Manliang Feng
Tougaloo College
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Featured researches published by Manliang Feng.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008
Manliang Feng; Hiroyasu Tachikawa
Surface-enhanced resonance Raman scattering (SERRS) spectra of biological species are often different from their resonance Raman (RR) spectra. A home-designed Raman flow system is used to determine the factors that contribute to the difference between the SERRS and RR of met-myoglobin (metMb). The results indicate that both the degree of protein-nanoparticles interaction and the laser irradiation contribute to the structural changes and are responsible for the observed differences between the SERRS and RR spectra of metMb. The prolonged adsorption of the protein molecules on the nanoparticle surface, which is the condition normally used for the conventional SERRS experiments, disturbs the heme pocket structure and facilitates the charge transfer process and the photoinduced transformation of proteins. The disruption of the heme pocket results in the loss of the distal water molecule, and the resulting SERRS spectrum of metMb shows a 5-coordinated high-spin heme. The flow system, when operated at a moderately high flow rate, can basically eliminate the factors that disturb the protein structure while maintaining a high enhancement factor. The SERRS spectrum obtained from a 1 x 10 (-7) M metMb solution using this flow system is basically identical to the RR spectrum of a 5 x 10 (-4) M metMb solution. Therefore, the Raman flow system reported here should be useful for characterizing the protein-nanoparticles interaction and the native structure of proteins using SERRS spectroscopy.
Biochemistry | 2010
Nafez Abu Tarboush; Lyndal M. R. Jensen; Manliang Feng; Hiroyasu Tachikawa; Carrie M. Wilmot; Victor L. Davidson
The diheme enzyme MauG catalyzes the posttranslational modification of a precursor protein of methylamine dehydrogenase (preMADH) to complete the biosynthesis of its protein-derived tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ) cofactor. It catalyzes three sequential two-electron oxidation reactions which proceed through a high-valent bis-Fe(IV) redox state. Tyr294, the unusual distal axial ligand of one c-type heme, was mutated to His, and the crystal structure of Y294H MauG in complex with preMADH reveals that this heme now has His-His axial ligation. Y294H MauG is able to interact with preMADH and participate in interprotein electron transfer, but it is unable to catalyze the TTQ biosynthesis reactions that require the bis-Fe(IV) state. This mutation affects not only the redox properties of the six-coordinate heme but also the redox and CO-binding properties of the five-coordinate heme, despite the 21 Å separation of the heme iron centers. This highlights the communication between the hemes which in wild-type MauG behave as a single diheme unit. Spectroscopic data suggest that Y294H MauG can stabilize a high-valent redox state equivalent to Fe(V), but it appears to be an Fe(IV)═O/π radical at the five-coordinate heme rather than the bis-Fe(IV) state. This compound I-like intermediate does not catalyze TTQ biosynthesis, demonstrating that the bis-Fe(IV) state, which is stabilized by Tyr294, is specifically required for this reaction. The TTQ biosynthetic reactions catalyzed by wild-type MauG do not occur via direct contact with the Fe(IV)═O heme but via long-range electron transfer through the six-coordinate heme. Thus, a critical feature of the bis-Fe(IV) species may be that it shortens the electron transfer distance from preMADH to a high-valent heme iron.
