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1.
D H Ozturk  D Safer  R F Colman 《Biochemistry》1990,29(30):7112-7118
Bovine liver glutamate dehydrogenase reacts with 8-[(4-bromo-2,3-dioxobutyl)thio]adenosine 5'-diphosphate (8-BDB-TA-5'-DP) and 5'-triphosphate (8-BDB-TA-5'-TP) to yield enzyme with about 1 mol of reagent incorporated/mol of enzyme subunit. The modified enzyme is catalytically active but has decreased sensitivity to inhibition by GTP, reduced extent of activation by ADP, and diminished inhibition by high concentrations of NADH. Since modified enzyme, like native glutamate dehydrogenase, reversibly binds more than 1 mol each of ADP and GTP, it is unlikely that 8-BDB-TA-5'-TP reacts directly within either the ADP or GTP regulatory sites. The rate constant for reaction of enzyme exhibits a nonlinear dependence on reagent concentration with KD = 89 microM for 8-BDB-TA-5'-TP and 240 microM for 8-BDB-TA-5'-DP. The ligands ADP and GTP alone and NADH alone produce only small decreases in the rate constant for the reaction of enzyme with 8-BDB-TA-5'-TP, but the combined addition of 5 mM NADH + 200 microM GTP reduces the reaction rate constant more than 10-fold and the reagent incorporation to about 0.1 mol/mol of enzyme subunit. These results suggest that 8-BDB-TA-5'-TP reacts as a nucleotide affinity label in the region of the GTP-dependent NADH regulatory site of bovine liver glutamate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

2.
A new reactive adenine nucleotide has been synthesized: 2-[(4-bromo-2,3-dioxobutyl)thio]-adenosine 5'-monophosphate (2-BDB-TAMP). Adenosine 5'-monophosphate 1-oxide was synthesized by reaction of AMP with m-chloroperoxybenzoic acid. Treatment with NaOH followed by reaction with carbon disulfide yielded 2-thioadenosine 5'-monophosphate (TAMP). The final product was generated by reaction of TAMP with 1,4-dibromobutanedione. The structure of 2-BDB-TAMP was determined by UV, 1H NMR, and 13C NMR spectroscopy as well as by bromide and phosphorus analysis. Rabbit muscle pyruvate kinase is inactivated by 2-BDB-TAMP at pH 7.0 and 25 degrees C. The inactivation rate exhibits a nonlinear dependence on the reagent concentration with KI = 0.57 mM. Protection against inactivation is provided by ADP and ATP, in the presence of Mn2+, as well as by phosphoenolpyruvate, in the presence of K+; in addition, partial protection is provided by AMP plus Mn2+. Incubation of pyruvate kinase with 0.075 mM 2-BDB-TAMP for 70 min in the absence of protective ligands leads to incorporation of 1.55 mol of reagent/mol of enzyme subunit when the enzyme is 53% inactive. In the presence of ADP and Mn2+, only 0.96 mol of reagent/mol of subunit is incorporated at 70 min, while the enzyme retains 100% activity. Similar results were obtained in the presence of ATP plus Mn2+. Assuming that the groups modified in the absence of ligands include those modified in the presence of the nucleotides, the 53% inactivation can be attributed to the modification of 0.59 (1.55-0.96) group per enzyme subunit.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
The 2',3'-dialdehyde derivative of NADPH (oNADPH) acts as a coenzyme for the reaction catalyzed by bovine liver glutamate dehydrogenase. Incubation of 250 microM oNADPH with enzyme for 300 min at 30 degrees C and pH 8.0 yields covalent incorporation of 1.0 mol of oNADPH/mol of enzyme subunit. The modified enzyme has a functional catalytic site and is activated by ADP, but is no longer inhibited by high NADH concentrations and exhibits decreased sensitivity to GTP inhibition. Using the change in inhibition by 600 microM NADH or 1 microM GTP to monitor the reaction leads to rate constants of 44.0 and 41.5 min-1 M-1, respectively, suggesting that loss of inhibition by the two regulatory compounds results from reaction by oNADPH at a single location. The oNADPH incorporation is proportional to the decreased inhibition by 600 microM NADH or 1 microM GTP, extrapolating to less than 1 mol of oNADPH/mol of subunit when the maximum change in NADH or GTP inhibition has occurred. Modified enzyme is still 93% inhibited at saturating levels of GTP, although its K1 is increased 20-fold to 4.6 microM. The kinetic effects caused by oNADPH are not prevented by alpha-ketoglutarate, ADP, 5 mM NADH, or 200 microM GTP alone, but are prevented by 5 mM NADH with 200 microM GTP. Incorporation of oNADPH into enzyme at 255 min is 0.94 mol/mol of peptide chain in the absence of ligands but only 0.53 mol/mol of peptide chain in the presence of the protectants 5 mM NADH plus 200 microM GTP. These results indicate that oNADPH modifies specifically about 0.4-0.5 sites/enzyme subunit or about 3 sites/enzyme hexamer and that reaction occurs at a GTP-dependent inhibitory NADH site of glutamate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

