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1.
We have used alanine-scanning site-directed mutagenesis of the dimer contact region of starch phosphorylase from Corynebacterium callunae to explore the relationship between a protein conformational change induced by phosphate binding and the up to 500-fold kinetic stabilization of the functional quarternary structure of this enzyme when phosphate is present. Purified mutants (at positions Ser-224, Arg-226, Arg-234, and Arg-242) were characterized by Fourier transform-infrared (FT-IR) spectroscopy and enzyme activity measurements at room temperature and under conditions of thermal denaturation. Difference FT-IR spectra of wild type and mutants in (2)H(2)O solvent revealed small changes in residual amide II band intensities at approximately 1,550 cm(-1), indicating that (1)H/(2)H exchange in the wild type is clearly perturbed by the mutations. Decreased (1)H/(2)H exchange in comparison to wild type suggests formation of a more compact protein structure in S224A, R234A, and R242A mutants and correlates with rates of irreversible thermal denaturation at 45 degrees C that are up to 10-fold smaller for the three mutants than the wild type. By contrast, the mutant R226A inactivates 2.5-fold faster at 45 degrees C and shows a higher (1)H/(2)H exchange than the wild type. Phosphate (20 mM) causes a greater change in FT-IR spectra of the wild type than in those of S224A and 234A mutants and leads to a 5-fold higher stabilization of the wild type than the two mutants. Therefore, structural effects of phosphate binding leading to kinetic stability of wild-type starch phosphorylase are partially complemented in the S224A and R234A mutants. Infrared spectroscopic measurements were used to compare thermal denaturations of the mutants and the wild type in the absence and presence of stabilizing oxyanion. The broad denaturation transition of unliganded wild type in the range 40-50 degrees C is reduced in the S224A and R234A mutants, and this reflects mainly a shift of the onset of denaturation to a 4-5 degrees C higher value.  相似文献   

2.
Herbicide-resistant mutants of the eukaryotic green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, that are altered in specific amino acids in their D-1 protein, show differential bicarbonate-reversible formate effects. These results suggest the involvement of D1 protein in the bicarbonate effect. A 25 mM formate treatment of mixotrophically or photoautotrophically grown wild type cells results in a slower rise of chlorophyll a fluorescence transient followed by a dramatically slowed decline during measurements in continuous light. These effects are fully reversed upon addition of 10 mM bicarbonate. The mutant BR-202 [L275F] is, however, highly insensitive to 25 mM formate suggesting that a significant change in formate (bicarbonate) binding has occurred in helix V of the D1 protein near histidine involved in Fe binding. With the exception of DCMU-4 [S264A], which is considerably more sensitive to formate than the wild type, five other different [V219I, A25IV, F255Y, G256D and cell-wall deficient CW-15] mutants display a relatively similar response to formate as wild type. Absence of formate effect on a PS II-lacking [FuD-7] mutant confirms the sole involvement of PS II in the bicarbonate effect.  相似文献   

3.
Dong X  Stams AJ 《Anaerobe》1995,1(1):35-39
Both H2 and formate were formed during butyrate oxidation by Syntrophospora bryantii with pentenoate as electron acceptor and during propionate oxidation by a mesophilic propionate oxidizing bacterium (MPOB) with fumarate as electron acceptor. H2 and formate levels were affected by the bicarbonate concentration. S bryantii and MPOB were also able to interconvert formate and H2+ HCO3-; the apparent K(M) values for formate were of 2.9 mM and 1.8 mM, respectively. The conversion of H2+ HCO3- to formate was detected only when the H2 partial pressure was above 80 kPa. This interconversion seems to be rather unimportant under conditions prevailing during syntrophic propionate and butyrate oxidation.  相似文献   

