40 results on '"Samoilova RI"'
Search Results
2. Noncovalent Dualism in Perylene-Diimide-Based Keggin Anion Complexes: Theoretical and Experimental studies.
- Author
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Popova VG, Kulik LV, Samoilova RI, Stass DV, Kokovkin VV, Glebov EM, Berezin AS, Novikov AS, Garcia A, Tuan HT, Rodriguez RD, Sokolov MN, and Abramov PA
- Abstract
We report the synthesis and comprehensive characterization of organic-inorganic hybrid salts formed by bis-cationic N,N'- bis(2-(trimethylammonium)ethylene)perylene-3,4,9,10-tetracarboxylic acid bisimide (PTCD
2+ ) and Keggin-type [XW12 O40 ]n - (X = Si, n = 4; X = P, n = 3) polyoxometalates. (PTCD)3 [PW12 O40 ]2 ·3DMSO·2H2 O ( 2 ) and (PTCD)2 [SiW12 O40 ]·DMSO·2H2 O ( 3 ) were structurally characterized by single crystal X-ray diffraction. The cations in both structures exhibited infinite chainlike arrangements through π-π interactions, contrasting with the previously reported cation-anion stacking observed in naphthalene diimide derivatives. A detailed theoretical study employing topological analysis of the electron density distribution within the quantum theory of atoms in molecules approach provided further insights into this structural dualism. Atomic force microscopy analyses revealed the formation of self-assembled supramolecular structures on graphite from molecular monolayers (3 nm of thick) to submicrometer aggregates for 2 . Hyperspectral Raman spectroscopy imaging revealed that such heterostructures are likely formed by an enhanced π-π interactions. Both complexes demonstrated interesting electrochemical behavior, photoluminescence and X-ray-induced luminescence. Electron spin resonance analysis confirmed charge separation in both compounds, with enhanced efficiency observed in compound 2 . Our findings of these perylene-based organic-inorganic hybrid salts offer the potential for their application in optoelectronic devices and functional materials.- Published
- 2023
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3. Platform for High-Spin Molecules: A Verdazyl-Nitronyl Nitroxide Triradical with Quartet Ground State.
- Author
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Tretyakov EV, Petunin PV, Zhivetyeva SI, Gorbunov DE, Gritsan NP, Fedin MV, Stass DV, Samoilova RI, Bagryanskaya IY, Shundrina IK, Bogomyakov AS, Kazantsev MS, Postnikov PS, Trusova ME, and Ovcharenko VI
- Abstract
Thermally resistant air-stable organic triradicals with a quartet ground state and a large energy gap between spin states are still unique compounds. In this work, we succeeded to design and prepare the first highly stable triradical, consisting of oxoverdazyl and nitronyl nitroxide radical fragments, with a quartet ground state. The triradical and its diradical precursor were synthesized via a palladium-catalyzed cross-coupling reaction of diiodoverdazyl with nitronyl nitroxide-2-ide gold(I) complex. Both paramagnetic compounds were fully characterized by single-crystal X-ray diffraction analysis, superconducting quantum interference device magnetometry, EPR spectroscopy in various matrices, and cyclic voltammetry. In the diradical, the verdazyl and nitronyl nitroxide centers demonstrated full reversibility of redox process, while for the triradical, the electrochemical reduction and oxidation proceed at practically the same redox potentials, but become quasi-reversible. A series of high-level CASSCF/NEVPT2 calculations was performed to predict inter- and intramolecular exchange interactions in crystals of di- and triradicals and to establish their magnetic motifs. Based on the predicted magnetic motifs, the temperature dependences of the magnetic susceptibility were analyzed, and the singlet-triplet (135 ± 10 cm
-1 ) and doublet-quartet (17 ± 2 and 152 ± 19 cm-1 ) splitting was found to be moderate. Unique high stability of synthesized verdazyl-nitronylnitroxide triradical opens new perspectives for further functionalization and design of high-spin systems with four or more spins.- Published
- 2021
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4. Electron spin echo detection of stochastic molecular librations: Non-cooperative motions on solid surface.
- Author
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Golysheva EA, Samoilova RI, De Zotti M, Toniolo C, Formaggio F, and Dzuba SA
- Subjects
- Computer Simulation, Freezing, Microwaves, Motion, Silicon Dioxide chemistry, Spin Labels, Temperature, Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy methods, Stochastic Processes, Surface Properties
- Abstract
In frozen biological media and molecular glasses only restricted motions exist; because of the weakness and disorder of intermolecular bonds these motions may have stochastic nature. Electron spin echo (ESE) spectroscopy of spin-labeled molecules allows detecting their restricted stochastic rotations (stochastic molecular librations). As in molecular disordered media motions may be highly cooperative, it would be desirable to investigate their spectroscopic manifestation also in the systems where cooperative effects would be certainly ruled out. In this work, ESE of spin-labeled molecules adsorbed on inorganic SiO
2 surface was investigated in a wide temperature range. The rate of motion-induced spin relaxation was found to become measurable above 130 K, increasing with temperature and attaining then a saturating behavior with a well-defined maximum near 250 K. For two types of molecules differing remarkably in their size and polarity (a small highly-polar nitroxide radical and a large spin-labeled peptide), quite similar results were obtained. This saturating behavior was quantitatively reproduced in simulations within a simple model of jump between two close orientations. Comparison with experiment allowed estimate that at 250 K the correlation time of the motion τc is of the order of several tens of nanoseconds and the angle α between two orientations is around 0.02 rad. As the found saturating behavior is a property of individual motions, for any other molecular system an excess of the spin relaxation rate above the maximum found here for adsorbed molecules may be ascribed to cooperative motions. Comparison with literature data on molecular systems of different origin has shown that effects of cooperativity indeed are present and, moreover, may be very essential., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2019
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5. Cationic penetrating antioxidants switch off Mn cluster of photosystem II in situ.
- Author
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Ptushenko VV, Solovchenko AE, Bychkov AY, Chivkunova OB, Golovin AV, Gorelova OA, Ismagulova TT, Kulik LV, Lobakova ES, Lukyanov AA, Samoilova RI, Scherbakov PN, Selyakh IO, Semenova LR, Vasilieva SG, Baulina OI, Skulachev MV, and Kirpichnikov MP
- Subjects
- Cations, Chlorella vulgaris drug effects, Chlorella vulgaris metabolism, Chlorophyll metabolism, Fluorescence, Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions, Kinetics, Light, Molecular Docking Simulation, Oxygen metabolism, Plastoquinone analogs & derivatives, Plastoquinone pharmacology, Antioxidants metabolism, Manganese metabolism, Photosystem II Protein Complex metabolism
- Abstract
Mitochondria-targeted antioxidants (also known as 'Skulachev Ions' electrophoretically accumulated by mitochondria) exert anti-ageing and ROS-protecting effects well documented in animal and human cells. However, their effects on chloroplast in photosynthetic cells and corresponding mechanisms are scarcely known. For the first time, we describe a dramatic quenching effect of (10-(6-plastoquinonyl)decyl triphenylphosphonium (SkQ1) on chlorophyll fluorescence, apparently mediated by redox interaction of SkQ1 with Mn cluster in Photosystem II (PSII) of chlorophyte microalga Chlorella vulgaris and disabling the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC). Microalgal cells displayed a vigorous uptake of SkQ1 which internal concentration built up to a very high level. Using optical and EPR spectroscopy, as well as electron donors and in silico molecular simulation techniques, we found that SkQ1 molecule can interact with Mn atoms of the OEC in PSII. This stops water splitting giving rise to potent quencher(s), e.g. oxidized reaction centre of PSII. Other components of the photosynthetic apparatus proved to be mostly intact. This effect of the Skulachev ions might help to develop in vivo models of photosynthetic cells with impaired OEC function but essentially intact otherwise. The observed phenomenon suggests that SkQ1 can be applied to study stress-induced damages to OEC in photosynthetic organisms.
- Published
- 2019
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6. Correction to The Semiquinone at the Q(i) Site of the bc1 Complex Explored Using HYSCORE Spectroscopy and Specific Isotopic Labeling of Ubiquinone in Rhodobacter sphaeroides via (13)C Methionine and Construction of a Methionine Auxotroph.
- Author
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Hong S, de Almeida WB, Taguchi AT, Samoilova RI, Gennis RB, O'Malley PJ, Dikanov SA, and Crofts AR
- Published
- 2015
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7. Plasticity in the High Affinity Menaquinone Binding Site of the Cytochrome aa3-600 Menaquinol Oxidase from Bacillus subtilis.
