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1.
The hydrolysis of N-acetyl-L-methionine, N-acetylglycine, N-acetyl-L-phenylalanine, and N-acetyl-L-alanine at 298.35K by porcine kidney acylase I (EC 3.5.1.14) was monitored by the heat released upon mixing of the substrate and enzyme in a differential stopped flow microcalorimeter. Values for the Michaelis constant (K(m)) and the catalytic constant (k(cat)) were determined from the progress of the reaction curve employing the integrated form of the Michaelis-Menten equation for each reaction mixture. When neglecting acetate product inhibition of the acylase, values for k(cat) were up to a factor of 2.3 larger than those values determined from reciprocal initial velocity-initial substrate concentration plots for at least four different reaction mixtures. In addition, values for K(m) were observed to increase linearly with an increase in the initial substrate concentration. When an acetate product inhibition constant of 600+/-31M(-1), determined by isothermal titration calorimetry, was used in the progress curve analysis, values for K(m) and k(cat) were in closer agreement with their values determined from the reciprocal initial velocity versus initial substrate concentration plots. The reaction enthalpies, Delta(r)H(cal), which were determined from the integrated heat pulse per amount of substrate in the reaction mixture, ranged from -4.69+/-0.09kJmol(-1) for N-acetyl-L-phenylalanine to -1.87+/-0.23kJmol(-1) for N-acetyl-L-methionine.  相似文献   

2.
Isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) may be used to determine the kinetic parameters of enzyme-catalyzed reactions when neither products nor reactants are spectrophotometrically visible and when the reaction products are unknown. We report here the use of the multiple injection method of ITC to characterize the catalytic properties of oxalate oxidase (OxOx) from Ceriporiopsis subvermispora (CsOxOx), a manganese dependent enzyme that catalyzes the oxygen-dependent oxidation of oxalate to carbon dioxide in a reaction coupled with the formation of hydrogen peroxide. CsOxOx is the first bicupin enzyme identified that catalyzes this reaction. The multiple injection ITC method of measuring OxOx activity involves continuous, real-time detection of the amount of heat generated (dQ) during catalysis, which is equal to the number of moles of product produced times the enthalpy of the reaction (ΔHapp). Steady-state kinetic constants using oxalate as the substrate determined by multiple injection ITC are comparable to those obtained by a continuous spectrophotometric assay in which H2O2 production is coupled to the horseradish peroxidase-catalyzed oxidation of 2,2′-azinobis-(3-ethylbenzthiazoline-6-sulfonic acid) and by membrane inlet mass spectrometry. Additionally, we used multiple injection ITC to identify mesoxalate as a substrate for the CsOxOx-catalyzed reaction, with a kinetic parameters comparable to that of oxalate, and to identify a number of small molecule carboxylic acid compounds that also serve as substrates for the enzyme.  相似文献   

3.
Energetic basis of molecular recognition in a DNA aptamer   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The thermal stability and ligand binding properties of the L-argininamide-binding DNA aptamer (5'-GATCGAAACGTAGCGCCTTCGATC-3') were studied by spectroscopic and calorimetric methods. Differential calorimetric studies showed that the uncomplexed aptamer melted in a two-state reaction with a melting temperature T(m)=50.2+/-0.2 degrees C and a folding enthalpy DeltaH(0)(fold)=-49.0+/-2.1 kcal mol(-1). These values agree with values of T(m)=49.6 degrees C and DeltaH(0)(fold)=-51.2 kcal mol(-1) predicted for a simple hairpin structure. Melting of the uncomplexed aptamer was dependent upon salt concentration, but independent of strand concentration. The T(m) of aptamer melting was found to increase as L-argininamide concentrations increased. Analysis of circular dichroism titration data using a single-site binding model resulted in the determination of a binding free energy DeltaG(0)(bind)=-5.1 kcal mol(-1). Isothermal titration calorimetry studies revealed an exothermic binding reaction with DeltaH(0)(bind)=-8.7 kcal mol(-1). Combination of enthalpy and free energy produce an unfavorable entropy of -TDeltaS(0)=+3.6 kcal mol(-1). A molar heat capacity change of -116 cal mol(-1) K(-1) was determined from calorimetric measurements at four temperatures over the range of 15-40 degrees C. Molecular dynamics simulations were used to explore the structures of the unligated and ligated aptamer structures. From the calculated changes in solvent accessible surface areas of these structures a molar heat capacity change of -125 cal mol(-1) K(-1) was calculated, a value in excellent agreement with the experimental value. The thermodynamic signature, along with the coupled CD spectral changes, suggest that the binding of L-argininamide to its DNA aptamer is an induced-fit process in which the binding of the ligand is thermodynamically coupled to a conformational ordering of the nucleic acid.  相似文献   

