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1.
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   

2.
Baker P  Carere J  Seah SY 《Biochemistry》2011,50(17):3559-3569
BphI, a pyruvate-specific class II aldolase found in the polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) degradation pathway, catalyzes the reversible C-C bond cleavage of (4S)-hydroxy-2-oxoacids to form pyruvate and an aldehyde. Mutations were introduced into bphI to probe the contribution of active site residues to substrate recognition and catalysis. In contrast to the wild-type enzyme that has similar specificities for acetaldehyde and propionaldehyde, the L87A variant exhibited a 40-fold preference for propionaldehyde over acetaldehyde. The specificity constant of the L89A variant in the aldol addition reaction using pentaldehyde is increased ~50-fold, making it more catalytically efficient for pentaldehyde utilization compared to the wild-type utilization of the natural substrate, acetaldehyde. Replacement of Tyr-290 with phenylalanine or serine resulted in a loss of stereochemical control as the variants were able to utilize substrates with both R and S configurations at C4 with similar kinetic parameters. Aldol cleavage and pyruvate α-proton exchange activity were undetectable in the R16A variant, supporting the role of Arg-16 in stabilizing a pyruvate enolate intermediate. The pH dependence of the enzyme is consistent with a single deprotonation by a catalytic base with pK(a) values of approximately 7. In H20A and H20S variants, pH profiles show the dependence of enzyme activity on hydroxide concentration. On the basis of these results, a catalytic mechanism is proposed.  相似文献   

3.
Xanthine oxidoreductase catalyzes the final two steps of purine catabolism and is involved in a variety of pathological states ranging from hyperuricemia to ischemia-reperfusion injury. The human enzyme is expressed primarily in its dehydrogenase form utilizing NAD+ as the final electron acceptor from the enzyme's flavin site but can exist as an oxidase that utilizes O2 for this purpose. Central to an understanding of the enzyme's function is knowledge of purine substrate orientation in the enzyme's molybdenum-containing active site. We report here the crystal structure of xanthine oxidase, trapped at the stage of a critical intermediate in the course of reaction with the slow substrate 2-hydroxy-6-methylpurine at 2.3A. This is the first crystal structure of a reaction intermediate with a purine substrate that is hydroxylated at its C8 position as is xanthine and confirms the structure predicted to occur in the course of the presently favored reaction mechanism. The structure also corroborates recent work suggesting that 2-hydroxy-6-methylpurine orients in the active site with its C2 carbonyl group interacting with Arg-880 and extends our hypothesis that xanthine binds opposite this orientation, with its C6 carbonyl positioned to interact with Arg-880 in stabilizing the MoV transition state.  相似文献   

4.
Li C  Li JJ  Montgomery MG  Wood SP  Bugg TD 《Biochemistry》2006,45(41):12470-12479
The alpha/beta-hydrolase superfamily, comprised mainly of esterase and lipase enzymes, contains a family of bacterial C-C hydrolases, including MhpC and BphD which catalyze the hydrolytic C-C cleavage of meta-ring fission intermediates on the Escherichia coli phenylpropionic acid pathway and Burkholderia xenovorans LB400 biphenyl degradation pathway, respectively. Five active site amino acid residues (Arg-188, Asn-109, Phe-173, Cys-261, and Trp-264) were identified from sequence alignments that are conserved in C-C hydrolases, but not in enzymes of different function. Replacement of Arg-188 in MhpC with Gln and Lys led to 200- and 40-fold decreases, respectively, in k(cat); the same replacements for Arg-190 of BphD led to 400- and 700-fold decreases, respectively, in k(cat). Pre-steady-state kinetic analysis of the R188Q MhpC mutant revealed that the first step of the reaction, keto-enol tautomerization, had become rate-limiting, indicating that Arg-188 has a catalytic role in ketonization of the dienol substrate, which we propose is via substrate destabilization. Mutation of nearby residues Phe-173 and Trp-264 to Gly gave 4-10-fold reductions in k(cat) but 10-20-fold increases in K(m), indicating that these residues are primarily involved in substrate binding. The X-ray structure of a succinate-H263A MhpC complex shows concerted movements in the positions of both Phe-173 and Trp-264 that line the approach to Arg-188. Mutation of Asn-109 to Ala and His yielded 200- and 350-fold reductions, respectively, in k(cat) and pre-steady-state kinetic behavior similar to that of a previous S110A mutant, indicating a role for Asn-109 is positioning the active site loop containing Ser-110. The catalytic role of Arg-188 is rationalized by a hydrogen bond network close to the C-1 carboxylate of the substrate, which positions the substrate and promotes substrate ketonization, probably via destabilization of the bound substrate.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
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   

