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Recent advances in biosynthetic modeling of nitric oxide reductases and insights gained from nuclear resonance vibrational and other spectroscopic studies

Authors :
E. Ercan Alp
Jiyong Zhao
Igor D. Petrik
Saumen Chakraborty
J. Timothy Sage
Kyle D. Miner
Nicole C. Branagan
Julian Reed
Michael Y. Hu
Yi Lu
Source :
Inorganic Chemistry
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

This Forum Article focuses on recent advances in structural and spectroscopic studies of biosynthetic models of nitric oxide reductases (NORs). NORs are complex metalloenzymes found in the denitrification pathway of Earth’s nitrogen cycle where they catalyze the proton-dependent two-electron reduction of nitric oxide (NO) to nitrous oxide (N2O). While much progress has been made in biochemical and biophysical studies of native NORs and their variants, a clear mechanistic understanding of this important metalloenzyme related to its function is still elusive. We report herein UV–vis and nuclear resonance vibrational spectroscopy (NRVS) studies of mononitrosylated intermediates of the NOR reaction of a biosynthetic model. The ability to selectively substitute metals at either heme or nonheme metal sites allows the introduction of independent 57Fe probe atoms at either site, as well as allowing the preparation of analogues of stable reaction intermediates by replacing either metal with a redox inactive metal. Together with previous structural and spectroscopic results, we summarize insights gained from studying these biosynthetic models toward understanding structural features responsible for the NOR activity and its mechanism. The outlook on NOR modeling is also discussed, with an emphasis on the design of models capable of catalytic turnovers designed based on close mimics of the secondary coordination sphere of native NORs.<br />New insights into nitric oxide reductases (NORs) are obtained. Using nuclear resonance vibrational spectroscopy, we probe both iron atoms in mononitrosylated intermediates of the NOR reaction in a biosynthetic protein model that reveal new insights into the structural and electronic features responsible for the NOR activity and its likely mechanism.

Details

ISSN :
1520510X
Volume :
54
Issue :
19
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Inorganic chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....906d7e2b3526177c5c271c6a4ad57c58