首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 46 毫秒
1.
Mosebi S  Sayed Y  Burke J  Dirr HW 《Biochemistry》2003,42(51):15326-15332
The C-terminal region in class alpha glutathione transferases (GSTs) modulates the catalytic and nonsubstrate ligand binding functions of these enzymes. Except for mouse GST A1-1 (mGST A1-1), the structures of class alpha GSTs have a bulky aliphatic side chain topologically equivalent to Ile219 in human GST A1-1 (hGST A1-1). In mGST A1-1, the corresponding residue is an alanine. To investigate the role of Ile219 in determining the conformational dynamics of the C-terminal region in hGST A1-1, the residue was replaced by alanine. The substitution had no effect on the global structure of hGST A1-1 but did reduce the conformational stability of the C-terminal region of the protein. This region could be stabilized by ligands bound at the active site. The catalytic behavior of hGST A1-1 was significantly compromised by the I219A mutation as demonstrated by reduced enzyme activity, increased K(m) for the substrates glutathione (GSH) and 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (CDNB), and reduced catalytic efficiencies. Inhibition studies also indicated that the binding affinities for product and substrate analogues were dramatically decreased. The affinity of the mutant for GSH was, however, only slightly increased, indicating that the G-site was unaltered by the mutation. The binding affinity and stoichiometry for the anionic dye 8-anilino-1-naphthalene sulfonate (ANS) was also not significantly affected by the I219A mutation. However, the lower DeltaC(p) for ANS binding to the mutant (-0.34 kJ/mol per K compared with -0.84 kJ/mol per K for the wild-type protein) suggests that ANS binding to the mutant results in the burial of less hydrophobic surface area. Fluorescence data also indicates that ANS bound to the mutant is more prone to quenching by water. Overall, the data from this study, together with the structural details of the C-terminal region in mGST A1-1, show that Ile219 is an important structural determinant of the stability and dynamics of the C-terminal region of hGST A1-1.  相似文献   

2.
Monobromobimane (mBBr), functions as a substrate of porcine glutathione S-transferase pi (GST pi): The enzyme catalyzes the reaction of mBBr with glutathione. S-(Hydroxyethyl)bimane, a nonreactive analog of monobromobimane, acts as a competitive inhibitor with respect to mBBr as substrate but does not affect the reaction of GST pi with another substrate, 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (CDNB). In the absence of glutathione, monobromobimane inactivates GST pi at pH 7.0 and 25 degrees C as assayed using mBBr as substrate, with a lesser effect on the enzyme's use of CDNB as substrate. These results indicate that the sites occupied by CDNB and mBBr are not identical. Inactivation is proportional to the incorporation of 2 moles of bimane/mole of subunit. Modification of GST pi with mBBr does not interfere with its binding of 8-anilino-1-naphthalene sulfonate, indicating that this hydrophobic site is not the target of monobromobimane. S-Methylglutathione and S-(hydroxyethyl)bimane each yield partial protection against inactivation and decrease reagent incorporation, while glutathionyl-bimane protects completely against inactivation. Peptide analysis after trypsin digestion indicates that mBBr modifies Cys45 and Cys99 equally. Modification of Cys45 is reduced in the presence of S-methylglutathione, indicating that this residue is at or near the glutathione binding region. In contrast, modification of Cys99 is reduced in the presence of S-(hydroxyethyl)bimane, suggesting that this residue is at or near the mBBr xenobiotic substrate binding site. Modification of Cys99 can best be understood by reaction with monobromobimane while it is bound to its xenobiotic substrate site in an alternate orientation. These results support the concept that glutathione S-transferase accomplishes its ability to react with a diversity of substrates in part by harboring distinct xenobiotic substrate sites.  相似文献   