7.
trans-3-Chloroacrylic acid dehalogenase (CaaD) converts trans-3-chloroacrylic acid to malonate semialdehyde by the addition of H(2)O to the C-2, C-3 double bond, followed by the loss of HCl from the C-3 position. Sequence similarity between CaaD, an (alphabeta)(3) heterohexamer (molecular weight 47,547), and 4-oxalocrotonate tautomerase (4-OT), an (alpha)(6) homohexamer, distinguishes CaaD from those hydrolytic dehalogenases that form alkyl-enzyme intermediates. The recently solved X-ray structure of CaaD demonstrates that betaPro-1 (i.e., Pro-1 of the beta subunit), alphaArg-8, alphaArg-11, and alphaGlu-52 are at or near the active site, and the >or=10(3.4)-fold decreases in k(cat) on mutating these residues implicate them as mechanistically important. The effect of pH on k(cat)/K(m) indicates a catalytic base with a pK(a) of 7.6 and an acid with a pK(a) of 9.2. NMR titration of (15)N-labeled wild-type CaaD yielded pK(a) values of 9.3 and 11.1 for the N-terminal prolines, while the fully active but unstable alphaP1A mutant showed a pK(a) of 9.7 (for the betaPro-1), implicating betaPro-1 as the acid catalyst, which may protonate C-2 of the substrate. These results provide the first evidence for an amino-terminal proline, conserved in all known tautomerase superfamily members, functioning as a general acid, rather than as a general base as in 4-OT. Hence, a reasonable candidate for the general base in CaaD is the active site residue alphaGlu-52. CaaD has 10 arginine residues, six in the alpha-subunit (Arg-8, Arg-11, Arg-17, Arg-25, Arg-35, and Arg-43), and four in the beta-subunit (Arg-15, Arg-21, Arg-55, and Arg-65). (1)H-(15)N-heteronuclear single quantum coherence (HSQC) spectra of CaaD showed seven to nine Arg-NepsilonH resonances (denoted R(A) to R(I)) depending on the protein concentration and pH. One of these signals (R(D)) disappeared in the spectrum of the largely inactive alphaR11A mutant (deltaH = 7.11 ppm, deltaN = 89.5 ppm), and another one (R(G)) disappeared in the spectrum of the inactive alphaR8A mutant (deltaH = 7.48 ppm, deltaN = 89.6 ppm), thereby assigning these resonances to alphaArg-11NepsilonH, and alphaArg-8NepsilonH, respectively. (1)H-(15)N-HSQC titration of the enzyme with the substrate analogue 3-chloro-2-butenoic acid (3-CBA), a competitive inhibitor (K(I)(slope) = 0.35 +/- 0.06 mM), resulted in progressive downfield shifts of the alphaArg-8Nepsilon resonance yielding a K(D) = 0.77 +/- 0.44 mM, comparable to the (K(I)(slope), suggestive of active site binding. Increasing the pH of free CaaD to 8.9 at 5 degrees C resulted in the disappearance of all nine Arg-NepsilonH resonances due to base-catalyzed NepsilonH exchange. Saturating the enzyme with 3-CBA (16 mM) induced the reappearance of two NepsilonH signals, those of alphaArg-8 and alphaArg-11, indicating that the binding of the substrate analogue 3-CBA selectively slows the NepsilonH exchange rates of these two arginine residues. The kinetic and NMR data thus indicate that betaPro-1 is the acid catalyst, alphaGlu-52 is a reasonable candidate for the general base, and alphaArg-8 and alphaArg-11 participate in substrate binding and in stabilizing the aci-carboxylate intermediate in a Michael addition mechanism.  相似文献   

