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1.
The reaction mechanism of carboxypeptidase Y catalyzed reactions is investigated. Presteady state and steady state kinetic measurements are performed on the hydrolysis and aminolysis of an ester and an amide substrate. It is found that deacylation is the rate determining step in hydrolysis of the ester, pivalic acid 4-nitrophenol and acylation in that of the amide, succinyl-L-alanyl-L-alalyl-L-propyl-L-phenylalanine 4-nitroanilide.

The kinetic effects observed in the presence of a nucleophile, L-valine amide, where aminolysis occurs in parallel to the hydrolysis reaction are analysed in details. The results are described satisfactorily by a reaction scheme which involves the binding of the added nucleophile, (i) to the free enzyme, resulting in a simple competitive effect, and (ii) to the acyl-enzyme with the formation of a complex between the enzyme and the aminolysis product, the dissociation of which is rate determining. That scheme can account for both increases and decreases of kinetic parameter values as a function of the nucleophile concentration. There is no indication of binding of the nucleophile to the enzyme-substrate complex before acylation takes place.  相似文献   

2.
Solowiej J  Thomson JA  Ryan K  Luo C  He M  Lou J  Murray BW 《Biochemistry》2008,47(8):2617-2630
Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) was a worldwide epidemic caused by a coronavirus that has a cysteine protease (3CLpro) essential to its life cycle. Steady-state and pre-steady-state kinetic methods were used with highly active 3CLpro to characterize the reaction mechanism. We show that 3CLpro has mechanistic features common and disparate to the archetypical proteases papain and chymotrypsin. The kinetic mechanism for 3CLpro-mediated ester hydrolysis, including the individual rate constants, is consistent with a simple double displacement mechanism. The pre-steady-state burst rate was independent of ester substrate concentration indicating a high commitment to catalysis. When homologous peptidic amide and ester substrates were compared, a series of interesting observations emerged. Despite a 2000-fold difference in nonenzymatic reactivity, highly related amide and ester substrates were found to have similar kinetic parameters in both the steady-state and pre-steady-state. Steady-state solvent isotope effect (SIE) studies showed an inverse SIE for the amide but not ester substrates. Evaluation of the SIE in the pre-steady-state revealed normal SIEs for both amide and ester burst rates. Proton inventory (PI) studies on amide peptide hydrolysis were consistent with two proton-transfer reactions in the transition state while the ester data was consistent with a single proton-transfer reaction. Finally, the pH-inactivation profile of 3CLpro with iodoacetamide is indicative of an ion-pair mechanism. Taken together, the data are consistent with a 3CLpro mechanism that utilizes an "electrostatic" trigger to initiate the acylation reaction, a cysteine-histidine catalytic dyad ion pair, an enzyme-facilitated release of P1, and a general base-catalyzed deacylation reaction.  相似文献   

3.
Polgár L 《Biochemistry》1999,38(47):15548-15555
Oligopeptidase B, a member of the novel prolyl oligopeptidase family of serine peptidases, is involved in cell invasion by trypanosomes. The kinetic analysis of the reactions of oligopeptidase B, which preferentially cleaves peptides at two adjacent basic residues, has revealed significant differences from the trypsin-like serine peptidases. (i) The pH dependence of k(cat)/K(m) deviates from normal bell-shaped curves due to ionization of an enzymatic group characterized by a macroscopic pK(a) of approximately 8.3. The effect of this group is abolished at high ionic strength. (ii) The second-order acylation rate constants, k(cat)/K(m), are similar with the ester and the corresponding amide substrates, suggesting that their chemical reactivity does not prevail in the rate-limiting step. The kinetic deuterium isotope effects indicate that the rate-limiting step for k(cat)/K(m) is principally governed by conformational changes. (iii) The pH-k(cat)/K(m) profile and the very low rate constant for benzoyl-citrulline ethyl ester reveal a new kinetically influential group ionizing below the pK(a) of the active site histidine and indicate that the positive charge of arginine is essential for effective catalysis. (iv) The enzyme is inhibited by high concentrations of substrate. The mechanism of inhibition markedly varies with the reaction conditions. (v) The optimum temperature for the reactions of amide substrates is unusually low, slightly below 25 degrees C, whereas with benzoyl-arginine ethyl ester a linear Eyring plot is obtained up to 39 degrees C. The positive entropies of activation point to substantial reorganization of water molecules upon substrate binding.  相似文献   