4.
Isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) was used to study the oxidation of syringic acid by laccases from two different sources: Galerina sp. HC1 and Trametes versicolor. Total molar heat of reaction with both enzymes was similar (230 kJ/mol for Galerina laccase and 233 kJ/mol for Trametes laccase), and was independent of syringic acid concentration. The kinetic parameters of the reaction were calculated from the single injection assay by applying the nonlinear least squares fitting (NLSF) of experimental data to the Michaelis-Menten equation. Higher values for V(max) were obtained with Galerina sp. laccase, whereas K(m) values were comparable for the two enzymes.  相似文献   

5.
Park SH  Park KH  Oh BC  Alli I  Lee BH 《New biotechnology》2011,28(6):639-648
Genomic analysis of the hyperthermophilic archaeon Pyrococcus furiosus revealed the presence of an open reading frame (ORF PF0356) similar to the enzymes in glycoside hydrolase family 1. This β-glycosidase, designated PFTG (P. furiosus thermostable glycosidase), was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli. The expressed enzyme was purified by heat treatment and Ni-NTA affinity chromatography. The gene was composed of 1,452 bp encoding 483 amino acids for a protein with a predicted molecular mass of 56,326 Da. The temperature and pH optima were 100°C and 5.0 in sodium citrate buffer, respectively. The substrate specificity of PFTG suggests that it possesses characteristics of both β-galactosidase and β-mannosidase activities. However, through kinetic studies by ITC (Isothermal Titration Colorimetry) which is very sensitive method for enzyme kinetics, PF0356 enzyme revealed the highest catalytic efficiency toward p-nitrophenyl-β-d-mannopyranoside (3.02 k(cat)/K(m)) and mannobiose (4.32 k(cat)/K(m)). The enzyme showed transglycosylation and transgalactosylation activities toward cellobiose, lactose and mannooligosaccharides that could produce GOS (galactooligosaccharides) and MOS (maltooligosaccharides). This novel hyperthermostable β-glycosidase may be useful for food and pharmaceutical applications.  相似文献   

6.
In lignocellulosic raw materials for biomass conversion, hemicelluloses constitute a substantial fraction, with xylan being the primary part. Although many pretreatments reduce the amount or change the distribution of xylan, it is important to degrade residual xylan so as to improve the overall yield. Typically, xylanase reaction rates are measured in stopped assays by chemical quantification of the reducing ends. With isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC), the heat flow of the hydrolysis can be measured in continuous fashion, with the reaction rate being directly proportional to the heat flow. Reaction enthalpies for carbohydrate hydrolysis are typically below 5 kJ/mol, which is the limiting factor for straight forward calorimetric quantification of enzymatic reaction rates using current ITC technology. To increase the apparent reaction enthalpy, we employed a subsequent oxidation of hydrolysis products by carbohydrate oxidase and catalase. Here we show that the coupled assay with carbohydrate oxidase and catalase can be used to measure enzyme kinetics of a GH10 xylanase from Aspergillus aculeatus on birch xylan and wheat arabinoxylan. Results are discussed in the light of a critical analysis of the sensitivity of four chemical-reducing-end quantification methods using well-characterized substrates.  相似文献   

