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1.
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   

2.
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   

3.
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   

4.
N S Rotberg  W W Cleland 《Biochemistry》1991,30(16):4068-4071
Secondary 15N isotope effects at the N-1 position of 3-acetylpyridine adenine dinucleotide have been determined, by using the internal competition technique, for horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase (LADH) with cyclohexanol as a substrate and yeast formate dehydrogenase (FDH) with formate as a substrate. On the basis of less precise previous measurements of these 15N isotope effects, the nicotinamide ring of NAD has been suggested to adopt a boat conformation with carbonium ion character at C-4 during hydride transfer [Cook, P. F., Oppenheimer, N. J. & Cleland, W. W. (1981) Biochemistry 20, 1817]. If this mechanism were valid, as N-1 becomes pyramidal an 15N isotope effect of up to 2-3% would be observed. In the present study the equilibrium 15N isotope effect for the reaction catalyzed by LADH was measured as 1.0042 +/- 0.0007. The kinetic 15N isotope effect for LADH catalysis was 0.9989 +/- 0.0006 for cyclohexanol oxidation and 0.997 +/- 0.002 for cyclohexanone reduction. The kinetic 15N isotope effect for FDH catalysis was 1.004 +/- 0.001. These values suggest that a significant 15N kinetic isotope effect is not associated with hydride transfer for LADH and FDH. Thus, in contrast with the deformation mechanism previously postulated, the pyridine ring of the nucleotide apparently remains planar during these dehydrogenase reactions.  相似文献   

5.
In the pyrimidine biosynthetic pathway, N-carbamyl-L-aspartate (CA-asp) is converted to L-dihydroorotate (DHO) by dihydroorotase (DHOase). The mechanism of this important reaction was probed using primary and secondary 15N and 13C isotope effects on the ring opening of DHO using isotope ratio mass spectrometry (IRMS). The reaction was performed at three different temperatures (25, 37, and 45 degrees C for hamster DHOase; 37, 50, and 60 degrees C for Bacillus caldolyticus), and the product CA-asp was purified for analysis. The primary and secondary kinetic isotope effects for the ring opening of the DHO were determined from analysis of the N and C of the carbamyl group after hydrolysis. In addition, the beta-carboxyl of the residual aspartate was liberated enzymatically by transamination to oxaloacetate with aspartate aminotransferase and then decarboxylation with oxaloacetate decarboxylase. The 13C/12C ratio from the released CO2 was determined by IRMS, yielding a second primary isotope effect. The primary and secondary isotope effects for the reaction catalyzed by DHOase showed little variation between enzymes or temperatures, the primary 13C and 15N isotope effects being approximately 1% on average, while the secondary 13C isotope effect is negligible or very slightly normal (>1.0000). These data indicate that the chemistry is at least partially rate-limiting while the secondary isotope effects suggest that the transition state may have lost some bending and torsional modes leading to a slight lessening of bond stiffness at the carbonyl carbon of the amide of CA-asp. The equilibrium isotope effects for DHO --> CA-asp have also been measured (secondary 13K(eq) = 1.0028 +/- 0.0002, primary 13K(eq) = 1.0053 +/- 0.0003, primary 15K(eq) = 1.0027 +/- 0.0003). Using these equilibrium isotope effects, the kinetic isotope effects for the physiological reaction (CA-asp --> DHO) have been calculated. These values indicate that the carbon of the amide group is more stiffly bonded in DHO while the slightly lesser, but still normal, values of the primary kinetic isotope effect show that the chemistry remains at least partially rate-limiting for the physiological reaction. It appears that the ring opening and closing is the slow step of the reaction.  相似文献   

