14 results on '"Namdoo Moon"'
Search Results
2. Fe-Mg order-disorder in orthopyroxenes
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Liping Wang, Youxue Zhang, Eric J. Essene, Namdoo Moon, and William R. Dunham
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Partition coefficient ,Crystallography ,Octahedron ,Geochemistry and Petrology ,Chemistry ,Mössbauer spectroscopy ,Analytical chemistry ,Order (group theory) - Abstract
(Received March 31, 2005; accepted in revised form August 11, 2005) Abstract—Published data on the distribution of Fe and Mg between the two distinct octahedral sites (M1 and M2) in orthopyroxenes show that the equilibrium Fe-Mg distribution coefficient (KD) is roughly constant at intermediate ferrosilite content (XFs of 0.2 to 0.6) but at low XFs (0.2) is either anomalously high (Mossbauer data) or low (XRD data) compared to KD at intermediate XFs. We report an experimental study on the equilibrium KD values for two natural single crystals of orthopyroxene (with XFs of 0.011 and 0.160) using a high-sensitivity Mossbauer spectrometer. The KD values were determined at 1 bar and temperatures between 600 and 1000°C, and reversed at 600 to 900°C. The values are found to be independent of orthopyroxene composition at a given temperature within analytical uncertainties, and in agreement with KD values at intermediate XFs. A least-squares fit to the KD data yields: lnKD 0.391(0.131) 2205(141)/T, where T is temperature in K, and uncertainties are at the 2 level. This equation is valid for XFs values up to at least 0.6. We suggest that previous Mossbauer and XRD data at low XFs were compromised by analytical difficulties. The new result that KD is roughly independent of XFs greatly simplifies treatment of equilibrium and speedometry based on Fe-Mg order-disorder in orthopyroxene. Copyright © 2005 Elsevier Ltd
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- 2005
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3. Synthesis and Characterization of Sulfur-Voided Cubanes. Structural Analogues for the MoFe3S3 Subunit in the Nitrogenase Cofactor
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Namdoo Moon, Dimitri Coucouvanis, and Jaehong Han
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Molybdoferredoxin ,Protein Conformation ,Stereochemistry ,Molecular Conformation ,Crystal structure ,Sulfides ,Crystallography, X-Ray ,Biochemistry ,Catalysis ,Cofactor ,law.invention ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Colloid and Surface Chemistry ,law ,Nitrogenase ,Pyridine ,Molecule ,Electron paramagnetic resonance ,Molecular Structure ,biology ,Chemistry ,Molecular Mimicry ,General Chemistry ,Magnetic susceptibility ,Heterocyclic Compounds, Bridged-Ring ,Enzyme Activation ,X-ray crystallography ,biology.protein - Abstract
A new class of Mo/Fe/S clusters with the MoFe(3)S(3) core has been synthesized in attempts to model the FeMo-cofactor in nitrogenase. These clusters are obtained in reactions of the (Cl(4)-cat)(2)Mo(2)Fe(6)S(8)(PR(3))(6) [R = Et (I), (n)Pr (II)] clusters with CO. The new clusters include those preliminarily reported: (Cl(4)-cat)MoFe(3)S(3)(PEt(3))(2)(CO)(6) (III), (Cl(4)-cat)(O)MoFe(3)S(3)(PEt(3))(3)(CO)(5) (IV), (Cl(4)-cat)(Pyr)MoFe(3)S(3)(PEt(3))(2)(CO)(6) (VI), and (Cl(4)-cat)(Pyr)MoFe(3)S(3)(P(n)Pr(3))(3)(CO)(4) (VIII). In addition the new (Cl(4)-cat)(O)MoFe(3)S(3)(P(n)Pr(3))(3)(CO)(5) cluster (IVa), the (Cl(4)-cat)(O)MoFe(3)S(3)(PEt(3))(2)(CO)(6)cluster (V), the (Cl(4)-cat)(O)MoFe(3)S(3)(P(n)Pr(3))(2)(CO)(6) cluster (Va), the (Cl(4)-cat)(Pyr)MoFe(3)S(3)(P(n)Pr(3))(2)(CO)(6) cluster (VIa), and the (Cl(4)-cat)(P(n)Pr(3))MoFe(3)S(3)(P(n)Pr(3))(2)(CO)(6) cluster (VII) also are reported. Clusters III-VIII have been structurally and spectroscopically characterized. EPR, zero-field (57)Fe-Mössbauer spectroscopic characterizations, and magnetic susceptibility measurements have been used for a tentative assignment of the electronic and oxidation states of the MoFe(3)S(3) sulfur-voided cuboidal clusters. A structural comparison of the clusters with the MoFe(3)S(3) subunit of the FeMo-cofactor has led to the suggestion that the storage of reducing equivalents into M-M bonds, and their use in the reduction of substrates, may occur with the FeMo-cofactor, which also appears to have M-M bonding. On the basis of this argument, a possible N(2)-binding and reduction mechanism on the FeMoco-cofactor is proposed.
