Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.127, No.43, 15161-15167, 2005
Detection of the His-Heme Fe2+-NO species in the reduction of NO to N2O by ba(3)-oxidase from Thermus thermophilus
Reaction pathways in the enzymatic formation and cleavage of the N-N and N-O bonds, respectively, are difficult to verify without the structure of the intermediates, but we now have such information on the heme a(3)(2+)-NO species formed in the reaction of ba(3)-oxidase with NO from resonance Raman spectroscopy. We have identified the His-heme a(3)(2+)-NO/CUB1+ species by its characteristic Fe-NO and N-O stretching frequencies at 539 and 1620 cm(-1), respectively. The Fe-NO and N-O frequencies in ba(3)-oxidase are 21 and 7 cm-1 lower and higher, respectively, than those observed in Mb-NO. From these results and earlier Raman and FTIR measurements, we demonstrate that the protein environment of the proximal His384 that is part of the Q-proton pathway controls the strength of the Fe-His384 bond upon ligand (CO vs NO) binding. We also show by time-resolved FTIR spectroscopy that Cu-B(1+) has a much lower affinity for NO than for CO. We suggest that the reduction of NO to N2O by ba(3)-oxidase proceeds by the fast binding of the first NO molecule to heme a(3) with high-affinity, and the second NO molecule binds to CUB with low-affinity, producing the temporal co-presence of two NO molecules in the heme-copper center. The low-affinity Of CUB for NO binding also explains the NO reductase activity of the ba(3)-oxidase as opposed to other heme-copper oxidases. With the identification of the His-heme a(3)(2+)-NO/Cu-B(1+) species, the structure of the binuclear heme a(3)-Cu-B(1+) center in the initial step of the NO reduction mechanism is known.