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1.
V C Sekhar  B V Plapp 《Biochemistry》1988,27(14):5082-5088
The binding of NAD+ to liver alcohol dehydrogenase was studied by stopped-flow techniques in the pH range from 6.1 to 10.9 at 25 degrees C. Varying the concentrations of NAD+ and a substrate analogue used to trap the enzyme-NAD+ complex gave saturation kinetics. The same maximum rate constants were obtained with or without the trapping agent and by following the reaction with protein fluorescence or absorbance of a ternary complex. The data fit a mechanism with diffusion-controlled association of enzyme and NAD+, followed by an isomerization with a forward rate constant of 500 s-1 at pH 8: E E-NAD+ *E-NAD+. The isomerization may be related to the conformational change determined by X-ray crystallography of free enzyme and enzyme-coenzyme complexes. Overall bimolecular rate constants for NAD+ binding show a bell-shaped pH dependence with apparent pK values at 6.9 and 9.0. Acetimidylation of epsilon-amino groups shifts the upper pK to a value of 11 or higher, suggesting that Lys-228 is responsible for the pK of 9.0. Formation of the enzyme-imidazole complex abolishes the pK value of 6.9, suggesting that a hydrogen-bonded system extending from the zinc-bound water to His-51 is responsible for this pK value. The rates of isomerization of E-NAD+ and of pyrazole binding were maximal at pH below a pK of about 8, which is attributable to the hydrogen-bonded system. Acetimidylation of lysines or displacement of zinc-water with imidazole had little effect on the rate of isomerization of the E-NAD+ complex.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
The quenching of liver alcohol dehydrogenase protein fluorescence at alkaline pH indicates two conformational states of the enzyme with a pKa of 9.8+/-0.2, shifted to 10.6+/-0.2 in D2O. NAD+ and 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulfonate, a fluorescent probe competitive with coenzyme, bind to the acid conformation of the enzyme. The pKa of the protein-fluorescence quenching curve is shifted toward 7.6 in the presence of NAD+, and the ternary complex formation with NAD+ and trifluoroethanol results in a pH-independent maximal quench. At pH (pD) 10.5, the rate constant for NAD+ binding was 2.6 times faster in D2O2 than in H2O due to the shift of the pKa. Based on these results, a scheme has been proposed in which the state of protonation of an enzyme functional group with a pKa of 9.8 controls the conformational state of the enzyme. NAD+ binds to the acid conformation and subsequently causes another conformational change resulting in the perturbation of the pKa to 7.6. Alcohol then binds to the unprotonated form of the functional group with a pKa of 7.6 in the binary enzyme-NAD+ complex and converts the enzyme to the alkaline conformation. Thus, at neutral pH liver alcohol dehydrogenase undergoes two conformational changes en route to the ternary complex in which hydride transfer occurs.  相似文献   

3.
M R Eftink  K Bystr?m 《Biochemistry》1986,25(21):6624-6630
The association of the coenzyme NAD+ to liver alcohol dehydrogenase (LADH) is known to be pH dependent, with the binding being linked to the shift in the pK of some group on the protein from a value of 9-10, in the free enzyme, to 7.5-8 in the LADH-NAD+ binary complex. We have further characterized the nature of this linkage between NAD+ binding and proton dissociation by studying the pH dependence (pH range 6-10) of the proton release, delta n, and enthalpy change, delta Ho(app), for formation of both binary (LADH-NAD+) and ternary (LADH-NAD+-I, where I is pyrazole or trifluoroethanol) complexes. The pH dependence of both delta n and delta Ho(app) is found to be consistent with linkage to a single acid dissociating group, whose pK is perturbed from 9.5 to 8.0 upon NAD+ binding and is further perturbed to approximately 6.0 upon ternary complex formation. The apparent enthalpy change for NAD+ binding is endothermic between pH 7 and pH 10, with a maximum at pH 8.5-9.0. The pH dependence of the delta Ho(app) for both binary and ternary complex formation is consistent with a heat of protonation of -7.5 kcal/mol for the coupled acid dissociating group. The intrinsic enthalpy changes for NAD+ binding and NAD+ plus pyrazole binding to LADH are determined to be approximately 0 and -11.0 kcal/mol, respectively. Enthalpy change data are also presented for the binding of the NAD+ analogues adenosine 5'-diphosphoribose and 3-acetylpyridine adenine dinucleotide.  相似文献   

