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1.
GTP is an allosteric activator of CTP synthase and acts to increase the k(cat) for the glutamine-dependent CTP synthesis reaction. GTP is suggested, in part, to optimally orient the oxy-anion hole for hydrolysis of glutamine that takes place in the glutamine amidotransferase class I (GATase) domain of CTP synthase. In the GATase domain of the recently published structures of the Escherichia coli and Thermus thermophilus CTP synthases a loop region immediately proceeding amino acid residues forming the oxy-anion hole and named lid L11 is shown for the latter enzyme to be flexible and change position depending on the presence or absence of glutamine in the glutamine binding site. Displacement or rearrangement of this loop may provide a means for the suggested role of allosteric activation by GTP to optimize the oxy-anion hole for glutamine hydrolysis. Arg359, Gly360 and Glu362 of the Lactococcus lactis enzyme are highly conserved residues in lid L11 and we have analyzed their possible role in GTP activation. Characterization of the mutant enzymes R359M, R359P, G360A and G360P indicated that both Arg359 and Gly360 are involved in the allosteric response to GTP binding whereas the E362Q enzyme behaved like wild-type enzyme. Apart from the G360A enzyme, the results from kinetic analysis of the enzymes altered at position 359 and 360 showed a 10- to 50-fold decrease in GTP activation of glutamine dependent CTP synthesis and concomitant four- to 10-fold increases in K(A) for GTP. The R359M, R359P and G360P also showed no GTP activation of the uncoupled glutaminase reaction whereas the G360A enzyme was about twofold more active than wild-type enzyme. The elevated K(A) for GTP and reduced GTP activation of CTP synthesis of the mutant enzymes are in agreement with a predicted interaction of bound GTP with lid L11 and indicate that the GTP activation of glutamine dependent CTP synthesis may be explained by structural rearrangements around the oxy-anion hole of the GATase domain.  相似文献   

2.
CTP synthase catalyses the reaction: glutamine+UTP+ATP --> glutamate+CTP+ADP+P(i). The reaction is greatly stimulated by the allosteric binding of GTP. In addition to glutamine that is hydrolysed by the enzyme to ammonia and glutamate, CTP synthase will also utilise external sources of amino donors such as NH(4)Cl. This reaction is no longer dependent on allosteric activation by GTP. Hydroxylamine is also a substrate for Lactococcus lactis CTP synthase and results in the formation of N4-OH CTP. This product has the feature that it absorbs at 300nm where CTP absorption was shown to be greatly reduced and enabled the determination of N4-OH CTP formation in the presence of CTP synthesis derived from glutamine hydrolysis. Differences in initial rates determined for the hydroxylamine dependent reaction at 291nm in the presence and absence of glutamine and GTP were ascribed to simultaneous CTP and N4-OH CTP synthesis in the presence of these compounds. A characterisation of the apparent inhibition by GTP and glutamine of N4-OH CTP synthesis determined at 300nm showed that glutamine dependent CTP synthesis occurs at a rate of about 60% of that in the absence of hydroxylamine. GTP dependent inhibition of the ammonium chloride dependent reaction of L. lactis CTP synthase by the glutamine analog glutamate gamma-semialdehyde showed a partial inhibition with a maximum inhibition of about 60%. These results are interpreted in terms of a "half of the sites" mechanism for glutamine hydrolysis on CTP synthase.  相似文献   

3.
Cytidine 5'-triphosphate (CTP) synthase catalyzes the ATP-dependent formation of CTP from UTP using either ammonia or l-glutamine as the source of nitrogen. When glutamine is the substrate, GTP is required as a positive allosteric effector to promote catalysis of glutamine hydrolysis. We show that at concentrations exceeding approximately 0.15 mM, GTP actually behaves as a negative allosteric effector of E. coli CTP synthase, inhibiting glutamine-dependent CTP formation. In addition, GTP inhibits NH(3)-dependent CTP formation in a concentration-dependent manner. However, GTP does not inhibit the enzyme's intrinsic glutaminase activity. Although the activation of CTP synthase by GTP does not display cooperative behavior, inhibition of both CTP synthase-catalyzed ammonia- and glutamine-dependent CTP synthesis by GTP do exhibit positive cooperativity. These results suggest that GTP binding affects CTP synthase catalysis in two ways: it activates enzyme-catalyzed glutamine hydrolysis and it inhibits the utilization of NH(3) as a substrate by the synthase domain.  相似文献   

