4.4 Article

Oxy Intermediates of Homoprotocatechuate 2,3-Dioxygenase: Facile Electron Transfer between Substrates

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 50, Issue 47, Pages 10262-10274

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/bi201436n

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [GM 24689, EB-001475, GM77387, GM08700]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Substrates homoprotocatechuate (HPCA) and O(2) bind to the Fe(II) of homoprotocatechuate 2,3-dioxygenase (FeHPCD) in adjacent coordination sites. Transfer of an electron(s) from HPCA to O(2) via the iron is proposed to activate the substrates for reaction with each other to initiate aromatic ring cleavage. Here, rapid-freeze-quench methods are used to trap and spectroscopically characterize intermediates in the reactions of the HPCA complexes of FeHPCD and the variant His200Asn (FeHPCD HPCA and H200N-HPCA, respectively) with O(2). A blue intermediate forms within 20 ms of mixing of O(2) with H200N-HPCA (H200N(Int1)(HPCA)). Parallel mode electron paramagnetic resonance and Mossbauer spectroscopies show that this intermediate contains high-spin Fe(III) (S = 5/2) antiferromagnetically coupled to a radical (SR = 1/2) to yield an S = 2 state. Together, optical and Mossbauer spectra of the intermediate support assignment of the radical as an HPCA semiquinone, implying that oxygen is bound as a (hydro)peroxo ligand. H200N(Int1)(HPCA) decays over the next 2 s, possibly through an Fe(II) intermediate (H200N(Int2)(HPCA)), to yield the product and the resting Fe(II) enzyme. Reaction of FeHPCD-HPCA with O(2) results in rapid formation of a colorless Fe(II) intermediate (FeHPCD(Int1)(HPCA)). This species decays within 1 s to yield the product and the resting enzyme. The absence of a chromophore from a semiquinone or evidence of a spin-coupled species in FeHPCD(Int1)(HPCA) suggests it is an intermediate occurring after O(2) activation and attack. The similar Mossbauer parameters for FeHPCD(Int1)(HPCA) and H200N(Int2)(HPCA) suggest these are similar intermediates. The results show that transfer of an electron from the substrate to the O(2) via the iron does occur, leading to aromatic ring cleavage.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available