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1.
Soluble inorganic pyrophosphatases (PPases) comprise two evolutionarily unrelated families (I and II). These two families have different specificities for metal cofactors, which is thought to be because of the fact that family II PPases have three active site histidines, whereas family I PPases have none. Here, we report the structural and functional characterization of a unique family I PPase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (mtPPase) that has two His residues (His21 and His86) in the active site. The 1.3-A three-dimensional structure of mtPPase shows that His86 directly interacts with bound sulfate, which mimics the product phosphate. Otherwise, mtPPase is structurally very similar to the well studied family I hexameric PPase from Escherichia coli, although mtPPase lacks the intersubunit metal binding site found in E. coli PPase. The cofactor specificity of mtPPase resembles that of E. coli PPase in that it has high activity in the presence of Mg2+, but it differs from the E. coli enzyme and family II PPases because it has much lower activity in the presence of Mn2+ or Zn2+. Replacements of His21 and His86 in mtPPase with the residues found in the corresponding positions of E. coli PPase had either no effect on the Mg2+- and Mn2+-supported reactions (H86K) or reduced Mg2+-supported activity (H21K). However, both replacements markedly increased the Zn2+-supported activity of mtPPase (up to 11-fold). In the double mutant, Zn2+ was a 2.5-fold better cofactor than Mg2+. These results show that the His residues in mtPPase are not essential for catalysis, although they determine cofactor specificity.  相似文献   

2.
Soluble inorganic pyrophosphatases (PPases) form two nonhomologous families, denoted I and II, that have similar active-site structures but different catalytic activities and metal cofactor specificities. Family II PPases, which are often found in pathogenic bacteria, are more active than family I PPases, and their best cofactor is Mn(2+) rather than Mg(2+), the preferred cofactor of family I PPases. Here, we present results of a detailed kinetic analysis of a family II PPase from Streptococcus gordonii (sgPPase), which was undertaken to elucidate the factors underlying the different properties of family I and II PPases. We measured rates of PP(i) hydrolysis, PP(i) synthesis, and P(i)/water oxygen exchange catalyzed by sgPPase with Mn(2+), Mg(2+), or Co(2+) in the high-affinity metal-binding site and Mg(2+) in the other sites, as well as the binding affinities for several active-site ligands (metal cofactors, fluoride, and P(i)). On the basis of these data, we deduced a minimal four-step kinetic scheme and evaluated microscopic rate constants for all eight relevant reaction steps. Comparison of these results with those obtained previously for the well-known family I PPase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Y-PPase) led to the following conclusions: (a) catalysis by sgPPase does not involve the enzyme-PP(i) complex isomerization known to occur in family I PPases; (b) the values of k(cat) for the magnesium forms of sgPPase and Y-PPase are similar because of similar rates of bound PP(i) hydrolysis and product release; (c) the marked acceleration of sgPPase catalysis in the presence of Mn(2+) and Co(2+) results from a combined effect of these ions on bound PP(i) hydrolysis and P(i) release; (d) sgPPase exhibits lower affinity for both PP(i) and P(i); and (e) sgPPase and Y-PPase exhibit similar values of k(cat)/K(m), which characterizes the PPase efficiency in vivo (i.e., at nonsaturating PP(i) concentrations).  相似文献   

3.
Family II inorganic pyrophosphatases (PPases) have been recently found in a variety of bacteria. Their primary and tertiary structures differ from those of the well-known family I PPases, although both have a binuclear metal center directly involved in catalysis. Here, we examined the effects of mutating one Glu, four His, and five Asp residues forming or close to the metal center on Mn(2+) binding affinity, catalysis, oligomeric structure, and thermostability of the family II PPase from Bacillus subtilis (bsPPase). Mutations H9Q, D13E, D15E, and D75E in two metal-binding subsites caused profound (10(4)- to 10(6)-fold) reductions in the binding affinity for Mn(2+). Most of the mutations decreased k(cat) for MgPP(i) by 2-3 orders of magnitude when measured with Mn(2+) or Mg(2+) bound to the high-affinity subsite and Mg(2+) bound to both the low-affinity subsite and pyrophosphate. In the E78D variant, the k(cat) for the Mn-bound enzyme was decreased 120-fold, converting bsPPase from an Mn-specific to an Mg-specific enzyme. K(m) values were less affected by the mutations, and, interestingly, were decreased in most cases. Mutations of His(97) and His(98) residues, which lie near the subunit interface, greatly destabilized the bsPPase dimer, whereas most other mutations stabilized it. Mn(2+), in sharp contrast to Mg(2+), conferred high thermostability to wild-type bsPPase, although this effect was reduced by all of the mutations except D203E. These results indicate that family II PPases have a more integrated active site structure than family I PPases and are consequently more sensitive to conservative mutations.  相似文献   

