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1.
K K Wong  J S Blanchard 《Biochemistry》1989,28(8):3586-3590
Human erythrocyte glutathione reductase catalyzes the pyridine nucleotide dependent reduction of oxidized glutathione (GSSG). The pH dependence of the kinetic parameters V and V/K for three reduced pyridine nucleotide substrates, the Ki's for three competitive inhibitors (versus NADPH), and the temperature dependence of the V pH profile have been determined. Below pH 8, V and V/K for NADPH, 2',3'-cyclic-NADPH, and NADH are pH independent. In the basic pH region, both V and V/K for the three substrates are pH dependent. All three of the V profiles decrease with increasing pH as a group with a pKa of approximately 9.2 is titrated. The V/K profiles for NADPH, 2',3'-cyclic-NADPH, and NADH decrease at high pH as a group with a pKa of greater than 9.8, 8.9, and 8.8, respectively, is deprotonated. The Ki's for ATP-ribose and 2',5'-ADP are pH independent below pH 8 but increase in the basic region as a group with a pKa of about 8.8 and 8.5, respectively, is deprotonated. The Ki of AADP is pH independent between pH 6 and 9. These studies suggest that binding interactions between the 2'-phosphate of NADPH and the enzyme are predominately nonionic. The temperature dependence of the pK observed in all V pH profiles allows the calculation of an enthalpy of ionization of 3.2 kcal/mol for this group. The high pK and low enthalpy of ionization suggest that the protonation state of the His-467'-Glu-472' ion pair observed in the structure of human erythrocyte glutathione reductase influences proton-transfer steps occurring in the oxidative half-reaction.  相似文献   

