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1.
Baker P  Carere J  Seah SY 《Biochemistry》2012,51(22):4558-4567
BphJ, a nonphosphorylating acylating aldehyde dehydrogenase, catalyzes the conversion of aldehydes to form acyl-coenzyme A in the presence of NAD(+) and coenzyme A (CoA). The enzyme is structurally related to the nonacylating aldehyde dehydrogenases, aspartate-β-semialdehyde dehydrogenase and phosphorylating glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. Cys-131 was identified as the catalytic thiol in BphJ, and pH profiles together with site-specific mutagenesis data demonstrated that the catalytic thiol is not activated by an aspartate residue, as previously proposed. In contrast to the wild-type enzyme that had similar specificities for two- or three-carbon aldehydes, an I195A variant was observed to have a 20-fold higher catalytic efficiency for butyraldehyde and pentaldehyde compared to the catalytic efficiency of the wild type toward its natural substrate, acetaldehyde. BphJ forms a heterotetrameric complex with the class II aldolase BphI that channels aldehydes produced in the aldol cleavage reaction to the dehydrogenase via a molecular tunnel. Replacement of Ile-171 and Ile-195 with bulkier amino acid residues resulted in no more than a 35% reduction in acetaldehyde channeling efficiency, showing that these residues are not critical in gating the exit of the channel. Likewise, the replacement of Asn-170 in BphJ with alanine and aspartate did not substantially alter aldehyde channeling efficiencies. Levels of activation of BphI by BphJ N170A, N170D, and I171A were reduced by ≥3-fold in the presence of NADH and ≥4.5-fold when BphJ was undergoing turnover, indicating that allosteric activation of the aldolase has been compromised in these variants. The results demonstrate that the dehydrogenase coordinates the catalytic activity of BphI through allostery rather than through aldehyde channeling.  相似文献   

2.
E A Sergienko  F Jordan 《Biochemistry》2001,40(25):7369-7381
Yeast pyruvate decarboxylase (YPDC), in addition to forming its metabolic product acetaldehyde, can also carry out carboligase reactions in which the central enamine intermediate reacts with acetaldehyde or pyruvate (instead of the usual proton electrophile), resulting in the formation of acetoin and acetolactate, respectively (typically, 1% of the total reaction). Due to the common mechanism shared by the acetaldehyde-forming and carboligase reactions through decarboxylation, a detailed analysis of the rates and stereochemistry of the carboligase products formed by the E477Q, D28A, and D28N active center YPDC variants was undertaken. While substitution at either position led to an approximately 2-3 orders of magnitude lower catalytic efficiency in acetaldehyde formation, the rate of acetoin formation by the E477Q and D28N variants was higher than that by wild-type enzyme. Comparison of the steady-state data for acetaldehyde and acetoin formation revealed that the rate-limiting step for acetaldehyde formation by the D28A, H114F, H115F, and E477Q variants is a step post-decarboxylation. In contrast to the wild-type YPDC and the E477Q variant, the D28A and D28N variants could synthesize acetolactate as a major product. The lower overall rate of side-product formation by the D28A variant than wild-type enzyme attests to participation of D28 in steps leading up to and including decarboxylation. The results also provide insight into the state of ionization of the side chains examined. (R)-Acetoin is produced by the variants with greater enantiomeric excess than by wild-type YPDC. (S)-Acetolactate is the predominant enantiomer produced by the D28-substituted variants, the same configuration as produced by the related plant acetolactate synthase.  相似文献   

