The interaction of bacteriophage λ protein phosphatase with Mn2+ was studied using biochemical
techniques and electron paramagnetic resonance spectrometry. Reconstitution of bacteriophage λ protein
phosphatase in the presence of excess MnCl2 followed by rapid desalting over a gel filtration column
resulted in the retention of approximately 1 equiv of Mn2+ ion bound to the protein. This was determined
by metal analyses and low-temperature EPR spectrometry, the latter of which provided evidence of a
mononuclear high-spin Mn2+ ion in a ligand environment of oxygen and nitrogen atoms. The Mn2+-reconstituted enzyme exhibited negligible phosphatase activity in the absence of added MnCl2. The EPR
spectrum of the mononuclear species disappeared upon the addition of a second equivalent of Mn2+ and
was replaced by a spectrum attributed to an exchange-coupled (Mn2+)2 cluster. EPR spectra of the dinuclear
(Mn2+)2 cluster were characterized by the presence of multiline features with a hyperfine splitting of 39
G. Temperature-dependent studies indicated that these features arose from an excited state. Titrations of
the apoprotein with MnCl2 provided evidence of one Mn2+ binding site with a micromolar affinity and at
least one additional Mn2+ site with a 100-fold lower affinity. The dependence of the phosphatase activity
on Mn2+ concentration indicates that full enzyme activity probably requires occupation of both Mn2+
sites. These results are discussed in the context of divalent metal ion activation of this enzyme and possible
roles for Mn2+ activation of other serine/threonine protein phosphatases