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1.
The nicotinamide nucleotide transhydrogenases (TH) of mitochondria and bacteria are membrane-intercalated proton pumps that transduce substrate binding energy and protonmotive force via protein conformational changes. In mitochondria, TH utilizes protonmotive force to promote direct hydride ion transfer from NADH to NADP, which are bound at the distinct extramembranous domains I and III, respectively. Domain II is the membrane-intercalated domain and contains the enzyme's proton channel. This paper describes the crystal structure of the NADP(H) binding domain III of bovine TH at 1.2 A resolution. The structure reveals that NADP is bound in a manner inverted from that previously observed for nucleotide binding folds. The non-classical binding mode exposes the NADP(H) nicotinamide ring for direct contact with NAD(H) in domain I, in accord with biochemical data. The surface of domain III surrounding the exposed nicotinamide is comprised of conserved residues presumed to form the interface with domain I during hydride ion transfer. Further, an adjacent region contains a number of acidic residues, forming a surface with negative electrostatic potential which may interact with extramembranous loops of domain II. Together, the distinctive surface features allow mechanistic considerations regarding the NADP(H)-promoted conformation changes that are involved in the interactions of domain III with domains I and II for hydride ion transfer and proton translocation.  相似文献   

2.
Ferredoxin-NADP(H) reductases catalyse the reversible hydride/electron exchange between NADP(H) and ferredoxin/flavodoxin, comprising a structurally defined family of flavoenzymes with two distinct subclasses. Those present in Gram-negative bacteria (FPRs) display turnover numbers of 1-5 s(-1) while the homologues of cyanobacteria and plants (FNRs) developed a 100-fold activity increase. We investigated nucleotide interactions and hydride transfer in Rhodobacter capsulatus FPR comparing them to those reported for FNRs. NADP(H) binding proceeds as in FNRs with stacking of the nicotinamide on the flavin, which resulted in formation of charge-transfer complexes prior to hydride exchange. The affinity of FPR for both NADP(H) and 2'-P-AMP was 100-fold lower than that of FNRs. The crystal structure of FPR in complex with 2'-P-AMP and NADP(+) allowed modelling of the adenosine ring system bound to the protein, whereas the nicotinamide portion was either not visible or protruding toward solvent in different obtained crystals. Stabilising contacts with the active site residues are different in the two reductase classes. We conclude that evolution to higher activities in FNRs was partially favoured by modification of NADP(H) binding in the initial complexes through changes in the active site residues involved in stabilisation of the adenosine portion of the nucleotide and in the mobile C-terminus of FPR.  相似文献   

3.
The mitochondrial nicotinamide nucleotide transhydrogenase catalyzes hydride ion transfer between NAD(H) and NADP(H) in a reaction that is coupled to proton translocation across the inner mitochondrial membrane. The enzyme (1043 residues) is composed of an N-terminal hydrophilic segment (approximately 400 residues long) which binds NAD(H), a C-terminal hydrophilic segment (approximately 200 residues long) which binds NADP(H), and a central hydrophobic segment (approximately 400 residues long) which appears to form about 14 membrane-intercalating clusters of approximately 20 residues each. Substrate modulation of transhydrogenase conformation appears to be intimately associated with its mechanism of proton translocation. Using trypsin as a probe of enzyme conformation change, we have shown that NADPH (and to a much lesser extent NADP) binding alters transhydrogenase conformation, resulting in increased susceptibility of several bonds to tryptic hydrolysis. NADH and NAD had little or no effect, and the NADPH concentration for half-maximal enhancement of trypsin sensitivity of transhydrogenase activity (35 microM) was close to the Km of the enzyme for NADPH. The NADPH-promoted trypsin cleavage sites were located 200-400 residues distant from the NADP(H) binding domain near the C-terminus. For example, NADPH binding greatly increased the trypsin sensitivity of the K410-T411 bond, which is separated from the NADP(H) binding domain by the 400-residue-long membrane-intercalating segment. It also enhanced the tryptic cleavage of the R602-L603 bond, which is located within the central hydrophobic segment. These results, which suggest a protein conformation change as a result of NADPH binding, have been discussed in relation to the mechanism of proton translocation by the transhydrogenase.  相似文献   