6.
The reversible reaction NAD + CN(-)----NAD-CN was examined for remote secondary 15N isotope effects caused by isotopic substitution at the ring nitrogen of the nicotinamide group. These were compared with analogous effects for dehydrogenase-catalyzed reactions, since both cyanide and the hydride ion add at the N-4 position of the nicotinamide ring. The 15N effects on the rate constants for the forward and reverse processes were examined directly by conducting both the normal and isotopic reactions simultaneously under carefully controlled conditions in the sample and reference cells of a dual-beam spectrophotometer. In both cases, the 15N kinetic isotope effect differed from 1.00 by considerably less than 0.01. The 15N equilibrium isotope effect, 15K, was obtained as the ratio of equilibrium constants measured separately with natural-abundance and labeled NAD by using a concentration jump procedure [1.004 +/- 0.002 (cyanide addition)]. A similar value for 15K of 1.010 +/- 0.008 was obtained in an analogous manner for the reaction catalyzed by lactate dehydrogenase: NAD + lactate----pyruvate + NADH + H+. The latter value is significantly smaller than a previously reported value obtained from kinetic studies [1.044 +/- 0.012; Cook, P. F., Oppenheimer, N. J., & Cleland, W. W. (1981) Biochemistry 20, 1817]. The present value also is smaller than might be expected for a change in bond order from 4 to 3 [Cleland, W. W. (1980) Methods Enzymol. 64, 104-125] on the basis of the canonical resonance structures for NAD and NADH.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
15N isotope effects and solvent deuterium isotope effects have been measured for the hydrolytic deamination of cytidine catalyzed by Escherichia coli cytidine deaminase and for the uncatalyzed reaction proceeding spontaneously in neutral solution at elevated temperatures. The primary (15)(V/K) arising from the exocyclic amino group for wild-type cytidine deaminase acting on its natural substrate, cytidine, is 1.0109 (in H(2)O, pH 7.3), 1.0123 (in H(2)O, pH 4.2), and 1.0086 (in D(2)O, pD 7.3). Increasing solvent D(2)O content has no substantial effect on k(cat) but enhances k(cat)/K(m), with a proton inventory showing that the fractionation factors of at least two protons increase markedly during the reaction. Mutant cytidine deaminases with reduced catalytic activity show more pronounced (15)N isotope effects of 1.0124 (Glu91Ala), 1.0134 (His102Ala), and 1.0158 (His102Asn) at pH 7.3 in H(2)O, as expected for processes in which the chemical transformation of the substrate becomes more rate determining. The isotope effect of mutant His102Asn is 1.033 after correcting for protonation of the -NH(2) group, and represents the intrinsic isotope effect on C-N bond cleavage. This result allows an estimation of the forward commitment of the reaction with the wild-type enzyme. The observed (15)N kinetic isotope effect of the pyrimidine N-3, for wild-type cytidine deaminase acting on cytidine, is 0.9879, which is consistent with protonation and rehybidization of N-3 with hydroxide ion attack on the adjacent carbon to create a tetrahedral intermediate. These results show that enzymatic deamination of cytidine proceeds stepwise through a tetrahedral intermediate with ammonia elimination as the major rate-determining step. The primary (15)N isotope effects observed for the uncatalyzed reaction at pH 7 (1.0021) and pH 12.5 (1.0034) were found to be insensitive to changing temperatures between 100 and 185 degrees C. These results show that the uncatalyzed and the enzymatic deaminations of cytidine proceed by similar mechanisms, although the commitment to C-N bond breaking is greater for the spontaneous reaction.  相似文献   

