EFFECT OF IONIC-STRENGTH ON THE KINETIC MECHANISM AND RELATIVE RATE LIMITATION OF STEPS IN THE MODEL NADPH-CYTOCHROME P450 OXIDOREDUCTASE REACTION WITH CYTOCHROME-C
Ds. Sem et Cb. Kasper, EFFECT OF IONIC-STRENGTH ON THE KINETIC MECHANISM AND RELATIVE RATE LIMITATION OF STEPS IN THE MODEL NADPH-CYTOCHROME P450 OXIDOREDUCTASE REACTION WITH CYTOCHROME-C, Biochemistry, 34(39), 1995, pp. 12768-12774
Although the kinetic mechanism of the NADPH-cytochrome P450 oxidoreduc
tase (P450R) reaction with cytochrome c(3+) has been determined at 850
mM ionic strength [Sem, D. S., & Kasper, C. B. (1994) Biochemistry 33
, 12012-12021], this mechanism is no longer valid at lower ionic stren
gth. At 850 mM ionic strength, the mechanism is two-site ping-pong, an
d reaction at the electron acceptor site is itself ping-pong. As the i
onic strength is decreased below 850 mM, the initial velocity profiles
begin to show curvature when cytochrome c(3+) is the varied substrate
. These data are consistent with a mechanism that is still two-site pi
ng-pong, but now with random sequential binding of two molecules of cy
tochrome c(3+) at the electron acceptor site. Decreasing ionic strengt
h also causes a change in rate-limiting steps, with (V/K)(cytc) and (V
/K)(NADPH) increasing while V-max decreases (below 500 mM ionic streng
th). These results are consistent with favorable ionic interactions be
ing important for binding NADPH and cytochrome c(3+) and with product
(NADP(+)) release becoming the rate-limiting step in V-max at low ioni
c strength. V-max decreases significantly at higher ionic strength (>5
00 mM), while (V/K)(NADPH) decreases only slightly. The V-D isotope ef
fect is largest (2.4) al 500 mM ionic strength but decreases at both l
ow and high ionic strength as steps other than hydride transfer become
more rate-limiting. (D)(V/K)(NADPH) also decreases at both low and hi
gh ionic strength, but to a lesser extent than V-D. These data are mos
t consistent with a model in which hydride transfer is a significant r
ate-limiting step in the ionic strength range of 200-750 mM, but since
the intrinsic isotope effect is greater than or equal to 4.3, hydride
transfer is not entirely rate limiting. At lower ionic strength, NADP
(+) release becomes rate-limiting, and at higher ionic strength, some
step other than hydride transfer becomes rate-limiting. This step occu
rs after NADPH binding, but before hydride transfer, so it probably re
presents a conformational change that must occur prior to hydride tran
sfer. Finally, a novel approach is presented for determining lower lim
it estimates of the intrinsic isotope effect, the forward commitment t
o catalysis (C-f), and the V ratio (C-vf). This method is applicable t
o enxymes with ping-pong mechanisms and small reverse commitments to c
atalysis (C-r).