首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 46 毫秒
1.
The function of His159 in the enolase mechanism is disputed. Recently, Vinarov and Nowak (Biochemistry (1999) 38, 12138-12149) prepared the H159A mutant of yeast enolase 1 and expressed this in Escherichia coli. They reported minimal (ca. 0.01% of the native value) activity, though the protein appeared to be correctly folded, according to its CD spectrum, tryptophan fluorescence, and binding of metal ion and substrate. We prepared H159A enolase using a multicopy plasmid and expressed the enzyme in yeast. Our preparations of H159A enolase have 0.2-0.4% of the native activity under standard assay conditions and are further activated by Mg(2+) concentrations above 1 mM to 1-1.5% of the native activity. Native enolase 1 (and enolase 2) are inhibited by such Mg(2+) concentrations. It is possible that His159 is necessary for correct folding of the enzyme and that expression in E. coli leads to largely misfolded protein.  相似文献   

2.
Crystallographic and kinetic methods have been used to characterize a site-specific variant of yeast enolase in which Ser 39 in the active-site flap has been changed to Ala. In the wild-type enzyme, the carbonyl and hydroxyl groups of Ser 39 chelate the second equivalent of divalent metal ion, effectively anchoring the flap over the fully liganded active site. With Mg(2+) as the activating cation, S39A enolase has <0.01% of wild-type activity as reported previously [J.M. Brewer, C.V. Glover, M.J. Holland, L. Lebioda, Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1383 (2) (1998) 351-355]. Measurements of (2)H kinetic isotope effects indicate that the proton abstraction from 2-phosphoglycerate (2-PGA) is significantly rate determining. Analysis of the isotope effects provides information on the relative rates of formation and breakdown of the enolate intermediate. Moreover, assays with different species of divalent metal ions reveal that with S39A enolase (unlike the case of wild-type enolase), more electrophilic metal ions promote higher activities. The kinetic results with the S39A variant support the notions that a rate-limiting product release lowers the activity of wild-type enolase with more electrophilic metal ions and that the metal ions are used to acidify the C2-proton of 2-PGA. The S39A enolase was co-crystallized with Mg(2+) and the inhibitor phosphonoacetohydroxamate (PhAH). The structure was solved and refined at a resolution of 2.1 A. The structure confirms the conjecture that the active-site flap is opened in the mutant protein. PhAH chelates to both Mg ions as in the corresponding structure of the wild-type complex. Positions of the side chains of catalytic groups, Lys 345 and Glu 211, and of "auxiliary" residues Glu 168 and Lys 396 are virtually unchanged relative to the complex with the wild-type protein. His 159, which hydrogen bonds to the phosphonate oxygens in the wild-type complex, is 5.7 A from the closest phosphonate oxygen, and the loop (154-166) containing His 159 is shifted away from the active center. A peripheral loop, Glu 251-Gly 275, also moves to open access to the active site.  相似文献   

3.
White DJ  Reiter NJ  Sikkink RA  Yu L  Rusnak F 《Biochemistry》2001,40(30):8918-8929
Bacteriophage lambda phosphoprotein phosphatase (lambdaPP) has structural similarity to the mammalian Ser/Thr phosphoprotein phosphatases (PPPs) including the immunosuppressant drug target calcineurin. PPPs possess a conserved active site containing a dinuclear metal cluster, with metal ligands provided by a phosphoesterase motif plus two additional histidine residues at the C-terminus. Multiple sequence alignment of lambdaPP with 28 eubacterial and archeal phosphoesterases identified active site residues from the phosphoesterase motif and in many cases 2 additional C-terminal His metal ligands. Most highly similar to lambdaPP are E. coli PrpA and PrpB. Using the crystal structure of lambdaPP [Voegtli, W. C., et al. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 15365-15374] as a structural and active site model for PPPs and related bacterial phosphoesterases, we have studied mutant forms of lambdaPP reconstituted with Mn(2+) by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy, Mn(2+) binding analysis, and phosphatase kinetics. Analysis of Mn(2+)-bound active site mutant lambdaPP proteins shows that H22N, N75H, and H186N mutations decrease phosphatase activity but still allow mononuclear Mn(2+) and [(Mn(2+))(2)] binding. The high affinity Mn(2+) binding site is shown to consist of M2 site ligands H186 and Asn75, but not H22 from the M1 site which is ascribed as the lower affinity site.  相似文献   

