The catalytic mechanism of ascorbate peroxidase : probing the effects of changes in enzyme and substrate structure

Recombinant pea cytosolic ascorbate peroxidase (rAPX) has been isolated and the mechanistic properties have been investigated. Rate constants for formation of compound I with H2O2 and other organic peroxides were measured. The data indicate that the structure and size of peroxide dictate the rate of...

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Main Author: Lad, Latesh
Published: University of Leicester 2001
Subjects:
572
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.696962
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6969622018-04-04T03:31:52ZThe catalytic mechanism of ascorbate peroxidase : probing the effects of changes in enzyme and substrate structureLad, Latesh2001Recombinant pea cytosolic ascorbate peroxidase (rAPX) has been isolated and the mechanistic properties have been investigated. Rate constants for formation of compound I with H2O2 and other organic peroxides were measured. The data indicate that the structure and size of peroxide dictate the rate of compound I formation. Rate constants for reduction of compound I and compound II were measured with L-ascorbic acid and other derivatised forms of ascorbate. Reduction of compound II showed evidence for formation of an enzyme-substrate complex. The rate constants for compound II reduction, by the various ascorbate-based substrates, were controlled by the thermodynamic driving force of the reaction. Variants H42A and H42E were constructed to investigate the catalytic role of His42 in rAPX catalysis. The observed pseudo-first-order rate constant for the reaction between the His42 variants and hydrogen peroxide saturates at high peroxide concentration. The data are consistent with a two-step mechanism involving the formation of an APX-H2O2 intermediate whose conversion to compound I is rate-limiting. pH-Dependence studies on compound I formation reveal His42 as the key ionizable residue. Rapid photodiode array spectrophotometry revealed the presence of a transient intermediate for H42A, with a spectrum consistent with a ferric-hydroperoxy complex. The rate of formation of compound I and peroxidase activity of H42E were significantly greater than H42A, however, addition of exogenous imidazoles partially rescues both the rate of compound I formation and peroxidase activity for H42A.572University of Leicesterhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.696962http://hdl.handle.net/2381/30060Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 572
spellingShingle 572
Lad, Latesh
The catalytic mechanism of ascorbate peroxidase : probing the effects of changes in enzyme and substrate structure
description Recombinant pea cytosolic ascorbate peroxidase (rAPX) has been isolated and the mechanistic properties have been investigated. Rate constants for formation of compound I with H2O2 and other organic peroxides were measured. The data indicate that the structure and size of peroxide dictate the rate of compound I formation. Rate constants for reduction of compound I and compound II were measured with L-ascorbic acid and other derivatised forms of ascorbate. Reduction of compound II showed evidence for formation of an enzyme-substrate complex. The rate constants for compound II reduction, by the various ascorbate-based substrates, were controlled by the thermodynamic driving force of the reaction. Variants H42A and H42E were constructed to investigate the catalytic role of His42 in rAPX catalysis. The observed pseudo-first-order rate constant for the reaction between the His42 variants and hydrogen peroxide saturates at high peroxide concentration. The data are consistent with a two-step mechanism involving the formation of an APX-H2O2 intermediate whose conversion to compound I is rate-limiting. pH-Dependence studies on compound I formation reveal His42 as the key ionizable residue. Rapid photodiode array spectrophotometry revealed the presence of a transient intermediate for H42A, with a spectrum consistent with a ferric-hydroperoxy complex. The rate of formation of compound I and peroxidase activity of H42E were significantly greater than H42A, however, addition of exogenous imidazoles partially rescues both the rate of compound I formation and peroxidase activity for H42A.
author Lad, Latesh
author_facet Lad, Latesh
author_sort Lad, Latesh
title The catalytic mechanism of ascorbate peroxidase : probing the effects of changes in enzyme and substrate structure
title_short The catalytic mechanism of ascorbate peroxidase : probing the effects of changes in enzyme and substrate structure
title_full The catalytic mechanism of ascorbate peroxidase : probing the effects of changes in enzyme and substrate structure
title_fullStr The catalytic mechanism of ascorbate peroxidase : probing the effects of changes in enzyme and substrate structure
title_full_unstemmed The catalytic mechanism of ascorbate peroxidase : probing the effects of changes in enzyme and substrate structure
title_sort catalytic mechanism of ascorbate peroxidase : probing the effects of changes in enzyme and substrate structure
publisher University of Leicester
publishDate 2001
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.696962
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AT ladlatesh catalyticmechanismofascorbateperoxidaseprobingtheeffectsofchangesinenzymeandsubstratestructure
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