- Author
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Yi SM, Taguchi AT, Samoilova RI, O'Malley PJ, Gennis RB, and Dikanov SA
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Substitution, Bacillus subtilis genetics, Bacterial Proteins genetics, Catalytic Domain genetics, Cytochrome b Group, Cytochromes chemistry, Cytochromes genetics, Cytochromes metabolism, Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy, Electron Transport, Electron Transport Complex IV genetics, Escherichia coli Proteins chemistry, Escherichia coli Proteins genetics, Escherichia coli Proteins metabolism, Hydrogen Bonding, Kinetics, Mutagenesis, Site-Directed, Plastoquinone analogs & derivatives, Plastoquinone metabolism, Recombinant Proteins chemistry, Recombinant Proteins genetics, Recombinant Proteins metabolism, Bacillus subtilis enzymology, Bacterial Proteins chemistry, Bacterial Proteins metabolism, Electron Transport Complex IV chemistry, Electron Transport Complex IV metabolism, Vitamin K 2 metabolism
- Abstract
Cytochrome aa3-600 is a terminal oxidase in the electron transport pathway that contributes to the electrochemical membrane potential by actively pumping protons. A notable feature of this enzyme complex is that it uses menaquinol as its electron donor instead of cytochrome c when it reduces dioxygen to water. The enzyme stabilizes a menasemiquinone radical (SQ) at a high affinity site that is important for catalysis. One of the residues that interacts with the semiquinone is Arg70. We have made the R70H mutant and have characterized the menasemiquinone radical by advanced X- and Q-band EPR. The bound SQ of the R70H mutant exhibits a strong isotropic hyperfine coupling (a(14)N ≈ 2.0 MHz) with a hydrogen bonded nitrogen. This nitrogen originates from a histidine side chain, based on its quadrupole coupling constant, e(2)qQ/h = 1.44 MHz, typical for protonated imidazole nitrogens. In the wild-type cyt aa3-600, the SQ is instead hydrogen bonded with Nε from the Arg70 side chain. Analysis of the (1)H 2D electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) spectra shows that the mutation also changes the number and strength of the hydrogen bonds between the SQ and the surrounding protein. Despite the alterations in the immediate environment of the SQ, the R70H mutant remains catalytically active. These findings are in contrast to the equivalent mutation in the close homologue, cytochrome bo3 ubiquinol oxidase from Escherichia coli, where the R71H mutation eliminates function.
- Published
- 2015
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8. The semiquinone at the Qi site of the bc1 complex explored using HYSCORE spectroscopy and specific isotopic labeling of ubiquinone in Rhodobacter sphaeroides via (13)C methionine and construction of a methionine auxotroph.
- Author
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Hong S, de Almeida WB, Taguchi AT, Samoilova RI, Gennis RB, O'Malley PJ, Dikanov SA, and Crofts AR
- Subjects
- Benzoquinones, Carbon Isotopes, Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial, Isotope Labeling, Methionine chemistry, Molecular Structure, Protein Conformation, Bacterial Proteins metabolism, Methionine metabolism, Rhodobacter sphaeroides metabolism, Spectrum Analysis methods, Ubiquinone chemistry
- Abstract
Specific isotopic labeling at the residue or substituent level extends the scope of different spectroscopic approaches to the atomistic level. Here we describe (13)C isotopic labeling of the methyl and methoxy ring substituents of ubiquinone, achieved through construction of a methionine auxotroph in Rhodobacter sphaeroides strain BC17 supplemented with l-methionine with the side chain methyl group (13)C-labeled. Two-dimensional electron spin echo envelope modulation (HYSCORE) was applied to study the (13)C methyl and methoxy hyperfine couplings in the semiquinone generated in situ at the Qi site of the bc1 complex in its membrane environment. The data were used to characterize the distribution of unpaired spin density and the conformations of the methoxy substituents based on density functional theory calculations of (13)C hyperfine tensors in the semiquinone of the geometry-optimized X-ray structure of the bc1 complex (Protein Data Bank entry 1PP9 ) with the highest available resolution. Comparison with other proteins indicates individual orientations of the methoxy groups in each particular case are always different from the methoxy conformations in the anion radical prepared in a frozen alcohol solution. The protocol used in the generation of the methionine auxotroph is more generally applicable and, because it introduces a gene deletion using a suicide plasmid, can be applied repeatedly.
- Published
- 2014
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9. Peptides on the surface. PELDOR data for spin-labeled alamethicin F50/5 analogues on organic sorbent.
- Author
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Milov AD, Samoilova RI, Tsvetkov YD, Peggion C, Formaggio F, and Toniolo C
- Subjects
- Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy, Ethanol chemistry, Protein Structure, Secondary, Spin Labels, Temperature, Alamethicin chemistry, Peptides chemistry
- Abstract
The PELDOR technique was used to obtain the spectra of distances between spin labels for mono and double TOAC substituted analogues of [Glu(OMe)(7,18,19)] alamethicin F50/5 (Alm') peptaibiotic on the surface of the organic sorbent Oasis HLB and in ethanol solution at 77 K. For the double-labeled Alm', the free radical probes are at positions 1 and 16 (Alm'1,16). The intra- and intermolecular contributions to the PELDOR time traces were separated, with regard to the fractality of the system studied. We established that on HLB the labeled Alm' molecules are prone to aggregation. The distance spectra for Alm'1,16 show that, in both adsorbed state and in ethanol solution, the peptaibiotic is predominantly folded in the α-helix conformation. We assign the asymmetry of the distance spectrum in both cases to the occurrence of an admixture of more elongated α/3(10)-helical conformers. The portion of these conformers is higher for the peptide adsorbed on HLB. We speculate that both the broadening of the basic spectrum line at r(max) = 2.0 nm and the increase in the contribution of elongated conformers might be associated with the spread of the peptaibiotic adsorption sites on HLB as compared with the more uniform Alm'1,16 trap structure in frozen ethanol solution. The aggregates of mono-labeled Alm'1 and Alm'16 also studied. The intermolecular distance spectrum for Alm'1 on HLB is shifted toward longer distances as compared with those of Alm'16. This result suggests that in the aggregates Alm' molecules are preferentially oriented with their C-terminal regions in the vicinity.
- Published
- 2014
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10. Hydrogen bonding between the Q(B) site ubisemiquinone and Ser-L223 in the bacterial reaction center: a combined spectroscopic and computational perspective.
- Author
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Martin E, Baldansuren A, Lin TJ, Samoilova RI, Wraight CA, Dikanov SA, and O'Malley PJ
- Subjects
- Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy, Hydrogen Bonding, Photosynthetic Reaction Center Complex Proteins chemistry, Photosynthetic Reaction Center Complex Proteins genetics, Photosynthetic Reaction Center Complex Proteins metabolism, Quantum Theory, Rhodobacter sphaeroides chemistry, Rhodobacter sphaeroides metabolism, Spectrum Analysis, Ubiquinone chemistry, Ubiquinone genetics, Ubiquinone analogs & derivatives
- Abstract
In the Q(B) site of the Rhodobacter sphaeroides photosynthetic reaction center, the donation of a hydrogen bond from the hydroxyl group of Ser-L223 to the ubisemiquinone formed after the first flash is debatable. In this study, we use a combination of spectroscopy and quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) calculations to comprehensively explore this topic. We show that ENDOR, ESEEM, and HYSCORE spectroscopic differences between mutant L223SA and the wild-type sample (WT) are negligible, indicating only minor perturbations in the ubisemiquinone spin density for the mutant sample. Qualitatively, this suggests that a strong hydrogen bond does not exist in the WT between the Ser-L223 hydroxyl group and the semiquinone O(1) atom, as removal of this hydrogen bond in the mutant should cause a significant redistribution of spin density in the semiquinone. We show quantitatively, using QM/MM calculations, that a WT model in which the Ser-L223 hydroxyl group is rotated to prevent hydrogen bond formation with the O(1) atom of the semiquinone predicts negligible change for the L223SA mutant. This, together with the better agreement between key QM/MM calculated and experimental hyperfine couplings for the non-hydrogen-bonded model, leads us to conclude that no strong hydrogen bond is formed between the Ser-L223 hydroxyl group and the semiquinone O(1) atom after the first flash. The implications of this finding for quinone reduction in photosynthetic reaction centers are discussed.
- Published
- 2012
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11. Interactions of intermediate semiquinone with surrounding protein residues at the Q(H) site of wild-type and D75H mutant cytochrome bo3 from Escherichia coli.
