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1.
Ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) catalyzes the first committed step in the biosynthesis of polyamines, and it has been identified as a drug target for the treatment of African sleeping sickness, caused by Trypanosoma brucei. ODC is a pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP) dependent enzyme and an obligate homodimer. X-ray structural analysis of the complex of the T. brucei wild-type enzyme with the product putrescine reveals two structural changes that occur upon ligand binding: Lys-69 is displaced by putrescine and forms new interactions with Glu-94 and Asp-88, and the side chain of Cys-360 rotates into the active site to within 3.4 A of the imine bond. Mutation of Cys-360 to Ala or Ser reduces the k(cat) of the decarboxylation reaction by 50- and 1000-fold, respectively. However, HPLC analysis of the products demonstrates that the mutant enzymes almost exclusively catalyze a decarboxylation-dependent transamination reaction to form pyridoxamine 5-phosphate (PMP) and gamma-aminobutyraldehyde, instead of PLP and putrescine. This side reaction arises when the decarboxylated substrate intermediate is protonated at C4' of PLP instead of at the C(alpha) of substrate. For the reaction catalyzed by the wild-type enzyme, this side reaction occurs infrequently (<0.01% of the turnovers). Single turnover analysis and multiwavelength stopped-flow spectroscopic studies suggest that for the mutant ODCs protonation at C4' occurs either very rapidly or in a concerted reaction with decarboxylation and that the rate-limiting step in the steady-state reaction is Schiff base hydrolysis/product release. These studies demonstrate a role for Cys-360 in the control of the C(alpha) protonation step that catalyzes the formation of the physiological product putrescine. The results further provide insight into the mechanism by which this class of PLP-dependent enzymes controls reaction specificity.  相似文献   

2.
Xiong H  Stanley BA  Pegg AE 《Biochemistry》1999,38(8):2462-2470
S-Adenosylmethionine decarboxylase is a pyruvate-dependent enzyme. The enzyme forms a Schiff base with substrate, S-adenosylmethionine, through the pyruvoyl moiety. This facilitates the release of CO2 from the substrate, which must then be protonated on the alpha carbon in order to permit hydrolysis of the Schiff base to release the product. The catalytic mechanism of human S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase was investigated via mutagenic and kinetic approaches. The results of enzyme kinetic studies indicated that Cys-82 is a crucial residue for activity and this residue has a basic pKa. Iodoacetic acid inhibited wild-type enzyme activity in a time- and pH-dependent manner but did not affect the already reduced activity of mutant C82A. Reaction of this mutant with iodoacetic acid led to approximately one less mole of reagent being incorporated per mole of enzyme alphabeta dimer than with wild-type S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase. Both wild-type and C82A mutant S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylases were inactivated by substrate-mediated transamination, but this reaction occurred much more frequently with C82A than with wild-type enzyme. A major proportion of the recombinant C82A mutant protein was in the transaminated form in which the pyruvoyl cofactor is converted into alanine. This suggests that incorrect protonation of the pyruvate, rather than the substrate, occurs much more readily when Cys-82 is altered. On the basis of these results, it was postulated that residue Cys-82 may be the proton donor of the decarboxylation reaction catalyzed by S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase.  相似文献   

