Oxidase Reaction of Cytochrome cd1 from Paracoccus pantotrophus
- 11 March 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Biochemistry
- Vol. 39 (14) , 4028-4036
- https://doi.org/10.1021/bi991912k
Abstract
Cytochrome cd1 (cd1NIR) from Paracoccus pantotrophus, which is both a nitrite reductase and an oxidase, was reduced by ascorbate plus hexaamineruthenium(III) chloride on a relatively slow time scale (hours required for complete reduction). Visible absorption spectroscopy showed that mixing of ascorbate-reduced enzyme with oxygen at pH = 6.0 resulted in the rapid oxidation of both types of heme center in the enzyme with a linear dependence on oxygen concentration. Subsequent changes on a longer time scale reflected the formation and decay of partially reduced oxygen species bound to the d1 heme iron. Parallel freeze−quench experiments allowed the X-band electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectrum of the enzyme to be recorded at various times after mixing with oxygen. On the same millisecond time scale that simultaneous oxidation of both heme centers was seen in the optical experiments, two new EPR signals were observed. Both of these are assigned to oxidized heme c and resemble signals from the cytochrome c domain of a “semi-apo” form of the enzyme for which histidine/methionine coordination was demonstrated spectroscopically. These observations suggests that structural changes take around the heme c center that lead to either histidine/methionine axial ligation or a different stereochemistry of bis-histidine axial ligation than that found in the as prepared enzyme. At this stage in the reaction no EPR signal could be ascribed to Fe(III) d1 heme. Rather, a radical species, which is tentatively assigned to an amino acid radical proximal to the d1 heme iron in the Fe(IV)-oxo state, was seen. The kinetics of decay of this radical species match the generation of a new form of the Fe(III) d1 heme, probably representing an OH--bound species. This sequence of events is interpreted in terms of a concerted two-electron reduction of oxygen to bound peroxide, which is immediately cleaved to yield water and an Fe(IV)-oxo species plus the radical. Two electrons from ascorbate are subsequently transferred to the d1 heme active site via heme c to reduce both the radical and the Fe(IV)-oxo species to Fe(III)-OH- for completion of a catalytic cycle.Keywords
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