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1.
The complex of porcine pancreatic elastase (PPE) with 7-amino-3-(2-bromoethoxy)-4-chloroisocoumarin, a potent mechanism-based inhibitor, was crystallized and the crystal structure determined at 1.9-A resolution with a final R factor of 17.1%. The unbiased difference Fourier electron density map showed continuous density from O gamma of Ser 195 to the benzoyl carbonyl carbon atom and from N epsilon 2 of His 57 to the carbon atom at the 4-position of the isocoumarin ring in the inhibitor. This suggested unambiguously that the inhibitor was doubly covalently bound to the enzyme. It represents the first structural evidence for irreversible binding of an isocoumarin inhibitor to PPE through both Ser 195 and His 57 in the active site. The PPE-inhibitor complex is only partially activated in solution by hydroxylamine and confirms the existence of the doubly covalently bound complex along with the acyl enzyme. The benzoyl carbonyl oxygen atom of the inhibitor is not situated in the oxyanion hole formed by the amide (greater than NH) groups of Gly 193 and Ser 195. The complex is stabilized by the hydrogen-bonding interactions in the active site (from the N epsilon 2 of Gln 192 to the bromine atom in the inhibitor and the amino group at the 7-position of the isocoumarin ring to the carbonyl oxygen of Thr 41) and by van der Waals interactions. The inhibition rates of several 7-substituted 4-chloro-3-(bromoalkoxy)isocoumarins toward PPE were measured.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
3.
Chen CC  Herzberg O 《Biochemistry》2001,40(8):2351-2358
The serine-beta-lactamases hydrolyze beta-lactam antibiotics in a reaction that proceeds via an acyl-enzyme intermediate. The double mutation, E166D:N170Q, of the class A enzyme from Staphylococcus aureus results in a protein incapable of deacylation. The crystal structure of this beta-lactamase, determined at 2.3 A resolution, shows that except for the mutation sites, the structure is very similar to that of the native protein. The crystal structures of two acyl-enzyme adducts, one with benzylpenicillin and the other with cephaloridine, have been determined at 1.76 and 1.86 A resolution, respectively. Both acyl-enzymes show similar key features, with the carbonyl carbon atom of the cleaved beta-lactam bond covalently bound to the side chain of the active site Ser70, and the carbonyl oxygen atom in an oxyanion hole. The thiadolizine ring of the cleaved penicillin is located in a slightly different position than the dihydrothiazine ring of cephaloridine. Consequently, the carboxylate moieties attached to the rings form different sets of interactions. The carboxylate group of benzylpenicillin interacts with the side chain of Gln237. The carboxylate group of cephaloridine is located between Arg244 and Lys234 side chains and also interacts with Ser235 hydroxyl group. The interactions of the cephaloridine resemble those seen in the structure of the acyl-enzyme of beta-lactamase from Escherichia coli with benzylpenicillin. The side chains attached to the cleaved beta-lactam rings of benzylpenicillin and cephaloridine are located in a similar position, which is different than the position observed in the E. coli benzylpenicillin acyl-enzyme complex. The three modes of binding do not show a trend that explains the preference for benzylpenicillin over cephaloridine in the class A beta-lactamases. Rather, the conformational variation arises because cleavage of the beta-lactam bond provides additional flexibility not available when the fused rings are intact. The structural information suggests that specificity is determined prior to the cleavage of the beta-lactam ring, when the rigid fused rings of benzylpenicillin and cephaloridine each form different interactions with the active site.  相似文献   