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- 2001
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4. Spectral Studies of tert-Butyl Isothiocyanate-Inactivated P450 2E1
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Ute M. Kent, William R. Dunham, Elizabeth S. Roberts-Kirchhoff, Namdoo Moon, and Paul F. Hollenberg
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Iodosobenzene ,Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization ,Heme ,Dithionite ,Biochemistry ,Cofactor ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Isothiocyanates ,Animals ,Enzyme Inhibitors ,Fomepizole ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Carbon Monoxide ,Binding Sites ,Chromatography ,biology ,Iodobenzenes ,Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy ,Substrate (chemistry) ,Cytochrome P-450 CYP2E1 ,CYP2E1 ,Rats ,Cytochrome P-450 CYP2E1 Inhibitors ,Enzyme Activation ,Enzyme ,chemistry ,Isothiocyanate ,biology.protein ,Pyrazoles ,Rabbits ,NADP ,Chromatography, Liquid ,Nuclear chemistry - Abstract
Inactivation of cytochrome P450 2E1 by tert-butyl isothiocyanate (tBITC) resulted in a loss in the spectrally detectable P450-reduced CO complex. The heme prosthetic group does not appear to become modified, since little loss of the heme was observed in the absolute spectra or the pyridine hemochrome spectra, or in the amount of heme recovered from HPLC analysis of the tBITC-inactivated samples. Prolonged incubations of the inactivated P450 2E1 with dithionite and CO resulted in a recovery of both the CO complex and the enzymatic activity. Inactivated samples that were first reduced with dithionite for 1 h prior to CO exposure recovered their CO spectrum to the same extent as samples not pretreated with dithionite, suggesting that the major defect was an inability of the inactivated sample to bind CO. Spectral binding studies with 4-methylpyrazole indicated that the inactivated P450 2E1 had an impaired ability to bind the substrate. Enzymatic activity could not be restored with iodosobenzene as the alternate oxidant. EPR analysis indicated that approximately 24% of the tBITC-inactivated P450 2E1 was EPR-silent. Of the remaining tBITC-inactivated P450 2E1, approximately 45% exhibited an unusual low-spin EPR signal that was attributed to the displacement of a water molecule at the sixth position of the heme by a tBITC modification to the apoprotein. ESI-LC-MS analysis of the inactivated P450 2E1 showed an increase in the mass of the apoprotein of 115 Da. In combination, the data suggest that tBITC inactivated P450 2E1 by binding to a critical active site amino acid residue(s). This modified amino acid(s) presumably acts as the sixth ligand to the heme, thereby interfering with oxygen binding and substrate binding.
