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1.
M Farnum  M Palcic  J P Klinman 《Biochemistry》1986,25(8):1898-1904
The pH dependence of steady-state parameters for [1,1-1H2]- and [1,1-2H2]benzylamine oxidation and of tritium exchange from [2-3H]dopamine has been measured in the bovine plasma amine oxidase reaction. Deuterium isotope effects on kcat/Km for benzylamine are observed to be constant, near the intrinsic value of 13.5, over the experimental pH range, indicating that C-H bond cleavage is fully rate limiting for this parameter. As a consequence, pKa values derived from kcat/Km profiles, 8.0 +/- 0.1 (pK1) and 9.0 +/- 0.16 (pKs), can be ascribed to microscopic pKa values for the ionization of an essential active site residue (EB1) and substrate, respectively. Profiles for kcat and Dkcat show that EB1 undergoes a perturbation from 8.0 to 5.6 +/- 0.3 (pK1') in the presence of substrate; additionally, a second ionization, pK2 = 7.25 +/- 0.25, is observed to mediate but not be essential for enzyme reoxidation. The pH dependence of the ratio of tritium exchange to product formation for dopamine also indicates base catalysis with a pKexch = 5.5 +/- 0.01, which is within experimental error of pK1'. We conclude that the data presented herein support a single residue catalyzing both substrate oxidation and exchange, consistent with recent stereochemical results that implicate a syn relationship between these processes [Farnum, M., & Klinman, J.P. (1985) Fed. Proc., Fed. Am. Soc. Exp. Biol. 44, 1055]. This conclusion contrasts with earlier kinetic data in support of a large rate differential for the exchange of hydrogen from C-1 vs. C-2 of phenethylamine derivatives [Palcic, M.M., & Klinman, J.P. (1983) Biochemistry 22, 5957-5966].(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
M M Palcic  J P Klinman 《Biochemistry》1983,22(25):5957-5966
Bovine plasma amine oxidase catalyzes the oxidative deamination of primary amines. The reaction can be viewed as two half-reactions: enzyme reduction by substrate followed by enzyme reoxidation by dioxygen. Anaerobic stopped-flow kinetic measurements of the first half-reaction indicate very large deuterium isotope effects for benzylamine, m-tyramine, and dopamine, Dk = 13.5 +/- 1.3, which are ascribed to an intrinsic isotope effect. From the insensitivity of these isotope effects to amine concentration, stopped-flow data provide substrate dissociation constants, K1, and rate constants for the C-H bond cleavage step, k3, directly. Steady-state isotope effects have also been measured for benzylamine and six ring-substituted phenethylamines. Whereas a small range of values for kcat, 0.38-1.2 s-1, and Dkcat, 5.4-8.8, is observed, kcat/Km = 1.3 X 10(2) to 3.8 X 10(4) M-1 S-1 and D(kcat/Km) = 5.6-16.1 indicate a marked effect of ring substituent. As described earlier [Miller, S., & Klinman, J.P. (1982) Methods Enzymol. 87, 711], the availability of an intrinsic isotope effect for an enzymatic reaction permits calculation of microscopic constants from steady-state data. By employment of a minimal mechanism for bovine plasma amine oxidase involving a single precatalytic and multiple postcatalytic enzyme-substrate complexes, equations have been derived that allow calculation of k3 and K1 when DKeq congruent to 1 less than Dk. Unexpectedly, in the case of K1, we have shown that this parameter can be calculated from steady-state parameters without the requirement for an intrinsic isotope effect. This result should have general application to both ping-pong and sequential ternary-complex enzyme mechanisms. Of significance for future applications of steady-state isotope effects to the calculation of microscopic constants, values for K1 and k3 derived from steady-state parameters and single turnover measurements indicate excellent agreement. Compilation of parameters among six ring-substituted phenethylamines reveals alteration in delta G for enzyme-substrate complex formation by 2.8 kcal/mol, together with an essentially invariant rate constant for C-H bond activation. A detailed discussion of the relevance of these findings to the interrelationship of binding energy and catalytic efficiency in enzyme reactions is presented.  相似文献   

