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1.
K Ratnam  H Ma  T M Penning 《Biochemistry》1999,38(24):7856-7864
Fluorescence stopped-flow studies were conducted with recombinant rat liver 3 alpha-HSD, an aldo-keto reductase (AKR) that plays critical roles in steroid hormone inactivation, to characterize the binding of nicotinamide cofactor, the first step in the kinetic mechanism. Binding of NADP(H) involved two events: the fast formation of a loose complex (E.NADP(H)), followed by a conformational change in enzyme structure leading to a tightly bound complex (E.NADP(H)), which was observed as a fluorescence kinetic transient. Binding of NAD(H) was not characterized by a similar kinetic transient, implying a difference in the mode of binding of the two cofactors. Unlike previously characterized AKRs, the rates associated with the formation and decay of E.NADP(H) and E.NADP(H) were much faster than kcat for the oxidoreduction of various substrates, indicating that binding and release of cofactor is not rate-limiting overall in 3 alpha-HSD. Mutation of Arg 276, a highly conserved residue in AKRs that forms a salt bridge with the adenosine 2'-phosphate of NADP(H), resulted in large changes in Km and Kd for NADP(H) that were not observed with NAD(H). The loss in free energy associated with the increase in Kd for NADP(H) is consistent with the elimination of an electrostatic link. Importantly, this mutation abolished the kinetic transient associated with NADPH binding. Thus, anchoring of the adenosine 2'-phosphate of NADPH by Arg 276 appears to be obligatory for the fluorescence kinetic transients to be observed. The removal of Trp 86, a residue involved in fluorescence energy transfer with NAD(P)H, also abolished the kinetic transient, but mutation of Trp 227, a residue on a mobile loop associated with cofactor binding, did not. It is concluded that in 3 alpha-HSD, the time dependence of the change in Trp 86 fluorescence is due to cofactor anchoring, and thus, Trp 86 is a distal reporter of this event. Further, the loop movement that accompanies cofactor binding is spectrally silent.  相似文献   

2.
To understand the catalytic mechanism of glycogen phosphorylase (EC 2.4.1.1), pyridoxal(5')phospho(1)-beta-D-glucose was synthesized and examined as a hypothetical intermediate in the catalysis. Pyridoxal phosphoglucose bound stoichiometrically to the cofactor site of rabbit muscle phosphorylase b in a similar mode of binding to the natural cofactor, pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. The rate of binding of pyridoxal phosphoglucose was only 1/100 compared with that of pyridoxal phosphate. The enzyme reconstituted with pyridoxal phosphoglucose showed no enzymatic activity at all even after prolonged incubation of the enzyme with substrates and activator. The present data would contradict participation of the phosphate group of pyridoxal phosphate in a covalent glucosyl-enzyme intermediate even if the covalent intermediate was formed during the catalysis.  相似文献   

3.
The glycogen phosphorylase molecule absorbs the ultraviolet energy of a nitrogen laser to form an excited state of the cofactor. The decay rate of this state has a lifetime of 6.7 microseconds, and its sensitivity to bound substrates presents a new perspective of the mechanism. A careful analysis of the decay curve for native enzyme and cofactor analogues showed that the lifetime depends on the conformation of protein groups at the active site and how the residues change with bound substrate. The reactive ternary complexes obtained from either direction of the reaction yielded the same lifetime, indicating a change in the active-site conformation to a common configuration for the cofactor and substrate phosphate. This configuration indicates an increase in the cofactor 5'-PO4 pKa and a possible proton shuttle. The pyridoxal 5'-pyrophosphate reconstituted enzyme showed no conformational change alone or in the presence of oligosaccharide. This result does not support an electrophilic attack by the 5'-PO4 phosphorus.  相似文献   

4.
The enzyme mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase from beef liver is a dimer of identical subunits. The enzymatic activity of the resolved enzyme is restored upon addition of the cofactor pyridoxal 5-phosphate. The binding of 1 molecule of cofactor restores 50% of the original enzymatic activity, whereas the binding of a 2nd molecule of cofactor brings about more than 95% recovery of the catalytic activity. Following addition of 1 mol of pyridoxal-5-P per dimer, three forms of the enzyme may exist in solution: apoenzyme-2 pyridoxal 5'-phosphate, apoenzyme-1 pyridoxal 5'-phosphate, and apoenzyme. The enzyme species are separated by affinity chromatography and the following distribution was found: apoenzyme-2 pyridoxal 5'-phosphate/apoenzyme-1 pytidoxal 5'-phosphate/apoenzyme, 2/6/2. Similar distribution was observed after reduction with NaBH4 of the mixture containing apoenzyme and pyridoxal-5-P at a mixing ratio of 1:1. Fluorometric titrations conducted on samples of apoenzyme and apoenzyme-1 pyridoxal 5'-phosphate reveal that the enzyme species display identical affinity towards the inhibitor 4-pyridoxic-5-P (KD equals 1.1 times 10- minus 6 M). It is concluded that the binding of the cofactor to one of the catalytic sites does not affect the affinity of the second site for the inhibitor. These results, obtained by two independent methods, lend strong support to the hypothesis that the two subunits of the enzyme function independently.  相似文献   