3.
Helix 9, the major structural element in the C-terminal region of class Alpha glutathione transferases, forms part of the active site of these enzymes where its dynamic properties modulate both catalytic and ligandin functions. A conserved aspartic acid N-capping motif for helix 9 was identified by sequence alignments of the C-terminal regions of class Alpha glutathione S-transferases (GSTs) and an analysis by the helix-coil algorithm AGADIR. The contribution of the N-capping motif to the stability and dynamics of the region was investigated by replacing the N-cap residue Asp-209 with a glycine in human glutathione S-transferase A1-1 (hGST A1-1) and in a peptide corresponding to its C-terminal region. Far-UV circular dichroism and AGADIR analyses indicate that, in the absence of tertiary interactions, the wild-type peptide displays a low intrinsic tendency to form a helix and that this tendency is reduced significantly by the Asp-to-Gly mutation. Disruption of the N-capping motif of helix 9 in hGST A1-1 alters the conformational dynamics of the C-terminal region and, consequently, the features of the H-site to which hydrophobic substrates (e.g. 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (CDNB)) and nonsubstrates (e.g. 8-anilino-1-naphthalene sulfonate (ANS)) bind. Isothermal calorimetric and fluorescence data for complex formation between ANS and protein suggest that the D209G-induced perturbation in the C-terminal region prevents normal ligand-induced localization of the region at the active site, resulting in a less hydrophobic and more solvent-exposed H-site. Therefore, the catalytic efficiency of the enzyme with CDNB is diminished due to a lowered affinity for the electrophilic substrate and a lower stabilization of the transition state.  相似文献   

4.
Hematopoietic prostaglandin (PG) D synthase (PGDS) is the first identified vertebrate ortholog in the Sigma class of the glutathione S-transferase (GST) family and catalyzes both isomerization of PGH(2) to PGD(2) and conjugation of glutathione to 1-chloro-2, 4-dinitrobenzene. We introduced site-directed mutations of Tyr(8), Arg(14), Trp(104), Lys(112), Tyr(152), Cys(156), Lys(198), and Leu(199), which are presumed to participate in catalysis or PGH(2) substrate binding based on the crystallographic structure. Mutants were analyzed in terms of structure, GST and PGDS activities, and activation of the glutathione thiol group. Of all the mutants, only Y8F, W104I, K112E, and L199F showed minor but substantial differences in their far-UV circular dichroism spectra from the wild-type enzyme. Y8F, R14K/E, and W104I were completely inactive. C156L/Y selectively lost only PGDS activity. K112E reduced GST activity slightly and PGDS activity markedly, whereas K198E caused a selective decrease in PGDS activity and K(m) for glutathione and PGH(2) in the PGDS reaction. No significant changes were observed in the catalytic activities of Y152F and L199F, although their K(m) for glutathione was increased. Using 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) as an SH-selective agent, we found that only Y8F and R14E/K did not accelerate the reactivity of the glutathione thiol group under the low reactivity condition of pH 5.0. These results indicate that Lys(112), Cys(156), and Lys(198) are involved in the binding of PGH(2); Trp(104) is critical for structural integrity of the catalytic center for GST and PGDS activities; and Tyr(8) and Arg(14) are essential for activation of the thiol group of glutathione.  相似文献   

5.
The inactivation mechanism(s) of human glutathione S-transferase P1-1 (hGST P1-1) by the catechol metabolite of Premarin estrogens, 4-hydroxyequilenin (4-OHEN), was (were) studied by means of site-directed mutagenesis, electrospray ionization mass spectrometric analysis, titration of free thiol groups, kinetic studies of irreversible inhibition, and analysis of band patterns on nonreducing sodium dodecyl sulfate--polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). The four cysteines (Cys 14, Cys 47, Cys 101, and Cys 169 in the primary sequence) in hGST P1-1 are susceptible to electrophilic attack and/or oxidative damage leading to loss of enzymatic activity. To investigate the role of cysteine residues in the 4-OHEN-mediated inactivation of this enzyme, one or a combination of cysteine residues was replaced by alanine residues (C47A, C101A, C47A/C101A, C14A/C47A/C101A, and C47A/C101A/C169A mutants). Mutation of Cys 47 decreased the affinity for the substrate GSH but not for the cosubstrate 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (CDNB). However, the Cys 47 mutation did not significantly affect the rate of catalysis since V(max) values of the mutants were similar or higher compared to that of wild type. Electrospray ionization mass spectrometric analyses of wild-type and mutant enzymes treated with 4-OHEN showed that a single molecule of 4-OHEN-o-quinone attached to the proteins, with the exception of the C14A/C47A/C101A mutant where no covalent adduct was detected. 4-OHEN also caused oxidative damage as demonstrated by the appearance of disulfide-bonded species on nonreducing SDS--PAGE and protection of 4-OHEN-mediated enzyme inhibition by free radical scavengers. The studies of thiol group titration and irreversible kinetic experiments indicated that the different cysteines have distinct reactivity for 4-OHEN; Cys 47 was the most reactive thiol group whereas Cys 169 was resistant to modification. These results demonstrate that hGST P1-1 is inactivated by 4-OHEN through two possible mechanisms: (1) covalent modification of cysteine residues and (2) oxidative damage leading to proteins inactivated by disulfide bond formation.  相似文献   