4.
Cytidine 5'-triphosphate synthase catalyses the ATP-dependent formation of CTP from UTP using either ammonia or l-glutamine as the source of nitrogen. When glutamine is the substrate, GTP is required as an allosteric effector to promote catalysis. Limited trypsin-catalysed proteolysis, Edman degradation, and site-directed mutagenesis were used to identify peptide bonds C-terminal to three basic residues (Lys187, Arg429, and Lys432) of Escherichia coli CTP synthase that were highly susceptible to proteolysis. Lys187 is located at the CTP/UTP-binding site within the synthase domain, and cleavage at this site destroyed all synthase activity. Nucleotides protected the enzyme against proteolysis at Lys187 (CTP > ATP > UTP > GTP). The K187A mutant was resistant to proteolysis at this site, could not catalyse CTP formation, and exhibited low glutaminase activity that was enhanced slightly by GTP. K187A was able to form tetramers in the presence of UTP and ATP. Arg429 and Lys432 appear to reside in an exposed loop in the glutamine amide transfer (GAT) domain. Trypsin-catalyzed proteolysis occurred at Arg429 and Lys432 with a ratio of 2.6 : 1, and nucleotides did not protect these sites from cleavage. The R429A and R429A/K432A mutants exhibited reduced rates of trypsin-catalyzed proteolysis in the GAT domain and wild-type ability to catalyse NH3-dependent CTP formation. For these mutants, the values of kcat/Km and kcat for glutamine-dependent CTP formation were reduced approximately 20-fold and approximately 10-fold, respectively, relative to wild-type enzyme; however, the value of Km for glutamine was not significantly altered. Activation of the glutaminase activity of R429A by GTP was reduced 6-fold at saturating concentrations of GTP and the GTP binding affinity was reduced 10-fold. This suggests that Arg429 plays a role in both GTP-dependent activation and GTP binding.  相似文献   

5.
CTP synthetase (CTPs) catalyzes the last step in CTP biosynthesis, in which ammonia generated at the glutaminase domain reacts with the ATP-phosphorylated UTP at the synthetase domain to give CTP. Glutamine hydrolysis is active in the presence of ATP and UTP and is stimulated by the addition of GTP. We report the crystal structures of Thermus thermophilus HB8 CTPs alone, CTPs with 3SO4(2-), and CTPs with glutamine. The enzyme is folded into a homotetramer with a cross-shaped structure. Based on the binding mode of sulfate anions to the synthetase site, ATP and UTP are computer modeled into CTPs with a geometry favorable for the reaction. Glutamine bound to the glutaminase domain is situated next to the triad of Glu-His-Cys as a catalyst and a water molecule. Structural information provides an insight into the conformational changes associated with the binding of ATP and UTP and the formation of the GTP binding site.  相似文献   

6.
A conserved sequence motif within the class 1 glutamine amidotransferase (GATase) domain of CTP synthases was identified. The sequence motif in the Lactococcus lactis enzyme is (429)GGTLRLG(435). This motif was present only in CTP synthases and not in other enzymes that harbor the GATase domain. Therefore, it was speculated that this sequence was involved in GTP activation of CTP synthase. Other members of the GATase protein family are not activated allosterically by GTP. Residues Thr-431 and Arg-433 were changed by site directed mutagenesis to the sterically similar residues valine and methionine, respectively. The resulting enzymes, T431V and R433M, had both lost the ability for GTP to activate the uncoupled glutaminase activity and showed reduced GTP activation of the glutamine-dependent CTP synthesis reaction. The T431V enzyme had a similar activation constant, K(A), for GTP, but the activation was only 2-3-fold compared with 35-fold for the wild type enzyme. The R433M enzyme was found to have a 10-15-fold lower K(A) for GTP and a concomitant decrease in V(app). The activation by GTP of this enzyme was about 7-fold. The kinetic parameters for saturation with ATP, UTP, and NH(4)Cl were similar for wild type and mutant enzymes, except that the R433M enzyme only had half the V(app) of the wild type enzyme when NH(4)Cl was the amino donor. The mutant enzymes T431V and R433M apparently had not lost the ability to bind GTP, but the signal transmitted through the enzyme to the active sites upon binding of the allosteric effector was clearly disrupted in the mutant enzymes.  相似文献   

7.
Cytidine 5(')-triphosphate (CTP) synthase (EC 6.4.3.2) catalyzes the transfer of an amino group to the 4 position of uridine 5(')-triphosphate (UTP) to yield CTP. The reaction proceeds by activation of the base moiety of UTP by adenosine 5(')-triphosphate (ATP)-dependent phosphorylation. The activated intermediate reacts with NH(3) in the solution or is obtained by hydrolysis of glutamine. The Lactococcus lactis CTP synthase shows significant differences from the enzymes from Escherichia coli, yeast, and mammals. One is the apparent stability of the L. lactis CTP synthase tetramer in the absence of the nucleotides ATP and UTP. This condition causes the E. coli, yeast, and mammal enzymes to dissociate into dimers. However, the L. lactis CTP synthase shows substrate inhibition by NH(4)Cl that coincides with the range of NH(4)Cl concentrations that apparently dissociates tetrameric enzyme into dimers. Even though regular substrate inhibition was observed with NH(4)Cl when the ionic strength was held constant, a significant part of the inhibition could be shown to be due to the increase in ionic strength with increasing substrate concentration. Since the substrate inhibition by NH(4)Cl was relieved by increasing the equimolar ATP and UTP concentrations, it appeared that the substrate nucleotides stabilized the tetramer in a manner similar to that found in the absence of salt for other CTP synthases. In contrast to the suggested hydrophobic nature of the tetramer interactions in E. coli CTP synthase, the dissociation of the L. lactis CTP synthase tetramer in response to an increase in ionic strength suggests that the tetramer is stabilized by ionic interactions.  相似文献   

8.
Molecular gates within enzymes often play important roles in synchronizing catalytic events. We explored the role of a gate in cytidine-5′-triphosphate synthase (CTPS) from Escherichia coli. This glutamine amidotransferase catalyzes the biosynthesis of CTP from UTP using either l-glutamine or exogenous NH3 as a substrate. Glutamine is hydrolyzed in the glutaminase domain, with GTP acting as a positive allosteric effector, and the nascent NH3 passes through a gate located at the end of a ~25-Å tunnel before entering the synthase domain where CTP is generated. Substitution of the gate residue Val 60 by Ala, Cys, Asp, Trp, or Phe using site-directed mutagenesis and subsequent kinetic analyses revealed that V60-substitution impacts glutaminase activity, nucleotide binding, salt-dependent inhibition, and inter-domain NH3 transport. Surprisingly, the increase in steric bulk present in V60F perturbed the local structure consistent with “pinching” the tunnel, thereby revealing processes that synchronize the transfer of NH3 from the glutaminase domain to the synthase domain. V60F had a slightly reduced coupling efficiency at maximal glutaminase activity that was ameliorated by slowing down the glutamine hydrolysis reaction, consistent with a “bottleneck” effect. The inability of V60F to use exogenous NH3 was overcome in the presence of GTP, and more so if CTPS was covalently modified by 6-diazo-5-oxo-l-norleucine. Use of NH2OH by V60F as an alternative bulkier substrate occurred most efficiently when it was concomitant with the glutaminase reaction. Thus, the glutaminase activity and GTP-dependent activation act in concert to open the NH3 gate of CTPS to mediate inter-domain NH3 transport.  相似文献   

