• Title of article

    A Rearranging Ligand Enables Allosteric Control of Catalytic Activity in Copper-containing Nitrite Reductase

  • Author/Authors

    Hein J. Wijma، نويسنده , , Iain MacPherson، نويسنده , , Maxime Alexandre، نويسنده , , Rutger E.M. Diederix، نويسنده , , Gerard W. Canters، نويسنده , , Michael E.P. Murphy، نويسنده , , Martin Ph. Verbeet، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
  • Pages
    13
  • From page
    1081
  • To page
    1093
  • Abstract
    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 enzymeʹs catalytic activity. The type-1 site optical spectrum of M150G (A460/A600=0.71) differs significantly from that of the native nitrite reductase (A460/A600=1.3). The midpoint potential of the type-1 site of nitrite reductase M150G (EM=312(±5) mV versus hydrogen) is higher than that of the native enzyme (EM=213(±5) mV). M150G has a lower catalytic activity (kcat=133(±6) s−1) than the wild-type nitrite reductase (kcat=416(±10) s−1). The binding of external ligands to M150G restores spectral properties, midpoint potential (EM<225 mV), and catalytic activity (kcat=374(±28) s−1). Also the M150H (A460/A600=7.7, EM=104(±5) mV, kcat=0.099(±0.006) s−1) and M150T (A460/A600=0.085, EM=340(±5) mV, kcat=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.
  • Keywords
    nitrate reductase , crystal structure , ligand , catalytic activity , Copper
  • Journal title
    Journal of Molecular Biology
  • Serial Year
    2006
  • Journal title
    Journal of Molecular Biology
  • Record number

    1247809