Type 1 Cu centers in cupredoxins, nitrite reductases, and multi-copper oxidases utilize the same trigonal core ligation to His-Cys-His, with a weak axial ligand generally provided by a Met sulfur. In azurin, an additional axial ligand, a carbonyl oxygen from a Gly, is present. The importance of these axial ligands and in particular the Met has been debated extensively in terms of their role in fine-tuning the redox potential, spectroscopic properties, and rack-induced or entatic state properties of the copper sites. Extensive site-directed mutagenesis of the Met ligand has been carried out in azurin, but the presence of an additional carbonyl oxygen axial ligand has made it difficult to interpret the effects of these substitutions. Here, the axial methionine ligand (Met148) in rusticyanin is replaced with Leu, Gln, Lys, and Glu to examine the effect on the redox potential, acid stability, and copper site geometry. The midpoint redox potential varies from 363 (Met148Lys) to 798 mV (Met148Leu). The acid stability of the oxidized proteins is reduced except for the Met148Gln mutant. The Gln mutant remains blue at all pH values between 2.8 and 8, and has a redox potential of 563 mV at pH 3.2. The optical and rhombic EPR properties of this mutant closely resemble those of stellacyanin, which has the lowest redox potential among single-type 1 copper proteins (185 mV). The Met148Lys mutant exhibits type 2 Cu EPR and optical spectra in this pH range. The Met148Glu mutant exhibits a type 2 Cu EPR spectrum above pH 3 and a mixture of type 1 and type 2 Cu spectra at lower pH. The Met148Leu mutant exhibits the highest redox potential ( approximately 800 mV at pH 3.2) which is similar to the values in fungal laccase and in the type 1 Cu site of ceruloplasmin where this axial ligand is also a Leu.
Introduction The natural product eupatorin has been reported to have antiproliferative activity in tumour cell lines, but the exact mechanism is unclear. The cytochromes P450 CYP1B1, CYP1A1, and CYP1A2 have been shown to participate in the activation of various xenobiotics, compounds derived from the diet as well as chemotherapeutic drugs. CYP1B1 and CYP1A1 have also been proposed as targets for cancer chemotherapy for their differential and selective overexpression in tumour cells. In this study, we aimed to identify a possible mechanism of action for the antiproliferative effect of eupatorin, which can be attributed to CYP1 family-mediated metabolism.
The blue copper proteins (BCPs), pseudoazurin from Achromobacter cycloclastes and rusticyanin from Thiobacillus ferrooxidans, have been investigated by (1)H NMR at a magnetic field of 18.8 T. Hyperfine shifts of the protons belonging to the coordinated ligands have been identified by exchange spectroscopy, including the indirect detection for those resonances that cannot be directly observed (the beta-CH(2) of the Cys ligand, and the NH amide hydrogen bonded to the S(gamma)(Cys) atom). These data reveal that the Cu(II)-Cys interaction in pseudoazurin and rusticyanin is weakened compared to that in classic blue sites (plastocyanin and azurin). This weakening is not induced by a stronger interaction with the axial ligand, as found in stellacyanin, but might be determined by the protein folding around the metal site. The average chemical shift of the beta-CH(2) Cys ligand in all BCPs can be correlated to geometric factors of the metal site (the Cu-S(gamma)(Cys) distance and the angle between the CuN(His)N(His) plane and the Cu-S(gamma)(Cys) vector). It is concluded that the degree of tetragonal distortion is not necessarily related to the strength of the Cu(II)-S(gamma)(Cys) bond. The copper-His interaction is similar in all BCPs, even for the solvent-exposed His ligand. It is proposed that the copper xy magnetic axes in blue sites are determined by subtle geometrical differences, particularly the orientation of the His ligands. Finally, the observed chemical shifts for beta-CH(2) Cys and Ser NH protons in rusticyanin suggest that a less negative charge at the sulfur atom could contribute to the high redox potential (680 mV) of this protein.
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