The reversible depletion and reconstitution of a copper ion in Coprinus cinereuslaccase followed by spectroscopic techniques

Christian Bukh, Morten Jannik Bjerrum

    12 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    The specific activities of crude and purified Coprinus cinereus laccase preparations could be enhanced by a factor of 10-12 by activation with copper ions. The copper to protein contents of purified non-activated laccase were 2.3 ± 0.1 compared to 3.3 ± 0.1 in purified activated laccase indicating that only a fraction of the laccase can be activated. Purified laccase not activated with copper ions shows in isoelectric focusing four bands in order of decreasing pI in a ratio 1/5/3/1 where only bands I and II had laccase activity. Purified activated laccase showed only three bands (I, II and III) in the ratio 5/4/1 all with some laccase activity. The pH profile of the activity for activated and non-activated laccase showed identical behavior indicating that the active forms were the same. The change in UV-Vis around 330. nm following the depletion and reconstitution of the enzyme combined with activity measurements supports the reversibility of the selective removal and insertion of copper ions at the type 2 site. The circular dichroism spectrum of activated purified laccase has characteristic changes around 350. nm relative to non-activated laccase indicative of changes at the type 2/type 3 sites. The difference between the electron paramagnetic resonance spectra of non-activated and activated C. cinereus laccase indicates that a fraction of the non-activated purified laccase contained a copper(II) signal with a coupling constant between a type 1 and a type 2 copper(II). This electron paramagnetic resonance signal could be explained by an induced asymmetry in the type 3 site due to a missing type 2 copper ion.

    Original languageEnglish
    JournalJournal of Inorganic Biochemistry
    Volume104
    Issue number10
    Pages (from-to)1029-1037
    Number of pages9
    ISSN0162-0134
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Oct 2010

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