- Author
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Lin MT, Baldansuren A, Hart R, Samoilova RI, Narasimhulu KV, Yap LL, Choi SK, O'Malley PJ, Gennis RB, and Dikanov SA
- Subjects
- Binding Sites, Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy, Escherichia coli enzymology, Escherichia coli genetics, Hydrogen Bonding, Nitrogen Isotopes, Oxidoreductases genetics, Benzoquinones metabolism, Cytochrome b Group metabolism, Oxidoreductases metabolism
- Abstract
Selective (15)N isotope labeling of the cytochrome bo(3) ubiquinol oxidase from Escherichia coli with auxotrophs was used to characterize the hyperfine couplings with the side-chain nitrogens from residues R71, H98, and Q101 and peptide nitrogens from residues R71 and H98 around the semiquinone (SQ) at the high-affinity Q(H) site. The two-dimensional ESEEM (HYSCORE) data have directly identified N(ε) of R71 as an H-bond donor carrying the largest amount of unpaired spin density. In addition, weaker hyperfine couplings with the side-chain nitrogens from all residues around the SQ were determined. These hyperfine couplings reflect a distribution of the unpaired spin density over the protein in the SQ state of the Q(H) site and the strength of interaction with different residues. The approach was extended to the virtually inactive D75H mutant, where the intermediate SQ is also stabilized. We found that N(ε) of a histidine residue, presumably H75, carries most of the unpaired spin density instead of N(ε) of R71, as in wild-type bo(3). However, the detailed characterization of the weakly coupled (15)N atoms from selective labeling of R71 and Q101 in D75H was precluded by overlap of the (15)N lines with the much stronger ~1.6 MHz line from the quadrupole triplet of the strongly coupled (14)N(ε) atom of H75. Therefore, a reverse labeling approach, in which the enzyme was uniformly labeled except for selected amino acid types, was applied to probe the contribution of R71 and Q101 to the (15)N signals. Such labeling has shown only weak coupling with all nitrogens of R71 and Q101. We utilize density functional theory-based calculations to model the available information about (1)H, (15)N, and (13)C hyperfine couplings for the Q(H) site and to describe the protein-substrate interactions in both enzymes. In particular, we identify the factors responsible for the asymmetric distribution of the unpaired spin density and ponder the significance of this asymmetry to the quinone's electron transfer function.
- Published
- 2012
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12. A rapid and robust method for selective isotope labeling of proteins.
- Author
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Lin MT, Sperling LJ, Frericks Schmidt HL, Tang M, Samoilova RI, Kumasaka T, Iwasaki T, Dikanov SA, Rienstra CM, and Gennis RB
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Motifs, Binding Sites, Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy, Electron Transport Complex IV chemistry, Escherichia coli genetics, Escherichia coli Proteins chemistry, Ferredoxins chemistry, Hydrogen Bonding, Iron chemistry, Membrane Proteins biosynthesis, Membrane Proteins chemistry, Models, Molecular, Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular, Organisms, Genetically Modified, Oxidation-Reduction, Protein Subunits biosynthesis, Protein Subunits chemistry, Recombinant Proteins biosynthesis, Recombinant Proteins chemistry, Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared, Sulfur chemistry, Electron Transport Complex IV biosynthesis, Escherichia coli Proteins biosynthesis, Ferredoxins biosynthesis, Isotope Labeling methods
- Abstract
Amino-acid selective isotope labeling of proteins offers numerous advantages in mechanistic studies by revealing structural and functional information unattainable from a crystallographic approach. However, efficient labeling of proteins with selected amino acids necessitates auxotrophic hosts, which are often not available. We have constructed a set of auxotrophs in a commonly used Escherichia coli expression strain C43(DE3), a derivative of E. coli BL21(DE3), which can be used for isotopic labeling of individual amino acids or sets of amino acids. These strains have general applicability to either soluble or membrane proteins that can be expressed in E. coli. We present examples in which proteins are selectively labeled with (13)C- and (15)N-amino acids and studied using magic-angle spinning solid-state NMR and pulsed EPR, demonstrating the utility of these strains for biophysical characterization of membrane proteins, radical-generating enzymes and metalloproteins., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2011
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13. Reaction of superoxide radical with quinone molecules.
- Author
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Samoilova RI, Crofts AR, and Dikanov SA
- Subjects
- Benzoquinones chemistry, Dimethyl Sulfoxide, Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy, Oxidation-Reduction, Solutions, Ubiquinone chemistry, Chemistry, Physical, Electron Transport, Oxygen chemistry, Protons, Superoxides chemistry, Ubiquinone analogs & derivatives
- Abstract
When the superoxide radical O(2)(•-) is generated on reaction of KO(2) with water in dimethyl sulfoxide, the decay of the radical is dramatically accelerated by inclusion of quinones in the reaction mix. For quinones with no or short hydrophobic tails, the radical product is a semiquinone at much lower yield, likely indicating reduction of quinone by superoxide and loss of most of the semiquinone product by disproportionation. In the presence of ubiquinone-10, a different species (I) is generated, which has the EPR spectrum of superoxide radical. However, pulsed EPR shows spin interaction with protons in fully deuterated solvent, indicating close proximity to the ubinquinone-10. We discuss the nature of species I, and possible roles in the physiological reactions through which ubisemiquinone generates superoxide by reduction of O(2) through bypass reactions in electron transfer chains.
- Published
- 2011
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14. ENDOR/HYSCORE studies of the common intermediate trapped during nitrogenase reduction of N2H2, CH3N2H, and N2H4 support an alternating reaction pathway for N2 reduction.
- Author
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Lukoyanov D, Dikanov SA, Yang ZY, Barney BM, Samoilova RI, Narasimhulu KV, Dean DR, Seefeldt LC, and Hoffman BM
- Subjects
- Crystallography, X-Ray, Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy, Hydrazines chemistry, Imides chemistry, Models, Molecular, Nitrogen chemistry, Nitrogenase chemistry, Oxidation-Reduction, Hydrazines metabolism, Imides metabolism, Nitrogen metabolism, Nitrogenase metabolism
- Abstract
Enzymatic N(2) reduction proceeds along a reaction pathway composed of a sequence of intermediate states generated as a dinitrogen bound to the active-site iron-molybdenum cofactor (FeMo-co) of the nitrogenase MoFe protein undergoes six steps of hydrogenation (e(-)/H(+) delivery). There are two competing proposals for the reaction pathway, and they invoke different intermediates. In the 'Distal' (D) pathway, a single N of N(2) is hydrogenated in three steps until the first NH(3) is liberated, and then the remaining nitrido-N is hydrogenated three more times to yield the second NH(3). In the 'Alternating' (A) pathway, the two N's instead are hydrogenated alternately, with a hydrazine-bound intermediate formed after four steps of hydrogenation and the first NH(3) liberated only during the fifth step. A recent combination of X/Q-band EPR and (15)N, (1,2)H ENDOR measurements suggested that states trapped during turnover of the α-70(Ala)/α-195(Gln) MoFe protein with diazene or hydrazine as substrate correspond to a common intermediate (here denoted I) in which FeMo-co binds a substrate-derived [N(x)H(y)] moiety, and measurements reported here show that turnover with methyldiazene generates the same intermediate. In the present report we describe X/Q-band EPR and (14/15)N, (1,2)H ENDOR/HYSCORE/ESEEM measurements that characterize the N-atom(s) and proton(s) associated with this moiety. The experiments establish that turnover with N(2)H(2), CH(3)N(2)H, and N(2)H(4) in fact generates a common intermediate, I, and show that the N-N bond of substrate has been cleaved in I. Analysis of this finding leads us to conclude that nitrogenase reduces N(2)H(2), CH(3)N(2)H, and N(2)H(4) via a common A reaction pathway, and that the same is true for N(2) itself, with Fe ion(s) providing the site of reaction.
- Published
- 2011
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15. Hydrogen bonding and spin density distribution in the Qb semiquinone of bacterial reaction centers and comparison with the Qa site.
- Author
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Martin E, Samoilova RI, Narasimhulu KV, Lin TJ, O'Malley PJ, Wraight CA, and Dikanov SA
- Subjects
- Benzoquinones metabolism, Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy, Hydrogen Bonding, Models, Molecular, Photosynthetic Reaction Center Complex Proteins metabolism, Protein Conformation, Protons, Quantum Theory, Benzoquinones chemistry, Photosynthetic Reaction Center Complex Proteins chemistry, Rhodobacter sphaeroides
- Abstract
In the photosynthetic reaction center from Rhodobacter sphaeroides, the primary (Q(A)) and secondary (Q(B)) electron acceptors are both ubiquinone-10, but with very different properties and functions. To investigate the protein environment that imparts these functional differences, we have applied X-band HYSCORE, a 2D pulsed EPR technique, to characterize the exchangeable protons around the semiquinone (SQ) in the Q(A) and Q(B) sites, using samples of (15)N-labeled reaction centers, with the native high spin Fe(2+) exchanged for diamagnetic Zn(2+), prepared in (1)H(2)O and (2)H(2)O solvent. The powder HYSCORE method is first validated against the orientation-selected Q-band ENDOR study of the Q(A) SQ by Flores et al. (Biophys. J.2007, 92, 671-682), with good agreement for two exchangeable protons with anisotropic hyperfine tensor components, T, both in the range 4.6-5.4 MHz. HYSCORE was then applied to the Q(B) SQ where we found proton lines corresponding to T ≈ 5.2, 3.7 MHz and T ≈ 1.9 MHz. Density functional-based quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) calculations, employing a model of the Q(B) site, were used to assign the observed couplings to specific hydrogen bonding interactions with the Q(B) SQ. These calculations allow us to assign the T = 5.2 MHz proton to the His-L190 N(δ)H···O(4) (carbonyl) hydrogen bonding interaction. The T = 3.7 MHz spectral feature most likely results from hydrogen bonding interactions of O1 (carbonyl) with both Gly-L225 peptide NH and Ser-L223 hydroxyl OH, which possess calculated couplings very close to this value. The smaller 1.9 MHz coupling is assigned to a weakly bound peptide NH proton of Ile-L224. The calculations performed with this structural model of the Q(B) site show less asymmetric distribution of unpaired spin density over the SQ than seen for the Q(A) site, consistent with available experimental data for (13)C and (17)O carbonyl hyperfine couplings. The implications of these interactions for Q(B) function and comparisons with the Q(A) site are discussed., (© 2011 American Chemical Society)
- Published
- 2011
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16. Exploring by pulsed EPR the electronic structure of ubisemiquinone bound at the QH site of cytochrome bo3 from Escherichia coli with in vivo 13C-labeled methyl and methoxy substituents.