9.
13C and 15N isotope effects have been measured for the aspartate transcarbamylase (ATCase) reaction in an effort to elucidate the chemical mechanism of this highly regulated enzyme. The observed 15(V/K(asp))H2O value for the ATCase holoenzyme at saturing carbamyl phosphate and 12 mM L-aspartate is 1.0045 at pH 7.5, and this value remains unchanged in the presence of 5 mM ATP (activator) or 5 mM CTP (inhibitor). The fact that the isotope effect is not changed by the allosteric modifiers supports the conclusion that the kinetic properties of the active form of ATCase are not influenced by ATP or CTP. The observed 15(V/K(asp)) values for the catalytic subunit of ATCase are also the same as those determined for the holoenzyme, suggesting that the chemical mechanisms of both enzyme species are the same. Quantitative analysis of 13C and 15N isotope effects in both H2O and D2O has led to the proposal of a chemical model for the ATCase reaction which involves a precatalytic conformational change to form an activated complex that facilitates deprotonation of L-aspartate by an enzyme functional group. Nucleophilic attack on the carbonyl carbon of carbamyl phosphate by the alpha-amino group of L-aspartate results in the formation of a tetrahedral intermediate. An intramolecular proton transfer leads to formation of products N-carbamyl-L-aspartate and inorganic phosphate.  相似文献   

10.
A detailed kinetic analysis of the catalytic trimer of aspartate transcarbamoylase containing the active site substitution H134A was performed to investigate the role of His 134 in the catalytic mechanism. Replacement of histidine by alanine resulted in decreases in the affinities for the two substrates, carbamoyl phosphate and aspartate, and the inhibitor succinate, by factors of 50, 10, and 6, respectively, and yielded a maximum velocity that was 5% that of the wild-type enzyme. However, the pK values determined from the pH dependence of the kinetic parameters, log V and log (V/K) for aspartate, the pK(i) for succinate, and the pK(ia) for carbamoyl phosphate, were similar for both the mutant and the wild-type enzymes, indicating that the protonated form of His 134 does not participate in binding and catalysis between pH 6.2 and 9.2. 13C and 15N isotope effects were studied to determine which steps in the catalytic mechanism were altered by the amino acid substitutions. The 13(V/K) for carbamoyl phosphate exhibited by the catalytic trimer containing alanine at position 134 revealed an isotope effect of 4.1%, probably equal to the intrinsic value and, together with quantitative analysis of the 15N isotope effects, showed that formation of the tetrahedral intermediate is rate-determining for the mutant enzyme. Thus, His 134 plays a role in the chemistry of the reaction in addition to substrate binding. The initial velocity pattern for the reaction catalyzed by the H134A mutant intersected to the left of the vertical axis, negating an equilibrium ordered kinetic mechanism.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Although aldolase-catalyzed condensations proceed by stepwise mechanisms via the intermediacy of nucleophilic enol(ate)s or enamines, the mechanisms of those enzymes that catalyze Claisen-type condensations are unclear. The reaction pathway followed by an enzyme from this second group, malate synthase, has been studied by the double-isotope fractionation method to determine whether the reaction is stepwise or concerted. In agreement with earlier work, a deuterium kinetic isotope effect D(V/K) of 1.3 +/- 0.1 has been found when [2H3]acetyl-CoA is the substrate. The 13C isotope effect at the aldehydic carbon of glyoxylate has also been measured. For this determination, the malate product (containing the carbon of interest at C-2) was quantitatively transformed into a new sample of malate having the carbon of interest at C-4. This material was decarboxylated by malic enzyme to produce the appropriate CO2 for isotope ratio mass spectrometric analysis. The 13C isotope effect with [1H3]acetyl-CoA [that is, 13(V/K)H] is 1.0037 +/- 0.0004. By use of the known values of the intermolecular and intramolecular deuterium effects and of 13(V/K)H, the value of the 13C isotope effect when deuteriated [2H3]acetyl-CoA is the substrate [that is, 13(V/K)D] can be predicted for three possible mechanisms. If 13(V/K)H is a kinetic isotope effect and the reaction is concerted, the value of the 13C effect on deuteriation of acetyl-CoA will rise to 1.011; if 13(V/K)H is a kinetic isotope effect and the reaction is stepwise, the value of the 13C effect will fall to 1.0025; and if the 13C effect is an equilibrium isotope effect deriving from glyoxylate dehydration, the reaction is necessarily stepwise, and the value of 13(V/K)D will be 1.0037, unchanged from that of 13(V/K)H. Experimentally, the value of 13(V/K)D is 1.0037 +/- 0.0007, which requires that malate synthase follow a stepwise path. It is therefore clear that the two salient characteristics of enzymes that catalyze Claisen-like condensations, namely, the absence of enzyme-catalyzed proton exchange with solvent and the inversion of the configuration at the nucleophilic center, which had been suggestive of a concerted pathway, are not mechanistically diagnostic.  相似文献   

