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Cameron, D. L., J. Jakus, S. R. Pauleta, G. W. Pettigrew, and A. Cooper. "Pressure Perturbation Calorimetry and the Thermodynamics of Noncovalent Interactions in Water: Comparison of Protein-Protein, Protein-Ligand, and Cyclodextrin-Adamantane Complexes." Journal of Physical Chemistry B. 114 (2010): 16228-16235. AbstractWebsite

Pressure perturbation calorimetry measurements on a range of cyclodextrin adamantane, protein ligand (lysozyme-(GlcNac)(3) and ribonuclease-2'CMP) and protein-protein (cytochrome c peroxidase-pseudoazurin) complexes in aqueous solution show consistent reductions in thermal expansibilities compared to the uncomplexed molecules. Thermodynamic data for binding, obtained by titration calorimetry, are also reported. Changes in molar expansibilities can be related to the decrease in solvation during complexation. Although reasonable estimates for numbers of displaced water molecules may be obtained in the case of rigid cyclodextrin-adamantane complexes, protein expansibility data are less easily reconciled. Comparison of data from this wide range of systems indicates that effects are not simply related to changes in solvent-accessible surface area, but may also involve changes in macromolecular dynamics and flexibility. This adds to the growing consensus that understanding thermodynamic parameters associated with noncovalent interactions requires consideration of changes in internal macromolecular fluctuations and dynamics that may not be related to surface area-related solvation effects alone.

Carepo, M. S., S. R. Pauleta, A. G. Wedd, J. J. Moura, and I. Moura. "Mo-Cu metal cluster formation and binding in an orange protein isolated from Desulfovibrio gigas." J Biol Inorg Chem. 19 (2014): 605-14. AbstractWebsite

The orange protein (ORP) isolated from the sulfate-reducing bacterium Desulfovibrio gigas (11.8 kDa) contains a mixed-metal sulfide cluster of the type [S2MoS2CuS2MoS2](3-) noncovalently bound to the polypeptide chain. The D. gigas ORP was heterologously produced in Escherichia coli in the apo form. Different strategies were used to reconstitute the metal cluster into apo-ORP and obtain insights into the metal cluster synthesis: (1) incorporation of a synthesized inorganic analogue of the native metal cluster and (2) the in situ synthesis of the metal cluster on the addition to apo-ORP of copper chloride and tetrathiomolybdate or tetrathiotungstate. This latter procedure was successful, and the visible spectrum of the Mo-Cu reconstituted ORP is identical to the one reported for the native protein with absorption maxima at 340 and 480 nm. The (1)H-(15)N heteronuclear single quantum coherence spectra of the reconstituted ORP obtained by strategy 2, in contrast to strategy 1, exhibited large changes, which required sequential assignment in order to identify, by chemical shift differences, the residues affected by the incorporation of the cluster, which is stabilized inside the protein by both electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions.

Carepo, M. S., C. Carreira, R. Grazina, M. E. Zakrzewska, A. Dolla, C. Aubert, S. R. Pauleta, J. J. Moura, and I. Moura. "Orange protein from Desulfovibrio alaskensis G20: insights into the Mo-Cu cluster protein-assisted synthesis." J Biol Inorg Chem. 21 (2016): 53-62. AbstractWebsite

A novel metalloprotein containing a unique [S2MoS2CuS2MoS2](3-) cluster, designated as Orange Protein (ORP), was isolated for the first time from Desulfovibrio gigas, a sulphate reducer. The orp operon is conserved in almost all sequenced Desulfovibrio genomes and in other anaerobic bacteria, however, so far D. gigas ORP had been the only ORP characterized in the literature. In this work, the purification of another ORP isolated form Desulfovibrio alaskensis G20 is reported. The native protein is monomeric (12443.8 +/- 0.1 Da by ESI-MS) and contains also a MoCu cluster with characteristic absorption bands at 337 and 480 nm, assigned to S-Mo charge transfer bands. Desulfovibrio alaskensis G20 recombinant protein was obtained in the apo-form from E. coli. Cluster reconstitution studies and UV-visible titrations with tetrathiomolybdate of the apo-ORP incubated with Cu ions indicate that the cluster is incorporated in a protein metal-assisted synthetic mode and the protein favors the 2Mo:1Cu stoichiometry. In Desulfovibrio alaskensis G20, the orp genes are encoded by a polycistronic unit composed of six genes whereas in Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough the same genes are organized into two divergent operons, although the composition in genes is similar. The gene expression of ORP (Dde_3198) increased 6.6 +/- 0.5 times when molybdate was added to the growth medium but was not affected by Cu(II) addition, suggesting an involvement in molybdenum metabolism directly or indirectly in these anaerobic bacteria.

