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1.
We have recorded 1H NMR spectra in H2O for exchangeable protons of four pyridoxal phosphate-dependent enzymes: D-serine dehydratase, aspartate aminotransferase, tryptophan: indole-lyase and glutamate decarboxylase. The molecular masses range from 48-250 kDa. In every case there are downfield peaks which are lost when the apoenzyme is formed. In most cases some peaks shift in response to interactions with substrates and inhibitors and with changes in pH. We associate one downfield resonance with the proton on the ring nitrogen of the coenzyme and others with imidazole groups that interact with coenzyme or substrates. The chemical shift for the coenzyme-bound proton differs for free enzyme, substrate Schiff base or quinonoid forms.  相似文献   

2.
Acylation of aspartate aminotransferase   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
1. Acetylation of aspartate aminotransferase from pig heart inhibits completely the enzymic activity when the coenzyme is in the amino form (pyridoxamine phosphate) or when the coenzyme has been removed, but not when the coenzyme is in the aldehyde form (pyridoxal phosphate). 2. The group the acylation of which is responsible for the inhibition has been identified with the in-amino group of a lysine residue at the coenzyme-binding site. Moreover, in the pyridoxamine-enzyme the amino group of the coenzyme is also acetylated. 3. The reactivity of the coenzyme-binding lysine residue is greatly different in the pyridoxamine-enzyme and in the apoenzyme, suggesting the possibility of an interaction of its in-amino group with pyridoxamine or with other groups on the protein.  相似文献   

3.
Stereochemical studies of three pyridoxal phosphate dependent decarboxylases and serine hydroxymethyltransferase have allowed the dispositions of conjugate acids that operate at the C alpha and C-4' positions of intermediate quinoids to be determined. Kinetic work with the decarboxylase group has determined that two different acids are involved, a monoprotic acid and a polyprotic acid. The use of solvent kinetic isotope effects allowed the resolution of chemical steps in the reaction coordinate profile for decarboxylation and abortive transamination and pH-sensitivities gave the molecular pKa of the monoprotic base. Thus the epsilon-ammonium group of the internal aldimine-forming lysine residue operates at C-4'-si-face of the coenzyme and the imidazolium side chain of an active site histidine residue protonates at C alpha from the 4'-si-face. Histidine serves two other functions, as a base in generating nitrogen nucleophiles during both transaldimination processes and as a binding group for the alpha-carboxyl group of substrates. The latter role for histidine was determined by comparison of the sequences for decarboxylase active site tetrapeptides (e.g. -S-X-H-K-) with that for aspartate aminotransferase (e.g. -S-X-A-K-) where it was known, from X-ray studies, that the serine and lysine residues interact with the coenzyme. By using the Dunathan Postulate, the conformation of the external aldimine was modified, and without changing the tetrapeptide conformation, the alanine residue was altered to a histidine. This model for the active site of a pyridoxal dependent decarboxylase was consistent with all available stereochemical and mechanistic data.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
The active site residue lysine 258 of chicken mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase was replaced with a histidine residue by means of site-directed mutagenesis. The mutant protein was expressed in Escherichia coli and purified to homogeneity. Addition of 2-oxoglutarate to its pyridoxamine form changed the coenzyme absorption spectrum (lambda max = 330 nm) to that of the pyridoxal form (lambda max = 330/392 nm). The rate of this half-reaction of transamination (kcat = 4.0 x 10(-4)s-1) is five orders of magnitude slower than that of the wild-type enzyme. However, the reverse half-reaction, initiated by addition of aspartate or glutamate to the pyridoxal form of the mutant enzyme, is only three orders of magnitude slower than that of the wild-type enzyme, kmax of the observable rate-limiting elementary step, i.e. the conversion of the external aldimine to the pyridoxamine form, being 7.0 x 10(-2)s-1. Aspartate aminotransferase (Lys258----His) thus represents a pyridoxal-5'-phosphate-dependent enzyme with significant catalytic competence without an active site lysine residue. Apparently, covalent binding of the coenzyme, i.e. the internal aldimine linkage, is not essential for the enzymic transamination reaction, and a histidine residue can to some extent substitute for lysine 258 which is assumed to act as proton donor/acceptor in the aldimine-ketimine tautomerization.  相似文献   

