Bacterial nitroreductases are NAD(P)H-dependent flavoenzymes which catalyze the oxygen-insensitive reduction of nitroaromatics, quinones, and riboflavin derivatives. Despite their broad substrate specificity, their reactivity is very specific for two-electron, not one-electron, chemistry. We now describe the thermodynamic properties of the flavin mononucleotide cofactor of Enterobacter cloacae nitroreductase (NR), determined under a variety of solution conditions. The two-electron redox midpoint potential of NR is -190 mV at pH 7.0, and both the pH dependence of the midpoint potential and the optical spectrum of the reduced enzyme indicate that the transition is from neutral oxidized flavin to anionic flavin hydroquinone. The one-electron-reduced semiquinone states of both the free enzyme and an NR-substrate analogue complex are strongly suppressed based on optical spectroscopy and electron paramagnetic resonance measurements. This can explain the oxygen insensitivity of NR and its homologues, as it makes the execution of one-electron chemistry thermodynamically unfavorable. Therefore, we have established a chemical basis for the recent finding that a nitroreductase is a member of the soxRS oxidative defense regulon in Escherichia coli [Liochev, S. I., Hausladen, A., Fridovich, I. (1999) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 96 (7), 3537-3539]. We also report binding affinities for the FMN cofactor in all three oxidation states either determined fluorometrically or calculated using thermodynamic cycles. Thus, we provide a detailed picture of the thermodynamics underlying the unusual activity of NR.
The arabinose-binding pockets of wild type AraC dimerization domains crystallized in the absence of arabinose are occupied with the side chains of Y31 from neighboring domains. This interaction leads to aggregation at high solution concentrations and prevents determination of the structure of truely apo AraC. In this work we found that the aggregation does not significantly occur at physiological concentrations of AraC. We also found that the Y31V mutation eliminates the self-association, but does not affect regulation properties of the protein. At the same time, the mutation allows crystallization of the dimerization domain of the protein with only solvent in the arabinose-binding pocket. Using a distance difference method suitable for detecting and displaying even minor structural variation among large groups of similar structures, we find that there is no significant structural change in the core of monomers of the AraC dimerization domain resulting from arabinose, fucose, or tyrosine occupancy of the ligand-binding pocket. A slight change is observed in the relative orientation of monomers in the dimeric form of the domain upon the binding of arabinose but its significance cannot yet be assessed.
A key question in muscle contraction is how tension generation is coupled to the chemistry of the actomyosin ATPase. Biochemical and mechanochemical experiments link tension generation to a change in structure associated with phosphate release. Length-jump and temperature-jump experiments, on the other hand, implicate phase 2slow, a significantly faster, markedly strain-sensitive kinetic process in tension generation. We use a laser temperature jump to probe the kinetics and mechanism of tension generation in skinned rabbit psoas fibers-an appropriate method since both phosphate release and phase 2slow are readily perturbed by temperature. Kinetics characteristic of the structural change associated with phosphate release are observed only when phosphate is added to fibers. When present, it causes a reduction in fiber tension; otherwise, no force is generated when it is perturbed. We therefore exclude this step from tension generation. The kinetics of de novo tension generation by the temperature-jump equivalent of phase 2slow appear unaffected by phosphate binding. We therefore propose that phosphate release is indirectly coupled to de novo tension generation via a steady-state flux through an irreversible step. We conclude that tension generation occurs in the absence of chemical change as the result of an entropy-driven transition between strongly bound crossbridges in the actomyosin-ADP state. The mechanism resembles the operation of a clock, with phosphate release providing the energy to tension the spring, and the irreversible step functions as the escapement mechanism, which is followed in turn by tension generation as the movement of the hands.Energy transduction in muscle is mediated by a complex sequence of biochemical and mechanical intermediates that form and decay during the crossbridge cycle. Consequently, change(s) in structure specific to energy transduction has to be resolved against a background of conformational changes typical of the normal function of an ATPase enzyme transiently activated by complex formation with a second protein.Of the biochemical steps, phosphate release from the active site of myosin (1-4), with its associated large free energy change (5) (see reviews in ref. [6][7][8], has received considerable attention in relation to tension generation. An isomerization (structural change) in the crossbridge immediately before phosphate release from the active site of myosin has emerged as the single step most likely associated with tension generation.As yet, no plausible connection has been made between the biochemistry and tension recovery in small length-jump/step (L-jump) experiments. In the classical Huxley-Simmons Ljump experiments, the large amplitude fast recovery of tension (phase 2) immediately following the length change has traditionally been associated with tension generation. A slower, phosphate-sensitive component of the L-jump kinetics (phase 3) has also received attention in the quest to link phosphate release to a mechanical step (9-11). However, this step...
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