4.
The specificity of porcine elastase (EC 3.4.4.7) has been studied. Ethyl esters derived from benzoyl amino acids with straight side chains are better substrates than those with branched side chains; the best substrate is norvaline ester. In the series of benzoylalanine alkyl esters the alcohol moiety markedly affects the susceptibility. The benzyl ester was found to be the best nonactivated substrate derived from monomeric amino acid. With elastase acylation is rate limiting, in contrast to chymotrypsin and trypsin where deacylation is generally the rate determining step with specific ester substrates.  相似文献   

5.
At the aim of investigating whether the early rapid phase of enzyme turnover is different in reverse micelles compared with bulk water, the kinetic properties of alpha-chymotrypsin have been studied in reverse micelles formed by sodium bis(2-ethylhexyl)sulfosuccinate in isooctane. Pre-steady state and steady-state kinetic constants, in water and in reverse micelles, have been determined by stopped-flow spectrophotometry for the hydrolysis of two substrates, namely acetyl-L-tryptophan-p-nitrophenyl ester and p-nitrophenyl acetate. It has been shown that, for both substrates, the acylation rate constant (k2) is very much lower in reverse micelles than in water. However, the deacylation rate constant (k3) and the turnover number (kcat) are not significantly changed in reverse micelles with respect to bulk water. Therefore, despite considerable rate changes in the acylation step, deacylation is rate limiting both in water as well as in reverse micelles, under the experimental conditions used.  相似文献   

6.
M Philipp  I H Tsai  M L Bender 《Biochemistry》1979,18(17):3769-3773
The p-nitrophenyl esters of straight-chain fatty acids were used as substrates of the enzyme subtilisin Novo (EC 3.4.4.16) and its chemically produced artificial enzyme thiolsubtilisin. Subtilisin and thiolsubtilisin pH--activity profiles were determined, and kinetic effects of the active site O-S substitution were observed. Among the substrates tested, both enzymes show highest specificity with p-nitrophenyl butyrate. It was also found that subtilisin is more sensitive to changes in substrate chain length than is thiolsubtilisin. Second-order acylation rate constants (k2/Ks) are remarkably similar for both enzymes. However, thiolsubtilisin deacylation rate constants and Km values are lower than analogous subtilisin constants. While thiolsubtilisin deacylation rate constants give a pH profile identical with that of subtilisin, the pH profile of thiolsubtilisin acylation rate constants shows an active site pK value lowered from the subtilisin pK of 7.15 and exhibits an inflection point at pH 8.45, which is absent in subtilisin.  相似文献   

7.
It has been shown for the first time that deacylation is the rate-limiting step in the enteropeptidase-catalyzed hydrolysis of highly effective oligopeptide substrates containing four Asp residues in positions P2–P5. On the other hand, the rate-limiting step in the hydrolysis of low-efficiency peptide substrates containing less than four Asp or Glu residues in positions P2–P5 is acylation, as it has previously been suggested for all amide and peptide substrates of serine proteases on the basis of classical works of Bender et al. The method of introduction of an additional nucleophile or another effector that selectively affects the deacylation step was used to determine the rate-limiting step in the enteropeptidase hydrolysis of N α-benzyloxycarbonyl-L-lysine thiobenzyl ester, the highly efficient amide substrate GlyAsp4-Lys β-naphthyl amide, and the low-efficiency peptide substrate VLSAADK-GNVKAAWG (where a hyphen denotes the hydrolysis site).  相似文献   

8.
Isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) was applied to determine enzymatic activity and inhibition. We measured the Michaelis–Menten kinetics for trypsin-catalyzed hydrolysis of two substrates, casein (an insoluble macromolecule substrate) and Nα-benzoyl-dl-arginine β-naphthylamide (a small substrate), and estimated the thermodynamic parameters in the temperature range from 20 to 37 °C. The inhibitory activities of reversible (small molecule benzamidine) and irreversible (small molecule phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride and macromolecule α1-antitrypsin) inhibitors of trypsin were also determined. We showed the usefulness of ITC for fast and direct measurement of inhibition constants and half-maximal inhibitory concentrations and for predictions of the mechanism of inhibition. ITC kinetic assays could be an easy and straightforward way to estimate Michaelis–Menten constants and the effectiveness of inhibitors as well as to predict the inhibition mechanism. ITC efficiency was found to be similar to that of classical spectrophotometric enzymatic assays.  相似文献   