4.
The structure of the complex of bovine trypsin and bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor has been determined by crystal structure analysis at 2.8 Å resolution. The structure is closely similar to the model predicted from the structures of the components. The complex is a tetrahedral adduct with a covalent bond between the carbonyl carbon of Lys-15I of the inhibitor and the γ-oxygen of Ser-195 of the enzyme. The imidazole of His-57 is hydrogen-bonded to Asp-102 and the bound seryl γ-oxygen in accord with the histidine being charged. The negatively charged carbonyl oxygen of Lys-15I forms two hydrogen bonds with the amide nitrogens of Gly-193 and Ser-195. Protonation of the leaving group N-H of Ala-16I to form an acyl-complex requires a conformational change of the imidazole of His-57. The tetrahedral adduct is further stabilized by hydrogen bonds between groups at the leaving group side and inhibitor and enzyme, which would be weakened in the acyl-enzyme. The kinetic data of inhibitor-enzyme interaction are reconciled with the structural model, and relations between enzyme-inhibitor interaction and productive enzyme-substrate interaction are proposed.  相似文献   

5.
The disulfide bond between Cys14 and Cys38 of bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor lies on the surface of the inhibitor and forms part of the protease-binding region. The functional properties of three variants lacking this disulfide, with one or both of the Cys residues replaced with Ser, were examined, and X-ray crystal structures of the complexes with bovine trypsin were determined and refined to the 1.58-Å resolution limit. The crystal structure of the complex formed with the mutant with both Cys residues replaced was nearly identical with that of the complex containing the wild-type protein, with the Ser oxygen atoms positioned to replace the disulfide bond with a hydrogen bond. The two structures of the complexes with single replacements displayed small local perturbations with alternate conformations of the Ser side chains. Despite the absence of the disulfide bond, the crystallographic temperature factors show no evidence of increased flexibility in the complexes with the mutant inhibitors. All three of the variants were cleaved by trypsin more rapidly than the wild-type inhibitor, by as much as 10,000-fold, indicating that the covalent constraint normally imposed by the disulfide contributes to the remarkable resistance to hydrolysis displayed by the wild-type protein. The rates of hydrolysis display an unusual dependence on pH over the range of 3.5-8.0, decreasing at the more alkaline values, as compared with the increased hydrolysis rates for normal substrates under these conditions. These observations can be accounted for by a model for inhibition in which an acyl-enzyme intermediate forms at a significant rate but is rapidly converted back to the enzyme-inhibitor complex by nucleophilic attack by the newly created amino group. The model suggests that a lack of flexibility in the acyl-enzyme intermediate, rather than the enzyme-inhibitor complex, may be a key factor in the ability of bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor and similar inhibitors to resist hydrolysis.  相似文献   

6.
The bacterial serine protease, SGPB, was inhibited by two specific tripeptide chloromethyl ketones, N-t-butyloxycarbonyl-l-alanylglycyl-l-phenylalanine chloromethyl ketone (BocAGFCK) and N-t-butyloxycarbonyl-glycyl-l-leucyl-l-phenylalanine chloromethyl ketone (BocGLFCK). Crystals of the inhibited complexes were grown and examined by X-ray crystallographic methods. The peptide backbone of each inhibitor is bound by three hydrogen bonds to the main chain of residues Ser214 to Gly216. There are two well-characterized hydrophobic pockets, S1 and S2, on the surface of SGPB which accommodate the P1 and P2 side-chains of the BocGLFCK inhibitor. A conformational change of Tyr171 is induced by the binding of this inhibitor. Both inhibitors make two covalent bonds to the SGPB enzyme. The imidazole ring of His57 is alkylated at the N?2 atom and Oγ of Ser195 forms a hemiketal bond with the carbonyl-carbon atom of the inhibitor. Comparison of the binding modes of the two tripeptides in conjunction with the differences in their inhibition constants (KI) allows one to estimate the binding energy of the leucyl side-chain as ?2.6 kcal mol?1. The importance of an electrophilic component in the serine protease mechanism, which involves the polarization of the susceptible carbonyl bond of a substrate or inhibitor by the peptide NH groups of Gly193 and Ser195 is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
The binding of acetazolamide to human carbonic anhydrase II (HCA II) has been investigated by X-ray crystallography. The atomic positions of the enzyme inhibitor complex have been refined at 1.9 Å resolution using the least squares refinement program package PROLSQ. The crystallographic R-factor is 17.6%. The bound inhibitor is clearly resolved in the active site of the enzyme. The acetazolamide amine group is bound as a fourth ligand to the zinc ion, the other three are all histidine residues. In addition to van der Waals' interactions and the previously described binding of the sulphonamide group, the inhibitor forms a hydrogen bond from the carbonyl oxygen of the acetylamido group to the amino group of Gln 92.  相似文献   