4.
D H Ozturk  I Park  R F Colman 《Biochemistry》1992,31(43):10544-10555
A new guanosine nucleotide has been synthesized and characterized: guanosine 5'-O-[S-(3-bromo-2-oxopropyl)]thiophosphate (GMPSBOP), with a reactive functional group which can be placed at a position equivalent to the pyrophosphate region of GTP. This new analog is negatively charged at neutral pH and is similar in size to GTP. GMPSBOP has been shown to react with bovine liver glutamate dehydrogenase with an incorporation of 2 mol of reagent/mol of subunit. The modification reaction desensitizes the enzyme to inhibition by GTP, activation by ADP, and inhibition by high concentrations of NADH, but does not affect the catalytic activity of the enzyme. The rate constant for reaction of GMPSBOP with the enzyme exhibits a nonlinear dependence on reagent concentration with KD = 75 microM. The addition to the reaction mixture of alpha-ketoglutarate, GTP, ADP, or NADH alone results in little decrease in the rate constant, but the combined addition of 5 mM NADH with 0.4 mM GTP or with 10 mM alpha-ketoglutarate reduces the reaction rate approximately 6-fold. GMPSBOP modifies peptides containing Met-169 and Tyr-262, of which Tyr-262 is not critical for the decreased sensitivity of the enzyme toward allosteric ligands. The presence of 0.4 mM GTP plus 5 mM NADH protects the enzyme against reaction at both Met-169 and Tyr-262, but yields enzyme with 1 mol of reagent incorporated/mol of subunit which is modified at an alternate site, Met-469. In the presence of 0.2 mM GTP + 0.1 mM NADH, protection against modification of Tyr-262, but only partial protection against labeling of Met-169, is observed. In contrast, the presence of 10 mM alpha-ketoglutarate + 5 mM NADH protect only against reaction with Met-169. The results suggest that GMPSBOP reacts at the GTP-dependent NADH regulatory site [Lark, R. H., & Colman, R. F. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 10659-10666] of bovine liver glutamate dehydrogenase, which markedly affects the sensitivity of the enzyme to GTP inhibition. The reaction of GMPSBOP with Met-169 is primarily responsible for the altered allosteric properties of the enzyme.  相似文献   