4.
Family II pyrophosphatases (PPases), recently found in bacteria and archaebacteria, are Mn(2+)-containing metalloenzymes with two metal-binding subsites (M1 and M2) in the active site. These PPases can use a number of other divalent metal ions as the cofactor but are inactive with Zn(2+), which is known to be a good cofactor for family I PPases. We report here that the Mg(2+)-bound form of the family II PPase from Streptococcus gordonii is nearly instantly activated by incubation with equimolar Zn(2+), but the activity thereafter decays on a time scale of minutes. The activation of the Mn(2+)-form by Zn(2+) was slower but persisted for hours, whereas activation was not observed with the Ca(2+)- and apo-forms. The bound Zn(2+) could be removed from PPase by prolonged EDTA treatment, with a complete recovery of activity. On the basis of the effect of Zn(2+) on PPase dimerization, the Zn(2+) binding constant appeared to be as low as 10(-12) M for S. gordonii PPase. Similar effects of Zn(2+) and EDTA were observed with the Mg(2+)- and apo-forms of Streptococcus mutans and Bacillus subtilis PPases. The effects of Zn(2+) on the apo- and Mg(2+)-forms of HQ97 and DE15 B. subtilis PPase variants (modified M2 subsite) but not of HQ9 variant (modified M1 subsite) were similar to that for the Mn(2+)-form of wild-type PPase. These findings can be explained by assuming that (a) the PPase tightly binds Mg(2+) and Mn(2+) at the M2 subsite; (b) the activation of the corresponding holoenzymes by Zn(2+) results from its binding to the M1 subsite; and (c) the subsequent inactivation of Mg(2+)-PPase results from Zn(2+) migration to the M2 subsite. The inability of Zn(2+) to activate apo-PPase suggests that Zn(2+) binds more tightly to M2 than to M1, allowing direct binding to M2. Zn(2+) is thus an efficient cofactor at subsite M1 but not at subsite M2.  相似文献   

5.
Bowers KE  Fierke CA 《Biochemistry》2004,43(18):5256-5265
Protein farnesyltransferase (FTase) requires both Zn(2+) and Mg(2+) for efficient catalysis of the formation of a thioether bond between carbon-1 of farnesyldiphosphate (FPP) and the cysteine thiolate contained in the carboxy-terminal CaaX sequence of target proteins. Millimolar concentrations of Mg(2+) accelerate catalysis by as much as 700-fold in FTase. Although FTase lacks a typical DDXXD Mg(2+) binding site found in other enzymes that use Mg(2+) for diphosphate stabilization, D352beta in FTase has been implicated in binding Mg(2+) (Pickett et al. (2003) J. Biol. Chem. 278, 51243). Structural studies demonstrate that the diphosphate (PPi) group of FPP resides in a binding pocket made up of highly positively charged side chains, including residues R291beta and K294beta, prior to formation of an active conformation. Analysis of the Mg(2+) dependence of FTase mutants demonstrates that these positively charged residues decrease the Mg(2+) affinity up to 40-fold. In addition, these residues enhance the farnesylation rate constant by almost 80-fold in the presence of Mg(2+), indicating that these residues are not simply displaced by Mg(2+) during the reaction. Mutations at R291beta increase the pK(a) observed in the magnesium affinity, suggesting that this arginine stabilizes the deprotonated form of the PPi leaving group. Furthermore, binding and catalysis data using farnesylmonophosphate (FMP) as a substrate indicate that the side chains of R291beta and K294beta interact mainly with the beta-phosphate of FPP during the chemical reaction. These results allow refinement of the model of the Mg(2+) binding site and demonstrate that positive charge stabilizes the developing charge on the diphosphate leaving group.  相似文献   

