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1.
Oxalate oxidase (E.C. 1.2.3.4) catalyzes the oxygen-dependent oxidation of oxalate to carbon dioxide in a reaction that is coupled with the formation of hydrogen peroxide. Although there is currently no structural information available for oxalate oxidase from Ceriporiopsis subvermispora (CsOxOx), sequence data and homology modeling indicate that it is the first manganese-containing bicupin enzyme identified that catalyzes this reaction. Interestingly, CsOxOx shares greatest sequence homology with bicupin microbial oxalate decarboxylases (OxDC). We show that CsOxOx activity directly correlates with Mn content and other metals do not appear to be able to support catalysis. EPR spectra indicate that the Mn is present as Mn(II), and are consistent with the coordination environment expected from homology modeling with known X-ray crystal structures of OxDC from Bacillus subtilis. EPR spin-trapping experiments support the existence of an oxalate-derived radical species formed during turnover. Acetate and a number of other small molecule carboxylic acids are competitive inhibitors for oxalate in the CsOxOx catalyzed reaction. The pH dependence of this reaction suggests that the dominant contribution to catalysis comes from the monoprotonated form of oxalate binding to a form of the enzyme in which an active site carboxylic acid residue must be unprotonated.  相似文献   

2.
Oxalate decarboxylase (OxDC) catalyzes the conversion of oxalate into CO(2) and formate using a catalytic mechanism that remains poorly understood. The Bacillus subtilis enzyme is composed of two cupin domains, each of which contains Mn(II) coordinated by four conserved residues. We have measured heavy atom isotope effects for a series of Bacillus subtilis OxDC mutants in which Arg-92, Arg-270, Glu-162, and Glu-333 are conservatively substituted in an effort to define the functional roles of these residues. This strategy has the advantage that observed isotope effects report directly on OxDC molecules in which the active site manganese center(s) is (are) catalytically active. Our results support the proposal that the N-terminal Mn-binding site can mediate catalysis, and confirm the importance of Arg-92 in catalytic activity. On the other hand, substitution of Arg-270 and Glu-333 affects both Mn(II) incorporation and the ability of Mn to bind to the OxDC mutants, thereby precluding any definitive assessment of whether the metal center in the C-terminal domain can also mediate catalysis. New evidence for the importance of Glu-162 in controlling metal reactivity has been provided by the unexpected observation that the E162Q OxDC mutant exhibits a significantly increased oxalate oxidase and a concomitant reduction in decarboxylase activities relative to wild type OxDC. Hence the reaction specificity of a catalytically active Mn center in OxDC can be perturbed by relatively small changes in local protein environment, in agreement with a proposal based on prior computational studies.  相似文献   

3.
Aminopeptidase P (APPro) is a manganese-dependent enzyme that cleaves the N-terminal amino acid from polypeptides where the second residue is proline. APPro shares a similar fold, substrate specificity, and catalytic mechanism with methionine aminopeptidase and prolidase. To investigate the roles of conserved residues at the active site, seven mutant forms of APPro were characterized kinetically and structurally. Mutation of individual metal ligands selectively abolished binding of either or both Mn(II) atoms at the active site, and none of these metal-ligand mutants had detectable catalytic activity. Mutation of the conserved active site residues His243 and His361 revealed that both are required for catalysis. We propose that His243 stabilizes substrate binding through an interaction with the carbonyl oxygen of the requisite proline residue of a substrate and that His361 stabilizes substrate binding and the gem-diol catalytic intermediate. Sequence, structural, and kinetic analyses reveal that His350, conserved in APPro and prolidase but not in methionine aminopeptidase, forms part of a hydrophobic binding pocket that gives APPro its proline specificity. Further, peptides in which the required proline residue is replaced by N-methylalanine or alanine are cleaved by APPro, but they are extremely poor substrates due to a loss of interactions between the prolidyl ring of the substrate and the hydrophobic proline-binding pocket.  相似文献   