4.
Feng H  Dong L  Cao W 《Biochemistry》2006,45(34):10251-10259
The enzyme endonuclease V initiates repair of deaminated DNA bases by making an endonucleolytic incision on the 3' side one nucleotide from a base lesion. In this study, we have used site-directed mutagenesis to characterize the role of the highly conserved residues D43, E89, D110, and H214 in Thermotoga maritima endonuclease V catalysis. DNA cleavage and Mn(2+)-rescue analysis suggest that amino acid substitutions at D43 impede the enzymatic activity severely while mutations at E89 and D110 may be tolerated. Mutations at H214 yield enzyme that maintains significant DNA cleavage activity. The H214D mutant exhibits little change in substrate specificity or DNA cleavage kinetics, suggesting the exchangeability between His and Asp at this site. DNA binding analysis implicates the involvement of the four residues in metal binding. Mn(2+)-mediated cleavage of inosine-containing DNA is stimulated by the addition of Ca(2+), a metal ion that does not support catalysis. The effects of Mn(2+) on Mg(2+)-mediated DNA cleavage show a complexed initial stimulatory and later inhibitory pattern. The data obtained from the dual metal ion analyses lead to the notion that two metal ions are involved in endonuclease V-mediated catalysis. A catalytic and regulatory two-metal model is proposed.  相似文献   

5.
R R Poyner  W W Cleland  G H Reed 《Biochemistry》2001,40(27):8009-8017
Spectroscopic and kinetic methods have been used to explore the roles of divalent metal ions in the enolase-catalyzed dehydration of 2-phosphoglycerate (2-PGA). Enolase requires 2 equiv of metal ion per active site for maximal activity. Previous crystallographic studies [Larsen, T. M., Wedekind, J. E., Rayment, I., and Reed, G. H. (1996) Biochemistry 35, 4349-4358] showed that both magnesium ions coordinated to the carboxylate group of the substrate/product-a scheme consistent with metal ion assistance in formation of the enolate intermediate. Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) data with 17O-labeled forms of phosphoenolpyruvate show that Mn(2+), bound at the lower affinity site, coordinates to one carboxylate oxygen and one phosphate oxygen of the substrate. These observations are fully consistent with the crystallographic data. Plots of activity versus log [metal ion] are bell-shaped, and the inhibitory phases of the profiles have been previously attributed to binding of metal ions at ancillary sites on the enzyme. However, the activation profiles and measurements of 2H kinetic isotope effects support an ordered kinetic mechanism wherein binding of 2-PGA precedes binding of the second metal ion, and release of the second metal ion occurs prior to departure of phosphoenolpyruvate. High concentrations of metal ion lead to inhibition in the ordered mechanism by interfering with product release. The 2H kinetic isotope effect is diminished in the inhibitory phases of the metal ion activation profiles in a manner that is consistent with the predominantly ordered mechanism. Zn(2+) gives lower maximal activity than Mg(2+), apparently due to slow release of Zn(2+) from the product complex. Addition of imidazole increases the maximal rate apparently by accelerating the release of Zn(2+) from the enzyme.  相似文献   