5.
D L Smith  S C Almo  M D Toney  D Ringe 《Biochemistry》1989,28(20):8161-8167
The three-dimensional structure of a mutant of the aspartate aminotransferase from Escherichia coli, in which the active-site lysine has been substituted by alanine (K258A), has been determined at 2.8-A resolution by X-ray diffraction. The mutant enzyme contains pyridoxamine phosphate as cofactor. The structure is compared to that of the mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase. The most striking differences, aside from the absence of the lysine side chain, occur in the positions of the pyridoxamine group and of tryptophan 140.  相似文献   

6.
The carbonyl reagent amino-oxyacetate is frequently used in metabolic studies to inhibit individual pyridoxal phosphate enzymes. The reaction of this compound with three such enzymes, aspartate transaminase, 4-aminobutyrate transaminase and dopa (3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine) decarboxylase, was studied to determine the extent to which the inhibition is reversible and the rates at which it takes place. Reactions were followed by observing changes in the absorption spectra of the bound coenzyme and by measuring loss of enzyme activity. The reactions with aspartate transaminase and aminobutyrate transaminase were not rapidly reversible and had second-order rate constants (21 degrees C) of 400 M-1.s.1 and 1300 M-1.s-1 respectively and all all concentrations studied showed the kinetics of a simple bimolecular reaction. The reaction with 4-aminobutyrate transaminase could not be reversed and that with aspartate transaminase could only be reversed significantly by addition of cysteinesulphinate to convert the enzyme into its pyridoxamine form. The first-order rate constant (21 degrees C) for the reverse reaction was 4 X 10(-5)s-1. Dopa decarboxylase inhibition by amino-oxyacetate was more rapid and more readily reversible, but measurements of rate and equilibrium constants were not obtained for this enzyme.  相似文献   

7.
Pyridoxamine-pyruvate aminotransferase is a PLP (pyridoxal 5'-phosphate) (a coenzyme form of vitamin B6)-independent aminotransferase which catalyses a reversible transamination reaction between pyridoxamine and pyruvate to form pyridoxal and L-alanine. The gene encoding the enzyme has been identified, cloned and overexpressed for the first time. The mlr6806 gene on the chromosome of a symbiotic nitrogen-fixing bacterium, Mesorhizobium loti, encoded the enzyme, which consists of 393 amino acid residues. The primary sequence was identical with those of archaeal aspartate aminotransferase and rat serine-pyruvate aminotransferase, which are PLP-dependent aminotransferases. The results of fold-type analysis and the consensus amino acid residues found around the active-site lysine residue identified in the present study showed that the enzyme could be classified into class V aminotransferases of fold type I or the AT IV subfamily of the alpha family of the PLP-dependent enzymes. Analyses of the absorption and CD spectra of the wild-type and point-mutated enzymes showed that Lys197 was essential for the enzyme activity, and was the active-site lysine residue that corresponded to that found in the PLP-dependent aminotransferases, as had been suggested previously [Hodsdon, Kolb, Snell and Cole (1978) Biochem. J. 169, 429-432]. The K(d) value for pyridoxal determined by means of CD was 100-fold lower than the K(m) value for it, suggesting that Schiff base formation between pyridoxal and the active-site lysine residue is partially rate determining in the catalysis of pyridoxal. The active-site structure and evolutionary aspects of the enzyme are discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Conditions for reductive methylation of amine groups in proteins using formaldehyde and cyanoborohydride can be chosen to modify selectively the active site lysyl residue of aspartate aminotransferase among the 19 lysyl residues in each subunit of this protein. Apoenzyme must be treated, under mildly acidic conditions (pH = 6), at a relatively low molar ratio of formaldehyde to protein (40:1); and, upon reduction with sodium cyanoborohydride, 85% of the formaldehyde is incorporated at Lysine 258 and 15% at the amino-terminal alanyl residue. The modified protein, characterized after tryptic hydrolysis, separation of the peptides by high performance liquid chromatography procedures and subsequent amino acid analysis, shows that lysine 258 is preferentially modified as a dimethylated derivative. Modified apoenzyme can accept and tightly bind added coenzyme pyridoxal phosphate, as measured by circular dichroism procedures. The methylated enzyme is essentially catalytically inactive when measured by standard enzymatic assays. On the other hand, addition of the substrate, glutamate, produces the characteristic absorption spectral shifts for conversion of the active site-bound pyridoxal form of the coenzyme (absorbance at 400 nm) to its pyridoxamine form (absorbance at 330 nm). Such a half-transamination-like process occurs as in native enzyme, albeit at several orders of magnitude lower rate. This event takes place even though the characteristic internal holoenzyme Schiff's base between Lys-258 and aldehyde of bound pyridoxal phosphate does not exist in methylated, reconstituted holoenzyme. It is concluded that this chemically transformed enzyme can undergo a half-transamination reaction with conversion of active site-bound coenzyme from a pyridoxal to a pyridoxamine form, even when overall catalytic turnover transamination cannot be detected.  相似文献   