6.
The kinetic mechanism of yeast inorganic pyrophosphatase (PPase) was examined by carrying out initial velocity studies. Ca2+ and Rh(H2O)4(methylenediphosphonate) (Rh(H2O)4PCP) were used as dead-end inhibitors to study the order of binding of Cr(H2O)4PP to the substrate site and Mg2+ to the "low affinity" activator site on the enzyme. Competitive inhibition was observed for Ca2+ vs Mg2+ (Kis = 0.93 +/- 0.03 mM), for Rh(H2O)4PCP vs Cr(H2O)4PP (Kis = 0.25 +/- 0.07 mM), and for RH(H2O)4PCP vs Mg2+ (Kis = 0.38 +/- 0.03 mM). Uncompetitive inhibition was observed for Ca2+ vs Cr(H2O)4PP (Kii = 0.49 +/- 0.01). On the basis of these results a rapid equilibrium ordered mechanism in which Cr(H2O)4PP binding precedes Mg2+ ion binding is proposed. The inert substrate analog, Mg(imidodiphosphate) (MgPNP) was shown to induce Mg2+ inhibition of the PPase-catalyzed hydrolysis of MgPP. The Mg2+ inhibition observed was competitive vs MgPP and partial. These results suggest that Mg2+/MgPNP release from the enzyme occurs in preferred rather than strict order and that the Mg2+/MgPP-binding steps are at steady state. Zn2+, Co2+, and Mn2+ (but not Mg2+) displayed activator inhibition of the PPase-catalyzed hydrolysis of PPi (this study) and of Cr(H2O)4PP (W.B. Knight, S. Fitts, and D. Dunaway-Mariano, (1981) Biochemistry 20, 4079). These findings suggest that cofactor release from the low affinity cofactor site on the enzyme must precede product release and that Zn2+, Mn2+, and Co2+ (but not Mg2+) have high affinities for the cofactor sites on both the PPase.M.MPP and PPase.M.M(P)2 complexes. The role of the metal cofactor in determining PPase substrate specificity was briefly explored by testing the ability of the Mg2+ complex of tripolyphosphate (PPPi) (a substrate for the Zn2+-activated enzyme but not the Mg2+-activated enzyme) to induce Mg2+ inhibition of PPase-catalyzed hydrolysis of MgPP. MgPPP was shown to be as effective as MgPNP in inducing competitive Mg2+ inhibition (vs MgPP). This result suggests that the low affinity Mg2+ cofactor-binding site present in the enzyme-MgPP complex is maintained in the enzyme-MgPPP complex. Thus, failure of Mg2+ to bind to the enzyme-MgPPP complex was ruled out as a possible explanation for the failure of the Mg2+-activated enzyme to catalyze the hydrolysis of MgPPP.  相似文献   

7.
7-Chloro-4-nitro-benzofurazan selectively modifies one PPase Tyr residue per subunit and lowers the enzyme activity. Hydrolysis of the modified protein by trypsin and then by chymotrypsin produces the 82-89 peptide which possesses modified Tyr-89. Substrate analog (CaPPi) and the product of the enzyme reaction, MgPi, protect the enzyme against inactivation. Ions of metal-activators (Mg2+, Zn2+) exert no influence on the inactivation rate. On the contrary, the Ca(2+)-inhibitor of the enzyme accelerates the reaction by binding to the high-affinity site, and effectively decreases it when Ca2+ binds to both sites. Mg2+ competes with Ca2+ for one binding site, which is the low affinity site for Mg2+ and the high-affinity site for Ca2+. The Ca2+ saturation of the high-affinity site decreases the pK2 of Tyr-89, probably due to direct coordination between Tyr and Ca2+. The observed properties of Tyr-89 modification enable us to propose that Tyr-89 serves as a proton donor for phosphate releasing during enzymatic hydrolysis of pyrophosphate. The Ca2+ inhibitory effect on the enzyme activity may be due to the existence of a Tyr-89 bond in the Ca2+ pyrophosphatase complex.  相似文献   

