Sjöberg B M, Sanders-Loehr J, Loehr T M
Department of Molecular Biology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala Biomedical Center.
Biochemistry. 1987 Jul 14;26(14):4242-7. doi: 10.1021/bi00388a010.
The resonance Raman spectrum of protein B2 of ribonucleotide reductase from Escherichia coli shows several features to its oxo-bridged binuclear iron center. A peak at 492 cm-1 is assigned to the symmetric stretch of the Fe-O-Fe moiety on the basis of its 13-cm-1 shift to lower energy upon 18O substitution. The 18O species shows an additional peak at 731 cm-1, which is a good candidate for the asymmetric stretch of the Fe-O-Fe moiety. Its exact location in the 16O species is obscured by the presence of a protein tryptophan vibration at 758 cm-1. A third resonance-enhanced peak at 598 cm-1 is identified as an Fe-OH vibration on the basis of its 24-cm-1 shift to lower energy in H2 18O, its 2-cm-1 shift to lower energy in D2O, and its pH-dependent intensity. A hydrogen-bonded mu-oxo bridge similar to that in hemerythrin is suggested by the unusually low frequency for the Fe-O-Fe symmetric stretch and the 3-cm-1 shift to higher energy of vs(Fe-O-Fe) in D2O. From the oxygen isotope dependence of vs(Fe-O-Fe), an Fe-O-Fe angle of 138 degrees can be calculated. This small angle suggests that the iron center consists of a tribridged core as in hemerythrin. A model for the binuclear iron center of ribonucleotide reductase is presented in which the hydroxide ligand sites provide an explanation for the half-of-sites reactivity of the enzyme.