5.
P F Guidinger  T Nowak 《Biochemistry》1991,30(36):8851-8861
The participation of lysine in the catalysis by avian liver phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase was studied by chemical modification and by a characterization of the modified enzyme. The rate of inactivation by 2,4-pentanedione is pseudo-first-order and linearly dependent on reagent concentration with a second-order rate constant of 0.36 +/- 0.025 M-1 min-1. Inactivation by pyridoxal 5'-phosphate of the reversible reaction catalyzed by phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase follows bimolecular kinetics with a second-order rate constant of 7700 +/- 860 M-1 min-1. A second-order rate constant of inactivation for the irreversible reaction catalyzed by the enzyme is 1434 +/- 110 M-1 min-1. Treatment of the enzyme with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate gives incorporation of 1 mol of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate per mole of enzyme or one lysine residue modified concomitant with 100% loss in activity. A stoichiometry of 1:1 is observed when either the reversible or the irreversible reactions catalyzed by the enzyme are monitored. A study of kobs vs pH suggests this active-site lysine has a pKa of 8.1 and a pH-independent rate constant of inactivation of 47,700 M-1 min-1. The phosphate-containing substrates IDP, ITP, and phosphoenolpyruvate offer almost complete protection against inactivation by pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. Modified, inactive enzyme exhibits little change in Mn2+ binding as shown by EPR. Proton relaxation rate measurements suggest that pyridoxal 5'-phosphate modification alters binding of the phosphate-containing substrates. 31P NMR relaxation rate measurements show altered binding of the substrates in the ternary enzyme.Mn2+.substrate complex. Circular dichroism studies show little change in secondary structure of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate modified phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase. These results indicate that avian liver phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase has one reactive lysine at the active site and it is involved in the binding and activation of the phosphate-containing substrates.  相似文献   

6.
In order to determine the ionization state of the 5'-phosphate of bound pyridoxal phosphate, a Fourier transform infrared spectroscopic study of cytosolic aspartate aminotransferase has been carried out. Dianionic and monoanionic phosphate monoesters give rise to two bands each in the infrared spectrum [Shimanouchi, T., Tsuboi, M., & Kyogoku, Y. (1964) Adv. Chem. Phys. 8, 435-498]. These bands can be identified in infrared spectra of the free coenzyme in solution. Due to interfering bands arising from the protein, only the band assigned to the symmetric stretching of the dianionic phosphate is observed in holoenzyme solutions. The integrated intensity of this band does not change with pH in the range 5.3-8.6, while for free pyridoxal phosphate, the integrated intensity of the same band changes with pH according to the pK value expected for the 5'-phosphate group in solution. Moreover, the value of the integrated intensity for the bound cofactor is close to the value given by free cofactor at pH 8-9. These results suggest that the 5'-phosphate of the bound cofactor remains mostly dianionic throughout the investigated pH range and disfavor other interpretations in terms of ionization of the phosphate group on the basis of the nuclear magnetic resonance 31P chemical shift-pH titration curve of holoenzyme [Schnackerz, K. D. (1984) in Chemical and Biological Aspects of Vitamin B6 Catalysis (Evangelopoulos, E. A., Ed.) Part A, pp 195-208, Alan R. Liss, New York].(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
Ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) is a pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP) dependent enzyme that catalyzes the decarboxylation of l-Orn to putrescine, a rate-limiting step in the formation of polyamines. The X-ray crystal structures of ODC, complexed to several ligands, support a model where the substrate is oriented with the carboxyl-leaving group buried on the re face of the PLP cofactor. This binding site is composed of hydrophobic and electron-rich residues, in which Phe-397 is predicted to form a close contact. Mutation of Phe-397 to Ala reduces the steady-state rate of product formation by 150-fold. Moreover, single turnover analysis demonstrates that the rate of the decarboxylation step is decreased by 2100-fold, causing this step to replace product release as the rate-limiting step in the mutant enzyme. These data support the structural prediction that the carboxyl-leaving group is positioned to interact with Phe-397. Multiwavelength stopped-flow analysis of reaction intermediates suggests that a major product of the reaction with the mutant enzyme is pyridoximine 5'-phosphate (PMP), resulting from incorrect protonation of the decarboxylated intermediate at the C4' position. This finding was confirmed by HPLC analysis of the reaction products, demonstrating that Phe-397 also plays a role in maintaining the integrity of the reaction chemistry. The finding that the carboxylate-leaving group is oriented on the buried side of the PLP cofactor suggests that ODC facilitates decarboxylation by destabilizing the charged substrate carboxyl group in favor of an electrostatically more neutral transition state.  相似文献   

