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1.
Phillips RS  Johnson N  Kamath AV 《Biochemistry》2002,41(12):4012-4019
Y74F and H463F mutant forms of Escherichia coli tryptophan indole-lyase (Trpase) have been prepared. These mutant proteins have very low activity with L-Trp as substrate (kcat and kcat/Km values less than 0.1% of wild-type Trpase). In contrast, these mutant enzymes exhibit much higher activity with S-(o-nitrophenyl)-L-cysteine and S-ethyl-L-cysteine (kcat/Km values about 1-50% of wild-type Trpase). Thus, Tyr-74 and His-463 are important for the substrate specificity of Trpase for L-Trp. H463F Trpase is not inhibited by a potent inhibitor of wild-type Trpase, oxindolyl-L-alanine, and does not exhibit the pK(a) of 6.0 seen in previous pH dependence studies [Kiick, D. M., and Phillips, R. S. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 7333]. These results suggest that His-463 may be the catalytic base with a pK(a) of 6.0 and Tyr-74 may be a general acid catalyst for the elimination step, as we found previously with tyrosine phenol-lyase [Chen, H., Demidkina, T. V., and Phillips, R. S. (1995) Biochemistry 34, 12776]. H463F Trpase reacts with L-Trp and S-ethyl-L-cysteine in rapid-scanning stopped-flow experiments to form equilibrating mixtures of external aldimine and quinonoid intermediates, similar to those observed with wild-type Trpase. In contrast to the results with wild-type Trpase, the addition of benzimidazole to reactions of H463F Trpase with L-Trp does not result in the formation of an aminoacrylate intermediate. However, addition of benzimidazole with S-ethyl-L-cysteine results in the formation of an aminoacrylate intermediate, with lambda(max) at 345 nm, as was seen previously with wild-type Trpase [Phillips, R. S. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 5927]. This suggests that His-463 plays a specific role in the elimination step of the reaction of L-Trp. Refolding of equimolar mixtures of H463F and Y74F Trpase after unfolding in 4 M guanidine hydrochloride results in a dramatic increase in activity with L-Trp, indicating the formation of a hybrid H463F/Y74F dimer with one normal active site.  相似文献   

2.
Tyrosine phenol-lyase (TPL) and tryptophan indole-lyase (Trpase) catalyse the reversible hydrolytic cleavage of L-tyrosine or L-tryptophan to phenol or indole, respectively, and ammonium pyruvate. These enzymes are very similar in sequence and structure, but show strict specificity for their respective physiological substrates. We have mutated the active site residues of TPL (Thr(124), Arg(381), and Phe(448)) to those of Trpase and evaluated the effects of the mutations. Tyr(71) in Citrobacter freundii TPL, and Tyr(74) in E. coli Trpase, are essential for activity with both substrates. Mutation of Arg(381) of TPL to Ala, Ile, or Val (the corresponding residues in the active site of Trpase) results in a dramatic decrease in L-Tyr beta-elimination activity, with little effect on the activity of other substrates. Arg(381) may be the catalytic base with pK(a) of 8 seen in pH-dependent kinetic studies. T124D TPL has no measureable activity with L-Tyr or 3-F-L-Tyr as substrate, despite having high activity with SOPC. T124A TPL has very low but detectable activity, which is about 500-fold less than wild-type TPL, with L-Tyr and 3-F-L-Tyr. F448H TPL also has very low activity with L-Tyr. None of the mutant TPLs has any detectable activity with L-Trp as substrate. H463F Trpase also exhibits low activity with L-Trp, but retains high activity with other substrates. Thus, additional residues remote from the active site may be needed for substrate specificity. Both Trpase and TPL may react by a rare S(E)2-type mechanism.  相似文献   