4.
The variation with pH of the kinetic parameters for the alcohol and acetaldehyde reactions were studied for the alleloenzyme AdhS from Drosophila melanogaster. The variation of Ki (KEO,I) with pH for two ethanol-competitive inhibitors, pyrazole and 2,2,2-trifluoroethanol, was also studied. Both alcohol oxidation and acetaldehyde reduction follow a compulsory ordered pathway, with coenzyme binding first. The rate-limiting step for ethanol oxidation is complex and involves at least hydride transfer and dissociation of the enzyme-NADH complex (ER). In contrast with this, the rate-limiting step for the back reaction, i.e. the reduction of acetaldehyde, is dissociation of the enzyme-NAD+ complex (EO). A rate-limiting ER dissociation appears in the oxidation of the secondary alcohol propan-2-ol, whereas for the back reaction, i.e. acetone reduction, hydride transfer in the ternary complexes is rate-limiting. There is one group in the free enzyme, with a pK of approx. 8.0, that regulates the kon velocity for NADH, whereas for NAD+ several groups seem to be involved. A group in the enzyme is drastically perturbed by the formation of the binary EO complex. Protonation of this group with a pK of 7.6 in the EO complex resulted in weakened alcohol and inhibitor binding, in addition to an increased dissociation rate of NAD+ from the binary EO complex. Neither the binding of acetaldehyde nor the dissociation rate of NADH from the binary ER complex varied within the pH region studied.  相似文献   

5.
Drosophila alcohol dehydrogenase (DADH) is an NAD+-dependent enzyme that catalyzes the oxidation of alcohols to aldehydes/ketones. DADH is the member of the short-chain dehydrogenases/reductases family (SDR) for which the largest amount of biochemical data has been gathered during the last three decades. The crystal structures of one binary form (NAD+) and three ternary complexes with NAD+.acetone, NAD+.3-pentanone and NAD+.cyclohexanone were solved at 2.4, 2.2, 1. 4 and 1.6 A resolution, respectively. From the molecular interactions observed, the reaction mechanism could be inferred. The structure of DADH undergoes a conformational change in order to bind the coenzyme. Furthermore, upon binding of the ketone, a region that was disordered in the apo form (186-191) gets stabilized and closes the active site cavity by creating either a small helix (NAD+. acetone, NAD+.3-pentanone) or an ordered loop (NAD+.cyclohexanone). The active site pocket comprises a hydrophobic bifurcated cavity which explains why the enzyme is more efficient in oxidizing secondary aliphatic alcohols (preferably R form) than primary ones. Difference Fourier maps showed that the ketone inhibitor molecule has undergone a covalent reaction with the coenzyme in all three ternary complexes. Due to the presence of the positively charged ring of the coenzyme (NAD+) and the residue Lys155, the amino acid Tyr151 is in its deprotonated (tyrosinate) state at physiological pH. Tyr151 can subtract a proton from the enolic form of the ketone and catalyze a nucleophilic attack of the Calphaatom to the C4 position of the coenzyme creating an NAD-ketone adduct. The binding of these NAD-ketone adducts to DADH accounts for the inactivation of the enzyme. The catalytic reaction proceeds in a similar way, involving the same amino acids as in the formation of the NAD-ketone adduct. The p Kavalue of 9-9.5 obtained by kinetic measurements on apo DADH can be assigned to a protonated Tyr151 which is converted to an unprotonated tyrosinate (p Ka7.6) by the influence of the positively charged nicotinamide ring in the binary enzyme-NAD+form. pH independence during the release of NADH from the binary complex enzyme-NADH can be explained by either a lack of electrostatic interaction between the coenzyme and Tyr151 or an apparent p Kavalue for this residue higher than 10.0.  相似文献   

