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1.
Site-specific mutagenesis was employed to study structure-function relationships at the substrate binding site of rat tissue kallikrein. Four kallikrein mutants, the Pro219 deletion (P219del), the 34-38 loop Tyr-Tyr-Phe-Gly to Ile-Asn mutation [YYFG(34-38)IN], the Trp215----Gly exchange (W215G) and the double mutant with Tyr99----His and Trp215----Gly exchange (Y99H:W215G) were created by site-directed mutagenesis to probe their function in substrate binding. The mutant proteins were expressed in Escherichia coli at high levels and analyzed by Western blot. These mutant enzymes were purified to apparent homogeneity. Each migrated as a single band on SDS-PAGE, with slightly lower molecular mass (36 kDa) than that of the native enzyme, (38 kDa) because of their lack of glycosylation. The recombinant kallikreins are immunologically identical to the native enzyme, displaying parallelism with the native enzyme in a direct radioimmunoassay for rat tissue kallikrein. Kinetic analyses of Km and kcat using fluorogenic peptide substrates support the hypothesis that the Tyr99-Trp215 interaction is a major determinant for hydrophobic P2 specificity. The results suggest an important role for the 34-38 loop in hydrophobic P3 affinity and further show that Pro219 is essential to substrate binding and efficient catalysis of tissue kallikrein.  相似文献   

2.
The side chain of Gln143, a conserved residue in manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD), forms a hydrogen bond with the manganese-bound solvent and is critical in maintaining catalytic activity. The side chains of Tyr34 and Trp123 form hydrogen bonds with the carboxamide of Gln143. We have replaced Tyr34 and Trp123 with Phe in single and double mutants of human MnSOD and measured their catalytic activity by stopped-flow spectrophotometry and pulse radiolysis. The replacements of these side chains inhibited steps in the catalysis as much as 50-fold; in addition, they altered the gating between catalysis and formation of a peroxide complex to yield a more product-inhibited enzyme. The replacement of both Tyr34 and Trp123 in a double mutant showed that these two residues interact cooperatively in maintaining catalytic activity. The crystal structure of Y34F/W123F human MnSOD at 1.95 A resolution suggests that this effect is not related to a conformational change in the side chain of Gln143, which does not change orientation in Y34F/W123F, but rather to more subtle electronic effects due to the loss of hydrogen bonding to the carboxamide side chain of Gln143. Wild-type MnSOD containing Trp123 and Tyr34 has approximately the same thermal stability compared with mutants containing Phe at these positions, suggesting the hydrogen bonds formed by these residues have functional rather than structural roles.  相似文献   

3.
The heme of neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) participates in O2 activation but also binds self-generated NO, resulting in reversible feedback inhibition. We utilized mutagenesis to investigate if a conserved tryptophan residue (Trp409), which engages in pi-stacking with the heme and hydrogen bonds to its axial cysteine ligand, helps control catalysis and regulation by NO. Mutants W409F and W409Y were hyperactive regarding NO synthesis without affecting cytochrome c reduction, reductase-independent N-hydroxyarginine oxidation, or Arg and tetrahydrobiopterin binding. In the absence of Arg electron flux through the heme was slower in the W409 mutants than in wild-type. However, less NO complex accumulated during NO synthesis by the mutants. To understand the mechanism, we compared the kinetics of heme-NO complex formation, rate of heme reduction, kcat prior to and after NO complex formation, NO binding affinity, NO complex stability, and its reaction with O2. During the initial phase of NO synthesis, heme-NO complex formation was three and five times slower in W409F and W409Y, which corresponded to a slower heme reduction. NO complex formation inhibited wild-type turnover 7-fold but reduced mutant turnover less than 2-fold, giving mutants higher steady-state activities. NO binding kinetics were similar among mutants and wild type, although mutants also formed a 417 nm ferrous-NO complex. Oxidation of ferrous-NO complex was seven times faster in mutants than in wild type. We conclude that mutant hyperactivity primarily derives from slower heme reduction and faster oxidation of the heme-NO complex by O2. In this way Trp409 mutations minimize NO feedback inhibition by limiting buildup of the ferrous-NO complex during the steady state. Conservation of W409 among NOS suggests that this proximal Trp may regulate NO feedback inhibition and is important for enzyme physiologic function.  相似文献   