3.
The central phosphatase domain of Clostridium thermocellum polynucleotide kinase/phosphatase (CthPnkp) belongs to the dinuclear metallophosphoesterase superfamily. Prior mutational studies of CthPnkp identified 7 individual active site side chains (Asp-187, His-189, Asp-233, Asn-263, His-323, His-376, and Asp-392) required for Ni2+-dependent hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyl phosphate. Here we find that Mn2+-dependent phosphomonoesterase activity requires two additional residues, Arg-237 and His-264. We report that CthPnkp also converts bis-p-nitrophenyl phosphate to p-nitrophenol and inorganic phosphate via a processive two-step mechanism. The Ni2+-dependent phosphodiesterase activity of CthPnkp requires the same seven side chains as the Ni2+-dependent phosphomonoesterase. However, the Mn2+-dependent phosphodiesterase activity does not require His-189, Arg-237, or His-264, each of which is critical for the Mn2+-dependent phosphomonoesterase. Mutations H189A, H189D, and D392N transform the metal and substrate specificity of CthPnkp such that it becomes a Mn2+-dependent phosphodiesterase. The H189E change results in a Mn2+/Ni2+-dependent phosphodiesterase. Mutations H376N, H376D, and D392E convert the enzyme into a Mn2+-dependent phosphodiesterase-monoesterase. The phosphodiesterase activity is strongly stimulated compared with wild-type CthPnkp when His-189 is changed to Asp, Arg-237 is replaced by Ala or Gln, and His-264 is replaced by Ala, Asn, or Gln. Steady-state kinetic analysis of wild-type and mutated enzymes illuminates the structural features that affect substrate affinity and kcat. Our results highlight CthPnkp as an "undifferentiated" diesterase-monoesterase that can evolve toward narrower metal and substrate specificities via alterations of the active site milieu.  相似文献   

4.
Phillips RS  Holtermann G 《Biochemistry》2005,44(43):14289-14297
Escherichia coli tryptophan indole-lyase (Trpase) is a bacterial pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP)-dependent enzyme which catalyzes the reversible beta-elimination of l-Trp to give indole and ammonium pyruvate. H463F mutant E. coli Trpase (H463F Trpase) has very low activity with l-Trp, but it has near wild-type activity with other in vitro substrates, such as S-ethyl-l-cysteine and S-(o-nitrophenyl)-l-cysteine [Phillips, R. S., Johnson, N., and Kamath, A. V. (2002) Formation in vitro of Hybrid Dimers of H463F and Y74F Mutant Escherichia coli Tryptophan Indole-lyase Rescues Activity with l-Tryptophan, Biochemistry 41, 4012-4019]. The interaction of H463F Trpase with l-Trp and l-Met, a competitive inhibitor, has been investigated by rapid-scanning stopped-flow, high-pressure, and pressure jump spectrophotometry. Both l-Trp and l-Met bind to H463F Trpase to form equilibrating mixtures of external aldimine and quinonoid intermediates, absorbing at approximately 420 and approximately 505 nm, respectively. The apparent rate constant for quinonoid intermediate formation exhibits a hyperbolic dependence on l-Trp and l-Met concentration. The rate constant for quinonoid intermediate formation from l-Trp is approximately 10-fold lower for H463F Trpase than for wild-type Trpase, but the rate constant for reaction of l-Met is similar for H463F Trpase and wild-type Trpase. The temperature dependence of the rate constants for quinonoid intermediate formation reveals that both l-Trp and l-Met have similar values of DeltaH(++), but l-Met has a more negative value of DeltaS(++). Hydrostatic pressure perturbs the spectra of the H463F l-Trp and l-Met complexes, by shifting the position of the equilibria between different quinonoid and external aldimine complexes. Pressure-jump experiments show relaxations at 500 nm after rapid pressure changes of 100-400 bar with both l-Trp and l-Met. The apparent rate constants for relaxation of l-Trp, but not l-Met, show a significant increase with pressure. From these data, the value of DeltaV(++) for quinonoid intermediate formation from the external aldimine of l-Trp can be estimated to be -26.5 mL/mol, a larger than expected negative value for a proton transfer. These results suggest that there may be a contribution to the deprotonation reaction either from quantum mechanical tunneling or from a mechanical coupling of protein motion and proton transfer associated with the reaction of l-Trp, but not with l-Met.  相似文献   

5.
Gelatinase B (MMP-9), a member of the matrix metalloproteinase family, is a zinc- and calcium-dependent endopeptidase that is known to play a role in tumor cell invasion and in destruction of cartilage in arthritis. It contains a conserved sequence400His-(X)3-His-(X)28-Asp-Asp-(X)2-436Gly, the function of which is under investigation. The conserved Asp-432 and Asp-433 residues were individually replaced with Gly; these substitutions reduced the gelatinolytic activity of the enzyme to 23% and 0%, respectively. Replacing Asp-433 with Glu, however, decreased the gelatinolytic activity of the enzyme by 93% and proteolytic activity of the enzyme for the Mca-Pro-Leu-Gly-Leu-Dpa-Ala-Arg-NH2 substrate by 79%. The wild-type and D432G and D433E mutant enzymes had similarK m values for the synthetic substrate and similarK i values for the competitive inhibitor, GM6001. Thek cat/K m values for D432G and D433E mutant enzymes, however, were reduced by a factor of 4 and their K a Ca values were increased by four- and sixfold, respectively. The significance of His-400 in the activity of the enzyme was assessed by replacing this residue with Ala and Phe. Both H400A and H400F mutants were inactive toward gelatin substrate. These data demonstrate that Asp-432, Asp-433, and His-400 residues are important for the activity of gelatinase B. His-400 may act as a zinc-binding ligand similar to the His-197 in interstitial collagenase (MMP-7) and Asp-432 and Asp-433 residues are probably involved in stabilization of the active site of the enzyme. The His-400 and Asp-433 residues are conserved in all members of the MMP family. Therefore, our results are relevant to this group as a whole.Abbreviations MMP Matrix metalloproteinase - TIMP tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase - IPTG isopropyl-D-thiogalactoside - APMA 4-aminophenyl-mercuric acetate - PCR polymerase chain reaction - Dpa 3(2,4-di-nitrophenyl) diaminopropionic acid - Mca 7-methoxycoumarin acetic acid  相似文献   

6.
Tyr72 is located at the active site of tryptophanase (Trpase) from Proteus vulgaris. For the wild-type Trpase Tyr72 might be considered as the general acid catalyst at the stage of elimination of the leaving groups. The replacement of Tyr72 by Phe leads to a decrease in activity for L-tryptophan by 50,000-fold and to a considerable rearrangement of the active site of Trpase. This rearrangement leads to an increase of room around the alpha-C atom of any bound amino acid, such that covalent binding of alpha-methyl-substituted amino acids becomes possible (which cannot be realized in wild-type Trpase). The changes in reactivities of S-alkyl-L-cysteines provide evidence for an increase of congestion in the proximity of their side groups in the mutant enzyme as compared to wild-type enzyme. The observed alteration of catalytic properties in a large degree originates from a conformational change in the active site. The Y72F Trpase retains significant activity for L-serine, which allowed us to conclude that in the mutant enzyme, some functional group is present which fulfills the role of the general acid catalyst in reactions associated with elimination of small leaving groups.  相似文献   

7.
All known pseudouridine synthases have a conserved aspartic acid residue that is essential for catalysis, Asp-48 in Escherichia coli TruB. To probe the role of this residue, inactive D48C TruB was oxidized to generate the sulfinic acid cognate of aspartic acid. The oxidation restored significant but reduced catalytic activity, consistent with the proposed roles of Asp-48 as a nucleophile and general base. The family of pseudouridine synthases including TruB also has a nearly invariant histidine residue, His-43 in the E. coli enzyme. To examine the role of this conserved residue, site-directed mutagenesis was used to generate H43Q, H43N, H43A, H43G, and H43F TruB. Except for phenylalanine, the substitutions seriously impaired the enzyme, but all of the altered TruB retained significant activity. To examine the roles of Asp-48 and His-43 more fully, the pH dependences of wild-type, oxidized D48C, and H43A TruB were determined. The wild-type enzyme displays a typical bell-shaped profile. With oxidized D48C TruB, logk(cat) varies linearly with pH, suggesting the participation of specific rather than general base catalysis. Substitution of His-43 perturbs the pH profile, but it remains bell-shaped. The ascending limb of the pH profile is assigned to Asp-48, and the descending limb is tentatively ascribed to an active site tyrosine residue, the bound substrate uridine, or the bound product pseudouridine.  相似文献   

8.
The cellular form of human prostatic acid phosphatase (PAcP) is a neutral protein-tyrosine phosphatase (PTP) and may play a key role in regulating the growth and androgen responsiveness of prostate cancer cells. The functional role of the enzyme is at least due in part to its dephosphorylation of c-ErbB-2, an in vivo substrate of the enzyme. In this study, we investigated the molecular mechanism of phosphotyrosine dephosphorylation by cellular PAcP. We mutated several amino acid residues including one cysteine residue that was proposed to be involved in the PTP activity of the enzyme by serving as the phosphate acceptor. The cDNA constructs of mutant enzymes were transiently transfected into C-81 LNCaP and PC-3 human prostate cancer cells that lack the endogenous PAcP expression. The phosphotyrosine level of ErbB-2 in these transfected cells was subsequently analyzed. Our results demonstrated that the phosphotyrosine level of ErbB-2 in cells expressing H12A or D258A mutant PAcP is similar to that in control cells without PAcP expression, suggesting that these mutants are incapable of dephosphorylating ErbB-2. In contrast, cells expressing C183A, C281A, or wild-type PAcP had a decreased phosphotyrosine level of ErbB-2, compared with the control cells. Similar results were obtained from in vitro dephosphorylation of immunoprecipitated ErbB-2 by these mutant enzymes. Furthermore, transient expression of C183A, C281A, or the wild-type enzyme, but not H12A or D258A, decreased the growth rate of C-81 LNCaP cells. The data collectively indicate that His-12 and Asp-258, but not Cys-183 or Cys-281, are required for the PTP activity of PAcP.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Chemical modifications suggested that acidic amino acids such as aspartic and glutamic acids are involved in the active sites ofBacillus cereus sphingomyelinase. Among aspartic acid residues in the conserved regions of this enzyme, Asp-126, Asp-156, Asp-233 and Asp-295 were converted to glycine by site-directed mutagenesis. According to prediction on structural similarity to pancreatic DNase I, His-151 and His-296 were also converted to alanine. The Asp and His mutants, D126G, D156G, D233G, D295G, H151A and H296A, were produced inBacillus brevis 47, a protein-hyperproducing strain. The catalytic activities of D295G, H151A and H296A were completely abolished, and sphingomyelin-hydrolyzing activity of D126G or D156G was reduced by more than 50%. The activity of D126G towardp-NPPC was comparable to that of the wild-type, while D156G catalyzed the hydrolysis of HNP andp-NPPC more efficiently than the wild-type. Hemolytic activities of the mutants were parallel to their sphingomyelin-hydrolyzing activities.  相似文献   

10.
The role of Asp-177 in the His-Asp catalytic dyad of glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase from Leuconostoc mesenteroides has been investigated by a structural and functional characterization of the D177N mutant enzyme. Its three-dimensional structure has been determined by X-ray cryocrystallography in the presence of NAD(+) and in the presence of glucose 6-phosphate plus NADPH. The structure of a glucose 6-phosphate complex of a mutant (Q365C) with normal enzyme activity has also been determined and substrate binding compared. To understand the effect of Asp-177 on the ionization properties of the catalytic base His-240, the pH dependence of kinetic parameters has been determined for the D177N mutant and compared to that of the wild-type enzyme. The structures give details of glucose 6-phosphate binding and show that replacement of the Asp-177 of the catalytic dyad with asparagine does not affect the overall structure of glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase. Additionally, the evidence suggests that the productive tautomer of His-240 in the D177N mutant enzyme is stabilized by a hydrogen bond with Asn-177; hence, the mutation does not affect tautomer stabilization. We conclude, therefore, that the absence of a negatively charged aspartate at 177 accounts for the decrease in catalytic activity at pH 7.8. Structural analysis suggests that the pH dependence of the kinetic parameters of D177N glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase results from an ionized water molecule replacing the missing negative charge of the mutated Asp-177 at high pH. Glucose 6-phosphate binding orders and orients His-178 in the D177N-glucose 6-phosphate-NADPH ternary complex and appears to be necessary to form this water-binding site.  相似文献   

