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1.
Li L  Luo M  Ghanem M  Taylor EA  Schramm VL 《Biochemistry》2008,47(8):2577-2583
Transition-state structures of human and bovine of purine nucleoside phosphorylases differ, despite 87% homologous amino acid sequences. Human PNP (HsPNP) has a fully dissociated transition state, while that for bovine PNP (BtPNP) has early SN1 character. Crystal structures and sequence alignment indicate that the active sites of these enzymes are the same within crystallographic analysis, but residues in the second-sphere from the active sites differ significantly. Residues in BtPNP have been mutated toward HsPNP, resulting in double (Asn123Lys; Arg210Gln) and triple mutant PNPs (Val39Thr; Asn123Lys; Arg210Gln). Steady-state kinetic studies indicated unchanged catalytic activity, while pre-steady-state studies indicate that the chemical step is slower in the triple mutant. The mutant enzymes have higher affinity for inhibitors that are mimics of a late dissociative transition state. Kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) and computational chemistry were used to identify the transition-state structure of the triple mutant. Intrinsic KIEs from [1'-3H], [1'-14C], [2'-3H], [5'-3H], and [9-15N] inosines were 1.221, 1.035, 1.073, 1.062 and 1.025, respectively. The primary intrinsic [1'-14C] and [9-15N] KIEs indicate a highly dissociative SN1 transition state with low bond order to the leaving group, a transition state different from the native enzyme. The [1'-14C] KIE suggests significant nucleophilic participation at the transition state. The transition-state structure of triple mutant PNP is altered as a consequence of the amino acids in the second sphere from the catalytic site. These residues are implicated in linking the dynamic motion of the protein to formation of the transition state.  相似文献   

2.
Luo M  Li L  Schramm VL 《Biochemistry》2008,47(8):2565-2576
Purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) catalyzes the reversible phosphorolysis of purine (2'-deoxy)ribonucleosides to give the corresponding purine base and (2'-deoxy)ribose 1-phosphate as products. Human and bovine PNPs (HsPNP and BtPNP) form distinct transition states despite 87% identity in amino acid sequence. A PNP hybrid was produced by replacing K22 and H104 in HsPNP with the corresponding Glu and Arg residues found in BtPNP. We solved the transition-state structure of E:R-HsPNP (K22E:H104R mutant of HsPNP) using competitive kinetic isotope effects (KIE) and global density functional calculations. An array of PNP transition states was generated from optimized structure candidates with varied C1'-N9, C1'-Ophosphate distances, ribosyl pucker configurations and N7-protonation states. Isotopically labeled [1'-3H], [2'-3H], [1'-14C], [9-15N], [1'-14C, 9-15N] and [5'-3H2]inosines gave intrinsic KIE values of 1.210, 1.075, 1.035, 1.024, 1.065, 1.063 with E:R-HsPNP, respectively. The suite of E:R-HsPNP KIEs match a single structure from the array of PNP transition-state candidates. The transition state of E:R-HsPNP is fully dissociative, N7-protonated hypoxanthine (C1'-N9 distance >or= 3.0 A) with partial participation of phosphate (C1'-Ophosphate distance = 2.26 A), 2'-C-exo-ribosyl ring pucker and the O5'-C5'-C4'-O4' dihedral angle near 60 degrees . The transition state of E:R-HsPNP is altered from the fully dissociative DN*AN character for HsPNP to a late phosphate-associative character. E:R-HsPNP differs from native HsPNP by only two residues over 25 A away from the active site. New interactions caused by the mutations increase the catalytic efficiency of the enzyme for formation of a late transition state with increased participation of the phosphate nucleophile. Dynamic coupling motions from the remote mutations to the catalytic sites are proposed.  相似文献   

