40 research outputs found

    A Computational Library Design Protocol for Rapid Improvement of Protein Stability:FRESCO

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    The ability to stabilize enzymes and other proteins has wide-ranging applications. Most protocols for enhancing enzyme stability require multiple rounds of high-throughput screening of mutant libraries and provide only modest improvements of stability. Here, we describe a computational library design protocol that can increase enzyme stability by 20–35 °C with little experimental screening, typically fewer than 200 variants. This protocol, termed FRESCO, scans the entire protein structure to identify stabilizing disulfide bonds and point mutations, explores their effect by molecular dynamics simulations, and provides mutant libraries with variants that have a good chance (>10%) to exhibit enhanced stability. After experimental verification, the most effective mutations are combined to produce highly robust enzymes

    Bidirectional catalysis by copper-containing nitrite reductase

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    The copper-containing nitrite reductase from Alcaligenes faecalis S-6 was found to catalyze the oxidation of nitric oxide to nitrite, the reverse of its physiological reaction. Thermodynamic and kinetic constants with the physiological electron donor pseudoazurin were determined for both directions of the catalyzed reaction in the pH range of 6-8. For this, nitric oxide was monitored by a Clark-type electrode, and the redox state of pseudoazurin was measured by optical spectroscopy. The equilibrium constant (K-eq) depends on the reduction potentials of pseudoazurin and nitrite/nitric oxide, both of which vary with pH. Above pH 6.2 the formation of NiR substrates (nitrite and reduced pseudoazurin) is favored over the products (NO and oxidized pseudoazurin). At pH 8 the K-eq amounts to 103. The results show that dissimilatory nitrite reductases catalyze an unfavorable reaction at physiological pH (pH = 7-8). Consequently, nitrous oxide production by copper-containing nitrite reductases is unlikely to occur in vivo with a native electron donor. With increasing pH, the rate and specificity constant of the forward reaction decrease and become lower than the rate of the reverse reaction. The opposite occurs for the rate of the reverse reaction; thus the catalytic bias for nitrite reduction decreases. At pH 6.0 the kat for nitrite reduction was determined to be 1.5 x 10(3) s(-1), and at pH 8 the rate of the reverse reaction is 125 s(-1)

    Protein film voltammetry of copper-containing nitrite reductase reveals reversible inactivation.

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    The Cu-containing nitrite reductase from Alcaligenes faecalis S-6 catalyzes the one-electron reduction of nitrite to nitric oxide (NO). Electrons enter the enzyme at the so-called type-1 Cu site and are then transferred internally to the catalytic type-2 Cu site. Protein film voltammetry experiments were carried out to obtain detailed information about the catalytic cycle. The homotrimeric structure of the enzyme is reflected in a distribution of the heterogeneous electron-transfer rates around three main values. Otherwise, the properties and the mode of operation of the enzyme when it is adsorbed as a film on a pyrolytic graphite electrode are essentially unchanged compared to those of the free enzyme in solution. It was established that the reduced type-2 site exists in either an active or an inactive conformation with an interconversion rate of approximately 0.1 s(-1). The random sequential mechanism comprises two routes, one in which the type-2 site is reduced first and subsequently binds nitrite, which is then converted into NO, and another in which the oxidized type-2 site binds nitrite and then accepts an electron to produce NO. At high nitrite concentration, the second route prevails and internal electron transfer is rate-limiting. The midpoint potentials of both sites could be established under catalytic conditions. Binding of nitrite to the type-2 site does not affect the midpoint potential of the type-1 site, thereby excluding cooperativity between the two sites

    A random-sequential mechanism for nitrite binding and active site reduction in copper-containing nitrite reductase.

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    The homotrimeric copper-containing nitrite reductase (NiR) contains one type-1 and one type-2 copper center per monomer. Electrons enter through the type-1 site and are shuttled to the type-2 site where nitrite is reduced to nitric oxide. To investigate the catalytic mechanism of NiR the effects of pH and nitrite on the turnover rate in the presence of three different electron donors at saturating concentrations were measured. The activity of NiR was also measured electrochemically by exploiting direct electron transfer to the enzyme immobilized on a graphite rotating disk electrode. In all cases, the steady-state kinetics fitted excellently to a random-sequential mechanism in which electron transfer from the type-1 to the type-2 site is rate-limiting. At low [NO(-)(2)] reduction of the type-2 site precedes nitrite binding, at high [NO(-)(2)] the reverse occurs. Below pH 6.5, the catalytic activity diminished at higher nitrite concentrations, in agreement with electron transfer being slower to the nitrite-bound type-2 site than to the water-bound type-2 site. Above pH 6.5, substrate activation is observed, in agreement with electron transfer to the nitrite-bound type-2 site being faster than electron transfer to the hydroxyl-bound type-2 site. To study the effect of slower electron transfer between the type-1 and type-2 site, NiR M150T was used. It has a type-1 site with a 125-mV higher midpoint potential and a 0.3-eV higher reorganization energy leading to an approximately 50-fold slower intramolecular electron transfer to the type-2 site. The results confirm that NiR employs a random-sequential mechanism

    A systematic study of the influence of peptide modification of a gold electrode on the cyclic voltammetry of pseudoazurin from Alcaligenes faecalis strain S-6

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    The influence of peptide-protein interactions on the electrochemistry of copper-containing pseudoazurin from Alcaligenes faecalis strain S-6 has been investigated by covalently binding cysteine-containing hexapeptides to a gold electrode surface. The hexapeptides contain three cysteines in the same positions with the remaining amino acids varied to give mixed charge (lysine, threonine, alanine), positive (lysine), overall neutral (alanine), and negative (glutamate) chemically modified electrode surfaces. These systematic variations in the amino acid sequence lead to large variations in voltammetric behavior for the Cu(II) --> Cu(I) heterogeneous pseudoazurin redox process encompassing fully reversible and diffusional, transitionally adsorbed, or strongly adsorbed forms of voltammetry. The variations in voltammetric behavior may be related to electrostatic interactions between the charges from the hexapeptide electrode modifiers and surface charges of pseudoazurin. A possible description of the pseudoazurin-electrode surface interaction is given

    Sensing nitrite through a pseudoazurin-nitrite reductase electron transfer relay.

