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1.
Abstract

In order to design new efficient cytidine based drugs, an intersubunit interactions study related to the active site has been performed on the wild-type cytidine deaminase (CDA) and on the mutant enzyme F137W/W113F. F137 is the homologous to the Bacillus subtilis CDA F125 involved in the subunit interactions. In presence of the dissociating agent SDS, wild-type human CDA dissociate into enzymatically inactive monomers without intermediate forms via a non-cooperative transition. Extensive dialysis or dilution of the inactivated monomers restores completely the activity. The presence of the strong human CDA competitive inhibitor 5-fluorozebularine disfavour dissociation of the tetramer into subunits in the wild-type CDA but not in mutant enzyme F137W/W113F.  相似文献   

2.
An intersubunit interactions study related to the active site has been performed on the wild-type cytidine deaminase (CDA) and on the mutant enzyme F137W/W113F. F137 is the homologous to the Bacillus subtilis CDA F125 involved in the subunit interactions. In the presence of SDS, wild-type human CDA dissociates into enzymatically inactive monomers without intermediate forms via a non-cooperative transition. Extensive dialysis or dilution of the inactivated monomers restores completely the activity. Circular dichroism measurements show that the secondary/tertiary structure organization of each subunit is unaffected by the SDS concentration, while the mutation Phe/Trp causes weakening in quaternary structure. The presence of the strong human CDA competitive inhibitor 5-fluorozebularine disfavours dissociation of the tetramer into subunits in the wild-type CDA, but not in mutant enzyme F137W/W113F. The absence of tyrosine fluorescence and the much higher quantum yield of the double mutant protein spectrum suggest the occurrence of an energy transfer effect between the protein subunits. This assumption is confirmed by the crystallographic studies on B.subtilis in which it is shown that three different subunits concur with the formation of each of the four active sites and that F125, homologous to the human CDA F137, is located at the interface between two different subunits contributing to the formation of active site.  相似文献   

3.
Site-directed mutagenesis on human cytidine deaminase (CDA) was employed to mutate specifically two highly conserved phenylalanine residues, F36 and F137, to tryptophan; at the same time, the unique tryptophan residue present in the sequence at position 113 was mutated to phenylalanine. These double mutations were performed in order to have for each protein a single tryptophan signal for fluorescence studies relative to position 36 or 137. The mutant enzymes thus obtained, W113F, F36W/W113F and F137W/W113F, showed by circular dicroism and thermal stability an overall structure not greatly affected by the mutations. The titration of Trp residues by N-bromosuccinimide (NBS) suggested that residue W113 of the wild-type CDA and W36 of mutant F36W/W113F are buried in the tertiary structure of the enzyme, whereas the residue W137 of mutant F137W/W113F is located near the surface of the molecule. Kinetic experiments and equilibrium experiments with FZEB showed that the residue W113 seems not to be part of the active site of the enzyme whereas the Phe/Trp substitution in F36W/W113F and F137W/W113F mutant enzymes had a negative effect on substrate binding and catalysis, suggesting that F137 and F36 of the wild-type CDA are involved in a stabilizing interaction between ligand and enzyme.  相似文献   