8.
Earlier it has been demonstrated that inactivation of inorganic pyrophosphatase (PPase) of S. cerevisiae by 7-chloro-4-nitronbenzofurasane is due to modification of Tyr89. The effect of pH and active center ligands on this reaction has been studied. It was found that pK for Tyr89 does not exceed 8.5; the phosphate-metal complex binding to the high affinity center protects Tyr89 from inactivation. Activating ions (Mg2+ and Zn2+) do not influence the inactivation, whereas the PPase inhibitor, Ca2+, enhances this process after saturation of the high affinity binding site. Saturation of two binding sites with Ca2+ has a protective effect on the enzyme. An increase in the rate of Tyr89 binding to the inhibitor in the presence of low concentrations of Ca2+ is due to the decrease of Tyr89 pK. The data obtained suggest that Tyr89 is located near the high affinity binding site for phosphate. The high reactivity of Tyr89 and its tight binding in the active center point to the presence of a hydrogen bondage with the substrate and suggest a role of a proton donor whose acceptor is the product of the enzymatic reaction, i.e., phosphate.  相似文献   

9.
Inorganic pyrophosphatase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mt-PPase) is one of the possible targets for the rational design of anti-tuberculosis agents. In this paper, functional properties of this enzyme are characterized in the presence of the most effective activators--Mg2+ and Mn2+. Dissociation constants of Mt-PPase complexed with Mg2+ or Mn2+ are essentially similar to those of Escherichia coli PPase. Stability of a hexameric form of Mt-PPase has been characterized as a function of pH both for the metal-free enzyme and for Mg2+- or Mn2+-enzyme. Hexameric metal-free Mt-PPase has been shown to dissociate, forming monomers at pH below 4 or trimers at pH from 8 to 10. Mg2+ or Mn2+ shift the hexamer-trimer equilibrium found for the apo-Mt-PPase at pH 8-10 toward the hexameric form by stabilizing intertrimeric contacts. The pK(a) values have been determined for groups that control the observed hexamer-monomer (pK(a) 5.4), hexamer-trimer (pK(a) 7.5), and trimer-monomer (pK(a) 9.8) transitions. Our results demonstrate that due to the non-conservative amino acid residues His21 and His86 in the active site of Mt-PPase, substrate specificity of this enzyme, in contrast to other typical PPases, does not depend on the nature of the metal cofactor.  相似文献   

10.
Kinetic studies with myo-inositol monophosphatase from bovine brain   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
A J Ganzhorn  M C Chanal 《Biochemistry》1990,29(25):6065-6071
The kinetic properties of myo-inositol monophosphatase with different substrates were examined with respect to inhibition by fluoride, activation or inhibition by metal ions, pH profiles, and solvent isotope effects. F- is a competitive inhibitor versus 2'-AMP and glycerol 2-phosphate, but noncompetitive (Kis = Kii) versus DL-inositol 1-phosphate, all with Ki values of approximately 45 microM. Activation by Mg2+ follows sigmoid kinetics with Hill constants around 1.9, and random binding of substrate and metal ion. At high concentrations, Mg2+ acts as an uncompetitive inhibitor (Ki = 4.0 mM with DL-inositol 1-phosphate at pH 8.0 and 37 degrees C). Activation and inhibition constants, and consequently the optimal concentration of Mg2+, vary considerably with substrate structure and pH. Uncompetitive inhibition by Li+ and Mg2+ is mutually exclusive, suggesting a common binding site. Lithium binding decreases at low pH with a pK value of 6.4, and at high pH with a pK of 8.9, whereas magnesium inhibition depends on deprotonation with a pK of 8.3. The pH dependence of V suggests that two groups with pK values around 6.5 have to be deprotonated for catalysis. Solvent isotope effects on V and V/Km are greater than 2 and 1, respectively, regardless of the substrate, and proton inventories are linear. These results are consistent with a model where low concentrations of Mg2+ activate the enzyme by stabilizing the pentacoordinate phosphate intermediate. Li+ as well as Mg2+ at inhibiting concentrations bind to an additional site in the enzyme-substrate complex. Hydrolysis of the phosphate ester is rate limiting and facilitated by acid-base catalysis.  相似文献   