4.
The conformational properties of an active-site loop segment, defined by residues Ser(161)-Glu(162)-Asn(163)-Ser(164), have been shown to be important for modulating the intrinsic reactivity of Mn(II) in the active site of Bacillus subtilis oxalate decarboxylase. We now detail the functional and structural consequences of removing a conserved Arg/Thr hydrogen-bonding interaction by site-specific mutagenesis. Hence, substitution of Thr-165 by a valine residue gives an OxDC variant (T165V) that exhibits impaired catalytic activity. Heavy-atom isotope effect measurements, in combination with the X-ray crystal structure of the T165V OxDC variant, demonstrate that the conserved Arg/Thr hydrogen bond is important for correctly locating the side chain of Glu-162, which mediates a proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) step prior to decarboxylation in the catalytically competent form of OxDC. In addition, we show that the T165V OxDC variant exhibits a lower level of oxalate consumption per dioxygen molecule, consistent with the predictions of recent spin-trapping experiments [Imaram et al. (2011) Free Radicals Biol. Med. 50, 1009-1015]. This finding implies that dioxygen might participate as a reversible electron sink in two putative PCET steps and is not merely used to generate a protein-based radical or oxidized metal center.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Sheng Y  Khanam N  Tsaksis Y  Shi XM  Lu QS  Bognar AL 《Biochemistry》2008,47(8):2388-2396
The folylpolyglutamate synthetase (FPGS) enzyme of Escherichia coli differs from that of Lactobacillus casei in having dihydrofolate synthetase activity, which catalyzes the production of dihydrofolate from dihydropteroate. The present study undertook mutagenesis to identify structural elements that are directly responsible for the functional differences between the two enzymes. The amino terminal domain (residues 1-287) of the E. coli FPGS was found to bind tetrahydrofolate and dihydropteroate with the same affinity as the intact enzyme. The domain-swap chimera proteins between the E. coli and the L. casei enzymes possess both folate or pteroate binding properties and enzymatic activities of their amino terminal portion, suggesting that the N-terminal domain determines the folate substrate specificity. Recent structural studies have identified two unique folate binding sites, the omega loop in L. casei FPGS and the dihydropteroate binding loop in the E. coli enzyme. Mutants with swapped omega loops retained the activities and folate or pteroate binding properties of the rest of the enzyme. Mutating L. casei FPGS to contain an E. coli FPGS dihydropteroate binding loop did not alter its substrate specificity to using dihydropteroate as a substrate. The mutant D154A, a residue specific for the dihydropteroate binding site in E. coli FPGS, and D151A, the corresponding mutant in the L. casei enzyme, were both defective in using tetrahydrofolate as their substrate, suggesting that the binding site corresponding to the E. coli pteroate binding site is also the tetrahydrofolate binding site for both enzymes. Tetrahydrofolate diglutamate was a slightly less effective substrate than the monoglutamate with the wild-type enzyme but was a 40-fold more effective substrate with the D151A mutant. This suggests that the 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate binding site identified in the L. casei ternary structure may bind diglutamate and polyglutamate folate derivatives.  相似文献   

7.
We have generated mutants of Drosophila calmodulin in which pairs of calcium-binding sites are mutated so as to prevent calcium binding. In all sites, the mutation involves replacement of the -Z position glutamate residue with glutamine. Mutants inactivated in both N-terminal sites (B12Q) or both C-terminal sites (B34Q), and two mutants with one N- and one C-terminal site inactivated (B13Q and B24Q) were generated. The quadruple mutant with all four sites mutated was also studied. UV-difference spectroscopy and near-UV CD were used to examine the influence of these mutations upon the single tyrosine (Tyr-138) of the protein. These studies uncovered four situations in which Tyr-138 in the C-terminal lobe responds to a change to the calcium-binding properties of the N-terminal lobe. Further, they suggest that N-terminal calcium-binding events contribute strongly to the aberrant behavior of Tyr-138 seen in mutants with a single functional C-terminal calcium-binding site. The data also indicate that loss of calcium binding at site 1 adjusts the aberrant conformation of Tyr-138 produced by mutation of site 3 toward the wild-type structure. However, activation studies for skeletal muscle myosin light chain kinase (SK-MLCK) established that all of the multiple binding site mutants are poor activators of SK-MLCK. Thus, globally, the calcium-induced conformation of B13Q is not closer to wild type than that of either the site 1 or the site 3 mutant. The positioning of Tyr-138 within the crystal structure of calmodulin suggests that effects of the N-terminal lobe on this residue may be mediated via changes to the central linker region of the protein.  相似文献   