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- 2001
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5. Identification and Functional Requirement of Cu(I) and Its Ligands within Coagulation Factor VIII
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Luigina Tagliavacca, William R. Dunham, Randal J. Kaufman, and Namdoo Moon
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Leupeptins ,Macromolecular Substances ,Stereochemistry ,Mutant ,chemistry.chemical_element ,CHO Cells ,Cysteine Proteinase Inhibitors ,Ligands ,Immunoglobulin light chain ,Biochemistry ,law.invention ,law ,Cricetinae ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Animals ,Humans ,Binding site ,Electron paramagnetic resonance ,Molecular Biology ,Binding Sites ,Factor VIII ,COS cells ,Chemistry ,Spectrophotometry, Atomic ,Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy ,Cell Biology ,Copper ,Recombinant Proteins ,Kinetics ,Amino Acid Substitution ,Culture Media, Conditioned ,Copper ion binding ,COS Cells ,Mutagenesis, Site-Directed ,Recombinant DNA - Abstract
Coagulation factor VIII (FVIII) is a heterodimer consisting of a light chain of 80 kDa (domains A3-C1-C2) in a metal ion-dependent association with a 220-kDa heavy chain (domains A1-A2-B). The nature of the metal ion-dependent association between the heavy and light chains was investigated using atomic absorption spectroscopy, electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy (EPR), and site-directed mutagenesis and expression of the FVIII cDNA. Whereas copper ion was not detected in intact recombinant FVIII, EDTA dissociation of the chains yielded an EPR signal consistent with 1 mol of Cu(I)/mol of active protein, supporting the hypothesis that a single molecule of reduced copper ion is buried within intact FVIII and is released and oxidized upon treatment with EDTA. Cu(I), and not Cu(II), was able to reconstitute FVIII activity from dissociated chains, demonstrating a requirement for Cu(I) in FVIII function. Three potential copper ion binding sites exist within FVIII: one type-2 site and two type-1 sites. The importance of these potential copper ion ligands was tested by studying the effect of site-directed mutants. Of the two histidines that compose the type-2 binding site, the His-1957 --Ala mutant displayed secretion, light and heavy chain assembly, and activity similar to wild-type FVIII, while mutant His-99 --Ala was partially defective for secretion and had low levels of heavy and light chain association and activity. In contrast, FVIII having the mutation Cys-310 --Ser within the type-1 copper binding site in the A1 domain was inactive and partially defective for secretion from the cell, and the heavy and light chains of the secreted protein were not associated. Mutant Cys-2000 --Ser within the A3 domain displayed secretion, assembly, and activity similar to that for wild-type FVIII. These results support the hypothesis that Cu(I) is buried within the type-1 copper binding site within the A1 domain and is required for FVIII chain association and activity.
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- 1997
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6. Regulation of the soxRS Oxidative Stress Regulon
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Philippe Gaudu, Namdoo Moon, and B. Weiss
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Chemistry ,Reducing agent ,Superoxide ,Cell Biology ,Plumbagin ,medicine.disease_cause ,Biochemistry ,Redox ,Sodium dithionite ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Regulon ,medicine ,Molecular Biology ,Escherichia coli ,Oxidative stress - Abstract
SoxR protein, a transcriptional activator of the soxRS (superoxide response) regulon of Escherichia coli, contains autooxidizable [2Fe-2S] centers that are presumed to serve as redox sensors. In vitro transcription experiments previously demonstrated that only the oxidized form is active. Reduced SoxR was detected in overproducing strains by EPR spectroscopy of suspensions of intact cells. Oxidized Fe-S centers were determined by lysing the cells and treating them with the reducing agent sodium dithionite prior to EPR measurements. In uninduced cells, 90% of the SoxR was in the reduced form. Treatment with the redox cycling agents phenazine methosulfate or plumbagin was accompanied by reversible oxidation of the Fe-S centers. Mutant SoxR derivatives that were constitutively activated existed constitutively in an oxidized state. The results indicate the presence of a cellular pathway for countering the autooxidation of SoxR and confirm the hypothesis that induction of the regulon is mediated by a shift in the redox equilibrium of SoxR rather than by assembly of its Fe-S clusters.
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- 1997
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7. A high-sensitivity Mössbauer spectrometer facilitates the study of iron proteins at natural abundance
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Richard H. Sands, Namdoo Moon, David C Steinke, W.Richard Dunham, and C.Tristram Coffin
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Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Range (particle radiation) ,Quality (physics) ,Spectrometer ,Preamplifier ,Abundance (chemistry) ,Chemistry ,Mössbauer spectroscopy ,Detector ,Analytical chemistry ,Instrumentation ,Sensitivity (electronics) - Abstract
A Wide-Angle Mossbauer Spectrometer has been constructed, tested and shown to have approximately ten times the sensitivity of a standard Mossbauer spectrometer. The most innovative feature of the spectrometer is the eighty degree, conical acceptance geometry of its gamma-ray detector, which is constructed of 77 argon gas proportional counters with their associated charge-sensitive preamplifiers and single channel analyzers. The spectrometer has demonstrated the following features: (1) it has approximately 100 times the countrate of most existing Mossbauer spectrometers; (2) velocities reproduce to an accuracy of ±0.005 mm/s over periods of several weeks; (3) the temperatures of the source and the sample are regulated with an accuracy of ±0.1°C in the range of 4.2 to 300 K. By obtaining a high quality Mossbauer spectrum of un-enriched 0.3 mM K 3 Fe(CN) 6 , we have shown that the study of high molecular weight natural abundance iron proteins can be greatly facilitated by this spectrometer.
