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Double crossed?: Structural and computational studies of an unusually crosslinked haem in Methylococcus capsulatus cytochrome P460

Double crossed?: Structural and computational studies of an unusually crosslinked haem in Methylococcus capsulatus cytochrome P460
Double crossed?: Structural and computational studies of an unusually crosslinked haem in Methylococcus capsulatus cytochrome P460

Cytochromes P460 oxidise hydroxylamine within the nitrogen cycle and contain as their active site an unusual catalytic c-type haem where the porphyrin is crosslinked to the protein via a lysine residue in addition to the canonical cross links from cysteine residues. Understanding how enzymes containing P460 haem oxidise hydroxylamine into either nitrous oxide or nitric oxide has implications for climate change. Interestingly the P460-containing hydroxylamine oxidoreductase utilises a tyrosine crosslink to haem and performs similar chemistry. Previous crystal structures of cytochrome P460 from Nitrosomonas europaea (NeP460) clearly show the existence of a single crosslink between the NZ atom of lysine and the haem porphyrin, with mutagenesis studies indicating roles for the crosslink in positioning a proton transfer residue and/or influencing the distortion of the haem. Here we describe the evidence for a novel double crosslink between lysine and haem in the cytochrome P460 from Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath). In order to understand the complexities of this enzyme system we applied high resolution structural biology approaches at synchrotron and XFEL sources paired with crystal spectroscopies. Linked to this, we carried out QM/MM simulations that enabled the prediction of electronic absorption spectra providing a crucial validation to linking simulations and experimental structures. Our work demonstrates the feasibility of a double crosslink in McP460 and provides an opportunity to investigate how simulations can interact with experimental structures.

2041-6520
16266-16283
Pfalzgraf, Hans E
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Rao, Aditya G
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Sen, Kakali
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Adams, Hannah R
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Edwards, Marcus
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Lu, You
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Yong, Chin
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Jaho, Sofia
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Tosha, Takehiko
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Sugimoto, Hiroshi
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Horrell, Sam
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Beilsten-Edmands, James
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Owen, Robin L
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Andrew, Colin R
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Worrall, Jonathan A R
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Tews, Ivo
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Mulholland, Adrian J
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Hough, Michael A
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Keal, Thomas W
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Pfalzgraf, Hans E
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Rao, Aditya G
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Sen, Kakali
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Adams, Hannah R
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Edwards, Marcus
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Lu, You
68e05f77-b12a-4a59-9872-d2c9142fbfba
Yong, Chin
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Jaho, Sofia
f499112f-076c-49b0-a944-5d298c413d1a
Tosha, Takehiko
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Sugimoto, Hiroshi
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Horrell, Sam
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Beilsten-Edmands, James
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Owen, Robin L
ff75d5ec-120c-42d9-8bb3-ab39d9f19b8a
Andrew, Colin R
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Worrall, Jonathan A R
2ca758e0-026b-44cf-8ef2-0bcdb21caf0b
Tews, Ivo
9117fc5e-d01c-4f8d-a734-5b14d3eee8dd
Mulholland, Adrian J
31c4d9a5-7333-4829-8bbe-4bf69adf2aaa
Hough, Michael A
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Keal, Thomas W
31c55cd4-4f32-496d-be4d-b6ed40454110

Pfalzgraf, Hans E, Rao, Aditya G, Sen, Kakali, Adams, Hannah R, Edwards, Marcus, Lu, You, Yong, Chin, Jaho, Sofia, Tosha, Takehiko, Sugimoto, Hiroshi, Horrell, Sam, Beilsten-Edmands, James, Owen, Robin L, Andrew, Colin R, Worrall, Jonathan A R, Tews, Ivo, Mulholland, Adrian J, Hough, Michael A and Keal, Thomas W (2025) Double crossed?: Structural and computational studies of an unusually crosslinked haem in Methylococcus capsulatus cytochrome P460. Chemical Science, 16 (35), 16266-16283. (doi:10.1039/d5sc04213e).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Cytochromes P460 oxidise hydroxylamine within the nitrogen cycle and contain as their active site an unusual catalytic c-type haem where the porphyrin is crosslinked to the protein via a lysine residue in addition to the canonical cross links from cysteine residues. Understanding how enzymes containing P460 haem oxidise hydroxylamine into either nitrous oxide or nitric oxide has implications for climate change. Interestingly the P460-containing hydroxylamine oxidoreductase utilises a tyrosine crosslink to haem and performs similar chemistry. Previous crystal structures of cytochrome P460 from Nitrosomonas europaea (NeP460) clearly show the existence of a single crosslink between the NZ atom of lysine and the haem porphyrin, with mutagenesis studies indicating roles for the crosslink in positioning a proton transfer residue and/or influencing the distortion of the haem. Here we describe the evidence for a novel double crosslink between lysine and haem in the cytochrome P460 from Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath). In order to understand the complexities of this enzyme system we applied high resolution structural biology approaches at synchrotron and XFEL sources paired with crystal spectroscopies. Linked to this, we carried out QM/MM simulations that enabled the prediction of electronic absorption spectra providing a crucial validation to linking simulations and experimental structures. Our work demonstrates the feasibility of a double crosslink in McP460 and provides an opportunity to investigate how simulations can interact with experimental structures.

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Accepted/In Press date: 25 July 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 8 August 2025
Published date: 10 September 2025
Additional Information: This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 504624
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/504624
ISSN: 2041-6520
PURE UUID: 092b063a-d48f-467d-ab3d-6ec35f1f9ec0
ORCID for Ivo Tews: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4704-1139

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Date deposited: 16 Sep 2025 16:52
Last modified: 17 Sep 2025 01:46

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Contributors

Author: Hans E Pfalzgraf
Author: Aditya G Rao
Author: Kakali Sen
Author: Hannah R Adams
Author: Marcus Edwards
Author: You Lu
Author: Chin Yong
Author: Sofia Jaho
Author: Takehiko Tosha
Author: Hiroshi Sugimoto
Author: Sam Horrell
Author: James Beilsten-Edmands
Author: Robin L Owen
Author: Colin R Andrew
Author: Jonathan A R Worrall
Author: Ivo Tews ORCID iD
Author: Adrian J Mulholland
Author: Michael A Hough
Author: Thomas W Keal

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