The reduction kinetics of the mutants K354M and D124N of the Paracoccus denitrificans cytochrome oxidase (heme aa3) by ruthenium hexamine was investigated by stopped-flow spectrophotometry in the absence/presence of NO. Quick heme a reduction precedes the biphasic heme a3 reduction, which is extremely slow in the K354M mutant (k1 = 0.09 ± 0.01 s-1; k2 = 0.005 ± 0.001 s-1) but much faster in the D124N aa3 (k1 = 21 ± 6 s-1; k2 = 2.2 ± 0.5 s-1). NO causes a very large increase (> 100-fold) in the rate constant of heme a3 reduction in the K354M mutant but only a ~5-fold increase in the D124N mutant. The K354M enzyme reacts rapidly with O2 when fully reduced but is essentially inactive in turnover; thus, it was proposed that impaired reduction of the active site is the cause of activity loss. Since at saturating [NO], heme a3 reduction is ~100-fold faster than the extremely low turnover rate, we conclude that, contrary to O2, NO can react not only with the two-electron but also with the single-electron reduced active site. This mechanism would account for the efficient inhibition of cytochrome oxidase activity by NO in the wild-type enzyme, both from P. denitrificans and from beef heart. Results also suggest that the H+-conducting K pathway, but not the D pathway, controls the kinetics of the single-electron reduction of the active site.

Nitric oxide reacts with the single-electron reduced active site of cytochrome c oxidase

Giuffrè A;
2002

Abstract

The reduction kinetics of the mutants K354M and D124N of the Paracoccus denitrificans cytochrome oxidase (heme aa3) by ruthenium hexamine was investigated by stopped-flow spectrophotometry in the absence/presence of NO. Quick heme a reduction precedes the biphasic heme a3 reduction, which is extremely slow in the K354M mutant (k1 = 0.09 ± 0.01 s-1; k2 = 0.005 ± 0.001 s-1) but much faster in the D124N aa3 (k1 = 21 ± 6 s-1; k2 = 2.2 ± 0.5 s-1). NO causes a very large increase (> 100-fold) in the rate constant of heme a3 reduction in the K354M mutant but only a ~5-fold increase in the D124N mutant. The K354M enzyme reacts rapidly with O2 when fully reduced but is essentially inactive in turnover; thus, it was proposed that impaired reduction of the active site is the cause of activity loss. Since at saturating [NO], heme a3 reduction is ~100-fold faster than the extremely low turnover rate, we conclude that, contrary to O2, NO can react not only with the two-electron but also with the single-electron reduced active site. This mechanism would account for the efficient inhibition of cytochrome oxidase activity by NO in the wild-type enzyme, both from P. denitrificans and from beef heart. Results also suggest that the H+-conducting K pathway, but not the D pathway, controls the kinetics of the single-electron reduction of the active site.
2002
Istituto di Biologia e Patologia Molecolari - IBPM
Enzyme kinetics
Nitrogen oxides
Reduction
Spectrophotometry
Cytochromes
Biochemistry
cytochrome c oxidase
methenamine
nitric oxide
ruthenium
article
enzyme active site
enzyme activity
enzyme inhibition
enzyme kinetics
enzyme mechanism
enzyme metabolism
mutant
nonhuman
Paracoccus denitrificans
priority journal
reduction
Binding Sites
Electron Transport Complex IV
Electrons
Hydrogen-Ion Concentration
Kinetics
Models
Chemical
Nitric Oxide
Paracoccus denitrificans
Protein Binding
Time Factors
Bacteria (microorganisms)
Negibacteria
Paracoccus denitrificans
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/192368
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