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1.
In order to probe the active site of the heme protein indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase, magnetic and natural circular dichroism (MCD and CD) and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) studies of the substrate (L-tryptophan)-free and substrate-bound enzyme with and without various exogenous ligands have been carried out. The MCD spectra of the ferric and ferrous derivatives are similar to those of the analogous myoglobin and horseradish peroxidase species. This provides strong support for histidine imidazole as the fifth ligand to the heme iron of indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase. The substrate-free native ferric enzyme exhibits predominantly high-spin EPR signals (g perpendicular = 6, g parallel = 2) along with weak low-spin signals (g perpendicular = 2.86, 2.28, 1.60); similar EPR, spin-state and MCD features are found for the benzimidazole adduct of ferric myoglobin. This suggests that the substrate-free ferric enzyme has a sterically hindered histidine imidazole nitrogen donor sixth ligand. Upon substrate binding, noticeable MCD and EPR spectral changes are detected that are indicative of an increased low spin content (from 30 to over 70% at ambient temperature). Concomitantly, new low spin EPR signals (g = 2.53, 2.18, 1.86) and MCD features characteristic of hydroxide complexes of histidine-ligated heme proteins appear. For almost all of the other ferric and ferrous derivatives, only small substrate effects are observed with MCD spectroscopy, while substantial substrate effects are seen with CD spectroscopy. Thus, changes in the heme coordination structure of the ferric enzyme and in the protein conformation at the active site of the ferric and ferrous enzyme are induced by substrate binding. The observed substrate effects on the ferric enzyme may correlate with the previously observed kinetic substrate inhibition of indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase activity, while such effects on the ferrous enzyme suggest the possibility that the substrate is activated during turnover.  相似文献   

2.
The catalytic activity of phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH, phenylalanine 4-monooxygenase EC 1.14.16.1) is regulated by three main mechanisms, i.e. substrate (l-phenylalanine, L-Phe) activation, pterin cofactor inhibition and phosphorylation of a single serine (Ser16) residue. To address the molecular basis for the inhibition by the natural cofactor (6R)-l-erythro-5,6,7,8-tetrahydrobiopterin, its effects on the recombinant tetrameric human enzyme (wt-hPAH) was studied using three different conformational probes, i.e. the limited proteolysis by trypsin, the reversible global conformational transition (hysteresis) triggered by L-Phe binding, as measured in real time by surface plasmon resonance analysis, and the rate of phosphorylation of Ser16 by cAMP-dependent protein kinase. Comparison of the inhibitory properties of the natural cofactor with the available three-dimensional crystal structure information on the ligand-free, the binary and the ternary complexes, have provided important clues concerning the molecular mechanism for the negative modulatory effects. In the binary complex, the binding of the cofactor at the active site results in the formation of stabilizing hydrogen bonds between the dihydroxypropyl side-chain and the carbonyl oxygen of Ser23 in the autoregulatory sequence. L-Phe binding triggers local as well as global conformational changes of the protomer resulting in a displacement of the cofactor bound at the active site by 2.6 A (mean distance) in the direction of the iron and Glu286 which causes a loss of the stabilizing hydrogen bonds present in the binary complex and thereby a complete reversal of the pterin cofactor as a negative effector. The negative modulatory properties of the inhibitor dopamine, bound by bidentate coordination to the active site iron, is explained by a similar molecular mechanism including its reversal by substrate binding. Although the pterin cofactor and the substrate bind at distinctly different sites, the local conformational changes imposed by their binding at the active site have a mutual effect on their respective binding affinities.  相似文献   