4.
Rubach JK  Plapp BV 《Biochemistry》2003,42(10):2907-2915
Amino acid residues Thr-178, Val-203, and Val-292, which interact with the nicotinamide ring of the coenzyme bound to alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH), may facilitate hydride transfer and hydrogen tunneling by orientation and dynamic effects. The T178S, T178V, V203A, V292A, V292S, and V292T substitutions significantly alter the steady state and transient kinetics of the enzyme. The V292A, V292S, and V292T enzymes have decreased affinity for coenzyme (NAD+ by 30-50-fold and NADH by 35-75-fold) as compared to the wild-type enzyme. The substitutions in the nicotinamide binding site decrease the rate constant of hydride transfer for benzyl alcohol oxidation by 3-fold (for V292T ADH) to 16-fold (for V203A ADH). The modest effects suggest that catalysis does not depend critically on individual residues and that several residues in the nicotinamide binding site contribute to catalysis. The structures of the V292T ADH-NAD+-pyrazole and wild-type ADH-NAD+-4-iodopyrazole ternary complexes are very similar. Only subtle changes in the V292T enzyme cause the large changes in coenzyme binding and the small change in hydride transfer. In these complexes, one pyrazole nitrogen binds to the catalytic zinc, and the other nitrogen forms a partial covalent bond with C4 of the nicotinamide ring, which adopts a boat conformation that is postulated to be relevant for hydride transfer. The results provide an experimental basis for evaluating the contributions of dynamics to hydride transfer.  相似文献   

5.
The beta-subunit of the voltage-sensitive K(+) (K(v)) channels belongs to the aldo-keto reductase superfamily, and the crystal structure of K(v)beta2 shows NADP bound in its active site. Here we report that K(v)beta2 displays a high affinity for NADPH (K(d) = 0.1 micrometer) and NADP(+) (K(d) = 0.3 micrometer), as determined by fluorometric titrations of the recombinant protein. The K(v)beta2 also bound NAD(H) but with 10-fold lower affinity. The site-directed mutants R264E and N333W did not bind NADPH, whereas, the K(d)(NADPH) of Q214R was 10-fold greater than the wild-type protein. The K(d)(NADPH) was unaffected by the R189M, W243Y, W243A, or Y255F mutation. The tetrameric structure of the wild-type protein was retained by the R264E mutant, indicating that NADPH binding is not a prerequisite for multimer formation. A C248S mutation caused a 5-fold decrease in K(d)(NADPH), shifted the pK(a) of K(d)(NADPH) from 6.9 to 7.4, and decreased the ionic strength dependence of NADPH binding. These results indicate that Arg-264 and Asn-333 are critical for coenzyme binding, which is regulated in part by Cys-248. The binding of both NADP(H) and NAD(H) to the protein suggests that several types of K(v)beta2-nucleotide complexes may be formed in vivo.  相似文献   

6.
Woodyer R  van der Donk WA  Zhao H 《Biochemistry》2003,42(40):11604-11614
Homology modeling was used to identify two particular residues, Glu175 and Ala176, in Pseudomonas stutzeri phosphite dehydrogenase (PTDH) as the principal determinants of nicotinamide cofactor (NAD(+) and NADP(+)) specificity. Replacement of these two residues by site-directed mutagenesis with Ala175 and Arg176 both separately and in combination resulted in PTDH mutants with relaxed cofactor specificity. All three mutants exhibited significantly better catalytic efficiency for both cofactors, with the best kinetic parameters displayed by the double mutant, which had a 3.6-fold higher catalytic efficiency for NAD(+) and a 1000-fold higher efficiency for NADP(+). The cofactor specificity was changed from 100-fold in favor of NAD(+) for the wild-type enzyme to 3-fold in favor of NADP(+) for the double mutant. Isoelectric focusing of the proteins in a nondenaturing gel showed that the replacement with more basic residues indeed changed the effective pI of the protein. HPLC analysis of the enzymatic products of the double mutant verified that the reaction proceeded to completion using either substrate and produced only the corresponding reduced cofactor and phosphate. Thermal inactivation studies showed that the double mutant was protected from thermal inactivation by both cofactors, while the wild-type enzyme was protected by only NAD(+). The combined results provide clear evidence that Glu175 and Ala176 are both critical for nicotinamide cofactor specificity. The rationally designed double mutant might be useful for the development of an efficient in vitro NAD(P)H regeneration system for reductive biocatalysis.  相似文献   