7.
To elucidate the interaction between substrate inhibition and substrate transglycosylation of retaining glycoside hydrolases (GHs), a steady-state kinetic study was performed for the GH family 3 glucan (1-->3)-beta-glucosidase from the white-rot fungus Phanerochaete chrysosporium, using laminarioligosaccharides as substrates. When laminaribiose was incubated with the enzyme, a transglycosylation product was detected by thin-layer chromatography. The product was purified by size-exclusion chromatography, and was identified as a 6-O-glucosyl-laminaribiose (beta-D-Glcp-(1-->6)-beta-D-Glcp-(1-->3)-D-Glc) by 1H NMR spectroscopy and electrospray ionization mass spectrometry analysis. In steady-state kinetic studies, an apparent decrease of laminaribiose hydrolysis was observed at high concentrations of the substrate, and the plots of glucose production versus substrate concentration were thus fitted to a modified Michaelis-Menten equation including hydrolytic and transglycosylation parameters (K(m), K(m2), k(cat), k(cat2)). The rate of 6-O-glucosyl-laminaribiose production estimated by high-performance anion-exchange chromatography coincided with the theoretical rate calculated using these parameters, clearly indicating that substrate inhibition of this enzyme is fully explained by substrate transglycosylation. Moreover, when K(m), k(cat), and affinity for glucosyl-enzyme intermediates (K(m2)) were estimated for laminarioligosaccharides (DP=3-5), the K(m) value of laminaribiose was approximately 5-9 times higher than those of the other oligosaccharides (DP=3-5), whereas the K(m2) values were independent of the DP of the substrates. The kinetics of transglycosylation by the enzyme could be well interpreted in terms of the subsite affinities estimated from the hydrolytic parameters (K(m) and k(cat)), and a possible mechanism of transglycosylation is proposed.  相似文献   

8.
Isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) has been applied to the determination of the activity of D-hydantoinase (EC 3.5.2.2) with several substrates by monitoring the heat released during the reaction. The method is based on the proportionality between the reaction rate and the thermal power (heat/time) generated. Microcalorimetric assays carried out at different temperatures provided the dependence of the catalytic rate constant on temperature. We show that ITC assay is a nondestructive method that allows the determination of the catalytic rate constant (kcat), Michaelis constant (KM), activation energy and activation Gibbs energy, enthalpy and entropy of this reaction.  相似文献   

9.
To gain insight into the role of the strictly conserved histidine residue, H178, in the reaction mechanism of the methionyl aminopeptidase from Escherichia coli (EcMetAP-I), the H178A mutant enzyme was prepared. Metal-reconstituted H178A binds only one equivalent of Co(II) or Fe(II) tightly with affinities that are identical to the WT enzyme based on kinetic and isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) data. Electronic absorption spectra of Co(II)-loaded H178A EcMetAP-I indicate that the active site divalent metal ion is pentacoordinate, identical to the WT enzyme. These data indicate that the metal binding site has not been affected by altering H178. The effect of altering H178 on activity is, in general, due to a decrease in k(cat). The k(cat) value for Co(II)-loaded H178A decreased 70-fold toward MGMM and 290-fold toward MP-p-NA compared to the WT enzyme, while k(cat) decreased 50-fold toward MGMM for the Fe(II)-loaded H178A enzyme and 140-fold toward MP-p-NA. The K(m) values for MGMM remained unaffected, while those for MP-p-NA increased approximately 2-fold for Co(II)- and Fe(II)-loaded H178A. The k(cat)/K(m) values for both Co(II)- and Fe(II)-loaded H178A toward both substrates ranged from approximately 50- to 580-fold reduction. The pH dependence of log K(m), log k(cat), and log(k(cat)/K(m)) of both WT and H178A EcMetAP-I were also obtained and are identical, within error, for H178A and WT EcMetAP-I. Therefore, H178A is catalytically important but is not required for catalysis. Assignment of one of the observed pK(a) values at 8.1 for WT EcMetAP-I was obtained from plots of molar absorptivity at lambda(max(640)) vs pH for both WT and H178A EcMetAP-I. Apparent pK(a) values of 8.1 and 7.6 were obtained for WT and H178A EcMetAP-I, respectively, and were assigned to the deprotonation of a metal-bound water molecule. The data reported herein provide support for the key elements of the previously proposed mechanism and suggest that a similar mechanism can apply to the enzyme with a single metal in the active site.  相似文献   

