Shewanella oneidensis Cytochrome c Nitrite Reductase (ccNiR) Does Not Disproportionate Hydroxylamine
to Ammonia and Nitrite, Despite a Strongly Favorable Driving Force
Posted on 2014-04-08 - 00:00
Cytochrome c nitrite reductase (ccNiR) from Shewanella oneidensis, which catalyzes the six-electron
reduction of nitrite to ammonia in vivo, was shown
to oxidize hydroxylamine in the presence of large quantities of this
substrate, yielding nitrite as the sole free nitrogenous product.
UV–visible stopped-flow and rapid-freeze-quench electron paramagnetic
resonance data, along with product analysis, showed that the equilibrium
between hydroxylamine and nitrite is fairly rapidly established in
the presence of high initial concentrations of hydroxylamine, despite
said equilibrium lying far to the left. By contrast, reduction of
hydroxylamine to ammonia did not occur, even though disproportionation
of hydroxylamine to yield both nitrite and ammonia is strongly thermodynamically
favored. This suggests a kinetic barrier to the ccNiR-catalyzed reduction
of hydroxylamine to ammonia. A mechanism for hydroxylamine reduction
is proposed in which the hydroxide group is first protonated and released
as water, leaving what is formally an NH2+ moiety
bound at the heme active site. This species could be a metastable
intermediate or a transition state but in either case would exist
only if it were stabilized by the donation of electrons from the ccNiR
heme pool into the empty nitrogen p orbital. In this scenario, ccNiR
does not catalyze disproportionation because the electron-donating
hydroxylamine does not poise the enzyme at a sufficiently low potential
to stabilize the putative dehydrated hydroxylamine; presumably, a
stronger reductant is required for this.
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Youngblut, Matthew; Pauly, Daniel J.; Stein, Natalia; Walters, Daniel; Conrad, John A.; Moran, Graham R.; et al. (2016). Shewanella oneidensis Cytochrome c Nitrite Reductase (ccNiR) Does Not Disproportionate Hydroxylamine
to Ammonia and Nitrite, Despite a Strongly Favorable Driving Force. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/bi401705d