9.
Pyridoxal kinase is an ATP dependent enzyme that phosphorylates pyridoxal, pyridoxine, and pyridoxamine forming their respective 5'-phosphorylated esters. The kinase is a part of the salvage pathway for re-utilizing pyridoxal 5'-phosphate, which serves as a coenzyme for dozens of enzymes involved in amino acid and sugar metabolism. Clones of two pyridoxal kinases from Escherichia coli and one from human were inserted into a pET 22b plasmid and expressed in E. coli. All three enzymes were purified to near homogeneity and kinetic constants were determined for the three vitamin substrates. Previous studies had suggested that ZnATP was the preferred trinucleotide substrate, but our studies show that under physiological conditions MgATP is the preferred substrate. One of the two E. coli kinases has very low activity for pyridoxal, pyridoxine, and pyridoxamine. We conclude that in vivo this kinase may have an alternate substrate involved in another metabolic pathway and that pyridoxal has only a poor secondary activity for this kinase.  相似文献   

10.
Amino groups in the pyridoxal phosphate, pyridoxamine phosphate, and apo forms of pig heart cytoplasmic aspartate aminotransferase (L-aspartate: 2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase, EC .2.6.1.1) have been reversibly modified with 2,4-pentanedione. The rate of modification has been measured spectrophotometrically by observing the formation of the enamine produced and this rate has been compared with the rate of loss of catalytic activity for all three forms of the enzyme. Of the 21 amino groups per 46 500 molecular weight, approx. 16 can be modified in the pyridoxal phosphate form with less than a 50% change in the catalytic activity of the enzyme. A slow inactivation occurs which is probably due to reaction of 2,4-pentanedione with the enzyme-bound pyridoxal phosphate. The pyridoxamine phosphate enzyme is completely inactivated by reaction with 2,4-pentanedione. The inactivation of the pyridoxamine phosphate enzyme is not inhibited by substrate analogs. A single lysine residue in the apoenzyme reacts approx. 100 times faster with 2,4-pentanedione than do other amino groups. This lysine is believed to be lysine-258, which forms a Schiff base with pyridoxal phosphate in the holoenzyme.  相似文献   

11.
The active site of Sulfolobus solfataricus aspartate aminotransferase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Aspartate aminotransferase from the archaebacterium Sulfolobus solfataricus binds pyridoxal 5' phosphate, via an aldimine bond, with Lys-241. This residue has been identified by reducing the enzyme in the pyridoxal form with sodium cyanoboro[3H]hydride and sequencing the specifically labeled peptic peptides. The amino acid sequence centered around the coenzyme binding site is highly conserved between thermophilic aspartate aminotransferases and differs from that found in mesophilic isoenzymes. An alignment of aspartate aminotransferase from Sulfolobus solfataricus with mesophilic isoenzymes, attempted in spite of the low degree of similarity, was confirmed by the correspondence between pyridoxal 5' phosphate binding residues. Using this alignment it was possible to insert the archaebacterial aspartate aminotransferase into a subclass, subclass I, of pyridoxal 5' phosphate binding enzymes comprising mesophilic aspartate aminotransferases, tyrosine aminotransferases and histidinol phosphate aminotransferases. These enzymes share 12 invariant amino acids most of which interact with the coenzyme or with the substrates. Some enzymes of subclass I and in particular aspartate aminotransferase from Sulfolobus solfataricus, lack a positively charged residue, corresponding to Arg-292, which in pig cytosolic aspartate aminotransferase interacts with the distal carboxylate of the substrates (and determines the specificity towards dicarboxylic acids). It was confirmed that aspartate aminotransferase from Sulfolobus solfataricus does not possess any arginine residue exposed to chemical modifications responsible for the binding of omega-carboxylate of the substrates. Furthermore, it has been found that aspartate aminotransferase from Sulfolobus solfataricus is fairly active when alanine is used as substrate and that this activity is not affected by the presence of formate. The KM value of the thermophilic aspartate aminotransferase towards alanine is at least one order of magnitude lower than that of the mesophilic analogue enzymes.  相似文献   

