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Molybdenum EXAFS of the Desulfovibrio gigas Mo(2Fe-2S) protein--structural similarity to "desulfo" xanthine dehydrogenase, Cramer, S. P., Moura J. J., Xavier A. V., and Legall J. , J Inorg Biochem, Apr, Volume 20, Number 4, p.275-80, (1984) AbstractWebsite

The molybdenum EXAFS of the Mo(2Fe-2S) protein from Desulfovibrio gigas has been examined using fluorescence detection and synchrotron radiation. In the oxidized form the molybdenum environment is found to contain two terminal oxo groups and two long (2.47 A) Mo-S bonds. Evidence was also found for an oxygen or nitrogen donor ligand at 1.90 A. Addition of dithionite to the oxidized enzyme results in loss of a terminal oxo group, perhaps due to protonation. In addition, a 0.1 A contraction in the Mo-S bond lengths is observed. The behavior of both oxidized and dithionite-treated forms is similar to that observed previously with "desulfo" xanthine oxidase.

Molybdenum induces the expression of a protein containing a new heterometallic Mo-Fe cluster in Desulfovibrio alaskensis, Rivas, M. G., Carepo M. S., Mota C. S., Korbas M., Durand M. C., Lopes A. T., Brondino C. D., Pereira A. S., George G. N., Dolla A., Moura J. J., and Moura I. , Biochemistry, Feb 10, Volume 48, Number 5, p.873-82, (2009) AbstractWebsite

The characterization of a novel Mo-Fe protein (MorP) associated with a system that responds to Mo in Desulfovibrio alaskensis is reported. Biochemical characterization shows that MorP is a periplasmic homomultimer of high molecular weight (260 +/- 13 kDa) consisting of 16-18 monomers of 15321.1 +/- 0.5 Da. The UV/visible absorption spectrum of the as-isolated protein shows absorption peaks around 280, 320, and 570 nm with extinction coefficients of 18700, 12800, and 5000 M(-1) cm(-1), respectively. Metal content, EXAFS data and DFT calculations support the presence of a Mo-2S-[2Fe-2S]-2S-Mo cluster never reported before. Analysis of the available genomes from Desulfovibrio species shows that the MorP encoding gene is located downstream of a sensor and a regulator gene. This type of gene arrangement, called two component system, is used by the cell to regulate diverse physiological processes in response to changes in environmental conditions. Increase of both gene expression and protein production was observed when cells were cultured in the presence of 45 microM molybdenum. Involvement of this system in Mo tolerance of sulfate reducing bacteria is proposed.

The molybdenum iron-sulphur protein from Desulfovibrio gigas as a form of aldehyde oxidase, Turner, N., Barata B., Bray R. C., Deistung J., Legall J., and Moura J. J. , Biochem J, May 1, Volume 243, Number 3, p.755-61, (1987) AbstractWebsite

The molybdenum iron-sulphur protein originally isolated from Desulfovibrio gigas by Moura, Xavier, Bruschi, Le Gall, Hall & Cammack [(1976) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 72, 782-789] has been further investigated by e.p.r. spectroscopy of molybdenum(V). The signal obtained on extended reduction of the protein with sodium dithionite has been shown, by studies at 9 and 35 HGz in 1H2O and 2H2O and computer simulations, to have parameters corresponding to those of the Slow signal from the inactive desulpho form of various molybdenum-containing hydroxylases. Another signal obtained on brief reduction of the protein with small amounts of dithionite was shown by e.p.r. difference techniques to be a Rapid type 2 signal, like that from the active form of such enzymes. In confirmation that the protein is a molybdenum-containing hydroxylase, activity measurements revealed that it had aldehyde:2,6-dichlorophenol-indophenol oxidoreductase activity. No such activity towards xanthine or purine was observed. Salicylaldehyde was a particularly good substrate, and treatment of the protein with it also gave rise to the Rapid signal. Molybdenum cofactor liberated from the protein was active in the nit-1 Neurospora crassa nitrate reductase assay. It is concluded that the protein is a form of an aldehyde oxidase or dehydrogenase. From the intensity of the e.p.r. signals and from enzyme activity measurements, 10-30% of the protein in the sample examined appeared to be in the functional form. The evolutionary significance of the protein, which may represent a primitive form of the enzyme rather than a degradation product, is discussed briefly.