8.
The detailed environment of the essential cofactor pyridoxal 5'-phosphate in glycogen phosphorylase b, resulting from crystallographic refinement at 1.9-A resolution, is described. The pyridoxal ring is buried in a nonpolar site containing three aromatic rings while the 5'-phosphate group is highly solvated and makes only three direct contacts to the protein. The pyridine nitrogen interacts via a water with protein atoms [main chain carbonyl oxygen (Asn-133) and OH of tyrosine (Tyr-90)]. The crystal structures of three active derivatives of phosphorylase reconstituted with 5'-deoxypyridoxal 5'-methylenephosphonate (PDMP), 6-fluoropyridoxal 5'-phosphate (6-FPLP), and pyridoxal (PL) in place of the natural cofactor have been determined at 2.5-A resolution. The results for PDMP-phosphorylase show a closer proximity of the phosphonate group to the NZ atom of a lysine (Lys-574) than that observed in the native enzyme, consistent with 31P NMR studies that have shown a change in ionization state of the phosphonate group compared to the native cofactor phosphate. The replacement of the polar 5'-ester linkage by a CH2 group results in a small shift of a water and its hydrogen-bonded tyrosine (Tyr-648). In 6-FPLP-phosphorylase the fluorine is accommodated with no significant change in structure. It is suggested that substitution of the electronegative fluorine at the 6-position may result in lower activity of 6-FPLP-phosphorylase through a strengthening of hydrogen-bonded interactions to the pyridine nitrogen N1.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
The human fatty-acid synthase (HFAS) is a potential target for anti-tumor drug discovery. As a prelude to the design of compounds that target the enoyl reductase (ER) component of HFAS, the recognition of NADPH and exogenous substrates by the ER active site has been investigated. Previous studies demonstrate that modification of Lys-1699 by pyridoxal 5'-phosphate results in a specific decrease in ER activity. For the overall HFAS reaction, the K1699A and K1699Q mutations reduced kcat and kcat/KNADPH by 8- and 600-fold, respectively (where KNADPH indicates the Km value for NADPH). Thus, Lys-1699 contributes 4 kcal/mol to stabilization of the rate-limiting transition state following NADPH binding, while also stabilizing the most stable ground state after NADPH binding by 3 kcal/mol. A similar effect of the mutations on the ER partial reaction was observed, in agreement with the proposal that Lys-1699 is located in the ER NADPH-binding site. Most unexpectedly, however, both kcat and kcat/KNADPH for the beta-ketoacyl reductase (BKR) reaction were also impacted by the Lys-1699 mutations, raising the possibility that the ER and BKR activities share a single active site. However, based on previous data indicating that the two reductase activities utilize distinct cofactor binding sites, mutagenesis of Lys-1699 is hypothesized to modulate BKR activity via allosteric effects between the ER and BKR NADPH sites.  相似文献   

10.
Human polynucleotide kinase (hPNK) is required for processing and rejoining DNA strand break termini. The 5'-DNA kinase and 3'-phosphatase activities of hPNK can be stimulated by the "scaffold" protein XRCC1, but the mechanism remains to be fully elucidated. Using a variety of fluorescence techniques, we examined the interaction of hPNK with XRCC1 and substrates that model DNA single-strand breaks. hPNK binding to substrates with 5'-OH termini was only approximately 5-fold tighter than that to identical DNA molecules with 5'-phosphate termini, suggesting that hPNK remains bound to the product of its enzymatic activity. The presence of XRCC1 did not influence the binding of hPNK to substrates with 5'-OH termini, but sharply reduced the interaction of hPNK with DNA bearing a 5'-phosphate terminus. These data, together with kinetic data obtained at limiting enzyme concentration, indicate a dual function for the interaction of XRCC1 with hPNK. First, XRCC1 enhances the capacity of hPNK to discriminate between strand breaks with 5'-OH termini and those with 5'-phosphate termini; and second, XRCC1 stimulates hPNK activity by displacing hPNK from the phosphorylated DNA product.  相似文献   