9.
A C Storer  P R Carey 《Biochemistry》1985,24(24):6808-6818
The kinetic constants for the papain-catalyzed hydrolysis of the methyl thiono esters of N-benzoylglycine and N-(beta-phenylpropionyl)glycine are compared with those for the corresponding methyl ester substrates. The k2/Ks values for the thiono esters are 2-3 times higher than those for the esters, and both show bell-shaped pH dependencies with similar pKa's (approximately 4 and 9). The k3 values for the thiono esters are 30-60 times less than those for the esters and do not exhibit a pH dependency. Solvent deuterium isotope effects on k2/Ks and k3 were measured for the ester and thiono ester substrates of both glycine derivatives. Each thiono ester substrate showed an isotope effect similar to that for the corresponding ester substrate. Moreover, use of the proton inventory technique indicated that, as for esters, one proton is transferred in the transition state for deacylation during reactions involving thiono esters and the degree of heavy atom reorganization in the transition state is very similar in both cases. The k3 values for the hydrolysis of a series of para-substituted N-benzoylglycine esters were found to correlate with the k3 values for the corresponding para-substituted thiono esters [Carey, P. R., Lee, H., Ozaki, Y., & Storer, A. C. (1984) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 106, 8258-8262], showing that the rate-determining step for the deacylation of both thiolacyl and dithioacyl enzymes probably involves the disruption of a contact between the substrate's glycinic nitrogen atom and the sulfur of cysteine-25. It is concluded that the hydrolysis of esters and thiono esters proceeds by essentially the same reaction pathway. Due to an oxygen-sulfur exchange process the product released in the case of the N-(beta-phenylpropionyl)glycine thiono ester substrate is the dioxygen acid; however, for the N-benzoylglycine thiono ester substrate, the thiol acid is the initial product. This thiol acid then acts as a substrate for papain and reacylates the enzyme to eventually give the dioxygen acid product. It is shown that thiol acids are excellent substrates for papain.  相似文献   

10.
The rate constants for hydrolysis of the enantiomers of amino acid p-nitrophenyl esters catalyzed by bifunctional comicellar catalysts containing the imidazolyl and hydroxyl groups have been determined at pH 7.30, 0.02 m phosphate buffer, and 25°C. The kinetic analysis suggests a reaction scheme which involves acylation followed by deacylation at the imidazolyl group. Although no appreciable cooperative catalytic efficiencies are observed between the bifunctional groups in the acylation step, it is found that the deacylation rates are thus accelerated by surfactant hydroxyl groups, and some of the stereoselective acyl transfer reaction occurs from the imidazolyl to the hydroxyl group in optically active comicellar systems.  相似文献   

11.
The viscosity dependence of enzymatic catalysis was examined in subtilisin BPN' catalyzed hydrolysis of N-succinyl-Ala-Ala-Pro-Phe-p-nitroanilide and N-succinyl-Ala-Ala-Pro-Phe-thiobenzyl ester. The viscosity of the reaction medium was varied by added glycerol, ethylene glycol, sucrose, glucose, fructose, poly(ethylene glycol) and Ficoll-400. Responses of the Michaelis-Menten parameters associated with hydrolysis were calculated from data obtained by spectrophotometric techniques. The reactions with these two substrates have catalytic rates well below the diffusion-controlled limit and thus enable us to study the viscosity effects on catalytic steps of non-transport nature. It was found that the Km values for both amide and ester reactions remained relatively independent of cosolvents. On the other hand, while the kcat values for amide were insensitive to cosolvents, those for ester were substantially attenuated except in the case of poly(ethylene glycol). The observed rate attenuations cannot be explained by changes in proton activity, water activity, dielectric constant of the reaction medium or shifts of any kinetically important pKa. Instead, the results can be adequately described by microviscosity effects on the unimolecular deacylation step with a coupling constant of 0.65 +/- 0.11. In addition, the different viscosity dependence in the acylation vs deacylation step can be rationalized in terms of fluctuation-dependent chemical dynamics of proton transfers in the context of the Bogris-Hynes model.  相似文献   

