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Dive into the research topics where Masanori Sono is active.

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Featured researches published by Masanori Sono.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1991

1-methyl-dl-tryptophan, β-(3-benzofuranyl)-dl-alanine (the oxygen analog of tryptophan), and β-[3-benzo(b)thienyl]-dl-alanine (the sulfur analog of tryptophan) are competitive inhibitors for indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase☆

Susan G. Cady; Masanori Sono

1-methyl-DL-Trp, beta-(3-benzofuranyl)-DL-alanine (the oxygen analog of Trp), and beta-[3-benzo(b)thienyl]-DL-alanine (the sulfur analog of Trp), each of which has a substitution at the indole nitrogen atom, were found to be the first examples of potent substrate analog competitive inhibitors (Ki 7-70 microM) with respect to the substrates D-Trp and L-Trp for rabbit small intestinal indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase. Binding studies using optical absorption and CD spectroscopy demonstrated that these three inhibitors cause spectral changes upon binding to the native ferric, ferrous, ferrous-CO, and ferrous-NO enzymes. Such spectral effects of 1-methyl-DL-Trp on all of these enzyme derivatives were similar to those caused by L-Trp, while the sulfur and the oxygen analogs of Trp exhibit relatively small effects except for those observed for the sulfur analog with CD spectroscopy. Each of these three Trp analog inhibitors competes with L-Trp for the ferrous-CO enzyme, a model for the ferrous-O2 enzyme. The present findings demonstrate that, although substitution of a methyl group for the hydrogen atom on the indole nitrogen or of a more electron-inductive sulfur or oxygen atom for the indole nitrogen atom does not prevent the binding of the resulting Trp analog to indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase, the free form of the indole nitrogen base is an important physical and/or electronic structural requirement for Trp to be metabolized by the enzyme. The inability of 1-methyl-Trp to serve as a substrate for the dioxygenase supports a view that singlet oxygen is not the reactive oxygen species involved in the dioxygenation of Trp by the enzyme.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Neutral thiol as a proximal ligand to ferrous heme iron: Implications for heme proteins that lose cysteine thiolate ligation on reduction

Roshan Perera; Masanori Sono; Jeffrey A. Sigman; Thomas D. Pfister; Yi Lu; John H. Dawson

Cysteine plays a key role as a metal ligand in metalloproteins. In all well-recognized cases, however, it is the anionic cysteinate that coordinates. Several cysteinate-ligated heme proteins are known, but some fail to retain thiolate ligation in the ferrous state, possibly following protonation to form neutral cysteine. Ligation by cysteine thiol in ferrous heme proteins has not been documented. To establish spectroscopic signatures for such systems, we have prepared five-coordinate adducts of the ferrous myoglobin H94G cavity mutant with neutral thiol and thioether sulfur donors as well as six-coordinate derivatives such as with CO and, when possible, with NO and O2. A thiol-ligated oxyferrous complex is reported, to our knowledge for the first time. Further, a bis-thioether ferrous H93G model for bis-methionine ligation, as found in Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacterioferritin heme protein, is described. Magnetic CD spectroscopy has been used due to its established ability in axial ligand identification. The magnetic CD spectra of the H93G complexes have been compared with those of ferrous H175C/D235L cytochrome c peroxidase to show that its proximal ligand is neutral cysteine. We had previously reported this cytochrome c peroxidase mutant to be cysteinate-ligated in the ferric state, but the ferrous ligand was undetermined. The spectral properties of ferrous liver microsomal cytochrome P420 (inactive P450) are also consistent with thiol ligation. This study establishes that neutral cysteine can serve as a ligand in ferrous heme iron proteins, and that ferric cysteinate-ligated heme proteins that fail to retain such ligation on reduction may simply be ligated by neutral cysteine.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1984

Extensive studies of the heme coordination structure of indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase and of tryptophan binding with magnetic and natural circular dichroism and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy

Masanori Sono; John H. Dawson

In order to probe the active site of the heme protein indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase, magnetic and natural circular dichroism (MCD and CD) and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) studies of the substrate (L-tryptophan)-free and substrate-bound enzyme with and without various exogenous ligands have been carried out. The MCD spectra of the ferric and ferrous derivatives are similar to those of the analogous myoglobin and horseradish peroxidase species. This provides strong support for histidine imidazole as the fifth ligand to the heme iron of indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase. The substrate-free native ferric enzyme exhibits predominantly high-spin EPR signals (g perpendicular = 6, g parallel = 2) along with weak low-spin signals (g perpendicular = 2.86, 2.28, 1.60); similar EPR, spin-state and MCD features are found for the benzimidazole adduct of ferric myoglobin. This suggests that the substrate-free ferric enzyme has a sterically hindered histidine imidazole nitrogen donor sixth ligand. Upon substrate binding, noticeable MCD and EPR spectral changes are detected that are indicative of an increased low spin content (from 30 to over 70% at ambient temperature). Concomitantly, new low spin EPR signals (g = 2.53, 2.18, 1.86) and MCD features characteristic of hydroxide complexes of histidine-ligated heme proteins appear. For almost all of the other ferric and ferrous derivatives, only small substrate effects are observed with MCD spectroscopy, while substantial substrate effects are seen with CD spectroscopy. Thus, changes in the heme coordination structure of the ferric enzyme and in the protein conformation at the active site of the ferric and ferrous enzyme are induced by substrate binding. The observed substrate effects on the ferric enzyme may correlate with the previously observed kinetic substrate inhibition of indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase activity, while such effects on the ferrous enzyme suggest the possibility that the substrate is activated during turnover.


Biochemistry | 2010

Functional Switching of Amphitrite ornata Dehaloperoxidase from O2-Binding Globin to Peroxidase Enzyme Facilitated by Halophenol Substrate and H2O2

Jing Du; Masanori Sono; John H. Dawson

Amphitrite ornata dehaloperoxidase (DHP) is the first heme-containing globin possessing a native peroxidase enzymatic activity. DHP catalyzes the H(2)O(2)-dependent dehalogenation of halophenols. By possessing this detoxifying enzymatic activity, these organisms are able to thrive in an environment contaminated with toxic haloaromatics. It has been proposed that DHP evolved from a dioxygen carrier globin protein and therefore possesses dual physiological roles of O(2) carrier and dehaloperoxidase. Although DHP is isolated in the catalytically inactive oxyferrous state (oxy-DHP), we find that the combination of H(2)O(2) and the substrate 2,4,6-trichlorophenol (TCP) brings about facile switching of oxy-DHP to the enzymatically active ferric state via a process likely involving substrate radicals (TCP*). In contrast, in the absence of TCP, H(2)O(2) alone converts oxy-DHP to an inactive state (compound RH) instead of oxidizing the enzyme to the ferric state. Further, although the rate of autoxidation of oxy-DHP is somewhat enhanced by the presence of TCP, the effect is too small to be the functional switch. Instead, both substrate and H(2)O(2) are needed to convert oxy-DHP to the catalytically active ferric state. These observations provide a physiological link between the O(2) carrier role of the ferrous protein and the peroxidase activity of the ferric enzyme in this bifunctional protein.


Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry | 1992

On the use of iron octa-alkylporphyrins as models for protoporphyrin IX-containing heme systems in studies employing magnetic circular dichroism spectroscopy

John H. Dawson; Saloumeh Kadkhodayan; Chengfeng Zhuang; Masanori Sono

The magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) properties of numerous oxidation and ligation state derivatives of myoglobin and horseradish peroxidase reconstituted with an iron octa-alkylporphyrin (mesoheme IX) have been investigated in order to establish the utility of such porphyrins as models for protoporphyrin IX-containing systems. The MCD spectra of the mesoheme-reconstituted proteins are blue-shifted (4-12 nm) and are somewhat more intense (1.5-2.5 fold) when compared to the spectra of analogous derivatives of native myoglobin and horseradish peroxidase. However, the spectral band patterns of the mesoheme-reconstituted proteins closely resemble those of the native proteins in essentially all cases. These data demonstrate that octa-alkylporphyrins can be productively used as models for protoporphyrin IX in studies of heme proteins with MCD spectroscopy.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2015