5.
S P Batra  R F Colman 《Biochemistry》1984,23(21):4940-4946
Bovine liver glutamate dehydrogenase reacts covalently with the new adenosine analogue 6-[(4-bromo-2,3-dioxobutyl)thio]-6-deaminoadenosine 5'-diphosphate with incorporation of about 1 mol of reagent/mol of enzyme subunit. Modified enzyme completely loses its normal ability to be inhibited by high concentrations of reduced diphosphopyridine nucleotide (DPNH) (greater than 100 microM), which binds at a regulatory site distinct from the catalytic site; however, the modified enzyme retains its full activity when assayed at 100 microM DPNH in the absence of allosteric compounds. The enzyme is still activated by ADP, is inhibited by GTP (albeit at higher concentrations), and binds 1.5-2 mol of [14C]GTP/subunit. A plot of initial velocity vs. DPNH concentration for the modified enzyme, in contrast to the native enzyme, followed Michaelis-Menten kinetics. The rate constant (k) for loss of DPNH inhibition (as measured at 0.6 mM DPNH) exhibits a nonlinear dependence on reagent concentration, suggesting a reversible binding of reagent (Kd = 0.19 mM) prior to irreversible modification. At 0.1 mM 6-[(4-bromo-2,3-dioxobutyl)thio]-6-deaminoadenosine 5'-diphosphate, k = 0.036 min-1 and is not affected by alpha-ketoglutarate, 100 microM DPNH, or GTP alone but is decreased to 0.0094 min-1 by 5 mM DPNH and essentially to zero by 5 mM DPNH plus 100 microM GTP. Incorporation after incubation with 0.25 mM 6-[(4-bromo-2,3-dioxobutyl)thio]-6-deaminoadenosine 5'-diphosphate for 2 h at pH 7.1 is 1.14 mol/mol of subunit in the absence but only 0.24 mol/mol of subunit in the presence of DPNH plus GTP.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
Pig heart NAD-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase is allosterically activated by ADP which reduces the Km of isocitrate. The new ADP analogue 6-(4-bromo-2,3-dioxobutyl)thioadenosine 5'-diphosphate (BDB-TADP) reacts irreversibly with the enzyme at pH 6.1 and 25 degrees C, causing a rapid loss of the ability of ADP to increase the initial velocity of assays conducted at low isocitrate concentrations and a slower inactivation measured using saturating isocitrate concentrations. The rate constant for loss of ADP activation exhibits a nonlinear dependence on BDB-TADP concentration; in the presence of 0.2 mM MnSO4, KI for the reversible enzyme-reagent complex is 0.069 mM with kmax at saturating reagent concentrations equal to 0.031 min-1. For reaction at the site causing overall inactivation, KI for the initial reversible enzyme-reagent complex is estimated to be 0.018 mM with kmax = 0.0083 min-1 in the presence of 0.2 mM MnSO4. Total protection against both reactions is provided by 1 mM ADP plus 0.2 mM MnSO4 or by 0.1 mM ADP plus 0.2 mM MnSO4 plus 0.2 mM isocitrate, but not by NAD, ATP, or ADP plus EDTA. The BDB-TADP thus appears to modify two distinct metal-dependent ADP-binding sites. Incubation of isocitrate dehydrogenase with 0.14 mM BDB-[beta-32P]TADP at pH 6.1 in the presence of 0.2 mM MnSO4 results in incorporation of 0.81 mol of reagent/mol of average subunit when the ADP activation is completely lost and the enzyme is 68% inactivated. The time-dependent incorporation is consistent with the postulate that covalent reaction of 0.5 mol of BDB-TADP/mol of average enzyme subunit causes complete loss of ADP activation, while reaction with another 0.5 mol of BDB-TADP would lead to total inactivation. The enzyme is composed of three distinct subunits in the approximate ratio 2 alpha:1 beta:1 gamma. The distribution of BDB-[beta-32P]TADP incorporated into modified enzyme is 63:30:7% for alpha:beta:gamma throughout the course of the reaction. These results indicate the 6-(4-bromo-2,3-dioxobutyl)thioadenosine 5'-diphosphate functions as an affinity label of two types of potential metal-dependent ADP sites of NAD-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase and that these allosteric sites are present on two (alpha and beta) of the enzyme's three types of subunits.  相似文献   

7.
A new reactive ADP analogue has been synthesized: 2-(4-bromo-2,3-dioxobutylthio)adenosine 5'-diphosphate (2-BDB-TADP). Reaction of ADP with m-chloroperoxybenzoic acid gave ADP 1-oxide, which was treated with NaOH, followed by reaction with carbon disulfide to yield 2-thioadenosine 5'-diphosphate. The final product was synthesized by condensation of 2-thioadenosine 5'-diphosphate with 1,4-dibromobutanedione. Reaction of pig heart NAD-specific isocitrate dehydrogenase with this nucleotide analogue (0.4 mM) causes a time-dependent loss of activity to a limiting value of 75% inactivation. The rate constant for inactivation exhibits a nonlinear dependence on the concentration of 2-BDB-TADP, with kmax = 0.021 min-1 and KI = 0.067 mM. Complete protection against inactivation by 0.2 mM 2-BDB-TADP is provided by ADP + Mn2+, but not by Mn2+ alone, isocitrate, alpha-ketoglutarate, or NAD. Incorporation of 2-BDB-TADP is proportional to the extent of inactivation, reaching 1 mol of reagent/mol of enzyme subunit when the enzyme is maximally inactivated. However, when inactivation is totally prevented by incubation with 2-BDB-TADP in the presence of ADP and Mn2+, 0.5 mol of reagent/mol of subunit is still incorporated, suggesting that inactivation may be attributed to 0.5 mol of reagent/mol of average subunit. In the native enzyme, the Km for total isocitrate is 1.8 mM and is decreased 6-fold to 0.3 mM in the presence of 1 mM ADP, whereas in the modified enzyme, with 25% residual activity, the Km for total isocitrate is about the same in the absence (2.0 mM) or presence (1.8 mM) of ADP. These results indicate that 2-BDB-TADP acts as an affinity label of the ADP allosteric site of NAD-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