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- 1996
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8. An Aerial Radiological Survey of the Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant and Surrounding Area, Portsmouth, Ohio
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Namdoo Moon
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Ground level ,Geography ,Radiological weapon ,fungi ,Large array ,Gamma ray ,food and beverages ,Gaseous diffusion ,Mineralogy ,Remote sensing - Abstract
An aerial radiological survey was conducted over the 16 square-mile (~41 square-kilometer) area surrounding the Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant. The survey was performed in August 2007 utilizing a large array of helicopter mounted sodium iodide detectors. The purpose of the survey was to update the previous radiological survey levels of the environment and surrounding areas of the plant. A search for a missing radium-226 source was also performed. Implied exposure rates, man-made activity, and excess bismuth-214 activity, as calculated from the aerial data are presented in the form of isopleth maps superimposed on imagery of the surveyed area. Ground level and implied aerial exposure rates for nine specific locations are compared. Detected radioisotopes and their associated gamma ray exposure rates were consistent with those expected from normal background emitters. At specific plant locations described in the report, man-made activity was consistent with the operational histories of the location. There was no spectral activity that would indicate the presence of the lost source.
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- 2007
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9. Long-Term Confinement of Dense Positron Plasma
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L. E. Thode, Namdoo Moon, George Spalek, Kevin J. VanderJack, Hoanh Vu, Kirby Meyer, and Gerald A. Smith
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Magnetic mirror ,Physics ,Trap (computing) ,Positron ,Physics::Plasma Physics ,Antimatter ,Solenoid ,Electron ,Cryogenics ,Plasma ,Atomic physics - Abstract
Efforts to increase the storage levels of positrons in Penning‐Malmberg and other types of traps are important for many applications. Positronics Research LLC (PRLLC) is developing a storage trap that will host several positron, electron, and mixed plasma experiments intended to maximize storage conditions for positrons with acceptable lifetimes. A warm‐bore 5 T cryomagnet with three independently controlled solenoids is used for experiment. The central solenoid is used for Penning‐Malmberg trap studies. The end coils are used for magnetic mirror and other pinch‐storage research experiments. The end potentials of the Penning‐Malmberg trap will be raised to 100 kV, creating an effective well of length 100 cm. Optimization of the radio‐frequency drive system, designed to control the plasma using Trivelpiece‐Gould modes, and assessment of diocotron instabilities of the non‐neutral plasma are being investigated using a 16‐node, distributed Linux cluster.
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- 2003
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10. The effect of three Korean traditional medicines on the growth rate of cultured human keratinocytes
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Namdoo Moon, Hiroto Terashi, Cynthia L. Marcelo, William R. Dunham, Seok Hee Chung, and Lenore Rhodes
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Adult ,Keratinocytes ,Chromatography, Gas ,Cell ,Biology ,law.invention ,Immune system ,Essential fatty acid ,law ,Drug Discovery ,medicine ,Humans ,Cells, Cultured ,Pharmacology ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Korea ,Epidermis (botany) ,Fatty Acids, Essential ,Cell growth ,Plant Extracts ,Models, Theoretical ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Cell culture ,Phytotherapy ,Keratinocyte ,Cell Division - Abstract
The effect of three different Korean Traditional Medicines (KTM) was studied on several functional parameters of adult human cells in culture. The cells were non-transformed strains of normal, skin epidermal cells (keratinocytes) from adult humans. Aqueous extracts of the herbal medicines were tested using two types of cell strains: one type was essential fatty acid deficient (EFAD) cells which grow rapidly in medium that was low in calcium and had no essential fatty acids; the second type was a cell strain grown in medium supplemented with essential fatty acid (EFA-supplemented). These cells had much slower, in vivo skin growth rates, and the fatty acid composition resembled that measured in epidermal biopsy tissue. The KTMs chosen for this study were tae-gang-hual-tang (for treating osteoarthritis), hual-ak-tang (for pain relief) and sip-zeon-tae-bo-tang (for fortifying immune systems). Because high proliferation rates usually correlate with skin inflammation and because many of the chemotactic agents mediating inflammatory response are modified fatty acids, this study focused on cell growth rate and membrane fatty acid composition as signals for the effects of the herbal medicines. By monitoring growth rate, these experiments measured both a stimulatory and a regulatory effect on the growth of keratinocytes. Some toxicity was seen at the highest doses of the KTMs. These effects were modeled mathematically, and the results showed varying effects on growth rate depending on dose and herbal recipe. The fitting parameters were discussed as they relate to biological function. The experimental design was also discussed and alternatives were suggested.