3.
J Rucker  Y Cha  T Jonsson  K L Grant  J P Klinman 《Biochemistry》1992,31(46):11489-11499
Previous investigations have indicated a role for hydrogen tunneling in the yeast alcohol dehydrogenase catalyzed oxidation of benzyl alcohol [Cha, Y., Murray, C. J., & Klinman, J. P. (1989) Science 243, 1325] and the bovine plasma amine oxidase catalyzed oxidation of benzylamine [Grant, K.L., & Klinman, J. P. (1989) Biochemistry 28,6597]. In the present studies, values of protium to tritium and deuterium to tritium isotope effects and their temperature dependencies have been measured using ring-substituted substrates for yeast alcohol dehydrogenase and bovine plasma amine oxidase, revealing tunneling in each case. The results of these studies indicate that hydrogen tunneling is a general phenomenon and is not limited to enzyme reactions with degenerate energy levels for bound substrates and products. An analysis of internal thermodynamics in the yeast alcohol dehydrogenase reaction shows that tunneling occurs when delta H degrees is endothermic and that the degree of tunneling appears to increase as delta H degrees decreases toward zero.  相似文献   

4.
J R Miller  D E Edmondson 《Biochemistry》1999,38(41):13670-13683
Monoamine oxidase A (MAO A) plays a central role in the oxidation of amine neurotransmitters. To investigate the structure and mechanism of this enzyme, recombinant human liver MAO A was expressed and purified from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Anaerobic titrations of the enzyme require only 1 mol of substrate per mole of enzyme-bound flavin for complete reduction. This demonstrates that only one redox-active group (i.e., the covalent FAD cofactor) is involved in catalysis. The reaction rates and binding affinities of 17 para-substituted benzylamine analogues with purified MAO A were determined by steady state and stopped flow kinetic experiments. For each substrate analogue that was tested, the rates of steady state turnover (k(cat)) and anaerobic flavin reduction (k(red)) are similar in value. Deuterium kinetic isotope effects on k(cat), k(red), k(cat)/K(m), and k(red)/K(s) with alpha, alpha-[(2)H]benzylamines are similar for each substrate analogue that was tested and range in value from 6 to 13, indicating that alpha-C-H bond cleavage is rate-limiting in catalysis. Substrate analogue dissociation constants determined from reductive half-reaction experiments as well as from steady state kinetic isotope effect data [Klinman, J. P., and Matthews, R. G. (1985) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 107, 1058-1060] are in excellent agreement. Quantitative structure-activity relationship (QSAR) analysis of dissociation constants shows that the binding of para-substituted benzylamine analogues to MAO A is best correlated with the van der Waals volume of the substituent, with larger substituents binding most tightly. The rate of para-substituted benzylamine analogue oxidation and/or substrate analogue-dependent flavin reduction is best correlated with substituent electronic effects (sigma). Separation of the electronic substituent parameter (sigma) into field-inductive and resonance effects provides a more comprehensive treatment of the electronic correlations. The positive correlation of rate with sigma (rho approximately 2.0) suggests negative charge development at the benzyl carbon position occurs and supports proton abstraction as the mode of alpha-C-H bond cleavage. These results are discussed in terms of several mechanisms proposed for MAO catalysis and with previous structure-activity studies published with bovine liver MAO B [Walker, M. C., and Edmondson, D. E. (1994) Biochemistry 33, 7088-7098].  相似文献   

