Spectroscopic studies of peroxyacetic acid reaction intermediates of cytochrome P450cam and chloroperoxidase
It is generally assumed that the putative compound I (cpd I) in cytochrome P450 should contain the same electron and spin distribution as is observed for cpd I of peroxidases and catalases and many synthetic cpd I analogues. In these systems one oxidation equivalent resides on the Fe(IV)=O unit (d 4...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of inorganic biochemistry 2002-09, Vol.91 (4), p.586-596 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | It is generally assumed that the putative compound I (cpd I) in cytochrome P450 should contain the same electron and spin distribution as is observed for cpd I of peroxidases and catalases and many synthetic cpd I analogues. In these systems one oxidation equivalent resides on the Fe(IV)=O unit (d
4,
S=1) and one is located on the porphyrin (
S′=1/2), constituting a magnetically coupled ferryl iron-oxo porphyrin π-cation radical system. However, this laboratory has recently reported detection of a ferryl iron (
S=1) and a tyrosyl radical (
S′=1/2), via Mössbauer and EPR studies of 8 ms-reaction intermediates of substrate-free P450cam from
Pseudomonas putida, prepared by a freeze-quench method using peroxyacetic acid as the oxidizing agent [Schünemann et al., FEBS Lett. 479 (2000) 149]. In the present study we show that under the same reaction conditions, but in the presence of the substrate camphor, only trace amounts of the tyrosine radical are formed and no Fe(IV) is detectable. We conclude that camphor restricts the access of the heme pocket by peroxyacetic acid. This conclusion is supported by the additional finding that binding of camphor and metyrapone inhibit heme bleaching at room temperature and longer reaction times, forming only trace amounts of 5-hydroxy-camphor, the hydroxylation product of camphor, during peroxyacetic acid oxidation. As a control we performed freeze-quench experiments with chloroperoxidase from
Caldariomyces fumago using peroxyacetic acid under the identical conditions used for the substrate-free P450cam oxidations. We were able to confirm earlier findings [Rutter et al., Biochemistry 23 (1984) 6809], that an antiferromagnetically coupled Fe(IV)O porphyrin π-cation radical system is formed. We conclude that CPO and P450 behave differently when reacting with peracids during an 8-ms reaction time. In P450cam the formation of Fe(IV) is accompanied by the formation of a tyrosine radical, whereas in CPO Fe(IV) formation is accompanied by the formation of a porphyrin radical. |
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ISSN: | 0162-0134 1873-3344 |
DOI: | 10.1016/S0162-0134(02)00476-2 |