Xia M, Dempski R, Hille R
Department of Medical Biochemistry, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210-1218, USA.
J Biol Chem. 1999 Feb 5;274(6):3323-30. doi: 10.1074/jbc.274.6.3323.
The kinetics of xanthine oxidase has been investigated with the aim of addressing several outstanding questions concerning the reaction mechanism of the enzyme. Steady-state and rapid kinetic studies with the substrate 2,5-dihydroxybenzaldehyde demonstrated that (kcat/Km)app and kred/Kd exhibit comparable bell-shaped pH dependence with pKa values of 6.4 +/- 0.2 and 8.4 +/- 0.2, with the lower pKa assigned to an active-site residue of xanthine oxidase (possibly Glu-1261, by analogy to Glu-869 in the crystallographically known aldehyde oxidase from Desulfovibrio gigas) and the higher pKa to substrate. Early steps in the catalytic sequence have been investigated by following the reaction of the oxidized enzyme with a second aldehyde substrate, 2-aminopteridine-6-aldehyde. The absence of a well defined acid limb in this pH profile and other data indicate that this complex represents an Eox.S rather than Ered.P complex (i.e. no chemistry requiring the active-site base has taken place in forming the long wavelength-absorbing complex seen with this substrate). It appears that xanthine oxidase (and by inference, the closely related aldehyde oxidases) hydroxylates both aromatic heterocycles and aldehydes by a mechanism involving base-assisted catalysis. Single-turnover experiments following incorporation of 17O into the molybdenum center of the enzyme demonstrated that a single oxygen atom is incorporated at a site that gives rise to strong hyperfine coupling to the unpaired electron spin of the metal in the MoV oxidation state. By analogy to the hyperfine interactions seen in a homologous series of molybdenum model compounds, we conclude that this strongly coupled, catalytically labile site represents a metal-coordinated hydroxide rather than the Mo=O group and that this Mo-OH represents the oxygen that is incorporated into product in the course of catalysis.
为了解决有关该酶反应机制的几个突出问题,对黄嘌呤氧化酶的动力学进行了研究。用底物2,5 - 二羟基苯甲醛进行的稳态和快速动力学研究表明,(kcat/Km)app和kred/Kd呈现出类似的钟形pH依赖性,pKa值分别为6.4±0.2和8.4±0.2,较低的pKa归属于黄嘌呤氧化酶的一个活性位点残基(通过与来自巨大脱硫弧菌的晶体学已知醛氧化酶中的Glu - 869类比,可能是Glu - 1261),较高的pKa归属于底物。通过跟踪氧化型酶与第二种醛底物2 - 氨基蝶啶 - 6 - 醛的反应,研究了催化序列中的早期步骤。该pH曲线中缺乏明确的酸支以及其他数据表明,这种复合物代表Eox.S而非Ered.P复合物(即,在形成与该底物相关的长波长吸收复合物时,没有发生需要活性位点碱的化学反应)。看来黄嘌呤氧化酶(以及由此推断,密切相关的醛氧化酶)通过涉及碱辅助催化的机制使芳香杂环和醛羟基化。在将17O掺入酶的钼中心后的单周转实验表明,单个氧原子掺入到一个位点,该位点与处于MoV氧化态的金属的未成对电子自旋产生强烈的超精细偶合。通过与一系列钼模型化合物的同源物中观察到的超精细相互作用类比,我们得出结论,这个强偶合、催化不稳定的位点代表金属配位的氢氧化物而非Mo = O基团,并且这个Mo - OH代表在催化过程中掺入产物中的氧。