- Author
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Lin MT, Shubin AA, Samoilova RI, Narasimhulu KV, Baldansuren A, Gennis RB, and Dikanov SA
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Substitution, Carbon Isotopes, Cytochrome b Group, Cytochromes, Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy, Escherichia coli genetics, Escherichia coli Proteins, Isotope Labeling, Mutation, Missense, Oxidation-Reduction, Ubiquinone chemistry, Ubiquinone metabolism, Escherichia coli metabolism, Ubiquinone analogs & derivatives
- Abstract
The cytochrome bo(3) ubiquinol oxidase from Escherichia coli resides in the bacterial cytoplasmic membrane and catalyzes the two-electron oxidation of ubiquinol-8 and four-electron reduction of O(2) to water. The one-electron reduced semiquinone forms transiently during the reaction, and the enzyme has been demonstrated to stabilize the semiquinone. The semiquinone is also formed in the D75E mutant, where the mutation has little influence on the catalytic activity, and in the D75H mutant, which is virtually inactive. In this work, wild-type cytochrome bo(3) as well as the D75E and D75H mutant proteins were prepared with ubiquinone-8 (13)C-labeled selectively at the methyl and two methoxy groups. This was accomplished by expressing the proteins in a methionine auxotroph in the presence of l-methionine with the side chain methyl group (13)C-labeled. The (13)C-labeled quinone isolated from cytochrome bo(3) was also used for the generation of model anion radicals in alcohol. Two-dimensional pulsed EPR and ENDOR were used for the study of the (13)C methyl and methoxy hyperfine couplings in the semiquinone generated in the three proteins indicated above and in the model system. The data were used to characterize the transferred unpaired spin densities on the methyl and methoxy substituents and the conformations of the methoxy groups. In the wild type and D75E mutant, the constraints on the configurations of the methoxy side chains are similar, but the D75H mutant appears to have altered methoxy configurations, which could be related to the perturbed electron distribution in the semiquinone and the loss of enzymatic activity.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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17. The quinone-binding sites of the cytochrome bo3 ubiquinol oxidase from Escherichia coli.
- Author
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Yap LL, Lin MT, Ouyang H, Samoilova RI, Dikanov SA, and Gennis RB
- Subjects
- Binding Sites genetics, Binding, Competitive drug effects, Cytochrome b Group, Cytochromes genetics, Escherichia coli Proteins genetics, Hydroxyquinolines chemistry, Hydroxyquinolines metabolism, Hydroxyquinolines pharmacology, Kinetics, Models, Biological, Molecular Structure, Mutagenesis, Site-Directed, Mutation, Oxidation-Reduction drug effects, Oxidoreductases genetics, Oxidoreductases metabolism, Oxygen metabolism, Protein Binding drug effects, Quinolones chemistry, Quinolones metabolism, Quinolones pharmacology, Quinones chemistry, Substrate Specificity, Ubiquinone analogs & derivatives, Ubiquinone chemistry, Ubiquinone metabolism, Cytochromes metabolism, Escherichia coli enzymology, Escherichia coli Proteins metabolism, Quinones metabolism
- Abstract
Cytochrome bo(3) is the major respiratory oxidase located in the cytoplasmic membrane of Escherichia coli when grown under high oxygen tension. The enzyme catalyzes the 2-electron oxidation of ubiquinol-8 and the 4-electron reduction of dioxygen to water. When solubilized and isolated using dodecylmaltoside, the enzyme contains one equivalent of ubiquinone-8, bound at a high affinity site (Q(H)). The quinone bound at the Q(H) site can form a stable semiquinone, and the amino acid residues which hydrogen bond to the semiquinone have been identified. In the current work, it is shown that the tightly bound ubiquinone-8 at the Q(H) site is not displaced by ubiquinol-1 even during enzyme turnover. Furthermore, the presence of high affinity inhibitors, HQNO and aurachin C1-10, does not displace ubiquinone-8 from the Q(H) site. The data clearly support the existence of a second binding site for ubiquinone, the Q(L) site, which can rapidly exchange with the substrate pool. HQNO is shown to bind to a single site on the enzyme and to prevent formation of the stable ubisemiquinone, though without displacing the bound quinone. Inhibition of the steady state kinetics of the enzyme indicates that aurachin C1-10 may compete for binding with quinol at the Q(L) site while, at the same time, preventing formation of the ubisemiquinone at the Q(H) site. It is suggested that the two quinone binding sites may be adjacent to each other or partially overlap., (Copyright © 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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18. Hydrogen bonds between nitrogen donors and the semiquinone in the Q(B) site of bacterial reaction centers.
- Author
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Martin E, Samoilova RI, Narasimhulu KV, Wraight CA, and Dikanov SA
- Subjects
- Binding Sites, Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy, Hydrogen Bonding, Models, Molecular, Rhodobacter sphaeroides growth & development, Rhodobacter sphaeroides metabolism, Ubiquinone chemistry, Ubiquinone metabolism, Benzoquinones chemistry, Nitrogen chemistry, Rhodobacter sphaeroides chemistry, Ubiquinone analogs & derivatives
- Abstract
Photosynthetic reaction centers from Rhodobacter sphaeroides have identical ubiquinone-10 molecules functioning as primary (Q(A)) and secondary (Q(B)) electron acceptors. X-band 2D pulsed EPR spectroscopy, called HYSCORE, was applied to study the interaction of the Q(B) site semiquinone with nitrogens from the local protein environment in natural and (15)N uniformly labeled reactions centers. (14)N and (15)N HYSCORE spectra of the Q(B) semiquinone show the interaction with two nitrogens carrying transferred unpaired spin density. Quadrupole coupling constants estimated from (14)N HYSCORE spectra indicate them to be a protonated nitrogen of an imidazole residue and amide nitrogen of a peptide group. (15)N HYSCORE spectra allowed estimation of the isotropic and anisotropic couplings with these nitrogens. From these data, we calculated the unpaired spin density transferred onto 2s and 2p orbitals of nitrogen and analyzed the contribution of different factors to the anisotropic hyperfine tensors. The hyperfine coupling of other protein nitrogens with the semiquinone is weak (<0.1 MHz). These results clearly indicate that the Q(B) semiquinone forms hydrogen bonds with two nitrogens and provide quantitative characteristics of the hyperfine couplings with these nitrogens, which can be used in theoretical modeling of the Q(B) site. On the basis of the quadrupole coupling constant, one nitrogen can only be assigned to N(delta) of His-L190, consistent with all existing structures. However, we cannot specify between two candidates the residue corresponding to the second nitrogen. Further work employing multifrequency spectroscopic approaches or selective isotope labeling would be desirable for unambiguous assignment of this nitrogen.
- Published
- 2010
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19. Characterization of the semiquinone radical stabilized by the cytochrome aa3-600 menaquinol oxidase of Bacillus subtilis.
- Author
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Yi SM, Narasimhulu KV, Samoilova RI, Gennis RB, and Dikanov SA
- Subjects
- Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid methods, Electrochemistry methods, Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy, Escherichia coli enzymology, Hydrogen Bonding, Models, Chemical, Mutagenesis, Site-Directed, Nitrogen chemistry, Photosystem I Protein Complex chemistry, Ubiquinone analogs & derivatives, Ubiquinone chemistry, Vitamin K chemistry, Vitamin K 2 analogs & derivatives, Vitamin K 2 chemistry, Bacillus subtilis enzymology, Benzoquinones chemistry, Electron Transport Complex IV chemistry
- Abstract
Cytochrome aa(3)-600 is one of the principle respiratory oxidases from Bacillus subtilis and is a member of the heme-copper superfamily of oxygen reductases. This enzyme catalyzes the two-electron oxidation of menaquinol and the four-electron reduction of O(2) to 2H(2)O. Cytochrome aa(3)-600 is of interest because it is a very close homologue of the cytochrome bo(3) ubiquinol oxidase from Escherichia coli, except that it uses menaquinol instead of ubiquinol as a substrate. One question of interest is how the proteins differ in response to the differences in structure and electrochemical properties between ubiquinol and menaquinol. Cytochrome bo(3) has a high affinity binding site for ubiquinol that stabilizes a ubi-semiquinone. This has permitted the use of pulsed EPR techniques to investigate the protein interaction with the ubiquinone. The current work initiates studies to characterize the equivalent site in cytochrome aa(3)-600. Cytochrome aa(3)-600 has been cloned and expressed in a His-tagged form in B. subtilis. After isolation of the enzyme in dodecylmaltoside, it is shown that the pure enzyme contains 1 eq of menaquinone-7 and that the enzyme stabilizes a mena-semiquinone. Pulsed EPR studies have shown that there are both similarities as well as significant differences in the interactions of the mena-semiquinone with cytochrome aa(3)-600 in comparison with the ubi-semiquinone in cytochrome bo(3). Our data indicate weaker hydrogen bonds of the menaquinone in cytochrome aa(3)-600 in comparison with ubiquinone in cytochrome bo(3). In addition, the electronic structure of the semiquinone cyt aa(3)-600 is more shifted toward the anionic form from the neutral state in cyt bo(3).