12.
Observation of the 93-kDa cytosolic aspartate aminotransferase by 500-MHz 1H NMR spectroscopy in H2O has revealed a series of resonances in the 10-18 ppm range arising from exchangeable protons. One of these (peak A) has been assigned to the proton bound to the ring nitrogen of the coenzyme pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. A second (peak B) is assigned to H143 which participates in a chain of hydrogen bonds that includes also the coenzyme-bound proton. There is a mutual nuclear Overhauser effect between these two resonances. Peaks A and B respond to changes in pH and to interaction of the enzyme with coenzyme derivatives and inhibitors. Peak A moves from 15.4 to 17.4 ppm as the pH is lowered, while peak B moves in the opposite direction from 14.7 to 13.7 ppm, both with an apparent pKa of 6.15. This pKa is associated with deprotonation of the imine nitrogen at the Schiff base linkage of the coenzyme with K258 of the enzyme. In spectra of enzyme containing pyridoxamine 5'-phosphate, peak A is observed at 16.5 ppm and peak B is at 13.9 ppm over a broad pH range. Peaks A and B are found at 17.8 and 14.0 ppm, respectively, for the enzyme complex with glutarate. When alpha-methylaspartate is added to the enzyme several new resonances appear in the spectrum, which are attributed to formation of the external aldimine. The position of peak A in spectra of various forms of the enzyme is interpreted to reflect the electronic distribution in the coenzyme ring. Several other peaks in this region of the spectrum also are sensitive to changes in pH or the addition of inhibitors. Some possible assignments of these resonances are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
The chemical modification of pig liver 4-aminobutyrate aminotransferase by the antiepileptic drug 4-aminohex-5-enoate (Vigabatrin) has been studied. After inactivation by 14C-labeled Vigabatrin, the enzyme was digested with trypsin, and automated Edman degradation of the purified labeled peptide gave the sequence FWAHEHWGLDDPADVMTFSKK. Chymotryptic digestion of the tryptic peptide and sequencing of a resulting tripeptide identified the penultimate lysine residue of this peptide as the site of covalent modification. This lysine normally binds the coenzyme. Absorption spectroscopy demonstrated the absence of coenzyme from the tryptic peptide, and mass spectrometry showed its mass/charge ratio to be increased by 128. All of the bound coenzyme released after denaturation of the inactivated enzyme was as pyridoxamine phosphate. The structural nature of the modification is deduced, and mechanisms for its occurrence identified. Initially, 1 mol of radiolabeled inhibitor was bound per mol of monomer of the enzyme, although approximately half was released during denaturation and digestion, while the remainder was irreversibly bound. Coenzyme not released as pyridoxamine phosphate retained the absorbance characteristics of the aldimine, although the enzyme was completely inactive. Mass spectrometry of the sample of purified radiolabeled tryptic peptide revealed the presence of an approximately equal amount of a second fragment that contained no modification and from which the second lysine was absent, indicating that at the time of proteolysis the active site lysine was unaltered in 50% of the enzyme molecules.  相似文献   

14.
Apoenzyme samples of aspartate aminotransferase (AspAT) purified from the cytosolic fraction of pig heart were reconstituted with [4'-13C]pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (pyridoxal-P). The 13C NMR spectra of AspAT samples thus generated established the chemical shift of 165.3 ppm for C4' of the coenzyme bound as an internal aldimine with lysine 258 of the enzyme at pH 5. In the absence of ligands the chemical shift of C4' was shown to be pH dependent, shifting 5 ppm upfield to a constant value of 160.2 ppm above pH 8, the resulting pKa of 6.3 in agreement with spectrophotometric titrations. The addition of the competitive inhibitor succinate to the internal aldimine raises the pKa of the imine to 7.8, consistent with the theory of charge neutralization in the active site. In the presence of saturating concentrations of 2-methylaspartic acid the C4' signal of the coenzyme was shown to be invariant with pH and located at 162.7 ppm, midway between the observed chemical shifts of the protonated and unprotonated forms of the internal aldimine. The intermediate chemical shift of the external aldimine complex is thought to reflect the observation of an equilibrium mixture composed of roughly equal populations of the protonated ketoenamine and a dipolar anion species, corresponding to their respective spectral bands at 430 and 360-370 nm. Conversion to the pyridoxamine form was accomplished via reaction of the internal aldimine with L-cysteinesulfinate or by reduction with sodium borohydride, and the resulting C4' chemical shifts were identified by difference spectroscopy. Finally, the line widths of the C4' resonance under the various conditions were measured and qualitatively compared. The results are discussed in terms of the current mechanism and molecular models of the active site of AspAT.  相似文献   

