Nitrite is an important metabolite in the physiological pathways of NO and other nitrogen oxides in both enzymatic and nonenzymatic reactions. The ferric heme b protein nitrophorin 4 (NP4) is capable of catalyzing nitrite disproportionation at neutral pH, producing NO. Here we attempt to resolve its disproportionation mechanism. Isothermal titration calorimetry of a gallium(III) derivative of NP4 demonstrates that the heme iron coordinates the first substrate nitrite. Contrary to previous low-temperature EPR measurements, which assigned the NP4-nitrite complex electronic configuration solely to a low-spin (S = 1/2) species, electronic absorption and resonance Raman spectroscopy presented here demonstrate that the NP4-NO2- cofactor exists in a high-spin/low-spin equilibrium of 7:3 which is in fast exchange in solution. Spin-state interchange is taken as evidence for dynamic NO2- coordination, with the high-spin configuration (S = 5/2) representing the reactive species. Subsequent kinetic measurements reveal that the dismutation reaction proceeds in two discrete steps and identify an {FeNO}(7) intermediate species. The first reaction step, generating the {FeNO}(7) intermediate, represents an oxygen atom transfer from the iron bound nitrite to a second nitrite molecule in the protein pocket. In the second step this intermediate reduces a third nitrite substrate yielding two NO molecules. A nearby aspartic acid residue side-chain transiently stores protons required for the reaction, which is crucial for NPs function as nitrite dismutase.

Nitrite dismutase reaction mechanism: Kinetic and spectroscopic investigation of the interaction between nitrophorin and nitrite / He, Chunmao; Howes, Barry D.; Smulevich, Giulietta; Rumpel, Sigrun; Reijerse, Edward J.; Lubitz, Wolfgang; Cox, Nicholas; Knipp, Markus. - In: JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY. - ISSN 0002-7863. - STAMPA. - 137:(2015), pp. 4141-4150. [10.1021/ja512938u]

Nitrite dismutase reaction mechanism: Kinetic and spectroscopic investigation of the interaction between nitrophorin and nitrite

HOWES, BARRY DENNIS;SMULEVICH, GIULIETTA;
2015

Abstract

Nitrite is an important metabolite in the physiological pathways of NO and other nitrogen oxides in both enzymatic and nonenzymatic reactions. The ferric heme b protein nitrophorin 4 (NP4) is capable of catalyzing nitrite disproportionation at neutral pH, producing NO. Here we attempt to resolve its disproportionation mechanism. Isothermal titration calorimetry of a gallium(III) derivative of NP4 demonstrates that the heme iron coordinates the first substrate nitrite. Contrary to previous low-temperature EPR measurements, which assigned the NP4-nitrite complex electronic configuration solely to a low-spin (S = 1/2) species, electronic absorption and resonance Raman spectroscopy presented here demonstrate that the NP4-NO2- cofactor exists in a high-spin/low-spin equilibrium of 7:3 which is in fast exchange in solution. Spin-state interchange is taken as evidence for dynamic NO2- coordination, with the high-spin configuration (S = 5/2) representing the reactive species. Subsequent kinetic measurements reveal that the dismutation reaction proceeds in two discrete steps and identify an {FeNO}(7) intermediate species. The first reaction step, generating the {FeNO}(7) intermediate, represents an oxygen atom transfer from the iron bound nitrite to a second nitrite molecule in the protein pocket. In the second step this intermediate reduces a third nitrite substrate yielding two NO molecules. A nearby aspartic acid residue side-chain transiently stores protons required for the reaction, which is crucial for NPs function as nitrite dismutase.
2015
137
4141
4150
He, Chunmao; Howes, Barry D.; Smulevich, Giulietta; Rumpel, Sigrun; Reijerse, Edward J.; Lubitz, Wolfgang; Cox, Nicholas; Knipp, Markus
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Utilizza questo identificatore per citare o creare un link a questa risorsa: https://hdl.handle.net/2158/1005189
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