8.
Oxalate decarboxylase is a manganese-dependent enzyme that catalyzes the conversion of oxalate to formate and carbon dioxide. We have determined the structure of oxalate decarboxylase from Bacillus subtilis at 1.75 A resolution in the presence of formate. The structure reveals a hexamer with 32-point symmetry in which each monomer belongs to the cupin family of proteins. Oxalate decarboxylase is further classified as a bicupin because it contains two cupin folds, possibly resulting from gene duplication. Each oxalate decarboxylase cupin domain contains one manganese binding site. Each of the oxalate decarboxylase domains is structurally similar to oxalate oxidase, which catalyzes the manganese-dependent oxidative decarboxylation of oxalate to carbon dioxide and hydrogen peroxide. Amino acid side chains in the two metal binding sites of oxalate decarboxylase and the metal binding site of oxalate oxidase are very similar. Four manganese binding residues (three histidines and one glutamate) are conserved as well as a number of hydrophobic residues. The most notable difference is the presence of Glu333 in the metal binding site of the second cupin domain of oxalate decarboxylase. We postulate that this domain is responsible for the decarboxylase activity and that Glu333 serves as a proton donor in the production of formate. Mutation of Glu333 to alanine reduces the catalytic activity by a factor of 25. The function of the other domain in oxalate decarboxylase is not yet known.  相似文献   

9.
Oxalate decarboxylase, a bicupin enzyme coordinating two essential manganese ions per subunit, catalyzes the decomposition of oxalate into carbon dioxide and formate in the presence of oxygen. Current efforts to elucidate its catalytic mechanism are focused on EPR studies of the Mn. We report on a new immobilization strategy linking the enzyme's N-terminal His6-tag to a Zn-loaded immobilized metal affinity resin. Activity is lowered somewhat due to the expected crowding effect. High-field EPR spectra of free and immobilized enzyme show that the resin affects the coordination environment of the active site Mn ions only minimally. The immobilized preparation was used to study the effect of varying pH on the same sample. Repeated freeze-thaw cycles lead to break down of the resin beads and some enzyme loss from the sample. However, the EPR signal increases due to higher packing efficiency on the sample column.  相似文献   

10.
Cyclophilin B is a cyclosporin A-binding protein exhibiting peptidyl-prolyl cis/trans isomerase activity. We have previously shown that it interacts with two types of binding sites on T lymphocytes. The type I sites correspond to specific functional receptors and the type II sites to sulfated glycosaminoglycans. The interactions of cyclophilin B with type I and type II sites are reduced in the presence of cyclosporin A and of a synthetic peptide mimicking the N-terminal part of cyclophilin B, respectively, suggesting that the protein possesses two distinct binding regions. In this study, we intended to characterize the areas of cyclophilin B involved in the interactions with binding sites present on Jurkat cells. The use of cyclophilin B mutants modified in the N-terminal region demonstrated that the 3Lys-Lys-Lys5 and 14Tyr-Phe-Asp16 clusters are probably solely required for the interactions with the type II sites. We further engineered mutants of the conserved central core of cyclophilin B, which bears the catalytic and the cyclosporin A binding sites as an approach to localize the binding regions for the type I sites. The enzymatic activity of cyclophilin B was dramatically reduced after substitution of the Arg62 and Phe67 residues, whereas the cyclosporin A binding activity was destroyed by mutation of the Trp128 residue and strongly decreased after modification of the Phe67 residue. Only the substitution of the Trp128 residue reduced the binding of the resulting cyclophilin B mutant to type I binding sites. The catalytic site of cyclophilin B therefore did not seem to be essential for cellular binding and the cyclosporin A binding site appeared to be partially involved in the binding to type I sites.  相似文献   