15.
1. The effect of pH change on the reconstitution of aspartate aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.1), i.e. the reactivation of the apoenzyme with coenzyme (pyridoxal phosphate and pyridoxamine phosphate), was studied in the pH range 4.2-8.9 by using three buffer systems at concentrations ranging from 0.025 to 0.1m. 2. Although the profile of the reconstitution rate-pH curve in the range pH5.2-6.8 (covered by sodium cacodylate-HCl buffer) reflects the influence of the H(+) concentration on the reconstitution process, the profile of the curve in the pH ranges 4.2-5.6 and 7.2-8.25 (covered respectively by sodium acetate-acetic acid and Tris-HCl buffers) appears to be influenced by the ionic strength of the buffer. 3. The reconstitution is also influenced by univalent inorganic ions such as halide ions and, to a lesser extent, alkali metal ions, which are known to alter the water structure.  相似文献   

16.
Measurement of the stereospecific release of the pro-S proton from C-4' of enzyme-bound pyridoxamine 5'-phosphate provides an experimental means to probe parts of the active site of aspartate aminotransferase independently of substrate turnover (Tobler, H. P., Christen, P., and Gehring, H. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 7105-7108). The release of pro-S 3H from enzyme-bound [3H]pyridoxamine 5'-phosphate is 30,000 times faster than from free coenzyme. Enzyme-bound [3H]pyridoxine 5'-phosphate is not detritiated suggesting an essential role of the 4'-amino group. Formation of the unproductive complex of the [3H]pyridoxamine 5'-phosphate-enzyme with aspartate or glutamate results in a 400-fold acceleration of 3H release. In contrast, addition of borohydride or cyanoborohydride immediately stops 3H release. Experiments with a fluorescent reporter group and with differential chemical modifications indicate that the activating effect of aspartate on the release of 3H is accompanied by a shift of the so-called open/closed conformational equilibrium of the enzyme (Kirsch, J.F., Eichele, G., Ford, G. C., Vincent, M.G., Jansonius, J.N., Gehring, H., and Christen, P. (1984) J. Mol. Biol. 174, 497-525) toward the closed conformation; the inhibiting effect of borohydride and cyanoborohydride appears to be accompanied by a shift toward the open conformation. Apparently, at least part of the catalytic apparatus of aspartate aminotransferase becomes fully operative only in the closed conformation of the enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
Aspartate aminotransferase from the archaebacterium Sulfolobus solfataricus, a thermoacidophilic organism isolated from an acidic hot spring (optimal growth conditions: 87 degrees C, pH 3.5) was purified to homogeneity. The enzyme is a dimer (Mr subunit = 53,000) showing microheterogeneity when submitted to chromatofocusing and/or isoelectric focusing analysis (two main bands having pI = 6.8 and 6.3 were observed). The N-terminal sequence (22 residues) does not show any homology with any stretch of known sequence of aspartate aminotransferases from animal and bacterial sources. The apoenzyme can be reconstituted with pyridoxamine 5'-phosphate and/or pyridoxal 5'-phosphate, each subunit binding 1 mol of coenzyme. The absorption maxima of the pyridoxamine and pyridoxal form are centered at 325 and 335 nm, respectively; the shape of the pyridoxal form band does not change with pH. The enzyme has an optimum temperature higher than 95 degrees C, and at 100 degrees C shows a half-inactivation time of 2 h. The above properties seem to be unique even for enzymes from extreme thermophiles (Daniel, R. M. (1986) in Protein Structure, Folding, and Design (Oxender, D. L., ed) pp. 291-296, Alan R. Liss, Inc., New York) and lead to the conclusion that aspartate aminotransferase from S. solfataricus is one of the most thermophilic and thermostable enzymes so far known.  相似文献   

18.
NtdA from Bacillus subtilis is a sugar aminotransferase that catalyzes the pyridoxal phosphate-dependent equatorial transamination of 3-oxo-α-d-glucose 6-phosphate to form α-d-kanosamine 6-phosphate. The crystal structure of NtdA shows that NtdA shares the common aspartate aminotransferase fold (Type 1) with residues from both monomers forming the active site. The crystal structures of NtdA alone, co-crystallized with the product α-d-kanosamine 6-phosphate, and incubated with the amine donor glutamate reveal three key structures in the mechanistic pathway of NtdA. The structure of NtdA alone reveals the internal aldimine form of NtdA with the cofactor pyridoxal phosphate covalently attached to Lys-247. The addition of glutamate results in formation of pyridoxamine phosphate. Co-crystallization with kanosamine 6-phosphate results in the formation of the external aldimine. Only α-d-kanosamine 6-phosphate is observed in the active site of NtdA, not the β-anomer. A comparison of the structure and sequence of NtdA with other sugar aminotransferases enables us to propose that the VIβ family of aminotransferases should be divided into subfamilies based on the catalytic lysine motif.  相似文献   