2.
J F Morrison  S R Stone 《Biochemistry》1988,27(15):5499-5506
The variations with pH of the kinetic parameters and primary deuterium isotope effects for the reaction of NADPH with dihydrofolate reductase from Escherichia coli have been determined. The aims of the investigations were to elucidate the chemical mechanism of the reaction and to obtain information about the location of the rate-limiting steps. The V and V/KNADPH profiles indicate that a single ionizing group at the active center of the enzyme must be protonated for catalysis, whereas the Ki profiles show that the binding of NADPH to the free enzyme and of ATP-ribose to the enzyme-dihydrofolate complex is pH independent. From the results of deuterium isotope effects on V/KNADPH, it is concluded that NADPH behaves as a sticky substrate. It is this stickiness that raises artificially the intrinsic pK value of 6.4 for the Asp-27 residue of the enzyme-dihydrofolate complex [Howell, E. E., Villafranca, J. E., Warren, M. S., Oatley, S. J., & Kraut, J. (1986) Science (Washington, D.C.) 231, 1123] to an observed value of 8.9. Thus, the binary enzyme complex is largely protonated at neutral pH. The elevation of the intrinsic pK value of 6.4 for the ternary enzyme-NADPH-dihydrofolate complex to 8.5 is not due to the kinetic effects of substrates. Rather, it is the consequence of the lower, pH-independent rate of product release and the faster pH-dependent catalytic step. At neutral pH, the proportion of enzyme present as a protonated ternary enzyme-substrate complex is sufficient to keep catalysis faster than product release.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
The chemical and kinetic mechanisms of the reaction catalyzed by the catalytic trimer of aspartate transcarbamoylase have been examined. The variation of the kinetic parameters with pH indicated that at least four ionizing amino acid residues are involved in substrate binding and catalysis. The pH dependence of K(ia) for carbamoyl phosphate and the K(i) for N-(phosphonoacetyl)-L- aspartate revealed that a protonated residue with a pK value of 9.0 is required for the binding of carbamoyl phosphate. However, the variation with pH of K(i) for succinate, a competitive inhibitor of aspartate, and for cysteine sulfinate, a slow substrate, showed that a single residue with a pK value of 7.3 must be protonated for binding these analogues and, by inference, aspartate. The profile of log V against pH displayed a decrease in reaction rate at low and high pH, suggesting that two groups associated with the Michaelis complex, a deprotonated residue with a pK value of 7.2 and a protonated group with a pK value of 9.5, are involved in catalysis. By contrast, the catalytically productive form of the enzyme-carbamoyl phosphate complex, as illustrated in the bell-shaped pH dependence of log (V/K)(asp), is one in which a residue with a pK value of 7.0 must be protonated while a group with a pK value of 9.1 is deprotonated. This interpretation is supported by the results from the temperature dependence of the V and V/K profiles and from the pH dependence of pK(i) for the aspartate analogues.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
The pH dependence of the kinetic parameters and the primary deuterium isotope effects with nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) and also thionicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (thio-NAD) as the nucleotide substrates were determined in order to obtain information about the chemical mechanism and location of rate-determining steps for the Ascaris suum NAD-malic enzyme reaction. The maximum velocity with thio-NAD as the nucleotide is pH-independent from pH 4.2 to 9.6, while with NAD, V decreases below a pK of 4.8. V/K for both nucleotides decreases below a pK of 5.6 and above a pK of 8.9. Both the tartronate pKi and V/Kmalate decrease below a pK of 4.8 and above a pK of 8.9. Oxalate is competitive vs. malate above pH 7 and noncompetitive below pH 7 with NAD as the nucleotide. The oxalate Kis increases from a constant value above a pK of 4.9 to another constant value above a pK of 6.7. The oxalate Kii also increases above a pK of 4.9, and this inhibition is enhanced by NADH. In the presence of thio-NAD the inhibition by oxalate is competitive vs. malate below pH 7. For thio-NAD, both DV and D(V/K) are pH-independent and equal to 1.7. With NAD as the nucleotide, DV decreases to 1.0 below a pK of 4.9, while D(V/KNAD) and D(V/Kmalate) are pH-independent. Above pH 7 the isotope effects on V and the V/K values for NAD and malate are equal to 1.45, the pH-independent value of DV above pH 7. From the above data, the following conclusions can be made concerning the mechanism for this enzyme. Substrates bind to only the correctly protonated form of the enzyme. Two enzyme groups are necessary for binding of substrates and catalysis. Both NAD and malate are released from the Michaelis complex at equal rates which are equal to the rate of NADH release from E-NADH above pH 7. Below pH 7 NADH release becomes more rate-determining as the pH decreases until at pH 4.0 it completely limits the overall rate of the reaction.  相似文献   

5.
Steady-state kinetic parameters of the human kidney aldehyde reductase-catalyzed reduction of para-substituted benzaldehydes by 3-acetyl pyridine dinucleotide phosphate (3-APADPH) were determined. The kcat of aldehyde reduction by 3-APADPH was 2- to 4-fold lower than by NADPH. The dissociation constant of 3-APADPH from the enzyme-coenzyme complex was higher (77 microM) than that of NADPH (5.3 microM). Primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects on both kcat and kcat/Km for para-substituted benzaldehyde reduction by 3-APADPH (with the exception of para-carboxybenzaldehyde) were equal and on average 2.82 +/- 0.21, suggesting that these reactions follow a rapid equilibrium-ordered reaction scheme in which the hydride transfer step is rate-limiting. Multiple regression analysis of the data suggests that benzaldehyde reduction depends upon electronic substituent effects, characterized by a rho value of 0.5. These data are consistent with a transition state in which the charge on the aldehyde carbonyl increases relative to the charge on this group in the ground state. A positive deviation of para-carboxybenzaldehyde from the linear correlation between other benzaldehydes and the substituent constant sigma + suggests a specific interaction of the carboxyl substituent of the substrate with the enzyme.  相似文献   