3.
Klebsiella aerogenes urease uses a dinuclear nickel active site to catalyze urea hydrolysis at >10(14)-fold the spontaneous rate. To better define the enzyme mechanism, we examined the kinetics and structures for a suite of site-directed variants involving four residues at the active site: His320, His219, Asp221, and Arg336. Compared to wild-type urease, the H320A, H320N, and H320Q variants exhibit similar approximately 10(-)(5)-fold deficiencies in rates, modest K(m) changes, and disorders in the peptide flap covering their active sites. The pH profiles for these mutant enzymes are anomalous with optima near 6 and shoulders that extend to pH 9. H219A urease exhibits 10(3)-fold increased K(m) over that of native enzyme, whereas the increase is less marked ( approximately 10(2)-fold) in the H219N and H219Q variants that retain hydrogen bonding capability. Structures for these variants show clearly resolved active site water molecules covered by well-ordered peptide flaps. Whereas the D221N variant is only moderately affected compared to wild-type enzyme, D221A urease possesses low activity ( approximately 10(-)(3) that of native enzyme), a small increase in K(m), and a pH 5 optimum. The crystal structure for D221A urease is reminiscent of the His320 variants. The R336Q enzyme has a approximately 10(-)(4)-fold decreased catalytic rate with near-normal pH dependence and an unaffected K(m). Phenylglyoxal inactivates the R336Q variant at over half the rate observed for native enzyme, demonstrating that modification of non-active-site arginines can eliminate activity, perhaps by affecting the peptide flap. Our data favor a mechanism in which His219 helps to polarize the substrate carbonyl group, a metal-bound terminal hydroxide or bridging oxo-dianion attacks urea to form a tetrahedral intermediate, and protonation occurs via the general acid His320 with Asp221 and Arg336 orienting and influencing the acidity of this residue. Furthermore, we conclude that the simple bell-shaped pH dependence of k(cat) and k(cat)/K(m) for the native enzyme masks a more complex underlying pH dependence involving at least four pK(a)s.  相似文献   

4.
E A Sergienko  F Jordan 《Biochemistry》2001,40(25):7382-7403
The widely quoted kinetic model for the mechanism of yeast pyruvate decarboxylase (YPDC, EC 4.1.1.1), an enzyme subject to substrate activation, is based on data for the wild-type enzyme under optimal experimental conditions. The major feature of the model is the obligatory binding of substrate in the regulatory site prior to substrate binding at the catalytic site. The activated monomer would complete the cycle by irreversible decarboxylation of the substrate and product (acetaldehyde) release. Our recent kinetic studies of YPDC variants substituted at positions D28 and E477 at the active center necessitate some modification of the mechanism. It was found that enzyme without substrate activation apparently is still catalytically competent. Further, substrate-dependent inhibition of D28-substituted variants leads to an enzyme form with nonzero activity at full saturation, requiring a second major branch point in the mechanism. Kinetic data for the E477Q variant suggest that three consecutive substrate binding steps may be needed to release product acetaldehyde, unlikely if YPDC monomer is the minimal catalytic unit with only two binding sites for substrate. A model to account for all kinetic observations involves a functional dimer operating through alternation of active sites. In the context of this mechanism, roles are suggested for the active center acid-base groups D28, E477, H114, and H115. The results underline once more the enormous importance that both aromatic rings of the thiamin diphosphate, rather than only the thiazolium ring, have in catalysis, a fact little appreciated prior to the availability of the 3-dimensional structure of these enzymes.  相似文献   

5.
Sergienko EA  Jordan F 《Biochemistry》2002,41(12):3952-3967
Pyruvate decarboxylase from yeast (YPDC, EC 4.1.1.1) exhibits a marked lag phase in the progress curves of product (acetaldehyde) formation. The currently accepted kinetic model for YPDC predicts that, only upon binding of substrate in a regulatory site, a slow activation step converts inactive enzyme into the active form. This allosteric behavior gives rise to sigmoidal steady-state kinetics. The E477Q active site variant of YPDC exhibited hyperbolic initial rate curves at low pH, not consistent with the model. Progress curves of product formation by this variant were S-shaped, consistent with the presence of three interconverting conformations with distinct steady-state rates. Surprisingly, wild-type YPDC at pH < or =5.0 also possessed S-shaped progress curves, with the conformation corresponding to the middle steady state being the most active one. Reexamination of the activation by substrate of wild-type YPDC in the pH range of 4.5-6.5 revealed two characteristic transitions at all pH values. The values of steady-state rates are functions of both pH and substrate concentration, affecting whether the progress curve appears "normal" or S-shaped with an inflection point. The substrate dependence of the apparent rate constants suggested that the first transition corresponded to substrate binding in an active site and a subsequent step responsible for conversion to an asymmetric conformation. Consequently, the second enzyme state may report on "unregulated" enzyme, since the regulatory site does not participate in its generation. This enzyme state utilizes the alternating sites mechanism, resulting in the hyperbolic substrate dependence of initial rate. The second transition corresponds to binding a substrate molecule in the regulatory site and subsequent minor conformational adjustments. The third enzyme state corresponds to the allosterically regulated conformation, previously referred to as activated enzyme. The pH dependence of the Hill coefficient suggests a random binding of pyruvate in a regulatory and an active site of wild-type YPDC. Addition of pyruvamide or acetaldehyde to YPDC results in the appearance of additional conformations of the enzyme.  相似文献   