10.
To obtain a clearer understanding of the forces involved in transition state stabilization by Escherichia coli cytidine deaminase, we investigated the thermodynamic changes that accompany substrate binding in the ground state and transition state for substrate hydrolysis. Viscosity studies indicate that the action of cytidine deaminase is not diffusion-limited. Thus, K(m) appears to be a true dissociation constant, and k(cat) describes the chemical reaction of the ES complex, not product release. Enzyme-substrate association is accompanied by a loss of entropy and a somewhat greater release of enthalpy. As the ES complex proceeds to the transition state (ES), there is little further change in entropy, but heat is taken up that almost matches the heat that was released with ES formation. As a result, k(cat)/K(m) (describing the overall conversion of the free substrate to ES is almost invariant with changing temperature. The free energy barrier for the enzyme-catalyzed reaction (k(cat)/K(m)) is much lower than that for the spontaneous reaction (k(non)) (DeltaDeltaG = -21.8 kcal/mol at 25 degrees C). This difference, which also describes the virtual binding affinity of the enzyme for the activated substrate in the transition state (S), is almost entirely enthalpic in origin (DeltaDeltaH = -20.2 kcal/mol), compatible with the formation of hydrogen bonds that stabilize the ES complex. Thus, the transition state affinity of cytidine deaminase increases rapidly with decreasing temperature. When a hydrogen bond between Glu-91 and the 3'-hydroxyl moiety of cytidine is disrupted by truncation of either group, k(cat)/K(m) and transition state affinity are each reduced by a factor of 10(4). This effect of mutation is entirely enthalpic in origin (DeltaDeltaH approximately 7.9 kcal/mol), somewhat offset by a favorable change in the entropy of transition state binding. This increase in entropy is attributed to a loss of constraints on the relative motions of the activated substrate within the ES complex. In an Appendix, some objections to the conventional scheme for transition state binding are discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Marmor S  Petersen CP  Reck F  Yang W  Gao N  Fisher SL 《Biochemistry》2001,40(40):12207-12214
The bacterial UDP-N-acetylmuramyl-L-alanine ligase (MurC) from Escherichia coli, an essential, cytoplasmic peptidoglycan biosynthetic enzyme, catalyzes the ATP-dependent ligation of L-alanine (Ala) and UDP-N-acetylmuramic acid (UNAM) to form UDP-N-acetylmuramyl-L-alanine (UNAM-Ala). The phosphinate inhibitor 1 was designed and prepared as a multisubstrate/transition state analogue. The compound exhibits mixed-type inhibition with respect to all three enzyme substrates (ATP, UNAM, Ala), suggesting that this compound forms dead-end complexes with multiple enzyme states. Results from isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) studies supported these findings as exothermic binding was observed under conditions with free enzyme (K(d) = 1.80-2.79 microM, 95% CI), enzyme saturated with ATP (K(d) = 0.097-0.108 microM, 95% CI), and enzyme saturated with the reaction product ADP (K(d) = 0.371-0.751 microM, 95% CI). Titrations run under conditions of saturating UNAM or the product UNAM-Ala did not show heat effects consistent with competitive compound binding to the active site. The potent binding affinity observed in the presence of ATP is consistent with the inhibitor design and the proposed Ordered Ter-Ter mechanism for this enzyme; however, the additional binding pathways suggest that the inhibitor can also serve as a product analogue.  相似文献   