11.
3-Hydroxyanthranilic acid 3,4-dioxygenase (3HAO) is a non-heme ferrous extradiol dioxygenase in the kynurenine pathway from tryptophan. It catalyzes the conversion of 3-hydroxyanthranilate (HAA) to quinolinic acid (QUIN), an endogenous neurotoxin, via the activation of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors and the precursor of NAD(+) biosynthesis. The crystal structure of 3HAO from S. cerevisiae at 2.4 A resolution shows it to be a member of the functionally diverse cupin superfamily. The structure represents the first eukaryotic 3HAO to be resolved. The enzyme forms homodimers, with two nickel binding sites per molecule. One of the bound nickel atoms occupies the proposed ferrous-coordinated active site, which is located in a conserved double-strand beta-helix domain. Examination of the structure reveals the participation of a series of residues in catalysis different from other extradiol dioxygenases. Together with two iron-binding residues (His49 and Glu55), Asp120, Asn51, Glu111, and Arg114 form a hydrogen-bonding network; this hydrogen-bond network is key to the catalysis of 3HAO. Residues Arg101, Gln59, and the substrate-binding hydrophobic pocket are crucial for substrate specificity. Structure comparison with 3HAO from Ralstonia metallidurans reveals similarities at the active site and suggests the same catalytic mechanism in prokaryotic and eukaryotic 3HAO. Based on sequence comparison, we suggest that bicupin of human 3HAO is the first example of evolution from a monocupin dimer to bicupin monomer in the diverse cupin superfamilies. Based on the model of the substrate HAA at the active site of Y3HAO, we propose a mechanism of catalysis for 3HAO.  相似文献   

12.
Nuclease A (NucA) is a nonspecific endonuclease from Anabaena sp. capable of degrading single- and double-stranded DNA and RNA in the presence of divalent metal ions. We have determined the structure of the delta(2-24),D121A mutant of NucA in the presence of Zn2+ and Mn2+ (PDB code 1ZM8). The mutations were introduced to remove the N-terminal signal peptide and to reduce the activity of the nonspecific nuclease, thereby reducing its toxicity to the Escherichia coli expression system. NucA contains a betabeta alpha metal finger motif and a hydrated Mn2+ ion at the active site. Unexpectedly, NucA was found to contain additional metal binding sites approximately 26 A apart from the catalytic metal binding site. A structural comparison between NucA and the closest analog for which structural data exist, the Serratia nuclease, indicates several interesting differences. First, NucA is a monomer rather than a dimer. Second, there is an unexpected structural homology between the N-terminal segments despite a poorly conserved sequence, which in Serratia includes a cysteine bridge thought to play a regulatory role. In addition, although a sequence alignment had suggested that NucA lacks a proposed catalytic residue corresponding to Arg57 in Serratia, the structure determined here indicates that Arg93 in NucA is positioned to fulfill this role. Based on comparison with DNA-bound nuclease structures of the betabeta alpha metal finger nuclease family and available mutational data on NucA, we propose that His124 acts as a catalytic base, and Arg93 participates in the catalysis possibly through stabilization of the transition state.  相似文献   