3.
Singh V  Lee JE  Núñez S  Howell PL  Schramm VL 《Biochemistry》2005,44(35):11647-11659
Methylthioadenosine/S-adenosylhomocysteine nucleosidase (MTAN) catalyzes reactions linked to polyamine metabolism, quorum sensing pathways, methylation reactions, and adenine salvage. It is a candidate target for antimicrobial drug design. Kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) were measured on the MTAN-catalyzed hydrolysis of 5'-methylthioadenosine (MTA) to determine the transition state structure. KIEs measured at pH 7.5 were near unity due to the large forward commitment to catalysis. Intrinsic KIEs were expressed by increasing the pH to 8.5. Intrinsic KIEs from MTAs labeled at 1'-(3)H, 1'-(14)C, 2'-(3)H, 4'-(3)H, 5'-(3)H, 9-(15)N, and Me-(3)H(3) were 1.160 +/- 0.004, 1.004 +/- 0.003, 1.044 +/- 0.004, 1.015 +/- 0.002, 1.010 +/- 0.002, 1.018 +/- 0.006, and 1.051 +/- 0.002, respectively. The large 1'-(3)H and small 1'-(14)C KIEs indicate that the Escherichia coli MTAN reaction undergoes a dissociative (D(N)A(N)) (S(N)1) mechanism with little involvement of the leaving group or participation of the attacking nucleophile at the transition state, causing the transition state to have significant ribooxacarbenium ion character. A transition state constrained to match the intrinsic KIEs was located with density functional theory [B3LYP/6-31G(d,p)]. The leaving group (N9) is predicted to be 3.0 A from the anomeric carbon. The small beta-secondary 2'-(3)H KIE of 1.044 corresponds to a modest 3'-endo conformation for ribose and a H1'-C1'-C2'-H2' dihedral angle of 53 degrees at the transition state. Natural bond orbital analysis of the substrate and the transition state suggests that the 4'-(3)H KIE is due to hyperconjugation between the lone pair (n(p)) of O3' and the antibonding (sigma) orbital of the C4'-H4' group, and the methyl-(3)H(3) KIE is due to hyperconjugation between the n(p) of sulfur and the sigma of methyl C-H bonds. Transition state analogues that resemble this transition state structure are powerful inhibitors, and their molecular electrostatic potential maps closely resemble that of the transition state.  相似文献   

4.
Purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) catalyzes the reversible phosphorolysis of 6-oxypurine (2'-deoxy)ribonucleosides, generating (2-deoxy)ribose 1-phosphate and the purine base. Transition-state models for inosine cleavage have been proposed with bovine, human, and malarial PNPs using arsenate as the nucleophile, since kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) are obscured on phosphorolysis due to high commitment factors. The Phe200Gly mutant of human PNP has low forward and reverse commitment factors in the phosphorolytic reaction, permitting the measurement of competitive intrinsic KIEs on both arsenolysis and phosphorolysis of inosine. The intrinsic 1'-(14)C, 1'-(3)H, 2'-(2)H, 9-(15)N, and 5'-(3)H(2) KIEs for inosine were measured for arsenolysis and phosphorolysis. Except for the remote 5'-(3)H(2), and some slight difference between the 2'-(2)H KIEs, all isotope effects originating in the reaction coordinate are the same within experimental error. Hence, arsenolysis and phosphorolysis proceed through closely related transition states. Although electrostatically similar, the volume of arsenate is greater than phosphate and supports a steric influence to explain the differences in the 5'-(3)H(2) KIEs. Density functional theory calculations provide quantitative models of the transition states for Phe200Gly human PNP-catalyzed arsenolysis and phosphorolysis, selected upon matching calculated and experimental KIEs. The models confirm the striking resemblance between the transition states for the two reactions.  相似文献   

5.
The transition state of adenosine nucleosidase (EC 3.2.2.7) isolated from yellow lupin (Lupinus luteus) was determined based upon a series of heavy atom kinetic isotope effects. Adenosine labeled with 13C, 2H, and 15N was analyzed by liquid chromatography/electrospray mass spectrometry to determine kinetic isotope effects. Values of 1.024+/-0.004, 1.121+/-0.005, 1.093+/-0.004, 0.993+/-0.006, and 1.028+/-0.005 were found for [1'-13C], [1'-2H], [2'-2H], [5'-2H], and [9-15N] adenosine, respectively. Using a bond order bond energy vibrational analysis, a transition state consisting of a significantly broken C-N bond, formation of an oxocarbenium ion in the ribose ring, a conformation of C3-exo for the ribose ring, and protonation of the heterocyclic base was proposed. This transition state was found to be very similar to the transition state for nucleoside hydrolase, another purine metabolizing enzyme, isolated from Crithidia fasciculata.  相似文献   