3.
Clyne T  Kinch LN  Phillips MA 《Biochemistry》2002,41(44):13207-13216
S-Adenosylmethionine decarboxylase (AdoMetDC) is a pyruvoyl-dependent enzyme that is processed from a single polypeptide into two subunits creating the cofactor. In the human enzyme, both the proenzyme processing reaction and enzyme activity are stimulated by the polyamine putrescine. The processing reaction of Trypanosoma cruzi AdoMetDC was studied in an in vitro translation system. The enzyme was fully processed in the absence of putrescine, and the rate of this reaction was not stimulated by addition of the polyamine. Residues in the putrescine binding site of the human enzyme were evaluated for their role in processing of the T. cruzi enzyme. The E15A, I80K/S178E, D174A, and E256A mutant T. cruzi enzymes were fully processed. In contrast, mutation of R13 to Leu (the equivalent residue in the human enzyme) abolished processing of the T. cruzi enzyme, demonstrating that Arg at position 13 is a major determinant for proenzyme processing in the parasite enzyme. This amino acid change is a key structural difference that is likely to be a factor in the finding that putrescine has no role in processing of the T. cruzi enzyme. In contrast, the activity of T. cruzi AdoMetDC is stimulated by putrescine. Equilibrium sedimentation experiments demonstrated that putrescine does not alter the oligomeric state of the enzyme. The putrescine binding constant for binding to the T. cruzi enzyme (K(d) = 150 microM) was measured by a fluorescence assay and by ultrafiltration with a radiolabeled ligand. The mutant T. cruzi enzyme D174V no longer binds putrescine, and is not activated by the diamine. In contrast, mutation of E15, S178, E256, and I80 had no effect on putrescine binding. The k(cat)/K(m) values for E15A and E256A mutants were stimulated by putrescine to a smaller extent than the wild-type enzyme (2- and 4-fold vs 11-fold, respectively). These data suggest that the putrescine binding site on the T. cruzi enzyme contains only limited elements (D174) in common with the human enzyme and that the diamine plays different roles in the function of the mammalian and parasite enzymes.  相似文献   

4.
Ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) is a pyridoxal-5'-phosphate-dependent (PLP) enzyme that catalyzes the biosynthesis of the polyamine putrescine. Similar to other PLP-dependent enzymes, an active site Lys residue forms a Schiff base with PLP in the absence of substrate. The mechanistic role of this residue (Lys-69) in catalysis by Trypanosoma brucei ODC has been studied by analysis of the mutant enzymes, in which Lys-69 has been replaced by Arg (K69R ODC) and Ala (K69A ODC). Analysis of K69A ODC demonstrated that the enzyme copurified with amines (e.g. putrescine) that were tightly bound to the active site through a Schiff base with PLP. In contrast, on the basis of an absorption spectrum of K69R ODC, PLP is likely to be bound to this mutant enzyme in the aldehyde form. Pre-steady-state kinetic analysis of the reaction of K69R ODC with L-Orn and putrescine demonstrated that the rates of both the product release (k(off.Put) = 0.0041 s(-)(1)) and the decarboxylation (k(decarb) = 0.016 s(-)(1)) steps were decreased by10(4)-fold in comparison to wild-type ODC. Further, the rates of Schiff base formation between K69R ODC and either substrate or product have decreased by at least 10(3)-fold. Product release remains as the dominant rate-limiting step in the reaction (the steady-state parameters for K69R ODC are k(cat) = 0.0031 s(-)(1) and K(m) = 0.18 mM). The effect of mutating Lys-69 on the decarboxylation step suggests that Lys-69 may play a role in the proper positioning of the alpha-carboxylate for efficient decarboxylation. K69R ODC binds diamines and amino acids with higher affinity than the wild-type enzyme; however, Lys-69 does not mediate substrate specificity. Wild-type and K69R ODC have similar ligand specificity preferring to bind putrescine over longer and shorter diamines. Kinetic analysis of the binding of a series of diamines and amino acids to K69R ODC suggests that noncovalent interactions in the active site of K69R ODC promote selective ligand binding during Schiff base formation.  相似文献   