12.
The theoretical foundation has been laid for the investigation of catalytic systems using first-order kinetics and for a general kinetic method of investigation of the active site content, E(a), of enzymes, catalytic antibodies, and other enzyme-like catalysts. The method involves a combination of steady-state and single-turnover kinetics to provide Vmax and Km and k(lim)(obs) and K(app)(m), respectively. The validity of the method is shown to remain valid for two extensions of the simple two-step enzyme catalysis model (a) when the catalyst preparation contains molecules (Eb) that bind substrate but fail to catalyse product formation and (b) when the catalyst itself binds substrate non-productively as well as productively. The former is a particularly serious complication for polyclonal catalytic antibodies and the latter a potential complication for all catalysts. For the simple model and for (b) Vmax/k(lim)(obs) provides the value of [Ea]T and for (a) its upper limit. This can be refined by consideration of the relative values of Km and the equilibrium dissociation constant of EbS. For the polyclonal catalytic antibody preparation investigated, the fact that K(app/m) > Km demonstrates for the first time the presence of a substrate-binding but non-catalytic component in a polyclonal preparation. First-order behaviour in catalytic systems occurs not only with a large excess of catalyst over substrate but also with lower catalyst/substrate ratios, including the equimolar condition, when K(app)(m) > [S]0, a phenomenon that is not widely appreciated.  相似文献   

13.
Oxalate decarboxylase converts oxalate to formate and carbon dioxide and uses dioxygen as a cofactor despite the reaction involving no net redox change. We have successfully used Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy to monitor in real time both substrate consumption and product formation for the first time. The assignment of the peaks was confirmed using [(13)C]oxalate as the substrate. The K(m) for oxalate determined using this assay was 3.8-fold lower than that estimated from a stopped assay. The infrared assay was also capable of distinguishing between oxalate decarboxylase and oxalate oxidase activity by the lack of formate being produced by the latter. In D(2)O, the product with oxalate decarboxylase was C-deuterio formate rather than formate, showing that the source of the hydron was solvent as expected. Large solvent deuterium kinetic isotope effects were observed on V(max) (7.1 +/- 0.3), K(m) for oxalate (3.9 +/- 0.9), and k(cat)/K(m) (1.8 +/- 0.4) indicative of a proton transfer event during a rate-limiting step. Semiempirical quantum mechanical calculations on the stability of formate-derived species gave an indication of the stability and nature of a likely enzyme-bound formyl radical catalytic intermediate. The capability of the enzyme to bind formate under conditions in which the enzyme is known to be active was determined by electron paramagnetic resonance. However, no enzyme-catalyzed exchange of the C-hydron of formate was observed using the infrared assay, suggesting that a formyl radical intermediate is not accessible in the reverse reaction. This restricts the formation of potentially harmful radical intermediates to the forward reaction.  相似文献   

