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1.
J Biol Inorg Chem ; 21(1): 5-12, 2016 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26841789

ABSTRACT

Our appreciation of the scholarly ideas and thinking of Bob Williams is illustrated here by a few of the areas in which he inspired us. His journey to bring inorganic chemistry to life began with an early interest in analytical chemistry, rationalising the relative stabilities of metal coordination complexes (The Irving-Williams Series), and elucidating the organometallic redox chemistry of vitamin B12. He (and Vallee) recognised that metal ions are in energised (entatic) states in proteins and enzymes, which themselves are dynamic structures of rods and springs. He played a key role in helping Rosenberg to pave the road toward the clinic for the anticancer drug cisplatin. He believed that evolution is not just dependent on DNA, but also on the metallome. Organisms and the environment are one system: does DNA code directly for all the essential elements of life?


Subject(s)
Chemistry, Inorganic , Antineoplastic Agents/chemistry , Antineoplastic Agents/pharmacology , History, 20th Century
2.
J Inorg Biochem ; 111: 100-3, 2012 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22855948

ABSTRACT

The enlightened formation, by Bert and Kuggie Vallee, of a procedure whereby senior scientists spend short time of about a month at Harvard, Oxford and other institutions, is illustrated by the views and opinions of those selected.


Subject(s)
Chemistry, Bioinorganic/history , International Educational Exchange/history , Metalloproteins/history , Zinc/history , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , United States
3.
Chemphyschem ; 6(6): 1114-20, 2005 Jun 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15900523

ABSTRACT

Nitrite is converted to nitric oxide by haem or copper-containing enzymes in denitrifying bacteria during the process of denitrification. In designing an efficient biosensor, this enzymic turnover must be quantitatively assessed. The enzyme nitrite reductase from Alcaligenes faecalis contains a redox-active blue copper centre and a nonblue enzyme-active copper centre. It can be covalently tethered to modified gold-electrode surfaces in configurations in which direct electron transfer is possible. A surface cysteine mutant of the enzyme can be similarly immobilised on bare electroactive gold substrates. Under such circumstances, however, electron transfer cannot be effectively coupled with substrate catalytic turnover. In using either the natural redox partner, pseudoazurin, or ruthenium hexammine as an "electron-shuttle" or "conduit" between enzyme and a peptide-modified electrode surface, the coupling of electron transfer to catalysis can be utilised in the development of an amperometric nitrite sensor.


Subject(s)
Azurin/chemistry , Nitrite Reductases/chemistry , Nitrites/analysis , Base Sequence , DNA Primers , Electrochemistry , Electron Transport , Protein Conformation
5.
Eur J Biochem ; 270(20): 4082-8, 2003 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14519119

ABSTRACT

Cytochrome p450BM3 is a self-sufficient fatty acid monooxygenase consisting of a diflavin (FAD/FMN) reductase domain and a heme domain fused together in a single polypeptide chain. The multidomain structure makes it an ideal model system for studying the mechanism of electron transfer and for understanding p450 systems in general. Here we report the redox properties of the cytochrome p450BM3 wild-type holoenzyme, and its isolated FAD reductase and p450 heme domains, when immobilized in a didodecyldimethylammonium bromide film cast on an edge-plane graphite electrode. The holoenzyme showed cyclic voltammetric peaks originating from both the flavin reductase domain and the FeIII/FeII redox couple contained in the heme domain, with formal potentials of -0.388 and -0.250 V with respect to a saturated calomel electrode, respectively. When measured in buffer solutions containing the holoenzyme or FAD-reductase domain, the reductase response could be maintained for several hours as a result of protein reorganization and refreshing at the didodecyldimethylammonium modified surface. When measured in buffer solution alone, the cyclic voltammetric peaks from the reductase domain rapidly diminished in favour of the heme response. Electron transfer from the electrode to the heme was measured directly and at a similarly fast rate (ks' = 221 s-1) to natural biological rates. The redox potential of the FeIII/FeII couple increased when carbon monoxide was bound to the reduced heme, but when in the presence of substrate(s) no shift in potential was observed. The reduced heme rapidly catalysed the reduction of oxygen to hydrogen peroxide.