4.
Two mutant lactose repressors, each containing a single tryptophan, were generated by site-specific mutagenesis. Tyrosine was substituted for tryptophan to be analogous to amber suppression mutants reported previously (Sommer, H., Lu, P., and Miller, J. H. (1976) J. Biol. Chem. 251, 3774-3779). Unlike the amber suppression mutants, plasmids containing the mutant sequences produce large quantities of stable, easily isolable protein. The binding properties of the site-specific mutant repressors (W201Y, W220Y) differ from those reported for the corresponding suppression mutants (A201, A220). Whereas minimal effects on operator dissociation rate from lambda plac DNA were noted for the suppression mutants, purified W201Y and W220Y proteins exhibit 10- and 5-fold reduced affinity for a 40-base pair operator, respectively, compared with wild-type. Inducer binding of the A201 and W201Y mutants was similar to that for wild-type repressor, but the inducer affinity of W220Y was approximately 2-fold lower than A220 (approximately 30-fold lower than wild-type). Fluorescence spectra and iodide quenching of the mutant proteins were similar to the suppression mutants, but the absorption coefficient differed significantly from the values reported previously. Acrylamide and iodide quenching results indicate that Trp201 is relatively buried whereas Trp220 is exposed to solvent; inducer binding reduces quenching of Trp220 significantly. CD spectra indicate that the mutant proteins have secondary structural features similar to those of wild-type. Inducer UV difference spectra showed that the major features reported for the wild-type isopropyl beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside difference spectrum were attributable to both tryptophans. In the presence of melibiose, a new minimum appeared in the difference spectra of wild-type and W201Y which was not evident when these proteins bound isopropyl beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside. It is possible that this new feature results from Trp220 involvement in a direct contact with the second sugar in disaccharide inducer molecules such as melibiose and 1,6-allolactose.  相似文献   

5.
Munagala N  Basus VJ  Wang CC 《Biochemistry》2001,40(14):4303-4311
The hypoxanthine-guanine-xanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (HGXPRTase), a type I PRTase, from Tritrichomonas foetus, is a potential target for antitritrichomonal chemotherapy. Structural data on all the type I PRTases reveal a highly flexible, 11-14-amino acid loop, presumably covering the active site. With the exception of a highly conserved Ser-Tyr dipeptide, the other amino acids constituting the loop vary widely among different PRTases. The roles of the conserved Ser73 and Tyr74 residues in the loop and the dynamics of the loop in T. foetus HGXPRTase were investigated using site-directed mutants, stop-flow kinetics, chemical modification, and two-dimensional (1)H-(15)N heteronuclear NMR relaxation experiments. S73A, Y74F, and Y74E mutants of HGXPRTase exhibited a 5-7-fold increase in K(m) for guanine and a 3-5-fold increase in K(m) for PRPP compared to that of the wild type, reflecting the decreased affinity of binding for the two substrates. The k(cat)'s for these mutant-catalyzed reactions, however, do not change appreciably from that of the wild-type enzyme. Stopped-flow fluorescence with a Y74W mutant showed no apparent quenching by adding either PRPP or GMP alone. When both PRPP and guanine were added together, however, the fluorescence was rapidly quenched, followed by a slow recovery as the enzyme-catalyzed reaction progressed, suggesting movement of the loop during catalysis. In the presence of 9-deazaguanine and PRPP, the rapidly quenched fluorescence was not recovered, suggesting a closed loop form. The accessibility of Trp74 in the flexible loop of the mutant enzyme was also analyzed using N-bromosuccinimide (NBS), which reacts specifically with the tryptophan residue. NBS reacted with the only tryptophan in the Y74W mutant enzyme and rendered the enzyme inactive. GMP or PRPP alone failed to protect the enzyme from NBS inactivation. However, the presence of both 9-deazaguanine and PPRP protected the enzyme, allowing it to retain up to 70% of its activity. An S75H mutant, labeled with [(15)N]histidine, was used in the (1)H-(15)N NMR study. Spectra obtained in the presence of enzyme substrates indicated an apparent stabilization of the loop only in the presence of 9-deazaguanine and PRPP. These experimental results thus clearly demonstrated stabilization of the flexible loop upon binding of both PRPP and guanine and suggested its involvement in enzyme catalysis.  相似文献   