14.
The steady-state and pre-steady-state kinetic parameters for the interaction of E with the fluorogenic substrate 2-aminobenzoyl-Thr-Ile-Nle-Phe(p-NO(2))-Gln-Arg-NH(2) were determined in 1.25 M NaCl, 0.1 M MES-TRIS at pH 6.0 at 25 degrees C. At low concentrations of enzyme, the values of the K(m) and k(cat) calculated from steady-state data were 2.1 microM and 7.4 s(-1), respectively. At high concentrations of enzyme, the time-courses of fluorescence enhancement associated with catalysis were very dependent on the excitation wavelength used to monitor the reaction. Because the absorbance spectrum of the substrate overlapped the fluorescence emission spectrum of the enzyme, these abnormalities were attributed to fluorescence energy transfer between the enzyme and the substrate in an enzyme-substrate intermediate. The kinetic data collected with lambda(ex) = 280 nm and lambda(em) > 435 nm were analyzed according to the following mechanism in which EX was the species with enhanced fluorescence relative to substrate or products: [formula see text]. The values of the kinetic parameters with (1)H(2)O as the solvent were K = 13 microM, k(2) = 150 s(-1), k(-2) = 25 s(-1), and k(3) = 11 s(-1). The values of the kinetic parameters with (2)H(2)O as the solvent were K = 13 microM, k(2) = 210 s(-1), k(-2) = 12 s(-1), and k(3) = 4.4 s(-1). These values yielded solvent isotope effects of 2 on k(cat) and 0.9 on k(cat)/K(m). From analysis of the complete time-course of the fluorescence change (lambda(ex) = 280 nm and lambda(em) > 435 nm) during the course of substrate hydrolysis, the intermediate EX was determined to be 6.3-fold more fluorescent than the product, which, in turn, was 4.5-fold more fluorescent than ES or S. Rapid quench experiments with 2 N HCl as the quenching reagent confirmed that EX was a complex between enzyme and substrate. Consequently, the small burst in fluorescence observed when monitoring with lambda(ex) = 340 nm (0.3 product equiv per enzyme equivalent) was attributed to the fluorescence change upon transfer of substrate from an aqueous environment to a nonaqueous environment in the enzyme. These results were consistent with carbon-nitrogen bond cleavage being the major contributor to k(cat).  相似文献   

15.
2-Nitropropane dioxygenase (EC 1.13.11.32) catalyzes the oxidation of nitroalkanes into their corresponding carbonyl compounds and nitrite. In this study, the ncd-2 gene encoding for the enzyme in Neurospora crassa was cloned, expressed in Escherichia coli, and the resulting enzyme was purified. Size exclusion chromatography, heat denaturation, and mass spectroscopic analyses showed that 2-nitropropane dioxygenase is a homodimer of 80 kDa, containing a mole of non-covalently bound FMN per mole of subunit, and is devoid of iron. With neutral nitroalkanes and anionic nitronates other than propyl-1- and propyl-2-nitronate, for which a non-enzymatic free radical reaction involving superoxide was established using superoxide dismutase, substrate oxidation occurs within the enzyme active site. The enzyme was more specific for nitronates than nitroalkanes, as suggested by the second order rate constant k(cat)/K(m) determined with 2-nitropropane and primary nitroalkanes with alkyl chain lengths between 2 and 6 carbons. The steady state kinetic mechanism with 2-nitropropane, nitroethane, nitrobutane, and nitrohexane, in either the neutral or anionic form, was determined to be sequential, consistent with oxygen reacting with a reduced form of enzyme before release of the carbonyl product. Enzyme-monitored turnover with ethyl nitronate as substrate indicated that the catalytically relevant reduced form of enzyme is an anionic flavin semiquinone, whose formation requires the substrate, but not molecular oxygen, as suggested by anaerobic substrate reduction with nitroethane or ethyl nitronate. Substrate deuterium kinetic isotope effects with 1,2-[(2)H(4)]nitroethane and 1,1,2-[(2)H(3) ethyl nitronate at pH 8 yielded normal and inverse effects on the k(cat)/K(m) value, respectively, and were negligible on the k(cat) value. The k(cat)/K(m) and k(cat) pH profiles with anionic nitronates showed the requirement of an acid, whereas those for neutral nitroalkanes were consistent with the involvement of both an acid and a base in catalysis. The kinetic data reported herein are consistent with an oxidasestyle catalytic mechanism for 2-nitropropane dioxygenase, in which the flavin-mediated oxidation of the anionic nitronates or neutral nitroalkanes and the subsequent oxidation of the enzyme-bound flavin occur in two independent steps.  相似文献   