A molybdenum-containing (2Fe, 2S) protein from desulphovibrio gigas, a sulphate reducer, Moura, J. J. G., Xavier A. V., Bruschi M., Legall J., and Cabral J. M. P. , Journal of the Less Common Metals, Volume 54, Number 2, p.555-562, (1977) AbstractWebsite
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A molybdenum-containing iron-sulphur protein from Desulphovibrio gigas, Moura, J. J., Xavier A. V., Bruschi M., Legall J., Hall D. O., and Cammack R. , Biochem Biophys Res Commun, Oct 4, Volume 72, Number 3, p.782-9, (1976) AbstractWebsite
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Mossbauer And Electron-Paramagnetic-Res Studies Of Desulforedoxin From Desulfovibrio-Gigas, Moura, I., Huynh B. H., Hausinger R. P., Legall J., Xavier A. V., and Munck E. , Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1980, Volume 255, Number 6, p.2493-2498, (1980) AbstractWebsite
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Mössbauer and EPR evidence for nickel and 3Fe cluster in the hydrogenases of D. desulfuricans and D. gigas, Huynh, B. H., Legall J., Dervartanian D. V., Peck Jr H. D., Krüger H. J., Moura I., Moura J. J. G., and Xavier A. V. , Inorganica Chimica Acta, Volume 79, p.136, (1983) AbstractWebsite
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Mossbauer and EPR studies on nitrite reductase from Thiobacillus denitrificans, Huynh, B. H., Lui M. C., Moura J. J., Moura I., Ljungdahl P. O., Munck E., Payne W. J., Peck, H. D. Jr., Dervartanian D. V., and Legall J. , J Biol Chem, Aug 25, Volume 257, Number 16, p.9576-81, (1982) AbstractWebsite
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Mossbauer characterization of the tetraheme cytochrome c3 from Desulfovibrio baculatus (DSM 1743). Spectral deconvolution of the heme components, Ravi, N., Moura I., Costa C., Teixeira M., Legall J., Moura J. J., and Huynh B. H. , Eur J Biochem, Mar 1, Volume 204, Number 2, p.779-82, (1992) AbstractWebsite

Mossbauer spectroscopy was used to study the tetraheme cytochrome c3 from Desulfovibrio baculatus (DSM 1743). Samples with different degrees of reduction were prepared using a redoxtitration technique. In the reduced cytochrome c3, all four hemes are reduced and exhibit diamagnetic Mossbauer spectra typical for low-spin ferrous hemes (S = 0). In the oxidized protein, the hemes are low-spin ferric (S = 1/2) and exhibit overlapping magnetic Mossbauer spectra. A method of differential spectroscopy was applied to deconvolute the four overlapping heme spectra and a crystal-field model was used for data analysis. Characteristic Mossbauer spectral components for each heme group are obtained. Hyperfine and crystal-field parameters for all four hemes are determined from these deconvoluted spectra.

Mossbauer study of the native, reduced and substrate-reacted Desulfovibrio gigas aldehyde oxido-reductase, Barata, B. A., Liang J., Moura I., Legall J., Moura J. J., and Huynh B. H. , Eur J Biochem, Mar 1, Volume 204, Number 2, p.773-8, (1992) AbstractWebsite