11.
Human bile acid-CoA:amino acid N-acyltransferase (hBAT), an enzyme catalyzing the conjugation of bile acids with the amino acids glycine or taurine has significant sequence homology with dienelactone hydrolases and other alpha/beta hydrolases. These enzymes have a conserved catalytic triad that maps onto the mammalian BATs at residues Cys-235, Asp-328, and His-362 of the human sequence, albeit that the hydrolases contain a serine instead of a cysteine. In the present study, the function of the putative catalytic triad of hBAT was examined by chemical modification with the cysteine alkylating reagent N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) and by site-directed mutagenesis of the triad residues followed by enzymology studies of mutant and wild-type hBATs. Treatment with NEM caused inactivation of wild-type hBAT. However, preincubation of wild-type hBAT with the substrate cholyl-CoA before NEM treatment prevented loss of N-acyltransferase activity. Substitution of His-362 or Asp-328 with alanine results in inactivation of hBAT. Although substitution of Cys-235 with serine generated an hBAT mutant with lower N-acyltransferase activity, it substantially increased the bile acid-CoA thioesterase activity compared with wild type. In summary, data from this study support the existence of an essential catalytic triad within hBAT consisting of Cys-235, His-362, and Asp-328 with Cys-235 serving as the probable nucleophile and thus the site of covalent attachment of the bile acid molecule.  相似文献   

12.
Mendel S  Arndt A  Bugg TD 《Biochemistry》2004,43(42):13390-13396
The extradiol catechol dioxygenases catalyze the non-heme iron(II)-dependent oxidative cleavage of catechols to 2-hydroxymuconaldehyde products. Previous studies of a biomimetic model reaction for extradiol cleavage have highlighted the importance of acid-base catalysis for this reaction. Two conserved histidine residues were identified in the active site of the class III extradiol dioxygenases, positioned within 4-5 A of the iron(II) cofactor. His-115 and His-179 in Escherichia coli 2,3-dihydroxyphenylpropionate 1,2-dioxygenase (MhpB) were replaced by glutamine, alanine, and tyrosine. Each mutant enzyme was catalytically inactive for extradiol cleavage, indicating the essential nature of these acid-base residues. Replacement of neighboring residues Asp-114 and Pro-181 gave D114N, P181A, and P181H mutant enzymes with reduced catalytic activity and altered pH/rate profiles, indicating the role of His-179 as a base and His-115 as an acid. Mutant H179Q was catalytically active for the lactone hydrolysis half-reaction, whereas mutant H115Q was inactive, implying a role for His-115 in lactone hydrolysis. A catalytic mechanism involving His-179 and His-115 as acid-base catalytic residues is proposed.  相似文献   

13.
We report the construction of subunit interface mutants of rabbit muscle aldolase A with altered quaternary structure. A mutation has been described that causes nonspherocytic hemolytic anemia and produces a thermolabile aldolase (Kishi H et al., 1987, Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 84:8623-8627). The disease arises from substitution of Gly for Asp-128, a residue at the subunit interface of human aldolase A. To elucidate the role of this residue in the highly homologous rabbit aldolase A, site-directed mutagenesis is used to replace Asp-128 with Gly, Ala, Asn, Gln, or Val. Rabbit aldolase D128G purified from Escherichia coli is found to be similar to human D128G by kinetic analysis, CD, and thermal inactivation assays. All of the mutant rabbit aldolases are similar to the wild-type rabbit enzyme in secondary structure and kinetic properties. In contrast, whereas the wild-type enzyme is a tetramer, chemical crosslinking and gel filtration indicate that a new dimeric species exists for the mutants. In sedimentation velocity experiments, the mutant enzymes as mixtures of dimer and tetramer at 4 degrees C. Sedimentation at 20 degrees C shows that the mutant enzymes are > 99.5% dimeric and, in the presence of substrate, that the dimeric species is active. Differential scanning calorimetry demonstrates that Tm values of the mutant enzymes are decreased by 12 degrees C compared to wild-type enzyme. The results indicate that Asp-128 is important for interface stability and suggest that 1 role of the quaternary structure of aldolase is to provide thermostability.  相似文献   