13.
Oxalate decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.2) catalyses the conversion of oxalate into carbon dioxide and formate. It requires manganese and, uniquely, dioxygen for catalysis. It forms a homohexamer and each subunit contains two similar, but distinct, manganese sites termed sites 1 and 2. There is kinetic evidence that only site 1 is catalytically active and that site 2 is purely structural. However, the kinetics of enzymes with mutations in site 2 are often ambiguous and all mutant kinetics have been interpreted without structural information. Nine new site-directed mutants have been generated and four mutant crystal structures have now been solved. Most mutants targeted (i) the flexibility (T165P), (ii) favoured conformation (S161A, S164A, D297A or H299A) or (iii) presence (Delta162-163 or Delta162-164) of a lid associated with site 1. The kinetics of these mutants were consistent with only site 1 being catalytically active. This was particularly striking with D297A and H299A because they disrupted hydrogen bonds between the lid and a neighbouring subunit only when in the open conformation and were distant from site 2. These observations also provided the first evidence that the flexibility and stability of lid conformations are important in catalysis. The deletion of the lid to mimic the plant oxalate oxidase led to a loss of decarboxylase activity, but only a slight elevation in the oxalate oxidase side reaction, implying other changes are required to afford a reaction specificity switch. The four mutant crystal structures (R92A, E162A, Delta162-163 and S161A) strongly support the hypothesis that site 2 is purely structural.  相似文献   

14.
X-ray studies of phosphoglycerate kinase (EC 2.7.2.3, PGK) have shown that the enzyme's single polypeptide chain is organized into two separate domains that correspond to the N- and C-terminal halves of the chain. Substrate binding studies and the incorporation of the complete amino acid sequence of horse-muscle PGK into its X-ray model suggest that the C-domain is an ADP/ATP binding unit and that the N-terminal domain contains the phosphoglycerate binding site and the active site located in a prominent cluster of positively charged residues. Because the distance between these two sites is 12-15 A, a hinge-bending of 10 degrees--20 degrees has been proposed to bring the two sites together for catalysis. Independent solution studies of yeast PGK have shown that the radius of gyration decreases significantly on the formation of the ternary complex. This change has been interpreted in terms of a 9 degrees--12 degrees rotation about a hinge in the interdomain region that brings the two domains together. We suggest here a structural basis for the proposed hinge-bending that involves the rotation of the two helices that form the domain interface about their contact normal carrying their respective domains with them.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Yeast NAD(+)-specific isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH) is an octamer containing two types of homologous subunits. Ligand-binding analyses were conducted to examine effects of residue changes in putative catalytic and regulatory isocitrate-binding sites respectively contained in IDH2 and IDH1 subunits. Replacement of homologous serine residues in either subunit site, S98A in IDH2 or S92A in IDH1, was found to reduce by half the total number of holoenzyme isocitrate-binding sites, confirming a correlation between detrimental effects on isocitrate binding and respective kinetic defects in catalysis and allosteric activation by AMP. Replacement of both serine residues eliminates isocitrate binding and measurable catalytic activity. The putative isocitrate-binding sites of IDH1 and IDH2 contain five identical and four nonidentical residues. Reciprocal replacement of the four nonidentical residues in either or both subunits (A108R, F136Y, T241D, and N245D in IDH1 and/or R114A, Y142F, D248T, and D252N in IDH2) was found to be permissive for isocitrate binding. This provides further evidence for two types of binding sites in IDH, although the authentic residues have been shown to be necessary for normal kinetic contributions. Finally, the mutant enzymes with residue replacements in the IDH1 site were found to be unable to bind AMP, suggesting that allosteric activation is dependent both upon binding of isocitrate at the IDH1 site and upon the changes in the enzyme normally elicited by this binding.  相似文献   

17.
Treatment of T7 DNA ligase with a range of proteases generates two major fragments which are resistant to further digestion. These fragments, of molecular weight 16 and 26 kDa, are derived from the N- and C-termini of the protein, respectively. The presence of ATP or a non-hydrolysable analogue, ADPNP, during limited proteolysis greatly reduces the level of digestion. The N-terminal 16 kDa region of the intact T7 ligase is labelled selectively in the presence of [alpha-32P]ATP, confirming that it contains the active site lysine residue. In common with the intact enzyme, the C-terminal portion of the protein retains the ability to band shift DNA fragments of various lengths, implicating it in DNA binding. It can also inhibit ligation by the intact protein, apparently by competing for target sites on DNA. We conclude that the N-terminal region, which contains the putative active site lysine, plays a role in the transfer of AMP from the enzyme-adenylate complex to the 5'phosphate at the nick site, while the C-terminal 26 kDa fragment appears to position the enzyme at the target site on DNA.  相似文献   