11.
Family II inorganic pyrophosphatases (PPases) constitute a new evolutionary group of PPases, with a different fold and mechanism than the common family I enzyme; they are related to the "DHH" family of phosphoesterases. Biochemical studies have shown that Mn(2+) and Co(2+) preferentially activate family II PPases; Mg(2+) partially activates; and Zn(2+) can either activate or inhibit (Zyryanov et al., Biochemistry, 43, 14395-14402, accompanying paper in this issue). The three solved family II PPase structures did not explain the differences between the PPase families nor the metal ion differences described above. We therefore solved three new family II PPase structures: Bacillus subtilis PPase (Bs-PPase) dimer core bound to Mn(2+) at 1.3 A resolution, and, at 2.05 A resolution, metal-free Bs-PPase and Streptococcus gordonii (Sg-PPase) containing sulfate and Zn(2+). Comparison of the new and old structures of various family II PPases demonstrates why the family II enzyme prefers Mn(2+) or Co(2+), as an activator rather than Mg(2+). Both M1 and M2 undergo significant changes upon substrate binding, changing from five-coordinate to octahedral geometry. Mn(2+) and Co(2+), which readily adopt different coordination states and geometries, are thus favored. Combining our structures with biochemical data, we identified M2 as the high-affinity metal site. Zn(2+) activates in the M1 site, where octahedral geometry is not essential for catalysis, but inhibits in the M2 site, because it is unable to assume octahedral geometry but remains trigonal bipyramidal. Finally, we propose that Lys205-Gln81-Gln80 form a hydrophilic channel to speed product release from the active site.  相似文献   

12.
Gao K  Wong S  Bushman F 《Journal of virology》2004,78(13):6715-6722
The D,DX(35)E motif characteristic of retroviral integrase enzymes (INs) is expected to bind the required metal cofactors (Mg(2+) or Mn(2+)), but direct evidence for a catalytic role has been lacking. Here we used a metal rescue strategy to investigate metal binding. We established conditions for analysis of an activity of IN, disintegration, in both Mg(2+) and Mn(2+), and tested IN mutants with cysteine substitutions in each acidic residue of the D,DX(35)E motif. Mn(2+) but not Mg(2+) can bind tightly to Cys, so if metal binding at the acidic residues is mechanistically important, it is expected that the Cys-substituted enzymes would be active in the presence of Mn(2+) only. Of the three acidic residues, a strong metal rescue effect was obtained for D116C, a weaker rescue was seen for D64C, and no rescue was seen with E152C. Modest rescue could also be detected for D116C in normal integration in vitro. Comparison to Ser and Ala substitutions at D116 established that the rescue was selective for Cys. Further studies of the response to pH suggest that the metal cofactor may stabilize the deprotonated nucleophile active in catalysis, and studies of the response to NaCl titrations disclose an additional role for the metal cofactor in stabilizing the IN-DNA complex.  相似文献   

13.
Binding of pyrophosphate or two phosphate molecules to the pyrophosphatase (PPase) active site occurs at two subsites, P1 and P2. Mutations at P2 subsite residues (Y93F and K56R) caused a much greater decrease in phosphate binding affinity of yeast PPase in the presence of Mn(2+) or Co(2+) than mutations at P1 subsite residues (R78K and K193R). Phosphate binding was estimated in these experiments from the inhibition of ATP hydrolysis at a sub-K(m) concentration of ATP. Tight phosphate binding required four Mn(2+) ions/active site. These data identify P2 as the high affinity subsite and P1 as the low affinity subsite, the difference in the affinities being at least 250-fold. The time course of five "isotopomers" of phosphate that have from zero to four (18)O during [(18)O]P(i)-[(16)O]H(2)O oxygen exchange indicated that the phosphate containing added water is released after the leaving group phosphate during pyrophosphate hydrolysis. These findings provide support for the structure-based mechanism in which pyrophosphate hydrolysis involves water attack on the phosphorus atom located at the P2 subsite of PPase.  相似文献   