Subject(s)
Cytochrome P-450 Enzyme System/metabolism , Bacillus megaterium/enzymology , Carbon Monoxide/metabolism , Cytochrome P-450 Enzyme System/analysis , Electrochemistry , Electrodes , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Oxidation-Reduction , Oxygen/metabolism
6.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; (5): 576-7, 2003 Mar 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12669832

ABSTRACT

Engineered metalloproteins and enzymes can be self assembled on pristine gold electrodes in robust, electrochemically-addressable, arrays.


Subject(s)
Gold/chemistry , Metalloproteins/chemistry , Azurin/chemistry , Azurin/genetics , Electrochemistry , Electrodes , Metalloproteins/genetics , Microscopy, Atomic Force , Models, Molecular , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed , Surface Properties
7.
Eur J Biochem ; 270(3): 539-44, 2003 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12542703

ABSTRACT

Soluble methane monooxygenase (sMMO) is a three-component enzyme that catalyses dioxygen- and NAD(P)H-dependent oxygenation of methane and numerous other substrates. Oxygenation occurs at the binuclear iron active centre in the hydroxylase component (MMOH), to which electrons are passed from NAD(P)H via the reductase component (MMOR), along a pathway that is facilitated and controlled by the third component, protein B (MMOB). We previously demonstrated that electrons could be passed to MMOH from a hexapeptide-modified gold electrode and thus cyclic voltammetry could be used to measure the redox potentials of the MMOH active site. Here we have shown that the reduction current is enhanced by the presence of catalase or if the reaction is performed in a flow-cell, probably because oxygen is reduced to hydrogen peroxide, by MMOH at the electrode surface and the hydrogen peroxide then inactivates the enzyme unless removed by catalase or a continuous flow of solution. Hydrogen peroxide production appears to be inhibited by MMOB, suggesting that MMOB is controlling the flow of electrons to MMOH as it does in the presence of MMOR and NAD(P)H. Most importantly, in the presence of MMOB and catalase, the electrode-associated MMOH oxygenates acetonitrile to cyanoaldehyde and methane to methanol. Thus the electochemically driven sMMO showed the same catalytic activity and regulation by MMOB as the natural NAD(P)H-driven reaction and may have the potential for development into an economic, NAD(P)H-independent oxygenation catalyst. The significance of the production of hydrogen peroxide, which is not usually observed with the NAD(P)H-driven system, is also discussed.


Subject(s)
Gold/chemistry , Methylococcus capsulatus/enzymology , Oxygen/metabolism , Oxygenases/metabolism , Acetonitriles/pharmacology , Catalase/pharmacology , Electrochemistry , Electrodes , Electron Transport , Enzyme Activation , Hydrogen Peroxide/metabolism , Membrane Potentials , Methane/metabolism , NADP/chemistry , NADP/metabolism , Oxidation-Reduction , Oxygenases/chemistry
8.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; (5): 393-401, 2002 Mar 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12120511

ABSTRACT

In recent years, the concept of microscopy and the ability to study processes at a truly molecular level have been revolutionised by the development of a family of instruments based on acquiring data through the scanning of a proximal probe across a surface. Scanning Probe Microscopes (SPMs) enable surface-confined structures to be resolved at ångstrom-resolution, in real time, and under a variety of controllable conditions. Despite initial difficulties, much progress has been in the application of this technology to the high-resolution analysis of biological systems; these have varied from complex cellular systems to molecular biopolymers. Studying the interactions of protein with surfaces has been intrinsic to the development of our understanding of blood coagulation, fibrinolysis, thrombus formation and the synthesis of biocompatible materials. The specific interactions of metalloproteins and enzymes with electrode surfaces remains central to the understanding of the bioelectrochemical processes and to the development of biosensing devices. Though ellipsometry, Raman, microcalorimetry, surface plasmon resonance, and other spectroscopic methods, can provide much information on these interfaces, the acquired data are averaged over a large number of molecular species with a low spatial resolution. Proximal probe methods have much to offer in this regard and have revolutionized our ability to monitor such interactions.


