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Rapid Decay of the Native Intermediate in the Metallooxidase Fet3p Enables Controlled Fe Oxidation for Efficient Metabolism. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Multicopper oxidases (MCOs) facilitate the oxidation of substrates while reducing oxygen to water, divided into two groups: one with high turnover frequencies for organic substrates and another with low frequencies for metal ions.
  • The high turnover frequencies in organic oxidases are achieved through efficient electron transfer processes, while in metallooxidases like Fet3p, rapid decay of the intermediate limits turnover.
  • Understanding the factors influencing Fet3p's low turnover reveals that proton delivery is crucial, allowing for effective iron metabolism and minimizing harmful reactive oxygen species (ROS) production.

Article Abstract

The multicopper oxidases (MCOs) couple four 1 oxidations of substrate to the 4 reduction of O to HO. These divide into two groups: those that oxidize organic substrates with high turnover frequencies (TOFs) up to 560 s and those that oxidize metal ions with low TOFs, ∼1 s or less. The catalytic mechanism of the organic oxidases has been elucidated, and the high TOF is achieved through rapid intramolecular electron transfer (IET) to the native intermediate (NI), which only slowly decays to the resting form. Here, we uncover the factors that govern the low TOF in Fet3p, a prototypical metallooxidase, in the context of the MCO mechanism. We determine that the NI decays rapidly under optimal turnover conditions, and the mechanism thereby becomes rate-limited by slow IET to the resting enzyme. Development of a catalytic model leads to the important conclusions that proton delivery to the NI controls the mechanism and enables the slow turnover in Fet3p that is functionally significant in Fe metabolism enabling efficient ferroxidase activity while avoiding ROS generation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7315797PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.0c02384DOI Listing

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