14.
Giardia lamblia, the protozoan parasite responsible for giardiasis, requires purine salvage from its host for RNA and DNA synthesis. G. lamblia expresses an unusual purine phosphoribosyltransferase with a high specificity for guanine (GPRTase). The enzyme's sequence significantly diverges from those of related enzymes in other organisms. The transition state analogue immucillinGP is a powerful inhibitor of HGXPRTase from malaria [Li, C. M., et al. (1999) Nat. Struct. Biol. 6, 582-587] and is also a 10 nM inhibitor of G. lamblia GPRTase. Cocrystallization of GPRTase with immucillinGP led unexpectedly to a GPRTase.immucillinG binary complex with an open catalytic site loop. Diffusion of ligands into preformed crystals gave a GPRTase.immucillinGP.Mg(2+).pyrophosphate complex in which the open loop is stabilized by crystal contacts. G. lamblia GPRTase exhibits substantial structural differences from known purine phosphoribosyltransferases at positions remote from the catalytic site, but conserves most contacts to the bound inhibitor. The filled catalytic site with an open catalytic loop provides insight into ligand binding. One active site Mg(2+) ion is chelated to pyrophosphate, but the other is chelated to two conserved catalytic site carboxylates, suggesting a role for these amino acids. This arrangement of Mg(2+) and pyrophosphate has not been reported in purine phosphoribosyltransferases. ImmucillinG in the binary complex is anchored by its 9-deazaguanine group, and the iminoribitol is disordered. No Mg(2+) or pyrophosphate is detected; thus, the 5'-phosphoryl group is needed to immobilize the iminoribitol prior to magnesium pyrophosphate binding. Filling the catalytic site involves (1) binding the purine ring, (2) anchoring the 5'-phosphate to fix the ribosyl group, (3) binding the first Mg(2+) to Asp125 and Glu126 carboxyl groups and binding Mg(2+).pyrophosphate, and (4) closing the catalytic site loop and formation of bound (Mg(2+))(2). pyrophosphate prior to catalysis. Guanine specificity is provided by two peptide carbonyl oxygens hydrogen-bonded to the exocyclic amino group and a weak interaction to O6. Transition state formation involves N7 protonation by Asp129 acting as the general acid.  相似文献   

15.
Two structures of Escherichia coli soluble inorganic pyrophosphatase (EPPase) complexed with calcium pyrophosphate (CaPP(i)-EPPase) and with Ca(2+) (Ca(2+)-EPPase) have been solved at 1.2 and 1.1 A resolution, respectively. In the presence of Mg(2+), this enzyme cleaves pyrophosphate (PP(i)) into two molecules of orthophosphate (P(i)). This work has enabled us to locate PP(i) in the active site of the inorganic pyrophosphatases family in the presence of Ca(2+), which is an inhibitor of EPPase.Upon PP(i) binding, two Ca(2+) at M1 and M2 subsites move closer together and one of the liganded water molecules becomes bridging. The mutual location of PP(i) and the bridging water molecule in the presence of inhibitor cation is catalytically incompetent. To make a favourable PP(i) attack by this water molecule, modelling of a possible hydrolysable conformation of PP(i) in the CaPP(i)-EPPase active site has been performed. The reasons for Ca(2+) being the strong PPase inhibitor and the role in catalysis of each of four metal ions are the mechanistic aspects discussed on the basis of the structures described.  相似文献   