8.
Photolysis and deacylation of inhibited chymotrypsin   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Inhibited chymotrypsin was reactivated through the photolysis of the covalently bound light-reversible cinnamates described in our previous paper [Stoddard, B.L., Bruhnke, J., Porter, N.A., Ringe, D., & Petsko, G. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 4871-4879]. The light-induced deacylation was accomplished both in solution and in protein crystals, with the release of inhibitor from the crystal monitored and confirmed by X-ray diffraction. The product of photolysis has been characterized as a 3-methylcoumarin, leading to a mechanism for light-driven deacylation of an internal lactonization that is dependent on the presence of an internal hydroxyl nucleophile. The acyl enzyme formed from cinnamate A is not suitable for photochemical studies, as the complex has a short half-life in solution and does not have a chromophore that is well separated from protein absorbance. Cinnamate B, with a p-diethylamino substituent, shows an enzyme deacylation rate enhancement of 10(9) for the cis photoisomer relative to the trans starting material. The half-life and deacylation rate of this compound in the E-I complex after photon absorption have been directly measured by subsecond UV absorption studies. X-ray diffraction studies of photoactivation using a flow cell show that the cinnamate B acyl enzyme complex is fully capable of light-induced isomerization and regeneration of native enzyme in the crystalline state. The E-I complex formed upon binding of cinnamate A, however, shows little if any effect from irradiation due to competitive absorbance by the highly concentrated protein at the shorter UV wavelengths. Photolysis of cinnamate B appears to occur on a time scale fast enough for applications in crystallographic studies of enzymatic intermediate-state structures.  相似文献   

9.
The serine protease gamma-chymotrypsin was covalently inhibited with two different photoreversible cinnamate compounds, and the structures of the resulting complexes were determined to 1.9-A resolution. The inhibitors show different kinetics of binding, inhibition, and nonphotochemical deacylation relative to each other in solution activity assays. The crystal structures of the enzyme-cinnamate complexes show that both compounds acylate serine 195 and that the two molecules are bound in similar nonproductive conformations which have drastic effects on their ability to turn over. Substitution of a diethylamino group on the para position of the cinnamate ring causes a 1000-fold increase in the thermal stability of the inhibitor toward hydrolysis and deacylation.  相似文献   

10.
The three-dimensional interaction of the enzyme-activated (suicide) inhibitor AA 231-1 [N(2-chloromethyl)-3,3-difluoro-azetidin-2-one] with human leukocyte elastase has been studied using computer graphics and molecular mechanics. Systematic conformational analyses and energy minimizations have been performed for the inhibitor AA 231-1 and its presumed complexes formed during the enzymatic process of inactivation, i.e., the Michaelis complex, the acyl-enzyme, and the inactivated enzyme with the covalently bound inhibitor. The β-lactam ring characteristics of modeled AA 231-1 were in agreement with crystallo-graphic data of related structures. Lowest energy conformatinos were found when the angle between the planes of the β-lactam ring and that of its phenyl substituent was about −60 or 60°. To study the interaction with the enzyne, the enzyme-inhibitor complexes were constructed by docking the inhibitor in the active site using enzyme coordinates from an X-ray crystallographic structure. The whole enzyme structure was used for conformational analyses and energy mechanics. Favorable conformations for the Michaelis complex have been obtained in which the carbonyl oxygen of the inhibitor was located in the oxyanion hole and the hydroxyl of Ser195 was in position to interact with the β-lactam carbonyl carbon on the α face of AA 231-1. Simulations of the approach of the benzylic carbon by the nucleophilic amino acid His40 or His57 through an SN2 displacement on the halomethyl group of AA 231-1 were performed. The results agreed with the alkylation of the imidazole nitroge Nϵ2 of His57 leading to the inactivated enzyme (bis-adduct form).  相似文献   