6.
Reaction of rat liver glutathione S-transferase, isozyme 1-1, with 4-(fluorosulfonyl)benzoic acid (4-FSB), a xenobiotic substrate analogue, results in a time-dependent inactivation of the enzyme to a final value of 35% of its original activity when assayed at pH 6.5 with 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (CDNB) as substrate. The rate of inactivation exhibits a nonlinear dependence on the concentration of 4-FSB from 0.25 mM to 9 mM, characterized by a KI of 0.78 mM and kmax of 0.011 min-1. S-Hexylglutathione or the xenobiotic substrate analogue, 2,4-dinitrophenol, protects against inactivation of the enzyme by 4-FSB, whereas S-methylglutathione has little effect on the reaction. These experiments indicate that reaction occurs within the active site of the enzyme, probably in the binding site of the xenobiotic substrate, close to the glutathione binding site. Incorporation of [3,5-3H]-4-FSB into the enzyme in the absence and presence of S-hexylglutathione suggests that modification of one residue is responsible for the partial loss of enzyme activity. Tyr 8 and Cys 17 are shown to be the reaction targets of 4-FSB, but only Tyr 8 is protected against 4-FSB by S-hexylglutathione. DTT regenerates cysteine from the reaction product of cysteine and 4-FSB, but does not reactivate the enzyme. These results show that modification of Tyr 8 by 4-FSB causes the partial inactivation of the enzyme. The Michaelis constants for various substrates are not changed by the modification of the enzyme. The pH dependence of the enzyme-catalyzed reaction of glutathione with CDNB for the modified enzyme, as compared with the native enzyme, reveals an increase of about 0.9 in the apparent pKa, which has been interpreted as representing the ionization of enzyme-bound glutathione; however, this pKa of about 7.4 for modified enzyme remains far below the pK of 9.1 for the -SH of free glutathione. Previously, it was considered that Tyr 8 was essential for GST catalysis. In contrast, we conclude that Tyr 8 facilitates the ionization of the thiol group of glutathione bound to glutathione S-transferase, but is not required for enzyme activity.  相似文献   

7.
The thermodynamics of binding of both the substrate glutathione (GSH) and the competitive inhibitor S-hexylglutathione to the mutant Y49F of human glutathione S-transferase (hGST P1-1), a key residue at the dimer interface, has been investigated by isothermal titration calorimetry and fluorescence spectroscopy. Calorimetric measurements indicated that the binding of these ligands to both the Y49F mutant and wild-type enzyme is enthalpically favorable and entropically unfavorable over the temperature range studied. The affinity of these ligands for the Y49F mutant is lower than those for the wild-type enzyme due mainly to an entropy change. Therefore, the thermodynamic effect of this mutation is to decrease the entropy loss due to binding. Calorimetric titrations in several buffers with different ionization heat amounts indicate a release of protons when the mutant binds GSH, whereas protons are taken up in binding S-hexylglutathione at pH 6.5. This suggests that the thiol group of GSH releases protons to buffer media during binding and a group with low pKa (such as Asp98) is responsible for the uptake of protons. The temperature dependence of the free energy of binding, DeltaG0, is weak because of the enthalpy-entropy compensation caused by a large heat capacity change. The heat capacity change is -199.5 +/- 26.9 cal K-1 mol-1 for GSH binding and -333.6 +/- 28.8 cal K-1 mol-1 for S-hexylglutathione binding. The thermodynamic parameters are consistent with the mutation Tyr49 --> Phe, producing a slight conformational change in the active site.  相似文献   