3.
Catecholamines (adrenaline, noradrenaline and dopamine) are potent inhibitors of phenylalanine 4-monooxygenase (phenylalanine hydroxylase, EC 1.14.16.1). The amines bind to the enzyme by a direct coordination to the high-spin (S = 5/2) Fe(III) at the active site (charge transfer interaction), as seen by resonance Raman and EPR spectroscopy. Experimental evidence is presented that a group with an apparent pKa value of about 5.1 (20 degrees C) is involved in the interaction between the catecholamine and the enzyme. The high-affinity binding of L-noradrenaline to phenylalanine hydroxylase, as studied by equilibrium microdialysis (anaerobically) and ultrafiltration (aerobically), shows positive cooperativity (h = 1.9); at pH 7.2 and 20 degrees C the rat enzyme binds about 0.5 mol L-noradrenaline/mol subunit with a half-maximal binding (S50) at 0.25 microM L-noradrenaline. No binding to the ferrous form of the enzyme was observed. The affinity decreases with decreasing pH, by phosphorylation and by preincubation of the enzyme with the substrate L-phenylalanine, while it increases after alkylation of the enzyme with the activator N-ethylmaleimide. Preincubation of the enzyme with L-phenylalanine also leads to a complete loss of the cooperativity of L-noradrenaline binding (h = 1.0). The many similarities in binding properties of the inhibitor L-noradrenaline and the activator/substrate L-phenylalanine makes it likely that the cooperative interactions of these effectors are due to their binding to the same site. The high-affinity of catecholamines to phenylalanine hydroxylase is a valuable probe to study the active site of this enzyme and is also relevant for the homologous enzyme tyrosine hydroxylase, which is purified as a stable catecholamine-Fe(III) complex.  相似文献   

4.
Lipoxygenases contain a unique nonheme iron cofactor with a redox role in the catalyzed reaction. The conditions for the extraction of the metal atom were investigated for one of the soybean lipoxygenase isoenzymes. Removal of the iron by o-phenanthroline was attained in the presence of substrate under anaerobic conditions, but the apoenzyme could not be isolated and reconstituted. The freshly regenerated sodium form of Chelex-100 also removes the iron atom from native soybean lipoxygenase 3, but only in sodium bicarbonate buffer at pH 8.0. The soluble but inactive apoenzyme was reconstituted with ferric ammonium sulfate in Tris--HCl buffer at pH 7.0. Stoichiometric iron in the reconstituted enzyme was established using inductively coupled plasma-atomic emission spectroscopy. The reconstituted enzyme contained 90 +/- 10% of the specific activity of the native enzyme. The native configuration of the reconstituted iron site was confirmed by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy.  相似文献   

5.
M Sono  S G Cady 《Biochemistry》1989,28(13):5392-5399
The effects of norharman, one of the few known inhibitors of the heme protein indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase, and of 4-phenylimidazole (4-PheImid), a heme ligand, on the catalytic (Vmax, Km) and spectroscopic properties (optical absorption, CD, and magnetic CD) of the rabbit small intestinal dioxygenase were investigated. Assays were performed with the substrate L- or D-tryptophan (Trp) and an ascorbic acid-methylene blue cofactor system at 25 degrees C. This study has revealed that both norharman and 4-PheImid exhibit noncompetitive inhibition with respect to L-Trp and D-Trp. The binding of norharman to the enzyme results in the formation of a low-spin complex in both the ferric and ferrous enzyme with comparable dissociation constants (Kd = approximately 10 microM at pH 7.0) that are about 10 times smaller than the observed Ki value. L-Trp exerts no effect for the ferric enzyme and slight negative cooperative effects for the ferrous enzyme on norharman binding. Close spectral similarities are observed between the adducts of the enzyme with norharman and 4-PheImid in the respective oxidation states. This, together with competition experiments using cyanide, demonstrates that norharman binds directly to the heme iron of the enzyme as a nitrogen donor ligand. Thus, norharman competes with O2 for the heme iron of the ferrous (active) enzyme, resulting in the observed inhibition. L-Trp and 4-PheImid appear to compete for the heme binding site in the ferric enzyme and display slight negative cooperativity on binding to the ferrous enzyme.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
The crystal structures of the catalytic domain (DeltaN1-102/DeltaC428-452) of human phenylalanine hydroxylase (hPheOH) in its catalytically competent Fe(II) form and binary complex with the reduced pterin cofactor 6(R)-L-erythro-5,6,7,8-tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) have been determined to 1.7 and 1.5 A, respectively. When compared with the structures reported for various catalytically inactive Fe(III) forms, several important differences have been observed, notably at the active site. Thus, the non-liganded hPheOH-Fe(II) structure revealed well defined electron density for only one of the three water molecules reported to be coordinated to the iron in the high-spin Fe(III) form, as well as poor electron density for parts of the coordinating side-chain of Glu330. The reduced cofactor (BH4), which adopts the expected half-semi chair conformation, is bound in the second coordination sphere of the catalytic iron with a C4a-iron distance of 5.9 A. BH4 binds at the same site as L-erythro-7,8-dihydrobiopterin (BH2) in the binary hPheOH-Fe(III)-BH2 complex forming an aromatic pi-stacking interaction with Phe254 and a network of hydrogen bonds. However, compared to that structure the pterin ring is displaced about 0.5 A and rotated about 10 degrees, and the torsion angle between the hydroxyl groups of the cofactor in the dihydroxypropyl side-chain has changed by approximately 120 degrees enabling O2' to make a strong hydrogen bond (2.4 A) with the side-chain oxygen of Ser251. Carbon atoms in the dihydroxypropyl side-chain make several hydrophobic contacts with the protein. The iron is six-coordinated in the binary complex, but the overall coordination geometry is slightly different from that of the Fe(III) form. Most important was the finding that the binding of BH4 causes the Glu330 ligand to change its coordination to the iron when comparing with non-liganded hPheOH-Fe(III) and the binary hPheOH-Fe(III)-BH2 complex.  相似文献   