4.
An investigation was made of the role exerted by some residues supposed to be involved in the intersubunit interaction and also in the catalytic site of homotetrameric human cytidine deaminase (T-CDA). Attention was focused on Y33, Y60, R68, and F137 residues that are a part of a conserved region in most T-CDAs. Hence, a series of site-directed mutagenesis experiments was set up obtaining seven mutants: Y60G, Y33G, Y33F Y33S, F137A, R68G, and R68Q. Each active purified mutant protein was characterized kinetically, with a series of substrates and inhibitors, and the effect of temperature on enzyme activity and stability was also investigated. Circular dichroism (CD) experiments at different temperatures and in presence of small amounts of sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS) were performed in all the soluble mutant CDAs. The results obtained by site-directed mutagenesis studies were compared to the crystallographic data of B. subtilis CDA and E. coli CDA and to molecular modeling studies previously performed on human CDA. The mutation of Y60 to glycine produced an enzyme with a more compact quaternary structure with respect to the wild-type; this mutation did not have a dramatic effect on cytidine deamination, but it slightly affected the binding with the substrate. None of the mutant CDAs in Y33 showed enzymatic activity; they existed only as monomers, indicating that this residue, located at the intersubunit interface, may be responsible for the correct folding of human CDA. The insertion of an alanine instead of phenylalanine at position 137 led to a soluble but completely inactive enzyme unable to form a tetramer, suggesting that F137 residue may be important for the assembling of the tetramer and also for the arrangement of the CDA active site. Finally, R68G and R68Q mutations revealed that the presence of the amino group seems to be important for the catalytic process but not for substrate binding, as already shown in B. subtilis CDA. The quaternary structure of R68Q was not affected by the mutation, as shown by the SDS-induced dissociation experiments and CD studies, whereas R68G dissociated very easily in presence of small amounts of SDS. These experiments indicated that in the human CDA, the side chain of arginine 68 involved in the catalytic process in one subunit active site might come from another subunit. The data obtained from these studies confirmed the presence of a complicated set of intersubunit interactions in the active site of human CDA, as shown in other T-CDAs.  相似文献   

5.
The thermal stability of human cytidine deaminase (CDA), an enzyme involved in pyrimidine metabolism was investigated. With this in view, the residues R68 and Y60, supposed to be involved in the intersubunit interactions and in the catalytic site of CDA, were mutated to glutamine and glycine, respectively. Thermal stability experiments were performed on the purified mutants by means of circular dichroism and enzymatic assays. The results obtained should be useful for designing more efficient cytidine based drugs for chemotherapy.  相似文献   

6.
The x-ray structure of the unliganded aspartate transcarbamylase reveals that Arg-113 of the catalytic chain is involved in an important set of interactions at the interface between the catalytic and regulatory subunits (Honzatko, R.B., Crawford, J.L., Monaco, H.L., Ladner, J.E., Edwards, B.F.P., Evans, D.R., Warren, S.G., Wiley, D.C., Ladner, R.C., and Lipscomb, W. N. (1982) J. Mol. Biol. 160, 219-263). In order to disturb this interaction, site-directed mutagenesis has been used to replace Arg-113 with glycine. This modification results in a substantial weakening of the interface between the catalytic and regulatory subunits leading to a high tendency for dissociation. The unliganded mutant enzyme exhibits a pH dependence and a sensitivity toward mercurials analogous to that obtained for the relaxed conformation of the wild-type enzyme. Moreover, the presence of saturating concentrations of aspartate is accompanied by only a slight shift in the optimal pH for activity. The bisubstrate analog N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate induces a 2-fold increase in the sulfhydryl reactivity as compared to the 4-fold increase observed for the wild-type enzyme. Despite this change in the interactions at the interface between the catalytic and regulatory subunits, the mutant enzyme still retains homotropic and heterotropic effects and exhibits a normal affinity for aspartate. Together these data show that a substantial weakening of the catalytic-regulatory interface can occur without altering the allosteric properties of the enzyme. These results also indicate that the intersubunit interactions involving Arg-113, between the polar domain of the catalytic chain and the zinc domain of the regulatory chain, do not participate in the homotropic cooperativity of the enzyme.  相似文献   

