Export 1532 results:
Sort by: Author Title Type [ Year  (Desc)]
2002
Ortigueira, M, Matos C, Piedade MS.  2002.  Fractional Discrete-Time Signal Processing: Scale Conversion and Linear Prediction. Nonlinear Dynamics. :173–190. AbstractWebsite
n/a
de Melo, JS, Albelda MT, Diaz P, Garcia-Espana E, Lodeiro C, Alves S, Lima JC, Pina F, Soriano C.  2002.  Ground and excited state properties of polyamine chains bearing two terminal naphthalene units. Journal of the Chemical Society-Perkin Transactions 2. :991-998., Number 5 Abstract
n/a
Prata, JV, Clemente DTS, Prabhakar S, Lobo AM, Mourato I, Branco PS.  2002.  Intramolecular addition of acyldiazenecarboxylates onto double bonds in the synthesis of heterocycles. JOURNAL OF THE CHEMICAL SOCIETY-PERKIN TRANSACTIONS 1. :513-528., Number 4 Abstract
n/a
Pina, F, Lima JC, Lodeiro C, de Melo JS, Diaz P, Albelda MT, Garcia-Espana E.  2002.  Long range electron transfer quenching in polyamine chains bearing a terminal naphthalene unit. Journal of Physical Chemistry a. 106:8207-8212., Number 35 Abstract
n/a
Melo, MJ, Moura S, Maestri M, Pina F.  2002.  Micelle effects on multi state/multifunctional systems based on photochromic flavylium compounds. The case of luteolinidin. Journal of Molecular Structure. 612:245-253., Number 2-3 AbstractWebsite
n/a
Oliveira, R, Pita H, Coito F, Steiger-Gar{\c c}ão A.  2002.  O projecto OCTOPUS: O módulo Reconhecedor de Zonas Oxidadas–. 60: Jornadas de Engenharia de Telecomunica{\c c}ões e Computadores-ISEL Lisboa, Portugal Abstract

n/a

Roque, A, Lodeiro C, Pina F, Maestri M, Ballardini R, Balzani V.  2002.  Photochromic properties of 3-methyl-substituted flavylium salts. European Journal of Organic Chemistry. :2699-2709., Number 16 AbstractWebsite
n/a
Jameson, GNL, Jin W, Krebs C, Perreira AS, Tavares P, Liu XF, Theil EC, Huynh BH.  2002.  Stoichiometric production of hydrogen peroxide and parallel formation of ferric multimers through decay of the diferric-peroxo complex, the first detectable intermediate in ferritin mineralization. Biochemistry. {41}:{13435-13443}., Number {45} Abstract

The catalytic step that initiates formation of the ferric oxy-hydroxide mineral core in the central cavity of H-type ferritin involves rapid oxidation of ferrous ion by molecular oxygen (ferroxidase reaction) at a binuclear site (ferroxidase site) found in each of the 24 subunits. Previous investigators have shown that the first detectable reaction intermediate of the ferroxidase reaction is a diferric-peroxo intermediate, F-peroxo, formed within 25 ms, which then leads to the release of H2O2 and formation of ferric mineral precursors. The stoichiometric relationship between F-peroxo, H2O2, and ferric mineral precursors, crucial to defining the reaction pathway and mechanism, has now been determined. To this end, a horseradish peroxidase-catalyzed spectrophotometric method was used as an assay for H2O2. By rapidly mixing apo M ferritin from frog, Fe2+, and O-2 and allowing the reaction to proceed for 70 ms when F-peroxo has reached its maximum accumulation, followed by spraying the reaction mixture into the H2O2 assay solution, we were able to quantitatively determine the amount of H2O2 produced during the decay of F-peroxo. The correlation between the amount of H2O2 released with the amount of F-peroxo accumulated at 70 ms determined by Mossbauer spectroscopy showed that F-peroxo decays into H2O2 with a stoichiometry of 1 F-peroxo:H2O2. When the decay of F-peroxo was monitored by rapid freeze-quench Mossbauer spectroscopy, multiple diferric mu-oxo/mu-hydroxo complexes and small polynuclear ferric clusters were found to form at rate constants identical to the decay rate of F-peroxo. This observed parallel formation of multiple products (H2O2, diferric complexes, and small polynuclear clusters) from the decay of a single precursor (F-peroxo) provides useful mechanistic insights into ferritin mineralization and demonstrates a flexible ferroxidase site.