6.
Huang YC  Colman RF 《Biochemistry》2002,41(17):5637-5643
Sequence alignment predicts that His(309) of pig heart NADP-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase is equivalent to His(339) of the Escherichia coli enzyme, which interacts with the coenzyme in the crystal structure [Hurley et al. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 8671-8688], and porcine His(315) and His(319) are close to that site. The mutant porcine enzymes H309Q, H309F, H315Q, and H319Q were prepared by site-directed mutagenesis, expressed in E. coli, and purified. The H319Q mutant has K(m) values for NADP, isocitrate, and Mn(2+) similar to those of wild-type enzyme, and V(max) = 20.1, as compared to 37.8 micromol of NADPH min(-1) (mg of protein)(-1) for wild type. Thus, His(319) is not involved in coenzyme binding and has a minimal effect on catalysis. In contrast, H315Q exhibits a K(m) for NADP 40 times that of wild type and V(max) = 16.2 units/mg of protein, with K(m) values for isocitrate and Mn(2+) similar to those of wild type. These results implicate His(315) in the region of the NADP site. Replacement of His(309) by Q or F yields enzyme with no detectable activity. The His(309) mutants bind NADPH poorly, under conditions in which wild type and H319Q bind 1.0 mol of NADPH/mol of subunit, indicating that His(309) is important for the binding of coenzyme. The His(309) mutants bind isocitrate stoichiometrically, as do wild-type and the other mutant enzymes. However, as distinguished from the wild-type enzyme, the His(309) mutants are not oxidatively cleaved by metal isocitrate, implying that the metal ion is not bound normally. Since circular dichroism spectra are similar for wild type, H315Q, and H319Q, these amino acid substitutions do not cause major conformational changes. In contrast, replacement of His(309) results in detectable change in the enzyme's CD spectrum and therefore in its secondary structure. We propose that His(309) plays a significant role in the binding of coenzyme, contributes to the proper coordination of divalent metal ion in the presence of isocitrate, and maintains the normal conformation of the enzyme.  相似文献   

7.
We performed functional analyses for various single amino-acid substitution variants of Escherichia coli, Bacillus subtilis, and human tRNase Zs. The well-conserved six histidine, His(I)-His(VI), and two aspartate, Asp(I) and Asp(II), residues together with metal ions are thought to form the active site of tRNase Z. The Mn(2+)-rescue analysis for Thermotoga maritima tRNase Z(S) has suggested that Asp(I) and His(V) directly contribute the proton transfer for the catalysis, and a catalytic mechanism has been proposed. However, experimental evidence supporting the proposed mechanism was limited. Here we intensively examined E. coli and B. subtilis tRNase Z(S) variants and human tRNase Z(L) variants for cleavage activities on pre-tRNAs in the presence of Mg(2+) or Mn(2+) ions. We observed that the Mn(2+) ions cannot rescue the activities of Asp(I)Ala and His(V)Ala variants from each species, which are lost in the presence of Mg(2+). This observation may support the proposed catalytic mechanism.  相似文献   

8.
The hypothesis that His159 in yeast enolase moves on a polypeptide loop to protonate the phosphoryl of 2-phosphoglycerate to initiate its conversion to phosphoenolpyruvate was tested by preparing H159N, H159A, and H159F enolases. These have 0.07%–0.25% of the native activity under standard assay conditions and the pH dependence of maximum velocities of H159A and H159N mutants is markedly altered. Activation by Mg2+ is biphasic, with the smaller Mg2+ activation constant closer to that of the catalytic Mg2+ binding site of native enolase and the larger in the mM range in which native enolase is inhibited. A third Mg2+ may bind to the phosphoryl, functionally replacing proton donation by His159. N207A enolase lacks an intersubunit interaction that stabilizes the closed loop(s) conformation when 2-phosphoglycerate binds. It has 21% of the native activity, also exhibits biphasic Mg2+ activation, and its reaction with the aldehyde analogue of the substrate is more strongly inhibited than is its normal enzymatic reaction. Polypeptide loop(s) closure may keep a proton from His159 interacting with the substrate phosphoryl oxygen long enough to stabilize a carbanion intermediate.  相似文献   