6.
The variation of kinetic parameters with pH has been determined so as to gain insight into the chemical mechanism of the saccharopine dehydrogenase (NAD+,L-lysine-forming)-catalyzed reaction. In the direction of reductive condensation of lysine and alpha-ketoglutarate (reverse reaction), the V/K profile for lysine shows a group with a pK of 6.3 must be unprotonated and a group with a pK of 8.0 must be protonated for activity. Similar pK's are obtained in the pKi profile for ornithine, which acts as a linear competitive inhibitor with respect to lysine. Temperature and solvent perturbation studies show that these groups are probably histidines. The V/K profile for alpha-ketoglutarate reveals a single group with pK = 8.4 (probably lysine) that must be protonated. It is proposed that one of the histidines is involved in the binding of the epsilon-amino group of the substrate lysine and the positively charged lysine residue hydrogen bonds to the carbonyl oxygen of alpha-ketoglutarate. In the direction of saccharopine cleavage, the V/K profile for saccharopine shows that two groups with pK values of 6.0 and 7.1, possibly a histidine and lysine, must be unprotonated for its reaction with the enzyme X NAD+ complex. The log V-pH plots for the forward and reverse reactions both show sigmoidal curves. At low pH, the activity is lower for the forward reaction, and is higher for the reverse reaction. The ionization of a single group appears to be responsible for the change in activity. A tentative scheme for the chemical reaction is presented.  相似文献   

7.
The pH dependence of basal and calmodulin- (CaM-) stimulated neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) reduction of 2,6-dichloroindophenol (DCIP) and cytochrome c(3+) was investigated. The wave-shaped log V versus pH profile revealed that optimal DCIP reduction occurred when a group, pK(a) of 7.6-7.8, was ionized. The (V/K)(NADPH) and (V/K)(DCIP) versus pH profiles increased with the protonation of a group with a pK(a) of 6.5 or 5.9 and the ionization of two groups with the same pK(a) of 7.5 or 7.0, respectively. (V/K)(DCIP) decreased with the ionization of a group, pK(a) of 9.0. Similar V, (V/K)(NADPH), and (V/K)(DCIP) versus pH profiles for DCIP reduction were obtained with and without CaM, indicating that CaM does not influence ionizable groups involved in catalysis or substrate binding. In contrast, CaM affected the pH dependence of cytochrome c(3+) reduction. The wave-shaped log V versus pH profile for basal cytochrome c(3+) reduction revealed that ionization of a group, pK(a) of 8.6, increased catalysis. Log V for CaM-stimulated cytochrome c(3+) reduction displayed a bell-shaped pH dependence with the protonation of a group with a pK(a) of 6.4 and the ionization of a group with a pK(a) of 9.3, resulting in a loss of activity. The log(V/K)(cytc) versus pH profiles with and without CaM were bell-shaped with the ionization of a group at pK(a) of 7.1 or 7.6 (CaM) or pK(a) of 9.4 or 9.6 (CaM), increasing and decreasing (V/K)(cytc). These results suggest that CaM may change the nature of the rate-limiting catalytic steps or ionizable groups involved in cytochrome c(3+) reduction.  相似文献   

8.
The pH variation of the kinetic parameters for the oxidative decarboxylation of L-malate and decarboxylation of oxalacetate catalyzed by malic enzyme has been used to gain information on the catalytic mechanism of this enzyme. With Mn2+ as the activator, an active-site residue with a pK of 5.4 must be protonated for oxalacetate decarboxylation and ionized for the oxidative decarboxylation of L-malate. With Mg2+ as the metal, this pK is 6, and, at high pH, V/K for L-malate decreases when groups with pKs of 7.8 and 9 are deprotonated. The group at 7.8 is a neutral acid (thought to be water coordinated to Mg2+), while the group at 9 is a cationic acid such as lysine. The V profile for reaction of malate shows these pKs displaced outward by 1.4 pH units, since the rate-limiting step is normally TPNH release, and the chemical reaction, which is pH sensitive, is 25 times faster. TPN binding is decreased by ionization of a group with pK 9.3 or protonation of a group with pK 5.3. The pH variation of the Km for Mg shows that protonation of a group with pK 8.7 (possibly SH) decreases metal binding in the presence of malate by a factor of 1400, and in the absence of malate by a factor of 20. A catalytic mechanism is proposed in which hydride transfer is accompanied by transfer of a proton to the group with pK 5.4-6, and enolpyruvate is protonated by water coordinated to the Mg2+ (pK 7.8) after decarboxylation and release of CO2.  相似文献   