6.
Using differential scanning microcalorimetry and measurements of protein fluorescence, the thermal denaturation of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) from porcine muscle (in the apo-form as well as in the form of the enzyme-pyruvate, enzyme-NAD+ and enzyme-NAD-pyruvate-adduct complexes) was studied. Pyruvate binding did not affect the thermal stability of LDH. NAD+ exerted a stabilizing effect on the enzyme, the value of which was proportional to the number of ligand molecules bound per LDH tetramer. The formation of the abortive LDH-NAD-pyruvate complex in one, two or three active centers of the enzyme tetramer did not influence the values of calorimetric parameters of thermal denaturation in comparison with those for the apoenzyme. The occupancy of all four active centers of LDH by the adduct resulted in a sharp increase of the enzyme thermal stability and tightness of the LDH adduct complex as compared with complexes formed upon partial saturation. The experimental results are suggestive of the existence of a concerted conformational transition of the LDH tetramer induced by the formation of the LDH-NAD-pyruvate complex in the last active center of the tetramer.  相似文献   

7.
Pig heart lactate dehydrogenase was studied in the direction of pyruvate and NADH formation by recording rapid changes in extinction, proton concentration, nucleotide fluorescence and protein fluorescence. Experiments measuring extinction changes show that there is a very rapid formation of NADH within the first millisecond and that the amplitude of this phase (phase 1) increases threefold over the pH range 6-8. A second transient rate (phase 2) can also be distinguished (whose rate is pH-dependent), followed by a steady-state rate (phase 3) of NADH production. The sum of the amplitudes of the first two phases corresponds to 1mol of NADH produced/mol of active sites of lactate dehydrogenase. Experiments that measured the liberation of protons by using Phenol Red as an indicator show that no proton release occurs during the initial very rapid formation of NADH (phase 1), but protons are released during subsequent phases of NADH production. Fluorescence experiments help to characterize these phases, and show that the very rapid phase 1 corresponds to the establishment of an equilibrium between E(NAD) (Lactate) right harpoon over left harpoon H(+)E(NADH) (Pyruvate). This equilibrium can be altered by changing lactate concentration or pH, and the H(+)E(NADH) (Pyruvate) species formed has very low nucleotide fluorescence and quenched protein fluorescence. Phase 2 corresponds to the dissociation of pyruvate and a proton from the complex with a rate constant of 1150s(-1). The observed rate constant is slower than this and is proportional to the position of the preceding equilibrium. The E(NADH) formed has high nucleotide fluorescence and quenched protein fluorescence. The reaction, which is rate-limiting during steady-state turnover, must then follow this step and be involved with dissociation of NADH from the enzyme or some conformational change immediately preceding dissociation. Several inhibitory complexes have also been studied including E(NAD+) (Oxamate) and E(NADH) (Oxamate') and the abortive ternary complex E(NADH) (Lactate). The rate of NADH dissociation from the enzyme was measured and found to be the same whether measured by ligand displacement or by relaxation experiments. These results are discussed in relation to the overall mechanism of lactate dehydrogenase turnover and the independence of the four binding sites in the active tetramer.  相似文献   

8.
Corrected fluorescence properties of yeast alcohol dehydrogenase and its coenzyme complexes have been investigated as a function of temperature. Dissociation constants have been obtained for binary and ternary complexes of NAD and NADH by following the enhancement of NADH fluorescence or the quenching of the protein fluorescence. It is found that the presence of pyrazole increases the affinity of NAD to the enzyme approximately 100-fold. The formation of the ternary enzyme - NAD - pyrazole complex is accompanied by a large change in the ultraviolet absorption properties, with a new band in the 290-nm region. Significant optical changes also accompany the formation of the ternary enzyme-NADH-acetamide complex. The possible origin for the quenching of the protein fluorescence upon coenzyme binding is discussed, and it is suggested that a coenzyme-induced conformational change can cause it. Thermodynamic parameters associated with NAD and NADH binding have been evaluated on the basis of the change of the dissociation constants with temperature. Optical and thermodynamic properties of binary and ternary complexes of yeast alcohol dehydrogenase are compared with the analogous properties of horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