7.
Using the purified NADP(H)-binding domain of proton-translocating Escherichia coli transhydrogenase (ecIII) overexpressed in (15)N- and (2)H-labeled medium, together with the purified NAD(H)-binding domain from E. coli (ecI), the interface between ecIII and ecI, the NADP(H)-binding site and the influence on the interface by NAD(P)(H) was investigated in solution by NMR chemical shift mapping. Mapping of the NADP(H)-binding site showed that the NADP(H) substrate is bound to ecIII in an extended conformation at the C-terminal end of the parallel beta-sheet. The distribution of chemical shift perturbations in the NADP(H)-binding site, and the nature of the interaction between ecI and ecIII, indicated that the nicotinamide moiety of NADP(H) is located near the loop comprising residues P346-G353, in agreement with the recently determined crystal structures of bovine [Prasad, G. S., et al. (1999) Nat. Struct. Biol. 6, 1126-1131] and human heart [White, A. W., et al. (2000) Structure 8, 1-12] transhydrogenases. Further chemical shift perturbation analysis also identified regions comprising residues G389-I406 and G430-V434 at the C-terminal end of ecIII's beta-sheet as part of the ecI-ecIII interface, which were regulated by the redox state of the NAD(P)(H) substrates. To investigate the role of these loop regions in the interaction with domain I, the single cysteine mutants T393C, R425C, G430C, and A432C were generated in ecIII and the transhydrogenase activities of the resulting mutant proteins characterized using the NAD(H)-binding domain I from Rhodospirillum rubrum (rrI). All mutants except R425C showed altered NADP(H) binding and domain interaction properties. In contrast, the R425C mutant showed almost exclusively changes in the NADP(H)-binding properties, without changing the affinity for rrI. Finally, by combining the above conclusions with information obtained by a further characterization of previously constructed mutants, the implications of the findings were considered in a mechanistic context.  相似文献   

8.
We have analysed 1H, 15N-HSQC spectra of the recombinant, NADP(H)-binding component of transhydrogenase in the context of the emerging three dimensional structure of the protein. Chemical shift perturbations of amino acid residues following replacement of NADP+ with NADPH were observed in both the adenosine and nicotinamide parts of the dinucleotide binding site and in a region which straddles the protein. These observations reflect the structural changes resulting from hydride transfer. The interactions between the recombinant, NADP(H)-binding component and its partner, NAD(H)-binding protein, are complicated. Helix B of the recombinant, NADP(H)-binding component may play an important role in the binding process.  相似文献   

9.
Chloroplast ferredoxin-NADP(+) reductase has a 32,000-fold preference for NADPH over NADH, consistent with its main physiological role of NADP(+) photoreduction for de novo carbohydrate biosynthesis. Although it is distant from the 2'-phosphoryl group of NADP(+), replacement of the C-terminal tyrosine (Tyr(308) in the pea enzyme) by Trp, Phe, Gly, and Ser produced enzyme forms in which the preference for NADPH over NADH was decreased about 2-, 10-, 300-, and 400-fold, respectively. Remarkably, in the case of the Y308S mutant, the k(cat) value for the NADH-dependent activity approached that of the NADPH-dependent activity of the wild-type enzyme. Furthermore, difference spectra of the NAD(+) complexes revealed that the nicotinamide ring of NAD(+) binds at nearly full occupancy in the active site of both the Y308G and Y308S mutants. These results correlate well with the k(cat) values obtained with these mutants in the NADH-ferricyanide reaction. The data presented support the hypothesis that specific recognition of the 2'-phosphate group of NADP(H) is required but not sufficient to ensure a high degree of discrimination against NAD(H) in ferredoxin-NADP(+) reductase. Thus, the C-terminal tyrosine enhances the specificity of the reductase for NADP(H) by destabilizing the interaction of a moiety common to both coenzymes, i.e. the nicotinamide.  相似文献   