16.
The phosphorylcholine esterase from Streptococcus pneumoniae, Pce, catalyzes the hydrolysis of phosphorylcholine residues from teichoic and lipoteichoic acids attached to the bacterial envelope and comprises a globular N-terminal catalytic module containing a zinc binuclear center and an elongated C-terminal choline-binding module. The dependence of Pce activity on the metal/enzyme stoichiometry shows that the two equivalents of zinc are essential for the catalysis, and stabilize the catalytic module through a complex metal-ligand coordination network. The pH dependence of Pce activity toward the alternative substrate p-nitrophenylphosphorylcholine (NPPC) shows that k(cat) and k(cat)/K(m) depend on the protonation state of two protein residues that can be tentatively assigned to the ionization of the metal-bound water (hydrogen bonded to D89) and to H228. Maximum activity requires deprotonation of both groups, although the catalytic efficiency is optimum for the single deprotonated form. The drastic reduction of activity in the H90A mutant, which still binds two Zn2+ ions at neutral pH, indicates that Pce activity also depends on the geometry of the metallic cluster. The denaturation heat capacity profile of Pce exhibits two peaks with T(m) values of 39.6 degrees C (choline-binding module) and 60.8 degrees C (catalytic module). The H90A mutation reduces the high-temperature peak by about 10 degrees C. Pce is inhibited in the presence of 1 mM zinc, but this inhibition depends on pH, buffer, and substrate species. A reaction mechanism is proposed on the basis of kinetic data, the structural model of the Pce:NPPC complex, and the currently accepted mechanism for other Zn-metallophosphoesterases.  相似文献   

17.
The roles of particular amino acids in substrate and coenzyme binding and catalysis of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase of Leuconostoc mesenteroides have been investigated by site-directed mutagenesis, kinetic analysis, and determination of binding constants. The enzyme from this species has functional dual NADP(+)/NAD(+) specificity. Previous investigations in our laboratories determined the three-dimensional structure. Kinetic studies showed an ordered mechanism for the NADP-linked reaction while the NAD-linked reaction is random. His-240 was identified as the catalytic base, and Arg-46 was identified as important for NADP(+) but not NAD(+) binding. Mutations have been selected on the basis of the three-dimensional structure. Kinetic studies of 14 mutant enzymes are reported and kinetic mechanisms are reported for 5 mutant enzymes. Fourteen substrate or coenzyme dissociation constants have been measured for 11 mutant enzymes. Roles of particular residues are inferred from k(cat), K(m), k(cat)/K(m), K(d), and changes in kinetic mechanism. Results for enzymes K182R, K182Q, K343R, and K343Q establish Lys-182 and Lys-343 as important in binding substrate both to free enzyme and during catalysis. Studies of mutant enzymes Y415F and Y179F showed no significant contribution for Tyr-415 to substrate binding and only a small contribution for Tyr-179. Changes in kinetics for T14A, Q47E, and R46A enzymes implicate these residues, to differing extents, in coenzyme binding and discrimination between NADP(+) and NAD(+). By the same measure, Lys-343 is also involved in defining coenzyme specificity. Decrease in k(cat) and k(cat)/K(m) for the D374Q mutant enzyme defines the way Asp-374, unique to L. mesenteroides G6PD, modulates stabilization of the enzyme during catalysis by its interaction with Lys-182. The greatly reduced k(cat) values of enzymes P149V and P149G indicate the importance of the cis conformation of Pro-149 in accessing the correct transition state.  相似文献   

