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1.
The origin of reaction and substrate specificity and the control of activity by protein-protein interaction are investigated using the tryptophan synthase alpha 2 beta 2 complex from Salmonella typhimurium. We have compared some spectroscopic and kinetic properties of the wild type beta subunit and five mutant forms of the beta subunit that have altered catalytic properties. These mutant enzymes, which were engineered by site-directed mutagenesis, have single amino acid replacements in either the active site or in the wall of a tunnel that extends from the active site of the alpha subunit to the active site of the beta subunit in the alpha 2 beta 2 complex. We find that the mutant alpha 2 beta 2 complexes have altered reaction and substrate specificity in beta-elimination and beta-replacement reactions with L-serine and with beta-chloro-L-alanine. Moreover, the mutant enzymes, unlike the wild type alpha 2 beta 2 complex, undergo irreversible substrate-induced inactivation. The mechanism of inactivation appears to be analogous to that first demonstrated by Metzler's group for inhibition of two other pyridoxal phosphate enzymes. Alkaline treatment of the inactivated enzyme yields apoenzyme and a previously described pyridoxal phosphate derivative. We demonstrate for the first time that enzymatic activity can be recovered by addition of pyridoxal phosphate following alkaline treatment. We conclude that the wild type and mutant alpha 2 beta 2 complexes differ in the way they process the amino acrylate intermediate. We suggest that the wild type beta subunit undergoes a conformational change upon association with the alpha subunit that alters the reaction specificity and that the mutant beta subunits do not undergo the same conformational change upon subunit association.  相似文献   

2.
The circular dichroism has been used to evaluate the effect of mutation on the environment of the pyridoxal phosphate coenzyme in the active site of the beta-subunit in the tryptophan synthase alpha 2 beta 2 complex from Salmonella typhimurium. Seven mutant forms of the alpha 2 beta 2-complex with single amino acid replacements at residues 87, 109, 188, 306, and 350 of the beta-subunit have been prepared by site-directed mutagenesis, purified to homogeneity, and characterized by absorption and circular dichroism spectroscopy. Since the wild type and mutant alpha 2 beta 2 complexes all exhibit positive circular dichroism in the coenzyme absorption band, pyridoxal phosphate must bind asymmetrically in the active site of these enzymes. However, the coenzyme may have an altered orientation or active site environment in five of the mutant enzymes that display less intense ellipticity bands. The mutant enzyme in which lysine 87 is replaced by threonine has very weak ellipticity at 400 nm. Since lysine 87 forms a Schiff base with pyridoxal phosphate in the wild type enzyme, our results demonstrate the importance of the Schiff base linkage for rigid or asymmetric binding. Although the mutant enzymes display spectra in the presence of L-serine that differ from that of the wild type enzyme, addition of alpha-glycerol 3-phosphate converts the spectra of two of the mutant enzymes to that of the wild type enzyme. We conclude that this alpha-subunit ligand may produce a conformational change in the alpha-subunit that is transmitted to the mutant beta-subunits and partially corrects conformational alterations in the mutant enzymes.  相似文献   

3.
We have obtained a complete set of 20 variants of the alpha subunit of tryptophan synthase of Escherichia coli at position 49 in order to extend our previous studies on the effects of single amino acid replacements at position 49 on structure and function. Thirteen mutant alpha subunits have been newly constructed by site-directed mutagenesis using oligonucleotides. Six mutants were available from previous studies. We find that the wild type and all of the mutant alpha subunits form alpha 2 beta 2 complexes with the beta 2 subunit of tryptophan synthase with similar association constants and similarly stimulate the activity of the beta 2 subunit in the synthesis of L-tryptophan from L-serine and indole. Thus none of the changes at position 49 produces a change in the conformation of the alpha subunit which significantly interferes with normal subunit interaction. However, the 19 mutant alpha 2 beta 2 complexes are completely devoid of activity in reactions normally catalyzed by the active site of the alpha subunit. This is the first time that these several activities have been measured with a series of highly purified alpha subunits altered by mutation at a single site. Our finding that the mutant in which glutamic acid 49 is substituted by aspartic acid is totally devoid of alpha activity is especially significant and is strong evidence that glutamic acid 49 is an essential catalytic base in the reaction catalyzed by the alpha subunit. This result is consistent with the results of previous genetic studies, with evolutionary comparisons using sequence analysis, and with recent results from x-ray crystallography of the alpha 2 beta 2 complex of tryptophan synthase from Salmonella typhimurium.  相似文献   