11.
Studies on the catalytic mechanism and inhibition of serine proteases are widely used as paradigms for teaching enzyme catalysis. Ground-breaking work on the structures of chymotrypsin and subtilisin led to the idea of a conserved catalytic triad formed by the active site Ser, His and Asp residues. An oxyanion hole, consisting of the peptide amide of the active site serine and a neighbouring glycine, was identified, and hydrogen bonding in the oxyanion hole was suggested to stabilize the two proposed tetrahedral intermediates on the catalytic pathway. Here we show electron density changes consistent with the formation of a tetrahedral intermediate during the hydrolysis of an acyl-enzyme complex formed between a natural heptapeptide and elastase. No electron density for an enzyme-product complex was observed. The structures also suggest a mechanism for the synchronization of hydrolysis and peptide release triggered by the conversion of the sp2 hybridized carbonyl carbon to an sp3 carbon in the tetrahedral intermediate. This affects the location of the peptide in the active site cleft, triggering the collapse of a hydrogen bonding network between the peptide and the beta-sheet of the active site.  相似文献   

12.
The mutation Ala28 to serine in human immunodeficiency virus, type 1, (HIV-1) protease introduces putative hydrogen bonds to each active-site carboxyl group. These hydrogen bonds are ubiquitous in pepsin-like eukaryotic aspartic proteases. In order to understand the significance of this difference between HIV-1 protease and homologous, eukaryotic aspartic proteases, we solved the three-dimensional structure of A28S mutant HIV-1 protease in complex with a peptidic inhibitor U-89360E. The structure has been determined to 2.0 A resolution with an R factor of 0.194. Comparison of the mutant enzyme structure with that of the wild-type HIV-1 protease bound to the same inhibitor (Hong L, Treharne A, Hartsuck JA, Foundling S, Tang J, 1996, Biochemistry 35:10627-10633) revealed double occupancy for the Ser28 hydroxyl group, which forms a hydrogen bond either to one of the oxygen atoms of the active-site carboxyl or to the carbonyl oxygen of Asp30. We also observed marked changes in orientation of the Asp25 catalytic carboxyl groups, presumably caused by the new hydrogen bonds. These observations suggest that catalytic aspartyl groups of HIV-1 protease have significant conformational flexibility unseen in eukaryotic aspartic proteases. This difference may provide an explanation for some unique catalytic properties of HIV-1 protease.  相似文献   

13.
Phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) is a tetrahydrobiopterin and non-heme iron-dependent enzyme that hydroxylates L-Phe to l-Tyr using molecular oxygen as additional substrate. A dysfunction of this enzyme leads to phenylketonuria (PKU). The conformation and distances to the catalytic iron of both L-Phe and the cofactor analogue L-erythro-7,8-dihydrobiopterin (BH2) simultaneously bound to recombinant human PAH have been estimated by (1)H NMR. The resulting bound conformers of both ligands have been fitted into the crystal structure of the catalytic domain by molecular docking. In the docked structure L-Phe binds to the enzyme through interactions with Arg270, Ser349 and Trp326. The mode of coordination of Glu330 to the iron moiety seems to determine the amino acid substrate specificity in PAH and in the homologous enzyme tyrosine hydroxylase. The pterin ring of BH2 pi-stacks with Phe254, and the N3 and the amine group at C2 hydrogen bond with the carboxylic group of Glu286. The ring also establishes specific contacts with His264 and Leu249. The distance between the O4 atom of BH2 and the iron (2.6(+/-0.3) A) is compatible with coordination, a finding that is important for the understanding of the mechanism of the enzyme. The hydroxyl groups in the side-chain at C6 hydrogen bond with the carbonyl group of Ala322 and the hydroxyl group of Ser251, an interaction that seems to have implications for the regulation of the enzyme by substrate and cofactor. Some frequent mutations causing PKU are located at residues involved in substrate and cofactor binding. The sites for hydroxylation, C4 in L-Phe and C4a in the pterin are located at a distance of 4.2 and 4.3 A from the iron moiety, respectively, and at 6.3 A from each other. These distances are adequate for the intercalation of iron-coordinated molecular oxygen, in agreement with a mechanistic role of the iron moiety both in the binding and activation of dioxygen and in the hydroxylation reaction.  相似文献   