10.
Directed mutagenesis has been used to study the nicotinamide subsite of the glycolytic NAD-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH). Residue Asn313 is involved together with the carboxyamide moiety of the nicotinamide ring in a complex network of hydrogen bonding interactions which fix the position of the pyridinium ring of NAD to which hydride transfer occurs at the C-4 position in the catalytic reaction. The asparagine side-chain has been replaced by that of the Thr and Ala residues and results in mutants with very similar properties. Both mutants show much weaker binding of NAD and lower catalytic efficiency. The mutant Asn313----Thr still exhibits strict B-stereospecificity in hydride transfer and retains the property of negative co-operativity in NAD binding. These experiments strongly suggest that the mutant enzyme undergoes the apo----holo sub-unit structural transition associated with coenzyme binding but that the nicotinamide ring is no longer as rigidly held in its pocket as in the wild type enzyme. The results shed light on the details of the molecular interactions which are responsible for negative co-operativity in this enzyme.  相似文献   

11.
Proton-translocating nicotinamide nucleotide transhydrogenases contain an NAD(H)-binding domain (dI), an NADP(H)-binding domain (dIII) and a membrane domain (dII) with the proton channel. Separately expressed and isolated dIII contains tightly bound NADP(H), predominantly in the oxidized form, possibly representing a so-called "occluded" intermediary state of the reaction cycle of the intact enzyme. Despite a K(d) in the micromolar to nanomolar range, this NADP(H) exchanges significantly with the bulk medium. Dissociated NADP(+) is thus accessible to added enzymes, such as NADP-isocitrate dehydrogenase, and can be reduced to NADPH. In the present investigation, dissociated NADP(H) was digested with alkaline phosphatase, removing the 2'-phosphate and generating NAD(H). Surprisingly, in the presence of dI, the resulting NADP(H)-free dIII catalyzed a rapid reduction of 3-acetylpyridine-NAD(+) by NADH, indicating that 3-acetylpyridine-NAD(+) and/or NADH interacts unspecifically with the NADP(H)-binding site. The corresponding reaction in the intact enzyme is not associated with proton pumping. It is concluded that there is a 2'-phosphate-binding region in dIII that controls tight binding of NADP(H) to dIII, which is not a required for fast hydride transfer. It is likely that this region is the Lys424-Arg425-Ser426 sequence and loops D and E. Further, in the intact enzyme, it is proposed that the same region/loops may be involved in the regulation of NADP(H) binding by an electrochemical proton gradent.  相似文献   

12.
Transhydrogenase couples proton translocation across a membrane to hydride transfer between NADH and NADP+. Previous x-ray structures of complexes of the nucleotide-binding components of transhydrogenase ("dI2dIII1" complexes) indicate that the dihydronicotinamide ring of NADH can move from a distal position relative to the nicotinamide ring of NADP+ to a proximal position. The movement might be responsible for gating hydride transfer during proton translocation. We have mutated three invariant amino acids, Arg-127, Asp-135, and Ser-138, in the NAD(H)-binding site of Rhodospirillum rubrum transhydrogenase. In each mutant, turnover by the intact enzyme is strongly inhibited. Stopped-flow experiments using dI2dIII1 complexes show that inhibition results from a block in the steps associated with hydride transfer. Mutation of Asp-135 and Ser-138 had no effect on the binding affinity of either NAD+ or NADH, but mutation of Arg-127 led to much weaker binding of NADH and slightly weaker binding of NAD+. X-ray structures of dI2dIII1 complexes carrying the mutations showed that their effects were restricted to the locality of the bound NAD(H). The results are consistent with the suggestion that in wild-type protein movement of the Arg-127 side chain, and its hydrogen bonding to Asp-135 and Ser-138, stabilizes the dihydronicotinamide of NADH in the proximal position for hydride transfer.  相似文献   