8.
Mutations in pyridoxine 5′-phosphate oxidase are known to cause neonatal epileptic encephalopathy. This disorder has no cure or effective treatment and is often fatal. Pyridoxine 5′-phosphate oxidase catalyzes the oxidation of pyridoxine 5′-phosphate to pyridoxal 5′-phosphate, the active cofactor form of vitamin B6 required by more than 140 different catalytic activities, including enzymes involved in amino acid metabolism and biosynthesis of neurotransmitters. Our aim is to elucidate the mechanism by which a homozygous missense mutation (R229W) in the oxidase, linked to neonatal epileptic encephalopathy, leads to reduced oxidase activity. The R229W variant is ∼850-fold less efficient than the wild-type enzyme due to an ∼192-fold decrease in pyridoxine 5′-phosphate affinity and an ∼4.5-fold decrease in catalytic activity. There is also an ∼50-fold reduction in the affinity of the R229W variant for the FMN cofactor. A 2.5 Å crystal structure of the R229W variant shows that the substitution of Arg-229 at the FMN binding site has led to a loss of hydrogen-bond and/or salt-bridge interactions between FMN and Arg-229 and Ser-175. Additionally, the mutation has led to an alteration of the configuration of a β-strand-loop-β-strand structure at the active site, resulting in loss of two critical hydrogen-bond interactions involving residues His-227 and Arg-225, which are important for substrate binding and orientation for catalysis. These results provide a molecular basis for the phenotype associated with the R229W mutation, as well as providing a foundation for understanding the pathophysiological consequences of pyridoxine 5′-phosphate oxidase mutations.  相似文献   

9.
AzoR is an FMN-dependent NADH-azoreductase isolated from Escherichia coli as a protein responsible for the degradation of azo compounds. We previously reported the crystal structure of the enzyme in the oxidized form. In the present study, different structures of AzoR were determined under several conditions to obtain clues to the reaction mechanism of the enzyme. AzoR in its reduced form revealed a twisted butterfly bend of the isoalloxazine ring of the FMN cofactor and a rearrangement of solvent molecules. The crystal structure of oxidized AzoR in a different space group and the structure of the enzyme in complex with the inhibitor dicoumarol were also determined. These structures indicate that the formation of a hydrophobic part around the isoalloxazine ring is important for substrate binding and an electrostatic interaction between Arg-59 and the carboxyl group of the azo compound causes a substrate preference for methyl red over p-methyl red. The substitution of Arg-59 with Ala enhanced the Vmax value for p-methyl red 27-fold with a 3.8-fold increase of the Km value. This result indicates that Arg-59 decides the substrate specificity of AzoR. The Vmax value for the p-methyl red reduction of the R59A mutant is comparable with that for the methyl red reduction of the wild-type enzyme, whereas the activity toward methyl red was retained. These findings indicate the expansion of AzoR substrate specificity by a single amino acid substitution. Furthermore, we built an authentic model of the AzoR-methyl red complex based on the results of the study.  相似文献   

10.
Konkol L  Hirai TJ  Adams JA 《Biochemistry》2000,39(1):255-262
Based on the X-ray structure of the insulin receptor kinase [Hubbard, S. R. (1997) EMBO J. 16, 5572-5581], Arg-1130 in the oncoprotein v-Fps, a nonreceptor tyrosine protein kinase, is predicted to interact with the P+1 glutamate in substrate peptides. To determine whether this residue is an important recognition element in v-Fps, Arg-1130 was substituted with leucine (R1130L) and glutamic acid (R1130E). The ability of these mutants to phosphorylate the peptide EAEIYXAIE, where X is glutamic acid, alanine, or lysine, was assessed. A comparison of the rates of peptide phosphorylation under limiting substrate concentrations (i.e., k(cat)/K(m) conditions) indicates that substrate specificity is altered by the electrostatic environment of the P+1 pocket. When the pocket displays a positive charge (Arg-1130; wild type), no charge (R1130L), or a negative charge (R1130E), v-Fps prefers to phosphorylate the glutamate peptide over the lysine peptide by a 200:1, 9:1, or 1:1 margin. While k(cat)/K(m) for the glutamate peptide is 50-fold higher for wild type compared to R1130E, k(cat)/K(m) for the lysine peptide is 3-fold higher for R1130E compared to wild type, a 150-fold change in relative substrate specificity. Analysis of the individual steps in the kinetic mechanism using viscosometric techniques indicates that the wild-type enzyme binds the glutamate peptide 3-fold better than the alanine peptide and, at least, 10-fold better than the lysine peptide. For R1130L, this margin range is reduced substantially, and for R1130E, no binding preference is observed. Nonetheless, the lysine peptide binds, at least, 4-fold better to R1130E than to wild type, and the glutamate peptide binds 3-fold poorer to R1130E than to wild type. The mutants lower the phosphoryl transfer rate by 4-30-fold for the three peptides, suggesting that Arg-1130 helps to position the tyrosine for optimum catalysis. The data indicate that a single mutation in v-Fps can alter significantly the relative substrate specificity by about 2 orders of magnitude with, at least, 50% of this effect occurring through relative changes in peptide binding affinity.  相似文献   