7.
Phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) is a tetrahydrobiopterin (BH(4)) and non-heme iron-dependent enzyme that hydroxylates L-Phe to L-Tyr. The paramagnetic ferric iron at the active site of recombinant human PAH (hPAH) and its midpoint potential at pH 7.25 (E(m)(Fe(III)/Fe(II))) were studied by EPR spectroscopy. Similar EPR spectra were obtained for the tetrameric wild-type (wt-hPAH) and the dimeric truncated hPAH(Gly(103)-Gln(428)) corresponding to the "catalytic domain." A rhombic high spin Fe(III) signal with a g value of 4.3 dominates the EPR spectra at 3.6 K of both enzyme forms. An E(m) = +207 +/- 10 mV was measured for the iron in wt-hPAH, which seems to be adequate for a thermodynamically feasible electron transfer from BH(4) (E(m) (quinonoid-BH(2)/BH(4)) = +174 mV). The broad EPR features from g = 9.7-4.3 in the spectra of the ligand-free enzyme decreased in intensity upon the addition of L-Phe, whereas more axial type signals were observed upon binding of 7,8-dihydrobiopterin (BH(2)), the stable oxidized form of BH(4), and of dopamine. All three ligands induced a decrease in the E(m) value of the iron to +123 +/- 4 mV (L-Phe), +110 +/- 20 mV (BH(2)), and -8 +/- 9 mV (dopamine). On the basis of these data we have calculated that the binding affinities of L-Phe, BH(2), and dopamine decrease by 28-, 47-, and 5040-fold, respectively, for the reduced ferrous form of the enzyme, with respect to the ferric form. Interestingly, an E(m) value comparable with that of the ligand-free, resting form of wt-hPAH, i.e. +191 +/- 11 mV, was measured upon the simultaneous binding of both L-Phe and BH(2), representing an inactive model for the iron environment under turnover conditions. Our findings provide new information on the redox properties of the active site iron relevant for the understanding of the reductive activation of the enzyme and the catalytic mechanism.  相似文献   

8.
The mechanism of phenylalanine hydroxylase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The site of oxygen binding during phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH)-catalyzed turnover of phenylalanine to tyrosine has been tentatively identified as the 4a position of the tetrahydropterin cofactor, based on the spectral characteristics of an intermediate generated from both 6-methyltetrahydropterin and tetrahydrobiopterin during turnover. The rates of appearance of the intermediate and tyrosine are equal. Both rates exhibit the same dependence on enzyme concentration. PAH also requires 1.0 iron per 50,000-dalton subunit for maximal activity. A direct correlation between iron content and specific activity has been demonstrated. Apoenzyme can be reactivated by addition of Fe(II) aerobically or Fe(III) anaerobically and can be repurified to give apparently native protein. Evidence from electron paramagnetic resonance implicates the presence of high spin (5/2) Fe(III). As a working hypothesis we postulate that a key complex at the active site may be one containing iron in close proximity to a 4a-peroxytetrahydropterin.  相似文献   

