Abstract

The alphabeta dimer of active nitrile hydratase from Rhodococcus sp. R312 contains one low-spin ferric ion that is coordinated by three Cys residues, two N-amide groups from the protein backbone, and one OH(-). The enzyme isolated from bacteria grown in the dark is inactive and contains the iron site as a six-coordinate diamagnetic Fe-nitrosyl complex, called NH(dark). The active state can be obtained from the dark state by photolysis of the Fe-NO bond at room temperature. Activation is accompanied by the conversion of NH(dark) to a low-spin ferric complex, NH(light), exhibiting an S = (1)/(2) EPR signal with g values of 2.27, 2.13, and 1.97. We have characterized both NH(dark) and NH(light) with Mössbauer spectroscopy. The z-axis of the 57Fe magnetic hyperfine tensor, A, of NH(light) was found to be rotated by approximately 45 degrees relative to the z-axis of the g tensor (g(z) = 1.97). Comparison of the A tensor of NH(light) with the A tensors of low-spin ferric hemes indicates a substantially larger degree of covalency for nitrile hydratase. We have also performed photolysis experiments between 2 and 20 K and characterized the photolyzed products by EPR and Mössbauer spectroscopy. Photolysis at 4.2 K in the Mössbauer spectrometer yielded a five-coordinate low-spin ferric species, NH(A), which converted back into NH(dark) when the sample was briefly warmed to 77 K. We also describe preliminary EPR photolysis studies that have yielded new intermediates.

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