5.
Plasma amine oxidases catalyze the oxidative deamination of amines to aldehydes, followed by a 2e- reduction of O2 to H2O2. Pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ), previously believed to be restricted to prokaryotes, has recently been proposed to be the cofactor undergoing reduction in the first half-reaction of bovine plasma amine oxidase (Ameyama, M., Hayashi, U., Matsushita, K., Shinagawa, E., and Adachi, O. (1984) Agric. Biol. Chem. 48, 561-565; Lobenstein-Verbeek, C. L., Jongejan, J. A., Frank, J., and Duine, J. A. (1984) FEBS Lett. 170, 305-309). This result is unexpected, since model studies with PQQ implicate Schiff's base formation between a reactive carbonyl and substrates, whereas experiments with bovine plasma amine oxidase have failed to provide evidence for a carbonyl cofactor. We have, therefore, re-examined putative adducts between substrate and enzyme-bound cofactor, employing a combination of [14C]benzylamine and [3H]NaCNBH3. The use of the relatively weak reductant, NaCNBH3, affords Schiff's base specificity and permits the study of enzyme below pH 7.0. As we show, enzyme can only be inactivated by NaCNBH3 in the presence of substrate, leading to the incorporation of 1 mol of [14C]benzylamine/mol of enzyme subunit at complete inactivation. By contrast, we are unable to detect any labeling with [3H]NaCNBH3, analogous to an earlier study with [3H]NaCNBH4 (Suva, R. H., and Abeles, R. H. (1978) Biochemistry 17, 3538-3545). We conclude, first, that our inability to obtain adducts containing both carbon 14 and tritium rules out the reductive trapping either of amine substrate with pyridoxal phosphate or of aldehyde product with a lysyl side chain and, second, that the observed pattern of labeling is fully consistent with the presence of PQQ at the active site of bovine plasma amine oxidase.  相似文献   

6.
S M Miller  J P Klinman 《Biochemistry》1985,24(9):2114-2127
The chemical mechanism of hydroxylation, catalyzed by dopamine beta-monooxygenase, has been explored with a combination of secondary kinetic isotope effects and structure-reactivity correlations. Measurement of primary and secondary isotope effects on Vmax/Km under conditions where the intrinsic primary hydrogen isotope effect is known allows calculation of the corresponding intrinsic secondary isotope effect. By this method we have obtained an alpha-deuterium isotope effect, Dk alpha = 1.19 +/- 0.06, with dopamine as substrate. The beta-deuterium isotope effect is indistinguishable from one. The large magnitude of Dk alpha, together with our previous determination of a near maximal primary deuterium isotope effect of 9.4-11, clearly indicates the occurrence of a stepwise process for C-H bond cleavage and C-O bond formation and hence the presence of a substrate-derived intermediate. To probe the nature of this intermediate, a structure-reactivity study was performed by using a series of para-substituted phenylethylamines. Deuterium isotope effects on Vmax and Vmax/Km parameters were determined for all of the substrates, allowing calculation of the rate constants for C-H bond cleavage and product dissociation and dissociation constants for amine and O2 loss from the enzyme-substrate ternary complex. Multiple regression analysis yielded an electronic effect of p = -1.5 for the C-H bond cleavage step, eliminating the possibility of a carbanion intermediate. A negative p value is consistent with formation of either a radical or a carbocation; however, a significantly better correlation is obtained with sigma p rather than sigma p+, implying formation of a radical intermediate via a polarized transition state. Additional effects determined from the regression analyses include steric effects on rate constants for substrate hydroxylation and product release and on KDamine, consistent with a sterically restricted binding site, and a positive electronic effect of p = 1.4 on product dissociation, ascribed to a loss of product from an enzyme-bound Cu(II)-alkoxide complex. These results lead us to propose a mechanism in which O-O homolysis [from a putative Cu(II)-OOH species] and C-H homolysis (from substrate) occur in a concerted fashion, circumventing the formation of a discrete, high energy oxygen species such as hydroxyl radical. The substrate and peroxide-derived radical intermediates thus formed undergo a recombination, kinetically limited by displacement of an intervening water molecule, to give the postulated Cu(II)-alkoxide product complex.  相似文献   

7.
C-H bond breakage by tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ)-dependent methylamine dehydrogenase (MADH) occurs by vibrationally assisted tunneling (Basran, J., Sutcliffe, M. J., and Scrutton, N. S. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 3218--3222). We show here a similar mechanism in TTQ-dependent aromatic amine dehydrogenase (AADH). The rate of TTQ reduction by dopamine in AADH has a large, temperature independent kinetic isotope effect (KIE = 12.9 +/- 0.2), which is highly suggestive of vibrationally assisted tunneling. H-transfer is compromised with benzylamine as substrate and the KIE is deflated (4.8 +/- 0.2). The KIE is temperature-independent, but reaction rates are strongly dependent on temperature. With tryptamine as substrate reaction rates can be determined only at low temperature as C-H bond cleavage is rapid, and an exceptionally large KIE (54.7 +/- 1.0) is observed. Studies with deuterated tryptamine suggest vibrationally assisted tunneling is the mechanism of deuterium and, by inference, hydrogen transfer. Bond cleavage by MADH using a slow substrate (ethanolamine) occurs with an inflated KIE (14.7 +/- 0.2 at 25 degrees C). The KIE is temperature-dependent, consistent with differential tunneling of protium and deuterium. Our observations illustrate the different modes of H-transfer in MADH and AADH with fast and slow substrates and highlight the importance of barrier shape in determining reaction rate.  相似文献   