4.
Serine hydroxymethyltransferase has a conserved histidine residue (His-228) next to the lysine residue (Lys-229) which forms the internal aldimine with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. This histidine residue is also conserved at the equivalent position in all amino acid decarboxylases and tryptophan synthase. Two mutant forms of Escherichia coli serine hydroxymethyltransferase, H228N and H228D, were constructed, expressed, and purified. The properties of the wild type and mutant enzymes were studied with substrates and substrate analogs by differential scanning calorimetry, circular dichroism, steady state kinetics, and rapid reaction kinetics. The conclusions of these studies were that His-228 plays an important role in the binding and reactivity of the hydroxymethyl group of serine in the one-carbon-binding site. The mutant enzymes utilize substrates and substrate analogs more effectively for a variety of alternate non-physiological reactions compared to the wild type enzyme. As one example, the mutant enzymes cleave L-serine to glycine and formaldehyde when tetrahydropyteroylglutamate is replaced by 5-formyltetrahydropteroylglutamate. The released formaldehyde inactivates these mutant enzymes. The loss of integrity of the one-carbon-binding site with L-serine in the two mutant forms of the enzyme may be the result of these enzymes not undergoing a conformational change to a closed form of the active site when serine forms the external aldimine complex.  相似文献   

5.
Y X Fan  P McPhie  E W Miles 《Biochemistry》1999,38(24):7881-7890
To characterize the conformational transitions that regulate the activity and specificity of the tryptophan synthase alpha 2 beta 2 complex, we have determined some effects of low concentrations of guanidine hydrochloride (GuHCl) and of urea on functional properties. We report the novel finding that GuHCl at low concentrations (0. 02-0.08 M) is a cation activator of the tryptophan synthase alpha 2 beta 2 complex. Molecular modeling studies show that GuH+ could bind at a previously identified cation binding site in the tryptophan synthase beta subunit. Addition of increasing concentrations of GuHCl has strikingly different effects on the rates of different reactions with L-serine or beta-chloro-L-alanine in the presence or absence of indole. Spectroscopic studies demonstrate that GuHCl alters the equilibrium distribution of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate intermediates formed in reactions at the active site of the beta subunit. Data analysis shows that GuHCl binds preferentially with the conformer of the enzyme that predominates when the aldimine of L-serine is formed and shifts the equilibrium in favor of this conformer. These results provide evidence that GuHCl exerts dual effects on tryptophan synthase as a cation, stimulating activity, and as a chaotropic agent, altering the distribution of conformational states that exhibit different reaction specificities. Our finding that the nonionic urea stabilizes the aldimine of L-serine in the presence, but not in the absence, of NaCl shows that cation binding plays an important role in the conformational transitions that regulate activity and the transmission of allosteric signals between the alpha and beta sites.  相似文献   

6.
Our studies, which are aimed at understanding the catalytic mechanism of the beta subunit of tryptophan synthase from Salmonella typhimurium, use site-directed mutagenesis to clarify the functional roles of several putative active site residues. Although previous chemical modification studies have suggested that histidine 86, arginine 148, and cysteine 230 are essential residues in the beta subunit, our present findings that beta subunits with single amino acid replacements at these positions have partial activity show that these 3 residues are not essential for catalysis or substrate binding. These conclusions are consistent with the recently determined three-dimensional structure of the tryptophan synthase alpha 2 beta 2 complex. Amino acid substitution of lysine 87, which forms a Schiff base with pyridoxal phosphate in the wild type beta subunit, yields an inactive form of the beta subunit which binds alpha subunit, pyridoxal phosphate, and L-serine. We also report a rapid and efficient method for purifying wild type and mutant forms of the alpha 2 beta 2 complex from S. typhimurium from an improved enzyme source. The enzyme, which is produced by a multicopy plasmid encoding the trpA and trpB genes of S. typhimurium expressed in Escherichia coli, is crystallized from crude extracts by the addition of 6% poly(ethylene glycol) 8000 and 5 mM spermine. This new method is also used in the accompanying paper to purify nine alpha 2 beta 2 complexes containing mutant forms of the alpha subunit.  相似文献   

