The chloride-activated peroxidation of catechol as a mechanistic probe of chloroperoxidase reactions. Competitive activation as evidence for a catalytic chloride binding site on compound I
Chloride ion (Cl-) effects on chloroperoxidase (CPO)-catalyzed peroxidation of catechol were used to probe the involvement of Cl- in CPO reactions. High concentrations of Cl- inhibit catechol peroxidation by competing with hydrogen peroxide (KI = 370 mM). However, at lower concentrations, Cl- is a l...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of biological chemistry 1989-09, Vol.264 (26), p.15284-15292 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Chloride ion (Cl-) effects on chloroperoxidase (CPO)-catalyzed peroxidation of catechol were used to probe the involvement
of Cl- in CPO reactions. High concentrations of Cl- inhibit catechol peroxidation by competing with hydrogen peroxide (KI
= 370 mM). However, at lower concentrations, Cl- is a linear competitive activator versus catechol (KDC = 35 mM). Addition
of good halogenation substrates to the peroxidatic reaction mixture converts Cl- from a competitive activator to a competitive
inhibitor. The KI (10 mM) for this halogenation substrate promoted Cl- inhibition is equivalent to the KM (11 mM) for Cl-
in CPO-catalyzed halogenation reactions. During this inhibition, the halogenation substrate is consumed and, at the point
where its consumption is complete, Cl- again becomes an activator. Also, at 2.0 mM hydrogen peroxide, CPOs chlorination reaction
and its Cl- -activated peroxidatic reaction have similar apparent kcat values. All data are consistent with a mechanism in
which Cl- competes with catechol for binding to CPO Compound I. Catechol binding initiates the Cl- -independent path, in which
Compound I acts as the oxidizing agent for catechol. When Cl- binds to Compound I, it reacts to yield the enzymatic chlorinating
intermediate which is responsible for either the oxidation of catechol in the Cl- -dependent path or the chlorination of substrates
in the halogenation pathway. Cl- activation of the peroxidatic reaction is due to a shift from the Cl- -independent pathway
to the Cl- -dependent process. The mechanism is unique in that exclusion of the substrate from its primary binding site leads
to an increase in the catalytic efficiency of the reaction. This catechol-Cl- system also offers further potential for probing
the specificity and chemistry of the key enzymatic intermediates in haloperoxidase-catalyzed reactions. |
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ISSN: | 0021-9258 1083-351X |