9.
Phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) is a tetrahydrobiopterin and non-heme iron-dependent enzyme that hydroxylates L-Phe to l-Tyr using molecular oxygen as additional substrate. A dysfunction of this enzyme leads to phenylketonuria (PKU). The conformation and distances to the catalytic iron of both L-Phe and the cofactor analogue L-erythro-7,8-dihydrobiopterin (BH2) simultaneously bound to recombinant human PAH have been estimated by (1)H NMR. The resulting bound conformers of both ligands have been fitted into the crystal structure of the catalytic domain by molecular docking. In the docked structure L-Phe binds to the enzyme through interactions with Arg270, Ser349 and Trp326. The mode of coordination of Glu330 to the iron moiety seems to determine the amino acid substrate specificity in PAH and in the homologous enzyme tyrosine hydroxylase. The pterin ring of BH2 pi-stacks with Phe254, and the N3 and the amine group at C2 hydrogen bond with the carboxylic group of Glu286. The ring also establishes specific contacts with His264 and Leu249. The distance between the O4 atom of BH2 and the iron (2.6(+/-0.3) A) is compatible with coordination, a finding that is important for the understanding of the mechanism of the enzyme. The hydroxyl groups in the side-chain at C6 hydrogen bond with the carbonyl group of Ala322 and the hydroxyl group of Ser251, an interaction that seems to have implications for the regulation of the enzyme by substrate and cofactor. Some frequent mutations causing PKU are located at residues involved in substrate and cofactor binding. The sites for hydroxylation, C4 in L-Phe and C4a in the pterin are located at a distance of 4.2 and 4.3 A from the iron moiety, respectively, and at 6.3 A from each other. These distances are adequate for the intercalation of iron-coordinated molecular oxygen, in agreement with a mechanistic role of the iron moiety both in the binding and activation of dioxygen and in the hydroxylation reaction.  相似文献   

10.
The X-ray structure of a mutant version of Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase (H412N) in which His-412 was replaced by Asn has been determined at both low (-Zn) and high (+Zn) concentrations of zinc. In the wild-type structure, His-412 is a direct ligand to one of the two catalytically critical zinc atoms (Zn1) in the active site. Characterization of the H412N enzyme in solution revealed that the mutant enzyme required high concentrations of zinc for maximal activity and for high substrate and phosphate affinity (Ma L, Kantrowitz ER, 1994, J Biol Chem 269:31614-31619). The H412N enzyme was also inhibited by Tris, in contrast to the wild-type enzyme, which is activated more than twofold by 1 M Tris. To understand these kinetic properties at the molecular level, the structure of the H412N (+Zn) enzyme was refined to an R-factor of 0.174 at 2.2 A resolution, and the structure of the H412N(-Zn) enzyme was refined to an R-factor of 0.166 at a resolution of 2.6 A. Both indicated that the Asn residue substituted for His-412 did not coordinate well to Zn1. In the H412N(-Zn) structure, the Zn1 site had very low occupancy and the phosphate was shifted by 1.8 A from its position in the wild-type structure. The Mg binding site was also affected by the substitution of Asn for His-412. Both structures of the H412N enzyme also revealed a surface-accessible cavity near the Zn1 site that may serve as a binding site for Tris.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
The Rhodococcus rhodochrous strain 11Y XplA enzyme is an unusual cytochrome P450-flavodoxin fusion enzyme that catalyzes reductive denitration of the explosive hexahydro-1,3,5-trinitro-1,3,5-triazene (RDX). We show by light scattering that XplA is a monomeric enzyme. XplA has high affinity for imidazole (K(d) = 1.6 μM), explaining previous reports of a red-shifted XplA Soret band in pure enzyme. The true Soret maximum of XplA is at 417 nm. Similarly, unusually weak XplA flavodoxin FMN binding (K(d) = 1.09 μM) necessitates its purification in the presence of the cofactor to produce hallmark flavin contributions absent in previously reported spectra. Structural and ligand-binding data reveal a constricted active site able to accommodate RDX and small inhibitory ligands (e.g. 4-phenylimidazole and morpholine) while discriminating against larger azole drugs. The crystal structure also identifies a high affinity imidazole binding site, consistent with its low K(d), and shows active site penetration by PEG, perhaps indicative of an evolutionary lipid-metabolizing function for XplA. EPR studies indicate heterogeneity in binding mode for RDX and other ligands. The substrate analog trinitrobenzene does not induce a substrate-like type I optical shift but creates a unique low spin EPR spectrum due to influence on structure around the distal water heme ligand. The substrate-free heme iron potential (-268 mV versus NHE) is positive for a low spin P450, and the elevated potential of the FMN semiquinone/hydroquinone couple (-172 mV) is also an adaptation that may reflect (along with the absence of a key Thr/Ser residue conserved in oxygen-activating P450s) the evolution of XplA as a specialized RDX reductase catalyst.  相似文献   

