INVESTIGADORES
BRONDINO Carlos Dante
artículos
Título:
17O ENDOR detection of a Solvent-Derived Ni-(OHx)-Fe Bridge that is lost Upon Activation of the Hydrogenase from Desulfovibrio gigas
Autor/es:
M. CAREPO; D.L. TIERNEY; C.D. BRONDINO; T. CH. YANG; A. PAMPLONA; J. TELSER; I. MOURA; J. J. G. MOURA; B. M. HOFFMAN
Revista:
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Editorial:
American Chemical Society
Referencias:
Año: 2002 vol. 124 p. 281 - 286
ISSN:
0002-7863
Resumen:
Crystallographic studies of the hydrogenases (Hases) from Desulfovibrio gigas (Dg) and Desulfovibrio vulgaris Miyazaki (DvM) have revealed heterodinuclear nickel-iron active centers in both enzymes. The structures, which represent the as-isolated (unready) Ni-A (S = 1/2) enzyme state, disclose a nonprotein ligand (labeled as X) bridging the two metals. The bridging atom was suggested to be an oxygenic (O2- or OH-) species in Dg Hase and an inorganic sulfide in DvM Hase. To determine the nature and chemical characteristics of the Ni-X-Fe bridging ligand in Dg Hase, we have performed 35 GHz CW 17O ENDOR measurements on the Ni-A form of the enzyme, exchanged into H217O, on the active Ni-C (S = 1/2) form prepared by H2-reduction of Ni-A in H2 17O, and also on Ni-A formed by reoxidation of Ni-Cin H217O. In the native state of the protein (Ni-A), the bridging ligand does not exchange with the H217O solvent. However, after a reduction/reoxidation cycle (Ni-A -> Ni-C -> Ni-A), an 17O label is introduced at the active site, as seen by ENDOR. Detailed analysis of a 2-D field-frequency plot of ENDOR spectra taken across the EPR envelope of Ni-A(17O) shows that the incorporated 17O has a roughly axial hyperfine tensor, A(17O) ~ [5, 7, 20] MHz, discloses its orientation relative to the g tensor, and also yields an estimate of the quadrupole tensor. The substantial isotropic component (aiso(17O) ~ 11 MHz) of the hyperfine interaction indicates that a solvent-derived 17O is indeed a ligand to Ni and thus that the bridging ligand X in the Ni-A state of Dg Hase is indeed an oxygenic (O2- or OH-) species; comparison with earlier EPRresults by others indicates that the same holds for Ni-B. The small 57Fe hyperfine coupling seen previously for Ni-A (A(57Fe) ~ 0.9 MHz) is now shown to persist in Ni-C, A(57Fe) ~ 0.8 MHz. However, the 17O signal is lost upon reductive activation to the Ni-C state; reoxidation to Ni-A leads to the reappearance of the signal. Consideration of the electronic structure of the EPR-active states of the dinuclear center leads us to suggest that the oxygenic bridge in Ni-A(B) is lost in Ni-C and is re-formed from solvent upon reoxidation to Ni-A. This implies that the reductive activation to Ni-C opens Ni/Fe coordination sites which may play a central role in the enzyme’s activity.