19.
Both cytosolic and mitochondrial aspartate transaminase can be resolved of pyridoxal phosphate. The resulting apoenzymes still bind individual structural components of the coenzyme. The separate contributions of coenzyme components to protein thermal stability have been independently assessed for phosphate ions (Pi) and for the pyridoxal or pyridoxamine components of the coenzyme. 31P NMR and differential scanning calorimetry reveal that the thermodynamic contributions of binding are not additive and are dissimilar for the two isozymes. High and low affinity sites for Pi binding are present in both apoenzymes with only the low affinity site being present in the holoenzyme forms. The contribution of both bound phosphates to increasing temperatures (Tm) and enthalpies (delta Hd) of denaturation differ between the isozymes and within sites. In either isozyme occupancy of the high affinity site by Pi produces only a 4- or 5- degree increase in the Tm value with respect to Pi-free apoenzyme. By contrast, in the mitochondrial apoenzyme, the presence of Pi at the second low affinity site increases the calorimetric parameters from Tm = 47 degrees C and delta Hd = 4.7 cal g-1 to Tm = 62 degrees C and delta Hd = 7 cal g-1. For cytosolic apoenzyme the respective changes are from 66 to 69.5 degrees C and 5.2 to 5.8 cal g-1. Addition of pyridoxal, but not pyridoxamine, displaces the high affinity Pi in both apoenzymes. This shows that the pyridine ring and Pi groups of pyridoxal-P bind exclusive of each other when they are not covalently linked as an ester, as in the coenzyme. The observation has been exploited as a method to prepare completely dephosphorylated mitochondrial apoenzyme. Electrostatic effects, structural differences in the phosphate binding pockets, and steric effects can be invoked to account for the Pi and pyridine binding behavior in the two proteins.  相似文献   

20.
Asp222 is an invariant residue in all known sequences of aspartate aminotransferases from a variety of sources and is located within a distance of strong ionic interaction with N(1) of the coenzyme, pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP), or pyridoxamine 5'-phosphate (PMP). This residue of Escherichia coli aspartate aminotransferase was replaced by Ala, Asn, or Glu by site-directed mutagenesis. The PLP form of the mutant enzyme D222E showed pH-dependent spectral changes with a pKa value of 6.44 for the protonation of the internal aldimine bond, slightly lower than that (6.7) for the wild-type enzyme. In contrast, the internal aldimine bond in the D222A or D222N enzyme did not titrate over the pH range 5.3-9.5, and a 430-nm band attributed to the protonated aldimine persisted even at high pH. The binding affinity of the D222A and D222N enzymes for PMP decreased by 3 orders of magnitude as compared to that of the wild-type enzyme. Pre-steady-state half-transamination reactions of all the mutant enzymes with substrates exhibited anomalous progress curves comprising multiphasic exponential processes, which were accounted for by postulating several kinetically different enzyme species for both the PLP and PMP forms of each mutant enzyme. While the replacement of Asp222 by Glu yielded fairly active enzyme species, the replacement by Ala and Asn resulted in 8600- and 20,000-fold decreases, respectively, in the catalytic efficiency (kmax/Kd value for the most active species of each mutant enzyme) in the reactions of the PLP form with aspartate. In contrast, the catalytic efficiency of the PMP form of the D222A or D222N enzyme with 2-oxoglutarate was still retained at a level as high as 2-10% of that of the wild-type enzyme. The presteady-state reactions of these two mutant enzymes with [2-2H]aspartate revealed a deuterium isotope effect (kH/kD = 6.0) greater than that [kH/kD = 2.2; Kuramitsu, S., Hiromi, K., Hayashi, H., Morino, Y., & Kagamiyama, H. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 5469-5476] for the wild-type enzyme. These findings indicate that the presence of a negatively charged residue at position 222 is particularly critical for the withdrawal of the alpha-proton of the amino acid substrate and accelerates this rate-determining step by about 5 kcal.mol-1. Thus it is concluded that Asp222 serves as a protein ligand tethering the coenzyme in a productive mode within the active site and stabilizes the protonated N(1) of the coenzyme to strengthen the electron-withdrawing capacity of the coenzyme.  相似文献   

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