Complexes of Dual-Function Hemoglobin/Dehaloperoxidase
with Substrate 2,4,6-Trichlorophenol Are Inhibitory and Indicate Binding
of Halophenol to Compound I
- Publication date
- Publisher
Abstract
The
hemoglobin of sea worm <i>Amphitrite ornata</i>,
which for historical reasons is abbreviated as DHP for dehaloperoxidase,
has two physiological functions: it binds dioxygen in the ferrous
state and dehalogenates halophenols, such as 2,4,6-trichlorophenol
(TCP), using hydrogen peroxide as the oxidant in the ferric state.
The crystal structures of three DHP variants (Y34N, Y34N/S91G, and
L100F) with TCP bound show two mutually exclusive modes of substrate
binding. One of them, the internal site, is deep inside the distal
pocket with the phenolic OH moiety forming a hydrogen bond to the
water molecule coordinated to the heme Fe. In this complex, the distal
histidine is predominantly located in the closed position and also
forms a hydrogen bond to the phenolic hydroxide. The second mode of
TCP binding is external, at the heme edge, with the halophenol molecule
forming a lid covering the entrance to the distal cavity. The distal
histidine is in the open position and forms a hydrogen bond to the
OH group of TCP, which also hydrogen bonds to the hydroxyl of Tyr38.
The distance between the Cl4 atom of TCP and the heme Fe is 3.9 Å
(nonbonding). In both complexes, TCP molecules prevent the approach
of hydrogen
peroxide to the heme, indicating that the complexes are inhibitory
and implying that the substrates must bind in an ordered fashion:
hydrogen peroxide first and TCP second. Kinetic studies confirmed
the inhibition of DHP by high concentrations of TCP. The external
binding mode may resemble the interaction of TCP with Compound I,
the catalytic intermediate to which halophenols bind. The measured
values of the apparent <i>K</i><sub>m</sub> for TCP were
in the range of 0.3–0.8 mM, much lower than the concentrations
required
to observe TCP binding in crystals. This indicates that during catalysis
TCP binds to Compound I. Mutant F21W, which likely has the internal
TCP binding site blocked, has ∼7% of the activity of wild-type
DHP