Catalysis of hydrogen peroxide dismutation by the dimanganese catalase from Thermus thermophilus has been measured and found to obey Michaelis-Menton kinetics with no evidence for substrate inhibition at concentrations up to 0.45 M H2O2. Comparison among three dimanganese catalases (Thermus thermophilus, Thermoleophilium album, and Lactobacillus plantarum) reveals that their apparent second-order rate constants, Kcat/Km, differ by at most a factor of 5, even though the individual kinetic constants differ by as much as a factor of 20. This similarity suggests that all three enzymes may have the same rate-determining step. For T. thermophilus catalase we find that kcat/Km approximately kbi, the bimolecular rate constant at limiting substrate concentrations. Thus, the rate of the rate-determining step is unaltered over the entire range of substrate concentrations, unlike T. album and L. plantarum catalases where substrate inhibition has been reported. Comparison to structurally characterized dimanganese complexes and dimetalloproteins (arginase, hemerythrin), which are functional, albeit kinetically slow, catalase mimics, reveals that high catalase activity correlates with a greater number of stronger sigma-ligand donors like anionic carboxylatos vs neutral histidines that stabilize the oxidized Mn2(III,III) state over reduced Mn2(II,II). A critical feature for enzymatic functionality in vivo is suppression of one-electron chemistry leading to formation of the mixed-valence forms, Mn2(III,IV) and Mn2(II,III), which are kinetically inactive or precursors to inactive species, respectively. Evidence is presented from model compounds suggesting that the mu-carboxylato bridge between Mn ions in catalase may play the key role in suppressing formation of these detrimental oxidation states through destabilization of these one-electron redox processes.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi00255a025 | DOI Listing |
Molecules
March 2023
Research Group of Bioorganic and Biocoordination Chemistry, University of Pannonia, H-8201 Veszprém, Hungary.
Heme and nonheme dimanganese catalases are widely distributed in living organisms to participate in antioxidant defenses that protect biological systems from oxidative stress. The key step in these processes is the disproportionation of HO to O and water, which can be interpreted via two different mechanisms, namely via the formation of high-valent oxoiron(IV) and peroxodimanganese(III) or diiron(III) intermediates. In order to better understand the mechanism of this important process, we have chosen such synthetic model compounds that can be used to map the nature of the catalytically active species and the factors influencing their activities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMolecules
July 2021
Research Group of Bioorganic and Biocoordination Chemistry, University of Pannonia, H-8201 Veszprém, Hungary.
Heme iron and nonheme dimanganese catalases protect biological systems against oxidative damage caused by hydrogen peroxide. Rubrerythrins are ferritine-like nonheme diiron proteins, which are structurally and mechanistically distinct from the heme-type catalase but similar to a dimanganese KatB enzyme. In order to gain more insight into the mechanism of this curious enzyme reaction, non-heme structural and functional models were carried out by the use of mononuclear [Fe(L)(solvent)](ClO) (-) (L = 1,3-bis(2-pyridyl-imino)isoindoline, L = 1,3-bis(4'-methyl-2-pyridyl-imino)isoindoline, L = 1,3-bis(4'-Chloro-2-pyridyl-imino)isoindoline, L = 1,3-bis(5'-chloro-2-pyridyl-imino)isoindoline) complexes as catalysts, where the possible reactive intermediates, diiron-perroxo [Fe(μ-O)(μ-1,2-O)(L-L)(Solv)] (-) complexes are known and well-characterized.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Biol Inorg Chem
February 2019
College of Chemistry, Beijing Normal University, Beijing, 100875, China.
The mechanism of the HO disproportionation catalyzed by the manganese catalase (MnCat) KatB was studied using the hybrid density functional theory B3LYP and the quantum chemical cluster approach. Compared to the previous mechanistic study at the molecular level for the Thermus thermophilus MnCat (TTC), more modern methodology was used and larger models of increasing sizes were employed with the help of the high-resolution X-ray structure. In the reaction pathway suggested for KatB using the Large chemical model, the O-O homolysis of the first substrate HO occurs through a μ-η:η coordination mode and requires a barrier of 10.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Inorg Biochem
September 2018
IQUIR (Instituto de Química Rosario), Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET), Facultad de Ciencias Bioquímicas y Farmacéuticas, Universidad Nacional de Rosario, Suipacha 531, S2002LRK Rosario, Argentina. Electronic address:
A new diMn complex, [MnL(OAc)(HO)](BPh)·3HO (1), obtained with the unsymmetrical NO-ligand HL = 1-[N-(2-pyridylmethyl),N-(2-hydroxybenzyl)amino]-3-[N'-(2-hydroxybenzyl),N'-(benzyl)amino]propan-2-ol, has been prepared and characterized. The unsymmetrical hexadentate ligand L leads to coordination dissymmetry (dissimilar donor atoms) around each Mn ion (NO and NO(solvent), respectively) leaving one labile site on one of the two Mn ions that facilitates interaction of the metal center with HO, as in Mn catalase. 1 is able to catalyze HO disproportionation in acetonitrile, with second-order rate constant k = 23.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInorg Chem
September 2015
Institute for Molecular Science, National Institutes of Natural Sciences, Myodaiji, Okazaki, Aichi 444-8787, Japan.
Although atmospheric dioxygen is regarded as the most ideal oxidant, O2 activation for use in oxygenation reactions intrinsically requires a costly sacrificial reductant. The present study investigated the use of aqueous alkaline solution for O2 activation. A manganese(III) salen complex, Mn(III)(salen)(Cl), in toluene reacts with aqueous KOH solution under aerobic conditions, which yields a di-μ-oxo dimanganese(IV) salen complex, [Mn(IV)(salen)]2(μ-O)2.
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