Biochemistry | 2012
Manliang Feng; Lyndal M. R. Jensen; Erik T. Yukl; Xiaoxi Wei; Aimin Liu; Carrie M. Wilmot; Victor L. Davidson
The diheme enzyme MauG catalyzes a six-electron oxidation required for posttranslational modification of a precursor of methylamine dehydrogenase (preMADH) to complete the biosynthesis of its protein-derived tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ) cofactor. Crystallographic studies had shown that Pro107, which resides in the distal pocket of the high-spin heme of MauG, changes conformation upon binding of CO or NO to the heme iron. In this study, Pro107 was converted to Cys, Val, and Ser by site-directed mutagenesis. The structures of each of these MauG mutant proteins in complex with preMADH were determined, as were their physical and catalytic properties. P107C MauG was inactive, and the crystal structure revealed that Cys107 had been oxidatively modified to a sulfinic acid. Mass spectrometry revealed that this modification was present prior to crystallization. P107V MauG exhibited spectroscopic and catalytic properties that were similar to those of wild-type MauG, but P107V MauG was more susceptible to oxidative damage. The P107S mutation caused a structural change that resulted in the five-coordinate high-spin heme being converted to a six-coordinate heme with a distal axial ligand provided by Glu113. EPR and resonance Raman spectroscopy revealed this heme remained high-spin but with greatly increased rhombicity as compared to that of the axial signal of wild-type MauG. P107S MauG was resistant to reduction by dithionite and reaction with H(2)O(2) and unable to catalyze TTQ biosynthesis. These results show that the presence of Pro107 is critical in maintaining the proper structure of the distal heme pocket of the high-spin heme of MauG, allowing exogenous ligands to bind and directing the reactivity of the heme-activated oxygen during catalysis, thus minimizing the oxidation of other residues of MauG.
Biochemistry | 2013
Nafez Abu Tarboush; Erik T. Yukl; Sooim Shin; Manliang Feng; Carrie M. Wilmot; Victor L. Davidson
The diheme enzyme MauG catalyzes a six-electron oxidation required for post-translational modification of a precursor of methylamine dehydrogenase (preMADH) to complete the biosynthesis of its protein-derived tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ) cofactor. Crystallographic studies have implicated Glu113 in the formation of the bis-Fe(IV) state of MauG, in which one heme is Fe(IV)═O and the other is Fe(IV) with His-Tyr axial ligation. An E113Q mutation had no effect on the structure of MauG but significantly altered its redox properties. E113Q MauG could not be converted to the diferrous state by reduction with dithionite but was only reduced to a mixed valence Fe(II)/Fe(III) state, which is never observed in wild-type (WT) MauG. Addition of H2O2 to E113Q MauG generated a high valence state that formed more slowly and was less stable than the bis-Fe(IV) state of WT MauG. E113Q MauG exhibited no detectable TTQ biosynthesis activity in a steady-state assay with preMADH as the substrate. It did catalyze the steady-state oxidation of quinol MADH to the quinone, but 1000-fold less efficiently than WT MauG. Addition of H2O2 to a crystal of the E113Q MauG-preMADH complex resulted in partial synthesis of TTQ. Extended exposure of these crystals to H2O2 resulted in hydroxylation of Pro107 in the distal pocket of the high-spin heme. It is concluded that the loss of the carboxylic group of Glu113 disrupts the redox cooperativity between hemes that allows rapid formation of the diferrous state and alters the distribution of high-valence species that participate in charge-resonance stabilization of the bis-Fe(IV) redox state.
Biochemical Journal | 2013
Sooim Shin; Manliang Feng; Victor L. Davidson
The dihaem enzyme MauG catalyses a six-electron oxidation required for post-translational modification of preMADH (precursor of methylamine dehydrogenase) to complete the biosynthesis of its TTQ (tryptophan tryptophylquinone) cofactor. Trp93 of MauG is positioned midway between its two haems, and in close proximity to a Ca2+ that is critical for MauG function. Mutation of Trp93 to tyrosine caused loss of bound Ca2+ and changes in spectral features similar to those observed after removal of Ca2+ from WT (wild-type) MauG. However, whereas Ca2+-depleted WT MauG is inactive, W93Y MauG exhibited TTQ biosynthesis activity. The rate of TTQ biosynthesis from preMADH was much lower than that of WT MauG and exhibited highly unusual kinetic behaviour. The steady-state reaction exhibited a long lag phase, the duration of which was dependent on the concentration of preMADH. The accumulation of reaction intermediates, including a diradical species of preMADH and quinol MADH (methylamine dehydrogenase), was detected during this pre-steady-state phase. In contrast, steady-state oxidation of quinol MADH to TTQ, the final step of TTQ biosynthesis, exhibited no lag phase. A kinetic model is presented to explain the long pre-steady-state phase of the reaction of W93Y MauG, and the role of this conserved tryptophan residue in MauG and related dihaem enzymes is discussed.