Control of carotenoid biosynthesis through a heme-based cis - trans isomerase

Jesús Beltrán; Brian Kloss; Jonathan P. Hosler; Jiafeng Geng; Aimin Liu; Anuja Modi; John H. Dawson; Masanori Sono; Maria Shumskaya; Charles Ampomah-Dwamena; J. Love; Eleanore T. Wurtzel

Plants synthesize carotenoids essential for plant development and survival. These metabolites also serve as essential nutrients for human health. The biosynthetic pathway leading to all plant carotenoids occurs in chloroplasts and other plastids and requires 15-cis-ζ-carotene isomerase (Z-ISO). It was not certain whether isomerization was achieved by Z-ISO alone or in combination with other enzymes. Here we show that Z-ISO is a bona fide enzyme and integral membrane protein. Z-ISO independently catalyzes the cis-to-trans isomerization of the 15–15′ C=C bond in 9,15,9′-cis-ζ-carotene to produce the substrate required by the following biosynthetic pathway enzyme. We discovered that isomerization depends upon a ferrous heme b cofactor that undergoes redox-regulated ligand-switching between the heme iron and alternate Z-ISO amino acid residues. Heme b-dependent isomerization of a large, hydrophobic compound in a membrane is unprecedented. As an isomerase, Z-ISO represents a new prototype for heme b proteins and potentially utilizes a novel chemical mechanism.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1991

Effects of cyanogen bromide modification of the distal histidine on the spectroscopic and ligand binding properties of myoglobin : magnetic circular dichroism spectroscopy as a probe of distal water ligation in ferric high-spin histidine-bound heme proteins

Alma M. Bracete; Masanori Sono; John H. Dawson

Magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectroscopy has been utilized to characterize the change in coordination structure in native ferric sperm whale myoglobin upon cyanogen bromide-modification. Comparison of the MCD properties of the ferric high-spin state of cyanogen bromide-modified myoglobin (BrCN-Mb) with those of native ferric horseradish peroxidase and Aplysia myoglobin suggests that ferric BrCN-Mb is a potential MCD model for the pentacoordinate state of ferric high-spin histidine-ligated heme proteins. These five-coordinate heme proteins afford a relatively weak and unsymmetric signal in the Soret region of the MCD spectrum. In contrast, native ferric myoglobin and the benzohydroxamic acid adduct of ferric horseradish peroxidase show a strong and symmetric derivative-shaped Soret MCD signal which is indicative of hexacoordination with water and histidine axial ligands. Therefore it seems that MCD spectroscopy could be used to probe the presence of water ligated to the distal side of ferric high-spin heme proteins. The MCD spectra of the ferric-azide, ferrous-deoxy and ferrous-CO forms of BrCN-Mb have also been measured and compared to those of analogous native myoglobin complexes. The present MCD study has been extended to include new ligands, NO, thiocyanate and cyanate, which bind to ferric BrCN-Mb. With exogenous ligands such as CO, NO and thiocyanate, the coordination structures of the BrCN-Mb complexes are similar to those of the respective native myoglobin adducts. In the case of ferrous-deoxy and ferric-cyanate BrCN-Mb, however, the altered MCD spectra (and EPR for the latter) reveal changes in electronic structure which likely correlate with alterations of the coordination environment of these BrCN-Mb derivatives. Data are also presented which support the proposed tetrazole-bound structure for azide-treated BrCN-Mb (Hori, H., Fujii, M., Shiro, Y., Iizuka, T., Adachi, S. and Morishima, I. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 5715-5719) and the inability of the distal histidine of BrCN-Mb to stabilize the ferric ligand-bound state.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1991

Electron paramagnetic resonance investigations of exogenous ligand complexes of low-spin ferric chloroperoxidase: Further support for endogenous thiolate ligation to the heme iron