6.
7.
The transition state of the Vmax mutant of AMP nucleosidase from Azotobacter vinelandii [Leung, H. B., & Schramm, V. L. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 12823-12829] has been characterized by heavy-atom kinetic isotope effects in the presence and absence of MgATP, the allosteric activator. The enzyme catalyzes hydrolysis of the N-glycosidic bond of AMP at approximately 2% of the rate of the normal enzyme with only minor changes in the Km for substrate, the activation constant for MgATP, and the Ki for formycin 5'-phosphate, a tight-binding competitive inhibitor. Isotope effects were measured as a function of the allosteric activator concentration that increases the turnover number of the enzyme from 0.006 s-1 to 1.2 s-1. The kinetic isotope effects were measured with the substrates [1'-3H]AMP, [2'-2H]AMP, [2'-2H]AMP, [9-15N]AMP, and [1',9-14C, 15N]AMP. All substrates gave significant kinetic isotope effects in a pattern that establishes that the reaction expresses intrinsic kinetic isotope effects in the presence or absence of MgATP. The kinetic isotope effect with [9-15N]AMP decreased from 1.034 +/- 0.002 to 1.021 +/- 0.002 in response to MgATP. The [1'-3H]AMP isotope effect increased from 1.086 +/- 0.003 to 1.094 +/- 0.002, while the kinetic isotope effect for [1',9-14C, 15N]AMP decreased from 1.085 +/- 0.003 to 1.070 +/- 0.004 in response to allosteric activation with MgATP. Kinetic isotope effects with [1'-14C]AMP and [2'-2H]AMP were 1.041 +/- 0.006 and 1.089 +/- 0.002 and were not changed by addition of MgATP.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Zhang Y  Schramm VL 《Biochemistry》2011,50(21):4813-4818
Orotate phosphoribosyltransferases (OPRTs) form and break the N-ribosidic bond to pyrimidines by way of ribocation-like transition states (TSs) and therefore exhibit large α-secondary 1'-(3)H k(cat)/K(m) kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) [Zhang, Y., and Schramm, V. L. (2010) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 132, 8787-8794]. Substrate binding isotope effects (BIEs) with OPRTs report on the degree of ground-state destabilization for these complexes and permit resolution of binding and transition-state effects from the k(cat)/K(m) KIEs. The BIEs for interactions of [1'-(3)H]orotidine 5'-monophosphate (OMP) with the catalytic sites of Plasmodium falciparum and human OPRTs are 1.104 and 1.108, respectively. These large BIEs establish altered sp(3) bond hybridization of C1' toward the sp(2) geometry of the transition states upon OMP binding. Thus, the complexes of these OPRTs distort OMP part of the way toward the transition state. As the [1'-(3)H]OMP k(cat)/K(m) KIEs are approximately 1.20, half of the intrinsic k(cat)/K(m) KIEs originate from BIEs. Orotidine, a slow substrate for these enzymes, binds to the catalytic site with no significant [1'-(3)H]orotidine BIEs. Thus, OPRTs are unable to initiate ground-state destabilization of orotidine by altered C1' hybridization because of the missing 5'-phosphate. However the k(cat)/K(m) KIEs for [1'-(3)H]orotidine are also approximately 1.20. The C1' distortion for OMP happens in two steps, half upon binding and half on going from the Michaelis complex to the TS. With orotidine as the substrate, there is no ground-state destabilization in the Michaelis complexes, but the C1' distortion at the TS is equal to that of OMP. The large single barrier for TS formation with orotidine slows the rate of barrier crossing.  相似文献   