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- 2001
11. EPR spectrometry of cytochrome P450 2B4: effects of mutations and substrate binding
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Minor J. Coon, Jeremy E. LeLean, William R. Dunham, and Namdoo Moon
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Cytochrome ,Stereochemistry ,Mutant ,Biophysics ,Heme ,Biochemistry ,law.invention ,Substrate Specificity ,Cytochrome P-450 Enzyme System ,law ,medicine ,Escherichia coli ,Animals ,Electron paramagnetic resonance ,Molecular Biology ,Alanine ,Binding Sites ,biology ,Chemistry ,Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy ,Active site ,Cytochrome P450 ,Substrate (chemistry) ,Cell Biology ,Mutation ,Steroid Hydroxylases ,biology.protein ,Ferric ,Spin Labels ,Aryl Hydrocarbon Hydroxylases ,Reactive Oxygen Species ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The EPR spectra of NH(2)-terminal-truncated P450 cytochrome 2B4 and of several active site mutants that were previously shown to be profoundly altered in catalytic properties were determined. From these spectra it was seen that the truncated P450 2B4, like the full length cytochrome, exists as the low spin ferric form, but upon mutation of threonine 302 to alanine approximately 40% of the cytochrome is present as the high spin ferric form (g approximately 8, 4, 2). A similar situation was observed in the double mutant E310L T302A, but not in the single mutant E301L. A rhombic high spin signal (g approximately 8, 4, 2) was observed when a substrate such as styrene, benzphetamine, or cyclohexane was added to the truncated cytochrome. Accompanying this change was the appearance of a signal at g = 1.98. Conversely, an axial high spin signal was observed (g approximately 6, 6, 2) when cyclohexanecarboxaldehyde or 3-phenylpropionaldehyde was added to the truncated P450 2B4.
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- 2000
12. Rearrangement of L-2-hydroxyglutarate to L-threo-3-methylmalate catalyzed by adenosylcobalamin-dependent glutamate mutase
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David P. Ballou, I. Roymoulik, E. N. G. Marsh, William R. Dunham, and Namdoo Moon
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Stereochemistry ,Chick Embryo ,Photochemistry ,Biochemistry ,Catalysis ,Glutarates ,Reaction rate constant ,Dogs ,Isomerism ,medicine ,Animals ,Enzyme kinetics ,Intramolecular Transferases ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy ,Substrate (chemistry) ,Adenosylcobalamin ,Homolysis ,Kinetics ,Enzyme ,chemistry ,Models, Chemical ,Flow Injection Analysis ,Cobamides ,Isomerization ,medicine.drug ,Methylmalonic Acid - Abstract
Adenosylcobalamin-dependent enzymes catalyze a variety of chemically difficult isomerizations in which a nonacidic hydrogen on one carbon is interchanged with an electron-withdrawing group on an adjacent carbon. We describe a new isomerization, that of L-2-hydroxyglutarate to L-threo-3-methylmalate, involving the migration of the carbinol carbon. This reaction is catalyzed by glutamate mutase, but k(cat) = 0.05 s(-)(1) is much lower than that for the natural substrate, L-glutamate (k(cat) = 5.6 s(-)(1)). EPR spectroscopy confirms that the major organic radical that accumulates on the enzyme is the C-4 radical of L-2-hydroxyglutarate. Pre-steady-state kinetic measurements revealed that L-2-hydroxyglutarate-induced homolysis of AdoCbl occurs very rapidly, with a rate constant approaching those measured previously with glutamate and methylaspartate as substrates. These observations are consistent with the rearrangement of the 2-hydroxyglutaryl radical being the rate-determining step in the reaction. The slow rearrangement of the 2-hydroxyglutaryl radical can be attributed to the poor stabilization by the hydroxyl group of the migrating glycolyl moiety of the radical transiently formed on the migrating carbon. In contrast, with the normal substrate the migrating carbon atom bears a nitrogen substituent that better stabilizes the analogous glycyl moiety. These studies point to the importance of the functional groups attached to the migrating carbon in facilitating the carbon skeleton rearrangement.