7.
Mitochondrial F1 containing genetically modified beta-subunit was purified for the first time from a mutant of the yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe. Precipitation by poly(ethylene glycol) allowed us to obtain a very stable and pure enzyme from either mutant or wild-type strain. In the presence of EDTA, purified F1 retained high amounts of endogenous nucleotides: 4.6 mol/mol and 3.7 mol/mol for mutant and wild-type F1, respectively. The additional nucleotide in mutant F1 was ATP; it was lost in the presence of Mg2+, which led to a total of 3.4 mol of nucleotides/mol whereas wild-type F1 retained all its nucleotides. Mutant F1 bound more exogenous ADP than wild-type F1 and the same total nucleotide amount was reached with both enzymes. Kinetics of ATPase activity revealed a much higher negative cooperativity for mutant than for wild-type F1. Bicarbonate abolished this negative cooperativity, but higher concentrations were required for mutant F1. The mutant enzyme was more sensitive than the wild-type one to azide inhibition and ADP competitive inhibition; this indicated stronger interactions between nucleotide and F1 in the mutant enzyme. The latter also showed increased sensitivity to N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide irreversible inhibition.  相似文献   

8.
Almog R  Maley F  Maley GF  Maccoll R  Van Roey P 《Biochemistry》2004,43(43):13715-13723
2'-Deoxycytidylate deaminase (dCD) converts deoxycytidine 5'-monophosphate (dCMP) to deoxyuridine 5'-monophosphate and is a major supplier of the substrate for thymidylate synthase, an important enzyme in DNA synthesis and a major target for cancer chemotherapy. Wild-type dCD is allosterically regulated by the end products of its metabolic pathway, deoxycytidine 5'-triphosphate and deoxythymidine 5'-triphosphate, which act as an activator and an inhibitor, respectively. The first crystal structure of a dCD, in the form of the R115E mutant of the T4-bacteriophage enzyme complexed with the active site inhibitor pyrimidin-2-one deoxyribotide, has been determined at 2.2 A resolution. This mutant of dCD is active, even in the absence of the allosteric regulators. The molecular topology of dCD is related to that of cytidine deaminase (CDA) but with modifications for formation of the binding site for the phosphate group of dCMP. The enzyme has a zinc ion-based mechanism that is similar to that of CDA. A second zinc ion that is present in bacteriophage dCD, but absent in mammalian dCD and CDA, is important for the structural integrity of the enzyme and for the binding of the phosphate group of the substrate or inhibitor. Although the R115E mutant of dCD is a dimer in solution, it crystallizes as a hexamer, mimicking the natural state of the wild-type enzyme. Residues 112 and 115, which are known to be important for the binding of the allosteric regulators, are found in a pocket that is at the intersubunit interfaces in the hexamer but distant from the substrate-binding site. The substrate-binding site is composed of residues from a single protein molecule and is sequestered in a deep groove. This groove is located at the outer surface of the hexamer but ends at the subunit interface that also includes residue 115. It is proposed that the absence of subunit interactions at this interface in the dimeric R115E mutant renders the substrate-binding site accessible. In contrast, for the wild-type enzyme, binding of dCTP induces an allosteric effect that affects the subunit interactions and results in an increase in the accessibility of the binding site.  相似文献   

9.
Mejlhede N  Neuhard J 《Biochemistry》2000,39(27):7984-7989
Cytidine deaminase (CDA) from Bacillus subtilis is a zinc-containing enzyme responsible for the hydrolytic deamination of cytidine to uridine and 2'-deoxycytidine to 2'-deoxyuridine. Titration of the cysteinyl groups of the enzyme with p-hydroxymercuriphenyl sulfonate (PMPS) resulted in release of one zinc ion per subunit. Addition of EDTA to chelate the zinc and dithiothreitol (DTT) to remove PMPS, followed by removal of the low molecular weight compounds by gel filtration, resulted in an apoenzyme with no enzymatic activity. The apoenzyme was almost fully reactivated by addition of zinc chloride, indicating that the zinc ion played a central role in catalysis, in keeping with what has been observed with Escherichia coli CDA [Betts, L., Xiang, S., Short, S. A., Wolfenden, R., and Carter, C. W. J. (1994) J. Mol. Biol. 235, 635-656]. Addition of Cd(2+) or Co(2+) caused partial reactivation of the apoenzyme. Zinc reconstitution of the apoenzyme was strictly dependent on the presence of reducing agents, suggesting that the zinc-ligating cysteines, when unligated, participated in disulfide bond formation. An enzymatically active isoform of the tetrameric CDA protein, containing an extension of 13 amino acids at the C-terminus of each subunit, was used in conjunction with the wild-type CDA in subunit-subunit dissociation studies to show that the zinc ion does not assist in the thermodynamic refolding of the protein. After treatment with PMPS and EDTA, the enzyme existed as unfolded unassociated subunits. Immediately following DTT addition to remove PMPS, the subunits refolded into a tetrameric structure, independent of the presence of zinc.  相似文献   

