Spectroscopic characterization of the NO adduct of hydroxylamine oxidoreductase.

2002 
Hydroxylamine oxidoreductase (HAO) from the autotrophic nitrifying bacterium Nitrosomonas europaea catalyzes the oxidation of NH2OH to NO2-. The enzyme contains eight hemes per subunit which participate in catalysis and electron transport. NO is found to bind to the enzyme and inhibit electron flow to the acceptor protein, cytochrome c554. NO is found to oxidize either partially or fully reduced HAO, but NO will not reduce ferric HAO. Since NO can be reduced but not oxidized to product by HAO, NO is not considered to be a long-lived intermediate in the catalytic mechanism. Substrate oxidation occurs in the presence of bound NO or cyanide, suggesting a second interaction site for substrate with HAO and providing a means for recovery of the NO-inhibited form of the enzyme. Upon addition of NO to oxidized HAO, the integer-spin EPR signal from the active site vanishes, an IR band from NO appears at 1920 cm-1, and a diamagnetic quadrupole iron doublet appears in Mossbauer spectroscopy with δ = 0.06 mm/s and ΔE...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    17
    References
    35
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []