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1.
D-3-phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.95) from Escherichia coli contains two Gly-Gly sequences that have been shown previously to have the characteristics of hinge regions. One of these, Gly(336)-Gly(337), is found in the loop between the substrate binding domain and the regulatory domain. Changing these glycine residues to valine affected the sensitivity of the enzyme to inhibition by L-serine but not the extent of inhibition. The decrease in sensitivity was caused primarily by a decrease in the affinity of the enzyme for L-serine. These mutations also affected the domain rotation of the subunits in response to L-serine binding. A major conclusion of this study was that it defines a minimal limit on the necessary conformational changes leading to inhibition of enzyme activity. That is, some of the conformational differences seen in the native enzyme upon L-serine binding are not critical for inhibition, whereas others are maintained and may play important roles in inhibition and cooperativity. The structure of G336V demonstrates that the minimal effect of L-serine binding leading to inhibition of enzyme activity requires a domain rotation of approximately only 6 degrees in just two of the four subunits of the enzyme that are oriented diagonally across from each other in the tetramer. Moreover the structures show that both pairs of Asn190 to Asn190 hydrogen bonds across the subunit interfaces are necessary for activity. These observations are consistent with the half-the-sites activity, flip-flop mechanism proposed for this and other similar enzymes and suggest that the Asn190 hydrogen bonds may function in the conformational transition between alternate half-the-site active forms of the enzyme.  相似文献   

2.
The crystal structure of d-3-phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase reveals a limited number of contacts between the regulatory and substrate binding domains of each subunit in the tetrameric enzyme. These occur between the side chains of Arg-339, Arg-405, and Arg-407 in the regulatory domain and main chain carbonyls in the substrate binding domain. In addition, Arg-339 participates in a hydrogen bonding network within the regulatory domain involving Arg-338 and Tyr-410, the C-terminal residue of the enzyme subunit. Mutagenic analysis of these residues produce profound effects on the enzyme's sensitivity to serine, the cooperativity of serine inhibition, and in some cases, the apparent overall conformation of the enzyme. Mutations of Arg-405 and Arg-407, which span the interface where the two domains come together, reduce the cooperativity of inhibition and increase the sensitivity of the enzyme to serine concentration. Serine binding studies with Arg-407 converted to Ala demonstrate that cooperativity of serine binding is also significantly reduced in a manner similar to the reduction in the cooperativity of inhibition. Mutations of Tyr-410 and Arg-338 decrease the sensitivity to serine without an appreciable effect on the cooperativity of inhibition. In the case of Tyr-410, a deletion mutant demonstrates that this effect is due to the loss of the C-terminal carboxyl group rather than the tyrosine side chain. All mutations of Arg-339, with the exception of its conversion to Lys, had profound effects on the stability of the enzyme. In general, those mutants that decrease sensitivity to serine are those that participate mainly in intradomain interactions and may also directly affect the serine binding sites themselves. Those mutants that decrease cooperativity are those that participate in interdomain interaction within the subunit. The observation that the mutants that decrease cooperativity also increase sensitivity to serine suggests a potential separation of pathways between how the simple act of serine binding results in noncooperative active site inhibition in the first place and how serine binding also leads to cooperativity between sites in the native enzyme.  相似文献   

3.
The binding of L-serine to phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase from Escherichia coli displays elements of both positive and negative cooperativity. At pH 7.5, approximately 2 mol of serine are bound per mole of tetrameric enzyme. A substantial degree of positive cooperativity is seen for the binding of the second ligand, but the binding of the third and fourth ligand display substantial negative cooperativity. The data indicate a state of approximately 50% inhibition when only one serine is bound and approximately 80-90% inhibition when two serines are bound. This is consistent with the tethered domain hypothesis that has been presented previously. Comparison of the data derived directly from binding stoichiometry to the binding constants determined from the best fit to the Adair equation, produce a close agreement, and reinforce the general validity of the derived binding constants. The data also support the conclusion that the positive cooperativity between the binding to the first and second site involves binding sites at opposite interfaces over 110 A apart. Thus, an order of binding can be envisioned where the binding of the first ligand initiates a conformational transition that allows the second ligand to bind with much higher affinity at the opposite interface. This is followed by the third ligand, which binds with lesser affinity to one of the two already occupied interfaces, and in so doing, completes a global conformational transition that produces maximum inhibition of activity and an even lower affinity for the fourth ligand, excluding it completely. Thus, maximal inhibition is accomplished with less than maximal occupancy of effector sites through a mechanism that displays strong elements of both positive and negative cooperativity.  相似文献   

4.
Dey S  Burton RL  Grant GA  Sacchettini JC 《Biochemistry》2008,47(32):8271-8282
The crystal structure of Mycobacterium tuberculosis d-3-phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase has been solved with bound effector, l-serine, and substrate, hydroxypyruvic acid phosphate, at resolutions of 2.7 and 2.4 A, respectively. The subunits display the same extreme asymmetry as seen in the apo-structure and provide insight into the mode of serine binding and closure of the active site. Mutagenesis studies confirm the identity of the main residues involved in serine binding and suggest that the poly glycine stretch in the loop that contains the locus for the 160 degrees rotation that leads to subunit asymmetry may have a larger role in folding than in catalysis. The lack of electron density for the cofactor, NADH, in any of the crystals examined led us to study binding by stopped flow kinetic analysis. The kinetic data suggest that productive NADH binding, that would support catalytic turnover, is dependent on the presence of substrate. This observation, along with the binding of substrate in the active site, but in an unproductive conformation, suggests a possible mechanism where initial binding of substrate leads to enhanced interaction with cofactor accompanied by a rearrangement of catalytically critical residue side chains. Furthermore, comparison to the structure of a truncated form of human d-3-phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase with cofactor and a substrate analog, provides insight into the conformational changes that occur during catalysis.  相似文献   

5.
d-3-Phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase from Escherichia coli is a tetramer of identical subunits that is inhibited when l-serine binds at allosteric sites between subunits. Co-expression of two genes, the native gene containing a charge difference mutation and a gene containing a mutation that eliminates serine binding, produces hybrid tetramers that can be separated by ion exchange chromatography. Activity in the hybrid tetramer with only a single intact serine binding site is inhibited by approximately 58% with a Hill coefficient of 1. Thus, interaction at a single regulatory domain interface does not, in itself, lead to the positive cooperativity of inhibition manifest in the native enzyme. Tetramers with only two intact serine binding sites purify as a mixture that displays a maximum inhibition level that is less than that of native enzyme, suggesting the presence of a population of tetramers that are unable to be fully inhibited. Differential analysis of this mixture supports the conclusion that it contains two forms of the tetramer. One form contains two intact serine binding sites at the same interface and is not fully inhibitable. The second form is a fully inhibitable population that has one serine binding site at each interface. Overall, the hybrid tetramers show that the positive cooperativity observed for serine binding is mediated across the nucleotide binding domain interface, and the negative cooperativity is mediated across the regulatory domain interface. That is, they reveal a pattern in which the binding of serine at one interface leads to negative cooperativity of binding of a subsequent serine at the same interface and positive cooperativity of binding of a subsequent serine to the opposite interface. This trend is propagated to subsequent binding sites in the tetramer such that the negative cooperativity that is originally manifest at one interface is decreased by subsequent binding of ligand at the opposite interface.  相似文献   

6.
Pre-steady state, stopped flow analysis of Escherichia coli D-3-phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase was performed by following the fluorescence of protein tryptophan and the fluorescence resonance energy transfer from protein tryptophan to bound NADH. The results indicate that binding of substrates is ordered, with coenzyme, NADH, binding first. Furthermore, the analysis indicated that there are two sets of sites on the tetrameric enzyme that can be differentiated by their kinetic behavior. NADH binding was consistent with an initial binding event followed by a slow conformational change for each site. The slow conformational change is responsible for the apparent tight binding of NADH to the apoenzyme but is too slow to participate in the catalytic cycle when the enzyme is rapidly turning over. Subsequent binding of the substrate, alpha-ketoglutarate, was characterized by a rapid equilibrium binding event followed by a conformational change for each site. Catalysis in the direction of NAD(+) reduction showed a distinct burst of activity followed by a slow rate of turnover, indicating that the rate-limiting step is after hydride transfer. Catalysis in the direction of NADH oxidation did not display burst kinetics, indicating that the rate-limiting step is at or before the hydride transfer step. The burst data indicated that the rate of NAD(+) reduction (3.8 s(-1)) is similar to the k(cat) of the enzyme (2-3 s(-1)) in that direction. However, analysis of the reaction with deuterated NADH failed to show an effect on the velocity of the reaction with a V(H)/V(D)=1.07+/-0.06. None of the other rates determined by stopped flow analysis could account for the k(cat) of the enzyme in either direction (forward k(cat)=0.01 s(-1), reverse k(cat)=2-3 s(-1)), suggesting that the rate-limiting step in both directions is a conformational change in the enzyme that is not detected optically.  相似文献   

