17 research outputs found

    Mobile sequences in the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex, the E2 component, the catalytic domain and the 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase complex of Azotobacter vinelandii, as detected by 600 MHz 1H-NMR spectroscopy

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    Abstract600 MHz 1H-NMR spectroscopy demonstrates that the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex of Azotobacter vinelandii contains regions of the polypeptide chain with intramolecular mobility. This mobility is located in the E2 component and can probably be ascribed to alanine-proline-rich regions that link the lipoyl subdomains to each other as well as to the E1 and E3 binding domain. In the catalytic domain of E2, which is thought to form a compact, rigid core, also conformational flexibility is observed. It is conceivable that the N-terminal region of the catalytic domain, which contains many alanine residues, is responsible for the observed mobility. In the low-field region of the 1H-NMR spectrum of E2 specific resonances are found, which can be ascribed to mobile phenylalanine, histidine and/or tyrosine residues which are located in the E1 and E3 binding domain that links the lipoyl domain to the catalytic domain. In the 1H-NMR spectrum of the intact complex, these resonances cannot be observed, indicating a decreased mobility of the E1 and E3 binding domain

    Photosensitized production of hydrogen by hydrogenase in reversed micelles

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    Hydrogenase (hydrogen:ferricytochrome c(3) oxidoreductase, EC 1.12.2.1) from Desulfovibrio vulgaris was encapsulated in reversed micelles with cetyltrimethylammonium bromide as surfactant and a chloroform/octane mixture as solvent. Reducing equivalents for hydrogenase-catalyzed hydrogen production were provided by vectorial photosensitized electron transfer from a donor (thiophenol) in the organic phase through a surfactant-Ru(2+) sensitizer located in the interphase to methyl viologen concentrated in the aqueous core of the reversed micelle. The results show that reversed micelles provide a microenvironment that (i) stabilizes hydrogenase against inactivation and (ii) allows an efficient vectorial photosensitized electron and proton flow from the organic phase to hydrogenase in the aqueous phase

    Substrate specificity of flavin-dependent vanillyl-alcohol oxidase from Penicillium simplicissimum.Evidence for the production of 4-hydroxycinnamyl alcohols from 4-allylphenols

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    The substrate specificity of the flavoprotein vanillyl-alcohol oxidase from Penicillium simplicissimum was investigated. Vanillyl-alcohol oxidase catalyzes besides the oxidation of 4-hydroxybenzyl alcohols, the oxidative deamination of 4-hydroxybenzylamines and the oxidative demethylation of 4-(methoxymethyl)phenols. During the conversion of vanillylamine to vanillin, a transient intermediate, most probably vanillylimine, is observed. Vanillyl-alcohol oxidase weakly interacts with 4-hydroxyphenylglycols and a series of catecholamines. These compounds are converted to the corresponding ketones. Both enantiomers of (nor)epinephrine are substrates for vanillyl-alcohol oxidase, but the R isomer is preferred. Vanillyl-alcohol oxidase is most active with chavicol and eugenol. These 4-allylphenols are converted to coumaryl alcohol and coniferyl alcohol, respectively. Isotopic labeling experiments show that the oxygen atom inserted at the Cγ atom of the side chain is derived from water. The 4-hydroxycinnamyl alcohol products and the substrate analog isoeugenol are competitive inhibitors of vanillyl alcohol oxidation. The binding of isoeugenol to the oxidized enzyme perturbs the optical spectrum of protein-bound FAD. pH-dependent binding studies suggest that vanillyl-alcohol oxidase preferentially binds the phenolate form of isoeugenol (pKa<6, 25°C). From this and the high pH optimum for turnover, a hydride transfer mechanism involving a p-quinone methide intermediate is proposed for the vanillyl-alcohol-oxidase-catalyzed conversion of 4-allylphenols.

    Electrochemical behaviour of low-potential electron-transferring proteins at the mercury electrode

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    This paper reports on a pulse polarographic study of low-potential electron-transferring proteins at the mercury electrode. The proteins studied were the negatively charged iron-sulphur cluster containing ferredoxins from spinach, and from Megasphaera elsdenii, the iron-containing rubredoxin and the FMN-containing flavodoxin both from M. elsdenii. Furthermore, the positively charged, four haem-containing cytochrome c3 from Desulfovibrio vulgaris strain Hildenborough was studied. It was observed that the electrode reaction of these proteins could be made much more efficient when a polymer or surfactant was added, with a charge opposite to the protein. The reduction efficiency of these proteins reaches an optimum when the net charge of the protein times its concentration is about equal to the same amount of opposite charges, which was added as a polymer or surfactant

    Microperoxidase/H(2)O(2)-mediated alkoxylating dehalogenation of halophenol derivatives in alcoholic media

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    The results of this study report the H(2)O(2)-driven microperoxidase-8 (MP8)-catalyzed dehalogenation of halophenols such as 4-fluorophenol, 4-chlorophenol, 4-bromophenol, and 2-fluorophenol in alcoholic solvents. In methanol, the conversion of the para-halophenols and 2-fluorophenol to, respectively, 4-methoxyphenol and 2-methoxyphenol, as the major dehalogenated products is observed. In ethanol, 4-ethoxyphenol is the principal dehalogenated product formed from 4-fluorophenol. Two mechanisms are suggested for this MP8-dependent alkoxylating dehalogenation reaction. In one of these mechanisms the oxene resonant form of compound I of MP8 is suggested to react with methanol forming a cofactor-peroxide-alkyl intermediate. This intermediate reacts with the reactive π-electrons of the substrate, leading to the formation of the alkoxyphenols and the release of the fluorine substituent as fluoride anion

    Lipomide dehydrogenase from Azotobacter vinelandii : site-directed mutagenesis of the His450-Glu455 diad

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/65245/1/j.1432-1033.1992.tb17075.x.pd
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