11.
5-Aminolevulinate synthase (ALAS) is the first enzyme of the heme biosynthetic pathway in non-plant eukaryotes and the alpha-subclass of purple bacteria. The pyridoxal 5'-phosphate cofactor at the active site undergoes changes in absorptive properties during substrate binding and catalysis that have allowed us to study the kinetics of these reactions spectroscopically. Rapid scanning stopped-flow experiments of murine erythroid 5-aminolevulinate synthase demonstrate that reaction with glycine plus succinyl-CoA results in a pre-steady-state burst of quinonoid intermediate formation. Thus, a step following binding of substrates and initial quinonoid intermediate formation is rate-determining. The steady-state spectrum of the enzyme is similar to that formed in the presence of 5-aminolevulinate, suggesting that release of this product limits the overall rate. Reaction of either glycine or 5-aminolevulinate with ALAS is slow (kf = 0.15 s-1) and approximates kcat. The rate constant for reaction with glycine is increased at least 90-fold in the presence of succinyl-CoA and most likely represents a slow conformational change of the enzyme that is accelerated by succinyl-CoA. The slow rate of reaction of 5-aminolevulinate with ALAS is 5-aminolevulinate-independent, suggesting that it also represents a slow isomerization of the enzyme. Reaction of succinyl-CoA with the enzyme-glycine complex to form a quinonoid intermediate is a biphasic process and may be irreversible. Taken together, the data suggest that turnover is limited by release of 5-aminolevulinate or a conformational change associated with 5-aminolevulinate release.  相似文献   

12.
Pyridoxine-5'-phosphate oxidase catalyzes the oxidation of either the C4' alcohol group or amino group of the two substrates pyridoxine 5'-phosphate and pyridoxamine 5'-phosphate to an aldehyde, forming pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. A hydrogen atom is removed from C4' during the oxidation and a pair of electrons is transferred to tightly bound FMN. A new crystal form of the enzyme in complex with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate shows that the N-terminal segment of the protein folds over the active site to sequester the ligand from solvent during the catalytic cycle. Using (4'R)-[(3)H]PMP as substrate, nearly 100 % of the radiolabel appears in water after oxidation to pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. Thus, the enzyme is specific for removal of the proR hydrogen atom from the prochiral C4' carbon atom of pyridoxamine 5'-phosphate. Site mutants were made of all residues at the active site that interact with the oxygen atom or amine group on C4' of the substrates. Other residues that make interactions with the phosphate moiety of the substrate were mutated. The mutants showed a decrease in affinity, but exhibited considerable catalytic activity, showing that these residues are important for binding, but play a lesser role in catalysis. The exception is Arg197, which is important for both binding and catalysis. The R197 M mutant enzyme catalyzed removal of the proS hydrogen atom from (4'R)-[(3)H]PMP, showing that the guanidinium side-chain plays an important role in determining stereospecificity. The crystal structure and the stereospecificity studies suggests that the pair of electrons on C4' of the substrate are transferred to FMN as a hydride ion.  相似文献   

13.
To examine the role of lysyl residues in the activity of the enzyme, phosphoglyceromutase (PGM) from chicken breast muscle was chemically modified with trinitrobenzenesulfonate (TNBS) and pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. Trinitrophenylation resulted in modification of about nine lysines per mole of PGM with almost complete activity loss. Substrate (3-PGA) offered some protection to TNBS inactivation but cofactor (2,3-DPGA) did not. Reduction of the Schiff's base complex between pyridoxal 5'-phosphate and PGM gave irreversible inactivation of the enzyme. Inactivation was due to incorporation of 1 mol of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate per mole of PGM dimer through the epsilon-amino group of a lysyl residue. The effect of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate was specific for intact native enzyme and reaction with only one lysine per dimer was not due to induced conformational changes nor to dissociation of the reacted enzyme. 3-PGA prevented much of the reaction with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate with preservation of 70% of the activity and was a competitive inhibitor of the active site directed reagent. Cofactor (2,3-DPGA) acting noncompetitively, reduced the rate at which inactivation occurred with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. Incorporation of 2,3-[32P]DPGA into PGM irreversibly inactivated with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate and NaBH4 was incomplete indicating hindrance to phosphorylation in the modified enzyme. The results indicate that a lysyl residue is located at or near the active site of PGM and that it is probably involved in the binding of 3-PGA.  相似文献   