8.
The effects of benzyl (BITC) and phenethyl isothiocyanate (PEITC) on the activity of a P450 2E1 mutant where the conserved threonine at position 303 was replaced with an alanine residue (P450 2E1 T303A) were examined. PEITC inactivated the mutant enzyme with a K(I) of 1.6 microM. PEITC also inactivated the wild-type P450 2E1 as efficiently with a K(I) of 2.7 microM. The inactivation was entirely dependent on NADPH and followed pseudo-first-order kinetics. Previously we reported the mechanism-based inactivation of wild-type P450 2E1 by BITC with a K(I) of 13 microM. In contrast to the wild-type enzyme, the P450 2E1 T303A mutant was not inactivated by BITC but it was inhibited in a competitive manner with a K(i) of 3 microM. The binding constants determined by spectral binding studies were similar for both enzymes. The binding of BITC produced characteristic Type I spectral changes in the wild-type and mutant enzyme. A radiolabeled BITC metabolite bound to P450 2E1 and to P450 2E1 T303A when both enzymes were incubated with [(14)C]BITC and NADPH. Whole protein electrospray ion trap mass spectrometry indicated that a mass consistent with one molecule of benzylisocyanate and oxygen was adducted to the wild-type enzyme. The mass adducted to the T303A mutant was consistent with the addition of one hydroxylated BITC or of one benzylisocyanate moiety and one sulfur molecule. Analysis of the metabolites of BITC indicated that each enzyme produced similar metabolites but that the mutant enzyme generated significantly higher amounts of benzaldehyde and benzoic acid when compared to the wild-type enzyme.  相似文献   

9.
Previously, we discovered that human glutathione transferase (hGST) A1-1 could be site-specifically acylated on a tyrosine residue (Y9) to form ester products using thiolesters of glutathione (GS-thiolesters) as acylating reagents. Out of a total of 20 GS-thiolester reagents tested, 15 (75%) are accepted by hGST A1-1 and thus this is a very versatile reaction. The present investigation was aimed at obtaining a more stable product, an amide bond, between the acyl group and the protein, in order to further increase the value of the reaction. Three lysine mutants (Y9K, A216K, and Y9F/A216K) were therefore prepared and screened against a panel of 18 GS-thiolesters. The Y9K mutant did not react with any of the reagents. The double mutant Y9F/A216K reacted with only one reagent, but in contrast, the A216K mutant could be acylated at the introduced lysine 216 with eight (44%) of the GS-thiolesters. The reaction can take place in the presence of glutathione and even in a crude cell lysate for five (28%) of the reagents. Through the screening process we obtained some basic rules relating to reagent requirements. We have thus produced a mutant (A216K) that can be rapidly and site-specifically modified at a lysine residue to form a stable amide linkage with a range of acyl groups. One of the successful reagents is a fluorophore that potentially can be used in downstream protein purification and protein fusion applications.  相似文献   

10.
Zeng J  Liu Y  Wu L  Li D 《Biochimica et biophysica acta》2007,1774(12):1628-1634
Medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (MCAD) and acyl-CoA oxidase (ACO) are key enzymes catalyzing the rate-determining step for the beta-oxidation of fatty acids. Tyr375 of MCAD is conserved in all acyl-CoA dehydrogenases and is an important residue for substrate binding. Four Tyr375 variant enzymes of rat liver MCAD were obtained through site-directed mutagenesis. Y375K was found to have intrinsic acyl-CoA oxidase activity, which was confirmed using HPLC analysis, while the wild-type and other Tyr375 variant enzymes did not show detectable oxidase activity. The kinetic parameters for the oxidase activity of Y375K variant enzyme were determined to be k(cat) of 320+/-80 h(-1) and K(M) of 30+/-15 microM using hexanoyl-CoA as the substrate. The oxidase activity of Y375K increased more than 200 times compared with that reported for the MCAD wild-type enzyme from mammalian sources. Molecular modeling study shows that the solvent accessible area for Y375K variant enzyme is wider than that of the wild-type enzyme, which indicates that Tyr375 may function as a switch against solvent accession. The mutation of this residue to Lys375 allows molecular oxygen to enter into the catalytic site serving as the electron acceptor for the reduced FAD cofactor.  相似文献   