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- 2000
13. Electron paramagnetic resonance measurements of the ferrous mononuclear site of phthalate dioxygenase substituted with alternate divalent metal ions: direct evidence for ligation of two histidines in the copper(II)-reconstituted protein
- Author
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David P. Ballou, Christopher J. Batie, William R. Dunham, Namdoo Moon, and Eric D. Coulter
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Iron-Sulfur Proteins ,Cations, Divalent ,Metal ions in aqueous solution ,Inorganic chemistry ,Crystal structure ,Burkholderia cepacia ,Biochemistry ,Ferric Compounds ,Cofactor ,law.invention ,Ferrous ,Dioxygenases ,Electron transfer ,Electron Transport Complex III ,Apoenzymes ,law ,Multienzyme Complexes ,Histidine ,Ferrous Compounds ,Binding site ,Electron paramagnetic resonance ,Ferredoxin ,Binding Sites ,biology ,Chemistry ,Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy ,Crystallography ,biology.protein ,Oxygenases ,Tyrosine ,Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet ,Oxidation-Reduction ,Copper - Abstract
The metalloenzyme phthalate dioxygenase (PDO) contains two iron-based sites. A Rieske-type [2Fe-2S] cluster serves as an electron-transferring cofactor, and a mononuclear iron site is the putative site of substrate oxygenation. A reductase, which contains FMN and a plant-type [2Fe-2S] ferredoxin domain, transfers electrons from NADH to the Rieske center. Any of the metal ions, Fe(II), Cu(II), Co(II), Mn(II), and Zn(II), can be used to populate the mononuclear site, but only Fe(II) is competent for effecting hydroxylation. Nevertheless, studies of how these metal ions affect both the EPR spectra of the reduced Rieske site and the kinetics of electron transfer in the PDO system indicated that each of these metal ions binds tightly and affects the protein similarly. In this study, EPR spectra were obtained from samples in which iron of the mononuclear site was replaced with Cu(II). The use of (63)Cu(II), in combination with PDO obtained from cultures grown on media enriched in (15)N [using ((15)NH(4))(2)SO(4) as a sole nitrogen source], [delta,epsilon-(15)N]histidine, as well as natural abundance sources of nitrogen, enabled detailed spectral analysis of the superhyperfine structure of the Cu(II) EPR lines. These studies clearly show that two histidines are coordinated to the mononuclear site. Coupled with previous studies [Bertini, I., Luchinat, C., Mincione, G., Parigi, G., Gassner G. T., and Ballou, D. P. (1996) J. Bioinorg. Chem. 1, 468-475] that show the presence of one or two water molecules coordinated to the iron, it is suggested that the mononuclear site is similar to several other mononuclear nonheme iron proteins, including naphthalene dioxygenase, for which crystal structures are available. The lack of observable EPR interaction signals between Cu(II) in the mononuclear site and the reduced Rieske center of PDO suggest that the two sites are at least 12 A apart, which is similar to that found in the naphthalene dioxygenase crystal structure.
- Published
- 1999
14. Synthesis and Characterization of Sulfur-Voided Cubanes. Structural Analogues for the....
- Author
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Coucouvanis, Dimitri, Jaehong Han, and Namdoo Moon
- Subjects
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NONMETALS , *ELECTRONS - Abstract
Investigates the synthesis of Mo/Fe/S clusters with the MoFe[sub 3]S[sub 3] core. Mechanism of the FeMo-cofactor; Activation of dinitrogen on the FeMoco; Multielectron reduction of the electron deficient cofactor.
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- 2002
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