6.
Human glycine N-acyltransferase (human GLYAT) detoxifies a wide range of endogenous and xenobiotic metabolites, including benzoate and salicylate. Significant inter-individual variation exists in glycine conjugation capacity. The molecular basis for this variability is not known. To investigate the influence of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the GLYAT coding sequence on enzyme activity, we expressed and characterised a recombinant human GLYAT. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to generate six non-synonymous SNP variants of the enzyme (K16N; S17T; R131H; N156S; F168L; R199C). The variants were expressed, purified, and enzymatically characterised. The enzyme activities of the K16N, S17T and R131H variants were similar to that of the wild-type, whereas the N156S variant was more active, the F168L variant less active, and the R199C variant was inactive. We also generated an E227Q mutant, which lacks the catalytic residue proposed by Badenhorst et al. (2012). This mutant was inactive compared to the wild-type recombinant human GLYAT. A molecular model of human GLYAT containing coenzyme A (CoA) was generated which revealed that the inactivity of the R199C variant could be due to the substitution of the highly conserved Arg199 and destabilisation of an α-loop-α motif which is important for substrate binding in the GNAT superfamily. The finding that SNP variations in the human GLYAT gene influence the kinetic properties of the enzyme may explain some of the inter-individual variation in glycine conjugation capacity, which is relevant to the metabolism of xenobiotics such as aspirin and the industrial solvent xylene, and to the treatment of some metabolic disorders.  相似文献   

7.
Site-directed mutagenesis is a powerful tool for identifying active-site residues essential for catalysis; however, this approach has only recently become available for acetate kinase. The enzyme from Methanosarcina thermophila has been cloned and hyper-produced in a highly active form in Escherichia coli (recombinant wild-type). The role of arginines in this acetate kinase was investigated. Five arginines (R91, R175, R241, R285, and R340) in the M. thermophila enzyme were selected for individual replacement based on their high conservation among sequences of acetate kinase homologues. Replacement of R91 or R241 with alanine or leucine produced variants with specific activities less than 0.1% of the recombinant wild-type enzyme. The circular dichroism spectra and other properties of these variants were comparable to those of recombinant wild-type, indicating no global conformational changes. These results indicate that R91 and R241 are essential for activity, consistent with roles in catalysis. The variant produced by conservative replacement of R91 with lysine had approximately 2% of recombinant wild-type activity, suggesting a positive charge is important in this position. The K(m) value for acetate of the R91K variant increased greater than 10-fold relative to recombinant wild-type, suggesting an additional role for R91 in binding this substrate. Activities of both the R91A and R241A variants were rescued 20-fold when guanidine or derivatives were added to the reaction mixture. The K(m) values for ATP of the rescued variants were similar to those of recombinant wild-type, suggesting that the rescued activities are the consequence of replacement of important functional groups and not changes in the catalytic mechanism. These results further support roles for R91 and R241 in catalysis. Replacement of R285 with alanine, leucine, or lysine had no significant effect on activity; however, the K(m) values for acetate increased 6-10-fold, suggesting R285 influences the binding of this substrate. Phenylglyoxal inhibition and substrate protection experiments with the recombinant wild-type enzyme and variants were consistent with the presence of one or more essential arginine residues in the active site as well as with roles for R91 and R241 in catalysis. It is proposed that R91 and R241 function to stabilize the previously proposed pentacoordinate transition state during direct in-line transfer of the gamma-phosphate of ATP to acetate. The kinetic characterization of variants produced by replacement of R175 and R340 with alanine, leucine, or lysine indicated that these residues are not involved in catalysis but fulfill important structural roles.  相似文献   