7.
磷酸甘油酸脱氢酶(D-3-phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase,PGDH,EC 1.1.1.95)为L-丝氨酸合成途径的关键酶,其编码基因为ser A,其活性受到合成产物L-丝氨酸的反馈抑制调控。为解除丝氨酸的反馈抑制,采用定点突变技术把编码PGDH酶344位组氨酸或346位天冬氨酸或364位天冬氨酸的密码子定点突变为丙氨酸密码子。改造后的ser AFbr被连到表达载体pT7-7上,并转入大肠杆菌Escherichia coli BL21(DE3)中进行表达,破壁回收粗酶液,通过DEAE阴离子柱纯化PGDH突变体,并对其酶活性和IC_(50)值进行了测定。结果,野生型PGDH酶IC_(50)值为7μmol/L,而PGDH双突变体N346A/H344A催化活性与野生型相近,在丝氨酸浓度为160 mmol/L时,其酶活仍保持未添加丝氨酸时酶活的96%,基本解除反馈抑制。  相似文献   

8.
d-3-Phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase from Escherichia coli contains two Gly-Gly sequences that occur at junctions between domains. A previous study (Grant, G. A., Xu, X. L., and Hu, Z. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 7316-7319) determined that the Gly-Gly sequence at the junction between the regulatory and substrate binding domain functions as a hinge between the domains. Mutations in this area significantly decrease the ability of serine to inhibit activity but have little effect on the K(m) and k(cat). Conversely, the present study shows that mutations to the Gly-Gly sequence at the junction of the substrate and nucleotide binding domains, which form the active site cleft, have a significant effect on the k(cat) of the enzyme without substantially altering the enzyme's sensitivity to serine. In addition, mutation of Gly-294, but not Gly-295, has a profound effect on the cooperativity of serine inhibition. Interestingly, even though cooperativity of inhibition can be reduced significantly, there is little apparent effect on the cooperativity of serine binding itself. An additional mutant, G336V,G337V, also reduces the cooperativity of inhibition, but in this case serine binding also is reduced to the point at which it cannot be measured by equilibrium dialysis. The double mutant G294V,G336V demonstrates that strain imposed by mutation at one hinge can be relieved partially by mutation at the other hinge, demonstrating linkage between the two hinge regions. These data show that the two cooperative processes, serine binding and catalytic inhibition, can be uncoupled. Consideration of the allowable torsional angles for the side chains introduced by the mutations yields a range of values for these angles that the glycine residues likely occupy in the native enzyme. A comparison of these values with the torsional angles found for the inhibited enzyme from crystal coordinates provides potential beginning and ending orientations for the transition from active to inhibited enzyme, which will allow modeling of the dynamics of domain movement.  相似文献   

9.
Grant GA  Hu Z  Xu XL 《Biochemistry》2005,44(51):16844-16852
L-Serine inhibits the catalytic activity of Escherichia coli D-3-phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase (PGDH) by binding to its regulatory domain. This domain is a member of the ACT domain family of regulatory domains that are modulated by small molecules. A comparison of the phi and psi torsional angle differences between the crystal structures of PGDH solved in the presence and in the absence of L-serine demonstrated a clustering of significant angle deviations in the regulatory domain. A similar clustering was not observed in either of the other two structural domains of PGDH. In addition, significant differences were also observed at the active site and in the Trp-139 loop. To determine if these residues were functionally significant and not just due to other factors such as crystal packing, mutagenic analysis of these residues was performed. Not unexpectedly, this analysis showed that residues that affected the kcat/Km were grouped around the active site and those that affected the serine sensitivity were grouped in the regulatory domain. However, more significantly, residues that affected the cooperativity of inhibition of activity were identified at both locations. These latter residues represent structural elements that participate in both the initial and the ultimate events of the transfer of cooperative behavior from the regulatory domain to the active site. As such, their identification will assist in the elucidation of the pathway of cooperative interaction in this enzyme as well as in the elucidation of the regulatory mechanism of the ACT domain in general.  相似文献   