7.
Histidine 228 at the active site of Escherichia coli serine hydroxymethyltransferase was replaced with an asparagine. The mutant enzyme was expressed in a strain of E. coli that lacks wild type enzyme. Absorption spectra, circular dichroism spectra, and differential scanning calorimetry thermograms suggest that the amino acid change at the active site causes no detectable change in the tertiary structure of the enzyme. Kinetic studies demonstrated that kcat for the mutant enzyme is about 25% of the value for the wild type enzyme with either L-serine or allothreonine as substrate. Km or Kd values for amino acid substrates and reduced folate compounds were 2-10-fold larger with the mutant enzyme. The rate of interconversion of several enzyme-glycine complexes showed that the conversion of the external aldimine to the quinoid complex is not the rate-determining step for either the mutant or wild type enzyme in the presence of tetrahydrofolate. The binding of L-serine to the wild type enzyme gives a more thermally stable enzyme and increases its affinity for tetrahydrofolate. These effects are not found when L-serine binds to the mutant enzyme. The studies demonstrate that histidine 228 is not a catalytically essential residue and suggest that it is involved in interacting with either the amino acid substrate or the enzyme-bound pyridoxal phosphate.  相似文献   

8.
Site-specific mutagenesis has been used to prepare two mutant forms of the alpha subunit of tryptophan synthase from Salmonella typhimurium in which either cysteine-81 or cysteine-118 is replaced by a serine residue. These mutant proteins are potentially useful for x-ray crystallographic studies since a heavy metal binding site is specifically eliminated in each mutant. The purified mutant proteins are fully active in four reactions catalyzed by the wild type alpha 2 beta 2 complex of tryptophan synthase. However, the mutant alpha 2 beta 2 complexes dissociate more readily and are less heat-stable than the wild type alpha 2 beta 2 complex. Thus, cysteine-81 and cysteine-118 of the alpha subunit serve structural but not functional roles.  相似文献   

9.
L-Methionine gamma-lyase from Pseudomonas putida has a conserved tyrosine residue (Tyr114) in the active site as in all known sequences of y-family pyridoxal 5'-phosphate dependent enzymes. A mutant form of L-methionine y-lyase in which Tyr114 was replaced by phenylalanine (Y114F) resulted in 910-fold decrease in kcat for alpha,gamma-elimination of L-methionine, while the Km remained the same as the wild type enzyme. The Y114F mutant had the reduced kcat by only 28- and 16-fold for substrates with an electron-withdrawing group at the gamma-position, namely O-acetyl-L-homoserine and L-methionine sulfone, respectively, and also the similar reduction of kcat for alpha,beta-elimination and deamination substrates. The hydrogen exchange reactions of substrate and the spectral changes of the substrate-enzyme complex catalyzed by the mutant enzyme suggested that gamma-elimination process for L-methionine is the rate-limiting determination step in alpha,gamma-elimination overall reaction of the Y114F mutant. These results indicate that Tyr114 of L-methionine gamma-lyase is important in y-elimination of the substrate.  相似文献   