11.
The sequence of human myoglobin (Mb) is similar to that of other species except for a unique cysteine at position 110 (Cys(110)). Adding hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) to human Mb affords Trp(14)-peroxyl, Tyr(103)-phenoxyl, and Cys(110)-thiyl radicals and coupling of Cys(110)-thiyl radicals yields a homodimer through intermolecular disulfide bond formation (Witting, P. K., Douglas, D. J., and Mauk, A. G. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 20391-20398). Treating a solution of wild type Mb and H(2)O(2) with 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide (DMPO) at DMPO:protein /= 100 mol/mol only DMPO-Tyr(103) radicals were present. The DMPO-dependent decrease in DMPO-Cys(110) was matched by a near 1:1 stoichiometric increase in DMPO-Tyr(103). In contrast, reaction of the Y103F human Mb with H(2)O(2) gave no DMPO-Cys(110) at DMPO:protein /= 100 mol/mol (i.e. conditions that consistently gave DMPO-Tyr(103) in the case of wild type Mb). No detectable homodimer was formed by incubation of the Y103F variant with H(2)O(2). However, the homodimer was detected in a mixture of both the Y103F and C110A variants of human Mb upon treatment with H(2)O(2) (C110A:Y103F:H(2)O(2) 2:1:5 mol/mol/mol); the yield of this homodimer increased with increasing ratios of C110A:Y103F. Together, these data suggest that addition of H(2)O(2) to human Mb can produce Cys(110)-thiyl radicals through an intermolecular electron transfer reaction from Cys(110) to a Tyr(103)-phenoxyl radical.  相似文献   

12.
Two human Mu class glutathione transferases, hGST M1-1 and hGST M2-2, with high sequence identity (84%) exhibit a 100-fold difference in activities with the substrates aminochrome, 2-cyano-1,3-dimethyl-1-nitrosoguanidine (cyanoDMNG), and 1,2-dichloro-4-nitrobenzene (DCNB), hGST M2-2 being more efficient. A sequence alignment with the rat Mu class GST M3-3, an enzyme also showing high activities with aminochrome and DCNB, demonstrated an identical structural cluster of residues 164-168 in the alpha6-helices of rGST M3-3 and hGST M2-2, a motif unique among known sequences of human, rat, and mouse Mu class GSTs. A putative electrostatic network Arg107-Asp161-Arg165-Glu164(-Gln167) was identified based on the published three-dimensional structure of hGST M2-2. Corresponding variant residues of hGSTM1-1 (Leu165, Asp164, and Arg167) as well as the active site residue Ser209 were targeted for point mutations, introducing hGST M2-2 residues to the framework of hGST M1-1, to improve the activities with substrates characteristic of hGST M2-2. In addition, chimeric enzymes composed of hGST M1-1 and hGST M2-2 sequences were analyzed. The activity with 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (CDNB) was retained in all mutant enzymes, proving that they were catalytically competent, but none of the point mutations improved the activities with hGST M2-2 characteristic substrates. The chimeric enzymes showed that the structural determinants of these activities reside in domain II and that residue Arg165 in hGST M2-2 appears to be important for the reactions with cyanoDMNG and DCNB. A mutant, which contained all the hGST M2-2 residues of the putative electrostatic network, was still lacking one order of magnitude of the activities with the characteristic substrates of wild-type hGST M2-2. It was concluded that a limited set of point mutations is not sufficient, but that indirect secondary structural affects also contribute to the hGST M2-2 characteristic activities with aminochrome, cyanoDMNG, and DCNB.  相似文献   