- Published
- 2010
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20. Two-dimensional pulsed electron spin resonance characterization of 15N-labeled archaeal Rieske-type ferredoxin.
- Author
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Iwasaki T, Samoilova RI, Kounosu A, and Dikanov SA
- Subjects
- Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy, Isotope Labeling, Nitrogen Isotopes, Sulfolobus solfataricus, Archaeal Proteins chemistry, Electron Transport Complex III chemistry, Ferredoxins chemistry
- Abstract
Two-dimensional electron spin-echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) analysis of the uniformly (15)N-labeled archaeal Rieske-type [2Fe-2S] ferredoxin (ARF) from Sulfolobus solfataricus P1 has been conducted in comparison with the previously characterized high-potential protein homologs. Major differences among these proteins were found in the hyperfine sublevel correlation (HYSCORE) lineshapes and intensities of the signals in the (++) quadrant, which are contributed from weakly coupled (non-coordinated) peptide nitrogens near the reduced clusters. They are less pronounced in the HYSCORE spectra of ARF than those of the high-potential protein homologs, and may account for the tuning of Rieske-type clusters in various redox systems.
- Published
- 2009
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21. Continuous-wave and pulsed EPR characterization of the [2Fe-2S](Cys)3(His)1 cluster in rat MitoNEET.
- Author
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Iwasaki T, Samoilova RI, Kounosu A, Ohmori D, and Dikanov SA
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy, Molecular Sequence Data, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Rats, Cysteine chemistry, Histidine chemistry, Mitochondrial Proteins chemistry
- Abstract
CW EPR spectra of reduced [2Fe-2S](Cys)(3)(His)(1) clusters of mammalian mitoNEET soluble domain appear to produce features resulting from the interaction of the electron spins of the two adjacent clusters, which can be explained by employing the local spin model. This model favors the reduction of the outermost iron with His87 and Cys83 ligands, which is supported by orientation-selected hyperfine sublevel correlation (HYSCORE) characterization of the uniformly (15)N-labeled mitoNEET showing one strongly coupled nitrogen from the His87 N(delta) ligand with hyperfine coupling (15)a = 8 MHz. The (14)N and (15)N HYSCORE spectra also exhibit at least two different cross-peaks located near diagonal in the (++) quadrant, with frequencies approximately 2.8 and 2.4 MHz (N2), and the other approximately 4.0 and 3.5 MHz (N1), but did not show any of the larger splitting approximately 1.1-1.4 MHz previously seen with Rieske proteins. Further analysis with partially (15)N(3)-His-labeled protein indicates that His87 N(epsilon) cross-peaks produce resolved features (N2) in the (14)N spectrum but contribute much less than weakly coupled peptide nitrogen species to the (++) quadrant in the (15)N spectrum. It is suggested that these quantitative data may be used in future functional and theoretical studies on the mammalian mitoNEET [2Fe-2S] cluster system.
- Published
- 2009
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22. PELDOR study of conformations of double-spin-labeled single- and double-stranded DNA with non-nucleotide inserts.
- Author
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Kuznetsov NA, Milov AD, Koval VV, Samoilova RI, Grishin YA, Knorre DG, Tsvetkov YD, Fedorova OS, and Dzuba SA
- Subjects
- Ethylene Glycols chemistry, Furans chemistry, Models, Molecular, Oligodeoxyribonucleotides chemistry, DNA chemistry, DNA, Single-Stranded chemistry, Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy methods, Nucleic Acid Conformation, Spin Labels
- Abstract
DNA fragments were synthesized consisting of 12 nucleotides and containing non-nucleotide inserts of different length in the middle. Two nitroxide spin labels 4-amino-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl were attached at the two ends of the molecules. Single-stranded DNAs and double-stranded DNAs (DNA duplexes) in frozen at 77 K glassy water/glycerol solutions were studied using pulsed electron-electron double resonance (PELDOR). The distance distributions between two spin labels in molecules were obtained from PELDOR data using Tikhonov regularization algorithm, and were found to be close to the Gaussian functions. Experimental PELDOR data were fitted by adjusting precisely the maximum position and the width of these functions. The obtained results show that duplexes possess a substantially narrower distribution, as compared to the single-stranded DNAs. Introduction of a non-nucleotide insert 2-hydroxymethyl-3-hydroxy-tetrahydrofuran leads to a slight but nevertheless detectable decrease of the mean distance between two spin labels. This decrease may be attributed to bending of the molecule around the insert site, by an angle of approximately 20 degrees . An introduction of a non-nucleotide insert bis-(di-ethyleneglycol)-phosphate results in a remarkable broadening of the distance distribution. The results evidence that PELDOR of spin-labeled DNA molecules may be used as a "molecular ruler" for studying the influence of local damages on the DNA conformations.
- Published
- 2009
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23. The reduced [2Fe-2S] clusters in adrenodoxin and Arthrospira platensis ferredoxin share spin density with protein nitrogens, probed using 2D ESEEM.
- Author
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Dikanov SA, Samoilova RI, Kappl R, Crofts AR, and Hüttermann J
- Subjects
- Cysteine chemistry, Hydrogen Bonding, Iron-Sulfur Proteins chemistry, Models, Molecular, Oxidation-Reduction, Adrenodoxin chemistry, Cyanobacteria chemistry, Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy methods, Ferredoxins chemistry, Nitrogen chemistry
- Abstract
We have used X-band ESEEM to study the reduced [2Fe-2S] cluster in adrenodoxin and Arthrospira platensis ferredoxin. By use of a 2D approach (HYSCORE), we have shown that the cluster is involved in weak magnetic interactions with several nitrogens in each protein. Despite substantial differences in the shape and orientational dependence of individual cross-peaks, the major spectral features in both proteins are attributable to two peptide nitrogens (N1 and N2) with similar hyperfine couplings approximately 1.1 and approximately 0.70 MHz. The couplings determined represent a small fraction (0.0003-0.0005) of the unpaired spin density of the reduced cluster transferred to these nitrogens over H-bond bridges or the covalent bonds of cysteine ligands. Simulation of the HYSCORE spectra has allowed us to estimate the orientation of the nuclear quadrupole tensors of N1 and N2 in the g-tensor coordinate system. The most likely candidates for the role of N1 and N2 have been identified in the protein environment by comparing magnetic-resonance data with crystallographic structures of the oxidized proteins. A possible influence of redox-linked structural changes on ESEEM data is analyzed using available structures for related proteins in two redox states.
- Published
- 2009
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24. Structure of self-aggregated alamethicin in ePC membranes detected by pulsed electron-electron double resonance and electron spin echo envelope modulation spectroscopies.
- Author
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Milov AD, Samoilova RI, Tsvetkov YD, De Zotti M, Formaggio F, Toniolo C, Handgraaf JW, and Raap J
- Subjects
- Algorithms, Amino Acid Sequence, Models, Molecular, Molecular Sequence Data, Phosphatidylcholines chemistry, Spectrum Analysis, Alamethicin chemistry, Membranes, Artificial, Protein Conformation, Protein Multimerization
- Abstract
PELDOR spectroscopy was exploited to study the self-assembled super-structure of the [Glu(OMe)(7,18,19)]alamethicin molecules in vesicular membranes at peptide to lipid molar ratios in the range of 1:70-1:200. The peptide molecules were site-specifically labeled with TOAC electron spins. From the magnetic dipole-dipole interaction between the nitroxides of the monolabeled constituents and the PELDOR decay patterns measured at 77 K, intermolecular-distance distribution functions were obtained and the number of aggregated molecules (n approximately 4) was estimated. The distance distribution functions exhibit a similar maximum at 2.3 nm. In contrast to Alm16, for Alm1 and Alm8 additional maxima were recorded at 3.2 and approximately 5.2 nm. From ESEEM experiments and based on the membrane polarity profiles, the penetration depths of the different spin-labeled positions into the membrane were qualitatively estimated. It was found that the water accessibility of the spin-labels follows the order TOAC-1 > TOAC-8 approximately TOAC-16. The geometric data obtained are discussed in terms of a penknife molecular model. At least two peptide chains are aligned parallel and eight ester groups of the polar Glu(OMe)(18,19) residues are suggested to stabilize the self-aggregate superstructure.
- Published
- 2009
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25. Proton environment of reduced Rieske iron-sulfur cluster probed by two-dimensional ESEEM spectroscopy.
