Chauhan S, Kline CD, Mayfield M, Blackburn NJ. Binding of copper and silver to single-site variants of peptidylglycine monooxygenase reveals the structure and chemistry of the individual metal centers.
Biochemistry 2014;
53:1069-80. [PMID:
24471980 PMCID:
PMC3985755 DOI:
10.1021/bi4015264]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 14] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/05/2023]
Abstract
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Peptidylglycine
monooxygenase (PHM) catalyzes the final step in
the biosynthesis of amidated peptides that serve as important signaling
molecules in numerous endocrine pathways. The catalytic mechanism
has attracted much attention because of a number of unique attributes,
including the presence of a pair of uncoupled copper centers separated
by 11 Å (termed CuH and CuM), an unusual Cu(I)SMet interaction
at the oxygen binding M-site, and the postulated Cu(II)–superoxo
intermediate. Understanding the mechanism requires determining the
catalytic roles of the individual copper centers and how they change
during catalysis, a task made more difficult by the overlapping spectral
signals from each copper center in the wild-type (WT) protein. To
aid in this effort, we constructed and characterized two PHM variants
that bound metal at only one site. The H242A variant bound copper
at the H-center, while the H107AH108A double mutant bound copper at
the M-center; both mutants were devoid of catalytic activity. Oxidized
Cu(II) forms showed electron paramagnetic resonance and extended X-ray
absorption fine structure (EXAFS) spectra consistent with their previously
determined Cu(II)His3O and Cu(II)His2O2 ligand sets for the H- and M-centers, respectively. Cu(I) forms,
on the other hand, showed unique chemistry. The M-center bound two
histidines and a methionine at all pHs, while the H-center was two-coordinate
at neutral pH but coordinated a new methionine S ligand at low pH.
Fourier transform infrared studies confirmed and extended previous
assignments of CO binding and showed unambiguously that the 2092 cm–1 absorbing species observed in the WT and many variant
forms is an M-site Cu(I)–CO adduct. Silver binding was also
investigated. When H107AH108A and M109I (a WT analogue with both sites
intact) were incubated with excess AgNO3, each variant
bound a single Ag(I) ion, from which it was inferred that Ag(I) binds
selectively at the M-center with little or no affinity for the H-center.
EXAFS at the Ag K-edge established a strong degree of similarity between
the ligand sets of Cu and Ag bound at the M-center. These studies
validate previous spectral assignments and provide new insights into
the detailed chemistry of each metal site.
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