9.
Ramakrishnan B  Boeggeman E  Qasba PK 《Biochemistry》2004,43(39):12513-12522
Beta-1,4-galactosyltransferase (beta4Gal-T1) in the presence of manganese ion transfers galactose from UDP-galactose (UDP-Gal) to N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) that is either free or linked to an oligosaccharide. Crystallographic studies on bovine beta4Gal-T1 have shown that the primary metal binding site is located in the hinge region of a long flexible loop, which upon Mn(2+) and UDP-Gal binding changes from an open to a closed conformation. This conformational change creates an oligosaccharide binding site in the enzyme. Neither UDP nor UDP analogues efficiently induce these conformational changes in the wild-type enzyme, thereby restricting the structural analysis of the acceptor binding site. The binding of Mn(2+) involves an uncommon coordination to the Sdelta atom of Met344; when it is mutated to His, the mutant M344H, in the presence of Mn(2+) and UDP-hexanolamine, readily changes to a closed conformation, facilitating the structural analysis of the enzyme bound with an oligosaccharide acceptor. Although the mutant M344H loses 98% of its Mn(2+)-dependent activity, it exhibits 25% of its activity in the presence of Mg(2+). The crystal structures of M344H-Gal-T1 in complex with either UDP-Gal.Mn(2+) or UDP-Gal.Mg(2+), determined at 2.3 A resolution, show that the mutant enzyme in these complexes is in a closed conformation, and the coordination stereochemistry of Mg(2+) is quite similar to that of Mn(2+). Although either Mn(2+) or Mg(2+), together with UDP-Gal, binds and changes the conformation of the M344H mutant to the closed one, it is the Mg(2+) complex that engages efficiently in catalyses. Thus, this property enabled us to crystallize the M344H mutant for the first time with the acceptor substrate chitobiose in the presence of UDP-hexanolamine and Mn(2+). The crystal structure determined at 2.3 A resolution reveals that the GlcNAc residue at the nonreducing end of chitobiose makes extensive hydrophobic interactions with the highly conserved Tyr286 residue.  相似文献   

10.
L Lebioda  B Stec  J M Brewer  E Tykarska 《Biochemistry》1991,30(11):2823-2827
Enolase is a metalloenzyme which catalyzes the elimination of H2O from 2-phosphoglyceric acid (PGA) to form phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP). Mg2+ and Zn2+ are cofactors which strongly bind and activate the enzyme. Ca2+ also binds strongly but does not produce activity. Phosphoglycolate (PG) is a competitive inhibitor of enolase. The structures of two inhibitory ternary complexes: yeast enolase-Ca2(+)-PGA and yeast enolase-Zn2(+)-PG, were determined by X-ray diffraction to 2.2-A resolution and were refined by crystallographic least-squares to R = 14.8% and 15.7%, respectively, with good geometries of the models. These structures are compared with the structure of the precatalytic ternary complex enolase-Mg2(+)-PGA/PEP (Lebioda & Stec, 1991). In the complex enolase-Ca2(+)-PGA, the PGA molecule coordinates to the Ca2+ ion with the hydroxyl group, as in the precatalytic complex. The conformation of the PGA molecule is however different. In the active complex, the organic part of the PGA molecule is planar, similar to the product. In the inhibitory complex, the carboxylic group is in an orthonormal conformation. In the inhibitory complex enolase-Zn2(+)-PG, the PG molecule coordinates with the carboxylic group in a monodentate mode. In both inhibitory complexes, the conformational changes in flexible loops, which were observed in the precatalytic complex, do not take place. The lack of catalytic metal ion binding suggests that these conformational changes are necessary for the formation of the catalytic metal ion binding site.  相似文献   