- Author
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Kolling DR, Samoilova RI, Shubin AA, Crofts AR, and Dikanov SA
- Subjects
- Cysteine, Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy, Histidine, Hydrogen Bonding, Isotopes, Ligands, Magnetics, Water chemistry, Bacterial Proteins chemistry, Electron Transport Complex III chemistry, Protons, Rhodobacter sphaeroides chemistry
- Abstract
The proton environment of the reduced [2Fe-2S] cluster in the water-soluble head domain of the Rieske iron-sulfur protein (ISF) from the cytochrome bc(1) complex of Rhodobacter sphaeroides has been studied by orientation-selected X-band 2D ESEEM. The 2D spectra show multiple cross-peaks from protons, with considerable overlap. Samples in which (1)H(2)O water was replaced by (2)H(2)O were used to determine which of the observed peaks belong to exchangeable protons, likely involved in hydrogen bonds in the neighborhood of the cluster. By correlating the cross-peaks from 2D spectra recorded at different parts of the EPR spectrum, lines from nine distinct proton signals were identified. Assignment of the proton signals was based on a point-dipole model for interaction with electrons of Fe(III) and Fe(II) ions, using the high-resolution structure of ISF from Rb. sphaeroides. Analysis of experimental and calculated tensors has led us to conclude that even 2D spectra do not completely resolve all contributions from nearby protons. Particularly, the seven resolved signals from nonexchangeable protons could be produced by at least 13 protons. The contributions from exchangeable protons were resolved by difference spectra ((1)H(2)O minus (2)H(2)O), and assigned to two groups of protons with distinct anisotropic hyperfine values. The largest measured coupling exceeded any calculated value. This discrepancy could result from limitations of the point dipole approximation in dealing with the distribution of spin density over the sulfur atoms of the cluster and the cysteine ligands, or from differences between the structure in solution and the crystallographic structure. The approach demonstrated here provides a paradigm for a wide range of studies in which hydrogen-bonding interactions with metallic centers has a crucial role in understanding the function.
- Published
- 2009
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26. Identification of the nitrogen donor hydrogen bonded with the semiquinone at the Q(H) site of the cytochrome bo3 from Escherichia coli.
- Author
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Lin MT, Samoilova RI, Gennis RB, and Dikanov SA
- Subjects
- Cytochrome b Group, Cytochromes genetics, Escherichia coli genetics, Escherichia coli Proteins genetics, Hydrogen Bonding, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Molecular Structure, Benzoquinones chemistry, Cytochromes metabolism, Escherichia coli metabolism, Escherichia coli Proteins metabolism, Nitrogen chemistry, Nitrogen metabolism
- Abstract
The selective (15)N isotope labeling was used for the identification of the nitrogen involved in a hydrogen bond formation with the semiquinone in the high-affinity Q(H) site in the cytochrome bo(3) ubiquinol oxidase. This nitrogen produces dominating contribution to X-Band (14)N ESEEM spectra. The 2D ESEEM (HYSCORE) experiments with the Q(H) site SQ in the series of selectively (15)N labeled bo(3) oxidase proteins have directly identified the N(epsilon) of R71 as an H-bond donor. In addition, selective (15)N labeling has allowed us for the first time to determine weak hyperfine couplings with the side-chain nitrogens from all residues around the SQ. Those are reflecting a distribution of the unpaired spin density over the protein in the SQ state of the quinone processing site.
- Published
- 2008
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27. PELDOR conformational analysis of bis-labeled alamethicin aggregated in phospholipid vesicles.
- Author
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Milov AD, Samoilova RI, Tsvetkov YD, De Zotti M, Toniolo C, and Raap J
- Subjects
- Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Membranes, Artificial, Models, Molecular, Peptides chemistry, Protein Conformation, Solvents, Spin Labels, Alamethicin chemistry, Algorithms, Ionophores chemistry, Phospholipids chemistry
- Abstract
Alamethicin (Alm) is a linear peptide antibiotic of great interest for its capability to form self-assembled ion channels in lipid membranes. Here, the pulsed electron-electron double resonance technique was used to obtain unique conformational information on the aggregated peptide in the lipid membrane-bound state. Since a specific helical conformation implies a given length to the peptide molecule, a distance r was measured at the nanometer scale via the electron dipole-dipole interaction between two 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl-4-amino-4-carboxylic acid spin labels synthetically incorporated at positions 1 and 16 of this 19-mer peptide. Two data sets were collected (at 77 K): (i) from aggregates of Alm in hydrated egg-yolk phosphocholine (ePC) vesicles (at peptide-to-lipid ratios of 1:200 and 1:75) and (ii) from nonaggregated Alm in pure (nonhydrated) ePC and in solvents of different polarity. The intramolecular distance between the two labels obtained in this manner is in excellent agreement with that calculated on the basis of an almost fully developed alpha-helical conformation for this peptide and is found to be independent of the molecular aggregated state and the environment polarity as well.
- Published
- 2008
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28. Hydrogen bonds between nitrogen donors and the semiquinone in the Qi-site of the bc1 complex.
- Author
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Dikanov SA, Holland JT, Endeward B, Kolling DR, Samoilova RI, Prisner TF, and Crofts AR
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Substitution, Bacterial Proteins genetics, Binding Sites, Electron Transport Complex III genetics, Hydrogen Bonding, Mutation, Missense, Protein Structure, Quaternary, Rhodobacter sphaeroides genetics, Structure-Activity Relationship, X-Ray Diffraction, Bacterial Proteins chemistry, Benzoquinones chemistry, Electron Transport Complex III chemistry, Models, Molecular, Rhodobacter sphaeroides enzymology
- Abstract
The ubisemiquinone stabilized at the Qi-site of the bc1 complex of Rhodobacter sphaeroides forms a hydrogen bond with a nitrogen from the local protein environment, tentatively identified as ring N from His-217. The interactions of 14N and 15N have been studied by X-band (approximately 9.7 GHz) and S-band (3.4 GHz) pulsed EPR spectroscopy. The application of S-band spectroscopy has allowed us to determine the complete nuclear quadrupole tensor of the 14N involved in H-bond formation and to assign it unambiguously to the Nepsilon of His-217. This tensor has distinct characteristics in comparison with H-bonds between semiquinones and Ndelta in other quinone-processing sites. The experiments with 15N showed that the Nepsilon of His-217 was the only nitrogen carrying any considerable unpaired spin density in the ubiquinone environment, and allowed calculation of the isotropic and anisotropic couplings with the Nepsilon of His-217. From these data, we could estimate the unpaired spin density transferred onto 2s and 2p orbitals of nitrogen and the distance from the nitrogen to the carbonyl oxygen of 2.38+/-0.13A. The hyperfine coupling of other protein nitrogens with semiquinone is <0.1 MHz. This did not exclude the nitrogen of the Asn-221 as a possible hydrogen bond donor to the methoxy oxygen of the semiquinone. A mechanistic role for this residue is supported by kinetic experiments with mutant strains N221T, N221H, N221I, N221S, N221P, and N221D, all of which showed some inhibition but retained partial turnover.
- Published
- 2007
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29. Self-aggregation of spin-labeled alamethicin in ePC vesicles studied by pulsed electron - electron double resonance.
- Author
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Milov AD, Samoilova RI, Tsvetkov YD, Formaggio F, Toniolo C, and Raap J
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Lipid Bilayers chemistry, Molecular Sequence Data, Phospholipids chemistry, Alamethicin chemistry, Anti-Bacterial Agents chemistry, Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy methods, Spin Labels
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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30. Characterization of mutants that change the hydrogen bonding of the semiquinone radical at the QH site of the cytochrome bo3 from Escherichia coli.
- Author
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Yap LL, Samoilova RI, Gennis RB, and Dikanov SA
- Subjects
- Arginine chemistry, Aspartic Acid chemistry, Catalysis, Cytochrome b Group, Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy, Escherichia coli metabolism, Escherichia coli Proteins, Glutamine chemistry, Hydrogen Bonding, Kinetics, Models, Chemical, Protein Binding, Protons, Quinones chemistry, Benzoquinones chemistry, Cytochromes chemistry, Cytochromes genetics, Escherichia coli genetics, Mutation
- Abstract
The cytochrome bo3 ubiquinol oxidase catalyzes the two-electron oxidation of ubiquinol in the cytoplasmic membrane of Escherichia coli, and reduces O2 to water. This enzyme has a high affinity quinone binding site (QH), and the quinone bound to this site acts as a cofactor, necessary for rapid electron transfer from substrate ubiquinol, which binds at a separate site (QL), to heme b. Previous pulsed EPR studies have shown that a semiquinone at the QH site formed during the catalytic cycle is a neutral species, with two strong hydrogen bonds to Asp-75 and either Arg-71 or Gln-101. In the current work, pulsed EPR studies have been extended to two mutants at the QH site. The D75E mutation has little influence on the catalytic activity, and the pattern of hydrogen bonding is similar to the wild type. In contrast, the D75H mutant is virtually inactive. Pulsed EPR revealed significant structural changes in this mutant. The hydrogen bond to Arg-71 or Gln-101 that is present in both the wild type and D75E mutant oxidases is missing in the D75H mutant. Instead, the D75H has a single, strong hydrogen bond to a histidine, likely His-75. The D75H mutant stabilizes an anionic form of the semiquinone as a result of the altered hydrogen bond network. Either the redistribution of charge density in the semiquinone species, or the altered hydrogen bonding network is responsible for the loss of catalytic function.