11.
The unusually low pK(a) value of the general base catalyst Pro-1 (pK(a) = 6.4) in 4-oxalocrotonate tautomerase (4-OT) has been ascribed to both a low dielectric constant at the active site and the proximity of the cationic residues Arg-11 and Arg-39 [Stivers, J. T., Abeygunawardana, C., Mildvan, A. S., Hajipour, G., and Whitman, C. P. (1996) Biochemistry 35, 814-823]. In addition, the pH-rate profiles in that study showed an unidentified protonated group essential for catalysis with a pK(a) of 9.0. To address these issues, the pK(a) values of the active site Pro-1 and lower limit pK(a) values of arginine residues were determined by direct (15)N NMR pH titrations. The pK(a) values of Pro-1 and of the essential acid group were determined independently from pH-rate profiles of the kinetic parameters of 4-OT in arginine mutants of 4-OT and compared with those of wild type. The chemical shifts of all of the Arg Nepsilon resonances in wild-type 4-OT and in the R11A and R39Q mutants were found to be independent of pH over the range 4.9-9.7, indicating that no arginine is responsible for the kinetically determined pK(a) of 9.0 for an acidic group in free 4-OT. With the R11A mutant, where k(cat)/K(m) was reduced by a factor of 10(2.9), the pK(a) of Pro-1 was not significantly altered from that of the wild-type enzyme (pK(a) = 6.4 +/- 0.2) as revealed by both direct (15)N NMR titration (pK(a) = 6.3 +/- 0.1) and the pH dependence of k(cat)/K(m) (pK(a) = 6.4 +/- 0.2). The pH-rate profiles of both k(cat)/K(m) and k(cat) for the reaction of the R11A mutant with the dicarboxylate substrate, 2-hydroxymuconate, showed humps, i.e., sharply defined maxima followed by nonzero plateaus. The humps disappeared in the reaction with the monocarboxylate substrate, 2-hydroxy-2,4-pentadienoate, indicating that, unlike the wild-type enzyme which reacts only with the dianionic form of the dicarboxylic substrate, the R11A mutant reacts with both the 6-COOH and 6-COO(-) forms, with the 6-COOH form being 12-fold more active. This reversal in the preferred ionization state of the 6-carboxyl group of the substrate that occurs upon mutation of Arg-11 to Ala provides strong evidence that Arg-11 interacts with the 6-carboxylate of the substrate. In the R39Q mutant, where k(cat)/K(m) was reduced by a factor of 10(3), the kinetically determined pK(a) value for Pro-1 was 4.6 +/- 0.2, while the ionization of Pro-1 showed negative cooperativity with an apparent pK(a) of 7.1 +/- 0.1 determined by 1D (15)N NMR. From the Hill coefficient of 0.54, it can be shown that the apparent pK(a) value of 7.1 could result most simply from the averaging of two limiting pK(a) values of 4.6 and 8.2. Mutation of Arg-39, by altering the structure of the beta-hairpin which covers the active site, could result in an increase in the solvent exposure of Pro-1, raising its upper limit pK(a) value to 8.2. In the R39A mutant, the kinetically determined pK(a) of Pro-1 was also low, 5.0 +/- 0.2, indicating that in both the R39Q and R39A mutants, only the sites with low pK(a) values were kinetically operative. With the fully active R61A mutant, the kinetically determined pK(a) of Pro-1 (pK(a) = 6.5 +/- 0.2) agreed with that of wild-type 4-OT. It is concluded that the unusually low pK(a) of Pro-1 shows little contribution from electrostatic effects of the nearby cationic Arg-11, Arg-39, and Arg-61 residues but results primarily from a site of low local dielectric constant.  相似文献   