13.
Transhydrogenase, found in bacterial membranes and inner mitochondrial membranes of animal cells, couples the redox reaction between NAD(H) and NADP(H) to proton translocation. In this work, the invariant Gln132 in the NAD(H)-binding component (dI) of the Rhodospirillum rubrum transhydrogenase was substituted with Asn (to give dI.Q132N). Mixtures of the mutant protein and the NADP(H)-binding component (dIII) of the enzyme readily produced an asymmetric complex, (dI.Q132N)(2)dIII(1). The X-ray structure of the complex revealed specific changes in the interaction between bound nicotinamide nucleotides and the protein at the hydride transfer site. The first-order rate constant of the redox reaction between nucleotides bound to (dI.Q132N)(2)dIII(1) was <1% of that for the wild-type complex, and the deuterium isotope effect was significantly decreased. The nucleotide binding properties of the dI component in the complex were asymmetrically affected by the Gln-to-Asn mutation. In intact, membrane-bound transhydrogenase, the substitution completely abolished all catalytic activity. The results suggest that Gln132 in the wild-type enzyme behaves as a "tether" or a "tie" in the mutual positioning of the (dihydro)nicotinamide rings of NAD(H) and NADP(H) for hydride transfer during the conformational changes that are coupled to the translocation of protons across the membrane. This ensures that hydride transfer is properly gated and does not take place in the absence of proton translocation.  相似文献   

14.
Transhydrogenase (TH) is a dimeric integral membrane enzyme in mitochondria and prokaryotes that couples proton translocation across a membrane with hydride transfer between NAD(H) and NADP(H) in soluble domains. Crystal structures of the NAD(H) binding alpha1 subunit (domain I) of Rhodospirillum rubrum TH have been determined at 1.8 A resolution in the absence of dinucleotide and at 1.9 A resolution with NADH bound. Each structure contains two domain I dimers in the asymmetric unit (AB and CD); the dimers are intimately associated and related by noncrystallographic 2-fold axes. NADH binds to subunits A and D, consistent with the half-of-the-sites reactivity of the enzyme. The conformation of NADH in subunits A and D is very similar; the nicotinamide is in the anti conformation, the A-face is exposed to solvent, and both N7 and O7 participate in hydrogen bonds. Comparison of subunits A and D to six independent copies of the subunit without bound NADH reveals multiple conformations for residues and loops surrounding the NADH site, indicating flexibility for binding and release of the substrate (product). The NADH-bound structure is also compared to the structures of R. rubrum domain I with NAD bound (PDB code 1F8G) and with NAD bound in complex with domain III of TH (PDB code 1HZZ). The NADH- vs NAD-bound domain I structures reveal conformational differences in conserved residues in the NAD(H) binding site and in dinucleotide conformation that are correlated with the net charge, i.e., oxidation state, of the nicotinamides. The comparisons illustrate how nicotinamide oxidation state can affect the domain I conformation, which is relevant to the hydride transfer step of the overall reaction.  相似文献   