2001
Franco, R, Pereira AS, Tavares P, Mangravita A, Barber MJ, Moura I, Ferreira GC.  2001.  Substitution of murine ferrochelatase glutamate-287 with glutamine or alanine leads to porphyrin substrate-bound variants, May 15. Biochemical Journal. 356:217-222. AbstractWebsite

Ferrochelatase (EC 4.99.1.1) is the terminal enzyme of the haem biosynthetic pathway and catalyses iron chelation into the protoporphyrin IX ring. Glutamate-287 (E287) of murine mature ferrochelatase is a conserved residue in all known sequences of ferrochelatase, is present at the active site of the enzyme, as inferred from the Bacillus subtilis ferrochelatase three-dimensional structure, and is critical for enzyme activity. Substitution of E287 with either glutamine (Q) or alanine (A) yielded variants with lower enzymic activity than that of the wild-type ferrochelatase and with different absorption spectra from the wild-type enzyme. In contrast to the wild-type enzyme, the absorption spectra of the variants indicate that these enzymes, as purified, contain protoporphyrin IX. Identification and quantification of the porphyrin bound to the E287-directed variants indicate that approx. 80% of the total porphyrin corresponds to protoporphyrin IX. Significantly, rapid stopped-flow experiments of the E287A and E287Q Variants demonstrate that reaction with Zn2+ results in the formation of bound Zn-protoporphyrin IX, indicating that the endogenously bound protoporphyrin IX can be used as a substrate. Taken together, these findings suggest that the structural strain imposed by ferrochelatase on the porphyrin substrate as a critical step in the enzyme catalytic mechanism is also accomplished by the E287A and E287Q variants, but without the release of the product. Thus E287 in murine ferrochelatase appears to be critical For the catalytic process by controlling the release of the product.

Pereira, AS, Tavares P, Moura I, Moura JJ, Huynh BH.  2001.  Mossbauer characterization of the iron-sulfur clusters in Desulfovibrio vulgaris hydrogenase, Mar 28. J Am Chem Soc. 123:2771-82., Number 12 AbstractWebsite

The periplasmic hydrogenase of Desulfovibrio vulgaris (Hildenbourough) is an all Fe-containing hydrogenase. It contains two ferredoxin type [4Fe-4S] clusters, termed the F clusters, and a catalytic H cluster. Recent X-ray crystallographic studies on two Fe hydrogenases revealed that the H cluster is composed of two sub-clusters, a [4Fe-4S] cluster ([4Fe-4S](H)) and a binuclear Fe cluster ([2Fe](H)), bridged by a cysteine sulfur. The aerobically purified D. vulgaris hydrogenase is stable in air. It is inactive and requires reductive activation. Upon reduction, the enzyme becomes sensitive to O(2), indicating that the reductive activation process is irreversible. Previous EPR investigations showed that upon reoxidation (under argon) the H cluster exhibits a rhombic EPR signal that is not seen in the as-purified enzyme, suggesting a conformational change in association with the reductive activation. For the purpose of gaining more information on the electronic properties of this unique H cluster and to understand further the reductive activation process, variable-temperature and variable-field Mossbauer spectroscopy has been used to characterize the Fe-S clusters in D. vulgaris hydrogenase poised at different redox states generated during a reductive titration, and in the CO-reacted enzyme. The data were successfully decomposed into spectral components corresponding to the F and H clusters, and characteristic parameters describing the electronic and magnetic properties of the F and H clusters were obtained. Consistent with the X-ray crystallographic results, the spectra of the H cluster can be understood as originating from an exchange coupled [4Fe-4S]-[2Fe] system. In particular, detailed analysis of the data reveals that the reductive activation begins with reduction of the [4Fe-4S](H) cluster from the 2+ to the 1+ state, followed by transfer of the reducing equivalent from the [4Fe-4S](H) subcluster to the binuclear [2Fe](H) subcluster. The results also reveal that binding of exogenous CO to the H cluster affects significantly the exchange coupling between the [4Fe-4S](H) and the [2Fe](H) subclusters. Implication of such a CO binding effect is discussed.