The Desulfovibrio gigas aldehyde-oxido-reductase contains molybdenum and iron-sulfur clusters. Mossbauer spectroscopy was used to characterize the iron-sulfur clusters. Spectra of the enzyme in its oxidized, partially reduced and benzaldehyde-reacted states were recorded at different temperatures and applied magnetic fields. All the iron atoms in D. gigas aldehyde oxido-reductase are organized as [2Fe-2S] clusters. In the oxidized enzyme, the clusters are diamagnetic and exhibit a single quadrupole doublet with parameters (delta EQ = 0.62 +/- 0.02 mm/s and delta = 0.27 +/- 0.01 mm/s) typical for the [2Fe-2S]2+ state. Mossbauer spectra of the reduced clusters also show the characteristics of a [2Fe-2S]1+ cluster and can be explained by a spin-coupling model proposed for the [2Fe-2S] cluster where a high-spin ferrous ion (S = 2) is antiferromagnetically coupled to a high-spin ferric ion (S = 5/2) to form a S = 1/2 system. Two ferrous sites with different delta EQ values (3.42 mm/s and 2.93 mm/s at 85 K) are observed for the reduced enzyme, indicating the presence of two types of [2Fe-2S] clusters in the D. gigas enzyme. Taking this observation together with the re-evaluated value of iron content (3.5 +/- 0.1 Fe/molecule), it is concluded that, similar to other Mo-hydroxylases, the D. gigas aldehyde oxido-reductase also contains two spectroscopically distinguishable [2Fe-2S] clusters.

N
A needle in a haystack: the active site of the membrane-bound complex cytochrome c nitrite reductase, Almeida, M. G., Silveira C. M., Guigliarelli B., Bertrand P., Moura J. J., Moura I., and Leger C. , FEBS Lett, Jan 23, Volume 581, Number 2, p.284-8, (2007) AbstractWebsite

Cytochrome c nitrite reductase is a multicenter enzyme that uses a five-coordinated heme to perform the six-electron reduction of nitrite to ammonium. In the sulfate reducing bacterium Desulfovibrio desulfuricans ATCC 27774, the enzyme is purified as a NrfA2NrfH complex that houses 14 hemes. The number of closely-spaced hemes in this enzyme and the magnetic interactions between them make it very difficult to study the active site by using traditional spectroscopic approaches such as EPR or UV-Vis. Here, we use both catalytic and non-catalytic protein film voltammetry to simply and unambiguously determine the reduction potential of the catalytic heme over a wide range of pH and we demonstrate that proton transfer is coupled to electron transfer at the active site.

Neelaredoxin, an iron-binding protein from the syphilis spirochete, Treponema pallidum, is a superoxide reductase, Jovanovic, T., Ascenso C., Hazlett K. R., Sikkink R., Krebs C., Litwiller R., Benson L. M., Moura I., Moura J. J., Radolf J. D., Huynh B. H., Naylor S., and Rusnak F. , J Biol Chem, Sep 15, Volume 275, Number 37, p.28439-48, (2000) AbstractWebsite

Treponema pallidum, the causative agent of venereal syphilis, is a microaerophilic obligate pathogen of humans. As it disseminates hematogenously and invades a wide range of tissues, T. pallidum presumably must tolerate substantial oxidative stress. Analysis of the T. pallidum genome indicates that the syphilis spirochete lacks most of the iron-binding proteins present in many other bacterial pathogens, including the oxidative defense enzymes superoxide dismutase, catalase, and peroxidase, but does possess an orthologue (TP0823) for neelaredoxin, an enzyme of hyperthermophilic and sulfate-reducing anaerobes shown to possess superoxide reductase activity. To analyze the potential role of neelaredoxin in treponemal oxidative defense, we examined the biochemical, spectroscopic, and antioxidant properties of recombinant T. pallidum neelaredoxin. Neelaredoxin was shown to be expressed in T. pallidum by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction and Western blot analysis. Recombinant neelaredoxin is a 26-kDa alpha(2) homodimer containing, on average, 0.7 iron atoms/subunit. Mossbauer and EPR analysis of the purified protein indicates that the iron atom exists as a mononuclear center in a mixture of high spin ferrous and ferric oxidation states. The fully oxidized form, obtained by the addition of K(3)(Fe(CN)(6)), exhibits an optical spectrum with absorbances at 280, 320, and 656 nm; the last feature is responsible for the protein's blue color, which disappears upon ascorbate reduction. The fully oxidized protein has a A(280)/A(656) ratio of 10.3. Enzymatic studies revealed that T. pallidum neelaredoxin is able to catalyze a redox equilibrium between superoxide and hydrogen peroxide, a result consistent with it being a superoxide reductase. This finding, the first description of a T. pallidum iron-binding protein, indicates that the syphilis spirochete copes with oxidative stress via a primitive mechanism, which, thus far, has not been described in pathogenic bacteria.