12.
We have determined 15N isotope effects and solvent deuterium isotope effects for adenosine deaminase using both adenosine and the slow alternate substrate 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoadenosine. With adenosine, 15N isotope effects were 1.0040 in H2O and 1.0023 in D2O, and the solvent deuterium isotope effect was 0.77. With 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoadenosine, 15N isotope effects were 1.015 in H2O and 1.0131 in D2O, and the solvent deuterium isotope effect was 0.45. The inverse solvent deuterium isotope effect shows that the fractionation factor of a proton, which is originally less than 0.6, increases to near unity during formation of the tetrahedral intermediate from which ammonia is released. Proton inventories for 1/V and 1/(V/K) vs percent D2O are linear, indicating that a single proton has its fractionation factor altered during the reaction. We conclude that a sulfhydryl group on the enzyme donates its proton to oxygen or nitrogen during this step. pH profiles with 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoadenosine suggest that the pK of this sulfhydryl group is 8.45. The inhibition of adenosine deaminase by cadmium also shows a pK of approximately 9 from the pKi profile. Quantitative analysis of the isotope effects suggests an intrinsic 15N isotope effect for the release of ammonia from the tetrahedral intermediate of approximately 1.03 for both substrates; however, the partition ratio of this intermediate for release of ammonia as opposed to back-reaction is 14 times greater for adenosine (1.4) than for 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoadenosine (0.1).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
14.
Mycobacterium tuberculosis shikimate dehydrogenase (MtbSD) catalyzes the fourth reaction in the shikimate pathway, the NADPH-dependent reduction of 3-dehydroshikimate. To gather information on the kinetic mechanism, initial velocity patterns, product inhibition, and primary deuterium kinetic isotope effect studies were performed and the results suggested a steady-state ordered bi-bi kinetic mechanism. The magnitudes of both primary and solvent kinetic isotope effects indicated that the hydride transferred from NADPH and protons transferred from the solvent in the catalytic cycle are not significantly rate limiting in the overall reaction. Proton inventory analysis indicates that one proton gives rise to solvent isotope effects. Multiple isotope effect studies indicate that both hydride and proton transfers are concerted. The pH profiles revealed that acid/base chemistry takes place in catalysis and substrate binding. The MtbSD 3D model was obtained in silico by homology modeling. Kinetic and chemical mechanisms for MtbSD are proposed on the basis of experimental data.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
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   

17.
The mechanism of 3-dehydroquinate synthase was explored by incubating partially purified enzyme with mixtures of [1-14C]3-deoxy-D-arabino-heptulosonic acid 7-phosphate (DAHP) and one of the specifically tritiated substrates [4-3H]DAHP, [5-3H]DAHP, [6-3H]DAHP, (7RS)-[7-3H]DAHP, (7R)-[7-3H]DAHP, or (7S)-[7-3H]DAHP. Kinetic and secondary 3H isotope effects were calculated from 3H:14C ratios obtained in unreacted DAHP, 3-dehydroquinate, and 3-dehydroshikimate. 3H was not incorporated from the medium into 3-dehydroquinate, indicating that a carbanion (or methyl group) at C-7 is not formed. A kinetic isotope effect kH/k3H of 1.7 was observed at C-5, and afforded support for a mechanism involving oxidation of C-5 with NAD. A similar kinetic isotope effect was found at C-6 owing to removal of a proton in elimination of phosphate, which is reasonably assumed to be the next step in 3-dehydroquinate synthase. Hydrogen at C-7 of DAHP was not lost in the cyclization step of the reaction, indicating that the enol formed in phosphate elimination participated directly in an aldolase-type reaction with the carbonyl at C-2. In the dehydration of 3-dehydroquinate to 3-dehydroshikimate the (7R) proton from (7RS)- or (7R)-[7-3H]DAHP is lost, indicating that the 7R proton occupies the 2R position in dehydroquinate. Hence the cyclization step occurs with inversion of configuration at C-7. A kinetic isotope effect kH/k3H = 2.3 was observed in the conversion of (2R)-[2-3H]dehydroquinate to dehydroshikimate. Hence loss of a proton from the enzyme-dehydroquinate imine contributed to rate limitation in the reaction.  相似文献   