16.
Li Y  Gong Y  Shi G  Blaszczyk J  Ji X  Yan H 《Biochemistry》2002,41(27):8777-8783
6-Hydroxymethyl-7,8-dihydropterin pyrophosphokinase (HPPK) catalyzes the transfer of pyrophosphate from ATP to 6-hydroxymethyl-7,8-dihydropterin (HMDP). Because HPPK is essential for microorganisms but is absent from human and animals, the enzyme is an excellent target for developing antimicrobial agent. Thermodynamic analysis shows that Mg(2+) is important not only for the binding of nucleotides but also for the binding of HMDP. Transient kinetic analysis shows that a step or steps after the chemical transformation are rate-limiting in the reaction catalyzed by HPPK. The pre-steady-state kinetics is composed of a burst phase and a steady-state phase. The rate constant for the burst phase is approximately 50 times larger than that for the steady-state phase. The latter is very similar to the k(cat) value measured by steady-state kinetics. A set of rate constants for the individual steps of the HPPK-catalyzed reaction has been determined by a combination of stopped-flow and quench-flow analyses. These results form a thermodynamic and kinetic framework for dissecting the roles of active site residues in the substrate binding and catalysis by HPPK.  相似文献   

17.
Arnold JJ  Gohara DW  Cameron CE 《Biochemistry》2004,43(18):5138-5148
The use of Mn(2+) as the divalent cation cofactor in polymerase-catalyzed reactions instead of Mg(2+) often diminishes the stringency of substrate selection and incorporation fidelity. We have solved the complete kinetic mechanism for single nucleotide incorporation catalyzed by the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase from poliovirus (3D(pol)) in the presence of Mn(2+). The steps employed during a single cycle of nucleotide incorporation are identical to those employed in the presence of Mg(2+) and include a conformational-change step after nucleotide binding to achieve catalytic competence of the polymerase-primer/template-nucleotide complex. In the presence of Mn(2+), the conformational-change step is the primary determinant of enzyme specificity, phosphoryl transfer appears as the sole rate-limiting step for nucleotide incorporation, and the rate of phosphoryl transfer is the same for all nucleotides: correct and incorrect. Because phosphoryl transfer is the rate-limiting step in the presence of Mn(2+), it was possible to determine that the maximal phosphorothioate effect in this system is in the range of 8-11. This information permitted further interrogation of the nucleotide-selection process in the presence of Mg(2+), highlighting the capacity of this cation to permit the enzyme to use the phosphoryl-transfer step for nucleotide selection. The inability of Mn(2+) to support a reduction in the efficiency of phosphoryl transfer when incorrect substrates are employed is the primary explanation for the loss of fidelity observed in the presence of this cofactor. We propose that the conformational change involves reorientation of the triphosphate moiety of the bound nucleotide into a conformation that permits binding of the second metal ion required for catalysis. In the presence of Mg(2+), this conformation requires interactions with the enzyme that permit a reduction in catalytic efficiency to occur during an attempt to incorporate an incorrect nucleotide. Adventitious interactions in the cofactor-binding site with bound Mn(2+) may diminish fidelity by compensating for interaction losses used to modulate catalytic efficiency when incorrect nucleotides are bound in the presence of Mg(2+).  相似文献   

18.
Flagg SC  Giri N  Pektas S  Maroney MJ  Knapp MJ 《Biochemistry》2012,51(33):6654-6666
Prolyl hydroxylase domain 2 (PHD2) is deemed a primary oxygen sensor in humans, yet many details of its underlying mechanism are still not fully understood. (Fe(2+) + αKG)PHD2 is 6-coordinate, with a 2His/1Asp facial triad occupying three coordination sites, a bidentate α-ketoglutarate occupying two sites, and an aquo ligand in the final site. Turnover is thought to be initiated upon release of the aquo ligand, creating a site for O(2) to bind at the iron. Herein we show that steady-state turnover is faster under acidic conditions, with k(cat) exhibiting a kinetic pK(a) = 7.22. A variety of spectroscopic probes were employed to identify the active-site acid, through comparison of (Fe(2+) + αKG)PHD2 at pH 6.50 with pH 8.50. The near-UV circular dichroism spectrum was virtually unchanged at elevated pH, indicating that the secondary structure did not change as a function of pH. UV-visible and Fe X-ray absorption spectroscopy indicated that the primary coordination sphere of Fe(2+) changed upon increasing the pH; extended X-ray absorption fine structure analysis found a short Fe-(O/N) bond length of 1.96 ? at pH 8.50, strongly suggesting that the aquo ligand was deprotonated at this pH. Solvent isotope effects were measured during steady-sate turnover over a wide pH-range, with an inverse solvent isotope effect (SIE) of k(cat) observed ((D(2)O)k(cat) = 0.91 ± 0.03) for the acid form; a similar SIE was observed for the basic form of the enzyme ((D(2)O)k(cat) = 0.9 ± 0.1), with an acid equilibrium offset of ΔpK(a) = 0.67 ± 0.04. The inverse SIE indicated that aquo release from the active site Fe(2+) immediately precedes a rate-limiting step, suggesting that turnover in this enzyme may be partially limited by the rate of O(2) binding or activation, and suggesting that aquo release is relatively slow. The unusual kinetic pK(a) further suggested that PHD2 might function physiologically to sense both intracellular pO(2) as well as pH, which could provide for feedback between anaerobic metabolism and hypoxia sensing.  相似文献   