14.
Jackson MD  Fjeld CC  Denu JM 《Biochemistry》2003,42(28):8513-8521
Human PP2Calpha is a metal-dependent phosphoserine/phosphothreonine protein phosphatase and is the representative member of the large PPM family. The X-ray structure of human PP2Calpha has revealed an active site containing a dinuclear metal ion center that is coordinated by several invariant carboxylate residues. However, direct evidence for the catalytic function of these and other active-site residues has not been established. Using site-directed mutagenesis and enzyme kinetic analyses, we probed the roles of conserved active-site amino acids within PP2Calpha. Asp-60 bridges metals M1 and M2, and Asp-239 coordinates metal M2, both of which were replaced individually to asparagine residues. These point mutations resulted in >or=1000-fold decrease in k(cat) and >or=30-fold increase in K(m) value for Mn(2+). Mutation of Asp-282 to asparagine caused a 100-fold decrease in k(cat), but no significant effect on K(m) values for metal and substrate, consistent with Asp-282 activating a metal-bound water nucleophile. Mutants T128A, E37Q, D38N, and H40A displayed little or no alterations on k(cat) and K(m) values for substrate or metal ion (Mn(2+)). Analysis of H62Q and R33A yielded k(cat) values that were 20- and 2-fold lower than wild-type, respectively. The mutant R33A showed a 8-fold higher K(m) for substrate, while the K(m) observed with H62Q was unaffected. A pH-rate profile of the H62Q mutant showed loss of the ionization that must be protonated for activity. Br?nsted analysis of substrate leaving group pK(a) values for H62Q indicated a greater dependency (slope -0.84) on leaving group pK(a) in comparison to wild-type (slope -0.33). These data provide strong evidence that His-62 acts as a general acid during the cleavage of the P-O bond.  相似文献   

15.
D-Aminoacylase is an attractive candidate for commercial production of D-amino acids through its catalysis in the zinc-assistant hydrolysis of N-acyl-D-amino acids. We report here the cloning, expression, and structural-based mutation of the D-aminoacylase from Alcaligenes faecalis DA1. A 1,007-bp PCR product amplified with degenerate primers, was used to isolate a 4-kb genomic fragment, encoding a 484-residue D-aminoacylase. The enzyme amino-terminal segment shared significant homology within a variety of enzymes including urease. The structural fold was predicted by 3D-PSSM to be similar to urease and dihydroorotase, which have grouped into a novel alpha/beta-barrel amidohydrolase superfamily with a virtually indistinguishable binuclear metal centers containing six ligands, four histidines, one aspartate, and one carboxylated lysine. Three histidines, His-67, His-69, and His-250, putative metal ligands in D-aminoacylase, have been mutated previously, the remaining histidine (His-220) and aspartate (Asp-366) Asp-65, and four cysteines were then characterized. Substitution of Asp-65, Cys-96, His-220, and Asp-366 with alanine abolished the enzyme activity. The H220A mutant bound approximately half the normal complement of zinc ion as did H250N. However, the C96A mutant showed little zinc-binding ability, revealing that Cys-96 may replace the carboxylated lysine to serve as a bridging ligand. According to the urease structure, the conserved amino-terminal segment including Asp-65 may be responsible for structural stabilization.  相似文献   