A new type of metal-binding site in cobalt- and zinc-containing adenylate kinases isolated from sulfate-reducers Desulfovibrio gigas and Desulfovibrio desulfuricans ATCC 27774, Gavel, O. Y., Bursakov S. A., Di Rocco G., Trincao J., Pickering I. J., George G. N., Calvete J. J., Shnyrov V. L., Brondino C. D., Pereira A. S., Lampreia J., Tavares P., Moura J. J., and Moura I. , J Inorg Biochem, May-Jun, Volume 102, Number 5-6, p.1380-95, (2008) AbstractWebsite

Adenylate kinase (AK) mediates the reversible transfer of phosphate groups between the adenylate nucleotides and contributes to the maintenance of their constant cellular level, necessary for energy metabolism and nucleic acid synthesis. The AK were purified from crude extracts of two sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB), Desulfovibrio (D.) gigas NCIB 9332 and Desulfovibrio desulfuricans ATCC 27774, and biochemically and spectroscopically characterised in the native and fully cobalt- or zinc-substituted forms. These are the first reported adenylate kinases that bind either zinc or cobalt and are related to the subgroup of metal-containing AK found, in most cases, in Gram-positive bacteria. The electronic absorption spectrum is consistent with tetrahedral coordinated cobalt, predominantly via sulfur ligands, and is supported by EPR. The involvement of three cysteines in cobalt or zinc coordination was confirmed by chemical methods. Extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) indicate that cobalt or zinc are bound by three cysteine residues and one histidine in the metal-binding site of the "LID" domain. The sequence 129Cys-X5-His-X15-Cys-X2-Cys of the AK from D. gigas is involved in metal coordination and represents a new type of binding motif that differs from other known zinc-binding sites of AK. Cobalt and zinc play a structural role in stabilizing the LID domain.

Nickel - a redox catalytic site in hydrogenase, Moura, J. J. G., Teixeira M., Moura I., Xavier A. V., and Legall J. , Journal of Molecular Catalysis, Volume 23, Number 2–3, p.303-314, (1984) AbstractWebsite
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Nickel containing hydrogenases, Xavier, A. V., Teixeira M., Moura I., Moura J. J. G., and Legall J. , Inorganica Chimica Acta, Volume 79, p.13-14, (1983) AbstractWebsite
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Nickel X-ray absorption spectroscopy of Desulvovibrio gigas hydrogenase, Scott, R. A., Czechowski M., Dervartanian D. V., Legall J., Peck Jr H. D., and Moura I. , Rev Portuguesa de Química, Volume 27, p.67-70, (1985) Abstract
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NICKEL-CONTAINING HYDROGENASES, Moura, J. J. G., Moura I., Teixeira M., Xavier A. V., Fauque G. D., and Legall J. , Metal Ions in Biological Systems, 1988, Volume 23, p.285-314, (1988) AbstractWebsite
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Nickel-[iron-sulfur]-selenium-containing hydrogenases from Desulfovibrio baculatus (DSM 1743). Redox centers and catalytic properties, Teixeira, M., Fauque G., Moura I., Lespinat P. A., Berlier Y., Prickril B., Peck, H. D. Jr., Xavier A. V., Legall J., and Moura J. J. , Eur J Biochem, Aug 17, Volume 167, Number 1, p.47-58, (1987) AbstractWebsite