14.
Despite the availability of many experimental data and some modeling studies, questions remain as to the precise mechanism of the serine proteases. Here we report molecular dynamics simulations on the acyl-enzyme complex and the tetrahedral intermediate during the deacylation step in elastase catalyzed hydrolysis of a simple peptide. The models are based on recent crystallographic data for an acyl-enzyme intermediate at pH 5 and a time-resolved study on the deacylation step. Simulations were carried out on the acyl enzyme complex with His-57 in protonated (as for the pH 5 crystallographic work) and deprotonated forms. In both cases, a water molecule that could provide the nucleophilic hydroxide ion to attack the ester carbonyl was located between the imidazole ring of His-57 and the carbonyl carbon, close to the hydrolytic position assigned in the crystal structure. In the "neutral pH" simulations of the acyl-enzyme complex, the hydrolytic water oxygen was hydrogen bonded to the imidazole ring and the side chain of Arg-61. Alternative stable locations for water in the active site were also observed. Movement of the His-57 side-chain from that observed in the crystal structure allowed more solvent waters to enter the active site, suggesting that an alternative hydrolytic process directly involving two water molecules may be possible. At the acyl-enzyme stage, the ester carbonyl was found to flip easily in and out of the oxyanion hole. In contrast, simulations on the tetrahedral intermediate showed no significant movement of His-57 and the ester carbonyl was constantly located in the oxyanion hole. A comparison between the simulated tetrahedral intermediate and a time-resolved crystallographic structure assigned as predominantly reflecting the tetrahedral intermediate suggests that the experimental structure may not precisely represent an optimal arrangement for catalysis in solution. Movement of loop residues 216-223 and P3 residue, seen both in the tetrahedral simulation and the experimental analysis, could be related to product release. Furthermore, an analysis of the geometric data obtained from the simulations and the pH 5 crystal structure of the acyl-enzyme suggests that since His-57 is protonated, in some aspects, this crystal structure resembles the tetrahedral intermediate.  相似文献   

15.
The substrate specificity of beef heart phosphodiesterase activity and of the phosphodiesterase activity at the cell surface of the cellular slime mold Dictyostelium discoideum has been investigated by measuring the apparent Km and maximal velocity (V) of 24 derivatives of adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cAMP). Several analogs have increased Km values, but unaltered V values if compared to cAMP; also the contrary (unaltered Km and reduced V) has been observed, indicating that binding of the substrate to the enzyme and ring opening are two separate steps in the hydrolysis of cAMP. cAMP is bound to the beef heart phosphodiesterase by dipole-induced dipole interactions between the adenine moiety and an aromatic amino acid, and possibly by a hydrogen bond between the enzyme and one of the exocyclic oxygen atoms; a cyclic phosphate ring is not required to obtain binding. cAMP is bound to the slime mold enzyme via a hydrogen bond at the 3'-oxygen atom, and probably via a hydrogen bond with one of the exocyclic oxygen atoms. A cyclic phosphate ring is necessary to obtain binding to the enzyme. A specific interaction (polar or hydrophobic) between the base moiety and the enzyme has not been demonstrated. A negative charge on the phosphate moiety is not required for binding of cAMP to either enzyme. The catalytic reaction in both enzymes is restricted to the phosphorus atom and to the exocyclic oxygen atoms. Substitution of the negatively charged oxygen atom by an uncharged dimethylamino group in axial or equatorial position renders the compound non-hydrolyzable. Substitution of an exocyclic oxygen by a sulphur atom reduces the rate of the catalytic reaction about 100-fold if sulphur is placed in axial position and more than 10000-fold if sulphur is placed in equatorial position. A reaction mechanism for the enzymatic hydrolysis of cAMP is proposed.  相似文献   

