A recent report by Mills and Klinman [Mills, S. A., and Klinman, J. P. (2000) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 122, 9897-9904] described the preparation and initial characterization of a cobalt-substituted form of the copper amine oxidase from Hansenula polymorpha (HPAO). This enzyme was found to be fully catalytically active at saturating substrate concentrations, but with a K(m) for O(2) approximately 70-fold higher than that of the copper-containing, wild-type enzyme. Herein, we report a detailed analysis of the mechanism of catalysis for the wild-type and the cobalt-substituted forms of HPAO. Both forms of enzyme are concluded to utilize the same mechanism for oxygen reduction, involving initial, rate-limiting electron transfer from the reduced cofactor of the enzyme to prebound dioxygen. Superoxide formed in this manner is stabilized by the active site metal, facilitating the transfer of a second electron and two protons to form the product hydrogen peroxide. The elevated K(m) for O(2) at the dioxygen binding site in Co-substituted HPAO, relative to that of wild-type HPAO, is proposed to be due to a change in the net charge at the adjacent metal site from +1 (cupric hydroxide) in wild-type enzyme to +2 (cobaltous H(2)O) in cobalt-substituted HPAO.
The ferric uptake regulator is a metal-dependent transcription repressor that is activated by divalent transition metal cations. Fe(II) is believed to be the primary functional metal in vivo; however, the ability of other divalent cations to activate Fur brings into question the true physiological metal. Furthermore, the role of different oxidation states of iron in activating Fur has not been determined. Comparison of the affinity of different metals with intracellular metal concentrations would suggest which metals activate Fur in vivo; however, no accurate determinations of the affinity of Fur for metals have been reported. In this study, methods for reconstituting Fur with Fe(II), Fe(III), Co(II), and Zn(II) are described. Reconstituted protein was assayed for DNA affinity by gel shift assays. Fur is activated for DNA binding when reconstituted with Fe(III), as well as Fe(II), Zn(II), Co(II), and Mn(II), with little difference in DNA affinity for the different metallo forms of Fur. The affinity of Fur for the different metals was determined and ranges over several orders of magnitude in the following order: Zn(II) >> Co(II) > Fe(II) > Mn(II). Only Fe(II) binds with sufficient affinity to activate Fur significantly at physiological metal concentrations, when compared to previously determined total metal concentrations in Escherichia coli.
The copper amine oxidases (CAOs) catalyze both the single-turnover modification of a peptidyl tyrosine to form the active-site cofactor 2,4,5-trihydroxyphenylalanine quinone (TPQ) and the oxidative deamination of primary amines using TPQ. The function of a strictly conserved tyrosine located within hydrogen-bonding distance to TPQ has been explored by employing site-directed mutagenesis on the enzyme from H. polymorpha to form the mutants Y305A, Y305C, and Y305F. Both Y305A and Y305C behave similarly with regard to aliphatic amine oxidase activity, showing 3-7-fold decreases in kinetic parameters relative to WT, while the more conservative substitution of Y305F results in a >100-fold decrease in kcat and >500-fold decrease in kcat/Km relative to WT for the reductive half-reaction. The oxidation of benzylamine by all three mutants is severely impaired, with very significant effects seen in the oxidative half-reaction. CAO activity was studied as a function of pH for WT and Y305A proteins. Profiles for WT-catalyzed methylamine oxidation and Y305A-catalyzed ethylamine oxidation are comparable, while profiles of Y305A-catalyzed methylamine oxidation suggest the pH-dependent build-up of an inhibitory intermediate, which was subsequently observed spectrophotometrically and is attributed to the product Schiff base. The relative effects of mutations at Y305 on catalytic turnover are, thus, concluded to be dependent on the nature of the amino acid which substitutes for tyrosine and the substrate used in amine oxidase assays. TPQ biogenesis experiments demonstrate a approximately 800-fold decrease in kobs for apo-Y305A compared to WT. Despite the strict conservation of Tyr305 in all CAOs, neither biogenesis nor catalytic turnover is abolished upon mutation of this residue. We propose an important, but nonessential, role for Tyr305 in the positioning of the TPQ precursor for biogenesis, and in the maintenance of the correct conformation for TPQ-derived intermediates during catalytic turnover.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.