8.
The effect of isotopic substitution of the 8-H of xanthine (with 2H and 3H) on the rate of oxidation by bovine xanthine oxidase and by chicken xanthine dehydrogenase has been measured. V/K isotope effects were determined from competition experiments. No difference in H/T(V/K) values was observed between xanthine oxidase (3.59 +/- 0.1) and xanthine dehydrogenase (3.60 +/- 0.09). Xanthine dehydrogenase exhibited a larger T/D(V/K) value (0.616 +/- 0.028) than that observed for xanthine oxidase (0.551 +/- 0.016). Observed H/T(V/K) values for either enzyme are less than those H/T(V/K) values calculated with D/T(V/K) data. These discrepancies are suggested to arise from the presence of a rate-limiting step(s) prior to the irreversible C-H bond cleavage step in the mechanistic pathways of both enzymes. These kinetic complexities preclude examination of whether tunneling contributes to the reaction coordinate for the H-transfer step in each enzyme. No observable exchange of tritium with solvent is observed during the anaerobic incubation of [8-3H]xanthine with either enzyme, which suggests the reverse commitment to catalysis (Cr) is essentially zero. With the assumption of adherence to reduced mass relationships, the intrinsic deuterium isotope effect (Dk) for xanthine oxidation is calculated to be 7.4 +/- 0.7 for xanthine oxidase and 4.2 +/- 0.2 for xanthine dehydrogenase. By use of these values and steady-state kinetic data, the minimal rate for the hydrogen-transfer step is calculated to be approximately 75-fold faster than kcat for xanthine oxidase and approximately 10-fold faster than kcat for xanthine dehydrogenase. This calculated rate is consistent with data obtained by rapid-quench experiments with XO. A stoichiometry of 1.0 +/- 0.3 mol of uric acid/mol of functional enzyme is formed within the mixing time of the instrument (5-10 ms). The kinetic isotope effect data also permitted the calculation of the Kd values [Klinman, J. P., & Mathews, R. G. (1985) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 107, 1058-1060] for substrate dissociation, including all reversible steps prior to C-H bond cleavage. Values calculated for each enzyme (Kd = 120 microM) were found to be identical within experimental uncertainty.  相似文献   

9.
The catalytic function of bovine lysyl oxidase in the absence of copper   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Bovine lysyl oxidase (BLO) contains two different cofactors, copper (Kagan, H. M. (1986) in Biology of Extracellular Matrix (Mecham, R. P., ed) Vol. 1, pp. 321-398, Academic Press, Orlando, FL) and lysine tyrosyl quinone (LTQ) (Wang, S. X., Mure, M., Medzihradszky, K. F., Burlingame, A. L., Brown, D. E., Dooley, D. M., Smith, A. J., Kagan, H. M., and Klinman, J. P. (1996) Science 273, 1078-1084). By a combination of UV-visible spectroscopy, metal content analysis, and activity measurements, we find that copper-depleted BLO reacts in an irreversible manner with phenylhydrazine, an amine substrate analog, and catalyzes multiple turnovers of the substrate benzylamine. After removal of the majority of enzyme-bound copper, apoBLO exhibits a decrease in the LTQ content, as evidenced by the drop of the 510-520-nm absorbance, suggesting that the copper may play a structural role in stabilizing the LTQ. The remaining intact LTQ in the apoBLO reacted with phenylhydrazine, both in the presence and absence of the chelator, 10 mm 2,2'-dipyridyl. When benzylamine was used as the substrate, the apoBLO turned over at a rate of 50-60% of the native BLO (after correction for the residual copper and the change of LTQ content). Copper contamination from the assay buffer was ruled out by comparison of enzyme activity using different apoBLO concentrations. These studies demonstrate that the mature form of lysyl oxidase retains many of its functions in the absence of copper.  相似文献   