- Published
- 2007
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31. Identification of hydrogen bonds to the Rieske cluster through the weakly coupled nitrogens detected by electron spin echo envelope modulation spectroscopy.
- Author
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Dikanov SA, Kolling DR, Endeward B, Samoilova RI, Prisner TF, Nair SK, and Crofts AR
- Subjects
- Biochemistry methods, Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy, Electrons, Hydrogen, Hydrogen Bonding, Models, Molecular, Peptides chemistry, Protein Conformation, Software, Sulfur, Electron Transport Complex III chemistry, Iron-Sulfur Proteins chemistry, Nitrogen chemistry, Rhodobacter sphaeroides enzymology
- Abstract
The interaction of the reduced[2Fe-2S] cluster of isolated Rieske fragment from the bc1 complex of Rhodobacter sphaeroides with nitrogens (14N and 15N) from the local protein environment has been studied by X- and S-band pulsed EPR spectroscopy. The two-dimensional electron spin echo envelope modulation spectra of uniformly 15N-labeled protein show two well resolved cross-peaks with weak couplings of approximately 0.3-0.4 and 1.1 MHz in addition to couplings in the range of 6-8 MHz from two coordinating Ndelta of histidine ligands. The quadrupole coupling constants for weakly coupled nitrogens determined from S-band electron spin echo envelope modulation spectra identify them as Nepsilon of histidine ligands and peptide nitrogen (Np), respectively. Analysis of the line intensities in orientation-selected S-band spectra indicated that Np is the backbone N-atom of Leu-132 residue. The hyperfine couplings from Nepsilon and Np demonstrate the predominantly isotropic character resulting from the transfer of unpaired spin density onto the 2s orbitals of the nitrogens. Spectra also show that other peptide nitrogens in the protein environment must carry a 5-10 times smaller amount of spin density than the Np of Leu-132 residue. The appearance of the excess unpaired spin density on the Np of Leu-132 residue indicates its involvement in hydrogen bond formation with the bridging sulfur of the Rieske cluster. The configuration of the hydrogen bond therefore provides a preferred path for spin density transfer. Observation of similar splittings in the 15N spectra of other Rieske-type proteins and [2Fe-2S] ferredoxins suggests that a hydrogen bond between the bridging sulfur and peptide nitrogen is a common structural feature of [2Fe-2S] clusters.
- Published
- 2006
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32. Characterization of the exchangeable protons in the immediate vicinity of the semiquinone radical at the QH site of the cytochrome bo3 from Escherichia coli.
- Author
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Yap LL, Samoilova RI, Gennis RB, and Dikanov SA
- Subjects
- Anisotropy, Biochemistry methods, Cytochrome b Group, Electron Transport, Electron Transport Chain Complex Proteins, Electrons, Escherichia coli chemistry, Escherichia coli Proteins, Hydrogen Bonding, Kinetics, Models, Chemical, Protons, Benzoquinones, Cytochromes genetics, Escherichia coli enzymology
- Abstract
The cytochrome bo3 ubiquinol oxidase from Escherichia coli resides in the bacterial cytoplasmic membrane and catalyzes the two-electron oxidation of ubiquinol-8 and four-electron reduction of O2 to water. The one-electron reduced semiquinone forms transiently during the reaction, and the enzyme has been demonstrated to stabilize the semiquinone. Two-dimensional electron spin echo envelope modulation has been applied to explore the exchangeable protons involved in hydrogen bonding to the semiquinone by substitution of 1H2O by 2H2O. Three exchangeable protons possessing different isotropic and anisotropic hyperfine couplings were identified. The strength of the hyperfine interaction with one proton suggests a significant covalent O-H binding of carbonyl oxygen O1 that is a characteristic of a neutral radical, an assignment that is also supported by the unusually large hyperfine coupling to the methyl protons. The second proton with a large anisotropic coupling also forms a strong hydrogen bond with a carbonyl oxygen. This second hydrogen bond, which has a significant out-of-plane character, is from an NH2 or NH nitrogen, probably from an arginine (Arg-71) known to be in the quinone binding site. Assignment of the third exchangeable proton with smaller anisotropic coupling is more ambiguous, but it is clearly not involved in a direct hydrogen bond with either of the carbonyl oxygens. The results support a model that the semiquinone is bound to the protein in a very asymmetric manner by two strong hydrogen bonds from Asp-75 and Arg-71 to the O1 carbonyl, while the O4 carbonyl is not hydrogen-bonded to the protein.
- Published
- 2006
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33. 15N HYSCORE characterization of the fully deprotonated, reduced form of the archaeal Rieske [2Fe-2S] center.
- Author
-
Iwasaki T, Kounosu A, Samoilova RI, and Dikanov SA
- Subjects
- Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy methods, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Nitrogen Isotopes chemistry, Protons, Sulfolobus chemistry, Thermus thermophilus chemistry, Archaeal Proteins chemistry, Electron Transport Complex III chemistry, Iron-Sulfur Proteins chemistry
- Abstract
The hyperfine couplings for strongly and weakly coupled 15N nuclei around a reduced Rieske [2Fe-2S] center of uniformly 15N-labeled, hyperthermostable archaeal Rieske protein at pH 13.3 were determined by hyperfine sublevel correlation (HYSCORE) spectroscopy and compared with those at physiological pH. Significant changes in the hyperfine couplings of the terminal histidine Ndelta ligands and Nepsilon nuclei were observed between them, which can be explained by not only the redistribution of the unpaired electron spin density over the ligands but also the difference in the mixed-valence state of the fully deprotonated, reduced cluster. These quantitative data can be used in theoretical analysis for the selection of an appropriate model of the mixed-valence state of the reduced Rieske center at very alkaline pH.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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34. Orientation-selected 15N-HYSCORE detection of weakly coupled nitrogens around the archaeal rieske [2Fe-2S] center.
- Author
-
Iwasaki T, Kounosu A, Uzawa T, Samoilova RI, and Dikanov SA
- Subjects
- Archaeal Proteins metabolism, Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy methods, Electron Transport Complex III metabolism, Iron-Sulfur Proteins metabolism, Nitrogen Isotopes, Sulfolobus chemistry, Sulfolobus metabolism, Archaeal Proteins chemistry, Electron Transport Complex III chemistry, Iron-Sulfur Proteins chemistry
- Abstract
The weakly coupled 15N atoms around a reduced Rieske [2Fe-2S] cluster of the uniformly 15N-labeled, hyperthermostable archaeal Rieske protein appear to produce readily observable cross-peaks in the HYSCORE spectra, with the well-resolved couplings of 0.3-0.4 MHz for the Nepsilon and 1.1 MHz for the peptide backbone nitrogens, in addition to the contributions from the coordinated Ndelta atoms. These features can be used for structure-mechanism studies of the biological redox protein system involving the weakly coupled nitrogens in coupled electron-proton transfer reactions.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
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35. A comparative, two-dimensional 14N ESEEM characterization of reduced [2Fe-2S] clusters in hyperthermophilic archaeal high- and low-potential Rieske-type proteins.
- Author
-
Dikanov SA, Shubin AA, Kounosu A, Iwasaki T, and Samoilova RI
- Subjects
- Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy methods, Escherichia coli genetics, Escherichia coli metabolism, Histidine chemistry, Models, Chemical, Nitrogen chemistry, Organisms, Genetically Modified, Electron Transport Complex III chemistry, Iron-Sulfur Proteins chemistry, Sulfolobus chemistry
- Abstract
Proteins of the Rieske and Rieske-type family contain a [2Fe-2S] cluster with mixed ligation by two histidines and two cysteines, and play important roles in various biological electron transfer reactions. We report here the comparative orientation-selected ESEEM and HYSCORE studies of the reduced clusters from two hyperthermophilic Rieske-type proteins; a high-potential, archaeal Rieske protein called sulredoxin (SDX) from Sulfolobus tokodaii with weak homology to the cytochrome bc-associated Rieske proteins, and a low-potential, archaeal homolog of an oxygenase-associated Rieske-type ferredoxin (ARF) from Sulfolobus solfataricus. (14)N ESEEM and HYSCORE spectra of SDX and ARF show well-defined variations, which are primarily determined by changes of quadrupole couplings (up to 50% depending on the selected orientation) of the two coordinated nitrogens. These are due to variations in coordination geometry of the histidine imidazole ligands rather than to variations of hyperfine couplings of these nitrogens, which do not exceed 8-10%. The measured quadrupole couplings and their differences in the two proteins are consistent with those calculated using the reported crystal structures of high- and low-potential Rieske proteins. These results suggest that exploration of quadrupole tensors might provide a more accurate method for characterization of the histidine coordination in different proteins and mutants than hyperfine tensors, and might have potential applications in a wider range of biological systems.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Hydrogen bonds involved in binding the Qi-site semiquinone in the bc1 complex, identified through deuterium exchange using pulsed EPR.
