HIGH-RESOLUTION EPR SPECTROSCOPY OF MO ENZYMES. SULFITE OXIDASES: STRUCTURAL AND FUNCTIONAL IMPLICATIONS.

John H Enemark, A V Astashkin, A M Raitsimring
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Abstract

Sulfite oxidases (SOs) are physiologically vital Mo-containing enzymes that occur in animals, plants, and bacteria and which catalyze the oxidation of sulfite to sulfate, the terminal reaction in the oxidative degradation of sulfur-containing compounds. X-ray structure determinations of SOs from several species show nearly identical coordination structures of the molybdenum active center, and a common catalytic mechanism has been proposed that involves the generation of a transient paramagnetic Mo(V) state through a series of coupled electron-proton transfer steps. This chapter describes the use of pulsed electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) and electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) spectroscopic techniques to obtain information about the structure of this Mo(V) species from the hyperfine interactions (hfi) and nuclear quadrupole interactions (nqi) of nearby magnetic nuclei. Variable frequency instrumentation is essential to optimize the experimental conditions for measuring the couplings of different types of nuclei (e.g., (1)H, (2)H, (31)P, and (17)O). The theoretical background necessary for understanding the ESEEM and ENDOR spectra of the Mo(V) centers of SOs is outlined, and examples of the use of advanced pulsed EPR methods (RP-ESEEM, HYSCORE, integrated four-pulse ESEEM) for structure determination are presented. The analysis of variable-frequency pulsed EPR data from SOs is aided by parallel studies of model compounds that contain key functional groups or that are isotopically labeled and thus provide benchmark data for enzymes. Enormous progress has been made on the use of high-resolution variable-frequency pulsed EPR methods to investigate the structures and mechanisms of SOs during the past ~15 years, and the future is bright for the continued development and application of this technology to SOs, other molybdenum enzymes, and other problems in metallobiochemistry.

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mo酶的高分辨率epr光谱。亚硫酸盐氧化酶:结构和功能意义。
亚硫酸盐氧化酶(SOs)是生理上至关重要的含钼酶,存在于动物、植物和细菌中,它催化亚硫酸盐氧化成硫酸盐,这是含硫化合物氧化降解的最终反应。不同种类的SOs的x射线结构测定表明钼活性中心的配位结构几乎相同,并提出了一种共同的催化机制,即通过一系列耦合电子-质子转移步骤产生瞬态顺磁Mo(V)态。本章描述了利用脉冲电子-核双共振(ENDOR)和电子自旋回波包络调制(ESEEM)光谱技术,从附近磁核的超精细相互作用(hfi)和核四极相互作用(nqi)中获得有关该Mo(V)物质结构的信息。变频仪器对于优化测量不同类型原子核(例如(1)H, (2)H, (31)P和(17)O)耦合的实验条件至关重要。概述了理解SOs的Mo(V)中心的ESEEM和ENDOR光谱所需的理论背景,并介绍了使用先进的脉冲EPR方法(RP-ESEEM, HYSCORE,集成四脉冲ESEEM)进行结构测定的例子。通过对含有关键官能团或同位素标记的模型化合物的平行研究,可以帮助分析来自SOs的变频脉冲EPR数据,从而为酶提供基准数据。近15年来,利用高分辨率变频脉冲EPR方法研究SOs的结构和机制取得了巨大的进展,该技术在SOs、其他钼酶以及金属生物化学中的其他问题上的继续发展和应用前景广阔。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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