auxin) is a plant hormone whose degradation is a key determinant of plant growth and development. The first evidence for skatolyl hydroperoxide formation during the plant peroxidase-catalysed degradation of IAA has been obtained by electrospray MS. Skatolyl hydroperoxide degrades predominantly non-enzymically to oxindol-3-yl carbinol but in part enzymically into indol-3-yl methanol via a peroxidase cycle in which IAA acts as an electron donor. Skatolyl hydroperoxide is degradable by catalase. Horseradish peroxidase isoenzyme C (HRP-C) and anionic tobacco peroxidase (TOP) exhibit differences in their mechanisms of reaction. The insensitivity of the HRP-C-catalysed reaction to catalase is ascribed to the formation of HRP-C Compound III at the initiation step and its subsequent role in radical propagation. This is in contrast with the TOP-catalysed process in which skatolyl hydroperoxide has a key role. Indol-3-yl aldehyde is produced not via the peroxidase cycle but by catalysis involving ferrous peroxidase. Because indol-3-yl aldehyde is one of the main IAA-derived products identified in planta, we conclude that ferrous peroxidases participate in IAA catalytic transformations in vivo. A general scheme for peroxidase-catalysed IAA oxidation is presented.
The pre-steady-state kinetics of MgATP hydrolysis by nitrogenase from Klebsiella pneumoniae were studied by stopped-flow calorimetry at 6 degrees C and at pH 7.0. An endothermic reaction (delta Hobs. = +36 kJ.mol of ATP-1; kobs. = 9.4 s-1) in which 0.5 proton.mol of ATP-1 was released, has been assigned to the on-enzyme cleavage of MgATP to yield bound MgADP + Pi. The assignment is based on the similarity of these parameters to those of the corresponding reaction that occurs with rabbit muscle myosin subfragment-1 (delta Hobs. = +32 kJ.mol of ATP-1; kobs. = 7.1 s-1; 0.2 proton released.mol of ATP-1) [Millar, Howarth & Gutfreund (1987) Biochem. J. 248, 683-690]. MgATP-dependent electron transfer from the nitrogenase Fe-protein to the MoFe-protein was monitored by stopped-flow spectrophotometry at 430 nm and occurred with kobs. value of 3.0 s-1 at 6 degrees C. Thus, under these conditions, hydrolysis of MgATP precedes electron transfer within the protein complex. Evidence is presented that suggests that MgATP cleavage and subsequent electron transfer are reversible at 6 degrees C with an overall equilibrium constant close to unity, but that, at 23 degrees C, the reactions are essentially irreversible, with an overall equilibrium constant greater than or equal to 10.
The kinetics of oxidation of the Fe proteins of nitrogenases from Klebsiella pneumoniae (Kp2) and Azotobacter chroococcum (Ac2) by O2 and H2O2 have been studied by stopped-flow spectrophotometry at 23 degrees C, pH 7.4. With excess O2, one-electron oxidation of Kp2 and Ac2 and their 2 MgATP or 2 MgADP bound forms occurs with rate constants (k) in the range 5.3 x 10(3) M-1.S-1 to 1.6 x 10(5) M-1.S-1. A linear correlation between log k and the mid-point potentials (Em) of these protein species indicates that the higher rates of electron transfer from the Ac2 species are due to the differences in Em of the 4Fe-4S cluster. The reaction of Ac2(MgADP)2 with O2 is sufficiently rapid for it to contribute significantly to the high respiration rate of Azotobacter under N2-fixing conditions and may represent a new respiratory pathway. Excess O2 rapidly inactivates Ac2(MgADP)2 and Kp2(MgADP)2; however, when these protein species are in greater than 4-fold molar excess over the concentration of O2, 4 equivalents of protein are oxidized with no loss of activity. The kinetics of this reaction suggest that H2O2 is an intermediate in the reduction of O2 to 2 H2O by nitrogenase Fe proteins and imply a role for catalase or peroxidase in the mechanism of protection of nitrogenase from O2-induced inactivation.
Ethylene (C2H4) inhibited H2 evolution by the Mo-containing nitrogenase of Klebsiella pneumoniae. The extent of inhibition depended on the electron flux determined by the ratio of Fe protein (Kp2) to MoFe protein (Kp1) with KiC2H4 = 409 kPa ([Kp2]/[Kp1] = 22:1) and KC2H4i = 88 kPa ([Kp1]/[Kp2] = 21:1) at 23 degrees C at pH 7.4. At [Kp2]/[Kp1] = 1:1, inhibition was minimal with C2H4 (101 kPa). Extrapolation of data obtained when C2H4 was varied from 60 to 290 kPa indicates that at infinite pressure of C2H4 total inhibition of H2 evolution should occur. C2H4 inhibited concomitant S2O4(2-) oxidation to the same extent that it inhibited H2 evolution. Although other inhibitors of total electron flux such as CN- and CH3NC uncouple MgATP hydrolysis from electron transfer, C2H4 did not affect the ATP/2e ratio. Inhibition of H2 evolution by C2H4 was not relieved by CO. C2H4 was reduced to C2H6 at [Kp2]/[Kp1] ratios greater than or equal to 5:1 in a reaction that accounted for no more than 1% of the total electron flux. These data are discussed in terms of the chemistry of alkyne and alkene reduction on transition-metal centres.
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