Masanori Sono; Lowell P. Hager; John H. Dawson

Previous spectroscopic studies of chloroperoxidase have provided evidence for endogenous thiolate sulfur donor ligation to the central heme iron of the enzyme. This conclusion is further supported by recent DNA sequence data which revealed the existence of a third cysteine residue (in addition to a disulfide pair detected earlier) in the protein available for coordination to the heme iron. Thus, chloroperoxidase shares many spectroscopic properties with cytochrome P-450, the only other known thiolate-ligated heme protein. Surprisingly, a previous electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) study of low-spin ferric chloroperoxidase-ligand complexes (Hollenberg, P.F., Hager, L.P., Blumberg, W.E. and Peisach, J. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 4801-4807) was unable to provide clear support for the presence of a thiolate ligand, although sulfur coordination was implicated. This was, in part, because an insufficient number of complexes was examined. In this work, we have significantly expanded upon the previous EPR study by using an extensive variety of over twenty exogenous ligands including carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorus and sulfur donors. Crystal field analysis, using the procedure of Blumberg and Peisach, of the present data in comparison with data for analogous complexes of cytochrome P-450-CAM, thiolate-ligated heme model systems, and myoglobin, is clearly indicative of endogenous thiolate ligation for chloroperoxidase. In addition, the UV-visible absorption and EPR spectral data suggest that a carboxylate ligand is a possible candidate for the endogenous sixth ligand to the heme iron that is responsible for the reversible conversion of ferric chloroperoxidase from high-spin to low-spin at low temperatures (less than 200 K).


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1983

Circular dichroism studies of low-spin ferric cytochrome P-450CAM ligand complexes.

L A Andersson; Masanori Sono; John H. Dawson

Circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy has been used to probe the active site of bacterial ferric cytochrome P-450CAM. The endogenous sixth ligand to the heme iron has been displaced by an extensive series of exogenous oxygen, nitrogen, sulfur and other neutral and anionic donor ligands in an attempt to examine systematically the steric and electronic factors that influence the coupling of the heme chromophore to its protein environment. General trends for each ligand class are reported and discussed. Both the wavelengths and the intensities of the CD bands vary with ligand type and structure. All but one of the complexes exhibit negative CD maxima in their delta and Soret bands. Comparison to ferric myoglobin-thiolate complexes indicates that the negative sign observed for the cytochrome P-450 spectra is not a property of the thiolate fifth ligand, but rather arises from a different interaction of the cytochrome P-450 heme with its protein environment. Complexes with neutral oxygen donors display CD spectra that most closely resemble the spectrum of the native low-spin enzyme. Hyperporphyrin (split Soret) cytochrome P-450 complexes with thiolates, phosphines and cyanide trans to cysteinate have complex CD spectra, reflecting the intrinsic non-degeneracy of the Soret pi pi transitions. The extensive work presented herein provides an empirical foundation for use in analyzing the interaction of heme chromophores with their protein surroundings, not only for the cytochrome P-450 monooxygenases but also for heme proteins in general.


FEBS Letters | 1991

The active site structure of E. coli HPII catalase: Evidence favoring coordination of a tyrosinate proximal ligand to the chlorin iron

John H. Dawson; Alma M. Bracete; Ann M. Huff; Saloumeh Kadkhodayan; Caroline M. Zeitler; Masanori Sono; C. K. Chang; Peter C. Loewen

E. coli produces 2 catalases known as HPI and HPII. While the heme prosthetic group of the HPII catalase has been established to be a dihydroporphyrin or chlorin, the identity of the proximal ligand to the iron has not been addressed. The magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectrum of native ferric HPII catalase is very similar to those of a 5‐coordinate phenolate‐ligated ferric chlorin complex, a model for tyrosinate proximal ligation, as well as of chlorin‐reconstituted ferric horseradish peroxidase, a model for 5‐coordinate histidine ligation. However, further MCD comparisons of chlorin‐reconstituted myoglobin with parallel ligand‐bound adducts of the catalase clearly rule out histidine ligation in the latter, leaving tyrosinate as the best candidate for the proximal ligand.

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John H. Dawson

University of South Carolina

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Roshan Perera

University of South Carolina

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Alycen E. Pond

University of South Carolina

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Jing Du

University of South Carolina

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Alma M. Bracete

University of South Carolina

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L A Andersson

University of South Carolina

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Saloumeh Kadkhodayan

University of South Carolina

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Ann M. Huff

University of South Carolina

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Bettie Sue Siler Masters

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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