9.
LeBrun LA  Park DH  Ramaswamy S  Plapp BV 《Biochemistry》2004,43(11):3014-3026
Histidine-51 in horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) is part of a hydrogen-bonded system that appears to facilitate deprotonation of the hydroxyl group of water or alcohol ligated to the catalytic zinc. The contribution of His-51 to catalysis was studied by characterizing ADH with His-51 substituted with Gln (H51Q). The steady-state kinetic constants for ethanol oxidation and acetaldehyde reduction at pH 8 are similar for wild-type and H51Q enzymes. In contrast, the H51Q substitution significantly shifts the pH dependencies for steady-state and transient reactions and decreases by 11-fold the rate constant for the transient oxidation of ethanol at pH 8. Modest substrate deuterium isotope effects indicate that hydride transfer only partially limits the transient oxidation and turnover. Transient data show that the H51Q substitution significantly decreases the rate of isomerization of the enzyme-NAD(+) complex and becomes a limiting step for ethanol oxidation. Isomerization of the enzyme-NAD(+) complex is rate limiting for acetaldehyde reduction catalyzed by the wild-type enzyme, but release of alcohol is limiting for the H51Q enzyme. X-ray crystallography of doubly substituted His51Gln:Lys228Arg ADH complexed with NAD(+) and 2,3- or 2,4-difluorobenzyl alcohol shows that Gln-51 isosterically replaces histidine in interactions with the nicotinamide ribose of the coenzyme and that Arg-228 interacts with the adenosine monophosphate of the coenzyme without affecting the protein conformation. The difluorobenzyl alcohols bind in one conformation. His-51 participates in, but is not essential for, proton transfers in the mechanism.  相似文献   

10.
1. The kinetics of oxidation of butan-1-ol and propan-2-ol by NAD+, catalysed by yeast alcohol dehydrogenase, were studied at 25 degrees C from pH 5.5 to 10, and at pH 7.05 from 14 degrees to 44 degrees C, 2. Under all conditions studied the results are consistent with a mechanism whereby some dissociation of coenzyme from the active enzyme-NAD+-alcohol ternary complexes occurs, and the mechanism is therefore not strictly compulsory order. 3. A primary 2H isotopic effect on the maximum rates of oxidation of [1-2H2]butan-1-ol and [2H7]propan-2-ol was found at 25 degrees C over the pH range 5.5-10. Further, in stopped-flow experiments at pH 7.05 and 25 degrees C, there was no transient formation of NADH in the oxidation of butan-1-ol and propan-2-ol. The principal rate-limiting step in the oxidation of dependence on pH of the maximum rates of oxidation of butan-1-ol and propan-2-ol is consisten with the possibility that histidine and cysteine residues may affect or control catalysis.  相似文献   

11.
Based on our first structural data of L-threonine dehydrogenase (TDH) of Pyrococcus horikoshii (PhTDH), we examined its catalytic mechanism. The structural analysis indicated that a catalytic zinc atom at the active centre of PhTDH is coordinated by four residues (Cys42, His67, Glu68 and Glu152) with low affinity. These residues are highly conserved in alcohol dehydrogenases (ADHs) and TDHs. Several PhTDH mutants were prepared with respect to Glu152 and other residues, relating to the proton relay system that is substantially a rate-limiting step in ADH. It was found that the E152D mutant showed 3-fold higher turnover rate and reduced affinities toward L-threonine and NAD(+), compared to wild-type PhTDH. The kinetic analysis of Glu152 mutants indicated that the carboxyl group of Glu152 is important for expressing the catalytic activity. The results obtained from pH dependency of kinetic parameters suggested that Glu152 to Asp substitution causes the enhancement of deprotonation of His47 or ionization of zinc-bound water and threonine in the enzyme-NAD(+) complex. Furthermore, it was predicted that the access of threonine substrate to the enzyme-NAD(+) complex induces a large conformational change in the active domain of PhTDH. From these results, we propose here that the proton relay system works as a catalytic mechanism of PhTDH.  相似文献   