Pauleta, SR, Lu Y, Goodhew CF, Moura I, Pettigrew GW, Shelnutt JA.  2001.  Calcium-dependent conformation of a heme and fingerprint peptide of the diheme cytochrome c peroxidase from Paracoccus pantotrophus, Jun 5. Biochemistry. 40:6570-6579., Number 22 AbstractWebsite

The structural changes in the heme macrocycle and substituents caused by binding of Ca2+ to the diheme cytochrome c peroxidase from Paracoccus pantotrophus were clarified by resonance Raman spectroscopy of the inactive fully oxidized form of the enzyme. The changes in the macrocycle vibrational modes are consistent with a Ca2+-dependent increase in the out-of-plane distortion of the low-potential heme, the proposed peroxidatic heme. Most of the increase in out-of-plane distortion occurs when the high-affinity site I is occupied, but a small further increase in distortion occurs when site II is also occupied by Ca2+ or Mg2+. This increase in the heme distortion explains the red shift in the Soret absorption band that occurs upon Ca2+ binding. Changes also occur in the low-frequency substituent modes of the heme, indicating that a structural change in the covalently attached fingerprint pentapeptide of the LP heme occurs upon Ca2+ binding to site I. These structural changes may lead to loss of the sixth ligand at the peroxidatic heme in the semireduced form of the enzyme and activation.

Timóteo, CG, Tavares P, Pettigrew GW, Moura I.  2001.  Calcium in bacterial peroxidases - Pseudomonas stutzeri cytochrome c peroxidase, Aug. Journal Of Inorganic Biochemistry. {86}:{456}., Number {1} Abstract
n/a
Di Rocco, G, Pereira AS, Bursakov SA, Gavel OY, Rusnak F, Lampreia J, Moura JJG, Moura I.  2001.  Cloning of a novel Mo-Cu containing protein from Desulfovibrio.gigas, Aug. Journal Of Inorganic Biochemistry. {86}:{202}., Number {1}, 655 AVENUE OF THE AMERICAS, NEW YORK, NY 10010 USA: ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC Abstract
n/a
Cabrito, I, Pereira AS, Tavares P, Besson S, Brondino C, Hoffman B, Brown K, Tegoni M, Cambillau C, Moura JJG, Moura I.  2001.  Nitrous oxide reductase (N2OR) from Pseudomonas nautica 617, Aug. Journal Of Inorganic Biochemistry. {86}:{165}., Number {1} Abstract
n/a
Alves, T, Besson S, Pereira AS, Pettigrew GW, Moura JJG, Moura I.  2001.  Structure-function studies of cytochrome c peroxidase from ps. nautica, Aug. Journal Of Inorganic Biochemistry. {86}:{122}., Number {1}, 655 AVENUE OF THE AMERICAS, NEW YORK, NY 10010 USA: ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC Abstract
n/a
Lodeiro, C, Pina F, Parola AJ, Bencini A, Bianchi A, Bazzicalupi C, Ciattini S, Giorgi C, Masotti A, Valtancoli B, de Melo JS.  2001.  Exploring the photocatalytic properties and the long-lifetime chemosensor ability of Cl-2 Ru(Bpy)(2)L (L=2,5,8,11,14-pentaaza 15 )-2,2 '-bipyridilophane), 2001. Inorganic Chemistry. 40:6813-6819. AbstractWebsite

In this work a new water-soluble long-lifetime chemosensor, containing a polyamine unit connected to a complexed Ru(II) metal center, is described. Its crystal structure has been characterized by X-ray analysis. The polyamine macrocyclic unit is capable of anchoring cationic or anionic substrates, according to its protonation state. Examples of electron transfer involving the ruthenium complex core and the bound substrate are presented. The photocatalytic ability of such a system is illustrated by the oxidation of iodide to iodine promoted by light absorption at 436 nm.

Calhorda, MJ, Drew MGB, Felix V, Fonseca LP, Gamelas CA, Godinho S, Goncalves IS, Hunstock E, Lopes JP, Parola AJ, Pina F, Romao CC, Santos AG.  2001.  Metal-metal interaction in polynuclear complexes with cyanide bridges: synthesis, characterisation, and theoretical studies, 2001. Journal of Organometallic Chemistry. 632:94-106. AbstractWebsite

The reaction of the cyanide anion [M(CO)(5)CN](-) (M = Cr or Mo) with metallocenes of Groups 4 and 6 produced polynuclear complexes of the type [CpCp 'M(CO){-NC-M ' (CO)(5)}]BF4 (M = M0, W; M ' = Mo, Cr, Cp '= Cp, Ind), Cp2TiCl{-NC-Mo(CO)(5)} and Cp2Ti{-NC-Mo(CO)(5)}(2). These complexes were characterised by H-1-, C-13- and Mo-95-NMR, IR and UV-vis spectroscopies, elemental analysis and examined by cyclic voltammetry. These methods show that the [M(CO)(5)CN]- ligands shift the electron density towards the metallocene centres. The complex [Cp2W(CO){-NC-Mo(CO)(5)}](+) is additionally examined by single crystal X-ray structure determination. The Density Functional Theory (DFT) calculations with the ADF program were performed on selected compounds to understand the nature of the redox processes taking place. Compared with a nitrile, the coordination of a [M(CO)-,CN]- fragment to the metallocene moiety does not significantly change the geometrical features. but leads to the stabilisation of the HOMO of the latter. with all the oxidation processes occurring in the pentacarbonyl moiety of the binuclear species. Time-dependent DFT calculations were used to identify the band appearing in the visible spectrum of Cp2TiCl{-NC-Mo(CO)(5)} as a Mo to Ti charge transfer. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science BN. All rights reserved.