8.
The rapid reaction kinetics of wild-type xanthine dehydrogenase from Rhodobacter capsulatus and variants at Arg-310 in the active site have been characterized for a variety of purine substrates. With xanthine as substrate, k(red) (the limiting rate of enzyme reduction by substrate at high [S]) decreased approximately 20-fold in an R310K variant and 2 x 10(4)-fold in an R310M variant. Although Arg-310 lies on the opposite end of the substrate from the C-8 position that becomes hydroxylated, its interaction with substrate still contributed approximately 4.5 kcal/mol toward transition state stabilization. The other purines examined fell into two distinct groups: members of the first were effectively hydroxylated by the wild-type enzyme but were strongly affected by the exchange of Arg-310 to methionine (with a reduction in k(red) greater than 10(3)), whereas members of the second were much less effectively hydroxylated by wild-type enzyme but also much less significantly affected by the amino acid exchanges (with a reduction in k(red) less than 50-fold). The effect was such that the 4000-fold range in k(red) seen with wild-type enzyme was reduced to a mere 4-fold in the R310M variant. The data are consistent with a model in which "good" substrates are bound "correctly" in the active site in an orientation that allows Arg-310 to stabilize the transition state for the first step of the overall reaction via an electrostatic interaction at the C-6 position, thereby accelerating the reaction rate. On the other hand, "poor" substrates bound upside down relative to this "correct" orientation. In so doing, they are unable to avail themselves of the additional catalytic power provided by Arg-310 in wild-type enzyme but, for this reason, are significantly less affected by mutations at this position. The kinetic data thus provide a picture of the specific manner in which the physiological substrate xanthine is oriented in the active site relative to Arg-310 and how this residue is used catalytically to accelerate the reaction rate (rather than simply bind substrate) despite being remote from the position that is hydroxylated.  相似文献   

9.
Marks GT  Susler M  Harrison DH 《Biochemistry》2004,43(13):3802-3813
Two detailed mechanisms [Marks et al. (2001) Biochemistry 40, 6805] have been proposed to explain the activity of methylglyoxal synthase (MGS), a homohexameric allosterically regulated enzyme that catalyzes the elimination of phosphate from DHAP to form enol pyruvaldehyde. This enol then tautomerizes to methylglyoxal in solution. In one of these mechanisms His 98 plays an obligate role in the transfer of a proton from the O(3) oxygen of DHAP to the O2 oxygen. To test this hypothesized mechanism, the variants H98N and H98Q were expressed and purified. Relative to the wild-type enzyme, the H98N variant shows a 50-fold decrease in k(cat) with all other kinetic parameters (i.e., K(m), K(PGA), etc.) being nearly the same. By contrast, the apparent catalytic rate for the H98Q variant is 250-fold lower than that of the wild-type enzyme. Inorganic phosphate acts as a competitive inhibitor (with a K(i) of 15 microM) rather than as an allosteric-type inhibitor as it does in the wild-type enzyme, and the competitive inhibitor phosphoglyolate (PGA) acts as an activator of this variant. These facts are explained by a shift in the conformational equilibrium toward an "inactive" state. When activation by PGA is accounted for, the catalytic rate for the "active" state of H98Q is estimated to be only 6-fold less than that of the wild-type enzyme, and thus His 98 is not essential for catalysis. Primary deuterium isotope effect data were measured for the wild-type enzyme and the two variants. At pH 7.0, the (D)V isotope effect (1.5) and the absence of a (D)(V/K) isotope effect for the wild-type enzyme suggest that the rate for the isotopically sensitive step is partially rate limiting but greater than the rate of substrate dissociation. Both the (D)V (2.0) and (D)(V/K) (3.4) isotope effects were more pronounced in the H98N variant, while the H98Q variant displayed an unusual inverse (D)V (0.8) isotope effect and a normal (D)(V/K) (1.5) isotope effect. The X-ray crystal structures of PGA bound to the H98Q and H98N variants were both determined to a resolution of 2.2 A. These mutations had little effect on the overall structure. However, the pattern of hydrogen bonding in the active site suggests an explanation as to how in the wild-type and H98N mutated enzymes the "inactive to active" equilibrium lies toward the active state, while with the H98Q mutated enzyme the equilibrium lies toward the inactive state. Thus, the role of His 98 appears to be more as a regulator of the enzyme's conformation rather than as a critical contributor to the catalytic mechanism.  相似文献   

