4.6 Article

Correlating the structures and activities of the resting oxidized and native intermediate states of a small laccase by paramagnetic NMR

Journal

JOURNAL OF INORGANIC BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 159, Issue -, Pages 62-69

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jinorgbio.2016.02.002

Keywords

Paramagnetic NMR; Oxidase; Copper; Native intermediate; Exchange coupling; Laccase

Funding

  1. American Chemical Society-Petroleum Research Fund Undergraduate New Investigator [50143-UNI3]
  2. RSCA SURE award

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Multicopper oxidases (MCO) are the fastest and most efficient known catalysts of the oxygen-reduction reaction. When all four copper ions are oxidized during catalysis, the native intermediate state (NI) decays in seconds to the resting oxidized state (RO), which returns to the catalytic cycle via reduction, but at a much slower rate than NI. We report the long-lived (months at 4 degrees C) NI state of the small laccase (SLAC) MCO and the subsequent characterization of both its RO and NI states by paramagnetic H-1 NMR We find that the RO state of the trinuclear cluster (TNC) is best described as an isolated Type-3 dicopper site, antiferromagnetically coupled by a hydroxo group with -2J = 500 cm(-1). The NI state is more complicated; we develop a theoretical treatment for the case in which all three copper ions in the TNC are coupled, and find that the results are consistent with three coupling constants of -2J = 300, 240, and 160 cm(-1). These couplings result in a ground doublet state, a low-lying excited doublet state at 121 cm(-1), and a quartet excited state at 411 cm(-1), in good agreement with DFT models in which the Type-2 copper has a terminal hydroxo ligand. (C) 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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