Subject(s)
Enzymes/chemistry , Metalloproteins/chemistry , Microscopy, Scanning Probe/trends , Animals , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Microscopy, Scanning Probe/instrumentation , Protein Conformation
9.
J Inorg Biochem ; 88(3-4): 362-7, 2002 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11897351

ABSTRACT

We have previously reported the scanning tunnelling microscopy (STM) imaging under buffer of the heme monooxygenase cytochrome P450(cam) from Pseudomonas putida [Faraday Discuss. 116 (2000) 1]. We describe here the adsorption and STM imaging under buffer of complexes of a mutant of cytochrome P450(cam), K344C, and wild-type putidaredoxin (Pdx) on gold(111). The images of Pdx on its own on gold(111) are not uniform, presumably due to multiple orientations of protein adsorption because of the presence of five or more cysteines on the protein surface. STM imaging of a 1:1 mixture of P450(cam)-K344C/Pdx showed a regular array of pairs of different-sized proteins 20-25 A apart arranged in rows across the gold(111) surface which we attribute to the P450(cam)/Pdx complex. The images of the pairs are more regular than those of Pdx on its own, probably as a result of complex formation with P450(cam) partly overcoming the heterogeneity of Pdx adsorption. As far as we are aware this is the first report of STM imaging of a protein/protein complex, and the first direct observation of P450(cam)/Pdx complex formation which is a key step in the catalytic cycle of P450(cam) catalysis. The redox centers of the two proteins are ca. 20 A apart, too far for rapid intracomplex electron transfer. Whether the observed complex is competent for electron transfer or physiologically relevant is not known, and further work is in progress to elucidate the protein-protein interaction.


Subject(s)
Camphor 5-Monooxygenase/chemistry , Ferredoxins/chemistry , Pseudomonas putida/enzymology , Camphor 5-Monooxygenase/metabolism , Ferredoxins/metabolism , Gold , Microscopy, Scanning Tunneling , Mutation , Surface Properties
10.
Biochemistry ; 41(5): 1689-94, 2002 Feb 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11814364

ABSTRACT

We have previously established that ATP binds to mammalian metallothionein-2 (MT). The interaction between ATP and MT and the associated conformational change of the protein affect the sulfhydryl reactivity and zinc transfer potential of MT [Jiang, L.-J., Maret, W., and Vallee, B. L. (1998) The ATP-metallothionein complex. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 95, 9146-9149]. NMR spectroscopic investigations have now provided further evidence for the interaction. (35)Cl NMR spectroscopy has further identified chloride as an additional biological MT ligand, which can interfere with the interaction of ATP with MT. (1)H NMR/TOCSY spectra demonstrate that ATP binding affects the N- and C-terminal amino acids of the MT molecule. Scanning tunneling microscopy recorded images of single MT molecules in buffered solutions. Moreover, this technique demonstrates that the otherwise nearly linear MT molecule bends by about 20 degrees at its central hinge region between the domains in the presence of ATP. These results may bear on the development of mild obesity in MT null mice and the role of MT in the regulation of energy balance. The interaction suggests a mechanism for the cellular translocation, retention, and reactivity of the ATP*MT complex in the mitochondrial intermembrane space. Both MT and ATP are localized there, and MT and thionein alternately bind and release zinc, thereby affecting mitochondrial respiration.


Subject(s)
Adenosine Triphosphate/chemistry , Metallothionein/chemistry , Adenosine Triphosphate/metabolism , Animals , Binding, Competitive , Buffers , Cadmium/chemistry , Chlorine , Ligands , Metallothionein/metabolism , Metallothionein/ultrastructure , Microscopy, Scanning Tunneling/methods , Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular/methods , Protons , Rabbits , Solutions
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