8.
Bovine liver glutamate dehydrogenase reacts covalently with 2-(4-bromo-2,3-dioxobutylthio)adenosine 5'-monophosphate (2-BDB-TAMP) with incorporation of 1 mol reagent/mol enzyme subunit and loss of one of the two ADP sites of native enzyme [S. P. Batra and R. F. Colman, J. Biol. Chem. 261, 15565-15571 (1986)]. Incorporation of reagent is prevented specifically by ADP. The modified enzyme has now been digested with trypsin. The nucleotidyl peptide has been purified by chromatography on phenylboronate-agarose, followed by reverse-phase HPLC. On the basis of amino acid composition following acid hydrolysis, and gas-phase sequencing, the modified tryptic peptide was established as Ala-Gln-His-Ser-Gln-His-Arg, corresponding to amino acids 80-86 of the known glutamate dehydrogenase primary structure. The evidence presented indicates that the target amino acid attacked by 2-BDB-TAMP is histidine-82 and that this residue is located within the high-affinity ADP-activating site of glutamate dehydrogenase. In the course of this work, it was found that the positions of Gln84 and His85 had been reported as reversed in the revised sequence of bovine liver glutamate dehydrogenase [J. H. Julliard and E. L. Smith, J. Biol. Chem. 254, 3427-3438 (1979)]. Three additional corrections are here reported in the amino acid sequence of the native enzyme on the basis of gas-phase sequencing of other peptides purified by HPLC: Asp168 (not Asn); His221-Gly222 (not Gly-His); and Glu355 (not Gln).  相似文献   

9.
A new bifunctional affinity label, 5'-p-(fluorosulfonyl)benzoyl-8-azidoadenosine (5'-FSBAzA), has been synthesized by condensation of p-(fluorosulfonyl)benzoyl chloride with 8-azidoadenosine. 5'-FSBAzA has been characterized by elemental analysis, thin-layer chromatography, and ultraviolet and 1H NMR spectroscopy. The affinity label contains both an electrophilic fluorosulfonyl moiety and a photoactivatable azido group which are capable of reacting with several classes of amino acids found in enzymes. 5'-FSBAzA reacts with bovine liver glutamate dehydrogenase in a two-step process: a dark reaction yielding about 0.5 mol of the sulfonylbenzoyl-8-azidoadenosine (SBAzA) group bound/mol enzyme subunit by reaction of the enzyme at the fluorosulfonyl group, followed by photolysis in which 25% of the covalently bound SBAzA becomes crosslinked to the enzyme. 5'-FSBAzA-modified glutamate dehydrogenase, both before and after photolysis, retains full catalytic activity but is less sensitive to allosteric inhibition by GTP, to activation by ADP, and to inhibition by 1 mM NADH. These results suggest the modification in the dark reaction of a regulatory nucleotide binding site. Photoactivation of the covalently bound reagent may have general applicability in relating modified amino acids which are close to each other in the region of the purine nucleotide binding sites of glutamate dehydrogenase and other proteins.  相似文献   

10.
By reaction of adenosine 5'-monothiophosphate with benzophenone-4-maleimide, we synthesized adenosine 5'-O-[S-(4-succinimidyl-benzophenone)thiophosphate] (AMPS-Succ-BP) as a photoreactive ADP analogue. Bovine liver glutamate dehydrogenase is known to be allosterically activated by ADP, but the ADP site has not been located in the crystal structure of the hexameric enzyme [Peterson, P. E., and Smith, T. J. (1999) Structure 7, 769-782]. In the dark, AMPS-Succ-BP reversibly activates GDH. Irradiation of the complex of glutamate dehydrogenase and AMPS-Succ-BP at lambda >300 nm causes a time-dependent, irreversible 2-fold activation of the enzyme. The k(obs) for photoactivation shows nonlinear dependence on the concentration of AMPS-Succ-BP, with K(R) = 4.9 microM and k(max) = 0.076 min(-)(1). The k(obs) for photoreaction by 20 microM AMPS-Succ-BP is decreased 10-fold by 200 microM ADP, but is reduced less than 2-fold by NAD, NADH, GTP, or alpha-ketoglutarate. Modified enzyme is no longer activated by ADP, but is still inhibited by GTP and high concentrations of NADH. These results indicate that reaction of AMPS-Succ-BP occurs within the ADP site. The enzyme incorporates up to 0.5 mol of [(3)H]AMPS-Succ-BP/mol of enzyme subunit or 3 mol of reagent/mol of hexamer. The peptide Lys(488)-Glu(495) has been identified as the only reaction target, and the data suggest that Arg(491) is the modified amino acid. Arg(491) (in the C-terminal helix close to the GTP #2 binding domain of GDH) is thus considered to be at or near the enzyme's allosteric ADP site. On the basis of these results, the AMPS-Succ-BP was positioned within the crystal structure of glutamate dehydrogenase, where it should also mark the ADP binding site of the enzyme.  相似文献   