10.
When the stereospecifically deuterated dopamine enantiomers, (R)- and (S)-[alpha-2H1]dopamine, are incubated with amine oxidases, the deuterium atom may be either retained to form monodeuterated 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetaldehyde, or eliminated to produce the nondeuterated or protio-aldehyde product. These two aldehydes can be separated from one another and identified by high-performance liquid chromatography with electrochemical detection. Three types of stereospecific abstraction of a hydrogen from the alpha-carbon of dopamine during deamination have been observed. In the first type, the pro-R hydrogen is removed from the alpha-carbon. Enzymes in this category are mitochondrial monoamine oxidases A and B, as isolated from different tissues and species. The second type of deamination involves the abstraction of pro-S hydrogen from the alpha-carbon of dopamine. Soluble enzymes, such as rat aorta benzylamine oxidase or diamine oxidase from hog kidney and pea seedling, have been found to belong to this group. Bovine plasma amine oxidase exhibits the third type of deamination where no absolute stereospecificity is required. This enzyme catalyzes the oxidation of either (S)- or (R)-[alpha-2H1]dopamine, preferably breaking the C-H bond rather than the C-2H bond in both cases. The kinetic deuterium isotope effect during the deamination of dopamine catalyzed by the different amine oxidases varies greatly; VH/VD ranges from 1.5 to 5.5. The high magnitude of the isotope effect suggests that hydrogen abstraction may be the rate-limiting step (i.e., in reactions catalyzed by benzylamine oxidase and monoamine oxidase). When the isotope effect is low (i.e., for diamine oxidases from hog kidney or pea seedling), it is uncertain if the breaking of the bond is rate limiting.  相似文献   

11.
12.
L B Pearce  J A Roth 《Biochemistry》1985,24(8):1821-1826
Recently, evidence has been published which suggests that [Husain, M., Edmondson, D. E., & Singer, T.P. (1982) Biochemistry 21, 595-600] monoamine oxidase [amine:oxygen oxidoreductase (MAO), EC 1.4.3.4] deaminates phenylethylamine and benzylamine via two distinct kinetic pathways which involve either binary or ternary complex formation, respectively. These conclusions were drawn largely from stopped-flow kinetic analysis performed on purified enzyme removed from its native membrane and in the presence of the inhibitory detergent Triton X-100. In this study, d-amphetamine and alternative substrates were used as steady-state probes of the kinetics of deamination by the B form of human brain MAO using native membrane-bound enzyme. Initial velocity studies showed mixed-type patterns for amphetamine inhibition of phenylethylamine, tryptamine, and tyramine when either amine or oxygen was the varied substrate. Slope and intercept vs. amphetamine concentration replots were linear in all cases except for phenylethylamine (hyperbolic); Ki values obtained from linear replots of slope or intercept values were comparable. In contrast, amphetamine was a competitive inhibitor of benzylamine deamination when amine concentration was varied and uncompetitive when oxygen concentration was varied; slope and intercept replots were linear for both. When benzylamine was the alternative substrate inhibitor and tyramine and tryptamine deamination was measured, mixed-type inhibition patterns were obtained when either amine or oxygen concentration was varied; replots of slope and intercept were linear in all cases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
Nandigama RK  Edmondson DE 《Biochemistry》2000,39(49):15258-15265
The interaction of recombinant human liver monoamine oxidase A (MAO A) with a series of phenethylamine substrate analogues has been investigated by steady-state and stopped-flow kinetic techniques. Substrate analogues with para substituents exhibit large deuterium kinetic isotope effect on k(cat), on k(cat)/K(m), and on the limiting rate of enzyme reduction in reductive half-reaction experiments. These kinetic isotope effect values range from 5 to 10 with the exception of tyramine, which exhibited smaller steady-state isotope effects (2.3-3.5) than that observed on the rate of flavin reduction (6.9). The stopped-flow data show that imine release from the reduced enzyme is slower than the rate of catalytic turnover. Phenethylamine oxidation by MAO A can be described as the C-H bond cleavage step being rate limiting in catalysis and with oxygen reacting with the reduced enzyme-imine complex. In the case of tyramine, the product release from the oxidized enzyme-imine complex contributes to the rate limitation in catalysis. The binding affinities of a series of para-substituted phenethylamine analogues to MAO A show an increase in affinity of the deprotonated amine with increasing van der Waals volume of the substituent. The limiting rate of enzyme reduction decreases with increasing van der Waals volume of the substituent in a linear manner with no observable electronic contribution as observed previously with benzylamine reduction of MAO A [Miller, J. R., and Edmondson, D. E. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 13670-13683]. Examination of side chain analogues of phenethylamine show 3-phenylpropylamine to be oxidized 2.5-fold more slowly and bound 75-fold more tightly than phenethylamine. 4-Phenylbutylamine is not a substrate for MAO A but is a good competitive inhibitor with a K(i) value of 31 +/- 5 microM. Analysis of the effect of alkyl side chain alterations on binding affinities of a series of arylalkylamine analogues taken from this study and from the literature show a linear correlation with the Taft steric value (E(s)) of the side chain. These results suggest that the binding site for the aryl ring is identical for phenethylamine and for benzylamine analogues and that steric interactions of the alkyl side chain with the enzyme strongly contribute to the binding affinities of a series of reversible inhibitors of MAO A.  相似文献   

