The free radical of pyruvate formate‐lyase

Abstract
The first-derivative EPR spectrum of the active form of Escherichia coli pyruvate formate-lyase shows an asymmetric doublet with partially resolved hyperfine splittings (g = 2.0037). Isotope substitution studies demonstrated couplings of a carbon-centered unpaired electron to a solvent-exchangeable proton (a = 1.5 mT) and to further hydrogen nuclei (a = 0.36 and 0.57 mT). By selective incorporation of unlabelled tyrosine into 2H-labelled enzyme protein, a tyrosyl radical structure has been ruled out. Circumstantial evidence indicates that the organic free radical, which also displays an ultraviolet absorption signal at 365 nm, is located on a standard amino acid residue of the polypeptide chain. EPR signal quantification found a stoichiometry of 1 spin per active site. The formate analogue hypophosphite has been characterized as a specific kcat inhibitor of pyruvate formate-lyase which destroys the enzyme radical. Protein-linked 1-hydroxyethylphosphonate was previously described as the dead-end product after reaction of the analogue with the intermediary acetyl-enzyme form of the catalytic cycle [W. Plaga et al. (1988) Eur. J. Biochem. 178, 445-450]. EPR spectroscopy of this system has now identified the corresponding .alpha.-phosphoryl radical as a reaction intermediate [g = 2.0032; a(P) = 2.72 mT, a(3H) = 1.96 mT]; it showed a half-life of about 20 min at 0.degree. C. This finding proves that the enzyme radical is a hydrogen-atom-transferring coenzymic element.