화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.109, No.7, 3023-3031, 2005
Resonance Raman studies of xanthine oxidase: the reduced enzyme -Product complex with violapterin
A study of the molecular, electronic, and vibrational characteristics of the molybdenum-containing enzyme complex xanthine oxidase with violapterin has been carried out using density functional theory calculations and resonance Raman spectroscopy. The electronic structure calculations were carried out on a model consisting of the enzyme molybdopterin cofactor [in the four-valent, reduced state; (MoO)-O-IV(SH)] covalently linked to violapterin (1H,3H,8H-pteridine-2,4,7-trione in the neutral form) via an oxygen bridge, Mo-O-C7. Full geometry optimizations were performed for all models using the SDD basis set and the three-parameter geometry optimizations were pet exchange functional of Becke combined with the Lee, Yang, and Parr correlational functional. Harmonic vibrational frequencies were determined for a variety of isotopes in an attempt to correlate experimentally observed shifts upon O-18-labeling of the Mo-OR bridge to bound product as well as shifts seen upon substitution of solvent-exchangeable protons in samples prepared in DO. The theoretical vibrational frequencies compared favorably with experimentally observed vibrational modes in the resonance Raman spectra of the reduced xanthine oxidase-violapterin complex prepared in H2O and D2O and with O-18-labeled product. Correlating the isotopic shifts from the calculations with those from the resonance Raman experiments resulted in complete normal mode assignments for all modes observed in the 350-1750 cm(-1) range. The present work demonstrates that a model in which the violapterin is coordinated to the molybdenum of the active site in a simple end-on manner via the hydroxyl group introduced by an enzyme accurately predicts the observed resonance Raman spectrum of the complex. Given the numerous modes involving the bridging oxygen, a side-on binding mode can be eliminated.