10.
The function of the N-terminal domain ( approximately 350 residues) of the Pta (phosphotransacetylase) enzyme of Salmonella enterica is unclear. Results from in vivo genetic and in vitro studies suggest that the N-terminal domain of Pta is a sensor for NADH and pyruvate. We isolated 10 single-amino acid variants of Pta that, unlike the wild-type protein, supported growth of a strain of S. enterica devoid of Acs (acetyl-CoA synthetase; AMP-forming) activity on 10 mm acetate. All mutations were mapped within the N-terminal domain of the protein. Kinetic analyses of the wild type and three variant Pta proteins showed that two of the variant proteins were faster enzymes (k(cat) 2.5-3-fold > k(cat) Pta(WT). Results from sedimentation equilibrium experiments are consistent with Pta(WT) being a trimer. Pta variants formed more hexamer than the Pta(WT) protein. NADH inhibited Pta(WT) activity by inducing a conformational change detectable by limited trypsin proteolysis; NADH did not inhibit variant protein Pta(R252H). Pyruvate stimulated Pta(WT) activity, and its effect was potentiated in the variants, being most pronounced on Pta(R252H).  相似文献   

11.
Carere J  Baker P  Seah SY 《Biochemistry》2011,50(39):8407-8416
BphI-BphJ, an aldolase-dehydrogenase complex from the polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) degradation pathway, cleaves 4-hydroxy-2-oxoacids to pyruvate and an aldehyde. The enzyme complex was shown to exhibit substrate channeling, whereby linear aldehydes of up to 6 carbons long and branched isobutyraldehyde were directly channeled from the aldolase to the dehydrogenase with greater than 80% efficiency. BphI variants G322F, G322L, and G323F were created and were found to block aldehyde channeling. The dehydrogenase cofactor NADH was able to activate the catalytic activity of the aldol cleavage reaction in these variants, suggesting that activation of BphI by BphJ cofactors is not solely due to faster aldehyde release. A G323L variant was able to channel acetaldehyde but not the larger propionaldehyde while the G323A variant was able to channel butyraldehyde but not its isomer isobutyraldehyde, confirming that the restricted channeling of aldehydes in these glycine variants are due to steric blockage of the channel. Substitution of His-20 and Tyr-290 in BphI led to significant reductions in aldehyde channeling efficiencies. A mechanism of substrate channeling involving these two gating residues is proposed.  相似文献   

12.
P Carter  L Abrahmsén  J A Wells 《Biochemistry》1991,30(25):6142-6148
A mutant of the serine protease, subtilisin BPN', in which the catalytic His64 is replaced by Ala (H64A), is very specific for substrates containing a histidine, presumably by the substrate-bound histidine assisting in catalysis [Carter, P., & Wells, J.A. (1987) Science (Washington, D.C.) 237, 394-399]. Here we probe the catalytic mechanism of H64A subtilisin for cleaving His and non-His substrates. We show that the ratio of aminolysis to hydrolysis is the same for ester and amide substrates as catalyzed by the H64A subtilisin. This is consistent with formation of a common acyl-enzyme intermediate for H64A subtilisin, analogous to the mechanism of the wild-type enzyme. However, the catalytic efficiencies (kcat/KM) for amidase and esterase activities with His-containing substrates are reduced by 5000-fold and 14-fold, respectively, relative to wild-type subtilisin BPN, suggesting that acylation is more compromised than deacylation in the H64A mutant. High concentrations of imidazole are much less effective than His substrates in promoting hydrolysis by the H64A variant, suggesting that the His residue on the bound (not free) substrate is involved in catalysis. The reduction in catalytic efficiency kcat/KM for hydrolysis of the amide substrate upon replacement of the oxyanion stabilizing asparagine (N155G) is only 7-fold greater for wild-type than H64A subtilisin. In contrast, the reductions in kcat/KM upon replacement of the catalytic serine (S221A) or aspartate (D32A) are about 3000-fold greater for wild-type than H64A subtilisin, suggesting that the functional interactions between the Asp32 and Ser221 with the substrate histidine are more compromised in substrate-assisted catalysis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
A triple-site variant (W17Q N90A L129F) of mannose-6-phosphate isomerase from Geobacillus thermodenitrificans was obtained by combining variants with residue substitutions at different positions after random and site-directed mutagenesis. The specific activity and catalytic efficiency (k(cat)/K(m)) for L-ribulose isomerization of this variant were 3.1- and 7.1-fold higher, respectively, than those of the wild-type enzyme at pH 7.0 and 70°C in the presence of 1 mM Co(2+). The triple-site variant produced 213 g/liter l-ribose from 300 g/liter L-ribulose for 60 min, with a volumetric productivity of 213 g liter(-1) h(-1), which was 4.5-fold higher than that of the wild-type enzyme. The k(cat)/K(m) and productivity of the triple-site variant were approximately 2-fold higher than those of the Thermus thermophilus R142N variant of mannose-6-phosphate isomerase, which exhibited the highest values previously reported.  相似文献   