- Author
-
Dikanov SA, Samoilova RI, Kolling DR, Holland JT, and Crofts AR
- Subjects
- Benzoquinones metabolism, Deuterium metabolism, Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy, Electron Transport Complex III analysis, Hydrogen Bonding, Protons, Electron Transport Complex III metabolism, Rhodobacter sphaeroides metabolism
- Abstract
Exchangeable protons in the immediate neighborhood of the semiquinone (SQ) at the Qi-site of the bc1 complex (ubihydroquinone:cytochrome c oxidoreductase (EC 1.10.2.2)) from Rhodobacter sphaeroides have been characterized using electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) and hyperfine sublevel correlation spectroscopy (HYSCORE) and visualized by substitution of H2O by 2H2O. Three exchangeable protons interact with the electron spin of the SQ. They possess different isotropic and anisotropic hyperfine couplings that allow a clear distinction between them. The strength of interactions indicates that the protons are involved in hydrogen bonds with SQ. The hyperfine couplings differ from values typical for in-plane hydrogen bonds previously observed in model experiments. It is suggested that the two stronger couplings involve formation of hydrogen bonds with carbonyl oxygens, which have a significant out-of-plane character due to the combined influence of bulky substituents and the protein environment. These two hydrogen bonds are most probably to side chains suggested from crystallographic structures (His-217 and Asp-252 in R. sphaeroides). Assignment of the third hydrogen bond is more ambiguous but may involve either a bond between Asn-221 and a methoxy O-atom or a bond to water. The structural and catalytic roles of the exchangeable protons are discussed in the context of three high resolution crystallographic structures for mitochondrial bc1 complexes. Potential H-bonds, including those to water molecules, form a network connecting the quinone (ubiquinone) occupant and its ligands to the propionates of heme bH and the external aqueous phase. They provide pathways for exchange of protons within the site and with the exteriors, needed to accommodate the different hydrogen bonding requirements of different quinone species during catalysis.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Exploration of ligands to the Qi site semiquinone in the bc1 complex using high-resolution EPR.
- Author
-
Kolling DR, Samoilova RI, Holland JT, Berry EA, Dikanov SA, and Crofts AR
- Subjects
- Binding Sites, Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy, Hydrogen Bonding, Ligands, Models, Molecular, Oxidation-Reduction, Quinones chemistry, Rhodobacter sphaeroides enzymology, Electron Transport Complex III chemistry, Electron Transport Complex III metabolism
- Abstract
Pulsed EPR spectroscopy was used to explore the structural neighborhood of the semiquinone (SQ) stabilized at the Qi site of the bc1 complex of Rhodobacter sphaeroides (EC 1.10.2.2) and to demonstrate that the nitrogen atom of a histidine imidazole group donates an H-bond to the SQ. Crystallographic structures show two different configurations for the binding of ubiquinone at the Qi site of mitochondrial bc1 complexes in which histidine (His-201 in bovine sequence) is either a direct H-bond donor or separated by a bridging water. The paramagnetic properties of the SQ formed at the site provide an independent method for studying the liganding of this intermediate species. The antimycin-sensitive SQ formed at the Qi site by either equilibrium redox titration, reduction of the oxidized complex by ascorbate, or addition of decylubihydroquinone to the oxidized complex in the presence of myxothiazol all showed similar properties. The electron spin echo envelope modulation spectra in the 14N region were dominated by lines with frequencies at 1.7 and 3.1 MHz. Hyperfine sublevel correlation spectroscopy spectra showed that these were contributed by a single nitrogen. Further analysis showed that the 14N nucleus was characterized by an isotropic hyperfine coupling of approximately 0.8 MHz and a quadrupole coupling constant of approximately 0.35 MHz. The nitrogen was identified as the N-epsilon or N-delta imidazole nitrogen of a histidine (it is likely to be His-217, or His-201 in bovine sequence). A distance of 2.5-3.1 A for the O-N distance between the carbonyl of SQ and the nitrogen was estimated. The mechanistic significance is discussed in the context of a dynamic role for the movement of His-217 in proton transfer to the site.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Interactions of quinone with the iron-sulfur protein of the bc(1) complex: is the mechanism spring-loaded?
- Author
-
Crofts AR, Shinkarev VP, Dikanov SA, Samoilova RI, and Kolling D
- Subjects
- Binding Sites, Kinetics, Methacrylates, Oxidation-Reduction, Thermodynamics, Thiazoles chemistry, Ubiquinone analogs & derivatives, Ubiquinone chemistry, Benzoquinones chemistry, Electron Transport Complex III chemistry, Iron-Sulfur Proteins chemistry
- Abstract
Since available structures of native bc(1) complexes show a vacant Q(o)-site, occupancy by substrate and product must be investigated by kinetic and spectroscopic approaches. In this brief review, we discuss recent advances using these approaches that throw new light on the mechanism. The rate-limiting reaction is the first electron transfer after formation of the enzyme-substrate complex at the Q(o)-site. This is formed by binding of both ubiquinol (QH(2)) and the dissociated oxidized iron-sulfur protein (ISP(ox)). A binding constant of approximately 14 can be estimated from the displacement of E(m) or pK for quinone or ISP(ox), respectively. The binding likely involves a hydrogen bond, through which a proton-coupled electron transfer occurs. An enzyme-product complex is also formed at the Q(o)-site, in which ubiquinone (Q) hydrogen bonds with the reduced ISP (ISPH). The complex has been characterized in ESEEM experiments, which detect a histidine ligand, likely His-161 of ISP (in mitochondrial numbering), with a configuration similar to that in the complex of ISPH with stigmatellin. This special configuration is lost on binding of myxothiazol. Formation of the H-bond has been explored through the redox dependence of cytochrome c oxidation. We confirm previous reports of a decrease in E(m) of ISP on addition of myxothiazol, and show that this change can be detected kinetically. We suggest that the myxothiazol-induced change reflects loss of the interaction of ISPH with Q, and that the change in E(m) reflects a binding constant of approximately 4. We discuss previous data in the light of this new hypothesis, and suggest that the native structure might involve a less than optimal configuration that lowers the binding energy of complexes formed at the Q(o)-site so as to favor dissociation. We also discuss recent results from studies of the bypass reactions at the site, which lead to superoxide (SO) production under aerobic conditions, and provide additional information about intermediate states.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The interaction of the Rieske iron-sulfur protein with occupants of the Qo-site of the bc1 complex, probed by electron spin echo envelope modulation.
- Author
-
Samoilova RI, Kolling D, Uzawa T, Iwasaki T, Crofts AR, and Dikanov SA
- Subjects
- Binding Sites, Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy methods, Electron Transport Complex III chemistry, Ligands, Models, Chemical, Protein Binding, Recombinant Proteins metabolism, Rhodobacter chemistry, Electron Transport Complex III metabolism, Iron-Sulfur Proteins chemistry, Iron-Sulfur Proteins metabolism
- Abstract
The bifurcated reaction at the Q(o)-site of the bc(1) complex provides the mechanistic basis of the proton pumping activity through which the complex conserves redox energy in the proton gradient. Structural information about the binding of quinone at the site is lacking, because the site is vacant in crystals of the native complexes. We now report the first structural characterization of the interaction of the native quinone occupant with the Rieske iron-sulfur protein in the bc(1) complex of Rhodobacter sphaeroides, using high resolution EPR. We have compared the binding configuration in the presence of quinone with the known structures for the complex with stigmatellin and myxothiazol. We have shown by using EPR and orientation-selective electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) measurements of the iron-sulfur protein that when quinone is present in the site, the isotropic hyperfine constant of one of the N(delta) atoms of a liganding histidine of the [2Fe-2S] cluster is similar to that observed when stigmatellin is present and different from the configuration in the presence of myxothiazol. The spectra also show complementary differences in nitrogen quadrupole splittings in some orientations. We suggest that the EPR characteristics, the ESEEM spectra, and the hyperfine couplings reflect a similar interaction between the iron-sulfur protein and the quinone or stigmatellin and that the N(delta) involved is that of a histidine (equivalent to His-161 in the chicken mitochondrial complex) that forms both a ligand to the cluster and a hydrogen bond with a carbonyl oxygen atom of the Q(o)-site occupant.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Pulsed electron double resonance of spin-labeled peptides: data on the peptide-chain secondary structure.
- Author
-
Milov AD, Mar'yasov AG, Samoilova RI, Tsvetkov YD, Raap J, Monaco V, Formaggio F, Crisma M, and Toniolo C
- Subjects
- Kinetics, Molecular Conformation, Protein Structure, Secondary, Spin Labels, Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy methods, Oligopeptides chemistry
- Published
- 2000
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