9.
Badarau A  Page MI 《Biochemistry》2006,45(35):10654-10666
The kinetics and mechanism of hydrolysis of the native zinc and metal substituted Bacillus cereus (BcII) metallo-beta-lactamase have been investigated. The pH and metal ion dependence of k(cat) and k(cat)/K(m), determined under steady-state conditions, for the cobalt substituted BcII catalyzed hydrolysis of cefoxitin, cephaloridine, and cephalexin indicate that an enzyme residue of apparent pK(a) 6.3 +/- 0.1 is required in its deprotonated form for metal ion binding and catalysis. The k(cat)/K(m) for cefoxitin and cephalexin with cadmium substituted BcII is dependent on two ionizing groups on the enzyme: one of pK(a1) = 8.7 +/- 0.1 required in its deprotonated form and the other of pK(a2) = 9.3 +/- 0.1 required in its protonated form for activity. The pH dependence of the competitive inhibition constant, K(i), for CdBcII with l-captopril indicates that pK(a1) = 8.7 +/- 0.1 corresponds to the cadmium-bound water. For the manganese substituted BcII, the pH dependence of k(cat)/K(m) for benzylpenicillin, cephalexin, and cefoxitin similarly indicated the importance of two catalytic groups: one of pK(a1) = 8.5 +/- 0.1 which needs to be deprotonated and the other of pK(a2) = 9.4 +/- 0.1 which needs to be protonated for catalysis; the pK(a1) was assigned to the manganese-bound water. The rate was metal ion concentration dependent at the highest manganese concentrations used (10(-)(3) M). The metal substituted species have similar or higher catalytic activities compared with the zinc enzyme, albeit at pHs above 7. Interestingly, with cefoxitin, a very poor substrate for ZnBcII, both k(cat) and k(cat)/K(m) increase with increasing pK(a) of the metal-bound water, in the order Zn < Co < Mn < Cd. A higher pK(a) for the metal-bound water for cadmium and manganese BCII leads to more reactive enzymes than the native zinc BcII, suggesting that the role of the metal ion is predominantly to provide the nucleophilic hydroxide, rather than to act as a Lewis acid to polarize the carbonyl group and stabilize the oxyanion tetrahedral intermediate.  相似文献   

10.
The maximum velocity of the malic enzyme (L-malate: NADP+ oxidoreductase (oxaloacetate-decarboxylating), EC 1.1.1.40) reductive carboxylation of pyruvate and V/KCO2 are pH-independent from pH 5.5 to pH 8.5. V/K for pyruvate exhibits pK values values of 6.50 +/- 0.25 and 7.25 +/- 0.25. These data suggest that the binding of pyruvate locks the protonation state of enzyme. In addition, the pK values are within experimental error identical for the pH dependence of V/Kmalate and V/Kpyruvate. Thus, the catalytic groups appear to have reverse protonation states in the two reaction directions. The ratio of (V/Kmalate)/(V/Kpyruvate) is 100, suggesting that the protonation state of enzyme is optimum in the malate oxidative decarboxylation direction. Thus, the group with a pK of about 6 is unprotonated and the group with a pK of 7.5 is protonated for malate decarboxylation, and the opposite is true for pyruvate reductive carboxylation.  相似文献   