6.
On the basis of the molecular evolution of hen egg white, human, and turkey lysozymes, three replacements (Trp62 with Tyr, Asn37 with Gly, and Asp101 with Gly) were introduced into the active-site cleft of hen egg white lysozyme by site-directed mutagenesis. The replacement of Trp62 with Tyr led to enhanced bacteriolytic activity at pH 6.2 and a lower binding constant for chitotriose. The fluorescence spectral properties of this mutant hen egg white lysozyme were found to be similar to those of human lysozyme, which contains Tyr at position 62. The replacement of Asn37 with Gly had little effect on the enzymatic activity and binding constant for chitotriose. However, the combination of Asn37----Gly (N37G) replacement with Asp101----Gly (D101G) and Trp62----Tyr (W62Y) conversions enhanced bacteriolytic activity much more than each single mutation and restored hydrolytic activity toward glycol chitin. Consequently, the mutant lysozyme containing triple replacements (N37G, W62Y, and D101G) showed about 3-fold higher bacteriolytic activity than the wild-type hen lysozyme at pH 6.2, which is close to the optimum pH of the wild-type enzyme.  相似文献   

7.
Y F Li  A Sancar 《Biochemistry》1990,29(24):5698-5706
Escherichia coli DNA photolyase repairs pyrimidine dimers by a photoinduced electron-transfer reaction. The enzyme binds to UV-damaged DNA independent of light (the dark reaction) and upon absorbing a 300-500-nm photon breaks the cyclobutane ring of the dimer (the light reaction) and thus restores the DNA. No structural information on the enzyme is available at present. However, comparison of the sequences of photolyases from five different organisms has identified highly conserved regions of homology. These regions are presumably involved in chromophore (flavin and folate) and substrate binding or catalysis. Trp277 (W277) in E. coli photolyase is conserved in all photolyases sequenced to date. We replaced this residue with Arg, Glu, Gln, His, and Phe by site-specific mutagenesis. Properties of the mutant proteins indicate that W277 is involved in binding to DNA but not in chromophore binding or catalysis. Of particular significance is the finding that compared to wild type W277R and W277E mutants have about 300- and 1000-fold lower affinity, respectively, for substrate but were indistinguishable from wild-type enzyme in their photochemical and photocatalytic properties.  相似文献   

8.
Xyl1 from Streptomyces sp. S38 belongs to the low molecular mass family 11 of endo-beta-1,4-xylanases. Its three-dimensional structure has been solved at 2.0 A and its optimum temperature and pH for enzymatic activity are 60 degrees C and 6.0, respectively. Aspergillus kawachii xylanase XynC belongs to the same family but is an acidophilic enzyme with an optimum pH of 2.0. Structural comparison of Xyl1 and XynC showed differences in residues surrounding the two glutamic acid side chains involved in the catalysis that could be responsible for the acidophilic adaptation of XynC. Mutations W20Y, N48D, A134E, and Y193W were introduced by site-directed mutagenesis and combined in multiple mutants. Trp 20 and Tyr 193 are involved in substrate binding. The Y193W mutation inactivated Xyl1 whereas W20Y decreased the optimum pH of Xyl1 to 5.0 and slightly increased its specific activity. The N48D mutation also decreased the optimum pH of Xyl1 by one unit. The A134E substitution did not induce any change, but when combined with N48D, a synergistic effect was observed with a 1.4 unit decrease in the optimum pH. Modeling showed that the orientations of residue 193 and of the fully conserved Arg 131 are different in acidophilic and "alkaline" xylanases whereas the introduced Tyr 20 probably modifies the pKa of the acid-base catalyst via residue Asn 48. Docking of a substrate analog in the catalytic site highlighted striking differences between Xyl1 and XynC in substrate binding. Hydrophobicity calculations showed a correlation between acidophilic adaptation and a decreased hydrophobicity around the two glutamic acid side chains involved in catalysis.  相似文献   

