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2006
Pettigrew, G. W., A. Echalier, and S. R. Pauleta. "Structure and mechanism in the bacterial dihaem cytochrome c peroxidases." Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry. 100 (2006): 551-567. AbstractWebsite

The bacterial cytochroine c peroxidases contain an electron-transferring haem c (E) and a peroxidatic haem c (P). Many are isolated in an inactive oxidised state. Reduction of the E baem promotes Ca2+-dependent spin state and coordination changes at the P haem rendering it accessible to ligand. Recent crystallographic work on the oxidised and mixed valence enzymes has suggested a mechanism by which an electron entering the E haem remotely triggers this activation of the P haem. Binding of hydrogen peroxide at the activated P haem leads to an intermediate catalytic form containing two oxidising equivalents, one of which is a ferryl oxene. This form of the enzyme is then reduced by two single electron transfers to the E haem delivered by small redox proteins such as cytochromes or cupredoxins. The binding of these small redox proteins is dominated by global electrostatic forces but the interfaces of the electron transfer complexes that are formed are largely hydrophobic and relatively non-specific. These features allow very high electron transfer rates in the steady state. (c) 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

2004
Pauleta, S. R., F. Guerlesquin, C. F. Goodhew, B. Devreese, J. VanBeeumen, AS Pereira, I. Moura, and G. W. Pettigrew. "Paracoccus pantotrophus pseudoazurin is an electron donor to cytochrome c peroxidase." Biochemistry. 43 (2004): 11214-25. AbstractWebsite

The gene for pseudoazurin was isolated from Paracoccus pantotrophus LMD 52.44 and expressed in a heterologous system with a yield of 54.3 mg of pure protein per liter of culture. The gene and protein were shown to be identical to those from P. pantotrophus LMD 82.5. The extinction coefficient of the protein was re-evaluated and was found to be 3.00 mM(-1) cm(-1) at 590 nm. It was confirmed that the oxidized protein is in a weak monomer/dimer equilibrium that is ionic-strength-dependent. The pseudoazurin was shown to be a highly active electron donor to cytochrome c peroxidase, and activity showed an ionic strength dependence consistent with an electrostatic interaction. The pseudoazurin has a very large dipole moment, the vector of which is positioned at the putative electron-transfer site, His81, and is conserved in this position across a wide range of blue copper proteins. Binding of the peroxidase to pseudoazurin causes perturbation of a set of NMR resonances associated with residues on the His81 face, including a ring of lysine residues. These lysines are associated with acidic residues just back from the rim, the resonances of which are also affected by binding to the peroxidase. We propose that these acidic residues moderate the electrostatic influence of the lysines and so ensure that specific charge interactions do not form across the interface with the peroxidase.

Pauleta, S. R., A. Cooper, M. Nutley, N. Errington, S. Harding, F. Guerlesquin, C. F. Goodhew, I. Moura, JJG Moura, and G. W. Pettigrew. "A copper protein and a cytochrome bind at the same site on bacterial cytochrome c peroxidase." Biochemistry. 43 (2004): 14566-14576. AbstractWebsite

Pseudoazurin binds at a single site on cytochrome c peroxidase from Paracoccus pantotrophus with a K-d of 16.4 muM at 25 degreesC, pH 6.0, in an endothermic reaction that is driven by a large entropy change. Sedimentation velocity experiments confirmed the presence of a single site, although results at higher pseudoazurin concentrations are complicated by the dimerization of the protein. Microcalorimetry, ultracentrifugation, and H-1 NMR spectroscopy studies in which cytochrome c550, pseudoazurin, and cytochrome c peroxidase were all present could be modeled using a competitive binding algorithm. Molecular docking simulation of the binding of pseudoazurin to the peroxidase in combination with the chemical shift perturbation pattern for pseudoazurin in the presence of the peroxidase revealed a group of solutions that were situated close to the electron-transferring heme with Cu-Fe distances of about 14 Angstrom. This is consistent with the results of H-1 NMR spectroscopy, which showed that pseudoazurin binds closely enough to the electron - transferring heme of the peroxidase to perturb its set of heme methyl resonances. We conclude that cytochrome c550 and pseudoazurin bind at the same site on the cytochrome c peroxidase and that the pair of electrons required to restore the enzyme to its active state after turnover are delivered one-by-one to the electron-transferring heme.

