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1.
Human dUTPase is essential in controlling relative cellular levels of dTTP/dUTP, both of which can be incorporated into DNA. The nuclear isoform of the enzyme has been proposed as a promising novel target for anticancer chemotherapeutic strategies. The recently determined three-dimensional structure of this protein in complex with an isosteric substrate analogue allowed in-depth structural characterization of the active site. However, fundamental steps of the dUTPase enzymatic cycle have not yet been revealed. This knowledge is indispensable for a functional understanding of the molecular mechanism and can also contribute to the design of potential antagonists. Here we present detailed pre-steady-state and steady-state kinetic investigations using a single tryptophan fluorophore engineered into the active site of human dUTPase. This sensor allowed distinction of the apoenzyme, enzyme-substrate, and enzyme-product complexes. We show that the dUTP hydrolysis cycle consists of at least four distinct enzymatic steps: (i) fast substrate binding, (ii) isomerization of the enzyme-substrate complex into the catalytically competent conformation, (iii) a hydrolysis (chemical) step, and (iv) rapid, nonordered release of the products. Independent quenched-flow experiments indicate that the chemical step is the rate-limiting step of the enzymatic cycle. To follow the reaction in the quenched-flow, we devised a novel method to synthesize gamma-(32)P-labeled dUTP. We also determined by indicator-based rapid kinetic assays that proton release is concomitant with the rate-limiting hydrolysis step. Our results led to a quantitative kinetic model of the human dUTPase catalytic cycle and to direct assessment of relative flexibilities of the C-terminal arm, critical for enzyme activity, in the enzyme-ligand complexes along the reaction pathway.  相似文献   

2.
We have used a new approach to the dynamics of hydrolytic metalloenzyme catalysis based on investigations of both external solvent viscosity effects and kinetic 2H isotope effects. The former reflects solvent and protein dynamics, and the nuclear reorganization distribution among damped protein motion and intramolecular friction-free nuclear motion. The isotope effect represents proton tunnelling and reorganization in the hydrogen bond network around the active site. We illustrate the approach by new spectrophotometric and pH-titration data for carboxypeptidase-A-catalyzed benzoylglycyl-L-phenyllactate hydrolysis. This substrate exhibits both a significant inverse fractional power law viscosity dependence over wide ranges controlled by glycerol and sucrose, and a kinetic 2H isotope effect of 1.65. The analogous benzoylglycylphenylalanine hydrolysis has a smaller isotope effect (1.3) and no viscosity dependence. Viscosity variation has no effect on the CD spectra in the 180-240-nm range. In terms of stochastic chemical rate theory, the data correspond to an enzyme-peptide substrate complex with a 'tight' structure protected from the solvent. In comparison, the enzyme-ester substrate complex is 'softer', strongly coupled to the solvent, and the rate-determining step is accompanied by proton transfer or by substantial reorganization in the hydrogen bonds near the active site.  相似文献   

3.
Carbapenam synthetase (hereafter named CPS) catalyzes the formation of the beta-lactam ring in the biosynthetic pathway to (5R)-carbapen-2-em-3-carboxylate, the simplest of the carbapenem antibiotics. Kinetic studies showed remarkable tolerance to substrate stereochemistry in the turnover rate but did not distinguish between chemistry and a nonchemical step such as product release or conformational change as being rate-determining. Also, X-ray structural studies and modest sequence homology to beta-lactam synthetase, an enzyme that catalyzes the formation of a monocyclic beta-lactam ring in a similar ATP/Mg2+-dependent reaction, implicate K443 as an essential residue for substrate binding and intermediate stabilization. In these experiments, we use pH-rate profiles, deuterium solvent isotope effects, and solvent viscosity measurements to examine the rate-limiting step in this complex overall process of substrate adenylation and intramolecular ring formation. Mutagenesis and chemical rescue demonstrate that K443 is the general acid visible in the pH-rate profile of the wild-type CPS-catalyzed reaction. On the basis of these results, we propose a mechanism in which the rate-limiting step is beta-lactam ring formation coupled to a protein conformational change and underscore the role of K443 throughout the reaction.  相似文献   

