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Explaining the Atypical Reaction Profiles of Heme Enzymes with a Novel Mechanistic Hypothesis and Kinetic Treatment

Many heme enzymes show remarkable versatility and atypical kinetics. The fungal extracellular enzyme chloroperoxidase (CPO) characterizes a variety of one and two electron redox reactions in the presence of hydroperoxides. A structural counterpart, found in mammalian microsomal cytochrome P450 (CYP)...

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Autores principales: Manoj, Kelath Murali, Baburaj, Arun, Ephraim, Binoy, Pappachan, Febin, Maviliparambathu, Pravitha Parapurathu, Vijayan, Umesh K., Narayanan, Sivaprasad Valiyaveettil, Periasamy, Kalaiselvi, George, Ebi Ashley, Mathew, Lazar T.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2871781/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20498847
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0010601
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author Manoj, Kelath Murali
Baburaj, Arun
Ephraim, Binoy
Pappachan, Febin
Maviliparambathu, Pravitha Parapurathu
Vijayan, Umesh K.
Narayanan, Sivaprasad Valiyaveettil
Periasamy, Kalaiselvi
George, Ebi Ashley
Mathew, Lazar T.
author_facet Manoj, Kelath Murali
Baburaj, Arun
Ephraim, Binoy
Pappachan, Febin
Maviliparambathu, Pravitha Parapurathu
Vijayan, Umesh K.
Narayanan, Sivaprasad Valiyaveettil
Periasamy, Kalaiselvi
George, Ebi Ashley
Mathew, Lazar T.
author_sort Manoj, Kelath Murali
collection PubMed
description Many heme enzymes show remarkable versatility and atypical kinetics. The fungal extracellular enzyme chloroperoxidase (CPO) characterizes a variety of one and two electron redox reactions in the presence of hydroperoxides. A structural counterpart, found in mammalian microsomal cytochrome P450 (CYP), uses molecular oxygen plus NADPH for the oxidative metabolism (predominantly hydroxylation) of substrate in conjunction with a redox partner enzyme, cytochrome P450 reductase. In this study, we employ the two above-mentioned heme-thiolate proteins to probe the reaction kinetics and mechanism of heme enzymes. Hitherto, a substrate inhibition model based upon non-productive binding of substrate (two-site model) was used to account for the inhibition of reaction at higher substrate concentrations for the CYP reaction systems. Herein, the observation of substrate inhibition is shown for both peroxide and final substrate in CPO catalyzed peroxidations. Further, analogy is drawn in the “steady state kinetics” of CPO and CYP reaction systems. New experimental observations and analyses indicate that a scheme of competing reactions (involving primary product with enzyme or other reaction components/intermediates) is relevant in such complex reaction mixtures. The presence of non-selective reactive intermediate(s) affords alternate reaction routes at various substrate/product concentrations, thereby leading to a lowered detectable concentration of “the product of interest” in the reaction milieu. Occam's razor favors the new hypothesis. With the new hypothesis as foundation, a new biphasic treatment to analyze the kinetics is put forth. We also introduce a key concept of “substrate concentration at maximum observed rate”. The new treatment affords a more acceptable fit for observable experimental kinetic data of heme redox enzymes.
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spelling pubmed-28717812010-05-24 Explaining the Atypical Reaction Profiles of Heme Enzymes with a Novel Mechanistic Hypothesis and Kinetic Treatment Manoj, Kelath Murali Baburaj, Arun Ephraim, Binoy Pappachan, Febin Maviliparambathu, Pravitha Parapurathu Vijayan, Umesh K. Narayanan, Sivaprasad Valiyaveettil Periasamy, Kalaiselvi George, Ebi Ashley Mathew, Lazar T. PLoS One Research Article Many heme enzymes show remarkable versatility and atypical kinetics. The fungal extracellular enzyme chloroperoxidase (CPO) characterizes a variety of one and two electron redox reactions in the presence of hydroperoxides. A structural counterpart, found in mammalian microsomal cytochrome P450 (CYP), uses molecular oxygen plus NADPH for the oxidative metabolism (predominantly hydroxylation) of substrate in conjunction with a redox partner enzyme, cytochrome P450 reductase. In this study, we employ the two above-mentioned heme-thiolate proteins to probe the reaction kinetics and mechanism of heme enzymes. Hitherto, a substrate inhibition model based upon non-productive binding of substrate (two-site model) was used to account for the inhibition of reaction at higher substrate concentrations for the CYP reaction systems. Herein, the observation of substrate inhibition is shown for both peroxide and final substrate in CPO catalyzed peroxidations. Further, analogy is drawn in the “steady state kinetics” of CPO and CYP reaction systems. New experimental observations and analyses indicate that a scheme of competing reactions (involving primary product with enzyme or other reaction components/intermediates) is relevant in such complex reaction mixtures. The presence of non-selective reactive intermediate(s) affords alternate reaction routes at various substrate/product concentrations, thereby leading to a lowered detectable concentration of “the product of interest” in the reaction milieu. Occam's razor favors the new hypothesis. With the new hypothesis as foundation, a new biphasic treatment to analyze the kinetics is put forth. We also introduce a key concept of “substrate concentration at maximum observed rate”. The new treatment affords a more acceptable fit for observable experimental kinetic data of heme redox enzymes. Public Library of Science 2010-05-17 /pmc/articles/PMC2871781/ /pubmed/20498847 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0010601 Text en Manoj et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Manoj, Kelath Murali
Baburaj, Arun
Ephraim, Binoy
Pappachan, Febin
Maviliparambathu, Pravitha Parapurathu
Vijayan, Umesh K.
Narayanan, Sivaprasad Valiyaveettil
Periasamy, Kalaiselvi
George, Ebi Ashley
Mathew, Lazar T.
Explaining the Atypical Reaction Profiles of Heme Enzymes with a Novel Mechanistic Hypothesis and Kinetic Treatment
title Explaining the Atypical Reaction Profiles of Heme Enzymes with a Novel Mechanistic Hypothesis and Kinetic Treatment
title_full Explaining the Atypical Reaction Profiles of Heme Enzymes with a Novel Mechanistic Hypothesis and Kinetic Treatment
title_fullStr Explaining the Atypical Reaction Profiles of Heme Enzymes with a Novel Mechanistic Hypothesis and Kinetic Treatment
title_full_unstemmed Explaining the Atypical Reaction Profiles of Heme Enzymes with a Novel Mechanistic Hypothesis and Kinetic Treatment
title_short Explaining the Atypical Reaction Profiles of Heme Enzymes with a Novel Mechanistic Hypothesis and Kinetic Treatment
title_sort explaining the atypical reaction profiles of heme enzymes with a novel mechanistic hypothesis and kinetic treatment
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2871781/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20498847
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0010601
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