Biplab K. Maiti
Universidade Nova de Lisboa
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Publication
Featured researches published by Biplab K. Maiti.
Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry | 2013
Anders Thapper; Alberto C. Rizzi; Carlos D. Brondino; Anthony G. Wedd; Ricardo J. Pais; Biplab K. Maiti; Isabel Moura; Sofia R. Pauleta; José J. G. Moura
In order to gain insights into the interplay between Cu(I) and Cu(II) in sulfur-rich protein environments, the first preparation and characterization of copper-substituted forms of the wild-type rubredoxin (Rd) from Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough are reported, as well as those of its variant C42A-Rd. The initial products appear to be tetrahedral Cu(I)(S-Cys)n species for the wild type (n=4) and the variant C42A (n=3, with an additional unidentified ligand). These species are unstable to aerial oxidation to products, whose properties are consistent with square planar Cu(II)(S-Cys)n species. These Cu(II) intermediates are susceptible to auto-reduction by ligand S-Cys to produce stable Cu(I) final products. The original Cu(I) center in the wild-type system can be regenerated by reduction, suggesting that the active site can accommodate Cu(I)(S-Cys)2 and Cys-S-S-Cys fragments in the final product. The absence of one S-Cys ligand prevents similar regeneration in the C42A-Rd system. These results emphasize the redox instability of Cu(II)-(S-Cys)n centers.
Dalton Transactions | 2012
Golam Moula; Moumita Bose; Biplab K. Maiti; Sabyasachi Sarkar
Mo-Fe heterometallic complexes with Fe(X)(2) (X = Cl, SPh) moiety attached to monodithiolene oxomolybdenum via sulfur bridge, viz., [Ph(4)P](2)[Cl(2)FeS(2)MoOS(2)(DMED)] (2) (DMED, dimethylethylenedicarboxylate), [Ph(4)P](2)[Cl(2)FeS(2)MoO(tdt)] (3) (tdt, toluenedithiolate) and [Ph(4)P](2)[(SPh)(2)FeS(2)MoO(tdt)] (4) are reported. Mossbauer spectroscopy, magnetism, EPR, electrochemistry and electronic structure based on DFT and TD-DFT calculation show the transfer of electron from iron to molybdenum centre resulting antiferromagnetically coupled Fe(III)Mo(V) unit from the starting Fe(II) and Mo(VI) compounds. A net spin of S = 2 ground state arising from antiferromagnetically coupled Fe(III) and Mo(V) shows a rare X-band EPR in normal mode at g ~ 12 in the solid state. In addition, Mossbauer studies show that electron drifting is more pronounced upon substitution of the chloride ligand by thiophenolate. The changes in dithiolene periphery electronically affect the charge distribution between Mo-Fe in {OMo(μS)(2)Fe} core. DFT calculations indicate that the increasing stability of dative Fe → Mo hetero metal-metal bond in these complexes from 3 to 2 to 4 is related to the extent of electron transfer from the iron to molybdenum centre.
Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry | 2015
Biplab K. Maiti; Luisa B. Maia; Célia M. Silveira; Smilja Todorovic; Cíntia Carreira; Marta S. P. Carepo; Raquel Grazina; Isabel Moura; Sofia R. Pauleta; José J. G. Moura
Molybdenum is found in the active site of enzymes usually coordinated by one or two pyranopterin molecules. Here, we mimic an enzyme with a mononuclear molybdenum-bis pyranopterin center by incorporating molybdenum in rubredoxin. In the molybdenum-substituted rubredoxin, the metal ion is coordinated by four sulfurs from conserved cysteine residues of the apo-rubredoxin and two other exogenous ligands, oxygen and thiol, forming a Mo(VI)-(S-Cys)4(O)(X) complex, where X represents –OH or –SR. The rubredoxin molybdenum center is stabilized in a Mo(VI) oxidation state, but can be reduced to Mo(IV) via Mo(V) by dithionite, being a suitable model for the spectroscopic properties of resting and reduced forms of molybdenum-bis pyranopterin-containing enzymes. Preliminary experiments indicate that the molybdenum site built in rubredoxin can promote oxo transfer reactions, as exemplified with the oxidation of arsenite to arsenate.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2016
Biplab K. Maiti; Isabel Moura; José J. G. Moura; Sofia R. Pauleta
