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Published August 3, 1993 | public
Journal Article

Site saturation of the histidine-46 position in Pseudomonas aeruginosa azurin: Characterization of the His46Asp copper and cobalt proteins

Abstract

Cassette mutagenesis has been used to replace the copper ligand His46 of Pseudomonas aeruginosa azurin with 19 other amino acids and a stop codon. Several mutant proteins were expressed in Escherichia coli and isolated; however, only the variant in which His was replaced by Asp exhibited the spectral characteristics of a blue (type 1) center. The spectroscopic and electrochemical properties of this mutant protein show that the copper site is perturbed relative to wild-type azurin. The absorption spectrum of Cu(II)(His46Asp) azurin exhibits a S(Cys)-Cu(II) band at 612 nm, as well as weaker features at ~300, 454, and ~850 nm; its EPR spectrum is rhombic (g|| = 2.327(1), g_x ≈ 2.03, and g_y, ≈ 2.07; A|| ≈ 22(2) X 10^(-4), A_x, ≈ 46 X 10^(-4), and A_y, ≈ 22 X 10^(-4) cm^(-l)). The reduction potential of the mutant (260 mV us NHE at pH 8.5; 297 mV at pH 5.0) is lower than that of wild-type azurin (288 mV at pH 8.5; 349 mV at pH 5.0). The S(Cys)-Co(II) absorption bands (~300 and 362 nm) in Co(II)(His46Asp) azurin are strongly blue-shifted relative to those (330 and 375 nm) in the spectrum of the Co(II)(His46) protein, whereas the intensities of the ligand-field bands in the 500-650-nm region (∈ ≈ 100 M^(-1) cm^(-l)) indicate a five-coordinate Co(I1) environment.

Additional Information

© 1993 American Chemical Society. Received February 15, 1993; Revised Manuscript Received May 24, 1993. The authors thank William B. Connick, Deborah S. Wuttke, Tadashi J. Mizoguchi, Cindy D. Strong, and Yi Lu for helpful discussions. We are grateful to Sam Kim of the Caltech Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) for assistance with the EPR measurements. This research was supported by the National Institutes of Health (GM16424 to J.H.R.; DK19038 to H.B.G.) and the National Science Foundation. J.P.G. thanks the NIH for a postdoctoral fellowship.

Additional details

Created:
August 20, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023