The hydrogenase from Desulfovibrio baculatus (DSM 1743) was purified from each of three different fractions: soluble periplasmic (wash), soluble cytoplasmic (cell disruption) and membrane-bound (detergent solubilization). Plasma-emission metal analysis detected in all three fractions the presence of iron plus nickel and selenium in equimolecular amounts. These hydrogenases were shown to be composed of two non-identical subunits and were distinct with respect to their spectroscopic properties. The EPR spectra of the native (as isolated) enzymes showed very weak isotropic signals centered around g approximately 2.0 when observed at low temperature (below 20 K). The periplasmic and membrane-bound enzymes also presented additional EPR signals, observable up to 77 K, with g greater than 2.0 and assigned to nickel(III). The periplasmic hydrogenase exhibited EPR features at 2.20, 2.06 and 2.0. The signals observed in the membrane-bound preparations could be decomposed into two sets with g at 2.34, 2.16 and approximately 2.0 (component I) and at 2.33, 2.24, and approximately 2.0 (component II). In the reduced state, after exposure to an H2 atmosphere, all the hydrogenase fractions gave identical EPR spectra. EPR studies, performed at different temperatures and microwave powers, and in samples partially and fully reduced (under hydrogen or dithionite), allowed the identification of two different iron-sulfur centers: center I (2.03, 1.89 and 1.86) detectable below 10 K, and center II (2.06, 1.95 and 1.88) which was easily saturated at low temperatures. Additional EPR signals due to transient nickel species were detected with g greater than 2.0, and a rhombic EPR signal at 77 K developed at g 2.20, 2.16 and 2.0. This EPR signal is reminiscent of the Ni-signal C (g at 2.19, 2.14 and 2.02) observed in intermediate redox states of the well characterized Desulfovibrio gigas hydrogenase (Teixeira et al. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 8942]. During the course of a redox titration at pH 7.6 using H2 gas as reductant, this signal attained a maximal intensity around -320 mV. Low-temperature studies of samples at redox states where this rhombic signal develops (10 K or lower) revealed the presence of a fast-relaxing complex EPR signal with g at 2.25, 2.22, 2.15, 2.12, 2.10 and broad components at higher field. The soluble hydrogenase fractions did not show a time-dependent activation but the membrane-bound form required such a step in order to express full activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

NMR and electron-paramagnetic-resonance studies of a dihaem cytochrome from Pseudomonas stutzeri (ATCC 11607) (cytochrome c peroxidase), Villalain, J., Moura I., Liu M. C., Payne W. J., Legall J., Xavier A. V., and Moura J. J. , Eur J Biochem, Jun 1, Volume 141, Number 2, p.305-12, (1984) AbstractWebsite

A dihaem cytochrome (Mr 37 400) with cytochrome c peroxidase activity was purified from Pseudomonas stutzeri (ATCC 11 607). The haem redox potentials are far apart: one of the haems is completely ascorbate-reducible and the other is only reduced by dithionite. The coordination, spin states and redox properties of the covalently bound haems were probed by visible, NMR and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopies in three oxidation states. In the oxidized state, the low-temperature EPR spectrum of the native enzyme is a complex superimposition of three components: (I) a low-spin haem indicating a histidinyl-methionyl coordination; (II) a low-spin haem indicating a histidinyl-histidinyl coordination; and (III) a minor high-spin haem component. At room temperature, NMR and optical studies indicate the presence of high-spin and low-spin haems, suggesting that for one of the haems a high-spin to low-spin transition is observed when temperature is decreased. In the half-reduced state, the component I (high redox potential) of the EPR spectrum disappears and induces a change in the g-values and linewidth of component II; the high-spin component II is no longer detected at low temperature. Visible and NMR studies reveal the presence of a high-spin ferric and a low-spin (methionyl-coordinated) ferrous state. The NMR data fully support the haem-haem interaction probed by EPR. In the reduced state, the NMR spectrum indicates that the low-potential haem is high-spin ferrous.