5.
L M Abell  M H O'Leary 《Biochemistry》1988,27(9):3325-3330
The nitrogen isotope effect on the decarboxylation of glutamic acid by glutamate decarboxylase from Escherichia coli has been measured by comparison of the isotopic composition of the amino nitrogen of the product gamma-aminobutyric acid isolated after 10-20% reaction with that of the starting glutamic acid. At pH 4.7, 37 degrees C, the isotope effect is k14/k15 = 0.9855 +/- 0.0006 when compared to unprotonated glutamic acid. Interpretation of this result requires knowledge of the equilibrium nitrogen isotope effect for Schiff base formation. This equilibrium isotope effect is k14/k15 = 0.9824 for the formation of the unprotonated Schiff base between unprotonated valine and salicylaldehyde. Analysis of the nitrogen isotope effect on decarboxylation of glutamic acid and of the previously measured carbon isotope effect on this same reaction [O'Leary, M.H., Yamada, H., & Yapp, C.J. (1981) Biochemistry 20, 1476] shows that decarboxylation and Schiff base formation are jointly rate limiting. The enzyme-bound Schiff base between glutamate and pyridoxal 5'-phosphate partitions approximately 2:1 between decarboxylation and return to the starting state. The nitrogen isotope effect also reveals that the Schiff base nitrogen is protonated in this intermediate.  相似文献   

6.
S-Adenosylmethionine decarboxylase (AdoMetDC) is a pyruvoyl-dependent enzyme that catalyzes an essential step in polyamine biosynthesis. The polyamines are required for cell growth, and the biosynthetic enzymes are targets for antiproliferative drugs. The function of AdoMetDC is regulated by the polyamine-precursor putrescine in a species-specific manner. AdoMetDC from the protozoal parasite Trypanosoma cruzi requires putrescine for maximal enzyme activity, but not for processing to generate the pyruvoyl cofactor. The putrescine-binding site is distant from the active site, suggesting a mechanism of allosteric regulation. To probe the structural basis by which putrescine stimulates T. cruzi AdoMetDC we generated mutations in both the putrescine-binding site and the enzyme active site. The catalytic efficiency of the mutant enzymes, and the binding of the diamidine inhibitors, CGP 48664A and CGP 40215, were analyzed. Putrescine stimulates the k(cat)/K(m) for wild-type T. cruzi AdoMetDC by 27-fold, and it stimulates the binding of both inhibitors (IC(50)s decrease 10-20-fold with putrescine). Unexpectedly CGP 48664A activated the T. cruzi enzyme at low concentrations (0.1-10 microM), while at higher concentrations (>100 microM), or in the presence of putrescine, inhibition was observed. Analysis of the mutant data suggests that this inhibitor binds both the putrescine-binding site and the active site, providing evidence that the putrescine-binding site of the T. cruzi enzyme has broad ligand specificity. Mutagenesis of the active site identified residues that are important for putrescine stimulation of activity (F7 and T245), while none of the active site mutations altered the apparent putrescine-binding constant. Mutations of residues in the putrescine-binding site that resulted in reduced (S111R) and enhanced (F285H) catalytic efficiency were both identified. These data provide evidence for coupling between residues in the putrescine-binding site and the active site, consistent with a mechanism of allosteric regulation.  相似文献   

7.
S-Adenosylmethionine decarboxylase (AdoMetDC) is a pyruvoyl cofactor-dependent enzyme that participates in polyamine biosynthesis. AdoMetDC from the Archaea Methanococcus jannaschii is a prototype for a recently discovered class that is not homologous to the eucaryotic enzymes or to a distinct group of microbial enzymes. M. jannaschii AdoMetDC has a Km of 95 microm and the turnover number (kcat) of 0.0075 s(-1) at pH 7.5 and 22 degrees C. The turnover number increased approximately 38-fold at a more physiological temperature of 80 degrees C. AdoMetDC was inactivated by treatment with the imine reductant NaCNBH3 only in the presence of substrate. Mass spectrometry of the inactivated protein showed modification solely of the pyruvoyl-containing subunit, with a mass increase corresponding to reduction of a Schiff base adduct with decarboxylated AdoMet. The presteady state time course of the AdoMetDC reaction revealed a burst of product formation; thus, a step after CO2 formation is rate-limiting in turnover. Comparable D2O kinetic isotope effects of were seen on the first turnover (1.9) and on kcat/Km (1.6); there was not a significant D2O isotope effect on kcat, suggesting that product release is rate-limiting in turnover. The pH dependence of the steady state rate showed participation of acid and basic groups with pK values of 5.3 and 8.2 for kcat and 6.5 and 8.3 for kcat/Km, respectively. The competitive inhibitor methylglyoxal bis(guanylhydrazone) binds at a single site per (alphabeta) heterodimer. UV spectroscopic studies show that methylglyoxal bis(guanylhydrazone) binds as the dication with a 23 microm dissociation constant. Studies with substrate analogs show a high specificity for AdoMet.  相似文献   