4.
A cluster of conserved histidines and arginines (His-62, His-167, Arg-21, Arg-38, and Arg-168) in 3-phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK) has been implicated as possibly involved in the binding of 3-phosphoglycerate (3-PG) and/or stabilization of the negatively charged transition state. The role of these residues in the catalytic function of yeast PGK and in the substrate- and sulfate-dependent activation was investigated by site-directed mutagenesis. The following substitutions, R21A, R21Q, H62Q, H167S, and R168Q, produced functional enzymes. In contrast, the R38A and R38Q mutations resulted in a complete loss of catalytic activity. These results demonstrate that of the basic residues studied, only arginine 38 is essential for the catalytic function of PGK. A moderate decrease in the catalytic efficiency as the result of the R21A, H167S, and R168Q mutations and an increased catalytic efficiency of the H62Q mutant rule out a possible role of a positive charge at these positions in the mechanism of phosphoryl transfer reaction. In contrast to the wild type PGK and the H62Q mutant, both of which are activated at low and inhibited at high sulfate concentration, the H167S, R168Q, and R21A mutants exhibited a progressive inhibition with increased concentration of sulfate. The activation observed at high concentration of either ATP or 3-PG as a variable substrate in the steady-state kinetics of wild type PGK was abolished as the result of the latter three mutations. The results of this work support the hypothesis that PGK has two binding sites for anionic ligands, the catalytic and regulatory sites for each substrate and the activatory and inhibitory sites for sulfate, and suggest that arginine 21, arginine 168, and histidine 167 are located in the activatory anion binding site, common for sulfate, 3-PG, and ATP. The increased Km values for both substrates and decreased specific activities of the mutants suggest that this regulatory site is close to the catalytic site.  相似文献   

5.
Malonamidase E2 (MAE2) from Bradyrhizobium japonicum is an enzyme that hydrolyzes malonamate to malonate and has a Ser-cis-Ser-Lys catalytic triad at the active site. The crystal structures of wild type and mutant MAE2 exhibited that the guanido group of Arg-158 could be involved in the binding of malonamate in which the negative charge of the carboxyl group could destabilize a negatively charged transition-state oxyanion in the enzymatic reaction. In an attempt to elucidate the specific roles of Arg-158, site-directed mutants, R158Q, R158E, and R158K, were prepared (see Table 1). The crystal structure of R158Q determined at 2.2 Angstrom resolution showed that the guanido group of Arg-158 was important for the substrate binding with the marginal structural change upon the mutation. The k(cat) value of R158Q significantly decreased by over 1500-fold and the catalytic activity of R158E could not be detected. The k(cat) value of R158K was similar to that of the wild type with the K(m) value drastically increased by 100-fold, suggesting that Lys-158 of R158K can stabilize the negative charge of the carboxylate in the substrate to some extent and contribute to the stabilization of the transition-state oxyanion, but a single amine group of Lys-158 in R158K could not precisely anchor the carboxyl group of malonamate compared with the guanido group of Arg-158. Our kinetic and structural evidences demonstrate that Arg-158 in MAE2 should be critical to both binding the substrate and stabilizing the transition-state oxyanion for the catalytic reaction of MAE2.  相似文献   

6.
Johnson JL  Brooker RJ 《Biochemistry》2003,42(4):1095-1100
Several previous studies have suggested that glutamate-126 and arginine-144 in the lactose permease of Escherichia coli form an ion pair that is essential for sugar binding. To further investigate the role of these residues, E126Q, R144Q, and R144S mutants were made. The R144Q and R144S strains, which had negligible levels of transport, were used as parental strains to isolate suppressor mutations that partially restored sugar transport. The R144Q parent only yielded first-site revertants, but the R144S strain produced three types of second-site replacements: E126Q, V229A, and L330R. In downhill transport assays, the E126Q strain was able to transport lactose at low levels, with an apparent K(m) 3-fold higher than the wild-type strain but a severely depressed apparent V(max). A triple mutant, E126Q/R144S/V229A, showed a relatively robust V(max) value for downhill transport and could actively accumulate lactose against a concentration gradient. Taken together, these results indicate that Glu-126 and Arg-144 are not essential for sugar binding. An alternative explanation for their role in maintaining secondary structure is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
RNA interference was used to simultaneously suppress the expression of the two genes that encode the PsbQ proteins of Photosystem II (PS II) in Arabidopsis thaliana, psbQ-1 (At4g21280) and psbQ-2 (At4g05180). Two independent PsbQ-deficient plant lines were examined. These plant lines produced little detectable PsbQ protein. Under normal growth light conditions, the wild type and mutant plants were visually indistinguishable. Additionally, analysis of steady state oxygen evolution rates and chlorophyll fluorescence characteristics indicated little alteration of photosynthetic capacity in the mutant plants. No loss of other PS II proteins was evident. Interestingly, flash oxygen yield analysis performed on thylakoid membranes isolated from the mutant and wild type plants indicated that the oxygen-evolving complex was quite unstable in the mutants. Furthermore, the lifetime of the S2 state of the oxygen-evolving complex appeared to be increased in these plants. Incubation of the wild type and mutant plants under low light growth conditions led to a significantly stronger observed phenotype in the mutants. The mutant plants progressively yellowed (after 2 weeks) and eventually died (after 3-4 weeks). The wild type plants exhibited only slight yellowing after 4 weeks under low light conditions. The mutant plants exhibited a large loss of a number of PS II components, including CP47 and the D2 protein, under low light conditions. Additionally, significant alterations of their fluorescence characteristics were observed, including an increased FO and decreased FV, yielding a large loss in PS II quantum efficiency (FV/FM). Analysis of QA- decay kinetics in the absence of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethyl urea indicated a defect in electron transfer from QA- to QB, whereas experiments performed in the presence of this herbicide indicated that the recombination rate between QA- and the S2 state was strongly retarded. These results indicate that the loss of the PsbQ protein induces significant changes in Photosystem II function, particularly in low light-grown plants, and that the PsbQ protein is required for photoautotrophic growth under low light conditions.  相似文献   

8.
3-Hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) lyase catalyzes the divalent cation-dependent cleavage of HMG-CoA to produce acetyl-CoA and acetoacetate. Arginine-41 is an invariant residue in HMG-CoA lyases. Mutation of this residue (R41Q) correlates with human HMG-CoA lyase deficiency. To evaluate the functional importance of arginine-41, R41Q and R41M recombinant mutant human HMG-CoA lyase proteins have been constructed, expressed, and purified. These mutant proteins retain structural integrity based on Mn(2+) binding and affinity labeling stoichiometry. R41Q exhibits a 10(5)-fold decrease in V(max); R41M activity is >or=10-fold lower than the activity of R41Q. Acetyldithio-CoA, an analogue of the reaction product, acetyl-CoA, has been employed to test the function of arginine-41, as well as other residues (e.g., aspartate-42 and histidine-233) implicated in catalysis. Acetyldithio-CoA supports enzyme-catalyzed exchange of the methyl protons of the acetyl group with solvent; exchange is dependent on the presence of Mg(2+) and acetoacetate. In comparison with wild-type human enzyme, D42A and H233A mutant enzymes exhibit 4-fold and 10-fold decreases, respectively, in the proton exchange rate. In contrast, R41Q and R41M mutants do not catalyze any substantial enzyme-dependent proton exchange. These results suggest a role for arginine-41 in deprotonation or enolization of acetyldithio-CoA and implicate this residue in the HMG-CoA cleavage reaction chemistry that leads to acetyl-CoA product formation. Assignment of arginine-41 as an active site residue is also supported by a homology model for HMG-CoA lyase based on the structure of 4-hydroxy-2-ketovalerate aldolase. This model suggests the proximity of arginine-41 to other amino acids (aspartate-42, glutamate-72, histidine-235) implicated as active site residues based on their function as ligands to the activator cation.  相似文献   

9.
Arg-52 of the Escherichia coli melibiose carrier was replaced by Ser (R52S), Gln (R52Q), or Val (R52V). While the level of carrier in the membrane for each mutant remained similar to that for the wild type, analysis of melibiose transport showed an uncoupling of proton cotransport and a drastic reduction in Na(+)-coupled transport. Second-site revertants were selected on MacConkey plates containing melibiose, and substitutions were found at nine distinct locations in the carrier. Eight revertant substitutions were isolated from the R52S strain: Asp-19-->Gly, Asp-55-->Asn, Pro-60-->Gln, Trp-116-->Arg, Asn-244-->Ser, Ser-247-->Arg, Asn-248-->Lys, and Ile-352-->Val. Two revertants were also isolated from the R52V strain: Trp-116-->Arg and Thr-338-->Arg revertants. The R52Q strain yielded an Asp-55-->Asn substitution and a first-site revertant, Lys-52 (R52K). The R52K strain had transport properties similar to those of the wild type. Analysis of melibiose accumulation showed that proton-driven accumulation was still defective in the second-site revertant strains, and only the Trp-116-->Arg, Ser-247-->Arg, and Asn-248-->Lys revertants regained significant Na(+)-coupled accumulation. In general, downhill melibiose transport in the presence of Na(+) was better in the revertant strains than in the parental mutants. Three revertant strains, Asp-19-->Gly, Asp-55-->Asn, and Thr-338-->Arg strains, required a high Na(+) concentration (100 mM) for maximal activity. Kinetic measurements showed that the N248K and W116R revertants lowered the K(m) for melibiose, while other revertants restored transport velocity. We suggest that the insertion of positive charges on membrane helices is compensating for the loss of Arg-52 and that helix II is close to helix IV and VII. We also suggest that Arg-52 is salt bridged to Asp-55 (helix II) and Asp-19 (helix I).  相似文献   

10.
Photosystem II electron transfer, charge stabilization, and photoinhibition were studied in three site-specific mutants of the D1 polypeptide of Synechocystis PCC 6803: E243K, E229D, and CA1 (deletion of three glutamates 242-244 and a substitution, glutamine-241 to histidine). The phenotypes of the E229D and E243K mutants were similar to that of the control strain (AR) in all of the studied aspects. The characteristics of CA1 were very different. Formate, which inhibits the QA- to QB- reaction, was severalfold less effective in CA1 than in AR. The S2QA- and S2QB- states were stabilized in CA1. It was previously shown that the electron transfer between QA- and QB was modified in CA1 (P Maenpaa, T. Kallio, P. Mulo, G. Salih, E.-M. Aro, E. Tyystjarvi, C. Jansson [1993] Plant Mol Biol 22: 1-12). A change in the redox potential of the QA/QA- couple, which renders the reoxidation of QA- by back or forward reactions more difficult, could explain the phenotype of CA1. Although the rates of photoinhibition measured as inhibition of oxygen evolution, Chl fluorescence quenching, and decrease of thermoluminescence B and Q bands were similar in AR and CA1, the CA1 strain more quickly reached a state from which the cells were unable to recover their activity. The results described in this paper suggest that a modification in the structure of the D-de loop of D1 could influence the properties of the couple QA/QA- in D2 and the mechanism of recovery from photoinhibition.  相似文献   

11.
We examined the effects of mutations at amino acid residues S264 and F255 in the D1 protein on the binding affinity of the stimulatory anion bicarbonate and inhibitory anion formate in Photosystem II (PS II) in Synechococcus sp. PCC 7942. Measurements on the rates of oxygen evolution in the wild type and mutant cells in the presence of different concentrations of formate with a fixed bicarbonate concentration and vice versa, analyzed in terms of an equilibrium activator-inhibitor model, led to the conclusion that the equilibrium dissociation constant for bicarbonate is increased in the mutants, while that of the formate remains unchanged (11±0.5 mM). The hierarchy of the equilibrium dissociation constant for bicarbonate (highest to lowest, ±2 M) was: D1-F255L/S264A (46 M)>D1-F255Y/ S264A (31 M)D1-S264A (34 M)D1-F255Y (33 M)>wild type (25 M). The data suggest the importance of D1-S264 and D1-F255 in the bicarbonate binding niche. A possible involvement of bicarbonate and these two residues in the protonation of QB -, the reduced secondary plastoquinone of PS II, in the D1 protein is discussed.Abbreviations Chl a chlorophyll a - DBMIB 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - DMQ 2,5-dimethyl-p-benzoquinone - HEPES N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazine-N'-2-ethanesulfonic acid - MES 2-[N-morpholino]ethanesulfonic acid - PSI Photosystem I - PS II Photosystem II - QA bound plastoquinone, a one-electron acceptor in Photosystem II - QB another bound plastoquinone, a two-electron acceptor in Photosystem II This paper is dedicated to the memory of my dear friend Robin Hill-Govindjee.  相似文献   

12.
Like the other Y-family DNA polymerases, human DNA polymerase η (hpol η) has relatively low fidelity and is able to tolerate damage during DNA synthesis, including 7,8-dihydro-8-oxo-2′-deoxyguanosine (8-oxoG), one of the most abundant DNA lesions in the genome. Crystal structures show that Arg-61 and Gln-38 are located near the active site and may play important roles in the fidelity and efficiency of hpol η. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to replace these side chains either alone or together, and the wild type or mutant proteins were purified and tested by replicating DNA past deoxyguanosine (G) or 8-oxoG. The catalytic activity of hpol η was dramatically disrupted by the R61M and Q38A/R61A mutations, as opposed to the R61A and Q38A single mutants. Crystal structures of hpol η mutant ternary complexes reveal that polarized water molecules can mimic and partially compensate for the missing side chains of Arg-61 and Gln-38 in the Q38A/R61A mutant. The combined data indicate that the positioning and positive charge of Arg-61 synergistically contribute to the nucleotidyl transfer reaction, with additional influence exerted by Gln-38. In addition, gel filtration chromatography separated multimeric and monomeric forms of wild type and mutant hpol η, indicating the possibility that hpol η forms multimers in vivo.  相似文献   

13.
Acetyl-CoA carboxylase catalyzes the committed step in fatty acid synthesis in all plants, animals, and bacteria. The Escherichia coli form is a multifunctional enzyme consisting of three separate proteins: biotin carboxylase, carboxyltransferase, and the biotin carboxyl carrier protein. The biotin carboxylase component, which catalyzes the ATP-dependent carboxylation of biotin using bicarbonate as the carboxylate source, has a homologous functionally identical subunit in the mammalian biotin-dependent enzymes propionyl-CoA carboxylase and 3-methylcrotonyl-CoA carboxylase. In humans, mutations in either of these enzymes result in the metabolic deficiency propionic acidemia or methylcrotonylglycinuria. The lack of a system for structure-function studies of these two biotin-dependent carboxylases has prevented a detailed analysis of the disease-causing mutations. However, structural data are available for E. coli biotin carboxylase as is a system for its overexpression and purification. Thus, we have constructed three site-directed mutants of biotin carboxylase that are homologous to three missense mutations found in propionic acidemia or methylcrotonylglycinuria patients. The mutants M169K, R338Q, and R338S of E. coli biotin carboxylase were selected for study to mimic the disease-causing mutations M204K and R374Q of propionyl-CoA carboxylase and R385S of 3-methylcrotonyl-CoA carboxylase. These three mutants were subjected to a rigorous kinetic analysis to determine the function of the residues in the catalytic mechanism of biotin carboxylase as well as to establish a molecular basis for the two diseases. The results of the kinetic studies have revealed the first evidence for negative cooperativity with respect to bicarbonate and suggest that Arg-338 serves to orient the carboxyphosphate intermediate for optimal carboxylation of biotin.  相似文献   

14.
Three arginine residues (Arg-11, Arg-39, Arg-61) are found at the active site of 4-oxalocrotonate tautomerase in the X-ray structure of the affinity-labeled enzyme [Taylor, A. B., Czerwinski, R. M., Johnson, R. M., Jr., Whitman, C. P., and Hackert, M. L. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 14692-14700]. The catalytic roles of these arginines were examined by mutagenesis, kinetic, and heteronuclear NMR studies. With a 1,6-dicarboxylate substrate (2-hydroxymuconate), the R61A mutation showed no kinetic effects, while the R11A mutation decreased k(cat) 88-fold and increased K(m) 8.6-fold, suggesting both binding and catalytic roles for Arg-11. With a 1-monocarboxylate substrate (2-hydroxy-2,4-pentadienoate), no kinetic effects of the R11A mutation were found, indicating that Arg-11 interacts with the 6-carboxylate of the substrate. The stereoselectivity of the R11A-catalyzed protonation at C-5 of the dicarboxylate substrate decreased, while the stereoselectivity of protonation at C-3 of the monocarboxylate substrate increased in comparison with wild-type 4-OT, indicating the importance of Arg-11 in properly orienting the dicarboxylate substrate by interacting with the charged 6-carboxylate group. With 2-hydroxymuconate, the R39A and R39Q mutations decreased k(cat) by 125- and 389-fold and increased K(m) by 1.5- and 2.6-fold, respectively, suggesting a largely catalytic role for Arg-39. The activity of the R11A/R39A double mutant was at least 10(4)-fold lower than that of the wild-type enzyme, indicating approximate additivity of the effects of the two arginine mutants on k(cat). For both R11A and R39Q, 2D (1)H-(15)N HSQC and 3D (1)H-(15)N NOESY-HSQC spectra showed chemical shift changes mainly near the mutated residues, indicating otherwise intact protein structures. The changes in the R39Q mutant were mainly in the beta-hairpin from residues 50 to 57 which covers the active site. HSQC titration of R11A with the substrate analogue cis, cis-muconate yielded a K(d) of 22 mM, 37-fold greater than the K(d) found with wild-type 4-OT (0.6 mM). With the R39Q mutant, cis, cis-muconate showed negative cooperativity in active site binding with two K(d) values, 3.5 and 29 mM. This observation together with the low K(m) of 2-hydroxymuconate (0.47 mM) suggests that only the tight binding sites function catalytically in the R39Q mutant. The (15)Nepsilon resonances of all six Arg residues of 4-OT were assigned, and the assignments of Arg-11, -39, and -61 were confirmed by mutagenesis. The binding of cis,cis-muconate to wild-type 4-OT upshifts Arg-11 Nepsilon (by 0.05 ppm) and downshifts Arg-39 Nepsilon (by 1.19 ppm), indicating differing electronic delocalizations in the guanidinium groups. A mechanism is proposed in which Arg-11 interacts with the 6-carboxylate of the substrate to facilitate both substrate binding and catalysis and Arg-39 interacts with the 1-carboxylate and the 2-keto group of the substrate to promote carbonyl polarization and catalysis, while Pro-1 transfers protons from C-3 to C-5. This mechanism, together with the effects of mutations of catalytic residues on k(cat), provides a quantitative explanation of the 10(7)-fold catalytic power of 4-OT. Despite its presence in the active site in the crystal structure of the affinity-labeled enzyme, Arg-61 does not play a significant role in either substrate binding or catalysis.  相似文献   

15.
Kufryk GI  Vermaas WF 《Biochemistry》2001,40(31):9247-9255
Mutation of Glu69 to Gln in the D2 protein of photosystem II is known to lead to a loss of photoautotrophic growth in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. However, second-site mutants (pseudorevertants) with restored photoautotrophic growth but still maintaining the E69Q mutation in D2 are easily obtained. Using a genomic mapping technique involving functional complementation, the secondary mutation was mapped to slr0286 in two independent mutants. The mutations in Slr0286 were R42M or R394H. To study the function of Slr0286, mutants of E69Q and of the wild-type strain were made that lacked slr0286. Deletion of slr0286 did not affect photoautotrophic capacity in wild type but led to a marked decrease in the apparent affinity of Ca(2+) to its binding site at the water-splitting system of photosystem II and to a reduced heat tolerance of the oxygen-evolving system, particularly in E69Q. Moreover, a small increase in the half-time for photoactivation of the oxygen-evolving complex of photosystem II for both wild type and the E69Q mutant was observed in the absence of Slr0286. The accumulation of photosystem II reaction centers, dark stability of the oxygen-evolving apparatus, stability of oxygen evolution, and the kinetics of charge recombination between Q(A)(-) and the donor side were not affected by deletion of slr0286. Slr0286 lacks clear functional motifs, and no homologues are apparent in other organisms, even not in other cyanobacteria. In any case, Slr0286 appears to help the functional assembly and stability of the water-splitting system of photosystem II.  相似文献   

