Literature DB >> 21958058

Oxygen reactivity in flavoenzymes: context matters.

Claudia A McDonald1, Rebecca L Fagan, François Collard, Vincent M Monnier, Bruce A Palfey.   

Abstract

Many flavoenzymes--oxidases and monooxygenases--react faster with oxygen than free flavins do. There are many ideas on how enzymes cause this. Recent work has focused on the importance of a positive charge near N5 of the reduced flavin. Fructosamine oxidase has a lysine near N5 of its flavin. We measured a rate constant of 1.6 × 10(5) M(-1) s(-1) for its reaction with oxygen. The Lys276Met mutant reacted with a rate constant of 291 M(-1) s(-1), suggesting an important role for this lysine in oxygen activation. The dihydroorotate dehydrogenases from E. coli and L. lactis also have a lysine near N5 of the flavin. They react with O(2) with rate constants of 6.2 × 10(4) and 3.0 × 10(3) M(-1) s(-1), respectively. The Lys66Met and Lys43Met mutant enzymes react with rate constants that are nearly the same as those for the wild-type enzymes, demonstrating that simply placing a positive charge near N5 of the flavin does not guarantee increased oxygen reactivity. Our results show that the lysine near N5 does not exert an effect without an appropriate context; evolution did not find only one mechanism for activating the reaction of flavins with O(2).

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21958058      PMCID: PMC3203534          DOI: 10.1021/ja2081873

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Chem Soc        ISSN: 0002-7863            Impact factor:   15.419


  25 in total

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Authors:  François Collard; Rebecca L Fagan; Jianye Zhang; Ina Nemet; Bruce A Palfey; Vincent M Monnier
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