8.
The crenarchaeon Sulfolobus solfataricus uses arginine to produce putrescine for polyamine biosynthesis. However, genome sequences from S. solfataricus and most crenarchaea have no known homologs of the previously characterized pyridoxal 5'-phosphate or pyruvoyl-dependent arginine decarboxylases that catalyze the first step in this pathway. Instead they have two paralogs of the S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase (AdoMetDC). The gene at locus SSO0585 produces an AdoMetDC enzyme, whereas the gene at locus SSO0536 produces a novel arginine decarboxylase (ArgDC). Both thermostable enzymes self-cleave at conserved serine residues to form amino-terminal beta-domains and carboxyl-terminal alpha-domains with reactive pyruvoyl cofactors. The ArgDC enzyme specifically catalyzed arginine decarboxylation more efficiently than previously studied pyruvoyl enzymes. alpha-Difluoromethylarginine significantly reduced the ArgDC activity of purified enzyme, and treating growing S. solfataricus cells with this inhibitor reduced the cells' ratio of spermidine to norspermine by decreasing the putrescine pool. The crenarchaeal ArgDC had no AdoMetDC activity, whereas its AdoMetDC paralog had no ArgDC activity. A chimeric protein containing the beta-subunit of SSO0536 and the alpha-subunit of SSO0585 had ArgDC activity, implicating residues responsible for substrate specificity in the amino-terminal domain. This crenarchaeal ArgDC is the first example of alternative substrate specificity in the AdoMetDC family. ArgDC activity has evolved through convergent evolution at least five times, demonstrating the utility of this enzyme and the plasticity of amino acid decarboxylases.  相似文献   

9.
L M Abell  M H O'Leary 《Biochemistry》1988,27(16):5927-5933
The pyridoxal 5'-phosphate dependent histidine decarboxylase from Morganella morganii shows a nitrogen isotope effect k14/k15 = 0.9770 +/- 0.0021, a carbon isotope effect k12/k13 = 1.0308 +/- 0.0006, and a carbon isotope effect for L-[alpha-2H]histidine of 1.0333 +/- 0.0001 at pH 6.3, 37 degrees C. These results indicate that the overall decarboxylation rate is limited jointly by the rate of Schiff base interchange and by the rate of decarboxylation. Although the observed isotope effects are quite different from those for the analogous glutamate decarboxylase from Escherichia coli [Abell, L. M., & O'Leary, M. H. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 3325], the intrinsic isotope effects for the two enzymes are essentially the same. The difference in observed isotope effects occurs because of a roughly twofold difference in the partitioning of the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate-substrate Schiff base between decarboxylation and Schiff base interchange. The observed nitrogen isotope effect requires that the imine nitrogen in this Schiff base is protonated. Comparison of carbon isotope effects for deuteriated and undeuteriated substrates reveals that the deuterium isotope effect on the decarboxylation step is about 1.20; thus, in the transition state for the decarboxylation step, the carbon-carbon bond is about two-thirds broken.  相似文献   

10.
Polyamines are ubiquitous cellular components that are involved in normal and neoplastic growth. Polyamine biosynthesis is very highly regulated in mammalian cells by the activities of two key decarboxylases acting on ornithine and S-adenosylmethionine. Recent studies, which include crystallographic analysis of the recombinant human proteins, have provided a detailed knowledge of their structure and function. Ornithine decarboxylase is a PLP-requiring decarboxylase, whereas S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase (AdoMetDC) contains a covalently bound pyruvate prosthetic group. Both enzymes have a key cysteine residue, which is involved in protonation of the Schiff base intermediate C(alpha) to form the product. These residues, Cys360 in ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) and Cys82 in AdoMetDC, react readily with nitric oxide (NO), which is therefore a potent inactivator of polyamine synthesis. The inactivation of these enzymes may mediate some of the antiproliferative actions of NO.  相似文献   