15.
NAD+-dependent 15-hydroxyprostaglandin dehydrogenase (15-PGDH), a member of the short chain dehydrogenase/reductase (SDR) family, is responsible for the biological inactivation of prostaglandins. Sequence alignment within SDR coupled with molecular modeling analysis has suggested that Gln-15, Asp-36, and Trp-37 of 15-PGDH may determine the coenzyme specificity of this enzyme. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to examine the important roles of these residues. Several single mutants (Q15K, Q15R, W37K, and W37R), double mutants (Q15K-W37K, Q15K-W37R, Q15R-W37K, and Q15R-W37R), and triple mutants (Q15K-D36A-W37R and Q15K-D36S-W37R) were prepared and expressed as glutathione S-transferase (GST) fusion proteins in Escherichia coli and purified by GSH-agarose affinity chromatography. Mutants Q15K, Q15R, W37K, W37R, Q15K-W37K, and Q15R-W37K were found to be inactive or almost inactive with NADP+ but still retained substantial activity with NAD+. Mutant Q15K-W37R and mutant Q15R-W37R showed comparable activity for NAD+ and NADP+ with an increase in activity nearly 3-fold over that of the wild type. However, approximately 30-fold higher in K(m) for NADP+ than that of the wild type enzyme for NAD+ was found for mutants Q15K-W37R and Q15R-W37R. Similarly, the K(m) values for PGE(2) of mutants were also shown to increase over that of the wild type. Further mutation of Asp-36 to either an alanine or a serine of the double mutant Q15K-W37R (i.e., triple mutants Q15K-D36A-W37R and Q15K-D36S-W37R) rendered the mutants exhibiting exclusive activity with NADP+ but not with NAD+. The triple mutants showed a decrease in K(m) for NADP+ but an increase in K(m) for PGE(2). Further mutation at Ala-14 to a serine of a triple mutant (Q15K-D36S-W37R) decreased the K(m) values for both NADP+ and PGE(2) to levels comparable to those of the wild type. These results indicate that the coenzyme specificity of 15-PGDH can be altered from NAD+ to NADP+ by changing a few critical residues near the N-terminal end.  相似文献   

16.
The structure of crystalline porcine mitochondrial NADP-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH) has been determined in complex with Mn2+-isocitrate. Based on structural alignment between this porcine enzyme and seven determined crystal structures of complexes of NADP with bacterial IDHs, Arg83, Thr311, and Asn328 were chosen as targets for site-directed mutagenesis of porcine IDH. The circular dichroism spectra of purified wild-type and mutant enzymes are similar. The mutant enzymes exhibit little change in Km for isocitrate or Mn2+, showing that these residues are not involved in substrate binding. In contrast, the Arg83 mutants, Asn328 mutants, and T311A exhibit 3-20-fold increase in the Km(NADP). We propose that Arg83 enhances NADP affinity by hydrogen bonding with the 3'-OH of the nicotinamide ribose, whereas Asn328 hydrogen bonds with N1 of adenine. The pH dependence of Vmax for Arg83 and Asn328 mutants is similar to that of wild-type enzyme, but for all the Thr311 mutants, pK(es) is increased from 5.2 in the wild type to approximately 6.0. We have previously attributed the pH dependence of Vmax to the deprotonation of the metal-bound hydroxyl of isocitrate in the enzyme-substrate complex, prior to the transfer of a hydride from isocitrate to NADP's nicotinamide moiety. Thr311 interacts with the nicotinamide ribose and is the closest of the target amino acids to the nicotinamide ring. Distortion of the nicotinamide by Thr311 mutation will likely be transmitted to Mn2+-isocitrate resulting in an altered pK(es). Because porcine and human mitochondrial NADP-IDH have 95% sequence identity, these results should be applicable to the human enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
Sheep liver 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase shows a high specificity for NADP, with a much lower affinity for NAD. Discrimination between NADP and NAD suggests that the interactions between the 2'-phosphate and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase contribute most of the binding energy for NADP. There are three active site residues, Asn-32, Arg-33, and Thr-34, that hydrogen-bond to the 2'-phosphate of NADP according to the crystal structure of the E.Nbr(8)ADP complex. In this study alanine mutagenesis was used to probe the contribution of each of the three residues to binding the cofactor and to catalysis. All mutant enzymes exhibit no significant change in V/E(t) or K(6PG) but an increase in K(NADP) that ranges from 6- to 80-fold. All mutant enzymes also exhibit at least a 7-fold increase in the primary kinetic (13)C-isotope effect-1, indicating that the decarboxylation step has become more rate-limiting. Data are consistent with significant roles for Asn-32, Arg-33, and Thr-34 in providing binding energy for NADP, and more importantly, the 2'-phosphate of NADP is required for proper orientation of the cofactor to allow rotation about the N-glycosidic bond as it is reduced in the hydride transfer step.  相似文献   