14.
The bacteriophage λ's cI mRNA was utilized to examine the importance of the 5'-terminal phosphate on expression of leadered and leaderless mRNA in Escherichia coli. A hammerhead ribozyme was used to produce leadered and leaderless mRNAs, in vivo and in vitro, that contain a 5'-hydroxyl. Although these mRNAs may not occur naturally in the bacterial cell, they allow for the study of the importance of the 5'-phosphorylation state in ribosome binding and translation of leadered and leaderless mRNAs. Analyses with mRNAs containing either a 5'-phosphate or a 5'-hydroxyl indicate that leaderless cI mRNA requires a 5'-phosphate for stable ribosome binding in vitro as well as expression in vivo. Ribosome-binding assays show that 30S subunits and 70S ribosomes do not bind as strongly to 5'-hydroxyl as they do to 5'-phosphate containing leaderless mRNA and the tRNA-dependent ternary complex is less stable. Additionally, filter-binding assays revealed that the 70S ternary complex formed with a leaderless mRNA containing a 5'-hydroxyl has a dissociation rate (k(off)) that is 4.5-fold higher compared with the complex formed with a 5'-phosphate leaderless mRNA. Fusion to a lacZ reporter gene revealed that leaderless cI mRNA expression with a 5'-hydroxyl was >100-fold lower than the equivalent mRNA with a 5'-phosphate. These data indicate that a 5'-phosphate is an important feature of leaderless mRNA for stable ribosome binding and expression.  相似文献   

15.
A W MacFarlane  R J Stanley 《Biochemistry》2001,40(50):15203-15214
DNA photolyase is a flavoprotein that repairs cyclobutylpyrimidine dimers by ultrafast photoinduced electron transfer. One unusual feature of this enzyme is the configuration of the FAD cofactor, where the isoalloxazine and adenine rings are nearly in vdW contact. We have measured the steady-state and transient absorption spectra and excited-state decay kinetics of oxidized (FAD-containing, folate-depleted) Escherichia coli DNA photolyase with and without dinucleotide and polynucleotide single-stranded thymidine dimer substrates. The steady-state absorption spectrum for the enzyme-polynucleotide substrate complex showed a blue shift, as seen previously by Jorns et al. (1). No shift was observed for the dinucleotide substrate, suggesting that there are significant differences in the binding geometry of dinucleotide versus polynucleotide dimer lesions. Evidence was obtained from transient absorption experiments for a long-lived charge-transfer complex involving the isoalloxazine of the FAD cofactor. No evidence of excited-state quenching was measurable upon binding either substrate. To explain these data, we hypothesize the existence of a large substrate electric field in the cavity containing the FAD cofactor. A calculation of the magnitude and direction of this dipolar electric field is consistent with electrochromic band shifts for both S(0) --> S(1) and S(0) --> S(2) transitions. These observations suggest that the substrate dipolar electric field may be a critical component in its electron-transfer-mediated repair by photolyase and that the unique relative orientation of the isoalloxazine and adenine rings may have resulted from the consequences of the dipolar substrate field.  相似文献   