11.
M A Jacobson  R F Colman 《Biochemistry》1984,23(17):3789-3799
The distance between the catalytic site on bovine liver glutamate dehydrogenase labeled with 4-(iodoacetamido)salicylic acid (ISA) and the adenosine 5'-diphosphate (ADP) activatory site occupied by the analogue 2',3'-O-(2,4,6-trinitrocyclohexadienylidene)adenosine 5'-diphosphate (TNP-ADP) was evaluated by energy transfer. Native enzyme and enzyme containing about 1 mol of acetamidosalicylate/mol of subunit bind about 0.5 mol of TNP-ADP/mol of subunit, and TNP-ADP competes for binding with ADP to native and modified enzyme, indicating that the analogue is a satisfactory probe of the ADP site. From the quenching of acetamidosalicylate donor fluorescence upon addition of TNP-ADP, an average distance of 33 A was determined between the catalytic and ADP sites. The fluorescent nucleotide analogue 5'-[p-(fluorosulfonyl)benzoyl]-2-aza-1,N6-ethenoadenosine (5'-FSBa epsilon A) reacts covalently with glutamate dehydrogenase to about 1 mol/peptide chain. As compared to native enzyme, the SBa epsilon A-enzyme exhibits decreased sensitivity to GTP inhibition but retains its catalytic activity as well as its ability to be activated by ADP and inhibited by high concentrations of NADH. Complete protection against decreased sensitivity to GTP inhibition is provided by GTP in the presence of NADH. It is concluded that 5'-FSBa epsilon A modifies a GTP site on glutamate dehydrogenase. The distance of 23 A between the catalytic site labeled with ISA and a GTP site labeled with 5'-FSBa epsilon A was measured from the quenching of salicylate donor fluorescence in the presence of the SBa epsilon A acceptor on a doubly labeled enzyme. The average distance between the ADP and GTP sites was previously measured as 18 A [Jacobson, M. A., & Colman, R. F. (1983) Biochemistry 22, 4247-4257], indicating that the regulatory sites of glutamate dehydrogenase are closer to each other than to the catalytic site.  相似文献   

12.
The 2',3'-dialdehyde nicotinamide ribose derivatives of NAD (oNAD) and NADH (oNADH) have been prepared enzymatically from the corresponding 2',3'-dialdehyde analogs of NADP and NADPH. Pig heart NAD-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase requires NAD as coenzyme but binds NADPH, as well as NADH, ADP, and ATP, at regulatory sites. Incubation of 1-3 mM oNAD or oNADH with this isocitrate dehydrogenase causes a time-dependent decrease in activity to a limiting value 40% that of the initial enzyme, suggesting that reaction does not occur at the catalytic coenzyme site. Upon varying the concentration of oNAD or oNADH from 0.2 to 3 mM, the inactivation rate constants increase in a nonlinear manner, consistent with reversible binding of oNAD and oNADH to the enzyme prior to covalent reaction. Inactivation is accompanied by incorporation of radioactive reagent with extrapolation to 0.54 mol [14C]oNAD or 0.45 mol [14C]oNADH/mol average enzyme subunit (or about 2 mol reagent/mol enzyme tetramer) when the enzyme is maximally inactivated; this value corresponds to the number of reversible binding sites for each of the natural ligands of isocitrate dehydrogenase. The protection against oNAD or oNADH inactivation by NADH, NADPH, and ADP (but not by isocitrate, NAD, or NADP) indicates that reaction occurs in the region of a nucleotide regulatory site. In contrast to the effects of oNAD and oNADH, oNADP and oNADPH cause total inactivation of the NAD-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase, concomitant with incorporation, respectively, of about 3.5 mol [14C]oNADP or 1.3 mol [14C]oNADPH/mol average subunit. Reaction rates exhibit a linear dependence on [oNADP] or [oNADPH] and protection by natural ligands against inactivation is not striking. These results imply that oNADP and oNADPH are acting in this case as general chemical modifiers and indicate the importance of the free adenosine 2'-OH of oNAD and oNADH for specific labeling of the NAD-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase. The new availability of 2',3'-dialdehyde nicotinamide ribose derivatives of NAD, NADH, NADP, and NADPH may allow selection of the appropriate reactive coenzyme analog for affinity labeling of a variety of dehydrogenases.  相似文献   