16.
Arginine257 (R257), in the de-helix that caps the Q(B) site of the D1 protein, has been shown by mutational studies to play a key role in the sensitivity of Photosystem II (PS II) to bicarbonate-reversible binding of the formate anion. In this article, the role of this residue has been further investigated through D1 mutations (R257E, R257Q, and R257K) in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. We have investigated the activity of the Q(B) site by studying differences from wild type on the steady-state turnover of PS II, as assayed through chlorophyll (Chl) a fluorescence yield decay after flash excitation. The effects of p-benzoquinone (BQ, which oxidizes reduced Q(B), Q(B)(-) ) and 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU, which blocks electron flow from Q(A)(-) to Q(B)) were measured. The equilibrium constants of the two-electron gate were obtained through thermoluminescence measurements. The thermoluminescence properties were changed in the mutants, especially when observed after pretreatment with 100 microM BQ. A theoretical analysis of the thermoluminescence data, based mainly on the recombination pathways model of Rappaport et al. (2005), led to the conclusion that the free-energy difference for the recombination of Q(B)(-) with S(2) was reduced by 20-40 mV in the three mutants (D1-R257K, D1-R257Q, and D1-R257E); this was interpreted to be due to a lowering of the redox potential of Q(B)/Q(B)(-). Further, since the recombination of Q(A)(-) with S(2) was unaffected, we suggest that no significant change in redox potential of Q(A)/Q(A)(-) occurred in these three mutants. The maximum variable Chl a fluorescence yield is lowered in the mutants, in the order R257K > R257Q > R257E, compared to wild type. Our analysis of the binary oscillations in Chl a fluorescence following pretreatment of cells with BQ showed that turnover of the Q(B) site was relatively unaffected in the three mutants. The mutant D1-R257E had the lowest growth rate and steady-state activity and showed the weakest binary oscillations. We conclude that the size and the charge of the amino acid at the position D1-257 play a role in PS II function by modulating the effective redox potential of the Q(B)/Q(B)(-) pair. We discuss an indirect mechanism mediated through electrostatic and/or surface charge effects and the possibility of more pleiotropic effects arising from decreased stability of the D1/D2 and D1/CP47 interfaces.  相似文献   

17.
Tanaka A  Nakamura H  Shiro Y  Fujii H 《Biochemistry》2006,45(8):2515-2523
FixL is a heme-based O(2) sensor, in which the autophosphorylation is regulated by the binding of exogenous ligands such as O(2) and CN(-). In this study, mutants of the heme distal Arg200, Arg208, Ile209, Ile210, and Arg214 residues of SmFixL were characterized biochemically and physicochemically, because it has been suggested that they are significant residues in ligand-linked kinase regulation. Measurements of the autoxidation rate, affinities, and kinetics of ligand binding revealed that all of the above residues are involved in stabilization of the O(2)-heme complex of FixL. However, Arg214 was found to be the only residue that is directly relevant to the ligand-dependent regulation of kinase activity. Although the wild type and R214K and R214Q mutants exhibited normal kinase regulation, R214A, R214M, R214H, and R214Y did not. (13)C and (15)N NMR analyses for (13)C(15)N(-) bound to the truncated heme domains of the Arg214 mutants indicated that, in the wild type and the foregoing two mutants, the heme moiety is present in a single conformation, but in the latter four, the conformations fluctuate possibly because of the lack of an interaction between the iron-bound ligand and residue 214. It is likely that such a rigid conformation of the ligand-bound form is important for the downregulation of histidine kinase activity. Furthermore, a comparison of the NMR data between the wild type and R214K and R214Q mutants suggests that a strong electrostatic interaction between residue 214 and the iron-bound ligand is not necessarily required for the single convergent structure and eventually for the downregulation of FixL.  相似文献   