Electrochemical Sensors, Biosensors and their Biomedical Applications | 2008
Manliang Feng; Heyou Han; Jingdong Zhang; Hiroyasu Tachikawa
Publisher Summary This chapter focuses on the electrochemical sensors based on carbon nanotubes (CNT). The various advantages CNTs for electrochemical sensor applications include their small size with large surface area, high sensitivity, fast response time, enhanced electron transfer, easy protein immobilization with retention of activity, and alleviation of surface fouling effects. There are various methods used for forming CNT-modified electrodes which can be used for detecting analytes. Among the various types of transducers based on CNTs, the CNT-composite electrode was the first CNT electrode tested in 1996, and is still widely used with different composite materials such as conducting polymers, nanoparticles and sol–gel. These days, more applications are based on the layer-by-layer fabrication techniques for CNT-modified electrodes. This technique clearly provides thinner and more isolated CNTs compared with other methods such as CNT-composite and CNT coated electrodes in which CNTs are in the form of big bundles. This method should help biomolecules such as enzymes and DNA to interact more effectively with CNTs than other methods, and sensors based on this technique are expected to be more sensitive. Important biosensors such as glucose sensors have been developed by using this technique, and further development of other sensors based on the layer-by-layer technique is expected. Vertically aligned CNT-modified electrodes are based on a more elaborate technique, and microscopic images are used to characterize the integrity of this type of electrode. This technique has been applied in the immobilization of enzymes and DNA, and the sensors based on this technique have shown a lower detection limit than those based on other methods.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2015
Sooim Shin; Manliang Feng; Chao Li; Heather R. Williamson; Moonsung Choi; Carrie M. Wilmot; Victor L. Davidson
The diheme enzyme MauG catalyzes a six-electron oxidation required for posttranslational modification of a precursor of methylamine dehydrogenase (preMADH) to complete the biosynthesis of its protein-derived tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ) cofactor. One heme is low-spin with ligands provided by His205 and Tyr294, and the other is high-spin with a ligand provided by His35. The side chain methyl groups of Thr67 and Leu70 are positioned at a distance of 3.4Å on either side of His35, maintaining a hydrophobic environment in the proximal pocket of the high-spin heme and restricting the movement of this ligand. Mutation of Thr67 to Ala in the proximal pocket of the high-spin heme prevented reduction of the low-spin heme by dithionite, yielding a mixed-valent state. The mutation also enhanced the stabilization of the charge-resonance-transition of the high-valent bis-FeIV state that is generated by addition of H2O2. The rates of electron transfer from TTQ biosynthetic intermediates to the high-valent form of T67A MauG were similar to that of wild-type MauG. These results are compared to those previously reported for mutation of residues in the distal pocket of the high-spin heme that also affected the redox properties and charge resonance transition stabilization of the high-valent state of the hemes. However, given the position of residue 67, the structure of the variant protein and the physical nature of the T67A mutation, the basis for the effects of the T67A mutation must be different from those of the mutations of the residues in the distal heme pocket.
FEBS Letters | 2017
Manliang Feng; Zhongxin Ma; Breland Crudup; Victor L. Davidson
The diheme enzyme MauG catalyzes oxidative post‐translational modifications of a protein substrate, precursor protein of methylamine dehydrogenase (preMADH), that binds to the surface of MauG. The high‐spin heme iron of MauG is located 40 Å from preMADH. The ferric heme is an equilibrium of five‐ and six‐coordinate states. PreMADH binding increases the proportion of five‐coordinate heme three‐fold. On reaction of MauG with H2O2 both hemes become FeIV. In the absence of preMADH the hemes autoreduce to ferric in a multistep process involving multiple electron and proton transfers. Binding of preMADH in the absence of catalysis alters the mechanism of autoreduction of the ferryl heme. Thus, substrate binding alters the environment in the distal heme pocket of the high‐spin heme over very long distance.
Biosensors and Bioelectronics | 2007
Jingdong Zhang; Manliang Feng; Hiroyasu Tachikawa
Biochemistry | 2006
Xianghui Li; Manliang Feng; Yongting Wang; Hiroyasu Tachikawa; Victor L. Davidson