11.
BACKGROUND: S-Adenosylmethionine decarboxylase (AdoMetDC) is a critical regulatory enzyme of the polyamine synthetic pathway, and a well-studied drug target. The AdoMetDC decarboxylation reaction depends upon a pyruvoyl cofactor generated via an intramolecular proenzyme self-cleavage reaction. Both the proenzyme-processing and substrate-decarboxylation reactions are allosterically enhanced by putrescine. Structural elucidation of this enzyme is necessary to fully interpret the existing mutational and inhibitor-binding data, and to suggest further experimental studies. RESULTS: The structure of human AdoMetDC has been determined to 2.25 A resolution using multiwavelength anomalous diffraction (MAD) phasing methods based on 22 selenium-atom positions. The quaternary structure of the mature AdoMetDC is an (alpha beta)2 dimer, where alpha and beta represent the products of the proenzyme self-cleavage reaction. The architecture of each (alpha beta) monomer is a novel four-layer alpha/beta-sandwich fold, comprised of two antiparallel eight-stranded beta sheets flanked by several alpha and 3(10) helices. CONCLUSIONS: The structure and topology of AdoMetDC display internal symmetry, suggesting that this protein may be the product of an ancient gene duplication. The positions of conserved, functionally important residues suggest the location of the active site and a possible binding site for the effector molecule putrescine.  相似文献   

12.
S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase (AdoMetDC) is a key enzyme in the biosynthesis of the polyamines spermidine and spermine. Polyamines are ubiquitous organic cations that are absolutely required for normal cell proliferation and differentiation. AdoMetDC catalyzes decarboxylation of S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet) which provides aminopropyl groups for spermidine and spermine synthesis. Mammalian AdoMetDC is produced as a proenzyme (38 kDa) which is cleaved to form the alpha (30.7 kDa) and beta (7.7 kDa) subunits of the mature enzyme. It is here shown that the catalytic activity of the enzyme was completely eliminated when lysine 12 was mutated to an arginine residue in the small subunit; however, the proenzyme processing was not affected. On the other hand, mutations of other lysine residues (Lys45-->Arg and Lys56-->Arg) did not affect either the enzyme activity or the proenzyme processing. Structure analysis using Swiss Deep Viewer v3.7 has indicated that Arg in place of Lys12 may eliminate AdoMetDC activity by restricting the mobility of Thr85 through hydrogen bonding. Sequence alignment of various AdoMetDC sequences indicated that Thr85 is in a highly conserved region, suggesting that Thr85 is critical for the decarboxylation reaction.  相似文献   

13.
Silva RG  Schramm VL 《Biochemistry》2011,50(42):9158-9166
The reversible phosphorolysis of uridine to generate uracil and ribose 1-phosphate is catalyzed by uridine phosphorylase and is involved in the pyrimidine salvage pathway. We define the reaction mechanism of uridine phosphorylase from Trypanosoma cruzi by steady-state and pre-steady-state kinetics, pH-rate profiles, kinetic isotope effects from uridine, and solvent deuterium isotope effects. Initial rate and product inhibition patterns suggest a steady-state random kinetic mechanism. Pre-steady-state kinetics indicated no rate-limiting step after formation of the enzyme-products ternary complex, as no burst in product formation is observed. The limiting single-turnover rate constant equals the steady-state turnover number; thus, chemistry is partially or fully rate limiting. Kinetic isotope effects with [1'-(3)H]-, [1'-(14)C]-, and [5'-(14)C,1,3-(15)N(2)]uridine gave experimental values of (α-T)(V/K)(uridine) = 1.063, (14)(V/K)(uridine) = 1.069, and (15,β-15)(V/K)(uridine) = 1.018, in agreement with an A(N)D(N) (S(N)2) mechanism where chemistry contributes significantly to the overall rate-limiting step of the reaction. Density functional theory modeling of the reaction in gas phase supports an A(N)D(N) mechanism. Solvent deuterium kinetic isotope effects were unity, indicating that no kinetically significant proton transfer step is involved at the transition state. In this N-ribosyl transferase, proton transfer to neutralize the leaving group is not part of transition state formation, consistent with an enzyme-stabilized anionic uracil as the leaving group. Kinetic analysis as a function of pH indicates one protonated group essential for catalysis and for substrate binding.  相似文献   