18.
The experimental data presented in this paper comprise kinetic deuterium isotope effects on acylation of papain with various substrates when conducted in H2O and 2H2O. With alkyl esters of N-acylamino acids there is no or very little isotope effect, whereas with N-acylamino acid amides the ratio kappa H2O/kappa 2H2O is less than 1, i.e. there is an inverse isotope effect. Similarly, alkylation of papain with methyl bromoacetate exhibits no kinetic isotope effect, whereas for the analogous alkylation with bromoacetamide an inverse isotope effect is observed. It is concluded that (a) general base catalysis does not occur in the acylation of papain and (b) kinetic deuterium isotope effects can be affected substantially by interaction between the substrate leaving group and the enzyme, which has not been considered in previous mechanistic investigations.  相似文献   

19.
Deuterium isotope effects on the kinetic parameters for the hydroperoxide-supported N-demethylation of N,N-dimethylaniline catalyzed by chloroperoxidase and horseradish peroxidase were determined using N,N-di-(trideuteromethyl)aniline. The isotope effect on the Vmax for the chloroperoxidase-catalyzed demethylation reaction supported by ethyl hydroperoxide was 1.42 +/- 0.31. The isotope effects on the Vmax for the horseradish peroxidase-catalyzed reaction supported by ethyl hydroperoxide and hydrogen peroxide were 1.99 +/- 0.39 and 4.09 +/- 0.27, respectively. Isotope effects ranging from 1.76 to 5.10 were observed on the Vmax/Km for the hydroperoxide substrate (i.e. the second order rate constant for the reaction of the hydroperoxide with the peroxidase to form compound I) in both enzyme systems when the N-methyl groups of N,N-dimethylaniline were deuterated. These results are not predicted by the simple ping-pong kinetic model for peroxidase-catalyzed N-demethylation reactions. The data are most simply explained by a mechanism involving the transfer of deuterium (or hydrogen) from N,N-dimethylaniline to the enzyme during catalysis. The deuterium must subsequently be displaced from the enzyme by the hydroperoxide, causing the observed isotope effects.  相似文献   

20.
S C Kim  F M Raushel 《Biochemistry》1986,25(17):4744-4749
The mechanism of the argininosuccinate lyase reaction has been probed by the measurement of the effects of isotopic substitution at the reaction centers. A primary deuterium isotope effect of 1.0 on both V and V/K is obtained with (2S,3R)-argininosuccinate-3-d, while a primary 15N isotope effect on V/K of 0.9964 +/- 0.0003 is observed. The 15N isotope effect on the equilibrium constant is 1.018 +/- 0.001. The proton that is abstracted from C-3 of argininosuccinate is unable to exchange with the solvent from the enzyme-intermediate complex but is rapidly exchanged with solvent from the enzyme-fumarate-arginine complex. A deuterium solvent isotope effect of 2.0 is observed on the Vmax of the forward reaction. These and other data have been interpreted to suggest that argininosuccinate lyase catalyzes the cleavage of argininosuccinate via a carbanion intermediate. The proton abstraction step is not rate limiting, but the inverse 15N primary isotope effect and the solvent deuterium isotope effect suggest that protonation of the guanidino group and carbon-nitrogen bond cleavage of argininosuccinate are kinetically significant.  相似文献   

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