13.
Reaction of phenylglyoxal with glutamate dehydrogenase (EC 1.4.1.4), but not with glutamate synthase (EC 2.6.1.53), from Bacillus megaterium resulted in complete loss of enzyme activity. NADPH alone or together with 2-oxoglutarate provided substantial protection from inactivation by phenylglyoxal. Some 2mol of [14C]Phenylglyoxal was incorporated/mol of subunit of glutamate dehydrogenase. Addition of 1mM-NADPH decreased incorporation by 0.7mol. The Ki for phenylglyoxal was 6.7mM and Ks for competition with NADPH was 0.5mM. Complete inactivation of glutamate dehydrogenase by butane-2,3-dione was estimated by extrapolation to result from the loss of 3 of the 19 arginine residues/subunit. NADPH, but not NADH, provided almost complete protection against inactivation. Butane-2,3-dione had only a slight inactivating effect on glutamate synthase. The data suggest that an essential arginine residue may be involved in the binding of NADPH to glutamate dehydrogenase. The enzymes were inactivated by pyridoxal 5'-phosphate and this inactivation increased 3--4-fold in the borate buffer. NADPH completely prevented inactivation by pyridoxal 5'-phosphate.  相似文献   

14.
NADP+-specific glutamate dehydrogenase from Salmonella typhimurium, cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli, has been purified to homogeneity. The nucleotide sequence of S. typhimurium gdhA was determined and the amino acid sequence derived. The nucleotide analogue 2-[(4-bromo-2,3-dioxobutyl)thio]-1,N6-ethenoadenosine 2',5'-bisphosphate (2-BDB-T epsilon A-2',5'-DP) reacts irreversibly with the enzyme to yield a partially inactive enzyme. After about 60% loss of activity, no further inactivation is observed. The rate of inactivation exhibits a nonlinear dependence on 2-BDB-T epsilon A-2',5'-DP concentration with kmax = 0.160 min-1 and KI = 300 microM. Reaction of 200 microM 2-BDB-T epsilon A-2',5'-DP with glutamate dehydrogenase for 120 min results in the incorporation of 0.94 mol of reagent/mol of enzyme subunit. The coenzymes, NADPH and NADP+, completely protect the enzyme against inactivation by the reagent and decrease the reagent incorporation from 0.94 to 0.5 mol of reagent/mol enzyme subunit, while the substrate alpha-ketoglutarate offers only partial protection. These results indicate that 2-BDB-T epsilon A-2',5'-DP functions as an affinity label of the coenzyme binding site and that specific reaction occurs at only about 0.5 sites/enzyme subunit or 3 sites/hexamer. Glutamate dehydrogenase modified with 200 microM 2-BDB-T epsilon A-2',5'-DP in the absence and presence of coenzyme was reduced with NaB3H4, carboxymethylated, and digested with trypsin. Labeled peptides were purified by high performance liquid chromatography and characterized by gas phase sequencing. Two peptides modified by the reagent were isolated and identified as follows: Phe-Cys(CM)-Gln-Ala-Leu-Met-Thr-Glu-Leu-Tyr-Arg and Leu-Cys(CM)-Glu-Ile-Lys. These two peptides were located within the derived amino acid sequence as residues 146-156 and 282-286. In the presence of NADPH, which completely prevents inactivation, only peptide 146-156 was labeled. This result indicates that modification of the pentapeptide causes loss of activity. Glutamate 284 in this peptide is the probable reaction target and is located within the coenzyme binding site.  相似文献   

15.
Bovine liver glutamate dehydrogenase reacts with the bifunctional affinity label 5'-(p-(fluorosulfonyl)benzoyl)-8-azidoadenosine (5'-FSBAzA) in a two-step process: a dark reaction yielding about 0.5 mol of -SBAzA/mol of subunit by reaction through the fluorosulfonyl moiety, followed by photoactivation of the azido group whereby covalently bound -SBAzA becomes cross-linked to the enzyme [Dombrowski, K. E., & Colman, R. F. (1989) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 275, 302-308]. We now report that the rate constant for the dark reaction is not reduced by ADP or GTP, but it is decreased 7-fold by 2 mM NADH and 40-fold by 2 mM NADH + 0.2 mM GTP, suggesting that 5'-FSBAzA reacts at the GTP-dependent NADH inhibitory site. The amino acid residues modified in each phase of the reaction have been identified. Modified enzyme was isolated after each reaction phase, carboxymethylated, and digested with trypsin, chymotrypsin, or thermolysin. The digests were fractionated by chromatography on a phenylboronate agarose column followed by HPLC. Gas-phase sequencing of the labeled peptides identified Tyr190 as the major amino acid which reacts with the fluorosulfonyl group; Lys143 was also modified but to a lesser extent. The predominant cross-link formed during photolysis is between modified Tyr190 and the peptide Leu475-Asp476-Leu477-Arg478, which is located near the C-terminus of the enzyme. Thus, 5'-FSBAzA is effective in identifying critical residues distant in the linear sequence, but close within the regulatory nucleotide site of glutamate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