11.
Zheng R  Blanchard JS 《Biochemistry》2003,42(38):11289-11296
Ketopantoate reductase (EC 1.1.1.169), an enzyme in the pantothenate biosynthetic pathway, catalyzes the NADPH-dependent reduction of alpha-ketopantoate to form D-(-)-pantoate. The enzyme exhibits high specificity for ketopantoate, with V and V/K for ketopantoate being 5- and 365-fold higher than those values for alpha-ketoisovalerate and 20- and 648-fold higher than those values for alpha-keto-beta-methyl-n-valerate, respectively. For pyridine nucleotides, V/K for beta-NADPH is 3-500-fold higher than that for other nucleotide substrates. The magnitude of the primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects on V and V/K varied substantially when different ketoacid and pyridine nucleotide substrates were used. The small primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects observed using NADPH and NHDPH suggest that the chemical step is not rate-limiting, while larger primary deuterium isotope effects were observed for poor ketoacid and pyridine nucleotide substrates, indicating that the chemical reaction has become partially or completely rate-limiting. The pH dependence of (D)V using ketopantoate was observed to vary from a value of 1.1 at low pH to a value of 2.5 at high pH, while the magnitude of (D)V/K(NADPH) and (D)V/K(KP) were pH-independent. The value of (D)V is large and pH-independent when alpha-keto-beta-methyl-n-valerate was used as the ketoacid substrate. Solvent kinetic isotope effects of 2.2 and 1.2 on V and V/K, respectively, were observed with alpha-keto-beta-methyl-n-valerate. Rapid reaction analysis of NADPH oxidation using ketopantoate showed no "burst" phase, suggesting that product-release steps are not rate-limiting and the cause of the small observed kinetic isotope effects with this substrate pair. Large primary deuterium isotope effects on V and V/K using 3-APADPH in steady-state experiments, equivalent to the isotope effect observed in single turnover studies, suggests that chemistry is rate-limiting for this poorer reductant. These results are discussed in terms of a kinetic and chemical mechanism for the enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
T M Dougherty  W W Cleland 《Biochemistry》1985,24(21):5875-5880
pH profiles have been determined for the reactions catalyzed by pyruvate kinase between pyruvate and MgATP and between phosphoenolpyruvate and MgADP. V, V/KMgATP, and V/Kpyruvate all decrease below a pK of 8.3 and above one of 9.2. The group with pK = 8.3 is probably a lysine that removes the proton from pyruvate during enolization, while the pK of 9.2 is that of water coordinated to enzyme-bound Mg2+. The fact that this pK shows in all three pH profiles shows that pyruvate forms a predominantly second sphere complex and cannot replace hydroxide to form the inner sphere complex that results in enolization and subsequent phosphorylation. On the basis of the displacement of the pK of the acid-base catalytic group in its V/K profile, phosphoenolpyruvate is a sticky substrate, reacting to give pyruvate approximately 5 times faster than it dissociates. The V/K profile for the slow substrate phosphoenol-alpha-ketobutyrate shows the pK of 8.3 for the acid-base catalytic group in its correct position, but this group must be protonated so that it can donate a proton to the intermediate enolate following phosphoryl transfer. The secondary phosphate pK of the substrate is seen in this V/K profile as well as in the pKi profile for phosphoglycolate (but not in those for glycolate O-sulfate or oxalate), showing a preference for the trianion for binding. The chemical mechanism with the natural substrates thus appears to involve phosphoryl transfer between MgADP and a Mg2+-bound enolate with metal coordination of the enolate serving to make it a good leaving group.  相似文献   