10.
Evidence that cysteine 298 is in the active site of tryptophan indole-lyase   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Escherichia coli tryptophan indole-lyase (tryptophanase) mutants, with cysteine residues 294 and 298 selectively replaced by serines, have been prepared by site-directed mutagenesis. Both mutant enzymes are highly active for beta-elimination reactions measured with both L-tryptophan and S-(o-nitrophenyl)-L-cysteine. The Cys-294----Ser mutant enzyme is virtually identical to the wild type with respect to pyridoxal phosphate binding (KCO = 2 microM), cofactor absorption spectrum (lambda max = 420 and 337 nm) and pH dependence (pK alpha = 7.3), pH profile for catalysis, and rate of bromopyruvic acid inactivation. In contrast, the Cys-298----Ser mutant enzyme exhibits a reduced affinity for pyridoxal phosphate (KCO = 6 microM), a shift in the cofactor absorption spectrum to 414 nm and an altered pK alpha = 8.5, an alkaline shift in the pH profile for catalysis, and resistance to inactivation of the apoenzyme by bromopyruvic acid. The C298S mutant enzyme (wherein cysteine 298 is altered to serine) also undergoes an isomerization to an unreactive state upon storage at 4 degrees C. These results demonstrate that the sulfhydryl groups of Cys-294 and Cys-298 are catalytically nonessential. However, these data suggest that Cys-298 is located within or very near the active site of the enzyme and is the reactive cysteine residue previously observed by others.  相似文献   

11.
To explain our finding that the dimeric beta subunit of tryptophan synthase is only 50% inactivated by beta-chloro-L-alanine (Ahmed, S. A., Ruvinov, S. B., Kayastha, A. M., and Miles, E. W. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 21548-21557), we have extended our investigation using spectroscopic, steady-state kinetic, and electrophoretic methods. The spectroscopic properties of the half-active beta 2 dimer and the reactivation after alkali treatment show that the inactivation proceeds by an "enamine" mechanism. Although the fully active beta 2 dimer associates with the tryptophan synthase alpha subunit to form alpha 2 beta 2 complex, the inactive beta subunits in the half-active enzyme associate weakly or not at all with the alpha subunit. Our results provide evidence for two conformers of the beta subunit in solution: one is rapidly inactivated by beta-chloro-L-alanine and the other is not inactivated. Thermal inactivation studies and non-denaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the half-active enzyme show that the beta 2 dimer exists in both homologous and heterologous combinations of these two forms. After removal of the reaction products and unreacted beta-chloro-L-alanine from the half-active beta 2 dimer by gel filtration, further incubation with beta-chloro-L-alanine results in the loss of 50% of the remaining activity. This result suggests that the subunits undergo rearrangement via an intermediate monomer form to regenerate the two conformers of the active beta subunit. This mechanism of rearrangement is supported by our finding that the extent of inactivation increases at lower concentrations of the beta 2 dimer.  相似文献   

12.
The reactions of tryptophanase, tyrosine phenol-lyase, and tryptophan synthase with a new class of substrates, the O-acyl-L-serines, have been examined. A method for preparation of O-benzoyl-L-serine in high yield from tert.-butyloxycarbonyl (tBoc)-L-serine has been developed. Reaction of the cesium salt of tBoc-L-serine with benzyl bromide in dimethylformamide gives tBoc-L-serine benzyl ester in excellent yield. Acylation with benzoyl chloride and triethylamine in acetonitrile followed by hydrogenolysis with 10% palladium on carbon in trifluoroacetic acid gives O-benzoyl-L-serine, isolated as the hydrochloride salt. O-Benzoyl-L-serine is a good substrate for beta-elimination or beta-substitution reactions catalyzed by both tryptophanase and tyrosine phenol-lyase, with Vmax values 5- to 6-fold those of the physiological substrates and comparable to that of S-(o-nitrophenyl)-L-cysteine. Unexpectedly, O-acetyl-L-serine is a very poor substrate for these enzymes, with Vmax values about 5% of those of the physiological substrates. Both O-acyl-L-serines are poor substrates for tryptophan synthase, measured either by the synthesis of 5-fluoro-L-tryptophan from 5-fluoroindole and L-serine catalyzed by the intact alpha 2 beta 2 subunit or by the beta-elimination reaction catalyzed by the isolated beta 2 subunit. With all three enzymes, the elimination of benzoate appears to be irreversible. These results suggest that the binding energy from the aromatic ring of O-benzoyl-L-serine is used to lower the transition-state barrier for the elimination reactions catalyzed by tryptophanase and tyrosine phenol-lyase. Our findings support the suggestion (M. N. Kazarinoff and E. E. Snell (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 6228-6233) that tryptophanase undergoes a conformational change during catalysis and suggest that tyrosine phenol-lyase also may undergo a conformational change during catalysis.  相似文献   