16.
The bisphosphatase domain derived from the rat liver 6-phosphofructo-2-kinase/fructose-2,6-bisphosphatase was studied by 1H-13C HMQC NMR spectroscopy of the histidine C2' and H2' nuclei. The bacterially expressed protein was specifically labeled with 13C at the ring C2' position of the histidines. Each of the seven histidine residues gave rise to a single cross-peak in the HMQC spectra, and these were assigned by use of a series of histidine-to-alanine point mutants. His-304, His-344, and His-469 exhibit 13C and 1H resonances that titrated with pH, while the remaining histidine-associated resonances did not. The 13C and 1H chemical shifts indicate that at neutral pH, His-304 and His-446 are deprotonated, while His-469 is protonated. The pKa of His-344 was determined to be 7.04. The 13C chemical shifts suggest that the deprotonated His-258 exists as the N1' tautomer, while His-392 and His-419 are protonated in the resting, wild-type enzyme. Mutation of the remaining member of the catalytic triad, Glu-327, to alanine in the resting enzyme caused an upfield shift of 1.58 and 1.30 ppm in the 1H and 13C dimensions, respectively, and significant narrowing of the His-258 cross-peak. Mutation of His-446 to alanine produced perturbations of the His-258 cross-peak that were similar to those detected in the E327A mutant. The His-392 resonances were also shifted by the E327A and H446A mutations. These observations strongly suggest that residues His-258, Glu-327, His-392, and His-446 exist within a network of interacting residues that encompasses the catalytic site of the bisphosphatase and includes specific contacts with the C-terminal regulatory region of the enzyme. The specifically 13C-labeled bisphosphatase was monitored during turnover by HMQC spectra acquired from the transient N3' phosphohistidine intermediate complex in the wild-type enzyme, the E327A mutant, and the H446A mutant. These complexes were formed during reaction with the physiological substrate fructose-2, 6-bisphosphate. Upon formation of the phosphohistidine at His-258, the 13C and 1H resonances of this residue were shifted downfield by 1.7 and 0.31 ppm, respectively, in the wild-type enzyme. The upfield shifts of the His-258 resonances in the E327A and H446A mutant resting enzymes were reversed when the phosphohistidine was formed, generating spectra very similar to that of the wild-type enzyme in the intermediate complex. In contrast, the binding of fructose-6-phosphate, the reaction product, to the resting enzyme did not promote significant changes in the histidine-associated resonances in either the wild-type or the mutant enzymes. The interpretation of these data within the context of the X-ray crystal structures of the enzyme is used to define the role of Glu-327 in the catalytic mechanism of the bisphosphatase and to identify His-446 as a putative link in the chain of molecular events that results in activation of the bisphosphatase site by cAMP-dependent phosphorylation of the hepatic bifunctional enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
The crotonase homolog, 6-oxo camphor hydrolase (OCH), catalyzes the desymmetrization of bicyclic beta-diketones to optically active keto acids via an enzymatic retro-Claisen reaction, resulting in the cleavage of a carbon-carbon bond. We have previously reported the structure of OCH (Whittingham, J. L., Turkenburg, J. P., Verma, C. S., Walsh, M. A., and Grogan, G. (2003) J. Biol. Chem. 278, 1744-1750), which suggested the involvement of five residues, His-45, His-122, His-145, Asp-154, and Glu-244, in catalysis. Here we report mutation studies on OCH that reveal that H145A and D154N mutants of OCH have greatly reduced values of k(cat)/K(m) derived from a very large increase in K(m) for the native substrate, 6-oxo camphor. In addition, H122A has a greatly reduced value of k(cat), and its K(m) is five times that of the wild-type. The location of the active site is confirmed by the 1.9-A structure of the H122A mutant of OCH complexed with the minor diastereoisomer of (2S,4S)-alpha-campholinic acid, the natural product of the enzyme. This shows the pendant acetate of the product hydrogen bonded to a His-145/Asp-154 dyad and the endocyclic carbonyl of the cyclopentane ring hydrogen bonded to Trp-40. The results are suggestive of a base-catalyzed mechanism of C-C bond cleavage and provide clues to the origin of prochiral selectivity by the enzyme and to the recruitment of the crotonase fold for alternate modes of transition state stabilization to those described for other crotonase superfamily members.  相似文献   