12.
A number of peptide-ester substrates of the general structure Ac-Lxn-...-Lx2-Lx1-OMe have been synthesized and their alpha-chymotrypsin-catalyzed hydrolysis studied. The kinetic analysis involved varying the concentration of substrate and methanol product, and measuring rates along the entire progression curve. For the dipeptide esters Ac-Lx2-Lx1-OMe and the amino-acid derivatives Ac-Lx1-OMe the following constants could be determined: the dissociation constant of the enzyme-substrate complex, KEA, both rate constants of the acylation step, k23 and k32, and the forward rate constant of the deacylation step, k31. For the tripeptide ester Ac-Ala-Ala-Tyr-OMe it appears that the rate constant for the dissociation of the enzyme-substrate complex, k21, is smaller than the rate constant for acylation, k23. Thus, for this substrate only the association and dissociation rate constants k12 and k21 could be determined and the values of k23, k32 and k31 only indirectly estimated. The influence of structural changes in the peptide moiety of the substrates on reactivity has been established by comparing the rate constants of appropriate pairs of substrates. It was found that the substrate reactivity, as measured by k23/KEA, increase with the number and strength of the secondary interactions in a manner consistent with the binding scheme which has been proposed on the basis of crystallographic studies. The effect of a particular interaction on k23 and on KEA is dependent on the nature of the other interactions. However, the effect of k23/KEA appears to be independent of the presence of the other interactions and therefore characteristic of that particular interaction. The results for these substrates are compared with those found previously for a series of peptide substrates of the structure Ac-Lxn-... Lx2-...-Lx1-Gly-NH2 which have the same acyl moiety as the peptide esters studied in this work.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
The rate constants for both acylation and deacylation of beta-lactamase PC1 from Staphylococcus aureus and the RTEM beta-lactamase from Escherichia coli were determined by the acid-quench method [Martin & Waley (1988) Biochem. J. 254, 923-925] with several good substrates, and, for a wider range of substrates, of beta-lactamase I from Bacillus cereus. The values of the acylation and deacylation rate constants for benzylpenicillin were approximately the same (i.e. differing by no more than 2-fold) for each enzyme. The variation of kcat./Km for benzylpenicillin with the viscosity of the medium was used to obtain values for all four rate constants in the acyl-enzyme mechanism for all three enzymes. The reaction is partly diffusion-controlled, and the rate constant for the dissociation of the enzyme-substrate complex has approximately the same value as the rate constants for acylation and deacylation. Thus all three first-order rate constants have comparable values. Here there is no single rate-determining step for beta-lactamase action. This is taken to be a sign of a fully efficient enzyme.  相似文献   

15.
The kinetic constants for the papain-catalyzed hydrolysis of a series of substrates with glycine or alanine in the P1 position are discussed. The substrates have N-benzoyl, N-(p-nitrobenzoyl), N-(beta-phenylpropionyl), or N-(methyloxycarbonyl)phenylalanine attached to the P1 moiety, and kinetic constants are obtained for both esters and thiono esters. The results for the hydrolysis of esters can be readily interpreted in terms of the known specificity of papain. For any glycine ester the change in kcat/Km upon substituting C=S for C=O or upon substituting an alpha-CH3 group is minimal. However, upon making both these substitutions, i.e., going from a glycine ester to an alanine thiono ester substrate, larger changes are seen for this ratio. Data for N-benzoyl- and N-(beta-phenylpropionyl)glycine and -alanine methyl thiono esters show that k2 is the parameter most affected by the double C=S and alpha-CH3 substitution. A further conclusion is that the deacylation rate constants for any pair of glycine and alanine dithioacyl papains are similar; e.g., for the intermediates based on the "good" substrates PheAla and PheGly k3 differs by only 20%. This is a surprising finding in light of the very different conformations and interactions of the bound acyl groups revealed by resonance Raman spectroscopy and raises the possibility that specific stereochemical effects, such as the oxyanion hole and general base catalysis, are not operating in the hydrolysis of dithioacyl papains.  相似文献   

16.
Methylmalonate-semialdehyde dehydrogenase (MSDH) belongs to the CoA-dependent aldehyde dehydrogenase subfamily. It catalyzes the NAD-dependent oxidation of methylmalonate semialdehyde (MMSA) to propionyl-CoA via the acylation and deacylation steps. MSDH is the only member of the aldehyde dehydrogenase superfamily that catalyzes a β-decarboxylation process in the deacylation step. Recently, we demonstrated that the β-decarboxylation is rate-limiting and occurs before CoA attack on the thiopropionyl enzyme intermediate. Thus, this prevented determination of the transthioesterification kinetic parameters. Here, we have addressed two key aspects of the mechanism as follows: 1) the molecular basis for recognition of the carboxylate of MMSA; and 2) how CoA binding modulates its reactivity. We substituted two invariant arginines, Arg-124 and Arg-301, by Leu. The second-order rate constant for the acylation step for both mutants was decreased by at least 50-fold, indicating that both arginines are essential for efficient MMSA binding through interactions with the carboxylate group. To gain insight into the transthioesterification, we substituted MMSA with propionaldehyde, as both substrates lead to the same thiopropionyl enzyme intermediate. This allowed us to show the following: 1) the pK(app) of CoA decreases by ~3 units upon binding to MSDH in the deacylation step; and 2) the catalytic efficiency of the transthioesterification is increased by at least 10(4)-fold relative to a chemical model. Moreover, we observed binding of CoA to the acylation complex, supporting a CoA-binding site distinct from that of NAD(H).  相似文献   