9.
Tryptophan fluorescence was used to study GK (glucokinase), an enzyme that plays a prominent role in glucose homoeostasis which, when inactivated or activated by mutations, causes diabetes mellitus or hypoglycaemia in humans. GK has three tryptophan residues, and binding of D-glucose increases their fluorescence. To assess the contribution of individual tryptophan residues to this effect, we generated GST-GK [GK conjugated to GST (glutathione transferase)] and also pure GK with one, two or three of the tryptophan residues of GK replaced with other amino acids (i.e. W99C, W99R, W167A, W167F, W257F, W99R/W167F, W99R/W257F, W167F/W257F and W99R/W167F/W257F). Enzyme kinetics, binding constants for glucose and several other sugars and fluorescence quantum yields (varphi) were determined and compared with those of wild-type GK retaining its three tryptophan residues. Replacement of all three tryptophan residues resulted in an enzyme that retained all characteristic features of GK, thereby demonstrating the unique usefulness of tryptophan fluorescence as an indicator of GK conformation. Curves of glucose binding to wild-type and mutant GK or GST-GK were hyperbolic, whereas catalysis of wild-type and most mutants exhibited co-operativity with D-glucose. Binding studies showed the following order of affinities for the enzyme variants: N-acetyl-D-glucosamine>D-glucose>D-mannose>D-mannoheptulose>2-deoxy-D-glucose>L-glucose. GK activators increased sugar binding of most enzymes, but not of the mutants Y214A/V452A and C252Y. Contributions to the fluorescence increase from Trp(99) and Trp(167) were large compared with that from Trp(257) and are probably based on distinct mechanisms. The average quantum efficiency of tryptophan fluorescence in the basal and glucose-bound state was modified by activating (Y214A/V452A) or inactivating (C213R and C252Y) mutations and was interpreted as a manifestation of distinct conformational states.  相似文献   

10.
Based on amino acid sequence similarity and the ability to catalyze the four-electron reduction of oxygen to water using a quinol substrate, mitochondrial alternative oxidase (AOX) and plastid terminal oxidase (PTOX) appear to be two closely related members of the membrane-bound diiron carboxylate group of proteins. In the current studies, we took advantage of the high activity of Trypanosoma vivax AOX (TvAOX) to examine the importance of the conserved Glu and the Tyr residues around the predicted third helix region of AOXs and PTOXs. We first compared the amino acid sequences of TvAOX with AOXs and PTOXs from various taxa and then performed alanine-scanning mutagenesis of TvAOX between amino acids Y(199) and Y(247). We found that the ubiquinol oxidase activity of TvAOX is completely lost in the E214A mutant, whereas mutants E215A and E216A retained more than 30% of the wild-type activity. Among the Tyr mutants, a complete loss of activity was also observed for the Y221A mutant, whereas the activities were equivalent to wild-type for the Y199A, Y212A, and Y247A mutants. Finally, residues Glu(214) and Tyr(221) were found to be strictly conserved among AOXs and PTOXs. Based on these findings, it appears that AOXs and PTOXs are a novel subclass of diiron carboxylate proteins that require the conserved motif E(X)(6)Y for enzyme activity.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The role in activity of outer regions in the substrate binding cleft in alpha-amylases is illustrated by mutational analysis of Tyr(105) and Thr(212) localized at subsites -6 and +4 (substrate cleavage occurs between subsites -1 and +1) in barley alpha-amylase 1 (AMY1). Tyr(105) is conserved in plant alpha-amylases whereas Thr(212) varies in these and related enzymes. Compared with wild-type AMY1, the subsite -6 mutant Y105A has 140, 15, and <1% activity (k(cat)/K(m)) on starch, amylose DP17, and 2-chloro-4-nitrophenyl beta-d-maltoheptaoside, whereas T212Y at subsite +4 has 32, 370, and 90% activity, respectively. Thus engineering of aromatic stacking interactions at the ends of the 10-subsite long binding cleft affects activity very differently, dependent on the substrate. Y105A dominates in dual subsite -6/+4 [Y105A/T212(Y/W)]AMY1 mutants having almost retained and low activity on starch and oligosaccharides, respectively. Bond cleavage analysis of oligosaccharide degradation by wild-type and mutant AMY1 supports that Tyr(105) is critical for binding at subsite -6. Substrate binding is improved by T212(Y/W) introduced at subsite +4 and the [Y105A/T212(Y/W)]AMY1 double mutants synergistically enhanced productive binding of the substrate aglycone. The enzymatic properties of the series of AMY1 mutants suggest that longer substrates adopt several binding modes. This is in excellent agreement with computed distinct multiple docking solutions observed for maltododecaose at outer binding areas of AMY1 beyond subsites -3 and +3.  相似文献   