13.
Aminopeptidases are major enzymes in the midgut microvillar membranes of most insects and are targets of insecticidal Bacillus thuringiensis crystal delta-endotoxins. Sequence analysis and substrate specificity studies showed that these enzymes resemble mammalian aminopeptidase N, although information on the organization of their active site is lacking. The effect of pH at different temperatures on the kinetic parameters of Tenebrio molitor (Coleoptera) larval aminopeptidase showed that enzyme catalysis depend on a deprotonated (pK 7.6; DeltaH degrees (ion), 7.6 kJ/mol) and a protonated (pK 8.2; DeltaH degrees (ion), 16.8 kJ/mol) group. 1-Ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl) carbodiimide and diethylpyrocarbonate inactivate the enzyme by modifying a pK 5.8 carboxylate and a imidazole group, respectively, with a reaction order around 1. Tetranitromethane changes the K(m) of the enzyme without affecting its V(max) by modifying a phenol group. The presence of a competitive inhibitor decrease the inactivation reaction rates in all these cases. EDTA inactivation of the aminopeptidase is affected by pH and temperature suggesting the involvement in metal binding of at least one deprotonated imidazole group (pK 5.8, DeltaH degrees (ion), 20 kJ/mol). The data support the hypothesis that T. molitor aminopeptidase catalysis depends on a catalytic metal and on a carboxylate and a protonated imidazole group, whereas substrate binding relies in one phenol and one carboxylate groups. The insect aminopeptidase shares common features with mammalian aminopeptidase N, although differing in details of substrate binding and in residues directly involved in catalysis.  相似文献   

14.
Steady-state kinetic studies with differing divalent metals ions have been carried out on the pyruvate kinase-catalyzed, divalent cation-dependent decarboxylation of oxalacetate to probe the role of the divalent metal ion in this reaction. With either Mn2+ or Co2+, initial velocity patterns show that the divalent metal ion is bound to the enzyme in a rapid equilibrium prior to the addition of oxalacetate. Further, there is no change in the initial velocity patterns or the kinetic parameters in the presence or absence of K+, indicating that K+ is not required for oxalacetate decarboxylation. Dead-end inhibition of the decarboxylation reaction by the physiological substrate phosphoenolpyruvate indicates that phosphoenolpyruvate binds only to the enzyme-metal ion complex and not to free enzyme. The pKi values for both Mn2+ and Co2+ decrease below a pK of 7.0, and increase above a pK of 8.9. Since these pK values are the same for both ions, both of the observed pK values must be attributable to enzymatic residues. The pK of 7.0 is presumably that of a ligand to the metal ion, while the pK of 8.9 is probably that of the lysine involved in enolization of pyruvate in the normal physiological reaction. However, with Co2+ as divalent cation, the V for oxalacetate decreases above a pK of 8.0, the V/K decreases above two pK values averaging 7.8, and the pKi for oxalate decreases above a single pK of 7.3. These data indicate that metal-coordinated water is displaced during the binding of substrates or inhibitors and the other pK value observed in both V and V/K pH profiles (pK of 8.3 with Co2+ and 9.2 with Mg2+) is an enzymatic residue whose deprotonation disrupts the charge distribution in the active site and decreases activity.  相似文献   

15.
Zheng R  Blanchard JS 《Biochemistry》2000,39(13):3708-3717
Ketopantoate reductase (EC 1.1.1.169) catalyzes the NADPH-dependent reduction of alpha-ketopantoate to form D-(-)-pantoate in the pantothenate/coenzyme A biosynthetic pathway. The enzyme encoded by the panE gene from E. coli K12 was overexpressed and purified to homogeneity. The native enzyme exists in solution as a monomer with a molecular mass of 34 000 Da. The steady-state initial velocity and product inhibition patterns are consistent with an ordered sequential kinetic mechanism in which NADPH binding is followed by ketopantoate binding, and pantoate release precedes NADP(+) release. The pH dependence of the kinetic parameters V and V/K for substrates in both the forward and reverse reactions suggests the involvement of a single general acid/base in the catalytic mechanism. An enzyme group exhibiting a pK value of 8.4 +/- 0.2 functions as a general acid in the direction of the ketopantoate reduction, while an enzyme group exhibiting a pK value of 7.8 +/- 0.2 serves as a general base in the direction of pantoate oxidation. The stereospecific transfer of the pro-S hydrogen atom of NADPH to the C-2 position of ketopantoate was demonstrated by (1)H NMR spectroscopy. Primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects of 1.3 and 1.5 on V(for) and V/K(NADPH), respectively, and 2.1 and 1.3 on V(rev) and V/K(HP), respectively, suggest that hydride transfer is not rate-limiting in catalysis. Solvent kinetic isotope effects of 1.3 on both V(for) and V/K(KP), and 1.4 and 1.5 on V(rev) and V/K(HP), respectively, support this conclusion. The apparent equilibrium constant, K(eq)', of 676 at pH 7.5 and the standard free energy change, DeltaG, of -14 kcal/mol suggest that ketopantoate reductase reaction is very favorable in the physiologically important direction of pantoate formation.  相似文献   