18.
The effects of various formate concentrations on both the donor and the acceptor sides in oxygen-evolving PS II membranes (BBY particles) were examined. EPR, oxygen evolution and variable chlorophyll fluorescence have been observed. It was found that formate inhibits the formation of the S(2) state multiline signal concomitant with stimulation of the Q(A)(-)Fe(2+) signal at g = 1.82. The decrease and the increase in intensities of the multiline and Q(A)(-)Fe(2+) signals, respectively, had a linear relation for formate concentrations between 5 and 500 mM. The g = 4.1 signal formation measured in the absence of methanol was not inhibited by formate up to 250 mM in the buffer. In the presence of 3% methanol the g = 4.1 signal evolved as formate concentration increased. The evolved signal could be ascribed to the inhibited centers. Oxygen evolution measured in the presence of an electron acceptor, phenyl-p-benzoquinone, was also inhibited by formate proportionally to the decrease in the multiline signal intensity. The inhibition seemed to be due to a retarded electron transfer from the water-oxidizing complex to Y(Z)(+), which was observed in the decay kinetics of the Y(Z)(+) signal induced by illumination above 250 K. These results show that formate induces inhibition of water oxidation reactions as well as electron transfer on the PS II acceptor side. The inhibition effects of formate in PS II were found to be reversible, indicating no destructive effect on the reaction center induced by formate.  相似文献   

19.
Glutathione is essential for maintaining the intracellular redox environment and is synthesized from gamma-glutamylcysteine, glycine, and ATP by glutathione synthetase (GS). To examine the reaction mechanism of a eukaryotic GS, 24 Arabidopsis thaliana GS (AtGS) mutants were kinetically characterized. Within the gamma-glutamylcysteine/glutathione-binding site, the S153A and S155A mutants displayed less than 4-fold changes in kinetic parameters with mutations of Glu-220 (E220A/E220Q), Gln-226 (Q226A/Q226N), and Arg-274 (R274A/R274K) at the distal end of the binding site resulting in 24-180-fold increases in the K(m) values for gamma-glutamylcysteine. Substitution of multiple residues interacting with ATP (K313M, K367M, and E429A/E429Q) or coordinating magnesium ions to ATP (E148A/E148Q, N150A/N150D, and E371A) yielded inactive protein because of compromised nucleotide binding, as determined by fluorescence titration. Other mutations in the ATP-binding site (E371Q, N376A, and K456M) resulted in greater than 30-fold decreases in affinity for ATP and up to 80-fold reductions in turnover rate. Mutation of Arg-132 and Arg-454, which are positioned at the interface of the two substrate-binding sites, affected the enzymatic activity differently. The R132A mutant was inactive, and the R132K mutant decreased k(cat) by 200-fold; however, both mutants bound ATP with K(d) values similar to wild-type enzyme. Minimal changes in kinetic parameters were observed with the R454K mutant, but the R454A mutant displayed a 160-fold decrease in k(cat). In addition, the R132K, R454A, and R454K mutations elevated the K(m) value for glycine up to 11-fold. Comparison of the pH profiles and the solvent deuterium isotope effects of A. thaliana GS and the Arg-132 and Arg-454 mutants also suggest distinct mechanistic roles for these residues. Based on these results, a catalytic mechanism for the eukaryotic GS is proposed.  相似文献   

20.
Oxalate decarboxylase (OxDC) catalyzes the conversion of oxalate into CO(2) and formate using a catalytic mechanism that remains poorly understood. The Bacillus subtilis enzyme is composed of two cupin domains, each of which contains Mn(II) coordinated by four conserved residues. We have measured heavy atom isotope effects for a series of Bacillus subtilis OxDC mutants in which Arg-92, Arg-270, Glu-162, and Glu-333 are conservatively substituted in an effort to define the functional roles of these residues. This strategy has the advantage that observed isotope effects report directly on OxDC molecules in which the active site manganese center(s) is (are) catalytically active. Our results support the proposal that the N-terminal Mn-binding site can mediate catalysis, and confirm the importance of Arg-92 in catalytic activity. On the other hand, substitution of Arg-270 and Glu-333 affects both Mn(II) incorporation and the ability of Mn to bind to the OxDC mutants, thereby precluding any definitive assessment of whether the metal center in the C-terminal domain can also mediate catalysis. New evidence for the importance of Glu-162 in controlling metal reactivity has been provided by the unexpected observation that the E162Q OxDC mutant exhibits a significantly increased oxalate oxidase and a concomitant reduction in decarboxylase activities relative to wild type OxDC. Hence the reaction specificity of a catalytically active Mn center in OxDC can be perturbed by relatively small changes in local protein environment, in agreement with a proposal based on prior computational studies.  相似文献   

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