Dunford H B
Department of Chemistry, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada.
Redox Rep. 2000;5(4):169-71. doi: 10.1179/135100000101535708.
The first complete mechanistic analysis of halide ion oxidation by a peroxidase was that of iodide oxidation by horseradish peroxidase. It was shown conclusively that a two-electron oxidation of iodide by compound I was occurring. This implied that oxygen atom transfer was occurring from compound I to iodide, forming hypoiodous acid, HOI. Searches were conducted for other two-electron oxidations. It was found that sulfite was oxidized by a two-electron mechanism. Nitrite and sulfoxides were not. If a competing substrate reduces some compound I to compound II by the usual one-electron route, then compound II will compete for available halide. Thus compound II oxidizes iodide to an iodine atom, I*, although at a slower rate than oxidation of I by compound I. An early hint that mammalian peroxidases were designed for halide ion oxidation was obtained in the reaction of lactoperoxidase compound II with iodide. The reaction was accelerated by excess iodide, indicating a co-operative effect. Among the heme peroxidases, only chloroperoxidase (for example from Caldariomyces fumago) and mammalian myeloperoxidase are able to oxidize chloride ion. There is not yet a consensus as to whether the chlorinating agent produced in a peroxidase-catalyzed reaction is hypochlorous acid (HOCl), enzyme-bound hypochlorous acid (either Fe-HOCl or X-HOCl where X is an amino acid residue), or molecular chlorine Cl2. A study of the nonenzymatic iodination of tyrosine showed that the iodinating reagent was either HOI or I2. It was impossible to tell which species because of the equilibria: [reaction: see text] The same considerations apply to product analysis of an enzyme-catalyzed reaction. Detection of molecular chlorine Cl2 does not prove it is the chlorinating species. If Cl2 is in equilibrium with HOCl then one cannot tell which (if either) is the chlorinating reagent. Examples will be shown of evidence that peroxidase-bound hypochlorous acid is the chlorinating agent. Also a recent clarification of the mechanism of reaction of myeloperoxidase with hydrogen peroxide and chloride along with accurate determination of the elementary rate constants will be discussed.
对过氧化物酶催化卤离子氧化的首次完整机理分析是关于辣根过氧化物酶催化碘离子氧化的研究。确凿证据表明,化合物I对碘离子进行了双电子氧化。这意味着氧原子从化合物I转移至碘离子,形成次碘酸(HOI)。人们还探寻了其他双电子氧化反应。结果发现,亚硫酸盐通过双电子机制被氧化,而亚硝酸盐和亚砜则不然。如果一种竞争性底物通过常见的单电子途径将部分化合物I还原为化合物II,那么化合物II会与卤离子竞争。因此,化合物II将碘离子氧化为碘原子(I*),尽管其氧化速率比化合物I氧化碘离子的速率要慢。在乳过氧化物酶化合物II与碘离子的反应中,人们最早得到了哺乳动物过氧化物酶可用于卤离子氧化的线索。该反应会因过量碘离子而加速,表明存在协同效应。在血红素过氧化物酶中,只有氯过氧化物酶(如来自烟曲霉)和哺乳动物的髓过氧化物酶能够氧化氯离子。对于过氧化物酶催化反应中产生的氯化剂是次氯酸(HOCl)、酶结合的次氯酸(Fe-HOCl或X-HOCl,其中X为氨基酸残基)还是分子氯(Cl₂),目前尚无定论。一项关于酪氨酸非酶碘化反应的研究表明,碘化试剂要么是HOI,要么是I₂。由于存在如下平衡:[反应式:见原文],所以无法确定是哪种物质。同样的考量也适用于酶催化反应的产物分析。检测到分子氯(Cl₂)并不能证明它就是氯化剂。如果Cl₂与HOCl处于平衡状态,那么就无法确定哪种(如果有的话)是氯化试剂。文中将给出证据示例,表明过氧化物酶结合的次氯酸是氯化剂。此外,还将讨论近期对髓过氧化物酶与过氧化氢和氯离子反应机理的阐明以及对基本速率常数的精确测定。