Literature DB >> 17691919

Control by substrate of the cytochrome p450-dependent redox machinery: mechanistic insights.

Peter Hlavica1.   

Abstract

Based on initial studies with bacterial CYP101A1, a popular concept emerged predicting that substrate-induced low-to-high spin conversion of P450s is universally associated with shifts of the midpoint potential to a more positive value to maximize rates of electron transfer and metabolic turnover. However, evaluation of the plethora of observations with pro- and eukaryotic hemoproteins suggests a caveat as to generalization of this principle. Thus, some P450s are inherently high-spin, so that there is no need for a supportive substrate-triggered impulse to electron flow. With other enzymes, high-spin content is not consonant with reductive activity, and spin transition as such is not essential to sustaining substrate oxidation. Also, with certain proteins the low-spin conformer is reduced as swift as the high-spin entity. Moreover, there is not regularly a linear relationship between high-spin level and anodic shift of the reduction potential. Similarly, in given cases turnover may proceed despite insignificant or even lacking substrate-provoked alterations in the redox behaviour. Thus, folding of the disparate and sometimes conflicting data into a harmonized overall picture is a lingering problem. Apart from direct perturbation of the electrochemical properties, substrate docking may entail changes in enzyme conformation such as to favour productive complexation with redox partners or modulate electron transfer conduits within preformed donor/acceptor adducts, resulting in elevated ease of flow of reducing equivalents. Substrate-steered ordering of the oligomeric aggregation state of P450s is likely to impose steric constraints on heterodimers, causing one component to more readily align with electron carriers. Careful uncovering of electrochemical mechanisms in these systems will be fruitful to tailoring of novel bioenergetic machines and redox chains via redox-inspired protein engineering or molecular Lego, capable of generating products of interest or degrading toxic pollutants. Finally, availability of P450 nanobiochips for high-throughput screening of substrate libraries might expedite drug development.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17691919     DOI: 10.2174/138920007781368881

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Drug Metab        ISSN: 1389-2002            Impact factor:   3.731


  10 in total

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Review 4.  Interactions of cytochrome P450s with their ligands.

Authors:  Kip P Conner; Caleb M Woods; William M Atkins
Journal:  Arch Biochem Biophys       Date:  2010-10-19       Impact factor: 4.013

5.  Nanoscale electron transport measurements of immobilized cytochrome P450 proteins.

Authors:  Christopher D Bostick; Darcy R Flora; Peter M Gannett; Timothy S Tracy; David Lederman
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6.  Measurement of electron transfer through cytochrome P450 protein on nanopillars and the effect of bound substrates.

Authors:  John E Jett; David Lederman; Lance A Wollenberg; Debin Li; Darcy R Flora; Christopher D Bostick; Timothy S Tracy; Peter M Gannett
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7.  A series of hybrid P450 BM3 enzymes with different catalytic activity in the light-initiated hydroxylation of lauric acid.

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8.  Structure and Function of the Cytochrome P450 Monooxygenase Cinnamate 4-hydroxylase from Sorghum bicolor.

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9.  Identifying cytochrome p450 functional networks and their allosteric regulatory elements.

Authors:  Jin Liu; Gregory J Tawa; Anders Wallqvist
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-12-03       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  Strength of axial water ligation in substrate-free cytochrome P450s is isoform dependent.

Authors:  Kip P Conner; Alina M Schimpf; Alex A Cruce; Kirsty J McLean; Andrew W Munro; Daniel J Frank; Matthew D Krzyaniak; Paul Ortiz de Montellano; Michael K Bowman; William M Atkins
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  10 in total

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