Abstract

Trimethylamine dehydrogenase from the pseudomonad Methylophilus methylotrophus has been examined using the technique of pulse radiolysis to rapidly introduce a single reducing equivalent into the enzyme. Using enzyme that has had its iron-sulfur center rendered redox-inert by prior reaction with ferricenium hexafluorophosphate, we determined the spectral change associated with formation of both the anionic and neutral forms that were generated at high and low pH, respectively, of the unique 6-cysteinyl-FMN of the enzyme. With native enzyme, electron transfer was observed within the radiolytically generated one-electron reduced enzyme but only at low pH (6.0). The kinetics and thermodynamics of this electron transfer in one-electron reduced enzyme may be compared with that studied previously in the two-electron reduced enzyme. In contrast to previous studies with two-electron reduced enzyme in which a pK(a) of approximately 8 was determined for the flavin semiquinone, in the one-electron reduced enzyme the semiquinone was not substantially protonated even at pH 6. 0. These results indicate that reduction of the iron-sulfur center of the enzyme significantly decreases the pK(a) of the flavin semiquinone of the active site. This provides further evidence, in conjunction with the strong magnetic interaction known to exist between the centers in the two-electron reduced enzyme, that the two redox-active centers in trimethylamine dehydrogenase are in intimate contact with one another in the active site of the enzyme.

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