12.
Eudragit S-100, a copolymer of methacrylic acid and methyl methacrylate is soluble at pH above 5 and insoluble at pH below 4.5. pH-dependent solubility of the polymer is used for the development of reversibly soluble biocatalyst, which combines the advantages of both soluble and immobilized biocatalysts. Activity of trypsin, covalently coupled to Eudragit S-100, was improved by protecting the active site of the enzyme with benzamidine and removing the noncovalently bound proteins with Triton X-100 in 0.15 M Tris buffer (pH 7.6). Accurate choice of coupling conditions combined with proper washing protocol produced highly active enzyme-polymer conjugate with no noncovalently bound protein. Two conjugates with 100-fold difference in the content of trypsin coupled to Eudragit S-100 were studied when the preparations were in soluble and precipitated forms. The K(m)values of the soluble enzyme to the lower molecular weight substrate was less than that of the free enzyme, whereas that to the higher molecular weight substrate was closer to that of the free enzyme. Activities of the soluble and precipitated immobilized trypsin with higher molecular weight substrate were completely inhibited by soy bean trypsin inhibitor, whereas complete inhibition with soy bean trypsin inhibitor was never achieved with lower molecular weight substrate, indicating reduced access of high-molecular weight substrate/inhibitor to some of the catalytically active enzyme molecules in trypsin-Eudragit conjugate.  相似文献   

13.
Secondary amine mono-oxygenase from Pseudomonas aminovorans catalyzes the NAD(P)H- and dioxygen-dependent N-dealkylation of secondary amines to yield a primary amine and an aldehyde. Heme iron, flavin, and non-heme iron prosthetic groups are known to be present in the oligomeric enzyme. The N-dealkylation reaction is also catalyzed by the only other heme-containing mono-oxygenase, cytochrome P-450. In order to identify the heme iron axial ligands of secondary amine mono-oxygenase so as to better define the structural requirements for oxygen activation by heme enzymes, we have investigated the spectroscopic properties of the enzyme. The application of three different spectroscopic techniques, UV-visible absorption, magnetic circular dichroism and electron paramagnetic resonance, to study eight separate enzyme derivatives has provided extensive and convincing evidence for the presence of a proximal histidine ligand. This conclusion is based primarily on comparisons of the spectral properties of the enzyme with those of parallel derivatives of myoglobin (histidine proximal ligand) and P-450 (cysteinate proximal ligand). Spectral studies of ferric secondary amine mono-oxygenase as a function of pH have led to the proposal that the distal ligand is water. Deprotonation of the distal water ligand occurs upon either raising the pH to 9.0 or substrate (dimethylamine) binding. In contrast, the deoxyferrous enzyme appears to have a weakly bound nitrogen donor distal ligand. Initial spectroscopic studies of the iron-sulfur units in the enzyme are interpreted in terms of a pair of Fe2S2 clusters. Secondary amine mono-oxygenase is unique in its ability to function as cytochrome P-450 in activating molecular oxygen but to do so with a myoglobin-like active site. As such, it provides an important system with which to probe structure-function relations in heme-containing oxygenases.  相似文献   

14.
Apoenzyme of the major NAD(P)H-utilizing flavin reductase FRG/FRase I from Vibrio fischeri was prepared. The apoenzyme bound one FMN cofactor per enzyme monomer to yield fully active holoenzyme. The FMN cofactor binding resulted in substantial quenching of both the flavin and the protein fluorescence intensities without any significant shifts in the emission peaks. In addition to FMN binding (K(d) 0.5 microM at 23 degrees C), the apoenzyme also bound 2-thioFMN, FAD and riboflavin as a cofactor with K(d) values of 1, 12, and 37 microM, respectively, at 23 degrees C. The 2-thioFMN containing holoenzyme was about 40% active in specific activity as compared to the FMN-containing holoenzyme. The FAD- and riboflavin-reconstituted holoenzymes were also catalytically active but their specific activities were not determined. FRG/FRase I followed a ping-pong kinetic mechanism. It is proposed that the enzyme-bound FMN cofactor shuttles between the oxidized and the reduced form during catalysis. For both the FMN- and 2-thioFMN-containing holoenzymes, 2-thioFMN was about 30% active as compared to FMN as a substrate. FAD and riboflavin were also active substrates. FRG/FRase I was shown by ultracentrifugation at 4 degrees C to undergo a monomer-dimer equilibrium, with K(d) values of 18.0 and 13.4 microM for the apo- and holoenzymes, respectively. All the spectral, ligand equilibrium binding, and kinetic properties described above are most likely associated with the monomeric species of FRG/FRase I. Many aspects of these properties are compared with a structurally and functionally related Vibrio harveyi NADPH-specific flavin reductase FRP.  相似文献   

