observed and calculated structure factors for Zn(CN)2, Cd(CN)2, [N(CH3)4] [CuZn(CN)4, and CuI[4,4',4",4"'-tetracyanotetraphenylmethane]BF>xC6H5N02 (x > 7.7) (7 pages). Ordering information is given on any current masthead page.
Native ribonucleotide reductase from Escherichia coli exhibits a resonance-enhanced Raman mode at 1498 cm-1 that is characteristic of a tyrosyl radical. The Raman frequency as well as the absorption maximum at 410 nm identifies the radical as being in a deprotonated state. The B2 subunit of ribonucleotide reductase shows an additional resonance Raman mode at 493 cm-1 that has been assigned to the symmetric stretch of an Fe-O-Fe moiety. When samples of active B2 or metB2 are exposed to a tightly focused laser beam at 406.7 nm, there is a loss of intensity at 493 cm-1 and the appearance of a new peak at 595 cm-1. Although the 595-cm-1 feature was previously assigned to an Fe-OH vibration on the basis of its 23-cm-1 shift to lower energy in H2(18)O and the apparent dependence of its intensity on pH [Sjöberg, B. M., Loehr, T. M., & Sanders-Loehr, J. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 4242], the present studies indicate that the intensity of this mode is dependent primarily on input laser power. The peak at 595 cm-1 is more plausibly assigned to a new vs(Fe-O-Fe) mode in view of its lack of the deuterium isotope dependence expected for an Fe-OH mode and its resonant scattering cross section which is comparable to that of the 493-cm-1 mode. This new species has a calculated Fe-O-Fe angle of approximately 113 degrees compared to approximately 138 degrees calculated for the Fe-O-Fe unit in unmodified protein B2. One possible explanation for the photoinduced vibrational mode is that a bridging solvent molecule has been inserted in place of a bridging carboxylate.
The resonance Raman (RR) spectrum of oxidized methylamine dehydrogenase (MADHOX) exhibits a set of C-H, C-C, C = C, and C = O vibrational modes between 900 and 1700 cm-1 that are characteristic of the quinone moiety of the tryptophan tryptophlyquinone (TTQ) cofactor. The close similarity of the RR spectra for MADHs from Paracoccus denitrificans (Pd), Thiobacillus versutus (Tv), and bacterium W3A1 proves that the same cofactor is present in all three proteins. The MADHs from Pd and Tv have a v(C = O) mode at approximately 1625 cm-1 that shifts approximately 20 cm-1 upon 18O substitution of one of the carbonyl oxygens and is assigned to the in-phase symmetric stretch of the two C = O groups. The semiquinone form of Pd MADH has its own characteristic RR spectrum with altered peak frequencies and intensities as well as a decrease in the total number of peaks. The hydroxide and ammonia adducts of MADHOX produce RR spectra similar to that of the semiquinone. The spectral changes in all three cases are interpreted as being due to reduced conjugation of the cofactor. The ammonia adduct is formulated as a carbinolamine, a likely intermediate in the enzymatic mechanism. In contrast, formation of the electron-transfer complex between amicyanin and MADHOX has no effect on the vibrational frequencies (and, hence, structure) of either the MADH quinone or the amicyanin blue copper site. The behavior of the TTQ cofactors of Pd and Tv MADHs are very similar to one another and somewhat different from W3A1 MADH, particularly with regard to adduct formation and ability to undergo isotope exchange with solvent. These differences are ascribed to the cofactor environments within the proteins rather than to the structure of the cofactor itself.
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