4gp8
From Proteopedia
Structure of Recombinant Cytochrome ba3 Oxidase mutant Y133W+T231F from Thermus thermophilus
Structural highlights
Function[COX2_THET8] Subunits I and II form the functional core of the enzyme complex. Electrons originating in cytochrome c are transferred via heme a and Cu(A) to the binuclear center formed by heme a3 and Cu(B). Publication Abstract from PubMedKnowledge of the structure and dynamics of the ligand channel(s) in heme-copper oxidases is critical for understanding how the protein environment modulates their functions. Using photolabile NO and O2 carriers, we recently found that NO and O2 binding in Thermus thermophilus ba3 (Tt ba3) is ~10-times faster than in the bovine enzyme, indicating inherent structural differences that affect ligand access in these enzymes. Using x-ray crystallography, time-resolved optical absorption measurements, and theoretical calculations, we investigated ligand access in the Tt ba3 mutants Y133W, T231F, and Y133W&T231F, in which tyrosine and/or threonine in the O2-channel of Tt ba3 are replaced by the corresponding bulkier tryptophan and phenylalanine present in the aa3 enzymes. NO binding in Y133W and Y133W&T231F is 5-times slower than in wild-type ba3 and the T231F mutant, and the results show that the Tt ba3 Y133W mutation and the bovine W126 residue physically impede NO access to the binuclear center. In the bovine enzyme there is a hydrophobic "way-station," which may further slow ligand access to the active site. Classical simulations of Xe diffusion to the active sites in ba3 and bovine aa3 show conformational freedom of the bovine F238 and the F231 side chain of the Tt ba3 Y133W&T231F mutant, with both residues rotating out of the ligand channel, resulting in no effect on ligand access in either enzyme. Ligand Access to the Active Site in Thermus thermophilus ba3 and Bovine Heart aa3 Cytochrome Oxidases.,McDonald WJ, Funatogawa C, Li Y, Szundi I, Chen Y, Fee JA, Stout CD, Einarsdottir O Biochemistry. 2013 Jan 2. PMID:23282175[1] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. See AlsoReferences
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