19.
Aminopeptidases are major enzymes in the midgut microvillar membranes of most insects and are targets of insecticidal Bacillus thuringiensis crystal delta-endotoxins. Sequence analysis and substrate specificity studies showed that these enzymes resemble mammalian aminopeptidase N, although information on the organization of their active site is lacking. The effect of pH at different temperatures on the kinetic parameters of Tenebrio molitor (Coleoptera) larval aminopeptidase showed that enzyme catalysis depend on a deprotonated (pK 7.6; DeltaH degrees (ion), 7.6 kJ/mol) and a protonated (pK 8.2; DeltaH degrees (ion), 16.8 kJ/mol) group. 1-Ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl) carbodiimide and diethylpyrocarbonate inactivate the enzyme by modifying a pK 5.8 carboxylate and a imidazole group, respectively, with a reaction order around 1. Tetranitromethane changes the K(m) of the enzyme without affecting its V(max) by modifying a phenol group. The presence of a competitive inhibitor decrease the inactivation reaction rates in all these cases. EDTA inactivation of the aminopeptidase is affected by pH and temperature suggesting the involvement in metal binding of at least one deprotonated imidazole group (pK 5.8, DeltaH degrees (ion), 20 kJ/mol). The data support the hypothesis that T. molitor aminopeptidase catalysis depends on a catalytic metal and on a carboxylate and a protonated imidazole group, whereas substrate binding relies in one phenol and one carboxylate groups. The insect aminopeptidase shares common features with mammalian aminopeptidase N, although differing in details of substrate binding and in residues directly involved in catalysis.  相似文献   

20.
Escherichia coli inorganic pyrophosphatase (PPase) is a one-domain globular enzyme characterized by its ability to easily undergo minor structure rearrangements involving flexible segments of the polypeptide chain. To elucidate a possible role of these segments in catalysis, catalytic properties of mutant variants of E. coli PPase Gly100Ala and Gly147Val with substitutions in the conservative loops II and III have been studied. The main result of the mutations was a sharp decrease in the rates of conformational changes required for binding of activating Mg2+ ions, whereas affinity of the enzyme for Mg2+ was not affected. The pH-independent parameters of MgPP(i) hydrolysis, kcat and kcat/Km, have been determined for the mutant PPases. The values of kcat for Gly100Ala and Gly147Val variants were 4 and 25%, respectively, of the value for the native enzyme. Parameter kcat/Km for both mutants was two orders of magnitude lower. Mutation Gly147Val increased pH-independent Km value about tenfold. The study of synthesis of pyrophosphate in the active sites of the mutant PPases has shown that the maximal level of synthesized pyrophosphate was in the case of Gly100Ala twofold, and in the case of Gly147Val fivefold, higher than for the native enzyme. The results reported in this paper demonstrate that the flexibility of the loops where the residues Gly100 and Gly147 are located is necessary at the stages of substrate binding and product release. In the case of Gly100Ala PPase, significant impairment of affinity of enzyme effector site for PP(i) was also found.  相似文献   

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