13.
Thirty-nine mutant tryptophan synthase alpha subunits have been purified and analyzed (in the presence of the beta 2-subunit) for their enzymatic (kcat, Km) behavior in the reactions catalyzed by the alpha 2.beta 2 complex, the fully constituted form of this enzyme. The mutant alpha subunits, obtained by in vitro random, saturation mutagenesis of the encoding trpA gene, contain single amino acid substitutions at sites within the first 121 residues of the alpha polypeptide. Four categories of altered residues have been tentatively assigned roles in the catalytic functions of this enzyme: 1) catalytic residues (Glu49 and Asp60); 2) residues involved in substrate binding or orientation (Phe22, Thr63, Gln65, Tyr102, and Leu105); 3) residues involved in alpha.beta subunit interactions (Gly51, Pro53, Asp56, Asp60, Pro62, Ala67, Phe72, Thr77, Pro78, Tyr102, Asn104, Leu105, and Asn108); and 4) residues with no apparent catalytic roles. Catalytic residue alterations result in no detectable activity in the alpha-subunit specific reactions. Substrate binding/orientation roles are detected enzymatically primarily as rate defects; alterations only at Tyr102 result in apparent Km effects. alpha.beta interaction roles are detected as rate defects in all tryptophan synthase reactions plus Km increases for the alpha-subunit substrate, indole-3-glycerol phosphate, only when L-serine is present at the beta 2-subunit active site. A substitution at only one site, Asn104, appears to be unique in its potential effect on intersubunit channeling of indole, the product of the alpha-subunit specific reaction, to the beta 2-subunit active site.  相似文献   

14.
Our studies, which are aimed at understanding the catalytic mechanism of the alpha subunit of tryptophan synthase from Salmonella typhimurium, use site-directed mutagenesis to explore the functional roles of aspartic acid 60, tyrosine 175, and glycine 211. These residues are located close to the substrate binding site of the alpha subunit in the three-dimensional structure of the tryptophan synthase alpha 2 beta 2 complex. Our finding that replacement of aspartic acid 60 by asparagine, alanine, or tyrosine results in complete loss of activity in the reaction catalyzed by the alpha subunit supports a catalytic role for aspartic acid 60. Since the mutant form with glutamic acid at position 60 has partial activity, glutamic acid 60 may serve as an alternative catalytic base. The mutant form in which tyrosine 175 is replaced by phenylalanine has substantial activity; thus the phenolic hydroxyl of tyrosine 175 is not essential for catalysis or substrate binding. Yanofsky and colleagues have identified many missense mutant forms of the alpha subunit of tryptophan synthase from Escherichia coli. Two of these inactive mutant forms had either tyrosine 175 replaced by cysteine or glycine 211 replaced by glutamic acid. Surprisingly, a second-site revertant which contained both of these amino acid changes was partially active. These results indicated that the second mutation must compensate in some way for the first. We now extend the studies of the effects of specific amino acid replacements at positions 175 and 211 by two techniques: 1) characterization of several mutant forms of the alpha subunit from S. typhimurium prepared by site-directed mutagenesis and 2) computer graphics modeling of the substrate binding site of the alpha subunit using the x-ray coordinates of the wild type alpha 2 beta 2 complex from S. typhimurium. We conclude that the restoration of alpha subunit activity in the doubly altered second-site revertant results from restoration of the proper geometry of the substrate binding site.  相似文献   