10.
Tryptophan synthase alpha-subunit from Escherichia coli functionally exists as a heterotetramer of alpha(2)beta(2) with beta-subunit. While wild-type and mutant (F139W, T24M/F139W, and T24L/F139W) alpha-subunits were expressed as a monomer from recombinant plasmids in Escherichia coli, T24A/F139W, T24S/F139W, and T24K/F139W mutant alpha-subunits were abnormally expressed as soluble homodimers in addition to monomers. Monomers of dimer-forming mutant alpha-subunits retain high affinity to beta-subunit, high activity in stimulating catalytic activities of beta-subunit, and nearly intact content of secondary structure, indicating that the global structures of these monomers are identical to that of F139W alpha-subunit. However, fluorescence spectra of Trp139 and ANS binding indicate that significant perturbations occur in the mutant proteins. Interestingly, these defective properties of monomers caused by residue replacement were partially repaired by the dimer formation. As a result, it is suggested that dimers may be formed by domain or loop swapping, and that residue 24 may play important role in maintaining on-pathway of alpha-subunit folding.  相似文献   

11.
The allosteric properties of the wild-type Escherichia coli phosphofructokinase were compared to the E187A mutant by using frequency-domain techniques. Tryptophan-shifted mutants comprising of double (W311Y/Y55W and W/311F/F188W) and triple (W311Y/Y55W/E187A and W311F/F188W/E187A) amino acid residue changes, which allowed for better fluorescence probing at targeted sites, were also compared to the wild-type and E187A. The additive nature of multiple mutations allowed one to partition the net effect of modifying residue 187. In general, the mutant enzymes displayed greater heterogeneity in sub-state population than did the wild-type enzyme. The semi-cone angle model was used to quantify the extent of depolarization of the fluorophore. Use of the model presupposes that the extent of depolarization directly correlates with the degree of flexibility of the fluorophore. A relationship has been established between the values determined from the semi-cone angle calculations and the thermodynamic components responsible for the allosteric linkage between the regulatory and substrate binding. Coupling interactions giving rise to positive entropy components are manifested by increasing flexibility of the ternary complexes rather than the binary complexes.  相似文献   

12.
The crystal structure of dimeric D-amino acid transaminase shows that the two Trp-139 sites are located in a hydrophobic pocket at the interface between the subunits and that the two indole side chains face one another and are within 10 A of coenzyme. This enzyme prefers an aromatic character at position 139, as previously demonstrated by the finding that Phe-139 but no other substitution tested provides the maximum degree of thermostability and catalytic efficiency. Here we show that an equilibrium between active dimers and inactive monomers can be demonstrated with the W139F mutant enzyme, whereas with the wild-type enzyme the subunit interface is so tight that a study of this equilibrium is precluded. We show how the processes of dimerization of monomers and dissociation of dimers to monomers are controlled. Lower pH (5.0) favors monomer formation from dimers. Gel filtration and activity analysis show that at higher pH (7.0) the monomers combine to form active dimers with a K(d) of 0.17 microM. This assembly process is relatively slow and takes several hours for completion, thereby permitting accurate measurement of kinetics and equilibrium parameters. Absorption and circular dichroism spectra of dimers and monomers are significantly different, indicating that the environment around the cofactor is very likely altered between them. The circular dichroism peak of the W139F dimer at 418 nm is less negative than that of the wild-type enzyme in accordance with its lower visible absorbance; the circular dichroism peak of the W139F monomer at 418 nm is more negative than that of the wild-type enzyme. The dissociation of dimers to monomers has also been studied by taking advantage of these spectral differences, thus permitting the rates of the dissociation and the reassociation to be calculated and compared. 2-Mercaptoethanol assists in the conversion of monomers to dimers. The results here describe dissociation/reassociation in the dimeric enzyme under native conditions without denaturants.  相似文献   