12.
We studied the kinetics of proton uptake and release by photoactive yellow protein (PYP) from Ectothiorhodospira halophila in wild type and the E46Q and E46A mutants by transient absorption spectroscopy with the pH-indicator dyes bromocresol purple or cresol red in unbuffered solution. In parallel, we investigated the kinetics of chromophore protonation as monitored by the rise and decay of the blue-shifted state I(2) (lambda(max) = 355 nm). For wild type the proton uptake kinetics is synchronized with the fast phase of I(2) formation (tau = 500 micros at pH 6.2). The transient absorption signal from the dye also contains a slower component which is not due to dye deprotonation but is caused by dye binding to a hydrophobic patch that is transiently exposed in the structurally changed and partially unfolded I(2) intermediate. This conclusion is based on the wavelength, pH, and concentration dependence of the dye signal and on dye measurements in the presence of buffer. SVD analysis, moreover, indicates the presence of two components in the dye signal: protonation and dye binding. The dye binding has a rise time of about 4 ms and is coupled kinetically with a transition between two I(2) intermediates. In the mutant E46Q, which lacks the putative internal proton donor E46, the formation of I(2) is accelerated, but the proton uptake kinetics remains kinetically coupled to the fast phase of I(2) formation (tau = 100 micros at pH 6.3). For this mutant the protein conformational change, as monitored by the dye binding, occurs with about the same time constant as in wild type but with reduced amplitude. In the alkaline form of the mutant E46A the formation of the I(2)-like intermediate is even faster as is the proton uptake (tau = 20 micros at pH 8.3). No dye binding occurred in E46A, suggesting the absence of a conformational change. In all of the systems proton release is synchronized with the decay of I(2). Our results support mechanisms in which the chromophore of PYP is protonated directly from the external medium rather than by the internal donor E46.  相似文献   

13.
The binding of oxidized and reduced coenzyme (NAD+ and NADH) to 3-phosphoglyceroyl-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase has been studied spectrophotometrically and fluorimetrically. The binding of NAD+ to the acylated sturgeon enzyme is characterized by a significant quenching of the enzyme fluorescence (about 25%) and the induction of a difference spectrum in the ultraviolet absorbance region of the enzyme. Both of these spectroscopic properties are quantitatively distinguishable from those of the corresponding binary enzyme-NAD+ complex. Binding isotherms estimated by gel filtration of the acylated enzyme are in close agreement to those obtained by spectrophotometric and fluorimetric titrations. Up to four NAD+ molecules are bound to the enzyme tetramer. No anticooperativity can be detected in the binding of oxidized coenzyme, which is well described on the basis of a single class of four binding sites with a dissociation constant of 25 muM at 10 degrees C, pH 7.0. The binding of NADH to the acylenzyme has been characterized spectrophotometrically. The absorption band of the dihydronicotinamide moiety of the coenzyme is blue-shifted to 335 nm with respect to free NADH. In addition, a large hypochromicity (23%) is observed together with a significant increase of the bandwidth at half height of this absorption band. This last property is specific to the acylenzyme-DADH complex, since it disappears upon arsenolysis of the acylenzyme. The binding affinity of NADH to the acylated enzyme has been estimated by performing simultaneous spectrophotometric and fluorimetric titrations of the NADH appearance upon addition of NAD+ to a mixture of enzyme and excess glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate. In contrast to NAD+, the reduced coenzyme NADH appears to be relatively strongly bound to the acylated enzyme, the dissociation constant of the acylenzyme-NADH complex being estimated as 2.0 muM at 25 degrees C. In addition a large quenching of the NADH fluorescence (about 83%) is observed. The comparison of the dissociation constants of the coenzyme-acylenzyme complexes and the corresponding Michaelis constants suggests a reaction mechanism of the enzyme in which significant formation and dissociation of NAD+-acylenzyme and NADH-acylenzyme complexes occur. Under physiological conditions the activity of the enzyme can be regulated by the ratio of oxidized and reduced coenzymes. Possible reasons for the lack of anticooperativity in coenzyme binding to the acylated form of the enzyme are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
1. UDP-xylose and UDP-glucose both bind to UDP-glucose dehydrogenase in the absence of NAD+, causing an enhancement of protein fluorescence. 2. The binding of UDP-xylose is pH-dependent, tighter binding being observed at pH8.2 than at pH8.7. 3. At low protein concentrations sigmiodal profiles of fluorescence enhancement are obtained on titration of the enzyme with UDP-xylose. As the protein concentration is increased the titration profiles become progressively more hypebolic in shape. 4. The markedly different titration profiles obtained on titrating enzyme and the enzyme-NAD+ complex with UDP-xylose suggests a conformational difference between these two species 5. NAD+ lowere the apparent affinity of the enzyme for UDP-xylose. 6. There is no change in the apparent moleculare weight of UDP-glucose dehydrogenase on binging UDP-xylose. 7. Protein modification by either diethyl pyrocarbonate or 5, 5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoate) does not "desensitize" the enzyme with respect to the inhibition by UDP-xylose. 8. UDP-xylose lowers the affinity of the enzyme for NADG. 9. It is suggested that UDP-xylose is acting as a substrate analogue of UDP-glucose and causes protein-conformational changes on binding to the enzyme.  相似文献   

