Interaction between Neisseria gonorrhoeae bacterial peroxidase and its electron donor, the lipid-modified azurin

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Abstract

The Neisseria gonorrhoeae bacterial cytochrome c peroxidase plays a key role in detoxifying the cells from H2O2 by reducing it to water using the lipid-modified azurin, LAz, a small type 1 copper protein, as electron donor. Here, the interaction between these two proteins was characterized by steady-state kinetics, two-dimensional NMR and molecular docking simulations. LAz is an efficient electron donor capable of activating this enzyme. This electron transfer complex is weak with a hydrophobic character, with LAz binding close to the electron transferring heme of the enzyme. The high catalytic rate (39 ± 0.03 s−1) is explained by the LAz pre-orientation, due to a positive dipole moment, and by the fast-dynamic ensemble of orientations, suggested by the small chemical shifts.

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Nóbrega, C. S., & Pauleta, S. R. (2018). Interaction between Neisseria gonorrhoeae bacterial peroxidase and its electron donor, the lipid-modified azurin. FEBS Letters, 592(9), 1473–1483. https://doi.org/10.1002/1873-3468.13053

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