10.
A set of asymmetric hybrid tetramers of Escherichia coli d-3-phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase (PGDH) have been made by gene co-expression and KSCN-induced dimer exchange. These tetramers contain varied numbers of active sites and effector binding sites arranged in different orientations within the tetramer. They reveal that PGDH displays half-of-the-sites activity with respect to its active sites and that the two sites that are active at any particular time lie in subunits on either side of the nucleotide binding domain interface. Half-of-the-sites functionality is also observed for the effector even though all four sites eventually bind effector. That is, only two effector sites need to be occupied for maximum inhibition. Binding of the last two effector molecules does not contribute functionally to inhibition of activity. Furthermore, positive cooperativity of inhibition of activity by the effector is completely dependent on the positive cooperativity of binding of the effector. Binding of the first effector molecule produces a conformational change that essentially completely inhibits the active site within the subunit to which it binds and produces an approximate 33% inhibition of the active site in the subunit to which it is not bound. Binding of the second effector at the opposite regulatory domain interface completes the inhibition of activity. This simple relationship defines the positional and quantitative influence of effector ligand binding on activity and can be used to predict the maximum level of inhibition of individual hybrid tetramers. In addition, the site-specific quantitative relationship of effector binding to individual active sites can be used to model the inhibition profile with relatively good agreement. These simple rules for the site to site interaction in PGDH provide significant new insight into the mechanism of allostery of this enzyme.  相似文献   

11.
Grant GA  Xu XL  Hu Z  Purvis AR 《Biochemistry》1999,38(50):16548-16552
The binding of L-serine to phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase from E. coli displays elements of both positive and negative cooperativity. In addition, the inhibition of enzymatic activity by L-serine is also cooperative with Hill coefficients greater than 1. However, phosphate buffer significantly reduces the cooperative effects in serine binding without affecting the cooperativity of inhibition of activity. The maximal degree of inhibition and fluorescence quenching in Tris buffer occurs when an average of two serine binding sites out of four are occupied. This value increases to three out of the four sites at maximal levels of inhibition and quenching in phosphate buffer. The increase from two to three sites appears to be due to the ability of phosphate to reduce the site to site cooperative effects and render each ligand binding site less dependent on each other. The correlation between the level of inhibition and the fractional site occupancy indicates that in Tris buffer, one serine is bound to each interface at maximal effect. In the presence of phosphate, the order of binding appears to change so that both sites at one interface fill before the first site at the opposite interface is occupied. In each case, there is a good correlation between serine binding, conformational change at the regulatory site interfaces, and inhibition of enzyme activity. The observation that phosphate does not appear to have a similar effect on the cooperativity of inhibition of enzymatic activity suggests that there are two distinct cooperative pathways at work: one path between the four serine binding sites, and one path between the serine binding sites and the active sites.  相似文献   

12.
13.
14.
Escherichia coli 3-phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase (PGDH) catalyzes the first step in serine biosynthesis, and is allosterically inhibited by serine. Structural studies revealed a homotetramer in which the quaternary arrangement of subunits formed an elongated ellipsoid. Each subunit consisted of three domains: nucleotide, substrate and regulatory. In PGDH, extensive interactions are formed between nucleotide binding domains. A second subunit-subunit interaction occurs between regulatory domains creating an extended beta sheet. The serine-binding sites overlap this interface. In these studies, the nucleotide and substrate domains (NSDs) were subcloned to identify changes in both catalytic and physical properties upon removal of a subunit-subunit interface. The NSDs did not vary significantly from PGDH with respect to kinetic parameters with the exception that serine no longer had an effect on catalysis. Temperature dependent dynamic light scattering (DLS) revealed the NSDs aggregated > 5 degrees C before PGDH, indicating decreased stability. DLS and gel filtration studies showed that the truncated enzyme formed a tetramer. This result negated the hypothesis that the removal of the regulatory domain would create an enzyme mimic of the unregulated, closely related dimeric enzymes. Expression of the regulatory domain, to study conformational changes induced by serine binding, yielded a product that by CD spectra contained stable secondary structure. DLS and pulsed field gradient NMR studies of the regulatory domain showed the presence of higher oligomers instead of the predicted dimer. We have concluded that the removal of the regulatory domain is sufficient to eliminate serine inhibition but does not have the expected effect on the quaternary structure.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Escherichia coli d-3-phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase (PGDH) is a homotetrameric enzyme whose activity is allosterically regulated by l-serine, the end-product of its metabolic pathway. Previous studies have shown that PGDH displays two modes of cooperative interaction. One is between the l-serine binding sites and the other is between the l-serine binding sites and the active sites. Tryptophan 139 participates in an intersubunit contact near the active site catalytic residues. Site-specific mutagenesis of tryptophan 139 to glycine results in the dissociation of the tetramer to a pair of dimers and in the loss of cooperativity in serine binding and between serine binding and inhibition. The results suggest that the magnitude of inhibition of activity at a particular active site is primarily dependent on serine binding to that subunit but that activity can be modulated in a cooperative manner by interaction with adjacent subunits. The disruption of the nucleotide domain interface in PGDH by mutating Trp-139 suggests the potential for a critical role of this interface in the cooperative allosteric processes in the native tetrameric enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
Grant GA 《Biochemistry》2011,50(14):2900-2906
In Escherichia colid-3-phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase, the amino acid sequences G294-G295 and G336-G337 are found between structural domains and appear to function as hinge regions. Mutagenesis studies of these sequences showed that bulky side chains had significant effects on the kinetic properties of the enzyme. Placement of a tryptophanyl residue near the serine binding site (W139F/E360W) allows serine binding to be monitored by fluorescence quenching analysis. Pre-steady-state analysis has demonstrated that serine binds to two forms of the free enzyme, E and E*. Conversion of Gly-336 to valine has its main effect on the Kd of serine binding to one form of the free enzyme (E) while maintaining the cooperativity of binding observed in the native enzyme. Conversion of Gly-294 to valine eliminates a rate limiting conformational change that follows serine binding to E. The conformational change between the two forms of free enzyme is maintained, but the Hill coefficient for cooperativity is significantly lowered. The data indicate that the cooperative transmission induced by serine binding is transmitted through the Gly294-Gly295 hinge region to the opposite serine binding interface and that this is most likely propagated by way of the substrate binding domain-regulatory domain interface. In the G294 mutant enzyme, both serine bound species, E·Ser and E*·Ser, are present in significant amounts indicating that cooperativity of serine binding does not result from the binding to two different forms. The data also suggest that the E* form may be inactive even when serine is not bound.  相似文献   