9.
Parikh SL  Schramm VL 《Biochemistry》2004,43(5):1204-1212
Bacterial protein toxins are the most powerful human poisons known, exhibiting an LD(50) of 0.1-1 ng kg(-)(1). A major subset of such toxins is the NAD(+)-dependent ADP-ribosylating exotoxins, which include pertussis, cholera, and diphtheria toxin. Diphtheria toxin catalyzes the ADP ribosylation of the diphthamide residue of eukaryotic elongation factor 2 (eEF-2). The transition state of ADP ribosylation catalyzed by diphtheria toxin has been characterized by measuring a family of kinetic isotope effects using (3)H-, (14)C-, and (15)N-labeled NAD(+) with purified yeast eEF-2. Isotope trapping experiments yield a commitment to catalysis of 0.24 at saturating eEF-2 concentrations, resulting in suppression of the intrinsic isotope effects. Following correction for the commitment factor, intrinsic primary kinetic isotope effects of 1.055 +/- 0.003 and 1.022 +/- 0.004 were observed for [1(N)'-(14)C]- and [1(N)-(15)N]NAD(+), respectively; the double primary isotope effect was 1.066 +/- 0.004 for [1(N)'-(14)C, 1(N)-(15)N]NAD(+). Secondary kinetic isotope effects of 1.194 +/- 0.002, 1.101 +/- 0.003, 1.013 +/- 0.005, and 0.988 +/- 0.002 were determined for [1(N)'-(3)H]-, [2(N)'-(3)H]-, [4(N)'-(3)H]-, and [5(N)'-(3)H]NAD(+), respectively. The transition state structure was modeled using density functional theory (B1LYP/6-31+G) as implemented in Gaussian 98, and theoretical kinetic isotope effects were subsequently calculated using Isoeff 98. Constraints were varied in a systematic manner until the calculated kinetic isotope effects matched the intrinsic isotope effects. The transition state model most consistent with the intrinsic isotope effects is characterized by the substantial loss in bond order of the nicotinamide leaving group (bond order = 0.18, 1.99 A) and weak participation of the attacking imidazole nucleophile (bond order = 0.03, 2.58 A). The transition state structure imparts strong oxacarbenium ion character to the ribose ring even though significant bond order remains to the nicotinamide leaving group. The transition state model presented here is asymmetric and consistent with a dissociative S(N)1 type mechanism in which attack of the diphthamide nucleophile lags behind departure of the nicotinamide.  相似文献   

10.
The X-ray crystal structures of human purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) with bound inosine or transition-state analogues show His257 within hydrogen bonding distance of the 5'-hydroxyl. The mutants His257Phe, His257Gly, and His257Asp exhibited greatly decreased affinity for Immucillin-H (ImmH), binding this mimic of an early transition state as much as 370-fold (Km/Ki) less tightly than native PNP. In contrast, these mutants bound DADMe-ImmH, a mimic of a late transition state, nearly as well as the native enzyme. These results indicate that His257 serves an important role in the early stages of transition-state formation. Whereas mutation of His257 resulted in little variation in the PNP x DADMe-ImmH x SO4 structures, His257Phe x ImmH x PO4 showed distortion at the 5'-hydroxyl, indicating the importance of H-bonding in positioning this group during progression to the transition state. Binding isotope effect (BIE) and kinetic isotope effect (KIE) studies of the remote 5'-(3)H for the arsenolysis of inosine with native PNP revealed a BIE of 1.5% and an unexpectedly large intrinsic KIE of 4.6%. This result is interpreted as a moderate electronic distortion toward the transition state in the Michaelis complex with continued development of a similar distortion at the transition state. The mutants His257Phe, His257Gly, and His257Asp altered the 5'-(3)H intrinsic KIE to -3, -14, and 7%, respectively, while the BIEs contributed 2, 2, and -2%, respectively. These surprising results establish that forces in the Michaelis complex, reported by the BIEs, can be reversed or enhanced at the transition state.  相似文献   