18.
Two invariant tryptophan residues on the N-terminal extracellular region of the rat alpha1 subunit, Trp-69 and Trp-94, are critical for the assembly of the GABA(A) (gamma-aminobutyric acid, type A) receptor into a pentamer. These tryptophans are common not only to all GABA(A) receptor subunits, but also to all ligand-gated ion channel subunits. Converting each Trp residue to Phe and Gly by site-directed mutagenesis allowed us to study the role of these invariant tryptophan residues. Mutant alpha1 subunits, coexpressed with beta2 subunits in baculovirus-infected Sf9 cells, displayed high affinity binding to [(3)H]muscimol, a GABA site ligand, but no binding to [(35)S]t-butyl bicyclophosphorothionate, a ligand for the receptor-associated ion channel. Neither [(3)H]muscimol binding to intact cells nor immunostaining of nonpermeabilized cells gave evidence of surface expression of the receptor. When expressed with beta2 and gamma2 polypeptides, the mutant alpha1 polypeptides did not form [(3)H]flunitrazepam binding sites though wild-type alpha1 polypeptides did. The distribution of the mutant receptors on sucrose gradients suggests that the effects on ligand binding result from the inability of the mutant alpha1 subunits to form pentamers. We conclude that Trp-69 and Trp-94 participate in the formation of the interface between alpha and beta subunits, but not of the GABA binding site.  相似文献   

19.
Cys116, Lys240*, and Asp241* (asterisks indicate residues from the second subunit of the active dimer) at the active site of L-methionine γ-lyase of Pseudomonas putida (MGL_Pp) are highly conserved among heterologous MGLs. In a previous study, we found that substitution of Cys116 for His led to a drastic increase in activity toward L-cysteine and a decrease in that toward L-methionine. In this study, we examined some properties of the C116H mutant by kinetic analysis and 3D structural analysis. We assumed that substitution of Cys116 for His broke the original hydrogen-bond network and that this induced a significant effect of Tyr114 as a general acid catalyst, possibly due to the narrow space in the active site. The C116H mutant acquired a novel β-elimination activity and lead a drastic conformation change in the histidine residue at position 116 by binding the substrate, suggesting that this His residue affects the reaction specificity of C116H. Furthermore, we suggest that Lys240* is important for substrate recognition and structural stability and that Asp241* is also involved in substrate specificity in the elimination reaction. Based on this, we suggest that the hydrogen-bond network among Cys116, Lys240*, and Asp241* contributes to substrate specificity that is, to L-methionine recognition at the active site in MGL_Pp.  相似文献   

20.
The Met-168 residue in penicillin acylase from Kluyvera citrophila was changed to Ala by oligonucleotide site-directed mutagenesis. The Ala-168 mutant exhibited different substrate specificity than wild-type and enhanced thermal stability. The thermodynamic profiles for penicillin G hydrolysis catalyzed by both enzymes were obtained from the temperature dependence of the steady-state kinetic parameters Km and kcat. The high values of enthalpy and entropy of activation determined for the binding of substrate suggest that an induced-fit-like mechanism takes place. The Met----Ala168 mutation unstabilizes the first transition-state (E..S not equal to) and the enzyme-substrate complex (ES) causing a decrease in association equilibrium and specificity constants in the enzyme. However, no change is observed in the acyl-enzyme formation. It is concluded that residue 168 is involved in the enzyme conformational rearrangements caused by the interaction of the acid moiety of the substrate at the active site.  相似文献   

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