4.8 Article

Role of distal arginine residue in the mechanism of heme nitrite reductases

期刊

CHEMICAL SCIENCE
卷 14, 期 29, 页码 7875-7886

出版社

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d3sc01777j

关键词

-

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Heme nitrite reductases play a key role in the global nitrogen cycle by reducing NO2- to NO or NH4+. The presence of arginine residues in the second sphere of these enzymes is proposed to assist in substrate binding and provide protons for the reaction. This study investigates the role of guanidine arm attached to a synthetic ferrous porphyrin in reducing NO2-, and suggests that rapid re-protonation of arginine residues may trigger NO dissociation from the ferric nitrosyl species.
Heme nitrite reductases reduce NO2- by 1e(-)/2H(+) to NO or by 6e(-)/8H(+) to NH4+ which are key steps in the global nitrogen cycle. Second-sphere residues, such as arginine (with a guanidine head group), are proposed to play a key role in the reaction by assisting substrate binding and hydrogen bonding and by providing protons to the active site for the reaction. The reactivity of an iron porphyrin with a NO2- covalently attached to a guanidinium arm in its 2nd sphere was investigated to understand the role of arginine residues in the 2nd sphere of heme nitrite reductases. The presence of the guanidinium residue allows the synthetic ferrous porphyrin to reduce NO2- and produce a ferrous nitrosyl species ({FeNO}(7)), where the required protons are provided by the guanidinium group in the 2nd sphere. However, in the presence of additional proton sources in solution, the reaction of ferrous porphyrin with NO2- results in the formation of ferric porphyrin and the release of NO. Spectroscopic and kinetic data indicated that re-protonation of the guanidine group in the 2nd sphere by an external proton source causes NO to dissociate from a ferric nitrosyl species ({FeNO}(6)) at rates similar to those observed for enzymatic sites. This re-protonation of the guanidine group mimics the proton recharge mechanism in the active site of NiR. DFT calculations indicated that the lability of the Fe-NO bond in the {FeNO}(6) species is derived from the greater binding affinity of anions (e.g. NO2-) to the ferric center relative to neutral NO due to hydrogen bonding and electrostatic interaction of these bound anions with the protonated guanidium group in the 2nd sphere. The reduced {FeNO}(7) species, once formed, is not affected significantly by the re-protonation of the guanidine residue. These results provide direct insight into the role of the 2nd sphere arginine residue present in the active sites of heme-based NiRs in determining the fate of NO2- reduction. Specifically, the findings using the synthetic model suggest that rapid re-protonation of these arginine residues may trigger the dissociation of NO from the {FeNO}(6), which may also be the case in the protein active site.

作者

我是这篇论文的作者
点击您的名字以认领此论文并将其添加到您的个人资料中。

评论

主要评分

4.8
评分不足

次要评分

新颖性
-
重要性
-
科学严谨性
-
评价这篇论文

推荐

暂无数据
暂无数据