9.
Thiourea dioxide was used in chemical modification studies to identify functionally important amino acids in Escherichia coli CTP synthetase. Incubation at pH 8.0 in the absence of substrates led to rapid, time dependent, and irreversible inactivation of the enzyme. The second-order rate constant for inactivation was 0.18 M-1 s-1. Inactivation also occurred in the absence of oxygen and in the presence of catalase, thereby ruling out mixed-function oxidation/reduction as the mode of amino acid modification. Saturating concentrations of the substrates ATP and UTP, and the allosteric activator GTP prevented inactivation by thiourea dioxide, whereas saturating concentrations of glutamine (a substrate) did not. The concentration dependence of nucleotide protection revealed cooperative behavior with respect to individual nucleotides and with respect to various combinations of nucleotides. Mixtures of nucleotides afforded greater protection against inactivation than single nucleotides alone, and a combination of the substrates ATP and UTP provided the most protection. The Hill coefficient for nucleotide protection was approximately 2 for ATP, UTP, and GTP. In the presence of 1:1 ratios of ATP:UTP, ATP:GTP, and UTP:GTP, the Hill coefficient was approximately 4 in each case. Fluorescence and circular dichroism measurements indicated that modification by thiourea dioxide causes detectable changes in the structure of the protein. Modification with [14C]thiourea dioxide demonstrated that complete inactivation correlates with incorporation of 3 mol of [14C]thiourea dioxide per mole of CTP synthetase monomer. The specificity of thiourea dioxide for lysine residues indicates that one or more lysines are most likely involved in CTP synthetase activity. The data further indicate that nucleotide binding prevents access to these functionally important residues.  相似文献   

10.
Cytidine 5'-triphosphate (CTP) synthase catalyses the ATP-dependent formation of CTP from uridine 5'-triphosphate using either NH(3) or l-glutamine as the nitrogen source. The hydrolysis of glutamine is catalysed in the C-terminal glutamine amide transfer domain and the nascent NH(3) that is generated is transferred via an NH(3) tunnel [Endrizzi, J.A., Kim, H., Anderson, P.M. & Baldwin, E.P. (2004) Biochemistry43, 6447-6463] to the active site of the N-terminal synthase domain where the amination reaction occurs. Replacement of Leu109 by alanine in Escherichia coli CTP synthase causes an uncoupling of glutamine hydrolysis and glutamine-dependent CTP formation [Iyengar, A. & Bearne, S.L. (2003) Biochem. J.369, 497-507]. To test our hypothesis that L109A CTP synthase has a constricted or a leaky NH(3) tunnel, we examined the ability of wild-type and L109A CTP synthases to utilize NH(3), NH(2)OH, and NH(2)NH(2) as exogenous substrates, and as nascent substrates generated via the hydrolysis of glutamine, gamma-glutamyl hydroxamate, and gamma-glutamyl hydrazide, respectively. We show that the uncoupling of the hydrolysis of gamma-glutamyl hydroxamate and nascent NH(2)OH production from N(4)-hydroxy-CTP formation is more pronounced with the L109A enzyme, relative to the wild-type CTP synthase. These results suggest that the NH(3) tunnel of L109A, in the presence of bound allosteric effector guanosine 5'-triphosphate, is not leaky but contains a constriction that discriminates between NH(3) and NH(2)OH on the basis of size.  相似文献   

11.
The regulatory role of the allosteric site of CTP synthetase on flux through the enzyme in situ and on pyrimidine nucleotide triphosphate (NTP) pool balance was investigated using a mutant mouse T lymphoblast (S49) cell line which contains a CTP synthetase refractory to complete inhibition by CTP. Measurements of [3H]uridine incorporation into cellular pyrimidine NTP pools as a function of time indicated that CTP synthesis in intact wild type cells was markedly inhibited in a cooperative fashion by small increases in CTP pools, whereas flux across the enzyme in mutant cells was much less affected by changes in CTP levels. The cooperativity of the allosteric inhibition of the enzyme was greater in situ than in vitro. Exogenous manipulation of levels of GTP, an activator of the enzyme, indicated that GTP had a moderate effect on enzyme activity in situ, and changes in pools of ATP, a substrate of the enzyme, had small effects on CTP synthetase activity. The consequences of incubation with actinomycin D, cycloheximide, dibutyryl cyclic AMP, and 6-azauridine on the flux across CTP synthetase and on NTP pools differed considerably between wild type and mutant cells. Under conditions of growth arrest, an intact binding site for CTP on CTP synthetase was required to maintain a balance between the CTP and UTP pools in wild type cells. Moreover, wild type cells failed to incorporate H14CO3- into pyrimidine pools following growth arrest. In contrast, mutant cells incorporated the radiolabel at a high rate indicating loss of a regulatory function. These results indicated that uridine nucleotides are important regulators of pyrimidine nucleotide synthesis in mouse S49 cells, and CTP regulates the balance between UTP and CTP pools.  相似文献   