11.
Werner RM  Stivers JT 《Biochemistry》2000,39(46):14054-14064
The DNA repair enzyme uracil DNA glycosylase catalyzes the first step in the uracil base excision repair pathway, the hydrolytic cleavage of the N-glycosidic bond of deoxyuridine in DNA. Here we report kinetic isotope effect (KIE) measurements that have allowed the determination of the transition-state structure for this important reaction. The small primary (13)C KIE (=1.010 +/- 0.009) and the large secondary alpha-deuterium KIE (=1.201 +/- 0.021) indicate that (i) the glycosidic bond is essentially completely broken in the transition state and (ii) there is significant sp(2) character at the anomeric carbon. Large secondary beta-deuterium KIEs were observed when [2'R-(2)H] = 1.102 +/- 0.011 and [2'S-(2)H] = 1.106 +/- 0.010. The nearly equal and large magnitudes of the two stereospecific beta-deuterium KIEs indicate strong hyperconjugation between the elongated glycosidic bond and both of the C2'-H2' bonds. Geometric interpretation of these beta-deuterium KIEs indicates that the furanose ring adopts a mild 3'-exo sugar pucker in the transition state, as would be expected for maximal stabilization of an oxocarbenium ion. Taken together, these results strongly indicate that the reaction proceeds through a dissociative transition state, with complete dissociation of the uracil anion followed by addition of water. To our knowledge, this is the first transition-state structure determined for enzymatic cleavage of the glycosidic linkage in a pyrimidine deoxyribonucleotide.  相似文献   

12.
Adenosine 5'-phosphate was synthesized with specific heavy atom substitutions to permit measurement of V/K kinetic isotope effects for the N-glycohydrolase activity of the allosteric AMP nucleosidase and the acid-catalyzed solvolysis of these compounds. The effects of allosteric activation on the kinetic isotope effects together with the kinetic mechanism of AMP nucleosidase [DeWolf, W. E., Jr., Emig, F. A., & Schramm, V. L. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 4132-4140] indicate that the kinetic isotope effects are fully expressed. Comparison of individual primary and secondary kinetic isotope effects with combined isotope effects and the isotope effect of the reverse reaction indicated that kinetic isotope effects in AMP nucleosidase arise from a single step in the reaction mechanism. Under these conditions, kinetic isotope effects can be used to interpret transition-state structure for AMP nucleosidase. Changes in kinetic isotope effects occurred as a function of allosteric activator, demonstrating that allosteric activation alters transition-state structure for AMP nucleosidase. Kinetic isotope effects, expressed as [V/K(normal isotope]/[V/K(heavy isotope)], were observed with [2'-2H]AMP (1.061 +/- 0.002), [9-15N]AMP (1.030 +/- 0.003), [1'-2H]AMP (1.045 +/- 0.002), and [1'-14C]AMP (1.035 +/- 0.002) when hydrolyzed by AMP nucleosidase in the absence of MgATP. Addition of MgATP altered the [2'-2H]AMP effect (1.043 +/- 0.002) and the [1'-2H]AMP effect (1.030 +/- 0.003) and caused a smaller decrease of the 14C and 15N effects. Multiple heavy atom substitutions into AMP caused an increase in observed isotope effects to 1.084 +/- 0.004 for [1'-2H,1'-14C]AMP and to 1.058 +/- 0.002 for [9-15N,1'-14C]AMP with the enzyme in the absence of ATP.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
Transition states can be predicted from an enzyme's affinity to related transition-state analogues. 5'-Methylthioadenosine nucleosidases (MTANs) are involved in bacterial quorum sensing pathways and thus are targets for antibacterial drug design. The transition-state characteristics of six MTANs are compared by analyzing dissociation constants (K(d)) with a small array of representative transition-state analogues. These inhibitors mimic early or late dissociative transition states with K(d) values in the picomolar range. Our results indicate that the K(d) ratio for mimics of early and late transition states are useful in distinguishing between these states. By this criterion, the transition states of Neisseria meningitides and Helicobacter pylori MTANs are early dissociative, whereas Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus pneumoniae, and Klebsiella pneumoniae MTANs have late dissociative characters. This conclusion is confirmed independently by the characteristic [1'- (3)H] and [1'- (14)C] kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) of these enzymes. Large [1'- (3)H] and unity [1'- (14)C] KIEs are observed for late dissociative transition states, whereas early dissociative states showed close-to-unity [1'- (3)H] and significant [1'- (14)C] KIEs. K d values of various MTANs for individual transition-state analogues provide tentative information about transition-state structures due to varying catalytic efficiencies of enzymes. Comparing K d ratios for mimics of early and late transition states removes limitations inherent to the enzyme and provides a better predictive tool in discriminating between possible transition-state structures.  相似文献   