14.
M F Farnum  J P Klinman 《Biochemistry》1986,25(20):6028-6036
Bovine plasma amine oxidase (PAO) has previously been shown to catalyze a nonstereospecific loss of tritium from [2(R)-3H]- and [2(S)-3H]dopamines, attributed to multiple, catalytically active binding sites for substrate [Summers, M. C., Markovic, R., & Klinman, J. P. (1979) Biochemistry 18, 1969-1979]. Analysis of products formed from incubation of dopamine with PAO in tritiated water indicates a stereospecific, pro-R, incorporation of label at C-2. Thus, tritium washout (random) and washin (pro-R) are not the microscopic reverse of one another. We conclude that the (enamine) intermediates leading to tritium washin are nonequivalently bound. The observation of pro-R incorporation has provided a straightforward synthetic route to [1(R)-2H,2(R)-3H]- and [1(S)-2H,2(R)-3H]dopamines, which upon oxidation with PAO are expected to be processed preferentially by 1S and 1R cleavage, respectively. From previously measured isotope effects, we predict the loss of tritium from the 1(R)-2H and 1(S)-2H samples to be 74:8 for a syn relationship between cleavage at C-1 and C-2 vs. 21:90 for an anti relationship. The observation of a 68:18 ratio at 100% conversion provides strong evidence for a syn cleavage. The data support a mechanism in which a single base catalyzes a 1,3-prototrophic shift of hydrogen from C-1 of the substrate to cofactor, followed by exchange from C-2. Additionally, the results confirm the presence of alternate binding modes for dopamine at the active site of bovine plasma amine oxidase. This interaction of dopamine with plasma amine oxidase is a rare example of mirror-image catalysis in which a single substrate has two functional binding orientations on an enzyme surface.  相似文献   