13.
Adenosine deaminases acting on RNA (ADAR) convert adenosine residues into inosines in double-stranded RNA. Three vertebrate ADAR gene family members, ADAR1, ADAR2, and ADAR3, have been identified. The catalytic domain of all three ADAR gene family members is very similar to that of Escherichia coli cytidine deaminase and APOBEC-1. Homodimerization is essential for the enzyme activity of those cytidine deaminases. In this study, we investigated the formation of complexes between differentially epitope-tagged ADAR monomers by sequential affinity chromatography and size exclusion column chromatography. Both ADAR1 and ADAR2 form a stable enzymatically active homodimer complex, whereas ADAR3 remains as a monomeric, enzymatically inactive form. No heterodimer complex formation among different ADAR gene family members was detected. Analysis of HeLa and mouse brain nuclear extracts suggested that endogenous ADAR1 and ADAR2 both form a homodimer complex. Interestingly, endogenous ADAR3 also appears to form a homodimer complex, indicating the presence of a brain-specific mechanism for ADAR3 dimerization. Homodimer formation may be necessary for ADAR to act as active deaminases. Analysis of dimer complexes consisting of one wild-type and one mutant monomer suggests functional interactions between the two subunits during site-selective RNA editing.  相似文献   

14.
A single amino acid mutation (W321F) in Mycobacterium tuberculosis catalase-peroxidase (KatG) was constructed by site-directed mutagenesis. The purified mutant enzyme was characterized using optical and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy, and optical stopped-flow spectrophotometry. Reaction of KatG(W321F) with 3-chloroperoxybenzoic acid, peroxyacetic acid, or t-butylhydroperoxide showed formation of an unstable intermediate assigned as Compound I (oxyferryl iron:porphyrin pi-cation radical) by similarity to wild-type KatG, although second-order rate constants were significantly lower in the mutant for each peroxide tested. No evidence for Compound II was detected during the spontaneous or substrate-accelerated decay of Compound I. The binding of isoniazid, a first-line anti-tuberculosis pro-drug activated by catalase-peroxidase, was noncooperative and threefold weaker in KatG(W321F) compared with wild-type enzyme. An EPR signal assigned to a protein-based radical tentatively assigned as tyrosyl radical in wild-type KatG, was also observed in the mutant upon reaction of the resting enzyme with alkyl peroxide. These results show that mutation of residue W321 in KatG does not lead to a major alteration in the identity of intermediates formed in the catalytic cycle of the enzyme in the time regimes examined here, and show that this residue is not the site of stabilization of a radical as might be expected based on homology to yeast cytochrome c peroxidase. Furthermore, W321 is indicated to be important in KatG for substrate binding and subunit interactions within the dimer, providing insights into the origin of isoniazid resistance in clinically isolated KatG mutants.  相似文献   