16.
Chemical modification of arginine and lysine residues of bovine heart 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase with phenylglyoxal and pyridoxal 5'-phosphate inactivated the enzyme, indicating the importance of these residues for the catalysis. Inactivation caused by pyridoxal 5'-phosphate was prevented in the presence of thiamine pyrophosphate and Mg2+ allowing the assumption that lysine residues participate in binding of the cofactor.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of modification of Phe-RSase from E. coli MRE-600 by pyridoxal-5'-phosphate and 2', 3'-dialdehyde derivative of ATP and L-phenylalanynyl-5'-adenylate obtained by periodate oxidation on the enzyme interaction with substrates was investigated. It was shown that modification of Phe-RSase by pyridoxal-5'-phosphate and 2', 3'-dialdehyde derivative of ATP leads to a decrease of the aminoacylation rate without changing the rate of the ATP-[32P]-pyrophosphate exchange reaction. The substrate analogs L-phenylalanynol and L-phenyl-alanynyladenylate increase the degree of Phe-RSase inactivation in the aminoacylation reaction. tRNAphe strongly protects the enzyme against inactivation. ATP, both in the absence (in case of modification with pyridoxal-5'-phosphate) and in- the presence of Mg2+ and phenylalanine (in case of modification with o-ATP) exhibits a pronounced protective effect. L-Phe does not protect the enzyme against the inactivation by pyridoxal-5'-phosphate or o-ATP. The dissociation constant of the Phe-RSase[14C]-Phe-tRNAphe complex increases 2.5 -- 5-fold after the enzyme modification by pyridoxal-5'-phosphate, while the Km value for tRNAphe decreases approximately two times in the aminoacylation reaction. There are no changes in the Km values for amino acid and ATP and the Hill coefficients for all substrates tested. Modification of Phe-RSase by pyridoxal-5'-phosphate leads to a decrease of stability of the aminoacyladenylate -- enzyme complex. Oxidized L-phenylalanynyladenylate does not produce enzyme inactivation either by aminoacylation or in the isotropic ATP-PP iota exchange reaction. It is assumed that Phe-RSase from E. coli MRE-600 contains some lysine residues essential for binding and aminoacylation of tRNA, which do not occur in the ATP-binding subsite and aminoacyladenylate formation center.  相似文献   

18.
1. The alpha and beta subforms of aspartate aminotransferase were purified from pig heart. 2. The alpha subform contained 2mol of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. The apo-(alpha subform) could be fully reactived by combination with 2mol of cofactor. 3. The protein fluorescence of the apo-(alpha subform) decreased non-linearly with increase in enzyme activity and concentration of bound cofactor. 4. It is concluded that the enzyme activity/mol of bound cofactor is largely independent of the number of cofactors bound to the dimer. 5. The beta subform had approximately half the specific enzyme activity of the alpha subform, and contained an average of one active pyridoxal 5'-phosphate molecule per molecule, which could be removed by glutamate, and another inactive cofactor which could only be removed with NaOH. 6. On recombination with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate the protein fluorescence of the apo-(beta subform) decreased linearly, showing that each dimeric enzyme molecule contained one active and one inactive bound cofactor. 7. The results are not consistent with a flip-flop mechanism for this enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
Fourier analysis of the laser-induced absorption decay curves of 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (DOPA) decarboxylase and glycogen phosphorylase demonstrates a powerful technique in the analysis of complicated decay behavior. Phosphorylase which uses the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate cofactor in an unknown manner exhibits over weak absorption an intense decay while decarboxylase demonstrates only weak absorption. Fourier analysis of the decay curves clearly shows that phosphorylase has an intense absorption decay in the midst of three weaker ones and that decarboxylase only has three weak decays. This conclusion justifies the isolation and use of the intense decay of phosphorylase as an observable in the study of protein dynamics at the active site about the cofactor. The decay has demonstrated a movement of positive charge to substrate in the mechanism of phosphorylation of glycogen units.  相似文献   

20.
BACKGROUND: Escherichia coli pyridoxine 5'-phosphate oxidase (PNPOx) catalyzes the terminal step in the biosynthesis of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP), a cofactor used by many enzymes involved in amino acid metabolism. The enzyme oxidizes either the 4'-hydroxyl group of pyridoxine 5'-phosphate (PNP) or the 4'-primary amine of pyridoxamine 5'-phosphate (PMP) to an aldehyde. PNPOx is a homodimeric enzyme with one flavin mononucleotide (FMN) molecule non-covalently bound to each subunit. A high degree of sequence homology among the 15 known members of the PNPOx family suggests that all members of this group have similar three-dimensional folds. RESULTS: The crystal structure of PNPOx from E. coli has been determined to 1.8 A resolution. The monomeric subunit folds into an eight-stranded beta sheet surrounded by five alpha-helical structures. Two monomers related by a twofold axis interact extensively along one-half of each monomer to form the dimer. There are two clefts at the dimer interface that are symmetry-related and extend from the top to the bottom of the dimer. An FMN cofactor that makes interactions with both subunits is located in each of these two clefts. CONCLUSIONS: The structure is quite similar to the recently deposited 2.7 A structure of Saccharomyces cerevisiae PNPOx and also, remarkably, shares a common structural fold with the FMN-binding protein from Desulfovibrio vulgaris and a domain of chymotrypsin. This high-resolution E. coli PNPOx structure permits predictions to be made about residues involved in substrate binding and catalysis. These predictions provide testable hypotheses, which can be answered by making site-directed mutants.  相似文献   

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