15.
The substrates of dihydropteridine reductase (EC 1.6.99.7), quinonoid 7,8-dihydro(6 H)pterins, are unstable and decompose in various ways. In attempting to prepare a more stable substrate, 6,6,8-trimethyl-5,6,7,8-tetrahydro(3 H)pterin was synthesised and the quinonoid 6,6,8-trimethyl-7,8-dihydro(6 H)pterin derived from it is extremely stable with a half-life in 0.1 M Tris/HCl (pH 7.6, 25 degrees C) of 33 h. Quinonoid 6,6,8-trimethyl-7,8-dihydro(6 H)pterin is not a substrate for dihydropteridine reductase but it is reduced non-enzymically by NADH at a significant rate and it is a weak inhibitor of the enzyme: I50 200 microM, pH 7.6, 25 degrees C when using quinonoid 6-methyl-7,8-dihydro(6 H)pterin as substrate. 6,6,8-Trimethyl-5,6,7,8-tetrahydropterin is a cofactor for phenylalanine hydroxylase (EC 1.14.16.1) with an apparent Km of 0.33 mM, but no cofactor activity could be detected with tyrosine hydroxylase (EC 1.14.16.2). Its phenylalanine hydroxylase activity, together with the enhanced stability of quinonoid 6,6,8-trimethyl-7,8-dihydro(6 H)pterin, suggest that it may have potential for the treatment of variant forms of phenylketonuria.  相似文献   

16.
Human α‐amino‐β‐carboxymuconate‐ε‐semialdehyde decarboxylase determines the fate of tryptophan metabolites in the kynurenine pathway by controlling the quinolinate levels for de novo nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide biosynthesis. The unstable nature of its substrate has made gaining insight into its reaction mechanism difficult. Our electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopic study on the Cu‐substituted human enzyme suggests that the native substrate does not directly ligate to the metal ion. Substrate binding did not result in a change of either the hyperfine structure or the super‐hyperfine structure of the EPR spectrum. We also determined the crystal structure of the human enzyme in its native catalytically active state (at 1.99 Å resolution), a substrate analogue‐bound form (2.50 Å resolution), and a selected active site mutant form with one of the putative substrate binding residues altered (2.32 Å resolution). These structures illustrate that each asymmetric unit contains three pairs of dimers. Consistent with the EPR findings, the ligand‐bound complex structure shows that the substrate analogue does not directly coordinate to the metal ion but is bound to the active site by two arginine residues through noncovalent interactions. Proteins 2015; 83:178–187. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

17.
Previous studies of ferrous wild-type phenylalanine hydroxylase, [Fe(2+)]PAH(T)[], have shown the active site to be a six-coordinate distorted octahedral site. After the substrate and cofactor bind to the enzyme ([Fe(2+)]PAH(R)[L-Phe,5-deaza-6-MPH(4)]), the active site converts to a five-coordinate square pyramidal structure in which the identity of the missing ligand had not been previously determined. X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) at the Fe K-edge further supports this coordination number change with the binding of both cosubstrates to the enzyme, and determines this to be due to the loss of a water ligand.  相似文献   