12.
The pyrG gene of Lactococcus lactis subsp. cremoris, encoding CTP synthase, has been cloned and sequenced. It is flanked upstream by an open reading frame showing homology to several aminotransferases and downstream by an open reading frame of unknown function. L. lactis strains harboring disrupted pyrG alleles were constructed. These mutants required cytidine for growth, proving that in L. lactis, the pyrG product is the only enzyme responsible for the amination of UTP to CTP. In contrast to the situation in Escherichia coli, an L. lactis pyrG mutant could be constructed in the presence of a functional cdd gene encoding cytidine deaminase. A characterization of the enzyme revealed similar properties as found for CTP synthases from other organisms. However, unlike the majority of CTP synthases the lactococcal enzyme can convert dUTP to dCTP, although a half saturation concentration of 0.6 mm for dUTP makes it unlikely that this reaction plays a significant physiological role. As for other CTP synthases, the oligomeric structure of the lactococcal enzyme was found to be a tetramer, but unlike most of the other previously characterized enzymes, the tetramer was very stable even at dilute enzyme concentrations.  相似文献   

13.
D A Lewis  J J Villafranca 《Biochemistry》1989,28(21):8454-8459
The UTP-dependent ATPase reaction and the glutamine-dependent overall reaction of Escherichia coli CTP synthetase have been studied by rapid quench and isotope partitioning kinetics. The effect of GTP, an allosteric effector, on the pre-steady-state kinetics of both reactions has also been examined. The time courses of the UTP-dependent ATPase reaction in the presence and absence of GTP are both characterized by a burst of acid-labile phosphate equivalent to 0.93 and 0.43 subunits, respectively. The time course of the glutamine-dependent reaction in the absence of GTP is also characterized by a burst of acid-labile phosphate corresponding to 0.8 subunit; however, in the presence of GTP, no burst was observed. These results along with positional isotope exchange experiments [von der Saal, W., Anderson, P. M., & Villafranca, J. J. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 14997] provide evidence that the mechanism of CTP formation involves phosphorylation of UTP followed by attack of NH3, and finally release of phosphate, producing CTP, ADP, and Pi. A kinetic model for the first stages of the enzymatic reaction was developed from the rapid quench data, and the internal equilibrium constant for the formation of the phosphorylated UTP intermediate was determined. The internal equilibrium constants for the UTP-dependent reaction in the presence and absence of GTP were found to be 1.1 and 18, respectively. By contrast, the internal equilibrium constant for the reaction in the presence of glutamine was 50. Thus, the presence of glutamine shifts the internal equilibrium constant to favor formation of the phosphorylated UTP intermediate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
In all previous kinetics studies of calf liver CTP synthetase, simple Michaelis-Menten hyperbolic plots were obtained. In this study it was shown that calf liver CTP synthetase could generate sigmoidal kinetic plots as a function of the substrate UTP when in the presence of the product of the reaction, CTP. The Hill number was estimated to be 2.8. The enzyme did not generate sigmoidal plots as a function of the other substrates (L-glutamine and ATP) either in the presence or absence of CTP. Thus, CTP apparently induced changes in the liver enzyme which altered the binding of UTP to the enzyme by acting at a site distinct from the UTP binding site (allosteric site). This concept was further strengthened by the fact that 3-deazaUTP, a known competitive inhibitor of the liver enzyme, did not induce sigmoidal kinetic plots. It was also shown that CTP had no effect upon the dimerization of the enzyme, thus ruling out monomer to dimer transitions as a potential mechanism for the observed sigmoidal kinetics.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Pappas A  Park TS  Carman GM 《Biochemistry》1999,38(50):16671-16677
CTP synthetase [EC 6.3.4.2, UTP:ammonia ligase (ADP-forming)] from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae catalyzes the ATP-dependent transfer of the amide nitrogen from glutamine to the C-4 position of UTP to form CTP. In this work, we demonstrated that CTP synthetase utilized dUTP as a substrate to synthesize dCTP. The dUTP-dependent activity was linear with time and with enzyme concentration. Maximum dUTP-dependent activity was dependent on MgCl(2) (4 mM) and GTP (K(a) = 14 microM) at a pH optimum of 8.0. The apparent K(m) values for dUTP, ATP, and glutamine were 0.18, 0.25, and 0.41 mM, respectively. dUTP promoted the tetramerization of CTP synthetase, and the extent of enzyme tetramerization correlated with dUTP-dependent activity. dCTP was a poor inhibitor of dUTP-dependent activity, whereas CTP was a potent inhibitor of this activity. The enzyme catalyzed the synthesis of dCTP and CTP when dUTP and UTP were used as substrates together. CTP was the major product synthesized when dUTP and UTP were present at saturating concentrations. When dUTP and UTP were present at concentrations near their K(m) values, the synthesis of dCTP increased relative to that of CTP. The synthesis of dCTP was favored over the synthesis of CTP when UTP was present at a concentration near its K(m) value and dUTP was varied from subsaturating to saturating concentrations. These data suggested that the dUTP-dependent synthesis of dCTP by CTP synthetase activity may be physiologically relevant.  相似文献   

