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1999
Purification and characterization of a tungsten-containing formate dehydrogenase from Desulfovibrio gigas, Almendra, M. J., Brondino C. D., Gavel O., Pereira A. S., Tavares P., Bursakov S., Duarte R., Caldeira J., Moura J. J. G., and Moura I. , Biochemistry, Volume {38}, Number {49}, p.{16366-16372}, (1999) Abstract

An air-stable formate dehydrogenase (FDH), an enzyme that catalyzes the oxidation of formate to carbon dioxide, was purified from the sulfate reducing organism Desulfovibrio gigas (D. gigas) NCIB 9332. D. gigas FDH is a heterodimeric protein [alpha (92 kDa) and beta (29 kDa) subunits] and contains 7 +/- 1 Fe/protein and 0.9 +/- 0.1 W/protein, Selenium was not detected. The UV/visible absorption spectrum of D, gigas FDH is typical of an iron-sulfur protein. Analysis of pterin nucleotides yielded a content of 1.3 +/- 0.1 guanine monophosphate/mol of enzyme, which suggests a tungsten coordination with two molybdopterin guanine dinucleotide cofactors. Both Mossbauer spectroscopy performed on D. gigas FDH grown in a medium enriched with Fe-57 and EPR studies performed in the native and fully reduced state of the protein confirmed the presence of two [4Fe-4S] clusters. Variable-temperature EPR studies showed the presence of two signals compatible with an atom in a d(1) configuration albeit with an unusual relaxation behavior as compared to the one generally observed for W(V) ions.

Reactions of nitric oxide with the reduced non-heme diiron center of the soluble methane monooxygenase hydroxylase, Coufal, DE, Tavares P., Pereira A. S., Hyunh BH, and Lippard SJ , Biochemistry, Volume {38}, Number {14}, p.{4504-4513}, (1999) Abstract

The soluble methane monooxygenase system from Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath) catalyzes the oxidation of methane to methanol and water utilizing dioxygen at a non-heme, carboxylate-bridged diiron center housed in the hydroxylase (H) component. To probe the nature of the reductive activation of dioxygen in this system, reactions of an analogous molecule, nitric oxide, with the diiron(II) form of the enzyme (H-red) Were investigated by both continuous and discontinuous kinetics methodologies using optical, EPR, and Mossbauer spectroscopy. Reaction of NO with H-red affords a dinitrosyl species, designated H-dinitrosyl, with optical spectra (lambda(max) = 450 and 620 nm) and Mossbauer parameters (delta = 0.72 mm/s, Delta E-Q = 1.55 mm/s) similar to those of synthetic dinitrosyl analogues and of the dinitrosyl adduct of the reduced ribonucleotide reductase R2 (RNR-R2) protein. The H-dinitrosyl species models features of the H-peroxo intermediate formed in the analogous dioxygen reaction. In the presence of protein B, H-dinitrosyl builds up with approximately the same rate constant as H-peroxo (similar to 26 s(-1)) at 4 degrees C. In the absence of protein B, the kinetics of H-dinitrosyl formation were best fit with a biphasic A --> B --> C model, indicating the presence of an intermediate species between H-red and H-dinitrosyl. This result contrasts with the reaction of H-red with dioxygen, in which the H-peroxo intermediate forms in measurable quantities only in the presence of protein B. These findings suggest that protein B may alter the positioning but not the availability of coordination sites on iron for exogenous ligand binding and reactivity.

Redox potential of the heme protein KatG from Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Wengenack, N., Lopes H., Kennedy M., Tavares P., Pereira A. S., Moura I., Moura J. J. G., and Rusnak F. , Journal Of Inorganic Biochemistry, Volume {74}, Number {1-4}, p.{336}, (1999) Abstract
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Simple and complex iron-sulfur proteins in sulfate reducing bacteria, Moura, I., Pereira A. S., Tavares P., and Moura J. J. G. , Volume {47}, p.{361-419}, (1999) Abstract
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Spectroscopic characterization of porphyrin binding to ferrochelatase, the last enzyme in the heme biosynthetic pathway, Franco, R., Ma J. G., Lu Y., Pereira A., Tavares P., Moura I., Shelnutt J. A., and Ferreira G. C. , Journal Of Inorganic Biochemistry, Volume {74}, Number {1-4}, p.{130}, (1999) Abstract
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