S. Chakraborty, V. Massey
Nov 1, 2002
Citations
4
Influential Citations
56
Citations
Journal
The Journal of Biological Chemistry
Abstract
The reaction of diphenyliodonium chloride with free reduced flavins has been studied by stopped flow spectrophotometry under anaerobic conditions, and second order rate constants were determined as a function of pH. The reactive flavin species was identified as the reduced anion, based on an observed reaction pK of 6.7. The product mixture was independent of the initial concentration of reactant and contained ∼20% oxidized flavin. The results can be modeled quantitatively on a modification of the mechanism proposed by Tew (Tew, D. G. (1993)Biochemistry 32, 10209–10215). The composition of the complex reaction mixture has been analyzed, and four flavin-phenyl adducts with distinctive absorbance and fluorescence characteristics have been identified, involving substitution at the flavin C4a, N5, and C8 positions. Inactivation of flavoprotein enzymes by diphenyliodonium has also been studied, and several examples were found where inactivation occurs readily, despite noninvolvement of radical intermediates in their reaction mechanisms. It can be concluded that inactivation by phenyliodonium species is not a valid indicator of catalytic mechanism involving radical intermediates. One of the several factors determining inactivation is maintenance of the enzyme flavin in the reduced form in the steady state of catalysis, the other factors being redox potential and accessibility of the inhibitor to the flavin active site.