11.
The enzyme 2-C-methyl-D-erythritol 2,4-cyclodiphosphate (MECDP) synthase catalyzes the conversion of 4-diphosphocytidyl-2-C-methyl-D-erythritol 2-phosphate (CDP-ME2P) to MECDP, a highly unusual cyclodiphosphate-containing intermediate on the mevalonate-independent pathway to isopentenyl diphosphate and dimethylallyl diphosphate. We now report two x-ray crystal structures of MECDP synthase refined to 2.8-A resolution. The first structure contains a bound Mn(2+) cation, and the second structure contains CMP, MECDP, and Mn(2+). The protein adopts a homotrimeric quaternary structure built around a central hydrophobic cavity and three externally facing active sites. Each of these active sites is located between two adjacent monomers. A tetrahedrally arranged transition metal binding site, potentially occupied by Mn(2+), sits at the base of the active site cleft. A phosphate oxygen of MECDP and the side chains of Asp(8), His(10), and His(42) occupy the metal ion coordination sphere. These structures reveal for the first time the structural determinants underlying substrate, product, and Mn(2+) recognition and the likely catalytic mechanism accompanying the biosynthesis of the cyclodiphosphate-containing isoprenoid precursor, MECDP.  相似文献   

12.
Srivastava A  Dwivedi N  Samanta U  Sau AK 《IUBMB life》2011,63(11):1027-1036
Arginase is a binuclear Mn(2+) -metalloenzyme of urea cycle that hydrolyzes arginine to ornithine and urea. Unlike other arginases, the Helicobacter pylori enzyme is selective for Co(2+) and has all conserved motifs except (88) SSEHA(92) (instead of GGDHS). To examine the role of this motif in the activity and stability, steady-state kinetics, mutational analysis, thermal denaturation, and homology modeling were carried out. With a series of single and double mutants, we show that mutations of Ser88 and Ala92 to its analogous residues in other arginases individually enhance the catalytic activity. This is supported by the modeling studies, where the motif plays a role in alteration at the active site structure compared to other arginases. Mutational analysis further shows that both Glu90 and His91 are important for the activity, as their mutations lead to significant decrease in the catalytic efficiency but they appear to act in two different ways; Glu90 has a more catalytic role as its mutant displays binding of the two metal ions per monomer of the protein, but His91 plays a critical role in retaining the metal ion at the active site as its mutation exhibits a loss of one metal ion. Thermal denaturation studies demonstrated that Ser88 and His91 both play crucial roles in the stability of the protein as their mutants showed a decrease in the T(m) by ~10-11°. Unlike wild type, the metal ions have larger role in providing the stability to the mutant proteins. Thus, our data demonstrate that the motif not only plays an important role in the activity but also critical in the stability of the protein.  相似文献   

13.
UDP-galactose:beta-galactosyl-alpha1,3-galactosyltransferase (alpha3GT) catalyzes the synthesis of galactosyl-alpha-1,3-beta-galactosyl structures in mammalian glycoconjugates. In humans the gene for alpha3GT is inactivated, and its product, the alpha-Gal epitope, is the target of a large fraction of natural antibodies. alpha3GT is a member of a family of metal-dependent-retaining glycosyltransferases that includes the histo blood group A and B enzymes. Mn(2+) activates the catalytic domain of alpha3GT (alpha3GTcd), but the affinity reported for this ion is very low relative to physiological levels. Enzyme activity over a wide range of metal ion concentrations indicates a dependence on Mn(2+) binding to two sites. At physiological metal ion concentrations, Zn(2+) gives higher levels of activity and may be the natural cofactor. To determine the role of the cation, metal activation was perturbed by substituting Co(2+) and Zn(2+) for Mn(2+) and by mutagenesis of a conserved D(149)VD(151) sequence motif that is considered to act in cation binding in many glycosyltransferases. The aspartates of this motif were found to be essential for activity, and the kinetic properties of a Val(150) to Ala mutant with reduced activity were determined. The results indicate that the cofactor is involved in binding UDP-galactose and has a crucial influence on catalytic efficiency for galactose transfer and for the low endogenous UDP-galactose hydrolase activity. It may therefore interact with one or more phosphates of UDP-galactose in the Michaelis complex and in the transition state for cleavage of the UDP to galactose bond. The DXD motif conserved in many glycosyltransferases appears to have a key role in metal-mediated donor substrate binding and phosphate-sugar bond cleavage.  相似文献   

