Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1953193 | Biochimie | 2006 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Plant copper/quinone amine oxidases are homodimeric enzymes containing CuII and a quinone derivative of a tyrosyl residue (2,4,5-trihydroxyphenylalanine, TPQ) as cofactors. These enzymes catalyze the oxidative deamination of primary amines by a classical ping-pong mechanism, i.e. two distinct half-reactions, enzyme reduction by substrate followed by its re-oxidation by molecular oxygen. In the first half-reaction two forms of the reduced TPQ have been observed, the colorless CuII-aminoquinol and the yellow CuI-semiquinolamine radical so that this enzyme may be referred to as a “protein-radical enzyme”. The interaction of xenon, in aqueous solutions, with the copper/TPQ amine oxidase from lentil (Lens esculenta) seedlings has been investigated by NMR and optical spectroscopy. NMR data indicate that xenon binds to the protein. Under 10Â atm gaseous xenon and in the absence of substrates more than 60% native enzyme is converted into CuI-semiquinolamine radical species, showing for the first time that both monomers in the dimer can generate the radical. Under the same experimental conditions the copper-free lentil enzyme is able to generate an intermediate absorbing at about 360Â nm, which is assigned to the product Schiff base quinolaldimine which, to the best of our knowledge, has never been observed during the catalytic mechanism of plant amine oxidases. A possible role of the lysine residue responsible for the formation of CuI-semiquinolamine and quinolaldimine, is proposed.
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Authors
Rosaria Medda, Anna Mura, Silvia Longu, Roberto Anedda, Alessandra Padiglia, Mariano Casu, Giovanni Floris,