Literature DB >> 22616859

Redox, haem and CO in enzymatic catalysis and regulation.

Stephen W Ragsdale1, Li Yi, Güneş Bender, Nirupama Gupta, Yan Kung, Lifen Yan, Troy A Stich, Tzanko Doukov, Lars Leichert, Paul M Jenkins, Christopher M Bianchetti, Simon J George, Stephen P Cramer, R David Britt, Ursula Jakob, Jeffrey R Martens, George N Phillips, Catherine L Drennan.   

Abstract

The present paper describes general principles of redox catalysis and redox regulation in two diverse systems. The first is microbial metabolism of CO by the Wood-Ljungdahl pathway, which involves the conversion of CO or H2/CO2 into acetyl-CoA, which then serves as a source of ATP and cell carbon. The focus is on two enzymes that make and utilize CO, CODH (carbon monoxide dehydrogenase) and ACS (acetyl-CoA synthase). In this pathway, CODH converts CO2 into CO and ACS generates acetyl-CoA in a reaction involving Ni·CO, methyl-Ni and acetyl-Ni as catalytic intermediates. A 70 Å (1 Å=0.1 nm) channel guides CO, generated at the active site of CODH, to a CO 'cage' near the ACS active site to sequester this reactive species and assure its rapid availability to participate in a kinetically coupled reaction with an unstable Ni(I) state that was recently trapped by photolytic, rapid kinetic and spectroscopic studies. The present paper also describes studies of two haem-regulated systems that involve a principle of metabolic regulation interlinking redox, haem and CO. Recent studies with HO2 (haem oxygenase-2), a K+ ion channel (the BK channel) and a nuclear receptor (Rev-Erb) demonstrate that this mode of regulation involves a thiol-disulfide redox switch that regulates haem binding and that gas signalling molecules (CO and NO) modulate the effect of haem.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22616859      PMCID: PMC3553215          DOI: 10.1042/BST20120083

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biochem Soc Trans        ISSN: 0300-5127            Impact factor:   5.407


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