14.
[1'-3H]- and [2'-3H]dihydroneopterin triphosphate (NH2TP) were prepared enzymatically from [4-3H]- and [5-3H]glucose and converted to tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) by an extract from bovine adrenal medulla. The formation of BH4 from both [1'-3H]- and [2'-3H]-NH2TP proceeds with virtually complete loss of the respective tritium label. The breaking of the CH-bond at C-1' is characterized by a kinetic isotope effect of 2.6 +/- 0.5. A smaller kinetic isotope effect of 1.5 +/- 0.2 was found for the breaking of the CH-bond at C-2'.  相似文献   

15.
Zhou X  Jin X  Medhekar R  Chen X  Dieckmann T  Toney MD 《Biochemistry》2001,40(5):1367-1377
The two half-reactions of the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP)-dependent enzyme dialkylglycine decarboxylase (DGD) were studied individually by multiwavelength stopped-flow spectroscopy. Biphasic behavior was found for the reactions of DGD-PLP, consistent with two coexisting conformations observed in steady-state kinetics [Zhou, X., and Toney, M. D. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 5761--5769]. The half-reaction kinetic parameters depend on alkali metal ion size in a manner similar to that observed for steady-state kinetic parameters. The fast phase maximal rate constant for the 2-aminoisobutyrate (AIB) decarboxylation half-reaction with the potassium form of DGD-PLP is 25 s(-1), while that for the transamination half-reaction between DGD-PMP and pyruvate is 75 s(-1). The maximal rate constant for the transamination half-reaction of the potassium form of DGD-PLP with L-alanine is 24 s(-1). The spectral data indicate that external aldimine formation with either AIB or L-alanine and DGD-PLP is a rapid equilibrium process, as is ketimine formation from DGD-PMP and pyruvate. Absorption ascribable to the quinonoid intermediate is not observed in the AIB decarboxylation half-reaction, but is observed in the dead-time of the stopped-flow in the L-alanine transamination half-reaction. The [1-(13)C]AIB kinetic isotope effect (KIE) on k(cat) for the steady-state reaction is 1.043 +/- 0.003, while a value of 1.042 +/- 0.009 was measured for the AIB half-reaction. The secondary KIE measured for the AIB decarboxylation half-reaction with [C4'-(2)H]PLP is 0.92 +/- 0.02. The primary [2-(2)H]-L-alanine KIE on the transamination half-reaction is unity. Small but significant solvent KIEs are observed on k(cat) and k(cat)/K(M) for both substrates, and the proton inventories are linear in each case. NMR measurements of C2--H washout vs product formation give ratios of 105 and 14 with L-alanine and isopropylamine as substrates, respectively. These results support a rate-limiting, concerted C alpha-decarboxylation/C4'-protonation mechanism for the AIB decarboxylation reaction, and rapid equilibrium quinonoid formation followed by rate-limiting protonation to the ketimine intermediate for the L-alanine transamination half-reaction. Energy profiles for the two half-reactions are constructed.  相似文献   