13.
The loop following helix α2 in glutathione transferase P1-1 has two conserved residues, Cys48 and Tyr50, important for glutathione (GSH) binding and catalytic activity. Chemical modification of Cys48 thwarts the catalytic activity of the enzyme, and mutation of Tyr50 generally decreases the kcat value and the affinity for GSH in a differential manner. Cys48 and Tyr50 were targeted by site-specific mutations and chemical modifications in order to investigate how the α2 loop modulates GSH binding and catalysis. Mutation of Cys48 into Ala increased KMGSH 24-fold and decreased the binding energy of GSH by 1.5 kcal/mol. Furthermore, the protein stability against thermal inactivation and chemical denaturation decreased. The crystal structure of the Cys-free variant was determined, and its similarity to the wild-type structure suggests that the mutation of Cys48 increases the flexibility of the α2 loop rather than dislocating the GSH-interacting residues. On the other hand, replacement of Tyr50 with Cys, producing mutant Y50C, increased the Gibbs free energy of the catalyzed reaction by 4.8 kcal/mol, lowered the affinity for S-hexyl glutathione by 2.2 kcal/mol, and decreased the thermal stability. The targeted alkylation of Cys50 in Y50C increased the affinity for GSH and protein stability. Characterization of the most active alkylated variants, S-n-butyl-, S-n-pentyl-, and S-cyclobutylmethyl-Y50C, indicated that the affinity for GSH is restored by stabilizing the α2 loop through positioning of the key residue into the lock structure of the neighboring subunit. In addition, kcat can be further modulated by varying the structure of the key residue side chain, which impinges on the rate-limiting step of catalysis.  相似文献   

14.
Glutathione S-transferases catalyze the conjugation of glutathione with endogenous and exogenous xenobiotics. Hu and Colman (1995) proposed that there are two distinct substrate sites in rat GST M1-1, a 1-chloro-2,4-dintrobenzene (CDNB) substrate site located in the vicinity of tyrosine-115, and a monobromobimane (mBBr) substrate site. To determine whether the mBBr substrate site is distinguishable from the CDNB substrate site, we tested S-(hydroxyethyl)bimane, a nonreactive derivative of mBBr, for its ability to compete kinetically with the substrates. We find that S-(hydroxyethyl)bimane is a competitive inhibitor (K(I) = 0.36 microM) when mBBr is used as substrate, but not when CDNB is used as substrate, demonstrating that these two sites are distinct. Using site-directed mutagenesis, we have localized the mBBr substrate site to an area midway through alpha-helix 4 (residues 90-114) and have identified residues that are important in the enzymatic reaction. Substitution of alanine at positions along alpha-helix 4 reveals that mutations at positions 103, 104, and 109 exhibit a greater perturbation of the enzymatic reaction with mBBr than with CDNB as substrate. Various other substitutions at positions 103 and 104 reveal that a hydrophobic residue is necessary at each of these positions to maintain optimal affinity of the enzyme for mBBr and preserve the secondary structure of the enzyme. Substitutions at position 109 indicate that this residue is important in the enzyme's affinity for mBBr but has a minimal effect on Vmax. These results demonstrate that the promiscuity of rat GST M1-1 is in part due to at least two distinct substrate sites.  相似文献   

15.
The bacterial expression and purification of human pi class glutathione S-transferase (hGST P1-1) as a hexahistidine-tagged polypeptide was performed. The expression plasmid for hGST P1-1 was constructed by ligation of the cDNA which codes for the protein into the expression vector pET-15b. The expressed protein was purified by either glutathione or metal (Co(2+)) affinity column chromatography, which produced the pure and fully active enzyme in one step with a yield of more than 30 mg/liter culture. The activity of the purified protein was 130 units mg(-1) from the GSH affinity column and 112 units mg(-1) from the Co(2+) affinity column chromatography. The purity of the protein was assessed by electrospray ionization mass spectrometry and size-exclusion chromatography. It showed that the real molecular weight of the hexahistidine-tagged hGST P1-1 polypeptide chain agreed with the calculated value and that the purified protein eluted as an apparent homodimer on the gel filtration column. Our expression system allows the expression and purification of active hexahistidine-tagged hGST P1-1 in high yield with no need of removal of the hexahistidine tag and gives pure protein in one purification step allowing further study of this enzyme.  相似文献   

