Substrate‐analogue‐induced changes in the nickel‐EPR spectrum of active methyl‐coenzyme‐M reductase from Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum

Abstract
Methyl-coenzyme-M reductase (MCR) catalyzes the formation of methane from methyl-coenzyme M [2-(methylthio)ethanesulfonate] and 7-mercaptoheptanoylthreonine phosphate in methanogenic archaea. The enzyme contains the nickel porphinoid coenzyme F430 as a prosthetic group. In the active, reduced (red) state, the enzyme displays two characteristic EPR signals, MCR-red1 and MCR-red2, probably derived from Ni(I). In the presence of the substrate methyl-coenzyme M, the rhombic MCR-red2 signal is quantitatively converted to the axial MCR-red1 signal. We report here on the effects of inhibitory substrate analogues on the EPR spectrum of the enzyme. 3-Bromopropanesulfonate (BrPrSO3), which is the most potent inhibitor of MCR known to date (apparent Ki = 0.05 microM), converted the EPR signals MCR-red1 and MCR-red2 to a novel axial Ni(I) signal designated MCR-BrPrSO3. 3-Fluoropropanesulfonate (apparent Ki < 50 microM) and 3-iodopropanesulfonate (apparent Ki < 1 microM) induced a signal identical to that induced by BrPrSO3 without affecting the line shape, despite the fact that the fluorine, bromine and iodine isotopes employed have nuclear spins of I = 1/2, I = 3/2 and I = 5/2, respectively. This finding suggests that MCR-BrPrSO3 is not the result of a close halogen-Ni(I) interaction. 7-Bromoheptanoylthreonine phosphate (BrHpoThrP) (apparent Ki = 5 microM), which is an inhibitory substrate analogue of 7-mercaptoheptanoylthreonine phosphate, converted the signals MCR-red1 and MCR-red2 to a novel axial Ni(I) signal, MCR-BrHpoThrP, similar but not identical to MCR-BrPrSO3. The results indicate that inhibition of MCR by the halogenated substrate analogues investigated above is not via oxidation of Ni(I)F430. The different MCR EPR signals are assigned to different enzyme/substrate and enzyme/inhibitor complexes.

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