15.
Based on recent X-ray structural information, six site-directed mutants of human cyclophilin A (hCyPA) involving residues in the putative active site--H54, R55, F60, Q111, F113, and H126--have been constructed, overexpressed, and purified from Escherichia coli to homogeneity. The proteins W121A (Liu, J., Chen, C.-M., & Walsh, C.T., 1991a, Biochemistry 30, 2306-2310), H54Q, R55A, F60A, Q111A, F113A, and H126Q were assayed for cis-trans peptidyl-prolyl isomerase (PPIase) activity, their ability to bind the immunosuppressive drug cyclosporin A (CsA), and protein phosphatase 2B (calcineurin) inhibition in the presence of CsA. Results indicate that H54Q, Q111A, F113A, and W121A retain 3-15% of the catalytic efficiency (kcat/Km) of wild-type recombinant hCyPA. The remaining three mutants (R55A, F60A, and H126Q) each retain less than 1% of the wild-type catalytic efficiency, indicating participation by these residues in PPIase catalysis. Each of the mutants bound to a CsA affinity matrix. The mutants R55A, F60A, F113A, and H126Q inhibited calcineurin in the presence of CsA, whereas W121A did not. Although CsA is a competitive inhibitor of PPIase activity, it can complex with enzymatically inactive cyclophilins and inhibit the phosphatase activity of calcineurin.  相似文献   

16.
E E Howell  C Booth  M Farnum  J Kraut  M S Warren 《Biochemistry》1990,29(37):8561-8569
The adaptability of Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) is being explored by identifying second-site mutations that can partially suppress the deleterious effect associated with removal of the active-site proton donor aspartic acid-27. The Asp27----serine mutant DHFR (D27S) was previously characterized and the catalytic activity found to be greatly decreased at pH 7.0 [Howell et al. (1986) Science 231, 1123-1128]. Using resistance to trimethoprim (a DHFR inhibitor) in a genetic selection procedure, we have isolated a double-mutant DHFR gene containing Asp27----Ser and Phe137----Ser mutations (D27S+F137S). The presence of the F137S mutation increases kcat approximately 3-fold and decreases Km(DHF) approximately 2-fold over D27S DHFR values. The overall effect on kcat/Km(DHF) is a 7-fold increase. The D27S+F137S double-mutant DHFR is still 500-fold less active than wild-type DHFR at pH 7. Surprisingly, Phe137 is approximately 15 A from residue 27 in the active site and is part of a beta-bulge. We propose the F137S mutation likely causes its catalytic effect by slightly altering the conformation of D27S DHFR. This supposition is supported by the observation that the F137S mutation does not have the same kinetic effect when introduced into the wild-type and D27S DHFRs, by the altered distribution of two conformers of free enzyme [see Dunn et al. (1990)] and by a preliminary difference Fourier map comparing the D27S and D27S+F137S DHFR crystal structures.  相似文献   

17.
The tryptophanless mutant of horseradish peroxidase, W117F, has been constructed and expressed in Escherichia coli. The mutation affects enzyme folding and stability. The optimum composition of the refolding medium requires the presence of ammonium sulfate. The yield of mutant is ca. 8000 U per liter of the optimized refolding medium with the specific activity of 1100-1500 U/mg (compared to 25, 000 U per liter and 2000 U/mg for the recombinant wild-type enzyme). The mutant is more stable in acid media, in the reaction course and toward irradiation. The effect of hydrogen peroxide pretreatment on radiation-induced inactivation of the wild-type and mutant enzyme indirectly indicates participation of Trp-117 in electron transfer pathways through the enzyme molecule. This is in agreement with the steady-state kinetic data interpreted in terms of Trp-117 participation in electron transfer within the Michaelis complex.  相似文献   

18.
In the presence of moderate (2-4 M) urea concentrations the tetrameric enzyme, glycine N-methyltransferase (GNMT), dissociates into compact monomers. Higher concentrations of urea (7-8 M) promote complete denaturation of the enzyme. We report here that the H176N mutation in this enzyme, found in humans with hypermethioninaemia, significantly decreases stability of the tetramer, although H176 is located far from the intersubunit contact areas. Dissociation of the tetramer to compact monomers and unfolding of compact monomers of the mutant protein were detected by circular dichroism, quenching of fluorescence emission, size-exclusion chromatography, and enzyme activity. The values of apparent free energy of dissociation of tetramer and of unfolding of compact monomers for the H176N mutant (27.7 and 4.2 kcal/mol, respectively) are lower than those of wild-type protein (37.5 and 6.2 kcal/mol). A 2.7 A resolution structure of the mutant protein revealed no significant difference in the conformation of the protein near the mutated residue.  相似文献   