Carreira, Cíntia, Margarida M. C. dos Santos, Sofia R. Pauleta, and Isabel Moura. "Proton-coupled electron transfer mechanisms of the copper centres of nitrous oxide reductase from Marinobacter hydrocarbonoclasticus – An electrochemical study." 133 (2020): 107483. AbstractWebsite

Reduction of N2O to N2 is catalysed by nitrous oxide reductase in the last step of the denitrification pathway. This multicopper enzyme has an electron transferring centre, CuA, and a tetranuclear copper-sulfide catalytic centre, “CuZ”, which exists as CuZ*(4Cu1S) or CuZ(4Cu2S). The redox behaviour of these metal centres in Marinobacter hydrocarbonoclasticus nitrous oxide reductase was investigated by potentiometry and for the first time by direct electrochemistry. The reduction potential of CuA and CuZ(4Cu2S) was estimated by potentiometry to be +275 ± 5 mV and +65 ± 5 mV vs SHE, respectively, at pH 7.6. A proton-coupled electron transfer mechanism governs CuZ(4Cu2S) reduction potential, due to the protonation/deprotonation of Lys397 with a pKox of 6.0 ± 0.1 and a pKred of 9.2 ± 0.1. The reduction potential of CuA, in enzyme samples with CuZ*(4Cu1S), is controlled by protonation of the coordinating histidine residues in a two-proton coupled electron transfer process. In the cyclic voltammograms, two redox pairs were identified corresponding to CuA and CuZ(4Cu2S), with no additional signals being detected that could be attributed to CuZ*(4Cu1S). However, an enhanced cathodic signal for the activated enzyme was observed under turnover conditions, which is explained by the binding of nitrous oxide to CuZ0(4Cu1S), an intermediate species in the catalytic cycle.

Carreira, Cíntia, Rute F. Nunes, Olga Mestre, Isabel Moura, and Sofia R. Pauleta. "The effect of pH on Marinobacter hydrocarbonoclasticus denitrification pathway and nitrous oxide reductase." 25.7 (2020): 927-940. AbstractWebsite

Increasing atmospheric concentration of N2O has been a concern, as it is a potent greenhouse gas and promotes ozone layer destruction. In the N-cycle, release of N2O is boosted upon a drop of pH in the environment. Here, Marinobacter hydrocarbonoclasticus was grown in batch mode in the presence of nitrate, to study the effect of pH in the denitrification pathway by gene expression profiling, quantification of nitrate and nitrite, and evaluating the ability of whole cells to reduce NO and N2O. At pH 6.5, accumulation of nitrite in the medium occurs and the cells were unable to reduce N2O. In addition, the biochemical properties of N2O reductase isolated from cells grown at pH 6.5, 7.5 and 8.5 were compared for the first time. The amount of this enzyme at acidic pH was lower than that at pH 7.5 and 8.5, pinpointing to a post-transcriptional regulation, though pH did not affect gene expression of N2O reductase accessory genes. N2O reductase isolated from cells grown at pH 6.5 has its catalytic center mainly as CuZ(4Cu1S), while that from cells grown at pH 7.5 or 8.5 has it as CuZ(4Cu2S). This study evidences that an in vivo secondary level of regulation is required to maintain N2O reductase in an active state.

Carreira, C., O. Mestre, R. F. Nunes, I. Moura, and S. R. Pauleta. "Genomic organization, gene expression and activity profile of Marinobacter hydrocarbonoclasticus denitrification enzymes." PeerJ. 2018.9 (2018). AbstractWebsite
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Carreira, C., S. R. Pauleta, and I. Moura. "The catalytic cycle of nitrous oxide reductase — The enzyme that catalyzes the last step of denitrification." Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry. 177 (2017): 423-434. AbstractWebsite
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