14.
Sun W  Nicholson AW 《Biochemistry》2001,40(16):5102-5110
Escherichia coli ribonuclease III (EC 3.1.24) is a double-strand- (ds-) specific endoribonuclease involved in the maturation and decay of cellular, phage, and plasmid RNAs. RNase III is a homodimer and requires Mg(2+) to hydrolyze phosphodiesters. The RNase III polypeptide contains an N-terminal catalytic (nuclease) domain which exhibits eight highly conserved acidic residues, at least one of which (Glu117) is important for phosphodiester hydrolysis but not for substrate binding [Li and Nicholson (1996) EMBO J. 15, 1421-1433]. To determine the side chain requirements for activity, Glu117 was changed to glutamine or aspartic acid. The mutant proteins were purified as (His)(6)-tagged species, and both exhibited normal homodimeric behavior as shown by chemical cross-linking. The Glu117Gln mutant is unable to cleave substrate in vitro under all tested conditions but can bind substrate. The Glu117Asp mutant also is defective in cleavage while able to bind substrate. However, low level activity is observed at extended reaction times and high enzyme concentrations, with an estimated catalytic efficiency approximately 15 000-fold lower than that of RNase III. The activity of the Glu117Asp mutant but not that of the Glu117Gln mutant can be greatly enhanced by substituting Mn(2+) for Mg(2+), with the catalytic efficiency of the Glu117Asp-Mn(2+) holoenzyme approximately 400-fold lower than that of the RNase III-Mn(2+) holoenzyme. For RNase III, a Mn(2+) concentration of 1 mM provides optimal activity, while concentrations >5 mM are inhibitory. In contrast, the Glu117Asp mutant is not inhibited by high concentrations of Mn(2+). Finally, high concentrations of Mg(2+) do not inhibit RNase III nor relieve the Mn(2+)-dependent inhibition. In summary, these experiments establish the stringent functional requirement for a precisely positioned carboxylic acid group at position 117 and reveal two classes of divalent metal ion binding sites on RNase III. One site binds either Mg(2+) or Mn(2+) and supports catalysis, while the other site is specific for Mn(2+) and confers inhibition. Glu117 is important for the function of both sites. The implications of these findings on the RNase III catalytic mechanism are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Yeast exopolyphosphatase (scPPX) processively splits off the terminal phosphate group from linear polyphosphates longer than pyrophosphate. scPPX belongs to the DHH phosphoesterase superfamily and is evolutionarily close to the well characterized family II pyrophosphatase (PPase). Here, we used steady-state kinetic and binding measurements to elucidate the metal cofactor requirement for scPPX catalysis over the pH range 4.2-9.5. A single tight binding site for Mg(2+) (K(d) of 24 microm) was detected by equilibrium dialysis. Steady-state kinetic analysis of tripolyphosphate hydrolysis revealed a second site that binds Mg(2+) in the millimolar range and modulates substrate binding. This step requires two protonated and two deprotonated enzyme groups with pK(a) values of 5.0-5.3 and 7.6-8.2, respectively. The catalytic step requiring two deprotonated groups (pK(a) of 4.6 and 5.6) is modulated by ionization of a third group (pK(a) of 8.7). Conservative mutations of Asp(127), His(148), His(149) (conserved in scPPX and PPase), and Asn(35) (His in PPase) reduced activity by a factor of 600-5000. N35H and D127E substitutions reduced the Mg(2+) affinity of the tight binding site by 25-60-fold. Contrary to expectations, the N35H variant was unable to hydrolyze pyrophosphate, but markedly altered metal cofactor specificity, displaying higher catalytic activity with Co(2+) bound to the weak binding site versus the Mg(2+)- or Mn(2+)-bound enzyme. These results provide an initial step toward understanding the dynamics of scPPX catalysis and reveal significant functional differences between structurally similar scPPX and family II PPase.  相似文献   

