Abstract

The Raman spectrum of the B2 subunit of Escherichia coli ribonucleotide reductase shows a peak at 496 cm-1 that appears to be in resonance with the 370-nm electronic transition of the binuclear iron center in both the native and radical-free forms of the protein. Exposure of the protein to H218O causes the peak to shift to 481 cm-1, indicating that the vibrational mode is due to an Fe-O moiety in which the oxygen can exchange with solvent. The rate of oxygen exchange (kobsd = 8.3 x 10-4 s-1) is consistent with a mu-oxo-bridged structure. Protonation of the oxygen is unlikely since the Fe-O vibration fails to shift to lower frequency in D2O. Instead, there is a gradual increase in the vibrational frequency with time to a maximum value of 502 cm-1 after 3 h in 70% with time to a maximum value of 602 cm-1 after 3 h in 70% D2O. Apparently, the deuteration of successive protein functional groups causes a slight alteration in the structure of the binuclear iron center. The resonance Raman characteristics of the Fe-O-Fe group in protein B2 are similar to those previously reported for the mu-oxo-bridged binuclear iron center in hemerythrin. A further similarity between the two proteins is the high degree of alpha-helical content. Circular dichroism measurements place this value at approximately 60% for the B2 subunit of ribonucleotide reductase.

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