18.
Phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) is a pterin-dependent non-heme metalloenzyme that catalyzes the oxidation of phenylalanine to tyrosine, which is the rate-limiting step in the catabolism of Phe. Chromobacterium violaceum phenylalanine hydroxylase (cPAH) has been prepared and its steady-state mechanism has been investigated. The enzyme requires iron for maximal activity. Initial rate measurements, done in the presence of the 6,7-dimethyl-5,6,7,8-tetrahydropterin (DMPH(4)) cofactor, yielded an average apparent k(cat) of 36+/-1 s(-1). The apparent K(M) values measured for the substrates DMPH(4), L-Phe, and O(2) are 44+/-7, 59+/-10, and 76+/-7 microM, respectively. Steady-state kinetic analyses using double-reciprocal plots revealed line patterns consistent with a sequential ter-bi mechanism in which L-Phe is the middle substrate in the order of binding. The occurrence of a line intersection on the double-reciprocal plot abscissa when either pterin or O(2) is saturated suggests that, prior to O(2) binding, DMPH(4) and L-Phe are in associative pre-equilibrium with cPAH. Together with an inhibition study using the oxidized cofactor, 7,8-dimethyl-6,7-dihydropterin, it is conclusive that the mechanism is fully ordered, with DMPH(4) binding the active site first, L-Phe second, and O(2) last. This represents the first conclusive steady-state mechanism for a PAH enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
Tryptophan hydroxylase (TPH) carries out the 5-hydroxylation of L-Trp, which is the rate-limiting step in the synthesis of serotonin. We have prepared and characterized a stable N-terminally truncated form of human TPH that includes the catalytic domain (Delta90TPH). We have also determined the conformation and distances to the catalytic non-heme iron of both L-Trp and the tetrahydrobiopterin cofactor analogue L-erythro-7,8-dihydrobiopterin (BH2) bound to Delta90TPH by using 1H NMR spectroscopy. The bound conformers of the substrate and the pterin were then docked into the modeled three-dimensional structure of TPH. The resulting ternary TPH-BH2-L-Trp structure is very similar to that previously determined by the same methods for the complex of phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) with BH2 and L-Phe [Teigen, K., et al. (1999) J. Mol. Biol. 294, 807-823]. In the model, L-Trp binds to the enzyme through interactions with Arg257, Ser336, His272, Phe318, and Phe313, and the ring of BH2 interacts mainly with Phe241 and Glu273. The distances between the hydroxylation sites at C5 in L-Trp and C4a in the pterin, i.e., 6.1 +/- 0.4 A, and from each of these sites to the iron, i.e., 4.1 +/- 0.3 and 4.4 +/- 0.3 A, respectively, are also in agreement with the formation of a transient iron-4a-peroxytetrahydropterin in the reaction, as proposed for the other hydroxylases. The different conformation of the dihydroxypropyl chain of BH2 in PAH and TPH seems to be related to the presence of nonconserved residues, i.e., Tyr235 and Pro238 in TPH, at the cofactor binding site. Moreover, Phe313, which seems to interact with the substrate through ring stacking, corresponds to a Trp residue in both tyrosine hydroxylase and PAH (Trp326) and appears to be an important residue for influencing the substrate specificity in this family of enzymes. We show that the W326F mutation in PAH increases the relative preference for L-Trp as the substrate, while the F313W mutation in TPH increases the preference for L-Phe, possibly by a conserved active site volume effect.  相似文献   

20.
Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) has several flexible loops surrounding the active site that play a functional role in substrate and cofactor binding and in catalysis. We have used heteronuclear NMR methods to probe the loop conformations in solution in complexes of DHFR formed during the catalytic cycle. To facilitate the NMR analysis, the enzyme was labeled selectively with [(15)N]alanine. The 13 alanine resonances provide a fingerprint of the protein structure and report on the active site loop conformations and binding of substrate, product, and cofactor. Spectra were recorded for binary and ternary complexes of wild-type DHFR bound to the substrate dihydrofolate (DHF), the product tetrahydrofolate (THF), the pseudosubstrate folate, reduced and oxidized NADPH cofactor, and the inactive cofactor analogue 5,6-dihydroNADPH. The data show that DHFR exists in solution in two dominant conformational states, with the active site loops adopting conformations that closely approximate the occluded or closed conformations identified in earlier X-ray crystallographic analyses. A minor population of a third conformer of unknown structure was observed for the apoenzyme and for the disordered binary complex with 5,6-dihydroNADPH. The reactive Michaelis complex, with both DHF and NADPH bound to the enzyme, could not be studied directly but was modeled by the ternary folate:NADP(+) and dihydrofolate:NADP(+) complexes. From the NMR data, we are able to characterize the active site loop conformation and the occupancy of the substrate and cofactor binding sites in all intermediates formed in the extended catalytic cycle. In the dominant kinetic pathway under steady-state conditions, only the holoenzyme (the binary NADPH complex) and the Michaelis complex adopt the closed loop conformation, and all product complexes are occluded. The catalytic cycle thus involves obligatory conformational transitions between the closed and occluded states. Parallel studies on the catalytically impaired G121V mutant DHFR show that formation of the closed state, in which the nicotinamide ring of the cofactor is inserted into the active site, is energetically disfavored. The G121V mutation, at a position distant from the active site, interferes with coupled loop movements and appears to impair catalysis by destabilizing the closed Michaelis complex and introducing an extra step into the kinetic pathway.  相似文献   

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