12.
Rat liver fructose-2,6-bisphosphatase, which catalyzes its reaction via a phosphoenzyme intermediate, is evolutionarily related to the phosphoglycerate mutase enzyme family (Bazan, F., Fletterick, R., and Pilkis, S.J. (1989) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 86, 9642-9646). Arg-7 and Arg-59 of the yeast phosphoglycerate mutase have been postulated to be substrate-binding residues based on the x-ray crystal structure. The corresponding residues in rat liver 6-phosphofructo-2-kinase/fructose-2,6-bisphosphatase, Arg-257 and Arg-307, were mutated to alanine. The Arg257Ala and Arg307Ala mutants and the wild-type enzyme were expressed in Escherichia coli and then purified to homogeneity. Both mutant enzymes had identical far and near UV circular dichroism spectra and 6-phosphofructo-2-kinase activities when compared with the wild-type enzyme. However, the Arg257Ala and Arg307Ala mutants had altered steady state fructose-2,6-bisphosphatase kinetic properties; the Km values for fructose-2,6-bisphosphate of the Arg257Ala and Arg307Ala mutants were increased by 12,500- and 760-fold, whereas the Ki values for inorganic phosphate were increased 7.4- and 147-fold, respectively, as compared with the wild-type values. However, the Ki values for the other product, fructose-6-phosphate, were unchanged for the mutant enzymes. Although both mutants exhibited parallel changes in kinetic parameters that reflect substrate/product binding, they had opposing effects on their respective maximal velocities; the maximal velocity of Arg257Ala was 11-fold higher, whereas that for Arg307Ala was 700-fold lower, than that of the wild-type enzyme. Pre-steady state kinetic studies demonstrated that the rate of phosphoenzyme formation for Arg307Ala was at least 4000-fold lower than that of the wild-type enzyme, whereas the rate for Arg257Ala was similar to the wild-type enzyme. Furthermore, consistent with the Vmax changes, the rate constant for phosphoenzyme breakdown for Arg257Ala was increased 9-fold, whereas that for Arg307Ala was decreased by a factor of 500-fold, as compared with the wild-type value. The results indicate that both Arg-257 and Arg-307 interact with the reactive C-2 phospho group of fructose 2,6-bisphosphate and that Arg-307 stabilizes this phospho group in the transition state during phosphoenzyme breakdown, whereas Arg-257 stabilizes the phospho group of the ground state phosphoenzyme intermediate.  相似文献   

13.
The importance of the interdomain bridging interactions observed only in the R-state structure of Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamylase between Glu-50 of the carbamoyl phosphate domain with both Arg-167 and Arg-234 of the aspartate domain has been investigated by using site-specific mutagenesis. Two mutant versions of aspartate transcarbamylase were constructed, one with alanine at position 50 (Glu-50----Ala) and the other with aspartic acid at position 50 (Glu-50----Asp). The alanine substitution totally prevents the interdomain bridging interactions, while the aspartic acid substitution was expected to weaken these interactions. The Glu-50----Ala holoenzyme exhibits a 15-fold loss of activity, no substrate cooperativity, and a more than 6-fold increase in the aspartate concentration at half the maximal observed specific activity. The Glu-50----Asp holoenzyme exhibits a less than 3-fold loss of activity, reduced cooperativity for substrates, and a 2-fold increase in the aspartate concentration at half the maximal observed specific activity. Although the Glu-50----Ala enzyme exhibits no homotropic cooperativity, it is activated by N-(phosphonoacetyl)-L-aspartate (PALA). As opposed to the wild-type enzyme, the Glu-50----Ala enzyme is activated by PALA at saturating concentrations of aspartate. At subsaturating concentrations of aspartate, both mutant enzymes are activated by ATP, but are inhibited less by CTP than is the wild-type enzyme. At saturating concentrations of aspartate, the Glu-50----Ala enzyme is activated by ATP and inhibited by CTP to an even greater extent than at subsaturating concentrations of aspartate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
Xanthine oxidase is a molybdenum-containing enzyme catalyzing the hydroxylation of a sp2-hybridized carbon in a broad range of aromatic heterocycles and aldehydes. Crystal structures of the bovine enzyme in complex with the physiological substrate hypoxanthine at 1.8 Å resolution and the chemotherapeutic agent 6-mercaptopurine at 2.6 Å resolution have been determined, showing in each case two alternate orientations of substrate in the two active sites of the crystallographic asymmetric unit. One orientation is such that it is expected to yield hydroxylation at C-2 of substrate, yielding xanthine. The other suggests hydroxylation at C-8 to give 6,8-dihydroxypurine, a putative product not previously thought to be generated by the enzyme. Kinetic experiments demonstrate that >98% of hypoxanthine is hydroxylated at C-2 rather than C-8, indicating that the second crystallographically observed orientation is significantly less catalytically effective than the former. Theoretical calculations suggest that enzyme selectivity for the C-2 over C-8 of hypoxanthine is largely due to differences in the intrinsic reactivity of the two sites. For the orientation of hypoxanthine with C-2 proximal to the molybdenum center, the disposition of substrate in the active site is such that Arg880 and Glu802, previous shown to be catalytically important for the conversion of xanthine to uric acid, play similar roles in hydroxylation at C-2 as at C-8. Contrary to the literature, we find that 6,8-dihydroxypurine is effectively converted to uric acid by xanthine oxidase.  相似文献   