15.
The mechanism of binding of L-serine to tryptophan synthase, which is the initial phase of the catalytic mechanism, has been studied by steady-state and stopped-flow kinetic techniques. The dependence of three separable rate processes on the concentration of L-serine is compatible with four different enzyme-substrate complexes, one of which lies on a branch in the pathway. By use of L-serine deuterated at the alpha carbon, it is possible to assign the deprotonation of the external aldimine of L-serine with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate to the most rapid observable binding step. Measurements at two pH values show that the rate-determining step in the synthesis of L-tryptophan changes from release of L-tryptophan at the optimal pH of 7.6 to the binding of L-serine at pH 6.5. Measurements at pH 7.6 in the presence of the substrate analogue indolepropanol phosphate show that the stronger binding of L-serine is probably due to stabilization of the catalytically competent enzyme--L-serine complex. At pH 7.6 L-serine is bound far more slowly to the beta 2 subunit than to the alpha 2 beta 2 complex of tryptophan synthase and retains its alpha carbon proton. For the beta 2 subunit, the rate-determining step of tryptophan synthesis is deprotonation of bound L-serine. The effect of bound alpha subunit is to increase both the rate of deprotonation and beta-elimination, shifting the rate-limiting step to the release of L-tryptophan.  相似文献   

16.
Mammalian brain contains high levels of d-serine, an endogenous co-agonist of N-methyl D-aspartate type of glutamate receptors. D-Serine is synthesized by serine racemase, a brain enriched enzyme converting L- to D-serine. Degradation of D-serine is achieved by D-amino acid oxidase, but this enzyme is not present in forebrain areas that are highly enriched in D-serine. We now report that serine racemase catalyzes the degradation of cellular D-serine itself, through the alpha,beta-elimination of water. The enzyme also catalyzes water alpha,beta-elimination with L-serine and L-threonine. alpha,beta-Elimination with these substrates is observed both in vitro and in vivo. To investigate further the role of alpha,beta-elimination in regulating cellular D-serine, we generated a serine racemase mutant displaying selective impairment of alpha,beta-elimination activity (Q155D). Levels of D-serine synthesized by the Q155D mutant are several-fold higher than the wild-type both in vitro and in vivo. This suggests that the alpha,beta-elimination reaction limits the achievable D-serine concentration in vivo. Additional mutants in vicinal residues (H152S, P153S, and N154F) similarly altered the partition between the alpha,beta-elimination and racemization reactions. alpha,beta-Elimination also competes with the reverse serine racemase reaction in vivo. Although the formation of L- from D-serine is readily detected in Q155D mutant-expressing cells incubated with physiological D-serine concentrations, reversal with wild-type serine racemase-expressing cells required much higher D-serine concentration. We propose that alpha,beta-elimination provides a novel mechanism for regulating intracellular D-serine levels, especially in brain areas that do not possess D-amino acid oxidase activity. Extracellular D-serine is more stable toward alpha,beta-elimination, likely due to physical separation from serine racemase and its elimination activity.  相似文献   

17.
The sequence Gly-Asp-Met-Asp, spanning positions 189-192 of rat DNA polymerase beta, is similar to the sequence motif Gly-Asp-Thr-Asp that is highly conserved in a number of replicative DNA polymerases from eukaryotic cells, viruses, and phages. The role of this sequence in the catalytic function of rat DNA polymerase beta was investigated by individually changing each amino acid in this region by site-directed mutagenesis. The mutant enzymes DE190 and DE192, in which aspartic acid residues at positions 190 and 192, respectively, were replaced by glutamic acid, showed about 0.1% activity of the wild-type enzyme. On the other hand, the replacement of Gly-189 by alanine or Met-191 by isoleucine or threonine only slightly affected the enzyme activity. A gel mobility shift assay showed that DNA complexes with enzyme DE190 and especially with DE192 were less stable than the corresponding complex with the wild-type enzyme. Kinetic analysis with these mutant enzymes indicate that their Km's for primer DNA were about 10-fold higher than that of the wild type, while Km's for deoxyribonucleoside triphosphate were not changed. Since neither DE190 nor DE192 had any significant alteration in secondary structure, our results suggest that both Asp-190 and Asp-192 are located in the active site and are involved in the interaction of DNA polymerase beta with primer.  相似文献   