15.
M Akhtar  D E Stevenson  D Gani 《Biochemistry》1990,29(33):7648-7660
L-Methionine decarboxylase from Dryopteris filix-mas catalyzes the decarboxylation of L-methionine and a range of straight- and branched-chain L-amino acids to give the corresponding amine products. The deuterium solvent isotope effects for the decarboxylation of (2S)-methionine are D(V/K) = 6.5 and DV = 2.3, for (2S)-valine are D(V/K) = 1.9 and DV = 2.6, and for (2S)-leucine are D(V/K) = 2.5 and DV = 1.0 at pL 5.5. At pL 6.0 and above, where the value of kcat for all of the substrates is low, the solvent isotope effects on Vmax for methionine are 1.1-1.2 whereas the effects on V/K remain unchanged, indicating that the solvent-sensitive transition state occurs before the first irreversible step, carbon dioxide desorption. The enzyme also catalyzes an abortive decarboxylation-transamination reaction in which the coenzyme is converted to pyridoxamine phosphate [Stevenson, D. E., Akhtar, M., & Gani, D. (1990a) Biochemistry (first paper of three in this issue)]. At very high concentration, the product amine can promote transamination of the coenzyme. However, the reaction occurs infrequently and does not influence the partitioning between decarboxylation and substrate-mediated abortive transamination under steady-state turnover conditions. The partition ratio, normal catalytic versus abortive events, can be determined from the amount of substrate consumed by a known amount of enzyme at infinite time, and the rate of inactivation can be determined by measuring the decrease in enzyme activity with respect to time. For methionine, the values of Km as determined from double-reciprocal plots of concentration versus inactivation rate are the same as those calculated from initial catalytic (decarboxylation) rate data, indicating that a single common intermediate partitions between product formation and slow transamination. The partition ratio is sensitive to changes in pH and is also dependent upon the structure of the substrate; methionine causes less frequent inactivation than either valine or leucine. The pH dependence of the partition ratio with methionine as substrate is very similar to that for V/K. Both curves show a sharp increase at approximately pH 6.25, indicating that a catalytic group on the enzyme simultaneously suppresses the abortive reaction and enhances physiological reaction in its unprotonated state. Experiments conducted in deuterium oxide allowed the solvent isotope effects for the partition ratio and the abortive reaction to be determined.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
The copper-containing enzyme dopamine beta-monooxygenase has been studied with regard to pre-steady-state kinetics of tyramine hydroxylation and reduction of enzyme-bound Cu2+ by chemical- and freeze-quench EPR techniques. The bulk of the enzyme-bound copper (approximately 70%) is reduced in a single-exponential process with a limiting rate constant of 250 s-1, Km = 0.9 mM, consistent with participation of both copper ions in the redox events of catalysis. The remaining copper is reduced much more slowly (k approximately 2 s-1) or not at all, attributed to a distribution of copper into inhibitory binding sites and the presence of some inactive enzyme. Knowledge of the Cu2+ reduction rate, together with rate constants calculated from steady-state isotope effects [Miller, S. M., & Klinman, J. P. (1985) Biochemistry 24, 2114-2127], has allowed prediction of pre-steady-state product formation transients. Measurement of these transients under conditions of excess ascorbate shows close agreement with prediction, supporting the validity of individual rate constants obtained from steady-state data. Kinetic modeling shows further that the predominant steady-state enzyme form is the enzyme-product complex (E-P), which is expected to show a correspondingly large (approximately 70% of total copper) EPR signal for bound Cu2+. Surprisingly, the steady state is characterized by a low (19% of total copper) EPR signal. This lack of correlation between the anticipated and observed steady-state EPR signal suggests either antiferromagnetic coupling in binuclear copper centers or reduction of Cu2+ in this enzyme form by ascorbic acid.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
1. Isotope effects on the catalytic activity of benzylamine oxidase at pH 7 and 9 have been studied by steady-state and transient-state kinetics methods, using [alpha,alpha-2H]benzylamine as the substrate. 2. Replacement of the alpha-hydrogen atoms in benzylamine by deuterium has no significant effect on substrate-binding to benzylamine oxidase, neither does it affect the rate of reoxidation of the reduced form of the enzyme. Conversion of the primarily formed enzyme-substrate complex into the reduced enzyme species, however, exhibits an isotope effect of about 3. 3. The data obtained are consistent with a mechanism in which reduction of benzylamine oxidase takes place by a rapid pre-equilibration between enzyme and substrate to form an amine-pyridoxal Schiff-base, which is then tautomerized by a comparatively slow prototropic shift to an amino aldehyde-pyridoxamine Schiff-base from which there is a rapid hydrolytic release of the aldehyde product corresponding to the amine substrate. Proton abstraction from the alpha-carbon of the amine moiety in the primary Schiff-base appears to be at least partially rate-limiting for the tautomerization step, and hence for the entire process of enzyme reduction.  相似文献   