15.
The active site of pig kidney fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (EC 3.1.3.11) is shared between subunits, Arg-243 of one chain interacting with fructose-1,6-bisphosphate or fructose-2,6-bisphosphate in the active site of an adjacent chain. In this study, we present the X-ray structures of the mutant version of the enzyme with Arg-243 replaced by alanine, crystallized in both T and R allosteric states. Kinetic characteristics of the altered enzyme showed the magnesium binding and inhibition by AMP differed slightly; affinity for the substrate fructose-1,6-bisphosphate was reduced 10-fold and affinity for the inhibitor fructose-2,6-bisphosphate was reduced 1,000-fold (Giroux E, Williams MK, Kantrowitz ER, 1994, J Biol Chem 269:31404-31409). The X-ray structures show no major changes in the organization of the active site compared with wild-type enzyme, and the structures confirm predictions of molecular dynamics simulations involving Lys-269 and Lys-274. Comparison of two independent models of the T form structures have revealed small but significant changes in the conformation of the bound AMP molecules and small reorganization of the active site correlated with the presence of the inhibitor. The differences in kinetic properties of the mutant enzyme indicate the key importance of Arg-243 in the function of fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase. Calculations using the X-ray structures of the Arg-243-->Ala enzyme suggest that the role of Arg-243 in the wild-type enzyme is predominantly electrostatic in nature.  相似文献   

16.
Leon BC  Tsigelny I  Adams JA 《Biochemistry》2001,40(34):10078-10086
Autophosphorylation of Tyr-1073 in the activation loop of the oncoprotein v-Fps enhances the phosphoryl transfer reaction without influencing substrate, ATP, or metal ion binding affinities [Saylor, P., et al. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 17875-17881]. A structural model of v-Fps, generated from the insulin receptor, indicates that pTyr-1073 chelates two arginines. Mutation of these residues to alanine (R1042A and R1066A) results in weakly phosphorylated enzymes, indicating that one electropositive center is insufficient for attaining maximum loop phosphorylation and concomitant high catalytic activity. While the turnover rate for R1066A is similar to that for a mutant lacking a phosphorylatable residue in the activation loop, the rate for R1042A is 50-fold slower. While solvent perturbation studies suggest that the former is due to a slow phosphoryl transfer step, the latter effect results from a slow conformational change in the mutant, potentially linked to motions in the catalytic loop. Binding of a stoichiometric quantity of Mg(2+) is essential for ATP binding and catalysis, while binding of an additional Mg(2+) ion activates further the wild-type enzyme. The affinity of the R1066A enzyme for the second Mg(2+) ion is 23-fold higher than that of the phosphorylated or unphosphorylated form of wild-type v-Fps, with substrate binding unaffected. Conversely, the affinity of R1066A for a substrate mimic lacking a phosphorylation site is 12-fold higher than that for the phosphorylated or unphosphorylated form of wild-type v-Fps, with binding of the second Mg(2+) ion unaffected. A comparison of these enzyme-independent parameters indicates that Arg-1042 and Arg-1066 induce strain in the active site in the repressed form of the enzyme. While this strain is not relieved in the phosphorylated form, the improvements in catalysis in activated v-Fps compensate for reduced metal and substrate binding affinities.  相似文献   