13.
A ferrous heme-NO complex builds up in rat neuronal NO synthase during catalysis and lowers its activity. Mutation of a tryptophan located directly below the heme (Trp(409)) to Phe or Tyr causes hyperactive NO synthesis and less heme-NO complex buildup in the steady state (Adak, S., Crooks, C., Wang, Q., Crane, B. R., Tainer, J. A., Getzoff, E. D., and Stuehr, D. J. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 26907-26911). To understand the mechanism, we used conventional and stopped flow spectroscopy to compare kinetics of heme-NO complex formation, enzyme activity prior to and after complex formation, NO binding affinity, NO complex stability, and its reaction with O(2) in mutants and wild type nNOS. During the initial phase of NO synthesis, heme-NO complex formation was 3 and 5 times slower in W409F and W409Y, and their rates of NADPH oxidation were 50 and 30% that of wild type, probably due to slower heme reduction. NO complex formation slowed NADPH oxidation in the wild type by 7-fold but reduced mutant activities less than 2-fold, giving mutants higher final activities. NO binding kinetics were similar among mutants and wild type, although in ferrous W409Y (and to a lesser extent W409F) the 436-nm NO complex converted to a 417-nm NO complex with time. Oxidation of the ferrous heme-NO complex to ferric enzyme was 7 times faster in Trp(409) mutants than in wild type. Thus, mutant hyperactivity derives from slower formation and faster decay of the heme-NO complex. Together, these minimize partitioning into the NO-bound form.  相似文献   

14.
Sobrado P  Fitzpatrick PF 《Biochemistry》2003,42(47):13833-13838
The flavoenzyme tryptophan 2-monooxygenase catalyzes the oxidation of tryptophan to indoleacetamide, carbon dioxide, and water. The enzyme is a homologue of l-amino acid oxidase. In the structure of l-amino acid oxidase complexed with aminobenzoate, Tyr372 hydrogen bonds with the carboxylate of the inhibitor in the active site. All 10 conserved tyrosine residues in tryptophan 2-monooxygenase were mutated to phenylalanine; steady state kinetic characterization of the purified proteins identified Tyr413 as the residue homologous to Tyr372 of l-amino acid oxidase. Y413F and Y413A tryptophan 2-monooxygenase were characterized more completely with tryptophan as the substrate to probe the contribution of this residue to catalysis. Mutation of Tyr413 to phenylalanine results in a decrease in the value of the first-order rate constant for reduction of 35-fold and a decrease in the rate constant for oxidation of 11-fold. Mutation to alanine decreases the rate constant for reduction by 200-fold and that for oxidation by 33-fold. Both mutations increase the K(d) value for tryptophan and the K(i) values for the competitive inhibitors indoleacetamide and indole pyruvate by 5-10-fold. Both mutations convert the enzyme to an oxidase, in that the products of the catalytic reactions of both are indolepyruvate and hydrogen peroxide. The V/K(trp)-pH profiles for the Tyr413 mutant enzymes no longer show the pK(a) value of 9.9 seen in that for the wild-type enzyme, allowing identification of Tyr413 as the active site residue in the wild-type enzyme which must be protonated for catalysis. Substitution of Tyr413 abolishes the formation of the long wavelength charge transfer species observed in the wild-type enzyme. The data are consistent with the main role of Tyr413 being to maintain the correct orientation of tryptophan for effective hydride transfer and imino acid decarboxylation.  相似文献   

15.
The nonreducing end of the substrate-binding site of human salivary alpha-amylase contains two residues Trp58 and Trp59, which belong to beta2-alpha2 loop of the catalytic (beta/alpha)(8) barrel. While Trp59 stacks onto the substrate, the exact role of Trp58 is unknown. To investigate its role in enzyme activity the residue Trp58 was mutated to Ala, Leu or Tyr. Kinetic analysis of the wild-type and mutant enzymes was carried out with starch and oligosaccharides as substrates. All three mutants exhibited a reduction in specific activity (150-180-fold lower than the wild type) with starch as substrate. With oligosaccharides as substrates, a reduction in k(cat), an increase in K(m) and distinct differences in the cleavage pattern were observed for the mutants W58A and W58L compared with the wild type. Glucose was the smallest product generated by these two mutants in the hydrolysis oligosaccharides; in contrast, wild-type enzyme generated maltose as the smallest product. The production of glucose by W58L was confirmed from both reducing and nonreducing ends of CNP-labeled oligosaccharide substrates. The mutant W58L exhibited lower binding affinity at subsites -2, -3 and +2 and showed an increase in transglycosylation activity compared with the wild type. The lowered affinity at subsites -2 and -3 due to the mutation was also inferred from the electron density at these subsites in the structure of W58A in complex with acarbose-derived pseudooligosaccharide. Collectively, these results suggest that the residue Trp58 plays a critical role in substrate binding and hydrolytic activity of human salivary alpha-amylase.  相似文献   