16.
Ralat LA  Colman RF 《Biochemistry》2006,45(41):12491-12499
Alpha-tocopherol, the most abundant form of vitamin E present in humans, is a noncompetitive inhibitor of glutathione S-transferase pi (GST pi), but its binding site had not been located. Tocopherol iodoacetate (TIA), a reactive analogue, produces a time-dependent inactivation of GST pi to a limit of 25% residual activity. The rate constant for inactivation, k(obs), exhibits a nonlinear dependence on reagent concentration, with K(I) = 19 microM and k(max) = 0.158 min(-)(1). Complete protection against inactivation is provided by tocopherol and tocopherol acetate, whereas glutathione derivatives, electrophilic substrate analogues, buffers, or nonsubstrate hydrophobic ligands have little effect on k(obs). These results indicate that TIA reacts as an affinity label of a distinguishable tocopherol binding site. Loss of activity occurs concomitant with incorporation of about 1 mol of reagent/mol of enzyme subunit when the enzyme is maximally inactivated. Isolation of the labeled peptide from the tryptic digest shows that Tyr(79) is the only enzymic amino acid modified. The Y79F, Y79S, and Y79A mutant enzymes were generated, expressed, and purified. Changing Tyr(79) to Ser or Ala, but not Phe, renders the enzyme insensitive to inhibition by either tocopherol or tocopherol acetate as demonstrated by increases of at least 49-fold in K(I) values as compared to the wild-type enzyme. These results and examination of the crystal structure of GST pi suggest that tocopherols bind at a novel site, where an aromatic residue at position 79 is essential for binding.  相似文献   

17.
We have sought the structural basis for the differing substrate specificities of human glutathione transferase P1-1 (class Pi) and human glutathione transferase A1-1 (class Alpha) by adding an extra helix (helix 9), found in the electrophilic substrate-binding site (H-site) of the human class Alpha enzyme, at the C terminus of the human class Pi enzyme. This class Pi-chimera (CODA) was expressed in Escherichia coli, purified and characterized by kinetic and crystallographic approaches. The presence of the newly engineered tail in the H-site of the human Pi enzyme alters its catalytic properties towards those exhibited by the human Alpha enzyme, as assessed using cumene hydroperoxide (diagnostic for class Alpha enzymes) and ethacrynic acid (diagnostic for class Pi) as co-substrates. There is a change of substrate selectivity in the latter case, as the k(cat)/K(m)(EA) value decreases about 70-fold, compared to that of class Pi. With 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene as co-substrate there is a loss of catalytic activity to about 2% with respect to that of the Pi enzyme. Crystallographic and kinetic studies of the class Pi-chimera provide important clues to explain these altered catalytic properties. The new helix forms many complimentary interactions with the rest of the protein and re-models the original electrophilic substrate-binding site towards one that is more enclosed, albeit flexible. Of particular note are the interactions between Glu205 of the new tail and the catalytic residues, Tyr7 and Tyr108, and the thiol moiety of glutathione (GSH). These interactions may provide an explanation of the more than one unit increase in the pK(a) value of the GSH thiolate and affect both the turnover number and GSH binding, using 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene as co-substrate. The data presented are consistent with the engineered tail adopting a highly mobile or disordered state in the apo form of the enzyme.  相似文献   

18.
The contributions to substrate binding and catalysis of 13 amino acid residues of the Caenorhabditis elegans diadenosine tetraphosphate pyrophosphohydrolase (Ap(4)A hydrolase) predicted from the crystal structure of an enzyme-inhibitor complex have been investigated by site-directed mutagenesis. Sixteen glutathione S-transferase-Ap(4)A hydrolase fusion proteins were expressed and their k(cat) and K(m) values determined after removal of the glutathione S-transferase domain. As expected for a Nudix hydrolase, the wild type k(cat) of 23 s(-1) was reduced by 10(5)-, 10(3)-, and 30-fold, respectively, by replacement of the conserved P(4)-phosphate-binding catalytic residues Glu(56), Glu(52), and Glu(103) by Gln. K(m) values were not affected, indicating a lack of importance for substrate binding. In contrast, mutating His(31) to Val or Ala and Lys(83) to Met produced 10- and 16-fold increases in K(m) compared with the wild type value of 8.8 microm. These residues stabilize the P(1)-phosphate. H31V and H31A had a normal k(cat) but K83M showed a 37-fold reduction in k(cat). Lys(36) also stabilizes the P(1)-phosphate and a K36M mutant had a 10-fold reduced k(cat) but a relatively normal K(m). Thus both Lys(36) and Lys(83) may play a role in catalysis. The previously suggested roles of Tyr(27), His(38), Lys(79), and Lys(81) in stabilizing the P(2) and P(3)-phosphates were not confirmed by mutagenesis, indicating the absence of phosphate-specific binding contacts in this region. Also, mutating both Tyr(76) and Tyr(121), which clamp one substrate adenosine moiety between them in the crystal structure, to Ala only increased K(m) 4-fold. It is concluded that interactions with the P(1)- and P(4)-phosphates are minimum and sufficient requirements for substrate binding by this class of enzyme, indicating that it may have a much wider substrate range then previously believed.  相似文献   