16.
The nucleotide analogue 5'-p-fluorosulfonylbenzoyladenosine (FSBA) reacts irreversibly with rat liver cytosolic 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA (HMG-CoA) reductase kinase, causing a rapid loss of the AMP activation capacity and a slower inactivation of the catalytic activity. The rate constant for loss of AMP activation is about 10 times higher (kappa 1 = 0.112 min-1) than the rate constant of inactivation (kappa 2 = 0.0106 min-1). There is a good correspondence between the time-dependent inactivation of reductase kinase and the time-dependent incorporation of 5'-p-sulfonylbenzoyl[14C]adenosine ([14C]SBA). An average of 1.65 mol of reagent/mol of enzyme subunit is bound when reductase kinase is completely inactivated. The time-dependent incorporation is consistent with the postulate that covalent reaction of 1 mol of SBA/mol of subunit causes complete loss of AMP activation, whereas reaction of another mole of SBA/mol of subunit would lead to total inactivation. Protection against inactivation by the reagent is provided by the addition of Mg2+, AMP, Mg-ATP, or Mg-AMP to the incubation mixtures. In contrast, addition of ATP, 2'-AMP, or 3'-AMP has no effect on the rate constants. Mg-ATP protects preferentially the catalytic site against inactivation, whereas Mg-AMP at low concentration protects preferentially the allosteric site. Mg-ADP affords less protection than Mg-AMP to the allosteric site when both nucleotides are present at a concentration of 50 microM with 7.5 mM Mg2+. Experiments done with [14C]FSBA in the presence of some protectants have shown that a close correlation exists between the pattern of protection observed and the binding of [14C]SBA. The postulate is that there exists a catalytic site and an allosteric site in the reductase kinase subunit and that Mg-AMP is the main allosteric activator of the enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
Glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) of Clostridium symbiosum, like GDH from other species, is inactivated by pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (pyridoxal-P). This inactivation follows a similar pattern to that for beef liver GDH, in which a non-covalent GDH-pyridoxal-P complex reacts slowly to form a covalent complex in which pyridoxal-P is in a Schiff's-base linkage to lysine residues. [formula: see text] The equilibrium constant of this first-order reaction on the enzyme surface determines the final extent of inactivation observed [S. S. Chen and P. C. Engel (1975) Biochem. J. 147, 351-358]. For clostridial GDH, the maximal inactivation obtained was about 70%, reached after 10 min with 7 mM pyridoxal-P at pH 7. In keeping with the model, (a) inactivation became irreversible after reduction with NaBH4. (b) The NaBH4-reduced enzyme showed a new absorption peak at 325 nm. (c) Km values for NAD+ and glutamate were unaltered, although Vmax values were decreased by 70%. Kinetic analysis of the inactivation gave values of 0.81 +/- 0.34 min-1 for k3 and 3.61 +/- 0.95 mM for k2/k1. The linear plot of 1/(1-R) against 1/[pyridoxal-P], where R is the limiting residual activity reached in an inactivation reaction, gave a slightly higher value for k2/k1 of 4.8 +/- 0.47 mM and k4 of 0.16 +/- 0.01 min-1. NADH, NAD+, 2-oxoglutarate, glutarate and succinate separately gave partial protection against inactivation, the biggest effect being that of 40 mM succinate (68% activity compared with 33% in the control). Paired combinations of glutarate or 2-oxoglutarate and NAD+ gave slightly better protection than the separate components, but the most effective combination was 40 mM 2-oxoglutarate with 1 mM NADH (85% activity at equilibrium). 70% inactivated enzyme showed an incorporation of 0.7 mM pyridoxal-P/mol subunit, estimated spectrophotometrically after NaBH4 reduction, in keeping with the 1:1 stoichiometry for the inactivation. In a sample protected with 2-oxoglutarate and NADH, however, incorporation was 0.45 mol/mol, as against 0.15 mol/mol expected (85% active). Tryptic peptides of the enzyme, modified with and without protection, were purified by HPLC. Two major peaks containing phosphopyridoxyllysine were unique to the unprotected enzyme. These peaks yielded three peptide sequences clearly homologous to sequences of other GDH species. In each case, a gap at which no obvious phenylthiohydantoin-amino-acid was detected, matched a conserved lysine position. The gap was taken to indicate phosphopyridoxyllysine which had prevented tryptic cleavage.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
The nucleotide affinity label 2-(4-bromo-2,3-dioxobutylthio)adenosine 5'-diphosphate (2-BDB-TADP) reacts covalently with pig heart NAD+-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase with a limiting value of 75% inactivation and loss of ADP activation concomitant with incorporation of about 1 mol of reagent/mol of average enzyme subunit (Huang, Y.-C., Bailey, J. M., and Colman, R. F. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 251, 14100-14107). Complete protection against the functional changes is provided by ADP + Mn2+, and reagent incorporation is decreased to about 0.5 mol/mol of average enzyme subunit. We have now identified the critical modified peptide by comparison of the peptides labeled by 2-BDB-TADP at pH 6.8 in the absence and presence of ADP + Mn2+. After removal of excess reagent, modified enzyme was treated with [3H]NaBH4 to reduce the keto groups of the reagent and introduce a radioactive tracer into the reagent which is covalently linked to the protein. Following carboxymethylation and digestion with trypsin, the specific modified peptide was isolated using two successive high performance liquid chromatography steps: 1) 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid with an acetonitrile gradient; and 2) 20 mM ammonium acetate, pH 5.8, with an acetonitrile gradient. Gas phase sequencing gave the modified peptide Leu-Gly-Asp-Gly-Leu-Phe-Leu-Gln in which aspartic acid is the target of 2-BDB-TADP. Isolation of the corresponding tryptic peptide from unmodified enzyme yielded the sequence Leu-Gly-Asp-Gly-Leu-Phe-Leu-Gln-CmCys-CmCys-Lys. Isocitrate dehydrogenase is composed of three distinct subunits (alpha, beta, and gamma), separable by chromatofocusing in urea and identified by analytical gel isoelectric focusing. The evidence indicates that the specific peptide labeled by 2-BDB-TADP, which is at or near the ADP site, can be derived from the gamma subunit.  相似文献   