16.
Jao SC  Huang LF  Hwang SM  Li WS 《Biochemistry》2006,45(6):1547-1553
Analysis of the pH-rate profile for catalysis of bradykinin cleavage by aminopeptidase P (AMPP), a manganese-containing hydrolase from Escherichia coli, was carried out to show that optimal catalytic function is obtained at neutral pH. On the basis of information derived from the crystal structure, peptidase sequence alignments, and the hydrolysis of organophosphate triesters, active site residues Arg153, Arg370, Trp88, Tyr387, and Arg404 were identified as potential catalytic residues. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to substitute these residues with Leu, Ala, Trp, Lys, or Phe. The kcat values for the Arg153, Arg370, and Trp88 mutants were nearly the same as that for the wild-type enzyme. The kcat values of the R404K, R404A, and Y387A mutants were lower by factors of 285, 400, and 16, respectively. Inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry and circular dichroism spectroscopy showed that Arg404 is not required for metal chelation or stabilization of protein secondary structure. The hydrogen bond network observed between the side chains of conserved residues Asp260, Arg404, and Tyr387 indicated that Arg404 participates in proton relay. This was further evidenced by the return of activity in the R404A mutant by the addition of guanidine. Also, reduced catalytic efficiency in the R404K mutant, which conserves the positive charge at the bridge site, shows that only the arginine group of Arg404 (not the ammonium group of Lys404) can participate in the hydrogen bond network. The hydrogen bond interaction between the Arg404 and the Tyr387 ring hydroxyl group is suggested by the reduced catalytic efficiency of the Y387F mutant.  相似文献   

17.
Hypoxanthine‐guanine‐xanthine phosphoribosyltransference (HGXPRT), a key enzyme in the purine salvage pathway of the malarial parasite, Plasmodium falciparum (Pf), catalyses the conversion of hypoxanthine, guanine, and xanthine to their corresponding mononucleotides; IMP, GMP, and XMP, respectively. Out of the five active site loops (I, II, III, III', and IV) in PfHGXPRT, loop III' facilitates the closure of the hood over the core domain which is the penultimate step during enzymatic catalysis. PfHGXPRT mutants were constructed wherein Trp 181 in loop III' was substituted with Ser, Thr, Tyr, and Phe. The mutants (W181S, W181Y and W181F), when examined for xanthine phosphoribosylation activity, showed an increase in Km for PRPP by 2.1‐3.4 fold under unactivated condition and a decrease in catalytic efficiency by more than 5‐fold under activated condition as compared to that of the wild‐type enzyme. The W181T mutant showed 10‐fold reduced xanthine phosphoribosylation activity. Furthermore, molecular dynamics simulations of WT and in silico W181S/Y/F/T PfHGXPRT mutants bound to IMP.PPi.Mg2+ have been carried out to address the effect of the mutation of W181 on the overall dynamics of the systems and identify local changes in loop III'. Dynamic cross‐correlation analyses show a communication between loop III' and the substrate binding site. Differential cross‐correlation maps indicate altered communication among different regions in the mutants. Changes in the local contacts and hydrogen bonding between residue 181 with the nearby residues cause altered substrate affinity and catalytic efficiency of the mutant enzymes. Proteins 2016; 84:1658–1669. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

