Tran Chin Yang
Northwestern University
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Featured researches published by Tran Chin Yang.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006
Brett M. Barney; Dmitriy Lukoyanov; Tran Chin Yang; Dennis R. Dean; Brian M. Hoffman; Lance C. Seefeldt
Methyldiazene (HNNCH3) isotopomers labeled with 15N at the terminal or internal nitrogens or with 13C or 2H were used as substrates for the nitrogenase α-195Gln-substituted MoFe protein. Freeze quenching under turnover traps an S = ½ state that has been characterized by EPR and 1H-, 15N-, and 13C-electron nuclear double resonance spectroscopies. These studies disclosed the following: (i) a methyldiazene-derived species is bound to the active-site FeMo cofactor; (ii) this species binds through an [-NHx] fragment whose N derives from the methyldiazene terminal N; and (iii) the internal N from methyldiazene probably does not bind to FeMo cofactor. These results constrain possible mechanisms for reduction of methyldiazene. In the Chatt–Schrock mechanism for N2 reduction, H atoms sequentially add to the distal N before N-N bond cleavage (d-mechanism). In a d-mechanism for methyldiazene reduction, a bound [-NHx] fragment only occurs after reduction by three electrons, which leads to N-N bond cleavage and the release of the first NH3. Thus, the appearance of bound [-NHx] is compatible with the d-mechanism only if it represents a late stage in the reduction process. In contrast are mechanisms where H atoms add alternately to distal and proximal nitrogens before N-N cleavage (a-mechanism) and release of the first NH3 after reduction by five electrons. An [-NHx] fragment would be bound at every stage of methyldiazene reduction in an a-mechanism. Although current information does not rule out the d-mechanism, the a-mechanism is more attractive because proton delivery to substrate has been specifically compromised in α-195Gln-substituted MoFe protein.
Biochemistry | 2009
Brett M. Barney; Dmitriy Lukoyanov; Robert Y. Igarashi; Mikhail Laryukhin; Tran Chin Yang; Dennis R. Dean; Brian M. Hoffman; Lance C. Seefeldt
Nitrogenase reduces dinitrogen (N2) by six electrons and six protons at an active-site metallocluster called FeMo cofactor, to yield two ammonia molecules. Insights into the mechanism of substrate reduction by nitrogenase have come from recent successes in trapping and characterizing intermediates generated during the reduction of protons as well as nitrogenous and alkyne substrates by MoFe proteins with amino acid substitutions. Here, we describe an intermediate generated at a high concentration during reduction of the natural nitrogenase substrate, N2, by wild-type MoFe protein, providing evidence that it contains N2 bound to the active-site FeMo cofactor. When MoFe protein was frozen at 77 K during steady-state turnover with N2, the S = 3/2 EPR signal (g = [4.3, 3.64, 2.00]) arising from the resting state of FeMo cofactor was observed to convert to a rhombic, S = 1/2, signal (g = [2.08, 1.99, 1.97]). The intensity of the N2-dependent EPR signal increased with increasing N2 partial pressure, reaching a maximum intensity of approximately 20% of that of the original FeMo cofactor signal at > or = 0.2 atm N2. An almost complete loss of resting FeMo cofactor signal in this sample implies that the remainder of the enzyme has been reduced to an EPR-silent intermediate state. The N2-dependent EPR signal intensity also varied with the ratio of Fe protein to MoFe protein (electron flux through nitrogenase), with the maximum signal intensity observed with a ratio of 2:1 (1:1 Fe protein:FeMo cofactor) or higher. The pH optimum for the signal was 7.1. The N2-dependent EPR signal intensity exhibited a linear dependence on the square root of the EPR microwave power in contrast to the nonlinear response of signal intensity observed for hydrazine-, diazene-, and methyldiazene-trapped states. 15N ENDOR spectroscopic analysis of MoFe protein captured during turnover with 15N2 revealed a 15N nuclear spin coupled to the FeMo cofactor with a hyperfine tensor A = [0.9, 1.4, 0.45] MHz establishing that an N2-derived species was trapped on the FeMo cofactor. The observation of a single type of 15N-coupled nucleus from the field dependence, along with the absence of an associated exchangeable 1H ENDOR signal, is consistent with an N2 molecule bound end-on to the FeMo cofactor.
Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry | 2010
Hong-In Lee; Jin-Won Lee; Tran Chin Yang; Sa-Ouk Kang; Brian M. Hoffman
Superoxide dismutases (SODs) protect cells against oxidative stress by disproportionating O2− to H2O2 and O2. The recent finding of a nickel-containing SOD (Ni-SOD) has widened the diversity of SODs in terms of metal contents and SOD catalytic mechanisms. The coordination and geometrical structure of the metal site and the related electronic structure are the keys to understanding the dismutase mechanism of the enzyme. We performed Q-band 14N,1/2H continuous wave (CW) and pulsed electron–nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) and X-band 14N electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) on the resting-state Ni-SOD extracted from Streptomyces seoulensis. In-depth analysis of the data obtained from the multifrequency advanced electron paramagnetic resonance techniques detailed the electronic structure of the active site of Ni-SOD. The analysis of the field-dependent Q-band 14N CW ENDOR yielded the nuclear hyperfine and quadrupole coupling tensors of the axial Nδ of the His-1 imidazole ligand. The tensors are coaxial with the g-tensor frame, implying the g-tensor direction is modulated by the imidazole plane. X-band 14N ESEEM characterized the hyperfine coupling of Nε of His-1 imidazole. The nuclear quadrupole coupling constant of the nitrogen suggests that the hydrogen-bonding between Nε–H and OGlu-17 present for the reduced-state Ni-SOD is weakened or broken upon oxidizing the enzyme. Q-band 1H CW ENDOR and pulsed 2H Mims ENDOR showed a strong hyperfine coupling to the protons(s) of the equatorially coordinated His-1 amine and a weak hyperfine coupling to either the proton(s) of a water in the pocket at the side opposite the axial Nδ or the proton of a water hydrogen-bonded to the equatorial thiolate ligand.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2002
Marta S. P. Carepo; David L. Tierney; Carlos D. Brondino; Tran Chin Yang; Ana Pamplona; Joshua Telser; Isabel Moura; José J. G. Moura; Brian M. Hoffman
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2005
Brett M. Barney; Tran Chin Yang; Robert Y. Igarashi; Patricia C. Dos Santos; Mikhail Laryukhin; Hong-In Lee; Brian M. Hoffman; Dennis R. Dean; Lance C. Seefeldt
Biochemistry | 2005
Brett M. Barney; Mikhail Laryukhin; Robert Y. Igarashi; Hong-In Lee; Patricia C. Dos Santos; Tran Chin Yang; Brian M. Hoffman; Dennis R. Dean; Lance C. Seefeldt
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2005
Roman Davydov; Roshan Perera; Shengxi Jin; Tran Chin Yang; Thomas A. Bryson; Masanori Sono; John H. Dawson; Brian M. Hoffman
Inorganic Chemistry | 2007
Dmitriy Lukoyanov; Vladimir Pelmenschikov; Nathan Maeser; Mikhail Laryukhin; Tran Chin Yang; Louis Noodleman; Dennis R. Dean; David A. Case; and Lance C. Seefeldt; Brian M. Hoffman
Biochemistry | 2007
Brett M. Barney; Jammi McClead; Dmitriy Lukoyanov; Mikhail Laryukhin; Tran Chin Yang; Dennis R. Dean; Brian M. Hoffman; Lance C. Seefeldt
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2005
Tran Chin Yang; Nathan Maeser; Mikhail Laryukhin; Hong-In Lee; Dennis R. Dean; Lance C. Seefeldt; Brian M. Hoffman