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    Nitrite is converted to nitric oxide by haem or copper-containing enzymes in denitrifying bacteria during the process of denitrification. In designing an efficient biosensor, this enzymic turnover must be quantitatively assessed. The enzyme nitrite reductase from Alcaligenes faecalis contains a redox-active blue copper centre and a nonblue enzyme-active copper centre. It can be covalently tethered to modified gold-electrode surfaces in configurations in which direct electron transfer is possible. A surface cysteine mutant of the enzyme can be similarly immobilised on bare electroactive gold substrates. Under such circumstances, however, electron transfer cannot be effectively coupled with substrate catalytic turnover. In using either the natural redox partner, pseudoazurin, or ruthenium hexammine as an "electron-shuttle" or "conduit" between enzyme and a peptide-modified electrode surface, the coupling of electron transfer to catalysis can be utilised in the development of an amperometric nitrite sensor

    The substrate-bound type 2 copper site of nitrite reductase: The nitrogen hyperfine coupling of nitrite revealed by pulsed EPR

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    A pulsed electron paramagnetic resonance study has been performed on the type 2 copper site of nitrite reductase (NiR) from Alcaligenes faecalis. The H145A mutant, in which histidine 145 is replaced by alanine, was studied by ESEEM and HYSCORE experiments at 9 GHz on frozen solutions. This mutant contains a reduced type 1 copper site which allowed a selective investigation of the type 2 site of H145A and of its nitrite-bound form H145A (NO2-). The experiments yielded hyperfine and quadrupole parameters of the remote nitrogens of two of the histidines in the type 2 copper site of the protein and revealed the changes of these values induced by substrate binding ((NO2-)-N-14 and (NO2-)-N-15). The HYSCORE experiments displayed a signal of (NO2-)-N-15 bound to H145A, from which hyperfine parameters of the nitrite nitrogen were estimated. The small isotropic hyperfine coupling, 0.36 MHz, of the nitrite nitrogen (N-14) suggests that the substrate binds in an axial position to the copper in the type 2 site and that the molecular orbital containing the unpaired electron extends onto the substrate. This and other changes in the EPR parameters occurring after nitrite binding suggest a change in electronic structure of the site, which most likely prepares the site for the catalytic reaction. We propose that this change is essential for the reaction to occur

    A rearranging ligand enables allosteric control of catalytic activity in copper-containing nitrite reductase

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    In Cu-containing nitrite reductase from Alcaligenes faecalis S-6 the axial methionine ligand of the type-1 site was replaced (M150G) to make the copper ion accessible to external ligands that might affect the enzyme's catalytic activity. The type-1 site optical spectrum of M150G (A(460)/A(600) = 0.71) differs significantly from that of the native nitrite reductase (A(460)/ A(600) = 1.3). The midpoint potential of the type-1 site of nitrite reductase M150G (E-M = 312(+/- 5) mV versus hydrogen) is higher than that of the native enzyme (E-M = 213(+/- 5) mV). M150G has a lower catalytic activity (k(cat) = 133(+/- 6) s(-1)) than the wild-type nitrite reductase (k(cat) = 416(+/- 10) s(-1)). The binding of external ligands to M150G restores spectral properties, midpoint potential (E-M <225 mV), and catalytic activity (k(cat) = 374(+/- 28) s(-1)). Also the M150H (A(460)/A(600) = 7.7, E-M = 104(+/- 5) mV, k(cat) = 0.099(+/- 0.006) s(-1)) and M150T (A(460)/A(600) = 0.085, E-M = 340(+/- 5)mV, k(cat) = 126(+/- 2) s(-1)) variants were characterized. Crystal structures show that the ligands act as allosteric effectors by displacing Met62, which moves to bind to the Cu in the position emptied by the M150G mutation. The reconstituted type-1 site has an otherwise unaltered geometry The observation that removal of an endogenous ligand can introduce allosteric control in a redox enzyme suggests potential for structural and functional flexibility of copper-containing redox sites. (c) 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved

    Reconstitution of the type-1 active site of the H145G/A variants of nitrite reductase by ligand insertion

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    Variants of the copper-containing nitrite reductase (NiR) of Alcaligenes faecalis S6 were constructed by site-directed mutagenesis, by which the C-terminal histidine ligand (His145) of the Cu in the type-1 site was replaced by an alanine or a glycine. The type-1 sites in the NiR variants as isolated, are in the reduced form, but can be oxidized in the presence of external ligands, like (substituted) imidazoles and chloride. The reduction potential of the type-1 site of NiR-H145A reconstituted with imidazole amounts to 505 mV vs NHE (20degreesC, pH 7, 10 mM imidazole), while for the native type-1 site it amounts to 260 mV. XRD data on crystals of the reduced and oxidized NiR-H145A variant show that in the reduced type-1 site the metal is 3-coordinated, but in the oxidized form takes up a ligand from the solution. With the fourth (exogenous) ligand in place the type-1 site is able to accept electrons at about the same rate as the wt NiR, but it is unable to pass the electron onto the type-2 site, leading to loss of enzymatic activity. It is argued that the uptake of an electron by the mutated type-1 site is accompanied by a loss of the exogenous ligand and a concomitant rise of the redox potential. This rise effectively traps the electron in the type-1 site
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