18.
Wyman AJ  Popelkova H  Yocum CF 《Biochemistry》2008,47(24):6490-6498
The extrinsic photosystem II PsbO subunit (manganese-stabilizing protein) contains near-UV CD signals from its complement of aromatic amino acid residues (one Trp, eight Tyr, and 13 Phe residues). Acidification, N-bromosuccinimide modification of Trp, reduction or elimination of a disulfide bond, or deletion of C-terminal amino acids abolishes these signals. Site-directed mutations that substitute Phe for Trp241 and Tyr242, near the C-terminus of PsbO, were used to examine the contribution of these residues to the activity and spectral properties of the protein. Although this substitution is, in theory, conservative, neither mutant binds efficiently to PSII, even though these proteins appear to retain wild-type solution structures. Removal of six residues from the N-terminus of the W241F mutant restores activity to near-wild-type levels. The near-UV CD spectra of the mutants are modified; well-defined Tyr and Trp peaks are lost. Characterizations of the fluorescence spectra of the full-length WF and YF mutants indicate that Y242 contributes significantly to PsbO's Tyr fluorescence emission and that an excited-state tyrosinate could be present in PsbO. Deletion of W241 shows that this residue is a major contributor to PsbO's fluorescence emission. Loss of function is consistent with the proposal that a native C-terminal domain is required for PsbO binding and activity, and restoration of activity by deletion of N-terminal amino acids may provide some insights into the evolution of this important photosynthetic protein.  相似文献   

19.
The aggregation of alpha-synuclein is believed to be a critical step in the etiology of Parkinson's disease. A variety of biophysical techniques were used to investigate the aggregation and fibrillation of alpha-synuclein in which one of the four intrinsic Tyr residues was replaced by Trp, and two others by Phe, in order to permit fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) between residues 39 (Tyr) and 125 (Trp). The mutant Y125W/Y133F/Y136F alpha-synuclein (one Tyr, one Trp) showed fibrillation kinetics similar to that of the wild-type, as did the Y125F/Y133F/Y136F (one Tyr, no Trp) and Y39F/Y125W/Y133F/Y136F (no Tyr, one Trp) mutants. Time-dependent changes in FRET, Fourier transform infrared, Trp fluorescence, dynamic light-scattering and other probes, indicate the existence of a transient oligomer, whose population reaches a maximum at the end of the lag time. This oligomer, in which the alpha-synuclein is in a partially folded conformation, is subsequently converted into fibrils, and has physical properties that are distinct from those of the monomer and fibrils. In addition, another population of soluble oligomers was observed to coexist with fibrils at completion of the reaction. The average distance between Tyr39 and Trp125 decreases from 24.9A in the monomer to 21.9A in the early oligomer and 18.8A in the late oligomer. Trp125 remains solvent-exposed in both the oligomers and fibrils, indicating that the C-terminal domain is not part of the fibril core. No FRET was observed in the fibrils, due to quenching of Tyr39 fluorescence in the fibril core. Thus, aggregation of alpha-synuclein involves multiple oligomeric intermediates and competing pathways.  相似文献   

20.
Phosphite dehydrogenase (PTDH) from Pseudomonas stutzeri catalyzes the nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide-dependent oxidation of phosphite to phosphate. The enzyme belongs to the family of D-hydroxy acid dehydrogenases (DHDHs). A search of the protein databases uncovered many additional putative phosphite dehydrogenases. The genes encoding four diverse candidates were cloned and expressed, and the enzymes were purified and characterized. All oxidized phosphite to phosphate and had similar kinetic parameters despite a low level of pairwise sequence identity (39-72%). A recent crystal structure identified Arg301 as a residue in the active site that has not been investigated previously. Arg301 is fully conserved in the enzymes shown here to be PTDHs, but the residue is not conserved in other DHDHs. Kinetic analysis of site-directed mutants of this residue shows that it is important for efficient catalysis, with an ~100-fold decrease in k(cat) and an almost 700-fold increase in K(m,phosphite) for the R301A mutant. Interestingly, the R301K mutant displayed a slightly higher k(cat) than the parent PTDH, and a more modest increase in K(m) for phosphite (nearly 40-fold). Given these results, Arg301 may be involved in the binding and orientation of the phosphite substrate and/or play a catalytic role via electrostatic interactions. Three other residues in the active site region that are conserved in the PTDH orthologs but not DHDHs were identified (Trp134, Tyr139, and Ser295). The importance of these residues was also investigated by site-directed mutagenesis. All of the mutants had k(cat) values similar to that of the wild-type enzyme, indicating these residues are not important for catalysis.  相似文献   

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