17.
L-Ribulose-5-phosphate (L-Ru5P) 4-epimerase and L-fuculose-1-phosphate (L-Fuc1P) aldolase are evolutionarily related enzymes that display 26% sequence identity and a very high degree of structural similarity. They both employ a divalent cation in the formation and stabilization of an enolate during catalysis, and both are able to deprotonate the C-4 hydroxyl group of a phosphoketose substrate. Despite these many similarities, subtle distinctions must be present which allow the enzymes to catalyze two seemingly different reactions and to accommodate substrates differing greatly in the position of the phosphate (C-5 vs C-1). Asp76 of the epimerase corresponds to the key catalytic acid/base residue Glu73 of the aldolase. The D76N mutant of the epimerase retained considerable activity, indicating it is not a key catalytic residue in this enzyme. In addition, the D76E mutant did not show enhanced levels of background aldolase activity. Mutations of residues in the putative phosphate-binding pocket of the epimerase (N28A and K42M) showed dramatically higher values of K(M) for L-Ru5P. This indicates that both enzymes utilize the same phosphate recognition pocket, and since the phosphates are positioned at opposite ends of the respective substrates, the two enzymes must bind their substrates in a reversed or "flipped" orientation. The epimerase mutant D120N displays a 3000-fold decrease in the value of k(cat), suggesting that Asp120' provides a key catalytic acid/base residue in this enzyme. Analysis of the D120N mutant by X-ray crystallography shows that its structure is indistinguishable from that of the wild-type enzyme and that the decrease in activity was not simply due to a structural perturbation of the active site. Previous work [Lee, L. V., Poyner, R. R., Vu, M. V., and Cleland, W. W. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 4821-4830] has indicated that Tyr229' likely provides the other catalytic acid/base residue. Both of these residues are supplied by an adjacent subunit. Modeling of L-Ru5P into the active site of the epimerase structure suggests that Tyr229' is responsible for deprotonating L-Ru5P and Asp120' is responsible for deprotonating its epimer, D-Xu5P.  相似文献   