4.
The ammonia-producing arginine succinyltransferase pathway is the major pathway in Escherichia coli and related bacteria for arginine catabolism as a sole nitrogen source. This pathway consists of five steps, each catalyzed by a distinct enzyme. Here we report the crystal structure of N-succinylarginine dihydrolase AstB, the second enzyme of the arginine succinyltransferase pathway, providing the first structural insight into enzymes from this pathway. The enzyme exhibits a pseudo 5-fold symmetric alpha/beta propeller fold of circularly arranged betabetaalphabeta modules enclosing the active site. The crystal structure indicates clearly that this enzyme belongs to the amidinotransferase (AT) superfamily and that the active site contains a Cys-His-Glu triad characteristic of the AT superfamily. Structures of the complexes of AstB with the reaction product and a C365S mutant with bound the N-succinylarginine substrate suggest a catalytic mechanism that consists of two cycles of hydrolysis and ammonia release, with each cycle utilizing a mechanism similar to that proposed for arginine deiminases. Like other members of the AT superfamily of enzymes, AstB possesses a flexible loop that is disordered in the absence of substrate and assumes an ordered conformation upon substrate binding, shielding the ligand from the bulk solvent, thereby controlling substrate access and product release.  相似文献   

5.
The rate-limiting step for hydrolysis of the positively charged oxoester benzoylcholine (BzCh) by human butyrylcholinesterase (BuChE) is deacylation (k(3)), whereas it is acylation (k(2)) for hydrolysis of the homologous thioester benzoylthiocholine (BzSCh). Steady-state hydrolysis of BzCh and BzSCh by wild-type BuChE and its peripheral anionic site mutant D70G was investigated at different hydrostatic pressures, which allowed determination of volume changes associated with substrate binding, and the activation volumes for the chemical steps. A differential nonlinear pressure-dependence of the catalytic parameters for hydrolysis of both substrates by both enzymes was shown. Nonlinearity of the plots may be explained in terms of compressibility changes or rate-limiting changes. To distinguish between these two possibilities, enzyme phosphorylation by diisopropylfluorophosphate (DFP) in the presence of substrate (BzSCh) under pressure was studied. There was no pressure dependence of volume changes for DFP binding or for phosphorylation of either wild-type or D70G. Analysis of the pressure dependence for steady-state hydrolysis of substrates, and for phosphorylation by DFP provided evidence that no enzyme compressibility changes occurred during the catalyzed reactions. Thus, the nonlinear pressure dependence of substrate hydrolysis reflects changes in the rate-limiting step with pressure. Change in rate-determining step occurred at a pressure of 100 MPa for hydrolysis of BzCh by wild-type and at 75 MPa for D70G. For hydrolysis of BzSCh the change occurred at higher pressures because k(2) < k(3) at atmospheric pressure for this substrate. Elementary volume change contributions upon initial binding, productive binding, acylation and deacylation were calculated from the pressure differentiation of kinetic constants. This analysis shed light on the molecular events taking place along the hydrolysis pathways of BzCh and BzSCh by wild-type BuChE and the D70G mutant. In addition, volume change differences between wild-type and D70G provided new evidence that residue D70 in the peripheral site controls hydration of the active site gorge and the dynamics of the water molecule network during catalysis. Finally, a steady-state kinetic study of the oxyanion hole mutant (G117H) showed that substitution of the ethereal sulfur for oxygen in the substrate alters the final adjustment of substrate in the active site and stabilization of the acylation transition state.  相似文献   

6.
Kinetic and spectroscopic studies were carried out to study the role of hydrophobic effect on the activity of bovine serum amine oxidase (BSAO). Increasing the chain length of the substrates (linear aliphatic primary monoamines), the affinity for the active site increases while the catalytic constant decreases in accordance with a relative low value of dielectric constant (about 10) estimated for the microenvironment of BSAO active site using a fluorescent probe sensitive to solvent polarity. The aliphatic chain of 1-aminononane induces a shift in the pK(a) of the product Schiff base, the hydrolysis of which appears to be a rate-determining step of the reaction. Furthermore, circular dichroism studies highlighted the "flexibility" of BSAO secondary structure that can explain the wide substrate specificity of this enzyme. These results should be useful to elucidate the substrate/inhibitor preferences of CuAOs, in particular of the human enzyme.  相似文献   