18.
The energetics of the Sox-5 HMG box interaction with DNA duplexes, containing the recognition sequence AACAAT, were studied by fluorescence spectroscopy, isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). Fluorescence titration showed that the association constant of this HMG box with the duplexes is of the order 4x10(7) M(-1), increasing somewhat with temperature rise, i.e. the Gibbs energy is -40 kJ mol(-1) at 5 degrees C, decreasing to -48 kJ mol(-1) at 32 degrees C. ITC measurements of the enthalpy of association over this temperature range showed an endothermic effect below 17 degrees C and an exothermic effect above, suggesting a heat capacity change on binding of about -4 kJ K(-1) mol(-1), a value twice larger than expected from structural considerations. A straightforward interpretation of ITC data in heat capacity terms assumes, however, that the heat capacities of all participants in the association reaction do not change over the considered temperature range. Our previous studies showed that over the temperature range of the ITC experiments the HMG box of Sox-5 starts to unfold, absorbing heat and the heat capacities of the DNA duplexes also increase significantly. These heat capacity effects differ from that of the DNA/Sox-5 complex. Correcting the ITC measured binding enthalpies for the heat capacity changes of the components and complex yielded the net enthalpies which exhibit a temperature dependence of about -2 kJ K(-1) mol(-1), in good agreement with that predicted on the basis of dehydration of the protein-DNA interface. Using the derived heat capacity change and the enthalpy and Gibbs energy of association measured at 5 degrees C, the net enthalpy and entropy of association of the fully folded HMG box with the target DNA duplexes was determined over a broad temperature range. These functions were compared with those for other known cases of sequence specific DNA/protein association. It appears that the enthalpy and entropy of association of minor groove binding proteins are more positive than for proteins binding in the major groove. The observed thermodynamic characteristics of protein binding to the A+T-rich minor groove of DNA might result from dehydration of both polar and non-polar groups at the interface and release of counterions. The expected entropy of dehydration was calculated and found to be too large to be compensated by the negative entropy of reduction of translational/rotational freedom. This implies that DNA/HMG box association proceeds with significant decrease of conformational entropy, i.e. reduction in conformational mobility.  相似文献   

19.
Human glutathione transferase A1-1 (GST A1-1) has a flexible C-terminal segment that forms a helix (alpha9) closing the active site upon binding of glutathione and a small electrophilic substrate such as 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (CDNB). In the absence of active-site ligands, the C-terminal segment is not fixed in one position and is not detectable in the crystal structure. A key residue in the alpha9-helix is Phe 220, which can interact with both the enzyme-bound glutathione and the second substrate, and possibly guide the reactants into the transition state. Mutation of Phe 220 into Ala and Thr was shown to reduce the catalytic efficiency of GST A1-1. The mutation of an additional residue, Phe 222, caused further decrease in activity. The presence of a viscosogen in the reaction medium decreased the kinetic parameters k(cat) and k(cat)/K(m) for the conjugation of CDNB catalyzed by wild-type GST A1-1, in agreement with the view that product release is rate limiting for the substrate-saturated enzyme. The mutations cause a decrease of the viscosity dependence of both kinetic parameters, indicating that the motion of the alpha9-helix is linked to catalysis in wild-type GST A1-1. The isomerization reaction with the alternative substrate Delta(5)-androstene-3,17-dione (AD) is affected in a similar manner by the viscosogens. The transition state energy of the isomerization reaction, like that of the CDNB conjugation, is lowered by Phe 220 as indicated by the effects of the mutations on k(cat)/K(m). The results demonstrate that Phe 220 and Phe 222, in the dynamic C-terminal segment, influence rate-determining steps in the catalytic mechanism of both the substitution and the isomerization reactions.  相似文献   

20.
The 1:1 complexation reaction between Ba(2+) and 18-crown-6 ether is re-examined using isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC), with the goal of clarifying previously reported discrepancies between reaction enthalpies estimated directly (calorimetric) and indirectly, from the temperature dependence of the reaction equilibrium constant K (van't Hoff). The ITC thermograms are analyzed using three different non-linear fit models based on different assumptions about the data error: constant, proportional to the heat and proportional but correlated. The statistics of the fitting indicate a preference for the proportional error model, in agreement with expectations for the conditions of the experiment, where uncertainties in the delivered titrant volume should dominate. With attention to proper procedures for propagating statistical error in the van't Hoff analysis, the differences between Delta H(cal) and Delta H(vH) are deemed statistically significant. In addition, statistically significant differences are observed for the Delta H(cal) estimates obtained for two different sources of Ba(2+), BaCl(2) and Ba(NO(3))(2). The effects are tentatively attributed to deficiencies in the standard procedure in ITC of subtracting a blank obtained for pure titrant from the thermogram obtained for the sample.  相似文献   

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