Nitrite Reductase Activity of Ferrous Nitrobindins: A Comparative Study
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Published:2023-03-31
Issue:7
Volume:24
Page:6553
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ISSN:1422-0067
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Container-title:International Journal of Molecular Sciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:IJMS
Author:
De Simone Giovanna1ORCID, di Masi Alessandra1ORCID, Tundo Grazia R.2, Coletta Massimo3, Ascenzi Paolo4ORCID
Affiliation:
1. Dipartimento di Scienze, Università Roma Tre, 00146 Roma, Italy 2. Dipartimento di Scienze Cliniche e Medicina Traslazionale, Università di Roma Tor Vergata, 00133 Roma, Italy 3. IRCCS Fondazione Bietti, 00198 Roma, Italy 4. Laboratorio Interdipartimentale di Microscopia Elettronica, Università Roma Tre, 00146 Roma, Italy
Abstract
Nitrobindins (Nbs) are all-β-barrel heme proteins spanning from bacteria to Homo sapiens. They inactivate reactive nitrogen species by sequestering NO, converting NO to HNO2, and promoting peroxynitrite isomerization to NO3−. Here, the nitrite reductase activity of Nb(II) from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mt-Nb(II)), Arabidopsis thaliana (At-Nb(II)), Danio rerio (Dr-Nb(II)), and Homo sapiens (Hs-Nb(II)) is reported. This activity is crucial for the in vivo production of NO, and thus for the regulation of blood pressure, being of the utmost importance for the blood supply to poorly oxygenated tissues, such as the eye retina. At pH 7.3 and 20.0 °C, the values of the second-order rate constants (i.e., kon) for the reduction of NO2− to NO and the concomitant formation of nitrosylated Mt-Nb(II), At-Nb(II), Dr-Nb(II), and Hs-Nb(II) (Nb(II)-NO) were 7.6 M−1 s−1, 9.3 M−1 s−1, 1.4 × 101 M−1 s−1, and 5.8 M−1 s−1, respectively. The values of kon increased linearly with decreasing pH, thus indicating that the NO2−-based conversion of Nb(II) to Nb(II)-NO requires the involvement of one proton. These results represent the first evidence for the NO2 reductase activity of Nbs(II), strongly supporting the view that Nbs are involved in NO metabolism. Interestingly, the nitrite reductase reactivity of all-β-barrel Nbs and of all-α-helical globins (e.g., myoglobin) was very similar despite the very different three-dimensional fold; however, differences between all-α-helical globins and all-β-barrel Nbs suggest that nitrite reductase activity appears to be controlled by distal steric barriers, even though a more complex regulatory mechanism can be also envisaged.
Funder
Dipartimenti di Eccellenza, MIUR
Subject
Inorganic Chemistry,Organic Chemistry,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,Computer Science Applications,Spectroscopy,Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Catalysis
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