7.
H Kyushiki  A Ikai 《Proteins》1990,8(3):287-293
The overall activity of an animal fatty acid synthetase at the saturation level of substrate concentration decreased when the solvent viscosity, eta, of the reaction mixture was increased with viscogens such as glycerol, sucrose, and polyethylene glycol. The activity of the enzyme changed roughly proportional to eta-P, where p = 1.0 for glycerol, p = 0.66 for sucrose, and p less than 0.6 for polyethylene glycol with different molecular sizes. The thioesterase activity, which catalyzes the final partial reaction in the multifunctional enzyme, was not affected by 5-fold increase of solvent viscosity with sucrose. These results suggested that the rate-determining step of the enzyme other than the thioesterase reaction involves a microscopic transport step, the rate of which is influenced by the solvent viscosity. The microscopic transport step may be related to the transfer of the reaction intermediate from one active site to another or to the motion of a larger part of the enzyme requisite for the catalytic reaction. In the solution containing glycerol, the rate-determining motion was primarily diffusion limited since the inverse of the initial rate was proportional to eta, i.e., p = 1. Since the substrate concentration was at a saturation level in this experiment, the viscosity-dependent step cannot be the encounter between the enzyme and substrates, but must be intramolecular in origin, most probably the reaction catalyzed by beta-ketoacyl synthetase. In solutions containing other viscogens, however, p was less than 1.0, indicating a significant involvement of chemical steps in the rate-determining step as well. Bovine serum albumin, when used as a proteinic viscogen, also decreased the initial rate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Hall RS  Xiang DF  Xu C  Raushel FM 《Biochemistry》2007,46(27):7942-7952
NagA is a member of the amidohydrolase superfamily and catalyzes the deacetylation of N-acetyl-d-glucosamine-6-phosphate. The catalytic mechanism of this enzyme was addressed by the characterization of the catalytic properties of metal-substituted derivatives of NagA from Escherichia coli with a variety of substrate analogues. The reaction mechanism is of interest since NagA from bacterial sources is found with either one or two divalent metal ions in the active site. This observation indicates that there has been a divergence in the evolution of NagA and suggests that there are fundamental differences in the mechanistic details for substrate activation and hydrolysis. NagA from E. coli was inactivated by the removal of the zinc bound to the active site and the apoenzyme reactivated upon incubation with 1 equiv of Zn2+, Cd2+, Co2+, Mn2+, Ni2+, or Fe2+. In the proposed catalytic mechanism the reaction is initiated by the polarization of the carbonyl group of the substrate via a direct interaction with the divalent metal ion and His-143. The invariant aspartate (Asp-273) found at the end of beta-strand 8 in all members of the amidohydrolase superfamily abstracts a proton from the metal-bound water molecule (or hydroxide) to promote the hydrolytic attack on the carbonyl group of the substrate. A tetrahedral intermediate is formed and then collapses with cleavage of the C-N bond after proton transfer to the leaving group amine by Asp-273. The lack of a solvent isotope effect by D2O and the absence of any changes to the kinetic constants with increases in solvent viscosity indicate that net product formation is not limited to any significant extent by proton-transfer steps or the release of products. N-Trifluoroacetyl-d-glucosamine-6-phosphate is hydrolyzed by NagA 26-fold faster than the corresponding N-acetyl derivative. This result is consistent with the formation or collapse of the tetrahedral intermediate as the rate limiting step in the catalytic mechanism of NagA.  相似文献   

9.
1H-3-Hydroxy-4-oxoquinaldine 2,4-dioxygenase (Hod), catalyzing cleavage of its heteroaromatic substrate to form carbon monoxide and N-acetylanthranilate, belongs to the α/β hydrolase fold family of enzymes. Analysis of protein variants suggested that Hod has adapted active-site residues of the α/β hydrolase fold for the dioxygenolytic reaction. H251 was recently shown to act as a general base to abstract a proton from the organic substrate. Residue S101, which corresponds to the nucleophile of the catalytic triad of α/β-hydrolases, presumably participates in binding the heteroaromatic substrate. H102 and residues located in the topological region of the triad’s acidic residue appear to influence O2 binding and reactivity. A tyrosine residue might be involved in the turnover of the ternary complex [HodH+–3,4-dioxyquinaldine dianion–O2]. Absence of viscosity effects and kinetic solvent isotope effects suggests that turnover of the ternary complex, rather than substrate binding, product release, or proton movements, involves the rate-determining step in the reaction catalyzed by Hod.  相似文献   