A linear cluster formulated as [S2MoS2CuS2MoS2](3-), a unique heterometallic cluster found in biological systems, was identified in a small monomeric protein (named as Orange Protein). The gene coding for this protein is part of an operon mainly present in strict anaerobic bacteria, which is composed (in its core) by genes coding for the Orange Protein and two ATPase proposed to contain Fe-S clusters. In Desulfovibrio desulfuricans G20, there is an ORF, Dde_3197 that encodes a small protein containing several cysteine residues in its primary sequence. The heterologously produced Dde_3197 aggregates mostly in inclusion bodies and was isolated by unfolding with a chaotropic agent and refolding by dialysis. The refolded protein contained sub-stoichiometric amounts of iron atoms/protein (0.5±0.2), but after reconstitution with iron and sulfide, high iron load contents were detected (1.8±0.1 or 3.4±0.2) using 2- and 4-fold iron excess. The visible absorption spectral features of the iron-sulfur clusters in refolded and reconstituted Dde_3197 are similar and resemble the ones of [2Fe-2S] cluster containing proteins. The refolded and reconstituted [2Fe-2S] Dde_3197 are EPR silent, but after reduction with dithionite, a rhombic signal is observed with gmax=2.00, gmed=1.95 and gmin=1.92, consistent with a one-electron reduction of a [2Fe-2S](2+) cluster into a [2Fe-2S](1+) state, with an electron spin of S=½. The data suggests that Dde_3197 can harbor one or two [2Fe-2S] clusters, one being stable and the other labile, with quite identical spectroscopic properties, but stable to oxygen.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2018
Biplab K. Maiti; Luisa B. Maia; Artur J. Moro; João C. Lima; Cristina M. Cordas; Isabel Moura; José J. G. Moura
Copper-cysteine interactions play an important role in Biology and herein we used the copper-substituted rubredoxin (Cu-Rd) from Desulfovibrio gigas to gain further insights into the copper-cysteine redox chemistry. EPR spectroscopy results are consistent with Cu-Rd harboring a CuII center in a sulfur-rich coordination, in a distorted tetrahedral structure ( g∥,⊥ = 2.183 and 2.032 and A∥,⊥ = 76.4 × 10-4 and 12 × 10-4 cm-1). In Cu-Rd, two oxidation states at Cu-center (CuII and CuI) are associated with Cys oxidation-reduction, alternating in the redox cycle, as pointed by electrochemical studies that suggest internal geometry rearrangements associated with the electron transfer processes. The midpoint potential of [CuI(S-Cys)2(Cys-S-S-Cys)]/[CuII(S-Cys)4] redox couple was found to be -0.15 V vs NHE showing a large separation of cathodic and anodic peaks potential (Δ Ep = 0.575 V). Interestingly, sulfur-rich CuII-Rd is highly stable under argon in dark conditions, which is thermodynamically unfavorable to Cu-thiol autoreduction. The reduction of copper and concomitant oxidation of Cys can both undergo two possible pathways: oxidative as well as photochemical. Under O2, CuII plays the role of the electron carrier from one Cys to O2 followed by internal geometry rearrangement at the Cu site, which facilitates reduction at Cu-center to yield CuI(S-Cys)2(Cys-S-S-Cys). Photoinduced (irradiated at λex = 280 nm) reduction of the CuII center is observed by UV-visible photolysis (above 300 nm all bands disappeared) and tryptophan fluorescence (∼335 nm peak enhanced) experiments. In both pathways, geometry reorganization plays an important role in copper reduction yielding an energetically compatible donor-acceptor system. This model system provides unusual stability and redox chemistry rather than the universal Cu-thiol auto redox chemistry in cysteine-rich copper complexes.
Biophysical Chemistry | 2018
Nathália S.S. Castro; César A.T. Laia; Biplab K. Maiti; Nuno M. F. S. A. Cerqueira; Isabel Moura; Marta S. P. Carepo
Phosphorylation is an essential mechanism of protein control and plays an important role in biology. The two-component system (TCS) is a bacterial regulation mechanism mediated by a response regulator (RR) protein and a kinase protein, which synchronize the regulatory circuit according to the environment. Phosphorylation is a key element in TCS function as it controls RR activity. In the present study, we characterize the behavior of MorR, an RR associated with Mo homeostasis, upon acetylphosphate and phosphoramidate treatment in vitro. Our results show that MorR was phosphorylated by both phospho-donors. Fluorescence experiments showed that MorR tryptophan emission is quenched by phosphoramidate. Furthermore, theoretical and computational results demonstrate that phosphorylation by phosphoramidate is more favorable than that by acetylphosphate. In conclusion, phosphorylated MorR is a monomeric protein and phosphorylation does not appear to induce observable conformational changes in the protein structure.
European Journal of Inorganic Chemistry | 2007
Biplab K. Maiti; Kuntal Pal; Sabyasachi Sarkar
Inorganic Chemistry Communications | 2004
Biplab K. Maiti; Kuntal Pal; Sabyasachi Sarkar
Inorganic Chemistry | 2014
Biplab K. Maiti; Luisa B. Maia; Kuntal Pal; Bholanath Pakhira; Teresa Avilés; Isabel Moura; Sofia R. Pauleta; José L. Nuñez; Alberto C. Rizzi; Carlos D. Brondino; Sabyasachi Sarkar; José J. G. Moura
Dalton Transactions | 2008
Biplab K. Maiti; Kuntal Pal; Sabyasachi Sarkar