15.
K H Dahl  M F Dunn 《Biochemistry》1984,23(26):6829-6839
Liver alcohol dehydrogenase (LADH) carboxymethylated at Cys-46 (CMLADH) forms two different ternary complexes with 4-trans-(N,N-dimethylamino)cinnamaldehyde (DACA). The complex with reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) is characterized by a 38-nm red shift of the long-wavelength pi, pi* transition to 436 nm, while the complex with oxidized nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) is characterized by a 60-nm red shift to 458 nm. CMLADH also forms a ternary complex with NAD+ and the Z isomer of 4-trans-(N,N-dimethylamino)cinnamaldoxime in which the absorption of the oxime (lambda max = 354 nm) is red shifted 80 nm to 434 nm. Pyrazole and 4-methylpyrazole are weak competitive inhibitors of ligand binding to the substrate site of native LADH. These inhibitors were found to form ternary complexes with CMLADH and NADH which are more stable than the corresponding complexes with the native enzyme. The transient reductions of the aldehydes DACA and p-nitrobenzaldehyde (NBZA) were studied under single-turnover conditions. Carboxymethylation decreases the DACA reduction rate 80-fold and renders the process essentially independent of pH over the region 5-9, whereas this process depends on a pKa of 6.0 in the native enzyme. At pH 7.0, the rate constant for NBZA reduction also is decreased at least 80-fold to a value of 7.7 +/- 0.3 s-1. Since primary kinetic isotope effects are observed when NADH is substituted with (4R)-4-deuterio-NADH (kH/kD = 3.0 for DACA and kH/kD = 2.3 for NBZA), the rate-limiting step for both aldehydes involves hydride transfer. The altered pH dependence is concluded to be due to an increase in the pK value of the zinc-coordinated DACA-alcohol in the ternary complex with NAD+ by more than 3 units. This perturbation is brought about by the close proximity of the negatively charged carboxymethyl carboxylate.  相似文献   

16.
1. The kinetics of oxidation of ethanol, propan-1-ol, butan-1-ol and propan-2-ol by NAD(+) and of reduction of acetaldehyde and butyraldehyde by NADH catalysed by yeast alcohol dehydrogenase were studied. 2. Results for the aldehyde-NADH reactions are consistent with a compulsory-order mechanism with the rate-limiting step being the dissociation of the product enzyme-NAD(+) complex. In contrast the results for the alcohol-NAD(+) reactions indicate that some dissociation of coenzyme from the active enzyme-NAD(+)-alcohol ternary complexes must occur and that the mechanism is not strictly compulsory-order. The rate-limiting step in ethanol oxidation is the dissociation of the product enzyme-NADH complex but with the other alcohols it is probably the catalytic interconversion of ternary complexes. 3. The rate constants describing the combination of NAD(+) and NADH with the enzyme and the dissociations of these coenzymes from binary complexes with the enzyme were measured.  相似文献   

17.
The kinetic and spectral properties of native and totally cobalt-substituted liver alcohol dehydrogenase have been compared. Based on titrimetric determinations of enzyme active site concentration, the turnover number at pH 7.0 for cobalt enzyme was the same as for native enzyme. At pH 10, however, the turnover number was slower for cobalt-substituted enzyme, 3.14 s-1 as compared with 4.05 s-1 for native enzyme. A comparison between native and totally cobalt-substituted enzyme showed a blue-shifted enzyme-NADH double difference spectrum and a splitting and red-shifted enzyme-NAD+-pyrazole double difference spectrum in the near-ultraviolet. The 655-nm peak of the cobalt-substituted enzyme was perturbed by the formation of enzyme-NADH binary complex, enzyme-NAD+-trifloroethanol ternary complex, and enzyme-NAD+ binary complex formation. At pH 7.0, the only observable step in the reaction sequence with a significantly different rate constant for cobalt enzyme was the catalytic hydrogen-transferring step. The rate constant for this step is 92 s-1 for totally cobalt-substituted enzyme as compared with 138 s-1 for native liver alcohol dehydrogenase. The results of this study indicate that zinc is involved in catalysis alcohol and NADH.  相似文献   