17.
CTPS (cytidine 5'-triphosphate synthase) catalyses the ATP-dependent formation of CTP from UTP using either ammonia or L-glutamine as the nitrogen source. Binding of the substrates ATP and UTP, or the product CTP, promotes oligomerization of CTPS from inactive dimers to active tetramers. In the present study, site-directed mutagenesis was used to replace the fully conserved glycine residues 142 and 143 within the UTP-binding site and 146 within the CTP-binding site of Escherchia coli CTPS. CD spectral analyses of wild-type CTPS and the glycine mutants showed a slight reduction of approximately 15% in alpha-helical content for G142A and G143A relative to G146A and wild-type CTPS, suggesting some local alterations in structure. Relative to wild-type CTPS, the values of k(cat)/K(m) for ammonia-dependent and glutamine-dependent CTP formation catalysed by G143A were reduced 22- and 16-fold respectively, whereas the corresponding values for G146A were reduced only 1.4- and 1.8-fold respectively. The glutaminase activity (k(cat)) of G146A was similar to that exhibited by the wild-type enzyme, whereas that of G143A was reduced 7.5-fold. G146A exhibited substrate inhibition at high concentrations of ammonia and a partial uncoupling of glutamine hydrolysis from CTP production. Although the apparent affinity (1/[S](0.5)) of G143A and G146A for UTP was reduced approximately 4-fold, G146A exhibited increased co-operativity with respect to UTP. Thus mutations in the CTP-binding site can affect UTP-dependent activity. Surprisingly, G142A was inactive with both ammonia and glutamine as substrates. Gel-filtration HPLC experiments revealed that both G143A and G146A were able to form active tetramers in the presence of ATP and UTP; however, nucleotide-dependent tetramerization of G142A was significantly impaired. Our observations highlight the sensitivity of the structure of CTPS to mutations in the UTP- and CTP-binding sites, with Gly(142) being critical for nucleotide-dependent oligomerization of CTPS to active tetramers. This 'structural sensitivity' may limit the number and/or types of mutations that could be selected for during the development of resistance to cytotoxic pyrimidine nucleotide analogues.  相似文献   

18.
Cytidine 5'-triphosphate synthase (CTPS) catalyzes the ATP-dependent formation of CTP from UTP using either NH3 or L-glutamine as the source of nitrogen. To identify the location of the ATP-binding site within the primary structure of E. coli CTPS, we used the affinity label 2',3'-dialdehyde adenosine 5'-triphosphate (oATP). oATP irreversibly inactivated CTPS in a first-order, time-dependent manner while ATP protected the enzyme from inactivation. In the presence of 10 mM UTP, the values of k(inact) and K(I) were 0.054 +/- 0.001 min(-1) and 3.36 +/- 0.02 mM, respectively. CTPS was labeled using (2,8-3H)oATP and subsequently subjected to trypsin-catalyzed proteolysis. The tryptic peptides were separated using reversed-phase HPLC, and two peptides were identified using N-terminal sequencing (S(492)GDDQLVEIIEVPNH(506) and Y(298)IELPDAY(K(306)) in a 5:1 ratio). The latter suggested that Lys 306 had been modified by oATP. Replacement of Lys 306 by alanine reduced the rate of oATP-dependent inactivation (k(inact) = 0.0058 +/- 0.0005 min(-1), K(I) = 3.7 +/- 1.3 mM) and reduced the apparent affinity of CTPS for both ATP and UTP by approximately 2-fold. The efficiency of K306A-catalyzed glutamine-dependent CTP formation was also reduced 2-fold while near wild-type activity was observed when NH3 was the substrate. These findings suggest that Lys 306 is not essential for ATP binding, but does play a role in bringing about the conformational changes that mediate interactions between the ATP and UTP sites, and between the ATP-binding site and the glutamine amide transfer domain. Replacement of the nearby, fully conserved Lys 297 by alanine did not affect NH3-dependent CTP formation, relative to wild-type CTPS, but reduced k(cat) for the glutaminase activity 78-fold. Our findings suggest that the conformational change associated with binding ATP may be transmitted through the L10-alpha11 structural unit (residues 297-312) and thereby mediate effects on the glutaminase activity of CTPS.  相似文献   