18.
For bovine serum amine oxidase, two different mechanisms of substrate-induced inactivation have been proposed. One consists of a slow oxidation by H2O2 of a conserved residue in the reduced enzyme after the fast turnover phase [Pietrangeli, P., Nocera, S., Fattibene, P., Wang, X.T., Mondovì, B. & Morpurgo, L. (2000) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun.267, 174-178] and the other of the oxidation by H2O2 of the dihydrobenzoxazole in equilibrium with the product Schiff base, during the catalytic cycle [Lee, Y., Shepard, E., Smith, J., Dooley, D.M. & Sayre, L.M. (2001) Biochemistry40, 822-829]. To discriminate between the two mechanisms, the inactivation was studied using Lathyrus cicera (red vetchling) amine oxidase. This, in contrast to bovine serum amine oxidase, formed the Cu+-semiquinolamine radical with a characteristic UV-vis spectrum when oxygen was exhausted by an excess of any tested amine in a closed cuvette. The inactivation, lasting about 90 min, was simultaneous with the radical decay and with the formation of a broad band (shoulder) at 350 nm. No inactivation occurred when a thousand-fold excess of amine was rapidly oxidized in an L. cicera amine oxidase solution stirred in open air. Thus, the inactivation is a slow reaction of the reduced enzyme with H2O2, following the turnover phase. Catalase protected L. cicera amine oxidase from inactivation. This effect was substrate-dependent, varying from full protection (benzylamine) to no protection (putrescine). In the absence of H2O2, a specific inactivating reaction, without formation of the 350 nm band, was induced by some aldehydes, notably putrescine. Some mechanisms of inactivation are proposed.  相似文献   

19.
Human vascular adhesion protein-1 (VAP-1) is an endothelial copper-dependent amine oxidase involved in the recruitment and extravasation of leukocytes at sites of inflammation. VAP-1 is an important therapeutic target for several pathological conditions. We expressed soluble VAP-1 in HEK293 EBNA1 cells at levels suitable for detailed mechanistic studies with model substrates. Using the model substrate benzylamine, we analyzed the steady-state kinetic parameters of VAP-1 as a function of solution pH. We found two macroscopic pK(a) values that defined a bell-shaped plot of turnover number k(cat,app) as a function of pH, representing ionizable groups in the enzyme-substrate complex. The dependence of (k(cat)/K(m))(app) on pH revealed a single pK(a) value (~9) that we assigned to ionization of the amine group in free benzylamine substrate. A kinetic isotope effect (KIE) of 6 to 7.6 on (k(cat)/K(m))(app) over the pH range of 6 to 10 was observed with d(2)-benzylamine. Over the same pH range, the KIE on k(cat) was found to be close to unity. The unusual KIE values on (k(cat)/K(m))(app) were rationalized using a mechanistic scheme that includes the possibility of multiple isotopically sensitive steps. We also report the analysis of quantitative structure-activity relationships (QSAR) using para-substituted protiated and deuterated phenylethylamines. With phenylethylamines we observed a large KIE on k(cat,app) (8.01 ± 0.28 with phenylethylamine), indicating that C-H bond breakage is limiting for 2,4,5-trihydroxyphenylalanine quinone reduction. Poor correlations were observed between steady-state rate constants and QSAR parameters. We show the importance of combining KIE, QSAR, and structural studies to gain insight into the complexity of the VAP-1 steady-state mechanism.  相似文献   

20.
1. Stereospecific deuterated benzylamine enantiomers, R(alpha-2H1)-and S(alpha-2H1)-benzylamine, were synthesized by a combined chemical and enzymatic method. 2. The retention or cleavage of the deuterium atom during deamination of benzylamine catalyzed by amine oxidases from different sources was assessed by a GC-MS procedure and confirmed by HPLC separation of the products and by the observation of a deuterium isotope effect. 3. Three types of stereospecific abstraction of hydrogen atoms from the alpha-carbon of benzylamine during deamination were observed: (a) In the first type of deamination the pro-R hydrogen is removed from the alpha-carbon. Enzymes in this category are mitochondrial MAO from different tissues; (b) The second type of deamination involves the abstraction of pro-S hydrogen. Soluble enzymes such as rat aorta benzylamine oxidase or diamine oxidase from hog kidney and pea seedling have been found to belong to this group; and (c) Bovine plasma amine oxidase exhibits the third type of deamination where no absolute stereospecificity is required. 4. The kinetic deuterium isotope effect during the deamination of benzylamine by the different amine oxidase varies greatly, i.e. VH/VD ranged from 1.7 to 4.0.  相似文献   

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