Victor L. Davidson
University of Mississippi
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Featured researches published by Victor L. Davidson.
Science | 2010
Lyndal M. R. Jensen; Ruslan Sanishvili; Victor L. Davidson; Carrie M. Wilmot
Diheme Conversion A dehydrogenase enzyme found in methylotrophic and autotrophic bacteria, which converts methylamine to ammonia and formaldehyde, must be posttranslationally modified to create a covalently bound cofactor. Synthesis of the cofactor is completed by a diheme enzyme, MauG, which oxidatively links two tryptophan residues to form tryptophan tryptophylquinone. Jensen et al. (p. 1392; see the Perspective by Bollinger and Matthews) describe the crystal structure of a catalytically competent complex of MauG bound to the methylamine dehydrogenase precursor. The reactive tryptophans are buried and well-separated from both heme irons. The heme closest to the nascent tryptophylquinone site is a 6-coordinate with an unusual His-Tyr axial link. The axial Tyr likely stabilizes a bis-Fe(IV) state involved in catalysis. Two other tyrosine residues are positioned to participate in long-range interprotein electron and radical transfer. Bacterial ammonia and formaldehyde production requires prior processing of a dehydrogenase to form a cofactor. MauG is a diheme enzyme responsible for the posttranslational modification of two tryptophan residues to form the tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ) cofactor of methylamine dehydrogenase (MADH). MauG converts preMADH, containing monohydroxylated βTrp57, to fully functional MADH by catalyzing the insertion of a second oxygen atom into the indole ring and covalently linking βTrp57 to βTrp108. We have solved the x-ray crystal structure of MauG complexed with preMADH to 2.1 angstroms. The c-type heme irons and the nascent TTQ site are separated by long distances over which electron transfer must occur to achieve catalysis. In addition, one of the hemes has an atypical His-Tyr axial ligation. The crystalline protein complex is catalytically competent; upon addition of hydrogen peroxide, MauG-dependent TTQ synthesis occurs.
Journal of Synchrotron Radiation | 2007
Arwen R. Pearson; Reinhard Pahl; Elena G. Kovaleva; Victor L. Davidson; Carrie M. Wilmot
X-ray exposure during crystallographic data collection can result in unintended redox changes in proteins containing functionally important redox centers. In order to directly monitor X-ray-derived redox changes in trapped oxidative half-reaction intermediates of Paracoccus denitrificans methylamine dehydrogenase, a commercially available single-crystal UV/Vis microspectrophotometer was installed on-line at the BioCARS beamline 14-BM-C at the Advanced Photon Source, Argonne, USA. Monitoring the redox state of the intermediates during X-ray exposure permitted the creation of a general multi-crystal data collection strategy to generate true structures of each redox intermediate.
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 | 2011
Erik T. Yukl; Brandon R. Goblirsch; Victor L. Davidson; Carrie M. Wilmot
MauG is a diheme enzyme responsible for the post-translational formation of the catalytic tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ) cofactor in methylamine dehydrogenase (MADH). MauG can utilize hydrogen peroxide, or molecular oxygen and reducing equivalents, to complete this reaction via a catalytic bis-Fe(IV) intermediate. Crystal structures of diferrous, Fe(II)-CO, and Fe(II)-NO forms of MauG in complex with its preMADH substrate have been determined and compared to one another as well as to the structure of the resting diferric MauG-preMADH complex. CO and NO each bind exclusively to the 5-coordinate high-spin heme with no change in ligation of the 6-coordinate low-spin heme. These structures reveal likely roles for amino acid residues in the distal pocket of the high-spin heme in oxygen binding and activation. Glu113 is implicated in the protonation of heme-bound diatomic oxygen intermediates in promoting cleavage of the O-O bond. Pro107 is shown to change conformation on the binding of each ligand and may play a steric role in oxygen activation by positioning the distal oxygen near Glu113. Gln103 is in a position to provide a hydrogen bond to the Fe(IV)═O moiety that may account for the unusual stability of this species in MauG.
Biochemistry | 2003
Yongting Wang; M. Elizabeth Graichen; Aimin Liu; Arwen R. Pearson; Carrie M. Wilmot; Victor L. Davidson
Analytical Chemistry | 2000
Kui Zeng; Hiroyasu Tachikawa; Zhenyu Zhu; Victor L. Davidson
Journal of Bacteriology | 1994
Shanthi Govindaraj; Eric L. Eisenstein; Limei Hsu Jones; J. Sanders-Loehr; A. Y. Chistoserdov; Victor L. Davidson; S. L. Edwards
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2005
Yongting Wang; Xianghui Li; Limei Hsu Jones; Arwen R. Pearson; Carrie M. Wilmot; Victor L. Davidson
Biochemistry | 2006
Xianghui Li; Limei Hsu Jones; Arwen R. Pearson; Carrie M. Wilmot; Victor L. Davidson
Analytical Chemistry | 2002
Lili Bao; Dapeng Sun; Hiroyasu Tachikawa; Victor L. Davidson