The use of site-directed mutagenesis methods has revolutionalized the study of the so-called type 1 and type 2 copper sites in proteins. In particular our understanding of the relation between the structure, and the mechanistic and spectroscopic features of these sites is benefitting from the application of these techniques. Recent progress in the field is reviewed with emphasis on the study of type 1 sites. Topics covered comprise the characteristics of the natural type 1 and type 2 sites, the genetics of blue copper proteins, the modification of Cu sites, the spectroscopy of natural and engineered type 1 and type 2 sites, the effect of mutations on midpoint potentials and the mechanism of electron transfer as carried out by the blue copper proteins.
We have investigated the use of optically transparent, nanoporous TiO(2) films as substrates for protein immobilization. Immobilization on such films may be readily achieved from aqueous solutions at 4 °C. The nanoporous structure of the film greatly enhances the active surface area available for protein binding (by a factor of 150 for a 4-μm-thick film). We demonstrate that the redox state of immobilized cytochrome c may be modulated by the application of an electrical bias potential to the TiO(2) film and that the fluorescence yield of immobilized fluorophore-labeled maltose-binding protein may be used to monitor specifically maltose concentration. We conclude that nanoporous TiO(2) films may be useful both for basic studies of protein/electrode interactions and for the development of array-based bioanalytical devices employing both optical and electrochemical signal transduction methodologies.
This communication reports the first electrochemical study of the human P450 2E1 either absorbed or covalently linked to different electrode surfaces. Glassy-carbon and gold electrodes gave reversible electrochemical signals of an active P450 2E1. Molecular modeling of the enzyme helped to rationalize the results. A monolayer coverage was obtained on gold modified with cystamine/maleimide that covalently linked surface accessible cysteines of P450 2E1. The midpoint potential measured for the oriented P450 2E1 was -177 +/- 5 mV comparable to that of the FeIII/FeII of other P450 enzymes. The observed electron-transfer rate for this electrode was 10 s-1. The turnover of the active enzyme was measured with the P450 2E1 specific substrate p-nitrophenol, resulting in a KM of 130 +/- 3 muM and the formation of 2.2 muM of the p-nitrocatechol product upon application of a -300 mV bias.
Abstract[FeFe]-hydrogenases are efficient H2-catalysts, yet upon contact with dioxygen their catalytic cofactor (H-cluster) is irreversibly inactivated. Here, we combine X-ray crystallography, rational protein design, direct electrochemistry, and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy to describe a protein morphing mechanism that controls the reversible transition between the catalytic Hox-state and the inactive but oxygen-resistant Hinact-state in [FeFe]-hydrogenase CbA5H of Clostridium beijerinckii. The X-ray structure of air-exposed CbA5H reveals that a conserved cysteine residue in the local environment of the active site (H-cluster) directly coordinates the substrate-binding site, providing a safety cap that prevents O2-binding and consequently, cofactor degradation. This protection mechanism depends on three non-conserved amino acids situated approximately 13 Å away from the H-cluster, demonstrating that the 1st coordination sphere chemistry of the H-cluster can be remote-controlled by distant residues.
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