NMR and EPR studies on a monoheme cytochrome c550 isolated from Bacillus halodenitrificans, Saraiva, Lígia M., Denariaz Gerard, Liu Ming- Y., Payne William J., Legall Jean, and Moura Isabel , European Journal of Biochemistry, Volume 204, Number 3, p.1131-1139, (1992) AbstractWebsite

A c-type monoheme ferricytochrome c550 (9.6 kDa) was isolated from cells of Bacillus halodenitrificans sp.nov., grown anaerobically as a denitrifier. The visible absorption spectrum indicates the presence of a band at 695 nm characteristic of heme–methionine coordination. The mid-point redox potential was determined at several pH values by visible spectroscopy. The redox potential at pH 7.6 is 138 mV. When studied by 1H-NMR spectroscopy as a function of pH, the spectrum shows a pH dependence with pKa values of 6.0 and 11.0. According to these pKa values, three forms designated as I, II and III can be attributed to cytochrome c550. The first pKa is probably associated with protonation of the propionate groups. The second pKa value introduces a larger effect in the 1H-NMR spectrum and is probably due to the ionisation of the axial histidine. Studies of temperature variation of the 1H-NMR spectra for both the ferrous and ferri forms of the cytochrome were performed. Heme meso protons, the heme methyl groups, the thioether protons, two protons from a propionate and the methylene protons from the axial methionine were identified in the reduced form. The heme methyl resonances of the ferri form were also assigned. EPR spectroscopy was also used to probe the ferric heme environment. A signal at gmax∼ 3.5 at pH 7.5 was observed indicating an almost axial heme environment. At higher pH values the signal at gmax∼ 3.5 converts mainly to a signal at g∼ 2.96. The pKa associated with this change is around 11.3. The N-terminal sequence of this cytochrome was determined and compared with known amino acid sequences of other cytochromes.

NMR redox studies of Desulfovibrio vulgaris Cytochrome c3. Electron transfer mechanisms, Moura, J. J., Santos H., Moura I., Legall J., Moore G. R., Williams R. J., and Xavier A. V. , Eur J Biochem, Sep, Volume 127, Number 1, p.151-5, (1982) AbstractWebsite

The 300-MHz proton NMR spectra of the tetrahaem cytochrome c3 from Desulfovibrio vulgaris were examined while varying the pH and the redox potential. The analysis of the complete NMR reoxidation pattern was done taking into account all the 16 redox states that can be present in the redox titration of a tetra-redox-center molecule. A network of saturation transfer experiments performed at different oxidation stages, between the fully reduced and the fully oxidized states, allowed the observation of different resonances for some of the haem methyl groups. In the present experimental conditions, some of the haems show a fast intramolecular electron exchange rate, but the intermolecular electron exchange is always slow. In intermediate reoxidation stages, large shifts of the resonances of some haem methyl groups were observed upon changing the pH. These shifts are discussed in terms of a pH dependence of the haem midpoint redox potentials. The physiological relevance of this pH dependence is discussed.

NMR studies of a dihaem cytochrome from Pseudomonas perfectomarinus (ATCC 14405), Moura, I., Liu M. C., Legall J., Peck, H. D. Jr., Payne W. J., Xavier A. V., and Moura J. J. , Eur J Biochem, Jun 1, Volume 141, Number 2, p.297-303, (1984) AbstractWebsite

Pseudomonas perfectomarinus (ATCC 14405) dihaem cytochrome c552 was studied by 300-MHz proton magnetic resonance. Some of the haem resonances were assigned in the fully reduced and fully oxidized states. No evidence was found for methionine haem axial coordination. The oxidation-reduction equilibrium was studied in detail. Due to the large difference in mid-point redox potential between the two haems (+174 mV, for haem II and -180 mV for haem I) an intermediate oxidation state could be obtained containing reduced haem I and oxidized haem II. In this way the total paramagnetic shift at different oxidation levels could be decomposed in the intrinsic and extrinsic contributions. It was found that the two haems interact. The rate of electron exchange is slow on the NMR time scale. The redox equilibria are discussed for four possible redox species in solution.