16.
Some physical and chemical properties of the monomeric NADP+-dependent aldehyde reductase (previously called TPN-L-hexonate dehydrogenase or D-glucuronate reductase) from pig kidney have been examined. The amino acid composition has been determined. Four of the five thiol groups react with p-mercuribenzoate at pH 7, with no resulting loss of catalytic activity. High concentrations of p-mercuribenzoate cause complete enzyme inhibition, which can be partly reversed by addition of aldehyde reductase is low (9%, estimated from the ellipticity at 208 nm), and 70 to 80% of the tyrosine and tryptophan residues aare buried within the molecule. One molecule of NADPH binds to the enzyme (Kp equal 25 muM), causing a blue shift and enhancement of the coenzyme fluorescence, and suggesting that the environment of the active site is hydrophobic. In the reduction of D-glyceraldehyde, catalyzed by aldehyde reductase, the pro-4R "A" hydrogen of NADPH attacks the re face of the carbonyl group. This stereospecificity is the same as in the reductions of D-glyceraldehyde and acetaldehyde effected by rabbit muscle dehydrogenase and liver alcohol dehydrogenase, respectively.  相似文献   

17.
Christendat D  Turnbull JL 《Biochemistry》1999,38(15):4782-4793
Site-directed mutagenesis was used to investigate the importance of Lys178, Arg286, and Arg294 in the binding of prephenate to the bifunctional enzyme chorismate mutase-prephenate dehydrogenase. From comparison of the kinetic parameters of wild-type enzyme and selected mutants, we conclude that only Arg294 interacts specifically with prephenate. The R294Q substitution reduces the enzyme's affinity for prephenate without affecting V/Et of the dehydrogenase reaction or the kinetic parameters of the mutase reaction. Arg294 likely interacts with the ring carboxylate at C-1 of prephenate since the dissociation constants for a series of inhibitors missing the ring carboxyl group were similar for wild-type and R294Q enzymes. The pH dependencies of log (V/KprephenateEt) and of pKi for hydroxyphenyllactate show that the wild-type dehydrogenase possesses a group with a pK of 8.8 that must be protonated for binding prephenate to the enzyme. None of the three conserved residues is this group since its titration is observed in the V/KprephenateEt profiles for the mutants K178Q, R286A, and R294Q. This group is also seen in the pH-rate profiles of the binding of two substrate analogues, hydroxyphenyllactate and deoxoprephenate. Their only common structural feature at C-1 is the side chain carboxylate, indicating that the protonated residue (pK 8.8) must interact with prephenate's side chain carboxylate. Gdn-HCl-induced denaturation was conducted on wild-type and selected mutant proteins. Unfolding of the wild-type enzyme proceeds through a partially unfolded dimer which dissociates into unfolded monomers. The order of stability is wild-type = R294Q > K178Q > R286A > K178R. The least unstable mutants have reduced mutase and dehydrogenase activities.  相似文献   

