Abstract

Here we present new evidence that riboflavin is present as one of four flavins in Na+-NQR. In particular, we present conclusive evidence that the source of the neutral radical is not one of the FMNs and that riboflavin is the center that gives rise to the neutral flavosemiquinone. The riboflavin is a bona fide redox cofactor and is likely to be the last redox carrier of the enzyme, from which electrons are donated to quinone. We have constructed a double mutant that lacks both covalently bound FMN cofactors (NqrB-T236Y/NqrC-T225Y) and have studied this mutant together with the two single mutants (NqrB-T236Y and NqrC-T225Y) and a mutant that lacks the noncovalently bound FAD in NqrF (NqrF-S246A). The double mutant contains riboflavin and FAD in a 0.6:1 ratio, as the only flavins in the enzyme; noncovalently bound flavins were detected. In the oxidized form, the double mutant exhibits an EPR signal consistent with a neutral flavosemiquinone radical, which is abolished on reduction of the enzyme. The same radical can be observed in the FAD deletion mutant. Furthermore, when the oxidized enzyme reacts with ubiquinol (the reduced form of the usual electron acceptor) in a process that reverses the physiological direction of the electron flow, a single kinetic phase is observed. The kinetic difference spectrum of this process is consistent with one-electron reduction of a neutral flavosemiquinone. The presence of riboflavin in the role of a redox cofactor is thus far unique to Na+-NQR.

Highlights

  • When flavins occur as enzyme cofactors, they are usually found as FAD or FMN rather than the bare riboflavin [15, 16]

  • Two different anionic flavosemiquinone radical signals are detected at different levels of reduction

  • The neutral radical was observed in the oxidized form of the wild type enzyme, as well as in mutants where the FAD and each of the FMN cofactors

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Summary

Introduction

The neutral radical was observed in the oxidized form of the wild type enzyme, as well as in mutants where the FAD and each of the FMN cofactors Fluorescence Spectra of the Denatured NqrB-T236Y/NqrCT225Y Double Mutant—To confirm that the presence of riboflavin in Naϩ-NQR is not the result of the degradation of the other flavins in the enzyme, (i.e. degradation of the covalently bound flavins in NqrB or in NqrC or the noncovalently bound FAD in NqrF), we analyzed the flavin content of a double mutant, which lacks the two covalently bound flavins.

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