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PDBsum entry 4mfh
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Electron transport
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PDB id
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4mfh
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DOI no:
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Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
111:924-929
(2014)
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PubMed id:
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Copper-sulfenate complex from oxidation of a cavity mutant of Pseudomonas aeruginosa azurin.
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N.A.Sieracki,
S.Tian,
R.G.Hadt,
J.L.Zhang,
J.S.Woertink,
M.J.Nilges,
F.Sun,
E.I.Solomon,
Y.Lu.
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ABSTRACT
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Metal-sulfenate centers are known to play important roles in biology and yet
only limited examples are known due to their instability and high reactivity.
Herein we report a copper-sulfenate complex characterized in a protein
environment, formed at the active site of a cavity mutant of an electron
transfer protein, type 1 blue copper azurin. Reaction of hydrogen peroxide with
Cu(I)-M121G azurin resulted in a species with strong visible absorptions at 350
and 452 nm and a relatively low electron paramagnetic resonance gz value of
2.169 in comparison with other normal type 2 copper centers. The presence of a
side-on copper-sulfenate species is supported by resonance Raman spectroscopy,
electrospray mass spectrometry using isotopically enriched hydrogen peroxide,
and density functional theory calculations correlated to the experimental data.
In contrast, the reaction with Cu(II)-M121G or Zn(II)-M121G azurin under the
same conditions did not result in Cys oxidation or copper-sulfenate formation.
Structural and computational studies strongly suggest that the secondary
coordination sphere noncovalent interactions are critical in stabilizing this
highly reactive species, which can further react with oxygen to form a sulfinate
and then a sulfonate species, as demonstrated by mass spectrometry. Engineering
the electron transfer protein azurin into an active copper enzyme that forms a
copper-sulfenate center and demonstrating the importance of noncovalent
secondary sphere interactions in stabilizing it constitute important
contributions toward the understanding of metal-sulfenate species in biological
systems.
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');
}
}
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