18.
Transhydrogenase couples the transfer of hydride-ion equivalents between NAD(H) and NADP(H) to proton translocation across a membrane. The enzyme has three components: dI binds NAD(H), dIII binds NADP(H) and dII spans the membrane. Coupling between transhydrogenation and proton translocation involves changes in the binding of NADP(H). Mixtures of isolated dI and dIII from Rhodospirillum rubrum transhydrogenase catalyse a rapid, single-turnover burst of hydride transfer between bound nucleotides; subsequent turnover is limited by NADP(H) release. Stopped-flow experiments showed that the rate of the hydride transfer step is decreased at low pH. Single Trp residues were introduced into dIII by site-directed mutagenesis. Two mutants with similar catalytic properties to those of the wild-type protein were selected for a study of nucleotide release. The way in which Trp fluorescence was affected by nucleotide occupancy of dIII was different in the two mutants, and hence two different procedures for determining the rate of nucleotide release were developed. The apparent first-order rate constants for NADP(+) release and NADPH release from isolated dIII increased dramatically at low pH. It is concluded that a single ionisable group in dIII controls both the rate of hydride transfer and the rate of nucleotide release. The properties of the protonated and unprotonated forms of dIII are consistent with those expected of intermediates in the NADP(H)-binding-change mechanism. The ionisable group might be a component of the proton-translocation pathway in the complete enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
Proton-translocating transhydrogenase (TH) couples direct and stereospecific hydride transfer between NAD(H) and NADP(H), bound to soluble domains dI and dIII, respectively, to proton translocation across a membrane bound domain, dII. The reaction occurs with proton-gradient coupled conformational changes, which affect the energetics of substrate binding and interdomain interactions. The crystal structure of TH dIII from Rhodospirillum rubrum has been determined in the presence of NADPH (2.4 A) and NADP (2.1 A) (space group P6(1)22). Each structure has two molecules in the asymmetric unit, differing in the conformation of the NADP(H) binding loop D. In one molecule, loop D has an open conformation, with the B face of (dihydro)nicotinamide exposed to solvent. In the other molecule, loop D adopts a hitherto unobserved closed conformation, resulting in close interactions between NADP(H) and side chains of the highly conserved residues, betaSer405, betaPro406, and betaIle407. The conformational change shields the B face of (dihydro)nicotinamide from solvent, which would block hydride transfer in the intact enzyme. It also alters the environments of invariant residues betaHis346 and betaAsp393. However, there is little difference in either the open or the closed conformation upon change in oxidation state of nicotinamide, i.e., for NADP vs. NADPH. Consequently, the occurrence of two loop D conformations for both substrate oxidation states gives rise to four states: NADP-open, NADP-closed, NADPH-open, and NADPH-closed. Because these states are distinguished by protein conformation and by net charge they may be important in the proton translocating mechanism of intact TH.  相似文献   

20.
BACKGROUND: Membrane-bound ion pumps are involved in metabolic regulation, osmoregulation, cell signalling, nerve transmission and energy transduction. How the ion electrochemical gradient interacts with the scalar chemistry and how the catalytic machinery is gated to ensure high coupling efficiency are fundamental to the mechanism of action of such pumps. Transhydrogenase is a conformationally coupled proton pump linking a proton gradient to the redox reaction between NAD(H) and NADP(H). The enzyme has three components; dI binds NAD(H), dII spans the membrane and dIII binds NADP(H). RESULTS: The first crystal structure of a transhydrogenase dI component (from Rhodospirillum rubrum) has been determined at 2.0 A resolution. The monomer comprises two domains. Both are involved in dimer formation, and one has a Rossmann fold that binds NAD+ in a novel mode. The two domains can adopt different conformations. In the most closed conformation, the nicotinamide ring is expelled from the cleft between the two domains and is exposed on the outside of the protein. In this conformation it is possible to dock the structure of dI/NAD+ with that of a dIII/NADP+ complex to provide the first insights into the molecular basis of the hydride-transfer step. CONCLUSIONS: Analysis of the model of the dI/dIII complex identifies residues potentially involved in dI/dIII interaction and shows how domain motion in dI results in a shift in position of the nicotinamide ring of NAD+. We propose that this movement is responsible for switching between the forbidden and allowed states for hydride transfer during proton pumping.  相似文献   

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