14.
The role of Ser 167 of Escherichia coli thymidylate synthase (TS) in catalysis has been characterized by kinetic and crystallographic studies. Position 167 variants including S167A, S167N, S167D, S167C, S167G, S167L, S167T, and S167V were generated by site-directed mutagenesis. Only S167A, S167G, S167T, and S167C complemented the growth of thymidine auxotrophs of E. coli in medium lacking thymidine. Steady-state kinetic analysis revealed that mutant enzymes exhibited k(cat) values 1.1-95-fold lower than that of the wild-type enzyme. Relative to wild-type TS, K(m) values of the mutant enzymes for 2'-deoxyuridylate (dUMP) were 5-90 times higher, while K(m) values for 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate (CH(2)H(4)folate) were 1.5-16-fold higher. The rate of dehalogenation of 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine 5'-monophosphate (BrdUMP), a reaction catalyzed by TS that does not require CH(2)H(4)folate as cosubstrate, by mutant TSs was analyzed and showed that only S167A and S167G catalyzed the dehalogenation reaction and values of k(cat)/K(m) for the mutant enzymes were decreased by 10- and 3000-fold, respectively. Analysis of pre-steady-state kinetics of ternary complex formation revealed that the productive binding of CH(2)H(4)folate is weaker to mutant TSs than to the wild-type enzyme. Chemical transformation constants (k(chem)) for the mutant enzymes were lower by 1.1-6.0-fold relative to the wild-type enzyme. S167A, S167T, and S167C crystallized in the I2(1)3 space group and scattered X-rays to either 1.7 A (S167A and S167T) or 2.6 A (S167C). The high-resolution data sets were refined to a R(crys) of 19.9%. In the crystals some cysteine residues were derivatized with 2-mercaptoethanol to form S,S-(2-hydroxyethyl)thiocysteine. The pattern of derivatization indicates that in the absence of bound substrate the catalytic cysteine is not more reactive than other cysteines. It is proposed that the catalytic cysteine is activated by substrate binding by a proton-transfer mechanism in which the phosphate group of the nucleotide neutralizes the charge of Arg 126', facilitating the transfer of a proton from the catalytic cysteine to a His 207-Asp 205 diad via a system of ordered water molecules.  相似文献   

15.
We identify His381 of Pseudomonas mevalonii 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase as the basic residue functional in catalysis. The catalytic domain of 20 HMG-CoA reductases contains a single conserved histidine (His381 of the P. mevalonii enzyme). Diethyl pyrocarbonate inactivated the P. mevalonii enzyme, and hydroxylamine partially restored activity. We changed His381 to alanine, lysine, asparagine, and glutamine. The mutant proteins were overexpressed, purified to homogeneity, and characterized. His381 mutant enzymes were not inactivated by diethyl pyrocarbonate. All four mutant enzymes exhibited wild-type crystal morphology and chromatographed on substrate affinity supports like wild-type enzyme. The mutant enzymes had low catalytic activity (Vmax 0.06-0.5% that of wild-type enzyme), but Km values approximated those for wild-type enzyme. For wild-type enzyme and mutant enzymes H381A, H381N, and H381Q, Km values at pH 8.1 were 0.45, 0.27, 3.7, and 0.71 mM [(R,S)-mevalonate]; 0.05, 0.03, 0.20, and 0.11 mM [coenzyme A]; 0.22, 0.14, 0.81, and 0.62 mM [NAD+]. Km values at pH 11 for wild-type enzyme and mutant enzyme H381K were 0.32 and 0.75 mM [(R,S)-mevalonate]; 0.24 and 0.50 mM [coenzyme A]; 0.15 and 1.23 mM [NAD+]. Both pK values for the enzyme-substrate complex increased relative to wild-type enzyme (by 1-2.5 pH units for pK1 and by 0.5-1.3 pH units for pK2). For mutant enzyme H381K, the pK1 of 10.2 is consistent with lysine acting as a general base at high pH. His381 of P. mevalonii HMG-CoA reductase, and consequently the histidine of the consensus Leu-Val-Lys-Ser-His-Met-Xaa-Xaa-Asn-Arg-Ser motif of the catalytic domain of eukaryotic HMG-CoA reductases, thus is the general base functional in catalysis.  相似文献   