18.
H C Isom  R D DeMoss 《Biochemistry》1975,14(19):4291-4297
Trytophanase from Bacillus alvei was resolved from its coenzyme, pyridoxal phosphate, by treatment with cysteine followed by column chromatography. Spectrophotometric titration of apoenzyme with pyridoxal-P showed 1 mol of pyridoxal-P bound per 52,000 g of enzyme. Kinetic analysis of coenzyme binding showed hyperbolic activation curves with a Km of 1.6 muM. Pyridoxal-P was used as a natural active site probe in spectrophotometric studies to distinguish differences in the active center of holotryptophanase and reconstituted enzyme that were not apparent by other techniques. The pKa for holotryptophanase is 7.9 while the pKa for reconstituted apoenzyme is 8.4. Apotryptophanase binds 2-nor, 2'-methyl, 2'-hydroxy, 6-methyl, and N-oxide pyridoxal-P to form analog enzymes distinguishable on the basis of absorption spectra and relative activity in catalyzing both the alpha, beta-elimination and beta-replacement reactions of tryptophanase. Apoenzyme also binds pyridoxal but pyridoxal analog enzyme is not active.  相似文献   

19.
To understand how the alpha and beta 2 subunits of tryptophan synthase from Escherichia coli interact to form an alpha 2 beta 2 complex and undergo mutual activation, we have investigated alpha subunits with single amino acid replacements at conserved proline residues. Although the activities of alpha 2 beta 2 complexes that contain wild type alpha subunit or alpha subunits substituted at positions 28, 62, 96, and 207 are similar, the activities of alpha 2 beta 2 complexes that contain alpha subunits substituted at positions 57 and 132 are remarkably altered. Whereas the latter enzymes have greatly reduced activities in the individual half-reactions, they have considerably higher activities in the overall reaction. These remarkable activity results are explained by a decrease in the affinity of these mutant alpha subunits for the beta 2 subunit and by an increase in the affinity in the combined presence of ligands of both the alpha subunit and the beta 2 subunit. Isothermal calorimetric titrations of wild type beta 2 subunit with wild type alpha subunit and a mutant alpha subunit containing a substitution of glycine for proline at position 132 show that both the affinity and the exothermic association enthalpy are greatly reduced in the mutant alpha subunit although the stoichiometry of association is unchanged. The affinity of the mutant alpha subunit for the beta 2 subunits is greatly increased in the presence of an alpha subunit ligand, alpha-glycerol phosphate. We conclude that proline 132 plays a critical role in subunit interaction and in mutual subunit activation.  相似文献   

20.
In an effort to understand the catalytic mechanism of the tryptophan synthase beta-subunit from Salmonella typhimurium, possible functional active site residues have been identified (on the basis of the 3-D crystal structure of the bienzyme complex) and targeted for analysis utilizing site-directed mutagenesis. The chromophoric properties of the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate cofactor provide a particularly convenient and sensitive spectral probe to directly investigate changes in catalytic events which occur upon modification of the beta-subunit. Substitution of Asp for Glu 109 in the beta-subunit was found to alter both the catalytic activity and the substrate specificity of the beta-reaction. Steady-state kinetic data reveal that the beta-reaction catalyzed by the beta E109D alpha 2 beta 2 mutant enzyme complex is reduced 27-fold compared to the wild-type enzyme. Rapid-scanning stopped-flow (RSSF) UV-visible spectroscopy shows that the mutation does not seriously affect the pre-steady-state reaction of the beta E109D mutant with L-serine to form the alpha-aminoacrylate intermediate, E(A-A). Binding of the alpha-subunit specific ligand, alpha-glycerol phosphate (GP) to the alpha 2 beta 2 complex exerts the same allosteric effects on the beta-subunit as observed with the wild-type enzyme. However, the pre-steady-state spectral changes for the reaction of indole with E(A-A) show that the formation of the L-tryptophan quinonoid, E(Q3), is drastically altered. Discrimination against E(Q3) formation is also observed for the binding of L-tryptophan to the mutant alpha 2 beta 2 complex in the reverse reaction. In contrast, substitution of Asp for Glu 109 increases the apparent affinity of the beta E109D alpha-aminoacrylate complex for the indole analogue indoline and results in the increased rate of synthesis of the amino acid product dihydroiso-L-tryptophan. Thus, the mutation affects the covalent bond forming addition reactions and the nucleophile specificity of the beta-reaction catalyzed by the bienzyme complex.  相似文献   

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