19.
Glutathione transferase (GST) A3-3 is the most efficient human steroid double-bond isomerase known. The activity with Delta(5)-androstene-3,17-dione is highly dependent on the phenolic hydroxyl group of Tyr-9 and the thiolate of glutathione. Removal of these groups caused an 1.1 x 10(5)-fold decrease in k(cat); the Y9F mutant displayed a 150-fold lower isomerase activity in the presence of glutathione and a further 740-fold lower activity in the absence of glutathione. The Y9F mutation in GST A3-3 did not markedly decrease the activity with the alternative substrate 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene. Residues Phe-10, Leu-111, and Ala-216 selectively govern the activity with the steroid substrate. Mutating residue 111 into phenylalanine caused a 25-fold decrease in k(cat)/K(m) for the steroid isomerization. The mutations A216S and F10S, separate or combined, affected the isomerase activity only marginally, but with the additional L111F mutation k(cat)/K(m) was reduced to 0.8% of that of the wild-type value. In contrast, the activities with 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene and phenethylisothiocyanate were not largely affected by the combined mutations F10S/L111F/A216S. K(i) values for Delta(5)-androstene-3,17-dione and Delta(4)-androstene-3,17-dione were increased by the triple mutation F10S/L111F/A216S. The pK(a) of the thiol group of active-site-bound glutathione, 6.1, increased to 6.5 in GST A3-3/Y9F. The pK(a) of the active-site Tyr-9 was 7.9 for the wild-type enzyme. The pH dependence of k(cat)/K(m) of wild-type GST A3-3 for the isomerase reaction displays two kinetic pK(a) values, 6.2 and 8.1. The basic limb of the pH dependence of k(cat) and k(cat)/K(m) disappears in the Y9F mutant. Therefore, the higher kinetic pK(a) reflects ionization of Tyr-9, and the lower one reflects ionization of glutathione. We propose a reaction mechanism for the double-bond isomerization involving abstraction of a proton from C4 in the steroid accompanied by protonation of C6, the thiolate of glutathione serving as a base and Tyr-9 assisting by polarizing the 3-oxo group of the substrate.  相似文献   

20.
S-Nitrosoglutathione and the dinitrosyl-diglutathionyl iron complex are involved in the storage and transport of NO in biological systems. Their interactions with the human glutathione transferase P1-1 may reveal an additional physiological role for this enzyme. In the absence of GSH, S-nitrosoglutathione causes rapid and stable S-nitrosylation of both the Cys(47) and Cys(101) residues. Ion spray ionization-mass spectrometry ruled out the possibility of S-glutathionylation and confirms the occurrence of a poly-S-nitrosylation in GST P1-1. S-Nitrosylation of Cys(47) lowers the affinity 10-fold for GSH, but this negative effect is minimized by a half-site reactivity mechanism that protects one Cys(47)/dimer from nitrosylation. Thus, glutathione transferase P1-1, retaining most of its original activity, may act as a NO carrier protein when GSH depletion occurs in the cell. The dinitrosyl-diglutathionyl iron complex, which is formed by S-nitrosoglutathione decomposition in the presence of physiological concentrations of GSH and traces of ferrous ions, binds with extraordinary affinity to one active site of this dimeric enzyme (K(i) < 10(-12) m) and triggers negative cooperativity in the vacant subunit (K(i) = 10(-9) m). The complex bound to the enzyme is stable for hours, whereas in the free form and at low concentrations, its life time is only a few minutes. ESR and molecular modeling studies provide a reasonable explanation of this strong interaction, suggesting that Tyr(7) and enzyme-bound GSH could be involved in the coordination of the iron atom. All of the observed findings suggest that glutathione transferase P1-1, by means of an intersubunit communication, may act as a NO carrier under different cellular conditions while maintaining its well known detoxificating activity toward dangerous compounds.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号