18.
Grant GA  Xu XL  Hu Z 《Biochemistry》2000,39(24):7316-7319
The regulatory and substrate binding domains of D-3-phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase (PGDH, EC 1.1.1.95) from Escherichia coli are connected by a single polypeptide strand that contains a Gly-Gly sequence approximately midway between the domains. The potential flexibility of this sequence and its strategic location between major domain structures suggests that it may function in the conformational change leading from effector binding to inhibition of the active site. Site-directed mutagenesis of this region (Gly-336-Gly-337) supports this hypothesis. When bulky side chains were substituted for the glycines at these positions, substantial changes in the ability of serine to inhibit the enzyme were seen with little effect on the activity of the enzyme. The effect of these substitutions could be alleviated by placing a new glycine residue at position 335, immediately flanking the original glycine pair. On the other hand, substituting a glycine at position 338 revealed a critical role for the side chain of Arg-338. This residue may function in stabilizing the conformation about the Gly-Gly turn, resulting in a specific orientation of the adjacent domains relative to each other. Rotation about the phi or psi bonds of either Gly-336 or Gly-337 would have a profound effect on this orientation. The data are consistent with this as a role for the Gly-Gly sequence between the regulatory and substrate binding domains of PGDH.  相似文献   

19.
D-3-Phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase (PGDH) from Escherichia coli is allosterically inhibited by L-serine, the end product of its metabolic pathway. Previous results have shown that inhibition by serine has a large effect on Vmax and only a small or negligible effect on Km. PGDH is thus classified as a V-type allosteric enzyme. In this study, the active site of PGDH has been studied by site-directed mutagenesis to assess the role of certain residues in substrate binding and catalysis. These consist of a group of cationic residues (Arg-240, Arg-60, Arg-62, Lys-39, and Lys-141') that potentially form an electrostatic environment for the binding of the negatively charged substrate, as well as the only tryptophan residue found in PGDH and which fits into a hydrophobic pocket immediately adjacent to the active site histidine residue. Interestingly, Trp-139' and Lys-141' are part of the polypeptide chain of the subunit that is adjacent to the active site. The results of mutating these residues show that Arg-240, Arg-60, Arg-62, and Lys-141' play distinct roles in the binding of the substrate to the active site. Mutants of Trp-139' show that this residue may play a role in stabilizing the catalytic center of the enzyme. Furthermore, these mutants appear to have a significant effect on the cooperativity of serine inhibition and suggest a possible role for Trp-139' in the cooperative interactions between subunits.  相似文献   

20.
The nucleotide sequence of serA, the structural gene of Escherichia coli which codes for D-3-phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase, has been determined. The structural gene contains 1233 nucleotides which code for the 409 amino acids of the subunit of the tetrameric enzyme, as well as the initiator methionine, which is cleaved from the mature protein, and the termination codon. The majority of the primary structure of the enzyme has been confirmed by automated Edman degradation of peptide fragments produced by a variety of cleavage agents. Comparison of the amino acid sequence of phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase with other NAD-dependent oxidoreductases reveals less than 20% homology, although conservation of certain specific residues in the coenzyme binding domain appears to be evident.  相似文献   

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