18.
M Y Yoon  P F Cook 《Biochemistry》1987,26(13):4118-4125
The pH dependence of kinetic parameters and inhibitor dissociation constants for the adenosine cyclic 3',5'-monophosphate dependent protein kinase reaction has been determined. Data are consistent with a mechanism in which reactants selectively bind to enzyme with the catalytic base unprotonated and an enzyme group required protonated for peptide (Leu-Arg-Arg-Ala-Ser-Leu-Gly) binding. Binding of the peptide apparently locks both of the above enzyme residues in their correct protonation state. MgATP preferentially binds fully ionized and requires an enzyme residue (probably lysine) to be protonated. The maximum velocity and V/KMgATP are pH independent. The V/K for Ser-peptide is bell-shaped with pK values of 6.2 and 8.5 estimated. The pH dependence of 1/Ki for Leu-Arg-Arg-Ala-Ala-Leu-Gly is also bell-shaped, giving pK values identical with those obtained for V/KSer-peptide, while the Ki for MgAMP-PCP increases from a constant value of 650 microM above pH 8 to a constant value of 4 mM below pH 5.5. The Ki for uncomplexed Mg2+ obtained from the Mg2+ dependence of V and V/KMgATP is apparently pH independent.  相似文献   

19.
Gadda G  Fitzpatrick PF 《Biochemistry》2000,39(6):1406-1410
Nitroalkane oxidase catalyzes the oxidation of nitroalkanes to aldehydes or ketones with production of nitrite and hydrogen peroxide. pH and kinetic isotope effects with [1, 1-(2)H(2)]nitroethane have been used to study the mechanism of this enzyme. The V/K(ne) pH profile is bell-shaped. A group with a pK(a) value of about 7 must be unprotonated and one with a pK(a) value of 9.5 must be protonated for catalysis. The lower pK(a) value is seen also in the pK(is) profile for the competitive inhibitor valerate, indicating that nitroethane has no significant external commitments to catalysis. The (D)(V/K)(ne) value is pH-independent with a value of 7.5, whereas the (D)V(max) value increases from 1.4 at pH 8.2 to a limiting value of 7.4 below pH 5. The V(max) pH profile decreases at low and high pH, with pK(a) values of 6.6 and 9.5, respectively. Imidazole, which activates the enzyme, affects the V(max) but not the V/K(ne) pH profile. In the presence of imidazole at pH 7 the (D)V(max) value increases to a value close to the intrinsic value, consistent with cleavage of the carbon-hydrogen bond of the substrate being fully rate-limiting for catalysis in the presence of imidazole.  相似文献   

20.
African trypanosomes are devoid of glutathione reductase activity, and instead contain a unique flavoprotein variant, trypanothione reductase, which acts on a cyclic derivative of glutathione, trypanothione. The high degree of sequence similarity between trypanothione reductase and glutathione reductase, as well as the obvious similarity in the reactions catalyzed, led us to investigate the pH dependence of the kinetic parameters, and the isotopic behavior of trypanothione reductase. The pH dependence of the kinetic parameters V, V/K for NADH, and V/K for oxidized trypanothione has been determined for trypanothione reductase from Trypanosoma congolense. Both V/K for NADH and the maximum velocity decrease as single groups exhibiting pK values of 8.87 +/- 0.09 and 9.45 +/- 0.07, respectively, are deprotonated. V/K for oxidized trypanothione, T(S)2, decreases as two groups exhibiting experimentally indistinguishable pK values of 8.74 +/- 0.03 are deprotonated. Variable magnitudes of the primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects on pyridine nucleotide oxidation are observed on V and V/K when different pyridine nucleotide substrates are used, and the magnitude of DV and D(V/K) is independent of the oxidized trypanothione concentration at pH 7.25. Solvent kinetic isotope effects, obtained with 2',3'-cNADPH as the variable substrate, were observed on V only, and plots of V versus mole fraction of D2O (i.e., proton inventory) were linear, and yielded values of 1.3-1.6 for D2OV. Solvent kinetic isotope effects obtained with alternate pyridine nucleotides as substrates were also observed on V, and the magnitude of D2OV decreases for each pyridine nucleotide as its maximal velocity relative to that of NADPH oxidation decreases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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