17.
Kex2 protease from Saccharomyces cerevisiae is the prototype for a family of eukaryotic proprotein processing proteases belonging to the subtilase superfamily of serine proteases. Kex2 can be distinguished from degradative subtilisins on the basis of stringent substrate specificity and distinct pre-steady-state behavior. To better understand these mechanistic differences, we have examined the effects of substrate residues at P(1) and P(4) on individual steps in the Kex2 catalytic cycle with a systematic series of isosteric peptidyl amide and ester substrates. The results demonstrate that substrates based on known, physiological cleavage sites exhibit high acylation rates (> or =550 s(-1)) with Kex2. Substitution of Lys for the physiologically correct Arg at P(1) resulted in a > or =200-fold drop in acylation rate with almost no apparent effect on binding or deacylation. In contrast, substitution of the physiologically incorrect Ala for Nle at P(4) resulted in a much smaller defect in acylation and a modest but significant effect on binding with Lys at P(1). This substitution also had no effect on deacylation. These results demonstrate that Kex2 utilizes enzyme-substrate interactions in different ways at different steps in the catalytic cycle, with the S(1)-P(1) contact providing a key specificity determinant at the acylation step.  相似文献   

18.
The influence of water on the kinetics of alcoholysis of methyl propionate and n-propanol catalyzed by immobilized lipase B from Candida antarctica was studied in a continuous solid/gas reactor. In this reactor, the solid phase is composed of a packed enzymatic sample which is percolated by gaseous nitrogen, simultaneously carrying gaseous substrates to the enzyme while removing reaction products. In this system, interactions between the enzyme and nonreacting molecules are avoided, since no solvent is present, and it is thus more easy to assess the role of water. To this end, alcohol inhibition constant, substrates dissociation constants as well as acylation rate constant and ratio of acylation to deacylation rate constants have been determined as a function of water activity (a(w)). Data obtained highlight that n-propanol inhibition constant and dissociation constant of methyl propionate are a lot affected by a(w) variations whereas water has no significant effect on the catalytic acylation step nor on the ratio of acylation to deacylation rate constants. These results suggest the water-independent character of the transition step.  相似文献   

19.
Presteady state and steady state analyses of the alpha-chymotrypsin [EC 3.4.21.1]-catalyzed hydrolysis of three specific ester substrates and three ring-substituted derivatives were carried out to elucidate the effect of hydrophobic interactions due to the different side chains of the substrates on the individual steps of the reaction. Hydrolysis of all the substrates except for N alpha-acetyl-Nin-formyltryptophan methyl ester (Ac-Trp(CHO)-OMe) was controlled by the deacylation rate. In spite of their comparable Ks values, the substrates with small kcat, such as N alpha-acetyltryptophan methyl ester and N alpha-acetyl-2-(2-nitro-4-carboxyphenylsufenyl)-tryptophan methyl ester, characteristically gave Km values one order of magnitude smaller than the others. For the reaction of Ac-Trp(CHO)-OMe, it was ascertained that the deacylation step was not rate-controlling. It is suggested that the acylation step controls the rate in this case.  相似文献   

20.
The effects of subsite interactions in the S2-S4 region [Schechter & Berger (1967) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 27, 157-162] of porcine pancreatic kallikrein (EC 3.4.21.8) on its catalytic efficiency have been investigated. Kinetic constants (Kcat, Km) have been determined for a series of seven extended N-aminoacyl-L-arginine methyl esters whose sequence is based on either the C-terminal sequence of kallidin (-Pro-Phe-Arg) or (-Gly-)nArg. With these substrates it has been found that neither acylation nor deacylation of the enzyme is rate-limiting. Values of Kcat. range from 21.5 to 2320s-1, indicating that there are interactions with different residues in the N-aminoacyl chain and enzyme subsites in the S2-S4 region. It is shown that possible hydrogen-bonded interactions with the enzyme in the S3-S4 region have a significant effect on catalysis. The presence of L-phenylalanine at P2 has a very large effect on both Kcat, and Km, giving a greatly enhanced catalytic efficiency. Substrates with L-proline at P3 also have a marked effect, but in this case the overall effect is one of lowered catalytic efficiency. By comparison with the results of a similar study with human plasma kallikrein I (EC 3.4.21.8), it has been possible to demonstrate that there are considerable differences in kinetic behaviour between the two enzymes. These are related to relative differences in the rates of acylation and deacylation with ester substrates and also the roles of subsites S2 and S3 of the two enzymes.  相似文献   

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