19.
Protein chemical studies of glutamate dehydrogenase isoproteins (GDH I and GDH II) from bovine brain reveal that one cystein residue is accessible for reaction with thiol-modifying reagent. Reaction of the two types of GDH isoproteins with p-chloromercuribenzoic acid resulted in a time-dependent loss of enzyme activity. The inactivation followed pseudo first-order kinetics with the second-order rate constant of 83 M(-1) s(-1) and 75 M(-1) s(-1) for GDH I and GDH II, respectively. The inactivation was partially prevented by preincubation of the glutamate dehydrogenase isoproteins with NADH. A combination of 10 mM 2-oxoglutarate with 2 mM NADH gave complete protection against the inactivation. There were no significant differences between the two glutamate dehydrogenase isoproteins in their sensitivities to inactivation by p-chloromercuribenzoic indicating that the microenvironmental structures of the GDH isoproteins are very similar to each other. Allosteric effectors such as ADP and GTP had no effects on the inactivation of glutamate dehydrogenase isoproteins by thiol-modifying reagents. By a combination of peptide mapping analysis and labeling with [14C] p-chloromercuribenzoic acid, a reactive cystein residue was identified as Cys323 in the overall sequence. The cysteine residue was clearly identical to sequences of other GDH species known.  相似文献   

20.
1. One mol of diethyl pyrocarbonate will react with one mol of glutamate dehydrogenase polypeptide chains to form one mol of N(1)-carbethoxyhistidine. Reaction is prevented by NADH. 2. The 1:1 complex has an increased specific activity (1.4-2.0-fold). 3. The reason for the activation is discussed. The results are not consistent with NADH dissociation from the enzyme-glutamate-NADH complex being rate-limiting in the steady state measured. 4. The effects of modification on the properties of the enzyme were investigated. The effects of GTP and NAD(+) on the enzyme activity are unaltered by activation. NADH binding is unaltered and there is no apparent change in the molecular weight. However, the activated enzyme can still be further activated by ADP. K(s) for ADP is decreased fivefold.  相似文献   

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