The proximal hydrogen bond network modulates Bacillus subtilis nitric-oxide synthase electronic and structural properties

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Abstract

Bacterial nitric-oxide synthase (NOS)-like proteins are believed to be genuine NOSs. As for cytochromes P450 (CYPs), NOS-proximal ligand is a thiolate that exerts a push effect crucial for the process of dioxygen activation. Unlike CYPs, this catalytic electron donation seems controlled by a hydrogen bond (H-bond) interaction between the thiolate ligand and a vicinal tryptophan. Variations of the strength of this H-bond could provide a direct way to tune the stability along with the electronic and structural properties of NOS. We generated five different mutations of bsNOS Trp66, which can modulate this proximal H-bond. We investigated the effects of these mutations on different NOS complexes (FeIII, FeIICO, and Fe IINO), using a combination of UV-visible absorption, EPR, FTIR, and resonance Raman spectroscopies. Our results indicate that (i) the proximal H-bond modulation can selectively decrease or increase the electron donating properties of the proximal thiolate, (ii) this modulation controls the σ-competition between distal and proximal ligands, (iii) this H-bond controls the stability of various NOS intermediates, and (iv) a fine tuning of the electron donation by the proximal ligand is required to allow at the same time oxygen activation and to prevent uncoupling reactions. © 2011 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.

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Brunel, A., Wilson, A., Henry, L., Dorlet, P., & Santolini, J. (2011). The proximal hydrogen bond network modulates Bacillus subtilis nitric-oxide synthase electronic and structural properties. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 286(14), 11997–12005. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M110.195446

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