Literature DB >> 7547943

Regulation of interprotein electron transfer by Trp 191 of cytochrome c peroxidase.

M A Miller1, L Vitello, J E Erman.   

Abstract

Cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) reacts with peroxide to form compound I, an intermediate that has an oxy-ferryl iron center and a stable indolyl radical at Trp 191. During the normal catalytic cycle, the oxy-ferryl heme and the Trp 191 radical are reduced by sequential electron transfers from ferrous cytochrome c (Cc). To investigate the role of protein structure in these electron transfer reactions, mutagenesis was used to replace Trp 191 with Phe. The Trp 191-->Phe enzyme [CcP(MI,F191)] reacts with peroxide to form an oxy-ferryl iron center and a transient porphyrin radical. The reaction of Cc from horse and yeast with peroxide-oxidized CcP(MI,F191) was characterized under transient and steady-state conditions. The rate of ET from Cc to the oxy-ferryl heme of CcP(MI,F191) was decreased by at least 10,000-fold relative to the CcP(MI) parent. This effect was observed at 20 and 100 mM ionic strength, with both yeast and horse cytochrome c as the substrate. Thus, Trp 191 is a critical component of all pathways that permit rapid reduction of the oxy-ferryl heme by Cc under these conditions. The reaction of the porphyrin radical with Cc was difficult to characterize, owing to the short half-life of this intermediate. The oxidation of Cc by this intermediate had a maximum rate constant of 32 s-1 at pH 6.0, 25 degrees C. Circumstantial evidence suggests that the porphyrin radical is not directly reduced by Cc, but is instead reduced via a protein-based radical intermediate. The steady-state activity of the mutant enzyme was 300-600-fold lower than the CcP(MI) parent, but kcat is 7-20 times greater than the rate constant for reduction of the oxy-ferryl heme under all conditions examined. Thus, the oxy-ferryl heme is not reduced to the ferric state under steady-state conditions. Transient changes in the absorption spectrum further indicate that steady-state oxidation of Cc2+ by CcP(MI,F191) occurs via reaction of peroxide with the oxy-ferryl enzyme.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7547943     DOI: 10.1021/bi00037a048

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biochemistry        ISSN: 0006-2960            Impact factor:   3.162


  9 in total

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2.  Constraints on the Radical Cation Center of Cytochrome c Peroxidase for Electron Transfer from Cytochrome c.

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Review 4.  Thirty years of heme peroxidase structural biology.

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Journal:  Arch Biochem Biophys       Date:  2010-03-03       Impact factor: 4.013

5.  Replacement of an electron transfer pathway in cytochrome c peroxidase with a surrogate peptide.

Authors:  Anna-Maria A Hays Putnam; Young-Tae Lee; David B Goodin
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Journal:  J Am Soc Mass Spectrom       Date:  2013-03-20       Impact factor: 3.109

7.  LC-MS/MS suggests that hole hopping in cytochrome c peroxidase protects its heme from oxidative modification by excess H2O2.

Authors:  Meena Kathiresan; Ann M English
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8.  In-silico assessment of protein-protein electron transfer. a case study: cytochrome c peroxidase--cytochrome c.

Authors:  Frank H Wallrapp; Alexander A Voityuk; Victor Guallar
Journal:  PLoS Comput Biol       Date:  2013-03-21       Impact factor: 4.475

9.  A Noncanonical Tryptophan Analogue Reveals an Active Site Hydrogen Bond Controlling Ferryl Reactivity in a Heme Peroxidase.

Authors:  Mary Ortmayer; Florence J Hardy; Matthew G Quesne; Karl Fisher; Colin Levy; Derren J Heyes; C Richard A Catlow; Sam P de Visser; Stephen E J Rigby; Sam Hay; Anthony P Green
Journal:  JACS Au       Date:  2021-05-14
  9 in total

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