NMR studies of electron transfer mechanisms in a protein with interacting redox centres: Desulfovibrio gigas cytochrome c3, Santos, H., Moura J. J., Moura I., Legall J., and Xavier A. V. , Eur J Biochem, Jun 1, Volume 141, Number 2, p.283-96, (1984) AbstractWebsite

The proton NMR spectra of the tetrahaem cytochrome c3 from Desulfovibrio gigas were examined while varying the pH and the redox potential. The analysis of the NMR reoxidation pattern was based on a model for the electron distribution between the four haems that takes into account haem-haem redox interactions. The intramolecular electron exchange is fast on the NMR time scale (larger than 10(5) s-1). The NMR data concerning the pH dependence of the chemical shift of haem methyl resonances in different oxidation steps and resonance intensities are not compatible with a non-interacting model and can be explained assuming a redox interaction between the haems. A complete analysis at pH* = 7.2 and 9.6, shows that the haem-haem interacting potentials cover a range from -50 mV to +60 mV. The midpoint redox potentials of some of the haems, as well as some of their interacting potentials, are pH-dependent. The physiological relevance of the modulation of the haem midpoint redox potentials by both the pH and the redox potential of the solution is discussed.

A novel nitrite biosensor based on conductometric electrode modified with cytochrome c nitrite reductase composite membrane, Zhang, Z., Xia S., Leonard D., Jaffrezic-Renault N., Zhang J., Bessueille F., Goepfert Y., Wang X., Chen L., Zhu Z., Zhao J., Almeida M. G., and Silveira C. M. , Biosensors & Bioelectronics, Feb 15, Volume 24, Number 6, p.1574-9, (2009) AbstractWebsite

A conductometric biosensor for nitrite detection was developed using cytochrome c nitrite reductase (ccNiR) extracted from Desulfovibrio desulfuricans ATCC 27774 cells immobilized on a planar interdigitated electrode by cross-linking with saturated glutaraldehyde (GA) vapour in the presence of bovine serum albumin, methyl viologen (MV), Nafion, and glycerol. The configuration parameters for this biosensor, including the enzyme concentration, ccNiR/BSA ratio, MV concentration, and Nafion concentration, were optimized. Various experimental parameters, such as sodium dithionite added, working buffer solution, and temperature, were investigated with regard to their effect on the conductance response of the biosensor to nitrite. Under the optimum conditions at room temperature (about 25 degrees C), the conductometric biosensor showed a fast response to nitrite (about 10s) with a linear range of 0.2-120 microM, a sensitivity of 0.194 microS/microM [NO(2)(-)], and a detection limit of 0.05 microM. The biosensor also showed satisfactory reproducibility (relative standard deviation of 6%, n=5). The apparent Michaelis-Menten constant (K(M,app)) was 338 microM. When stored in potassium phosphate buffer (100mM, pH 7.6) at 4 degrees C, the biosensor showed good stability over 1 month. No obvious interference from other ionic species familiar in natural waters was detected. The application experiments show that the biosensor is suitable for use in real water samples.

Nuclear-magnetic-resonance studies of Desulfuromonas acetoxidans cytochrome c551.5 (c7), Moura, José J. G., Moore Geoffrey R., Williams Robert J. P., Probst Irmelin, Legall Jean, and Xavier António V. , European Journal of Biochemistry, Volume 144, Number 3, p.433-440, (1984) AbstractWebsite

1H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy has been used to examine cytochrome c551.5 (c7) from the sulfur reducer, Desulfuromonas acetoxidans. This protein contains three hemes. Two stable oxidation states (the fully oxidized and the fully reduced) as well as intermediate oxidation states were studied. The axial ligands of the iron were found to be neutral histidines. The redox properties of cytochrome c7 were examined and good quantitative agreement found between the NMR results and previously reported redox potential measurements. The properties of cytochrome c7 are discussed together with those of the homologous tetraheme cytochromes c3 isolate from sulfate-reducing bacteria.