19.
The folding and assembly of the dimeric glutathione transferases (GST) involves the association of two structurally distinct domains per subunit. A prominent and conserved domain-domain interaction in class alpha GSTs is formed by the packing of the indole side chain of Trp-20 from domain I into a hydrophobic pocket in domain II. Stability studies have shown that partial dissociation of the domains near Trp-20 occurs as an initial fast event during the unfolding kinetics of human GSTA1-1 (Wallace et al., Biochemistry 37 (1998) 5320-5328; Wallace et al., Biochem. J. 336 (1998) 413-418). The contribution of Trp-20 toward stabilising the domain-domain interface was investigated by mutating it to either a phenylalanine (W20F) or alanine (W20A) and determining the functionality (catalysis and non-substrate ligand binding) and stability (thermal- and urea-induced denaturation) of the mutant proteins. The replacement of Trp-20 did not impact on the protein's gross structural properties. Functionally, the W20F was non-disruptive, whereas the cavity-creating W20A mutation was. Both mutants destabilised the native state with W20A exerting the greatest effect. Reduced m-values as well as the protein concentration dependence of the urea unfolding transitions for W20F GSTA1-1 suggest the presence of a dimeric intermediate at equilibrium that is not observed with wild-type protein. Unfolding kinetics monitored by stopped-flow tyrosine fluorescence was mono-exponential and corresponded to the global unfolding of the protein during which the dimeric intermediate unfolds to two unfolded monomers. The similar unfolding kinetics data for wild-type and W20F A1-1 indicates that the global unfolding event was not affected by amino acid replacement. We propose that the packing interactions at the conserved Trp-20 plays an important role in stabilising the intrasubunit domain I-domain II interface of class alpha GSTs.  相似文献   

20.
The zinc-containing cytidine deaminase (CDA, EC 3.5.4.5) is a pyrimidine salvage enzyme catalyzing the hydrolytic deamination of cytidine and 2'-deoxycytidine forming uridine and 2'-deoxyuridine, respectively. Homodimeric CDA (D-CDA) and homotetrameric CDA (T-CDA) both contain one zinc ion per subunit coordinated to the catalytic water molecule. The zinc ligands in D-CDA are one histidine and two cysteine residues, whereas in T-CDA zinc is coordinated to three cysteines. Two of the zinc coordinating cysteines in T-CDA form hydrogen bonds to the conserved residue Arg56, and this residue together with the dipole moments from two alpha-helices partially neutralizes the additional negative charge in the active site, leading to a catalytic activity similar to D-CDA. Arg56 has been substituted by a glutamine (R56Q), the corresponding residue in D-CDA, an alanine (R56A), and an aspartate (R56D). Moreover, one of the zinc-liganding cysteines has been substituted by histidine to mimic D-CDA, alone (C53H) and in combination with R56Q (C53H/R56Q). R56A, R56Q, and C53H/R56Q contain the same amount of zinc as the wild-type enzyme. The zinc-binding capacity of R56D is reduced. Only R56A, R56Q, and C53H/R56Q yielded measurable CDA activity, R56A and R56Q with similar K(m) but decreased V(max) values compared to wild-type enzyme. Because of dissociation into its inactive subunits, it was impossible to determine the kinetic parameters for C53H/R56Q. R56A and C53H/R56Q display increased apparent pK(a) values compared to the wild-type enzyme and R56Q. On the basis of the structures of R56A, R56Q, and C53H/R56Q an explanation is provided of kinetic results and the apparent instability of C53H/R56Q.  相似文献   

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