16.
Substrate activation of yeast pyruvate decarboxylase has been studied extensively in the authors' laboratories providing strong evidence that interaction of substrate with residue C221 provides the trigger, and the information is then transmitted along the C221 to H92 to E91 to W412 to G413 pathway to the 4'-amino nitrogen of the thiamin diphosphate cofactor. Earlier, it was found that the C221S substitution reduced the Hill coefficient from 2.0 to 0.8-0.9, the C221A substitution to 1.0, even though C221 is located on the beta domain some 20 A from the active center thiamin diphosphate cofactor, which is at the interface of the alpha and gamma domains. Here are reported experiments on the C221D/C222A and C221E/C222A variants, in which a negative charge is built onto the C221 side chain, to better mimic the effect of a pyruvate molecule covalently bonded to C221 as a thiohemiketal. Both variants were purified to an optimal activity of 70% of the wild-type enzyme, higher activity than that with the earlier uncharged substitutions at this position. The Hill coefficient for both variants is exactly 1.0. The deuterium solvent kinetic isotope effects (SKIE) on k(cat) for these variants were similar to that for the wild-type enzyme and the C221A/C222A variant, suggesting that starting with the first irreversible step (decarboxylation) the rate-limiting transition states are very similar for all of these enzyme forms. In contrast, such SKIE on k(cat)/K(m) are quite different for the C221A/C222A variant (0.62) than for the C221E/C222A or C221D/C222A variants (0.80-0.82), clearly indicating the effect of the C221 substitutions on transition states starting with the binding of the first substrate to the enzyme and terminating with the decarboxylation step. The results provide strong additional evidence for the involvement of residue C221 in the substrate activation process and suggest that the C221D (C221E) substitution shifts the enzyme into a conformation that resembles the activated conformation. A comparison with SKIE for the wild-type enzyme provides insight to changes in hydrogen bonding at the active center as a result of substrate activation.  相似文献   

17.
Two N-terminally truncated variants of the esterase E34Tt from Thermus thermophilus HB27 (YP_004875.1) were expressed in Kluyveromyces lactis. Production and biochemical properties of both recombinant proteins were investigated. The esterase activity was greatly increased compared to the wild-type strain. In particular, the extracellular production of the ΔN16 variant (KLEST-3S) was 50-fold higher than that obtained with T. thermophilus HB27. Response surface methodology was applied to describe the pH and temperature dependence of both activity and stability. When compared with the wild type esterase, the optimal temperature of reaction decreased 35 and 15 °C for ΔN16 and ΔN26, respectively. KLEST-3S showed a maximum of activity at pH 7.5 and 47.5 °C, and maximal stability at pH 8.1 and 65 °C. KLEST-5A (ΔN26) did not show an absolute maximum of activity. However, best results were obtained at 40 °C and pH 8.5. KLEST-5A showed also a lower stability. In the presence of a surfactant, both proteins showed lower stability at 85 °C (t(?)< 5 min) than the wild-type enzyme (t(?)=135 min). However, in the absence of detergent, the stability of KLEST-3S was higher (t(?)=230 min, at 85 °C) than that of the mutant KLEST-5A (12 min) or the wild type enzyme (19 min). Minor differences were observed in the substrate specificity. Our results suggest that the N-terminal segment is critical for maintaining the hyperthermophilic function and stability.  相似文献   