14.
Homoisocitrate dehydrogenase (HIcDH, 3-carboxy-2-hydroxyadipate dehydrogenase) catalyzes the fourth reaction of the alpha-aminoadipate pathway for lysine biosynthesis, the conversion of homoisocitrate to alpha-ketoadipate using NAD as an oxidizing agent. A chemical mechanism for HIcDH is proposed on the basis of the pH dependence of kinetic parameters, dissociation constants for competitive inhibitors, and isotope effects. According to the pH-rate profiles, two enzyme groups act as acid-base catalysts in the reaction. A group with a p K a of approximately 6.5-7 acts as a general base accepting a proton as the beta-hydroxy acid is oxidized to the beta-keto acid, and this residue participates in all three of the chemical steps, acting to shuttle a proton between the C2 hydroxyl and itself. The second group acts as a general acid with a p K a of 9.5 and likely catalyzes the tautomerization step by donating a proton to the enol to give the final product. The general acid is observed in only the V pH-rate profile with homoisocitrate as a substrate, but not with isocitrate as a substrate, because the oxidative decarboxylation portion of the isocitrate reaction is limiting overall. With isocitrate as the substrate, the observed primary deuterium and (13)C isotope effects indicate that hydride transfer and decarboxylation steps contribute to rate limitation, and that the decarboxylation step is the more rate-limiting of the two. The multiple-substrate deuterium/ (13)C isotope effects suggest a stepwise mechanism with hydride transfer preceding decarboxylation. With homoisocitrate as the substrate, no primary deuterium isotope effect was observed, and a small (13)C kinetic isotope effect (1.0057) indicates that the decarboxylation step contributes only slightly to rate limitation. Thus, the chemical steps do not contribute significantly to rate limitation with the native substrate. On the basis of data from solvent deuterium kinetic isotope effects, viscosity effects, and multiple-solvent deuterium/ (13)C kinetic isotope effects, the proton transfer step(s) is slow and likely reflects a conformational change prior to catalysis.  相似文献   

15.
L M Abell  M H O'Leary 《Biochemistry》1988,27(16):5933-5939
The decarboxylation of histidine by the pyruvate-dependent histidine decarboxylase of Lactobacillus 30a shows a carbon isotope effect of k12/k13 = 1.0334 +/- 0.0005 and a nitrogen isotope effect k14/k15 = 0.9799 +/- 0.0006 at pH 4.8, 37 degrees C. The carbon isotope effect is slightly increased by deuteriation of the substrate and slightly decreased in D2O. The observed nitrogen isotope effect indicates that the imine nitrogen in the substrate-Schiff base intermediate complex is ordinarily protonated, and the pH dependence of the carbon isotope effect indicates that both protonated and unprotonated forms of this intermediate are capable of undergoing decarboxylation. As with the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate dependent enzyme, Schiff base formation and decarboxylation are jointly rate-limiting, with the intermediate histidine-pyruvate Schiff base showing a decarboxylation/Schiff base hydrolysis ratio of 0.5-1.0 at pH 4.8. The decarboxylation transition state is more reactant-like for the pyruvate-dependent enzyme than for the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate dependent enzyme. These studies find no particular energetic or catalytic advantage to the use of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate over covalently bound pyruvate in catalysis of the decarboxylation of histidine.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Effect of vanadate and pyridoxal phosphate on S-adenosylmethionine   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Vanadate in the presence of pyridoxal phosphate promotes the decarboxylation of S-adenosylmethionine. Pyridoxal has a lower effect; pyridoxine none. The rate of decarboxylation depends on pyridoxal phosphate and vanadate concentration. Vanadate as low as 10(-7) M gives significant decarboxylation. The reaction seems to occur through the formation of a Schiff base. The spectral shift elicited by S-adenosylmethionine on pyridoxal phosphate due to the presence of the sulfonium function is influenced by vanadate. Orthovanadate is a little less effective then metavanadate; vanadyl sulfate is even less efficient, and the effect of Cu2+ at the same concentration is still lower. Bleomycin partially prevents the vanadium effect. In vivo, vanadate promotes a marked increase in chicken liver S-adenosylmethionine and S-adenosylhomocysteine concentration, whereas the polyamine concentration is unaffected.  相似文献   