18.
Site-directed mutagenesis was used to create four mutant versions of Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamylase at three positions in the catalytic chain of the enzyme. The location of all the amino acid substitutions was near the carbamyl phosphate binding site as previously determined by X-ray crystallography. Arg-54, which interacts with both the anhydride oxygen and a phosphate oxygen of carbamyl phosphate, was replaced by alanine. This mutant enzyme was approximately 17,000-fold less active than the wild type, although the binding of substrates and substrate analogues was not altered substantially. Arg-105, which interacts with both the carbonyl oxygen and a phosphate oxygen of carbamyl phosphate, was replaced by alanine. This mutant enzyme exhibited an approximate 1000-fold loss of activity, while the activity of catalytic subunit isolated from this mutant enzyme was reduced by 170-fold compared to the wild-type catalytic subunit. The KD of carbamyl phosphate and the inhibition constants for acetyl phosphate and N-(phosphono-acetyl)-L-aspartate (PALA) were increased substantially by this amino acid substitution. Furthermore, this loss in substrate and substrate analogue binding can be correlated with the large increases in the aspartate and carbamyl phosphate concentrations at half of the maximum observed specific activity, [S]0.5. Gln-137, which interacts with the amino group of carbamyl phosphate, was replaced by both asparagine and alanine. The asparagine mutant exhibited only a small reduction in activity while the alanine mutant was approximately 50-fold less active than the wild type. The catalytic subunits of both these mutant enzymes were substantially more active than the corresponding holoenzymes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
Site-directed mutagenesis is a powerful tool for identifying active-site residues essential for catalysis; however, this approach has only recently become available for acetate kinase. The enzyme from Methanosarcina thermophila has been cloned and hyper-produced in a highly active form in Escherichia coli (recombinant wild-type). The role of arginines in this acetate kinase was investigated. Five arginines (R91, R175, R241, R285, and R340) in the M. thermophila enzyme were selected for individual replacement based on their high conservation among sequences of acetate kinase homologues. Replacement of R91 or R241 with alanine or leucine produced variants with specific activities less than 0.1% of the recombinant wild-type enzyme. The circular dichroism spectra and other properties of these variants were comparable to those of recombinant wild-type, indicating no global conformational changes. These results indicate that R91 and R241 are essential for activity, consistent with roles in catalysis. The variant produced by conservative replacement of R91 with lysine had approximately 2% of recombinant wild-type activity, suggesting a positive charge is important in this position. The K(m) value for acetate of the R91K variant increased greater than 10-fold relative to recombinant wild-type, suggesting an additional role for R91 in binding this substrate. Activities of both the R91A and R241A variants were rescued 20-fold when guanidine or derivatives were added to the reaction mixture. The K(m) values for ATP of the rescued variants were similar to those of recombinant wild-type, suggesting that the rescued activities are the consequence of replacement of important functional groups and not changes in the catalytic mechanism. These results further support roles for R91 and R241 in catalysis. Replacement of R285 with alanine, leucine, or lysine had no significant effect on activity; however, the K(m) values for acetate increased 6-10-fold, suggesting R285 influences the binding of this substrate. Phenylglyoxal inhibition and substrate protection experiments with the recombinant wild-type enzyme and variants were consistent with the presence of one or more essential arginine residues in the active site as well as with roles for R91 and R241 in catalysis. It is proposed that R91 and R241 function to stabilize the previously proposed pentacoordinate transition state during direct in-line transfer of the gamma-phosphate of ATP to acetate. The kinetic characterization of variants produced by replacement of R175 and R340 with alanine, leucine, or lysine indicated that these residues are not involved in catalysis but fulfill important structural roles.  相似文献   

20.
L C Kuo  A W Miller  S Lee  C Kozuma 《Biochemistry》1988,27(24):8823-8832
In the carbamoyl-transfer reaction catalyzed by ornithine transcarbamoylase, an arginine residue in the active site of the Escherichia coli enzyme has been suggested to bind the phosphate moiety of the substrate carbamoyl phosphate. With the application of site-specific mutagenesis, the most likely arginine residue among three candidates at the binding site of carbamoyl phosphate, Arg-57, has been replaced with a glycine. The resultant Gly-57 mutant enzyme is drastically inefficient in catalysis. In the synthesis of L-citrulline from carbamoyl phosphate and L-ornithine with the release of inorganic phosphate, the turnover rate of the mutant is 21,000-fold lower than that of the wild type. However, the mutation of Arg-57 affects only moderately the binding of carbamoyl phosphate; the dissociation constant of this substrate, measured under steady-state turnover condition, is increased from 0.046 to 3.2 mM by the mutation. On the other hand, ornithine binding is substantially affected as estimated by the change in the dissociation constant of its analogue L-norvaline. The dissociation constant of L-norvaline increases about 500-fold from 54 microM for the wild type to 25 mM for the mutant. Since Arg-57 is expected to be distal from the ornithine site and the amino acid (both ornithine and norvaline) binds only after carbamoyl phosphate in the wild-type reaction, the poor norvaline affinity to the mutant suggests that Arg-57 is involved in interactions essential for productive addition of the amino acid. This interpretation is supported by difference ultraviolet absorption spectra which show that the conformational changes induced in the wild type by carbamoyl phosphate upon binding are absent in the mutant. Furthermore, steady-state kinetic data reveal that the ordered binding mechanism of the wild-type enzyme is transformed into a random binding mechanism in the mutant. Thus, the presence of carbamoyl phosphate in the mutant active site is no longer a requisite for ornithine binding. In the 5-50 degrees C temperature range, transcarbamoylation catalyzed by either the wild type or the mutant observes the Arrhenius rate law with almost identical enthalpies of activation, 11 and 10 kcal/mol, respectively. The entropy of activation is -5.5 eu for the wild-type reaction and -29 eu for the mutant reaction, accounting for a loss of 6-7 kcal/mol in the rate-determining step of the enzymic reaction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

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