The heme-containing catalase HPII of Escherichia
coli consists of a homotetramer in which each subunit
contains a core region with the highly conserved catalase
tertiary structure, to which are appended N- and C-terminal
extensions making it the largest known catalase. HPII does
not bind NADPH, a cofactor often found in catalases. In
HPII, residues 585–590 of the C-terminal extension
protrude into the pocket corresponding to the NADPH binding
site in the bovine liver catalase. Despite this difference,
residues that define the NADPH pocket in the bovine enzyme
appear to be well preserved in HPII. Only two residues
that interact ionically with NADPH in the bovine enzyme
(Asp212 and His304) differ in HPII (Glu270 and Glu362),
but their mutation to the bovine sequence did not promote
nucleotide binding. The active-site heme groups are deeply
buried inside the molecular structure requiring the movement
of substrate and products through long channels. One potential
channel is about 30 Å in length, approaches the heme
active site laterally, and is structurally related to the
branched channel associated with the NADPH binding pocket
in catalases that bind the dinucleotide. In HPII, the upper
branch of this channel is interrupted by the presence of
Arg260 ionically bound to Glu270. When Arg260 is replaced
by alanine, there is a threefold increase in the catalytic
activity of the enzyme. Inhibitors of HPII, including azide,
cyanide, various sulfhydryl reagents, and alkylhydroxylamine
derivatives, are effective at lower concentration on the
Ala260 mutant enzyme compared to the wild-type enzyme.
The crystal structure of the Ala260 mutant variant of HPII,
determined at 2.3 Å resolution, revealed a number
of local structural changes resulting in the opening of
a second branch in the lateral channel, which appears to
be used by inhibitors for access to the active site, either
as an inlet channel for substrate or an exhaust channel
for reaction products.