2003
Pettigrew, G. W., S. R. Pauleta, C. F. Goodhew, A. Cooper, M. Nutley, K. Jumel, S. E. Harding, C. Costa, L. Krippahl, I. Moura, and J. Moura. "Electron transfer complexes of cytochrome c peroxidase from Paracoccus denitrificans containing more than one cytochrome." Biochemistry. 42 (2003): 11968-11981. AbstractWebsite

According to the model proposed in previous papers [Pettigrew, G. W., Prazeres, S., Costa, C., Palma, N., Krippahl, L., and Moura, J. J. (1999) The structure of an electron-transfer complex containing a cytochrome c and a peroxidase, J. Biol. Chem. 274, 11383-11389; Pettigrew, G. W., Goodhew, C. F., Cooper, A., Nutley, M., Jumel, K., and Harding, S. E. (2003) Electron transfer complexes of cytochrome c peroxidase from Paracoccus denitrificans, Biochemistry 42, 2046-2055], cytochrome c peroxidase of Paracoccus denitrificans can accommodate horse cytochrome c and Paracoccus cytochrome c(550) at different sites on its molecular surface. Here we use H-1 NMR spectroscopy, analytical ultracentrifugation, molecular docking simulation, and microcalorimetry to investigate whether these small cytochromes can be accommodated simultaneously in the formation of a ternary complex. The pattern of perturbation of heme methyl and methionine methyl resonances in binary and ternary solutions shows that a ternary complex can be formed, and this is confirmed by the increase in the sedimentation coefficient upon addition of horse cytochrome c to a solution in which cytochrome c(550) fully occupies its binding site on cytochrome c peroxidase. Docking experiments in which favored binary solutions of cytochrome, c(550) bound to cytochrome c peroxidase act as targets for horse cytochrome c and the reciprocal experiments in which favored binary solutions of horse cytochrome c bound to cytochrome c peroxidase act as targets for cytochrome c(550) show that the enzyme can accommodate both cytochromes at the same time on adjacent sites. Microcalorimetric titrations are difficult to interpret but are consistent with a weakened binding of horse cytochrome c to a binary complex of cytochrome c peroxidase and cytochrome c(550) and binding of cytochrome c(550) to the cytochrome c peroxidase that is affected little by the presence of horse cytochrome c in the other site. The presence of a substantial capture surface for small cytochromes on the cytochrome c peroxidase has implications for rate enhancement mechanisms which ensure that the two electrons required for re-reduction of the enzyme after reaction with hydrogen peroxide are delivered efficiently.

2002
Pauleta, S. R., Y. Lu, C. F. Goodhew, Y. Qiu, I. Moura, G. W. Pettigrew, and J. A. Shelnutt. "Structural changes in the calcium-dependent activation of the di-heme cytochrome c peroxidase of Paracoccus pantotrophus." Biophysical Journal. 82 (2002): 14A. AbstractWebsite
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2001
Pauleta, S. R., Y. Lu, C. F. Goodhew, I. Moura, G. W. Pettigrew, and J. A. Shelnutt. "Calcium-dependent conformation of a heme and fingerprint peptide of the diheme cytochrome c peroxidase from Paracoccus pantotrophus." Biochemistry. 40 (2001): 6570-6579. AbstractWebsite

The structural changes in the heme macrocycle and substituents caused by binding of Ca2+ to the diheme cytochrome c peroxidase from Paracoccus pantotrophus were clarified by resonance Raman spectroscopy of the inactive fully oxidized form of the enzyme. The changes in the macrocycle vibrational modes are consistent with a Ca2+-dependent increase in the out-of-plane distortion of the low-potential heme, the proposed peroxidatic heme. Most of the increase in out-of-plane distortion occurs when the high-affinity site I is occupied, but a small further increase in distortion occurs when site II is also occupied by Ca2+ or Mg2+. This increase in the heme distortion explains the red shift in the Soret absorption band that occurs upon Ca2+ binding. Changes also occur in the low-frequency substituent modes of the heme, indicating that a structural change in the covalently attached fingerprint pentapeptide of the LP heme occurs upon Ca2+ binding to site I. These structural changes may lead to loss of the sixth ligand at the peroxidatic heme in the semireduced form of the enzyme and activation.

Pettigrew, G., C. Goodhew, S. Pauleta, C. Costa, I. Moura, J. Moura, N. Palma, L. Krippahl, K. Jumel, S. Harding, and A. Cooper. "Cytochrome c peroxidase and its redox partners - binary and ternary complexes." Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry. 86 (2001): 86. AbstractWebsite
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Pauleta, S. R., C. Costa, A. Cooper, I. Moura, and G. W. Pettigrew. "Cytochrome c peroxidase as a model system to study electron transfer complexes." Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry. 86 (2001): 374. AbstractWebsite
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Qiu, Y., S. R. Pauleta, Y. Lu, C. F. Goodhew, I. Moura, G. W. Pettigrew, and J. A. Shelnutt. "Structural changes associated with calcium-dependent activation of the di-heme cytochrome c peroxidase of Paracoccus pantotrophus." Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry. 86 (2001): 386. AbstractWebsite
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