18.
beta-Ketoacyl-[acyl carrier protein (ACP)] synthase forms new carbon-carbon bonds in three steps: transfer of an acyl primer from ACP to the enzyme, decarboxylation of the elongating substrate and its condensation with the acyl primer substrate. Six residues of Escherichia coli beta-ketoacyl-ACP synthase I (KAS I) implicated in these reactions were subjected to site-directed mutagenesis. Analyses of the abilities of C163A, C163S, H298A, D306A, E309A, K328A, and H333A to carry out the three reactions lead to the following conclusions. The active site Cys-163 is not required for decarboxylation, whereas His-298 and His-333 are indispensable. Neither of the histidines is essential for increasing the nucleophilicity of Cys-163 to enable transfer of the acyl primer substrate. Maintenance of the structural integrity of the active site by Asp-306 and Glu-309 is required for decarboxylation but not for transfer. One function of Lys-328 occurs very early in catalysis, potentially before transfer. These results in conjunction with structural analyses of substrate complexes have led to a model for KAS I catalysis [Olsen, J. G., Kadziola, A., von Wettstein-Knowles, P., Siggaard-Andersen, M., and Larsen, S. (2001) Structure 9, 233-243]. Another facet of catalysis revealed by the mutant analyses is that the acyl primer transfer activity of beta-ketoacyl-ACP synthase I is inhibited by free ACP at physiological concentrations. Differences in the inhibitory response by individual mutant proteins indicate that interaction of free ACP with Cys-163, Asp-306, Glu-309, Lys-328, and His-333 might form a sensitive regulatory mechanism for the transfer of acyl primers.  相似文献   

19.
The mutants H250A and D197A of Agp1 phytochrome from Agrobacterium tumefaciens were prepared and investigated by different spectroscopic and biochemical methods. Asp-197 and His-250 are highly conserved amino acids and are part of the hydrogen-bonding network that involves the chromophore. Both substitutions cause a destabilization of the protonated chromophore in the Pr state as revealed by resonance Raman and UV-visible absorption spectroscopy. Titration experiments demonstrate a lowering of the pK(a) from 11.1 (wild type) to 8.8 in H250A and 7.2 in D197A. Photoconversion of the mutants does not lead to the Pfr state. H250A is arrested in a meta-Rc-like state in which the chromophore is deprotonated. For H250A and the wild-type protein, deprotonation of the chromophore in meta-Rc is coupled to the release of a proton to the external medium, whereas the subsequent proton re-uptake, linked to the formation of the Pfr state in the wild-type protein, is not observed for H250A. No transient proton exchange with the external medium occurs in D197A, suggesting that Asp-197 may be the proton release group. Both mutants do not undergo the photo-induced protein structural changes that in the wild-type protein are detectable by size exclusion chromatography. These conformational changes are, therefore, attributed to the meta-Rc --> Pfr transition and most likely coupled to the transient proton re-uptake. The present results demonstrate that Asp-197 and His-250 are essential for stabilizing the protonated chromophore structure in the parent Pr state, which is required for the primary photochemical process, and for the complete photo-induced conversion to the Pfr state.  相似文献   

20.
Phospholipase D from Streptomyces chromofuscus (sc-PLD) is a member of the diverse family of metallo-phosphodiesterase/phosphatase enzymes that also includes purple acid phosphatases, protein phosphatases, and nucleotide phosphodiesterases. Whereas iron is an essential cofactor for scPLD activity, Mn2+ is also found in the enzyme. A third metal ion, Ca2+, has been shown to enhance scPLD catalytic activity although it is not an essential cofactor. Sequence alignment of scPLD with known phosphodiesterases and phosphatases requiring metal ions suggested that His-212, Glu-213, and Asp-389 could be involved in Mn2+ binding. H212A, E213A, and D389A were prepared to test this hypothesis. These three mutant enzymes and wild type scPLD show similar metal content but considerably different catalytic properties, suggesting different roles for each residue. His-212 appears involved in binding the phosphate group of substrates, whereas Glu-213 acts as a ligand for Ca2+. D389A showed a greatly reduced phosphodiesterase activity but almost unaltered ability to hydrolyze the phosphate group in p-nitrophenyl phosphate suggesting it had a critical role in aligning groups at the active site to control phosphodiesterase versus phosphatase activities. We propose a model for substrate and cofactor binding to the catalytic site of scPLD based on these results and on sequence alignment to purple acid phosphatases of known structure.  相似文献   

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