16.
Immucillin-H [ImmH; (1S)-1-(9-deazahypoxanthin-9-yl)-1,4-dideoxy-1,4-imino-D-ribitol] is a 23 pM inhibitor of bovine purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) specifically designed as a transition state mimic [Miles, R. W., Tyler, P. C., Furneaux, R. H., Bagdassarian, C. K., and Schramm, V. L. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 8615-8621]. Cocrystals of PNP and the inhibitor are used to provide structural information for each step through the reaction coordinate of PNP. The X-ray crystal structure of free ImmH was solved at 0.9 A resolution, and a complex of PNP.ImmH.PO(4) was solved at 1.5 A resolution. These structures are compared to previously reported complexes of PNP with substrate and product analogues in the catalytic sites and with the experimentally determined transition state structure. Upon binding, ImmH is distorted to a conformation favoring ribosyl oxocarbenium ion formation. Ribosyl destabilization and transition state stabilization of the ribosyl oxocarbenium ion occur from neighboring group interactions with the phosphate anion and the 5'-hydroxyl of the ribosyl group. Leaving group activation of hypoxanthine involves hydrogen bonds to O6, N1, and N7 of the purine ring. Ordered water molecules provide a proton transfer bridge to O6 and N7 and permit reversible formation of these hydrogen bonds. Contacts between PNP and catalytic site ligands are shorter in the transition state analogue complex of PNP.ImmH.PO(4) than in the Michaelis complexes of PNP.inosine.SO(4) or PNP.hypoxanthine.ribose 1-PO(4). Reaction coordinate motion is dominated by translation of the carbon 1' of ribose between relatively fixed phosphate and purine groups. Purine and pyrimidine phosphoribosyltransferases and nucleoside N-ribosyl hydrolases appear to operate by a similar mechanism.  相似文献   

17.
rihC is one of a group of three ribonucleoside hydrolases found in Escherichia coli (E. coli). The enzyme catalyzes the hydrolysis of selected nucleosides to ribose and the corresponding base. A family of Vmax/Km kinetic isotope effects using uridine labeled with stable isotopes, such as 2H, 13C, and 15N, were determined by liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (LC/MS). The kinetic isotope effects were 1.012+/-0.006, 1.027+/-0.005, 1.134+/-0.007, 1.122+/-0.008, and 1.002+/-0.004 for [1'-13C], [1-15N], [1'-2H], [2'-2H], and [5'-2H2] uridine, respectively. A transition state based upon a bond-energy bond-order vibrational analysis (BEBOVIB) of the observed kinetic isotope effects is proposed. The main features of this transition state are activation of the heterocyclic base by protonation of/or hydrogen bonding to O2, an extensively broken C-N glycosidic bond, formation of an oxocarbenium ion in the ribose ring, C3'-exo ribose ring conformation, and almost no bond formation to the attacking nucleophile. The proposed transition state for the prokaryotic E. coli nucleoside hydrolase is compared to that of a similar enzyme isolated from Crithidia fasciculata (C. fasciculata).  相似文献   

18.
Purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) and hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HGPRTase) catalyze N-ribosidic bond cleavage in purine nucleosides and nucleotides, with addition of phosphate or pyrophosphate to form phosphorylated alpha-D-ribose products. The transition states have oxacarbenium ion character with a positive charge near 1'-C and ionic stabilization from nearby phosphoryl anions. Immucillin-H (ImmH) and Immucillin-H 5'-PO(4) (ImmHP) resemble the transition state charge when protonated at 4'-N and bind tightly to these enzymes with K(d) values of 20 pM to 1 nM. It has been proposed that Immucillins bind as the 4'-N neutral form and are protonated in the slow-onset step. Solution and solid-state NMR spectra of ImmH, ImmHP, guanosine, and GMP in complexes with two PNPs and a HGPRTase have been used to characterize their ionization states. Results with PNP*ImmH*PO(4) and HGPRTase*ImmHP*MgPP(i) indicate protonation at N-4' for the tightly bound inhibitors. The 1'-(13)C and 1'-(1)H resonances of bound Immucillins showed large downfield shifts as compared to Michaelis complexes, suggesting distortion of 1'-C toward sp(2) geometry. The Immucillins act as transition state mimics by binding with neutral iminoribitol groups followed by 4'-N protonation during slow-onset inhibition to form carbocationic mimics of the transition states. The ability of the Immucillins to mimic both substrate and transition state features contributes to their capture of transition state binding energy. Enzyme-activated phosphoryl nucleophiles bound to PNP and HGPRTase suggest enhanced electrostatic stabilization of the cationic transition states. Distortion of the oxacarbenium ion mimic toward transition state geometry is a common feature of the three distinct enzymatic complexes analyzed here. Substrate complexes, even in catalytically cycling equilibrium mixtures, do not reveal similar distortions.  相似文献   