18.
Engineering subtilisin BPN' for site-specific proteolysis   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
A combination of protein engineering and substrate optimization was used to create variants of the serine protease, subtilisin BPN', which efficiently and specifically cleave a designed target sequence in a fusion protein. The broad substrate specificity of wild-type subtilisin BPN' is greatly restricted by substitution of the catalytic histidine-containing of the catalytic histidine 64 with alanine (H64A) so that certain histidine-containing substrates are preferentially hydrolysed (Carter, P., Wells, J.A. Science 237:394-399, 1987). The catalytic efficiency, (kcat/Km), of this H64A variant was increased almost 20-fold by judicious choice of substrate and by installing three additional mutations which increase the activity of wild-type subtilisin. The most favorable substrate sequence identified was introduced as a linker in a fusion protein between a synthetic IgG binding domain of Staphylococcus aureus protein A and Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase. The fusion protein (affinity purified on an IgG column) was cleaved by the prototype H64A enzyme and its improved variant, efficiently and exclusively at the target site, to liberate an alkaline phosphatase product of the expected size and N-terminal sequence. Several features of H64A variants of subtilisin make them attractive for site-specific proteolysis of fusion proteins: they have exquisite substrate specificity on the N-terminal side of the cleavage site and yet are broadly specific on the C-terminal side; they can be produced in large quantities and remain highly active even in the presence of detergents, reductants (modest concentrations), protease inhibitors, at high temperatures, or when specifically immobilized on a solid support.  相似文献   

19.
2-Deoxyribose-5-phosphate aldolase (DERA, EC 4.1.2.4) catalyzes the reversible aldol reaction between acetaldehyde and D-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate to generate D-2-deoxyribose-5-phosphate. It is unique among the aldolases as it catalyzes the reversible asymmetric aldol addition reaction of two aldehydes. In order to expand the substrate scope and stereoselectivity of DERA, structure-based substrate design as well as site-specific mutation has been investigated. Using the 1.05 A crystal structure of DERA in complex with its natural substrate as a guide, five site-directed mutants were designed in order to improve its activity with the unnatural nonphosphorylated substrate, D-2-deoxyribose. Of these, the S238D variant exhibited a 2.5-fold improvement over the wild-type enzyme in the retroaldol reaction of 2-deoxyribose. Interestingly, this S238D mutant enzyme was shown to accept 3-azidopropinaldehyde as a substrate in a sequential asymmetric aldol reaction to form a deoxy-azidoethyl pyranose, which is a precursor to the corresponding lactone and the cholesterol-lowering agent Lipitor. This azidoaldehyde is not a substrate for the wild-type enzyme. Another structure-based design of new nonphosphorylated substrates was focused on the aldol reaction with inversion in enantioselectivity using the wild type or the S238D variant as the catalyst and 2-methyl-substituted aldehydes as substrates. An example was demonstrated in the asymmetric synthesis of a deoxypyranose as a new effective synthon for the total synthesis of epothilones. In addition, to facilitate the discovery of new enzymatic reactions, the engineered E. coli strain SELECT (Deltaace, adhC, DE3) was developed to be used in the future for selection of DERA variants with novel nonphosphorylated acceptor specificity.  相似文献   

20.
We have employed site-directed mutagenesis to investigate the contribution of a conserved arginyl residue to the catalytic activity and cofactor affinity of D-serine dehydratase, a model pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (vitamin B6) enzyme. Replacement of R-120 in the active site peptide of D-serine dehydratase by L decreased the affinity of the enzyme for pyridoxal 5'-phosphate by 20-fold and reduced turnover by 5-8-fold. kappa cat displayed modified substrate alpha-deuterium isotope effects and altered dependence on both temperature and pH. Analysis of the pH rate profiles of DSD and the R-120----L variant indicated that R-120 interacts electrostatically with catalytically essential ionizable groups at the active site of wild type D-serine dehydratase. The decrease in cofactor affinity observed for DSD(R120L) was not accompanied by significant perturbations in the UV, CD, or 31P NMR spectrum of the holoenzyme, suggesting that the contribution of R-120 to pyridoxal phosphate affinity may be indirect or else involve an interaction with a cofactor functional group other than the 5'-phosphoryl moiety. The properties of two other site-directed variants of D-serine dehydratase indicated that the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate:K-118 Schiff base was indifferent to a small change in the shape of the side chain at position 117 (I-117----L), whereas replacement of K-118 by H resulted in undetectable levels of enzyme. A poor ability to bind cofactor may have rendered DSD(K118H) susceptible to intracellular proteolysis.  相似文献   

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