16.
The activities of the eight mutant proteins of Escherichia coli RNase HI, in which the four carboxylic amino acids (Asp(10), Glu(48), Asp(70), and Asp(134)) involved in catalysis are changed to Asn (Gln) or Ala, were examined in the presence of Mn(2+). Of these proteins, the E48A, E48Q, D134A, and D134N proteins exhibited the activity, indicating that Glu(48) and Asp(134) are dispensable for Mn(2+)-dependent activity. The maximal activities of the E48A and D134A proteins were comparable to that of the wild-type protein. However, unlike the wild-type protein, these mutant proteins exhibited the maximal activities in the presence of >100 microM MnCl(2), and their activities were not inhibited at higher Mn(2+) concentrations (up to 10 mM). The wild-type protein contains two Mn(2+) binding sites and is activated upon binding of one Mn(2+) ion at site 1 at low ( approximately 1 microM) Mn(2+) concentrations. This activity is attenuated upon binding of a second Mn(2+) ion at site 2 at high (>10 microM) Mn(2+) concentrations. The cleavage specificities of the mutant proteins, which were examined using oligomeric substrates at high Mn(2+) concentrations, were identical to that of the wild-type protein at low Mn(2+) concentrations but were different from that of the wild-type protein at high Mn(2+) concentrations. These results suggest that one Mn(2+) ion binds to the E48A, E48Q, D134A, and D134N proteins at site 1 or a nearby site with weaker affinities. The binding analyses of the Mn(2+) ion to these proteins in the absence of the substrate support this hypothesis. When Mn(2+) ion is used as a metal cofactor, the Mn(2+) ion itself, instead of Glu(48) and Asp(134), probably holds water molecules required for activity.  相似文献   

17.
Metal ion binding to human hemopexin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Binding of divalent metal ions to human hemopexin (Hx) purified by a new protocol has been characterized by metal ion affinity chromatography and potentiometric titration in the presence and absence of bound protoheme IX. ApoHx was retained by variously charged metal affinity chelate resins in the following order: Ni(2+) > Cu(2+) > Co(2+) > Zn(2+) > Mn(2+). The Hx-heme complex exhibited similar behavior except the order of retention of the complex on Zn(2+)- and Co(2+)-charged columns was reversed. One-dimensional (1)H NMR of apoHx in the presence of Ni(2+) implicates at least two His residues and possibly an Asp, Glu, or Met residue in Ni(2+) binding. Potentiometric titrations establish that apoHx possesses more than two metal ion binding sites and that the capacity and/or affinity for metal ion binding is diminished when heme binds. For most metal ions that have been studied, potentiometric data did not fit to binding isotherms that assume one or two independent binding sites. For Mn(2+), however, these data were consistent with a high-affinity site [K(A) = (15 +/- 3) x 10(6) M(-)(1)] and a low-affinity site (K(A) 相似文献   