18.
Trypanosoma brucei brucei contained a S-adenosyl-L-methionine decarboxylase (AdoMetDC) strongly activated by putrescine. The enzyme was also activated to a lesser extent by cadaverine and 1,3-diaminopropane. Spermidine and spermine had no effect on basal activity of the enzyme. However, they interfered with putrescine activation of trypanosomal AdoMetDC. The trypanosomal enzyme could not be precipitated with antiserum against human AdoMetDC. The trypanosomal AdoMetDC enzyme subunit was labeled by reaction with 35S-decarboxylated AdoMet in the presence of NaCNBH4, and found to have a molecular weight of 34 kDa on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The subunit was readily degraded on storage to a form with a molecular weight of 26 kDa. The specificity of labeling of AdoMetDC by this procedure was confirmed by the prevention of 35S-decarboxylated S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet) binding in the presence of specific AdoMetDC inhibitors [either methylglyoxal bis(guanylhydrazone (MGBG), a reversible inhibitor, or 5-deoxy-5-[(2-hydrazinoethyl)methylamino]adenosine (MHZEA), an irreversible inactivator]. As compared to human AdoMetDC, the trypanosomal enzyme showed weaker binding to a column of MGBG-Sepharose and also was significantly less sensitive to inhibition by MGBG and its congener ethylglyoxal bis(guanylhydrazone) (EGBG). Thus, the trypanosomal AdoMetDC differs significantly from its mammalian and bacterial counterparts and may therefore be exploited as a specific target for chemotherapy of trypanosomiasis.  相似文献   

19.
Treatment of Ehrlich ascites-tumour cells with 1-amino-oxy-3-aminopropane (AOAP), a potent inhibitor of ornithine decarboxylase, resulted in a marked decrease in cellular contents of putrescine and spermidine, concomitant with an arrest of cell growth. The activity of S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase (AdoMetDC) was greatly increased in cells treated with AOAP. This increase in AdoMetDC activity was shown to be, at least partly, caused by enhanced synthesis of the enzyme, which most likely was induced by the change in cellular polyamine content.  相似文献   

20.
S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase (AdoMetDC) is a critical enzyme in the polyamine biosynthetic pathway and a subject of many structural and biochemical investigations for anti-cancer and anti-parasitic therapy. The enzyme undergoes an internal serinolysis reaction as a post-translational modification to generate the active site pyruvoyl group for the decarboxylation process. The crystal structures of AdoMetDC from Homo sapiens, Solanum tuberosum, Thermotoga maritima, and Aquifex aeolicus have been determined. Numerous crystal structures of human AdoMetDC and mutants have provided insights into the mechanism of autoprocessing, putrescine activation, substrate specificity, and inhibitor design to the enzyme. The comparison of the human and potato enzyme with the T. maritima and A. aeolicus enzymes supports the hypothesis that the eukaryotic enzymes evolved by gene duplication and fusion. The residues implicated in processing and activity are structurally conserved in all forms of the enzyme, suggesting a divergent evolution of AdoMetDC.  相似文献   

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