Lodeiro, C, Parola AJ, Pina F, Bazzicalupi C, Bencini A, Bianchi A, Giorgi C, Masotti A, Valtancoli B.  2001.  Protonation and Zn(II) coordination by dipyridine-containing macrocycles with different molecular architecture. A case of pH-controlled metal jumping outside-inside the macrocyclic cavity, 2001. Inorganic Chemistry. 40:2968-2975. AbstractWebsite

The synthesis of the macrocyclic ligand 4,4 '-(2,5,8, 11,14-pentaaza[15])-2,2 ' -bipyridylophane (L3), which contains a pentaamine chain linking the 4,4 ' -positions of a 2,2 ' -dipyridine moiety, is reported. Protonation and Zn(II) complexation by L3 and by macrocycle L2, containing the same pentaamine chain connecting the 6,6 ' -positions of 2,2 ' -dipyridine, were studied by means of potentiometric, UV-vis, and fluorescent emission measurements. While in L2 all the nitrogen donor atoms are convergent inside the macrocyclic cavity, in L3 the heteroaromatic nitrogen atoms are located outside. Both ligands form mono- and dinuclear Zn(II) complexes in aqueous solution. In the mononuclear Zn(II) complexes with L2, the metal is coordinated inside the macrocyclic cavity, bound to the heteroaromatic nitrogen donors and three amine groups of the aliphatic chain. As shown by the crystal structure of the [ZnL2](2+) complex, the two benzylic nitrogens are not coordinated and facile protonation of the complex takes place at slightly acidic pH values. Considering the mononuclear [ZnL3](2+) complex, the metal is encapsulated inside the cavity, not coordinated by the dipyridine unit. Protonation of the complex occurs on the aliphatic polyamine chain and gives rise to translocation of the metal outside the cavity, bound to the, heteroaromatic nitrogens.

Pessanha, M, Brennan L, Xavier AV, Cuthbertson PM, Reid GA, Chapman SK, Turner DL, Salgueiro CA.  2001.  NMR structure of the haem core of a novel tetrahaem cytochrome isolated from Shewanella frigidimarina: identification of the haem-specific axial ligands and order of oxidation. FEBS Letters. 489(1):8-13. AbstractWebsite

The tetrahaem cytochrome isolated during anaerobic growth of Shewanella frigidimarina NCIMB400 is a small protein (86 residues) involved in electron transfer to Fe(III), which can be used as a terminal respiratory oxidant by this bacterium. A 3D solution structure model of the reduced form of the cytochrome has been determined using NMR data in order to determine the relative orientation of the haems. The haem core architecture of S. frigidimarina tetrahaem cytochrome differs from that found in all small tetrahaem cytochromes c3 so far isolated from strict anaerobes, but has some similarity to the N-terminal cytochrome domain of flavocytochrome c3 isolated from the same bacterium. NMR signals obtained for the four haems of S. frigidimarina tetrahaem cytochrome at all stages of oxidation were cross-assigned to the solution structure using the complete network of chemical exchange connectivities. Thus, the order in which each haem in the structure becomes oxidised was determined.

Bazzicalupi, C, Bencini A, Berni E, Bianchi A, Giorgi C, Fusi V, Valtancoli B, Lodeiro C, Roque A, Pina F.  2001.  Coordination properties of a polyamine cryptand with two different binding moieties. A case of a pH-modulated antenna device based on a new Eu(III) cryptate complex. Inorganic Chemistry. 40:6172-6179., Number 24 AbstractWebsite
n/a
Romão, MJ, Dias JM, Moura I.  2001.  Dissimilatory Nitrate Reductase. Handbook of Metalloproteins . (Messerschmidt, A., Huber, R., Poulos, T., Wieghardt, K., Eds.).:1075-1085. Abstract
n/a
Correia dos Santos, MM, Paes de Sousa PM, Simões Gonçalves ML, Ascenso C, Moura I, Moura JJG.  2001.  Electrochemical studies of rubredoxin from Desulfovibrio vulgaris at modified electrodes. Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry. 501:173-179., Number 1–2 AbstractWebsite
n/a