18.
Boeggeman E  Qasba PK 《Glycobiology》2002,12(7):395-407
The catalytic domain of bovine beta1,4-galactosyltransferase (beta4Gal-T1) has been shown to have two metal binding sites, each with a distinct binding affinity. Site I binds Mn(2+) with high affinity and does not bind Ca(2+), whereas site II binds a variety of metal ions, including Ca(2+). The catalytic region of beta4Gal-T1 has DXD motifs, associated with metal binding in glycosyltransferases, in two separate sequences: D(242)YDYNCFVFSDVD(254) (region I) and W(312)GWGGEDDD(320) (region II). Recently, the crystal structure of beta4Gal-T1 bound with UDP, Mn(2+), and alpha-lactalbumin was determined in our laboratory. It shows that in the primary metal binding site of beta4Gal-T1, the Mn(2+) ion, is coordinated to five ligands, two supplied by the phosphates of the sugar nucleotide and the other three by Asp254, His347, and Met344. The residue Asp254 in the D(252)VD(254) sequence in region I is the only residue that is coordinated to the Mn(2+) ion. Region II forms a loop structure and contains the E(317)DDD(320) sequence in which residues Asp318 and Asp319 are directly involved in GlcNAc binding. This study, using site-directed mutagenesis, kinetic, and binding affinity analysis, shows that Asp254 and His347 are strong metal ligands, whereas Met344, which coordinates less strongly, can be substituted by alanine or glutamine. Specifically, substitution of Met344 to Gln has a less severe effect on the catalysis driven by Co(2+). Glu317 and Asp320 mutants, when partially activated by Mn(2+) binding to the primary site, can be further activated by Co(2+) or inhibited by Ca(2+), an effect that is the opposite of what is observed with the wild-type enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
Cyclic nucleotide monophosphate (cNMP) hydrolysis in bacteria and eukaryotes is brought about by distinct cNMP phosphodiesterases (PDEs). Since these enzymes differ in amino acid sequence and properties, they have evolved by convergent evolution. Cyclic NMP PDEs cleave cNMPs to NMPs, and the Rv0805 gene product is, to date, the only identifiable cNMP PDE in the genome of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. We have shown that Rv0805 is a cAMP/cGMP dual specificity PDE, and is unrelated in amino acid sequence to the mammalian cNMP PDEs. Rv0805 is a dimeric, Fe(3+)-Mn(2+) binuclear PDE, and mutational analysis demonstrated that the active site metals are co-ordinated by conserved aspartate, histidine and asparagine residues. We report here the structure of the catalytic core of Rv0805, which is distantly related to the calcineurin-like phosphatases. The crystal structure of the Rv0805 dimer shows that the active site metals contribute to dimerization and thus play an additional structural role apart from their involvement in catalysis. We also present the crystal structures of the Asn97Ala mutant protein that lacks one of the Mn(2+) co-ordinating residues as well as the Asp66Ala mutant that has a compromised cAMP hydrolytic activity, providing a structural basis for the catalytic properties of these mutant proteins. A molecule of phosphate is bound in a bidentate manner at the active site of the Rv0805 wild-type protein, and cacodylate occupies a similar position in the crystal structure of the Asp66Ala mutant protein. A unique substrate binding pocket in Rv0805 was identified by computational docking studies, and the role of the His140 residue in interacting with cAMP was validated through mutational analysis. This report on the first structure of a bacterial cNMP PDE thus significantly extends our molecular understanding of cAMP hydrolysis in class III PDEs.  相似文献   

20.
The topa quinone (TPQ) cofactor of copper amine oxidase is produced by posttranslational modification of a specific tyrosine residue through the copper-dependent, self-catalytic process. We have site-specifically mutated three histidine residues (His431, His433, and His592) involved in binding of the copper ion in the recombinant phenylethylamine oxidase from Arthrobacter globiformis. The mutant enzymes, in which each histidine was replaced by alanine, were purified in the Cu/TPQ-free precursor form and analyzed for their Cu-binding and TPQ-generating activities by UV-visible absorption, resonance Raman, and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopies. Among the three histidine-to-alanine mutants, only H592A was found to show a weak activity to form TPQ upon aerobic incubation with Cu(2+) ions. Also for H592A, exogenous imidazole rescued binding of copper and markedly promoted the TPQ formation. Accommodation of a free imidazole molecule within the cavity created in the active site of H592A was suggested by X-ray crystallography. Although the TPQ cofactor in H592A mutant was readily reduced with substrate, its catalytic activity was very low even in the presence of imidazole. Combined with the crystal structures of the mutant enzymes, these results demonstrate the importance of the three copper-binding histidine residues for both TPQ biogenesis and catalytic activity, fine-tuning the position of the essential metal.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号