19.
Immucillins are logically designed transition-state analogue inhibitors of mammalian purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) that induce purine-less death of Plasmodium falciparum in cultured erythrocytes (Kicska, G. A., Tyler, P. C., Evans, G. B., Furneaux, R. H., Schramm, V. L., and Kim, K. (2002) J. Biol. Chem. 277, 3226-3231). PNP is present at high levels in human erythrocytes and in P. falciparum, but the Plasmodium enzyme has not been characterized. A search of the P. falciparum genome data base yielded an open reading frame similar to the PNP from Escherichia coli. PNP from P. falciparum (P. falciparum PNP) was cloned, overexpressed in E. coli, purified, and characterized. The primary amino acid sequence has 26% identity with E. coli PNP, has 20% identity with human PNP, and is phylogenetically unique among known PNPs with equal genetic distance between PNPs and uridine phosphorylases. Recombinant P. falciparum PNP is catalytically active for inosine and guanosine but is less active for uridine. The immucillins are powerful inhibitors of P. falciparum PNP. Immucillin-H is a slow onset tight binding inhibitor with a K(i)* value of 0.6 nm. Eight related immucillins are also powerful inhibitors with dissociation constants from 0.9 to 20 nm. The K(m)/K(i)* value for immucillin-H is 9000, making this inhibitor the most powerful yet reported for P. falciparum PNP. The PNP from P. falciparum differs from the human enzyme by a lower K(m) for inosine, decreased preference for deoxyguanosine, and reduced affinity for the immucillins, with the exception of 5'-deoxy-immucillin-H. These properties of P. falciparum PNP are consistent with a metabolic role in purine salvage and provide an explanation for the antibiotic effect of the immucillins on P. falciparum cultured in human erythrocytes.  相似文献   

20.
Wang GP  Hansen MR  Grubmeyer C 《Biochemistry》2012,51(22):4406-4415
Residue-to-alanine mutations and a two-amino acid deletion have been made in the highly conserved catalytic loop (residues 100-109) of Salmonella typhimurium OMP synthase (orotate phosphoribosyltransferase, EC 2.4.2.10). As described previously, the K103A mutant enzyme exhibited a 10(4)-fold decrease in k(cat)/K(M) for PRPP; the K100A enzyme suffered a 50-fold decrease. Alanine mutations at His105 and Glu107 produced 40- and 7-fold decreases in k(cat)/K(M), respectively, and E101A, D104A, and G106A were slightly faster than the wild-type (WT) in terms of k(cat), with minor effects on k(cat)/K(M). Equilibrium binding of OMP or PRPP in binary complexes was affected little by loop mutation, suggesting that the energetics of ground-state binding have little contribution from the catalytic loop, or that a favorable binding energy is offset by costs of loop reorganization. Pre-steady-state kinetics for mutants showed that K103A and E107A had lost the burst of product formation in each direction that indicated rapid on-enzyme chemistry for WT, but that the burst was retained by H105A. Δ102Δ106, a loop-shortened enzyme with Ala102 and Gly106 deleted, showed a 10(4)-fold reduction of k(cat) but almost unaltered K(D) values for all four substrate molecules. The 20% (i.e., 1.20) intrinsic [1'-(3)H]OMP kinetic isotope effect (KIE) for WT is masked because of high forward and reverse commitment factors. K103A failed to express intrinsic KIEs fully (1.095 ± 0.013). In contrast, H105A, which has a smaller catalytic lesion, gave a [1'-(3)H]OMP KIE of 1.21 ± 0.0005, and E107A (1.179 ± 0.0049) also gave high values. These results are interpreted in the context of the X-ray structure of the complete substrate complex for the enzyme [Grubmeyer, C., Hansen, M. R., Fedorov, A. A., and Almo, S. C. (2012) Biochemistry 51 (preceding paper in this issue, DOI 10.1021/bi300083p )]. The full expression of KIEs by H105A and E107A may result from a less secure closure of the catalytic loop. The lower level of expression of the KIE by K103A suggests that in these mutant proteins the major barrier to catalysis is successful closure of the catalytic loop, which when closed, produces rapid and reversible catalysis.  相似文献   

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