10.
During the acetylcholinesterase catalytic process, the acetylcholine substrate attaches to the peripheral anionic site and then slides to the catalytic site situated in the center of the enzyme, at the bottom of a deep and narrow active gorge. Before the first catalytic cycle is complete, a second substrate molecule approaches and modulates the reaction. An inhibitor interferes with all steps and further complicates the situation. The reaction can be studied separately in the presence of two substrates, one good and one poor, and it can also be conducted simultaneously using a poor substrate as an inhibitor of the hydrolysis of a good substrate. Here, we have performed such an analysis, reducing the number of unknowns to those for the two substrates, while gaining additional information from the inhibition measurements without introducing new unknowns. To lower the number of realistic global minima in the analysis, we coupled the specific rate equation of the model to the rational polynomial of the corresponding degree. In contrast to the good substrate, the acetylation step by the poor substrate is found to be enhanced by the binding of the second substrate molecule to the peripheral anionic site. We attribute this to the different rate-limiting steps during the acetylation process: enhanced accommodation of the substrate paranitrophenylacetate is still slower than the hindered exit of the product paranitrophenol.  相似文献   

11.
Sun L  Martin DC  Kantrowitz ER 《Biochemistry》1999,38(9):2842-2848
Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase catalyzes both the nonspecific hydrolysis of phosphomonoesters and a transphosphorylation reaction in which phosphate is transferred to an alcohol via a phosphoseryl intermediate. The rate-determining step for the wild-type enzyme is pH dependent. At alkaline pH, release of the product phosphate from the noncovalent enzyme-phosphate complex determines the reaction rate, whereas at acidic pH hydrolysis of the covalent enzyme-phosphate complex controls the reaction rate. When the lysine at position 328 was substituted with a cysteine (K328C), the rate-determining step at pH 8.0 of the mutant enzyme was altered so that hydrolysis of the covalent intermediate became limiting rather than phosphate release. The transphosphorylation activity of the K328C enzyme was selectively enhanced, while the hydrolysis activity was reduced compared to that of the wild-type enzyme. The ratio of the transphosphorylation to the hydrolysis activities increased 28-fold for the K328C enzyme in comparison with the wild-type enzyme. Several other mutant enzymes for which a positive charge at the active center is removed by site-specific mutagenesis share this characteristic of the K328C enzyme. These results suggest that the positive charge at position 328 is at least partially responsible for maintaining the balance between the hydrolysis and transphosphorylation activities and plays an important role in determining the rate-limiting step of E. coli alkaline phosphatase.  相似文献   

12.
MutY, a DNA repair enzyme, is unusual in that it binds exceedingly tightly to its products after the chemical steps of catalysis. Until now it was not known whether the product being released in the rate-limiting step was DNA, adenine, or both. MutY hydrolyzes adenine from 8-oxo-G:A (OG:A) base pair mismatches as the first step in the base excision repair pathway, as well as from G:A mismatches. The products are adenine and DNA containing an apurinic (AP) site. Tight product binding may have a physiological role in preventing further damage at the OG:AP site. We developed a rate assay using [8-14C]adenine in OG:A or G:A mismatches that distinguishes between adenine hydrolysis and adenine release. [8-14C]Adenine was released quickly from the MutY.AP-DNA.[8-14C]adenine complex, with a rate constant greater than 5 min-1. This was much faster than the rate-limiting step, at 0.006-0.015 min-1. Gel retardation experiments showed that AP-DNA release was very slow, consistent with it being the rate-limiting step. Thus, the kinetic mechanism involves fast adenine release after hydrolysis followed by rate-limiting AP-DNA release. Adenine appears to be buried deep in the protein.DNA interface, but there is enough flexibility or open space for it to dissociate from the MutY.APDNA.adenine complex. These results have implications for the catalytic mechanism of MutY.  相似文献   

13.
DNA polymerase alpha from Drosophila melanogaster embryos is a multisubunit enzyme complex which can exhibit DNA polymerase, 3'----5' exonuclease, and DNA primase activities. Pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP) inhibition of DNA polymerase activity in this complex is time dependent and exhibits saturation kinetics. Inhibition can be reversed by incubation with an excess of a primary amine unless the PLP-enzyme conjugate is first reduced with NaBH4. These results indicate that PLP inhibition occurs via imine formation at a specific site(s) on the enzyme. Results from substrate protection experiments are most consistent with inhibition of DNA polymerase activity by PLP binding to either one of two sites. One site (PLP site 1) can be protected from PLP inhibition by any nucleoside triphosphate in the absence or presence of template-primer, suggesting that PLP site 1 defines a nucleotide-binding site which is important for DNA polymerase activity but which is distinct from the DNA polymerase active site. PLP also inhibits DNA primase activity of the DNA polymerase alpha complex, and primase activity can be protected from PLP inhibition by nucleotide alone, arguing that PLP site 1 lies within the DNA primase active site. The second inhibitory PLP-binding site (PLP site 2) is only protected from PLP inhibition when the enzyme is bound to both template-primer and correct dNTP in a stable ternary complex. Since binding of PLP at site 2 is mutually exclusive with template-directed dNTP binding at the DNA polymerase active site, PLP site 2 appears to define the dNTP binding domain of the active site. Results from initial velocity analysis of PLP inhibition argue that there is a rate-limiting step in the polymerization cycle during product release and/or translocation.  相似文献   

14.
The hydrolysis of NAD+ analogs bearing different substituents in the pyridinium moiety, catalyzed by solubilized calf spleen NAD+ glycohydrolase, was studied. The enzyme was specific for analogs possessing a carbonyl function at position C-3. The observed maximal rates showed no simple dependence either on the leaving ability of the parent pyridines or on the observed binding energies. The analogs without carbonyl substituents were not found to be hydrolyzed under our experimental conditions; and, compared to the substrates, they all presented much higher affinities for the active site, which could not be related to specific interactions. These results indicate that the rate-limiting step of the NAD+ hydrolysis, which is the formation of an enzyme-ADP-ribosyl intermediate, is probably more complex than a simple chemical step, i.e., pyridinium-ribose bond breakage. At a molecular level we favor a catalytic mechanism which, through nonbonded interactions between the substrate and the active site of the enzyme, results in the destabilization of the pyridinium-ribose bond, i.e., unimolecular decomposition involving an oxocarbonium ion intermediate.  相似文献   

15.
Clavulanic acid is a widely used beta-lactamase inhibitor whose key beta-lactam core is formed by beta-lactam synthetase. beta-Lactam synthetase exhibits a Bi-Ter mechanism consisting of two chemical steps, acyl-adenylation followed by beta-lactam formation. 32PPi-ATP exchange assays showed the first irreversible step of catalysis is acyl-adenylation. From a small, normal solvent isotope effect (1.38 +/- 0.04), it was concluded that beta-lactam synthesis contributes at least partially to kcat. Site-specific mutation of Lys-443 identified this residue as the ionizable group at pKa approximately 8.1 apparent in the pH-kcat profile that stabilizes the beta-lactam-forming step. Viscosity studies demonstrated that a protein conformational change was also partially rate-limiting on kcat attenuating the observed solvent isotope effect on beta-lactam formation. Adherence to Kramers' theory gave a slope of 1.66 +/- 0.08 from a plot of log(o kcat/kcat) versus log(eta/eta(o)) consistent with opening of a structured loop visible in x-ray data preceding product release. Internal "friction" within the enzyme contributes to a slope of > 1 in this analysis. Correspondingly, earlier in the catalytic cycle ordering of a mobile active site loop upon substrate binding was manifested by an inverse solvent isotope effect (0.67 +/- 0.15) on kcat/Km. The increased second-order rate constant in heavy water was expected from ordering of this loop over the active site imposing torsional strain. Finally, an Eyring plot displayed a large enthalpic change accompanying loop movement (DeltaH approximately 20 kcal/mol) comparable to the chemical barrier of beta-lactam formation.  相似文献   

16.
The Mechanism of Action of Multidrug-Resistance-Linked P-Glycoprotein   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
P-glycoprotein (Pgp), the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter, confers multidrug resistance to cancer cells by extruding cytotoxic natural product amphipathic drugs using the energy of ATP hydrolysis. Our studies are directed toward understanding the mechanism of action of Pgp and recent work deals with the assessment of interaction between substrate and ATP sites and elucidation of the catalytic cycle of ATP hydrolysis. The kinetic analyses of ATP hydrolysis by reconstituted purified Pgp suggest that ADP release is the rate-limiting step in the catalytic cycle and the substrates exert their effect by modulating ADP release. In addition, we provide evidence for two distinct roles for ATP hydrolysis in a single turnover of Pgp, one in the transport of drug and the other in effecting conformational changes so as to reset the transporter for the next catalytic cycle. Detailed kinetic measurements determined that both nucleotide-binding domains behave symmetrically and during individual hydrolysis events the ATP sites are recruited in a random manner. Furthermore, only one nucleotide site hydrolyzes ATP at any given time, causing (in this site) a conformational change that drastically decreases (>30-fold) the affinity of the second site for ATP-binding. Thus, the blocking of ATP-binding to the second site while the first one is in catalytic conformation appears to be the basis for the alternate catalytic cycle of ATP hydrolysis by Pgp, and this may be applicable as well to other ABC transporters linked with the development of multidrug resistance.  相似文献   

17.
Steady-state ATP hydrolysis in the F1-ATPase of the F(O)F1 ATP synthase complex involves rotation of the central gamma subunit relative to the catalytic sites in the alpha3beta3 pseudo-hexamer. To understand the relationship between the catalytic mechanism and gamma subunit rotation, the pre-steady-state kinetics of Mg x ATP hydrolysis in the soluble F1-ATPase upon rapid filling of all three catalytic sites was determined. The experimentally accessible partial reactions leading up to the rate-limiting step and continuing through to the steady-state mode were obtained for the first time. The burst kinetics and steady-state hydrolysis for a range of Mg x ATP concentrations provide adequate constraints for a unique minimal kinetic model that can fit all the data and satisfy extensive sensitivity tests. Significantly, the fits show that the ratio of the rates of ATP hydrolysis and synthesis is close to unity even in the steady-state mode of hydrolysis. Furthermore, the rate of Pi binding in the absence of the membranous F(O) sector is insignificant; thus, productive Pi binding does not occur without the influence of a proton motive force. In addition to the minimal steps of ATP binding, reversible ATP hydrolysis/synthesis, and the release of product Pi and ADP, one additional rate-limiting step is required to fit the burst kinetics. On the basis of the testing of all possible minimal kinetic models, this step must follow hydrolysis and precede Pi release in order to explain burst kinetics. Consistent with the single molecule analysis of Yasuda et al. (Yasuda, R., Noji, H., Yoshida, M., Kinosita, K., and Itoh, H. (2001) Nature 410, 898-904), we propose that the rate-limiting step involves a partial rotation of the gamma subunit; hence, we name this step k(gamma). Moreover, the only model that is consistent with our data and many other observations in the literature suggests that reversible hydrolysis/synthesis can only occur in the active site of the beta(TP) conformer (Abrahams, J. P., Leslie, A. G. W., Lutter, R., and Walker, J. E. (1994) Nature 370, 621-628).  相似文献   

18.
Saccharopine dehydrogenase (SDH) catalyzes the final reaction in the α-aminoadipate pathway, the conversion of l-saccharopine to l-lysine (Lys) and α-ketoglutarate (α-kg) using NAD? as an oxidant. The enzyme utilizes a general acid-base mechanism to conduct its reaction with a base proposed to accept a proton from the secondary amine of saccharopine in the oxidation step and a group proposed to activate water to hydrolyze the resulting imine. Crystal structures of an open apo form and a closed form of the enzyme with saccharopine and NADH bound have been determined at 2.0 and 2.2 ? resolution, respectively. In the ternary complex, a significant movement of domain I relative to domain II that closes the active site cleft between the two domains and brings H96 and K77 into the proximity of the substrate binding site is observed. The hydride transfer distance is 3.6 ?, and the side chains of H96 and K77 are properly positioned to act as acid-base catalysts. Preparation of the K77M and H96Q single-mutant and K77M/H96Q double-mutant enzymes provides data consistent with their role as the general acid-base catalysts in the SDH reaction. The side chain of K77 initially accepts a proton from the ε-amine of the substrate Lys and eventually donates it to the imino nitrogen as it is reduced to a secondary amine in the hydride transfer step, and H96 protonates the carbonyl oxygen as the carbinolamine is formed. The K77M, H976Q, and K77M/H96Q mutant enzymes give 145-, 28-, and 700-fold decreases in V/E(t) and >103-fold increases in V?/K(Lys)E(t) and V?/K(α-kg)E(t) (the double mutation gives >10?-fold decreases in the second-order rate constants). In addition, the K77M mutant enzyme exhibits a primary deuterium kinetic isotope effect of 2.0 and an inverse solvent deuterium isotope effect of 0.77 on V?/K(Lys). A value of 2.0 was also observed for (D)(V?/K(Lys))(D?O) when the primary deuterium kinetic isotope effect was repeated in D?O, consistent with a rate-limiting hydride transfer step. A viscosity effect of 0.8 was observed on V?/K(Lys), indicating the solvent deuterium isotope effect resulted from stabilization of an enzyme form prior to hydride transfer. A small normal solvent isotope effect is observed on V, which decreases slightly when repeated with NADD, consistent with a contribution from product release to rate limitation. In addition, V?/K(Lys)E(t) is pH-independent, which is consistent with the loss of an acid-base catalyst and perturbation of the pK(a) of the second catalytic group to a higher pH, likely a result of a change in the overall charge of the active site. The primary deuterium kinetic isotope effect for H96Q, measured in H?O or D?O, is within error equal to 1. A solvent deuterium isotope effect of 2.4 is observed with NADH or NADD as the dinucleotide substrate. Data suggest rate-limiting imine formation, consistent with the proposed role of H96 in protonating the leaving hydroxyl as the imine is formed. The pH-rate profile for V?/K(Lys)E(t) exhibits the pK(a) for K77, perturbed to a value of ~9, which must be unprotonated to accept a proton from the ε-amine of the substrate Lys so that it can act as a nucleophile. Overall, data are consistent with a role for K77 acting as the base that accepts a proton from the ε-amine of the substrate lysine prior to nucleophilic attack on the α-oxo group of α-ketoglutarate, and finally donating a proton to the imine nitrogen as it is reduced to give saccharopine. In addition, data indicate a role for H96 acting as a general acid-base catalyst in the formation of the imine between the ε-amine of lysine and the α-oxo group of α-ketoglutarate.  相似文献   