16.
An analysis of the geometry and the orientation of metal ions bound to histidine residues in proteins is presented. Cations are found to lie in the imidazole plane along the lone pair on the nitrogen atom. Out of the two tautomeric forms of the imidazole ring, the NE2-protonated form is normally preferred. However, when bound to a metal ion the ND1-protonated form is predominant and NE2 is the ligand atom. When the metal coordination is through ND1, steric interactions shift the side chain torsional angle, chi 2 from its preferred value of 90 or 270 degrees. The orientation of histidine residues is usually stabilized through hydrogen bonding; ND1-protonated form of a helical residue can form a hydrogen bond with the carbonyl oxygen atom in the preceding turn of the helix. A considerable number of ligands are found in helices and beta-sheets. A helical residue bound to a heme group is usually found near the C-terminus of the helix. Two ligand groups four residues apart in a helix, or two residues apart in a beta-strand are used in many proteins to bind metal ions.  相似文献   

17.
P J Tonge  P R Carey 《Biochemistry》1989,28(16):6701-6709
By use of resonance Raman (RR) spectroscopy, the population of the reactive carbonyl group in active acylchymotrypsins has been characterized and correlated with acyl-enzyme reactivity. RR spectra have been obtained, with a flow system and 324- and 337.5-nm excitation, at low and active pH for six acylchymotrypsins, viz., (indoleacryloyl)-, (4-amino-3-nitrocinnamoyl)-, (furylacryloyl)-, [( 5-ethylfuryl)-acryloyl]-, (thienylacryloyl)-, and [( 5-methylthienyl)acryloyl]chymotrypsin. These acyl-enzymes represent a 100-fold range of deacylation rate constants. Good RR spectral quality has enabled us to obtain the vibrational spectrum of the carbonyl group at low and active pH in each acyl-enzyme. The measured pKa of the spectroscopic changes in the carbonyl region is identical with that for the deacylation kinetics, showing that the RR carbonyl features reflect the ionization state of His-57. A carbonyl population has been observed in the active acyl-enzymes in which the carbonyl oxygen atom of the reactive acyl linkage is hydrogen-bonded in the active site. The proportion of this hydrogen-bonded population, with respect to other observed non-hydrogen-bonded species, together with the degree of polarization of the carbonyl bond, as monitored by vC = 0, has been correlated with the deacylation rate constants of the acyl-enzymes. It is proposed that the hydrogen-bonded carbonyl species is located at or near the oxyanion hole and represents the ground state from which deacylation occurs. An increase in the proportion of the hydrogen-bonded population and an increase in polarization of the carbonyl bond result in an increase in deacylation rate constant.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
We report here the crystallographic and biophysical analysis of a soluble, catalytically active fragment of the Escherichia coli type I signal peptidase (SPase Delta2-75) in complex with arylomycin A2. The 2.5-A resolution structure revealed that the inhibitor is positioned with its COOH-terminal carboxylate oxygen (O45) within hydrogen bonding distance of all the functional groups in the catalytic center of the enzyme (Ser90 O-gamma, Lys145 N-zeta, and Ser88 O-gamma) and that it makes beta-sheet type interactions with the beta-strands that line each side of the binding site. Ligand binding studies, calorimetry, fluorescence spectroscopy, and stopped-flow kinetics were also used to analyze the binding mode of this unique non-covalently bound inhibitor. The crystal structure was solved in the space group P4(3)2(1)2. A detailed comparison is made to the previously published acyl-enzyme inhibitor complex structure (space group: P2(1)2(1)2) and the apo-enzyme structure (space group: P4(1)2(1)2). Together this work provides insights into the binding of pre-protein substrates to signal peptidase and will prove helpful in the development of novel antibiotics.  相似文献   

