Substitution by cysteine of one of the heme iron axial ligands (His66) of f
lavocytochrome b(2) (L-lactate:cytochrome c oxidoreductase from Saccharomyc
es cerevisiae) has resulted in an enzyme (H66C-b(2)) which remains a compet
ent L-lactate dehydrogenase (k(cat) 272+/-6 s(-1), L-lactate KM 0.60+/-0.06
mM, 25 degreesC, I 0.10, Tris-HCl, pH 7.5) but which has no cytochrome c r
eductase activity. As a result of the mutation, the reduction potential of
the heme was found to be -265+/-5 mV, over 240 mV more negative than that o
f the wild-type enzyme, and therefore unable to be reduced by L-lactate, Su
rface-enhanced resonance Raman spectroscopy indicates similarities between
the heme of H66C-b2 and those of cytochromes P450, with a v(4) band at 1345
cm(-1) which is indicative of cysteine heme-iron ligation. In addition, EP
R spectroscopy yields g-values at 2.33, 2.22 and 1.94, typical of low-spin
ferric cytochromes P450, optical spectra show features between 600 and 900
nm which are characteristic of sulfur coordination of the heme iron, and MC
D spectroscopy shows a blue-shifted NIR CT band relative to the wild-type,
implying that the H66C-b(2) heme is P450-like, Interestingly, EPR evidence
also suggests that the second histidine heme-iron ligand (His43) is displac
ed in the mutant enzyme.