18.
Alexov E 《Proteins》2004,56(3):572-584
The protein-inhibitor binding energies of enzymes are often pH dependent, and binding induces either proton uptake or proton release. The proton uptake/release and the binding energy for three complexes with available experimental data were numerically studied: pepstatin-cathepsin D, pepstatin-plasmepsin II and pepstatin-endothiapepsin. Very good agreement with the experimental data was achieved when conformational changes were taken into account. The role of the desolvation energy and the conformational changes was revealed by modeling the complex, the separated molecules in the complex conformation and the free molecules. It was shown that the conformational changes induced by the complex formation are as important for the proton transfer as the loss of solvation energy caused by the burial of interface residues. The residues responsible for the proton transfer were identified and their contribution to the proton uptake/release calculated. These residues were found to be scattered along the whole protein rather than being localized only at the active site. In the case of cathepsin D, these residues were found to be highly conserved among the cathepsin D sequences of other species. It was shown that conformation and ionization changes induced by the complex formation are critical for the correct calculation of the binding energy. Taking into account the electrostatics and the van der Waals (vdW) energies within the Boltzmann distribution of energies and allowing ionization and conformation changes to occur makes the calculated binding energy more realistic and closer to the experimental value. The interplay between electrostatic and vdW forces makes the pH dependence of the binding energy smoother, because the vdW force acts in reaction to the changes of the electrostatic energy. It was found that a small fraction of the ionizable groups remain uncharged in both the free and complexed molecules. The sequence and structural position of these groups aligns well within the three proteases, suggesting that these may have specific role.  相似文献   

19.
M R Eftink 《Biochemistry》1986,25(21):6620-6624
The fluorescence of alcohol dehydrogenase is quenched by the acid dissociation of some group on the protein having an apparent pKa of 9.6 at 25 degrees C. The pKa of this alkaline quenching transition is unchanged by the binding of trifluoroethanol or pyrazole to the enzyme or by the selective removal of the active site of Zn2+ ion. This indicates that the ionization of a zinc-bound water molecule is not responsible for the quenching. The binding of NAD+ to the enzyme causes a drop in protein fluorescence and an apparent shift in the alkaline quenching transition to lower pH. In the ternary complex formed with NAD+ and trifluoroethanol the alkaline transition is difficult to discern between pH 6 and pH 11. In the NAD+-pyrazole ternary complex, however, a small but noticeable fluorescence transition is observed with a pKa(app) approximately 9.5. We propose that the alkaline transition centered at pH 9.6 is not shifted to lower pH upon binding NAD+. Instead, the amplitude of the alkaline quenching effect is decreased to the point that it is difficult to detect when NAD+ is bound. We present a model that describes the dependence of the fluorescence of the protein on pH and NAD+ concentration in terms of two independently operating, dynamic quenching mechanisms. Our data and model cast serious doubt on the identification, made previously in the literature, between the alkaline quenching pKa and the pKa of the group whose ionization is coupled to NAD+ binding.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
l-3-Hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase reversibly catalyzes the conversion of l-3-hydroxyacyl-CoA to 3-ketoacyl-CoA concomitant with the reduction of NAD(+) to NADH as part of the beta-oxidation spiral. In this report, crystal structures have been solved for the apoenzyme, binary complexes of the enzyme with reduced cofactor or 3-hydroxybutyryl-CoA substrate, and an abortive ternary complex of the enzyme with NAD(+) and acetoacetyl-CoA. The models illustrate positioning of cofactor and substrate within the active site of the enzyme. Comparison of these structures with the previous model of the enzyme-NAD(+) complex reveals that although significant shifting of the NAD(+)-binding domain relative to the C-terminal domain occurs in the ternary and substrate-bound complexes, there are few differences between the apoenzyme and cofactor-bound complexes. Analysis of these models clarifies the role of key amino acids implicated in catalysis and highlights additional critical residues. Furthermore, a novel charge transfer complex has been identified in the course of abortive ternary complex formation, and its characterization provides additional insight into aspects of the catalytic mechanism of l-3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

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