19.
The crystal structure of the acyl enzyme formed upon inhibition of porcine pancreatic elastase (PPE) by 4-chloro-3-ethoxy-7-guanidinoisocoumarin has been determined at a 1.85-A effective resolution. The chlorine atom is still present in this acyl enzyme, in contrast to the previously reported structure of the 7-amino-4-chloro-3-methoxyisocoumarin-PPE complex where the chlorine atom has been replaced by an acetoxy group. The guanidino group forms hydrogen bonds with the carbonyl group and side-chain hydroxyl group of Thr-41, and the acyl carbonyl group has been twisted out of the oxyanion hole. Molecular modeling indicates that the orientation of the initial Michaelis enzyme-inhibitor complex is quite different from that of the acyl enzyme since simple reconstruction of the isocoumarin ring would result in unfavorable interactions with Ser-195 and His-57. Molecular models were used to design a series of new 7-(alkylureido)- and 7-(alkylthioureido)-substituted derivatives of 3-alkoxy-7-amino-4-chloroisocoumarin as PPE inhibitors. All the 3-ethoxyisocoumarins were better inhibitors than those in the 3-methoxy series due to better interactions with the S1 pocket of PPE. The best ureido inhibitor also contained a tert-butylureido group at the 7-position of the isocoumarin. Due to a predicted interaction with a small hydrophobic pocket on the surface of PPE, this isocoumarin and a related phenylthioureido derivative are among the best irreversible inhibitors thus far reported for PPE (kobs/[I] = 8100 M-1 s-1 and 12,000 M-1 s-1). Kinetic studies of the stability of enzyme-inhibitor complexes suggest that many isocoumarins are alkylating the active site histidine at pH 7.5 via a quinone imine methide intermediate, while at pH 5.0, the predominant pathway appears to be simple formation of a stable acyl enzyme derivative.  相似文献   

20.
Hokenson MJ  Cope GA  Lewis ER  Oberg KA  Fink AL 《Biochemistry》2000,39(21):6538-6545
Class A beta-lactamases hydrolyze penicillins and other beta-lactams via an acyl-enzyme catalytic mechanism. Ser70 is the active site nucleophile. By constructing the S70A mutant, which is unable to form the acyl-enzyme intermediate, it was possible to make stable ES complexes with various substrates. The stability of such Michaelis complexes permitted acquisition of their infrared spectra. Comparison of the beta-lactam carbonyl stretch frequency (nu(CO)) in the free and enzyme-bound substrate revealed an average decrease of 13 cm(-)(1), indicating substantial strain/distortion of the lactam carbonyl when bound in the ES complex. Interestingly, regardless of the frequency of the C=O stretch in the free substrate, when complexed to Bacillus licheniformis beta-lactamase, the frequency was always 1755 +/- 2 cm(-)(1). This suggests the active site environment induces a similar conformation of the beta-lactam in all substrates when bound to the enzyme. Using deuterium substitution, it was shown that the "oxyanion hole", which involves hydrogen bonding to two backbone amides, is the major source of the enzyme-induced strain/distortion. The very weak catalytic activity of the S70A beta-lactamase suggests enzyme-facilitated hydrolysis due to substrate distortion on binding to the enzyme. Thus the binding of the substrate in the active site induces substantial strain and distortion that contribute significantly to the overall rate enhancement in beta-lactamase catalysis.  相似文献   

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