19.
Many enzymes have buried active sites. The properties of the tunnels connecting the active site with bulk solvent affect ligand binding and unbinding and also the catalytic properties. Here, we investigate ligand passage in the haloalkane dehalogenase enzyme LinB and the effect of replacing leucine by a bulky tryptophan at a tunnel-lining position. Transient kinetic experiments show that the mutation significantly slows down the rate of product release. Moreover, the mechanism of bromide ion release is changed from a one-step process in the wild type enzyme to a two-step process in the mutant. The rate constant of bromide ion release corresponds to the overall steady-state turnover rate constant, suggesting that product release became the rate-limiting step of catalysis in the mutant. We explain the experimental findings by investigating the molecular details of the process computationally. Analysis of trajectories from molecular dynamics simulations with a tunnel detection software reveals differences in the tunnels available for ligand egress. Corresponding differences are seen in simulations of product egress using a specialized enhanced sampling technique. The differences in the free energy barriers for egress of a bromide ion obtained using potential of mean force calculations are in good agreement with the differences in rates obtained from the transient kinetic experiments. Interactions of the bromide ion with the introduced tryptophan are shown to affect the free energy barrier for its passage. The study demonstrates how the mechanism of an enzymatic catalytic cycle and reaction kinetics can be engineered by modification of protein tunnels.  相似文献   

20.
BACKGROUND: Arginase is a manganese-dependent enzyme that catalyzes the hydrolysis of L-arginine to L-ornithine and urea. In ureotelic animals arginase is the final enzyme of the urea cycle, but in many species it has a wider role controlling the use of arginine for other metabolic purposes, including the production of creatine, polyamines, proline and nitric oxide. Arginase activity is regulated by various small molecules, including the product L-ornithine. The aim of these structural studies was to test aspects of the catalytic mechanism and to investigate the structural basis of arginase inhibition. RESULTS: We report here the crystal structures of arginase from Bacillus caldovelox at pH 5.6 and pH 8.5, and of binary complexes of the enzyme with L-arginine, L-ornithine and L-lysine at pH 8.5. The arginase monomer comprises a single compact alpha/beta domain that further associates into a hexameric quaternary structure. The binary complexes reveal a common mode of ligand binding, which places the substrate adjacent to the dimanganese centre. We also observe a conformational change that impacts on the active site and is coupled with the occupancy of an external site by guanidine or arginine. CONCLUSIONS: The structures reported here clarify aspects of the active site and indicate key features of the catalytic mechanism, including substrate coordination to one of the manganese ions and an orientational role for a neighboring histidine residue. Stereospecificity for L-amino acids is found to depend on their precise recognition at the active-site rim. Identification of a second arginine-binding site, remote from the active site, and associated conformational changes lead us to propose a regulatory role for this site in substrate hydrolysis.  相似文献   

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