19.
Dossena L  Curti B  Vanoni MA 《Biochemistry》2007,46(15):4473-4485
Crystal structures of glutamate synthase suggested that a conserved glutamyl residue of the synthase domain (E1013 of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 ferredoxin-dependent glutamate synthase, FdGltS) may play a key role in activating glutamine binding and hydrolysis and ammonia transfer to the synthase site in this amidotransferase, in response to the ligation and redox state of the synthase site. The E1013D, N, and A, variants of FdGltS were overproduced in Escherichia coli cells, purified, and characterized. The amino acyl substitutions had no effect on the reactivity of the synthase site nor on the interaction with ferredoxin. On the contrary, a dramatic decrease of activity was observed with the D (approximately 100-fold), N and A (approximately 10,000-fold) variants, mainly due to an effect on the maximum velocity of the reaction. The E1013D variant showed coupling between glutamine hydrolysis at the glutaminase site and 2-oxoglutarate-dependent L-glutamate synthesis at the synthase site, but a sigmoid dependence of initial velocity on L-glutamine concentration. The E1013N variant exhibited hyperbolic kinetics, but the velocity of glutamine hydrolysis was twice that of glutamate synthesis from 2-oxoglutarate at the synthase site. These results are consistent with the proposed role of E1013 in signaling the presence of 2-oxoglutarate (and reducing equivalents) at the synthase site to the glutaminase site in order to activate it and to promote ammonia transfer to the synthase site through the ammonia tunnel. The sigmoid dependence of the initial velocity of the glutamate synthase reaction of the E1013D mutant on glutamine concentration provides evidence for a participation of glutamine in the activation of glutamate synthase during the catalytic cycle.  相似文献   

20.
Cytidine 5'-triphosphate synthase catalyzes the ATP-dependent formation of CTP from UTP using either NH(3) or l-glutamine (Gln) as the source of nitrogen. GTP acts as an allosteric effector promoting Gln hydrolysis but inhibiting Gln-dependent CTP formation at concentrations of >0.15 mM and NH(3)-dependent CTP formation at all concentrations. A structure-activity study using a variety of GTP and guanosine analogues revealed that only a few GTP analogues were capable of activating Gln-dependent CTP formation to varying degrees: GTP approximately 6-thio-GTP > ITP approximately guanosine 5'-tetraphosphate > O(6)-methyl-GTP > 2'-deoxy-GTP. No activation was observed with guanosine, GMP, GDP, 2',3'-dideoxy-GTP, acycloguanosine, and acycloguanosine monophosphate, indicating that the 5'-triphosphate, 2'-OH, and 3'-OH are required for full activation. The 2-NH(2) group plays an important role in binding recognition, whereas substituents at the 6-position play an important role in activation. The presence of a 6-NH(2) group obviates activation, consistent with the inability of ATP to substitute for GTP. Nucleotide and nucleoside analogues of GTP and guanosine, respectively, all inhibited NH(3)- and Gln-dependent CTP formation (often in a cooperative manner) to a similar extent (IC(50) approximately 0.2-0.5 mM). This inhibition appeared to be due solely to the purine base and was relatively insensitive to the identity of the purine with the exception of inosine, ITP, and adenosine (IC(50) approximately 4-12 mM). 8-Oxoguanosine was the best inhibitor identified (IC(50) = 80 microM). Our findings suggest that modifying 2-aminopurine or 2-aminopurine riboside may serve as an effective strategy for developing cytidine 5'-triphosphate synthase inhibitors.  相似文献   

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