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1.
There have been several studies indicating that hydrolysis reactions of fatty acid esters catalyzed by lipases proceed through an acyl-enzyme intermediate typical of serine proteases. In particular, one careful kinetic study with the physiologically important enzyme lipoprotein lipase (LPL) is consistent with rate-limiting deacylation of such an intermediate. To observe the spectrum of acyl-enzyme and study the mechanism of LPL-catalyzed hydrolysis of substrate, we have used a variety of furylacryloyl substrates including 1,2-dipalmitoyl-3-[(beta-2-furylacryloyl)triacyl]glyceride (DPFATG) to study the intermediates formed during the hydrolysis reaction catalyzed by the enzyme. After isolation and characterization of the molecular weight of adipose LPL, we determined its extinction coefficient at 280 nm to quantitate the formation of any acyl-enzyme intermediate formed during substrate hydrolysis. We observed an intermediate at low pH during the enzyme-catalyzed hydrolysis of (furylacryloyl)imidazole. This intermediate builds early in the reaction when a substantial amount of substrate has hydrolyzed but no product, furylacrylate, has been formed. The acyl-enzyme has a lambda max = 305 nm and a molar extinction coefficient of 22,600 M-1 cm-1; these parameters are similar to those for furylacryloyl esters including the serine ester. These data provide the first spectral evidence for a serine acyl-enzyme in lipase-catalyzed reactions. The LPL hydrolysis reaction is base catalyzed, exhibiting two pKa values; the more acidic of these is 6.5, consistent with base catalysis by histidine. The biphasic rates for substrate disappearance or product appearance and the absence of leaving group effect indicate that deacylation of intermediate is rate limiting.  相似文献   

2.
Xu Q  Guo HB  Wlodawer A  Nakayama T  Guo H 《Biochemistry》2007,46(12):3784-3792
Quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical molecular dynamics and free energy simulations are performed to study the acylation reaction catalyzed by kumamolisin-As, a serine-carboxyl peptidase, and to elucidate the catalytic mechanism and the origin of substrate specificity. It is demonstrated that the nucleophilic attack by the serine residue on the substrate may not be the rate-limiting step for the acylation of the GPH*FF substrate. The present study also confirms the earlier suggestions that Asp164 acts as a general acid during the catalysis and that the electrostatic oxyanion hole interactions may not be sufficient to lead a stable tetrahedral intermediate along the reaction pathway. Moreover, Asp164 is found to act as a general base during the formation of the acyl-enzyme from the tetrahedral intermediate. The role of dynamic substrate assisted catalysis (DSAC) involving His at the P1 site of the substrate is examined for the acylation reaction. It is demonstrated that the bond-breaking and -making events at each stage of the reaction trigger a change of the position for the His side chain and lead to the formation of the alternative hydrogen bonds. The back and forth movements of the His side chain between the C=O group of Pro at P2 and Odelta2 of Asp164 in a ping-pong-like mechanism and the formation of the alternative hydrogen bonds effectively lower the free energy barriers for both the nucleophilic attack and the acyl-enzyme formation and may therefore contribute to the relatively high activity of kumamolisin-As toward the substrates with His at the P1 site.  相似文献   

3.
C P Govardhan  R F Pratt 《Biochemistry》1987,26(12):3385-3395
Steady-state kinetic parameters have been determined for the hydrolysis of a series of acyclic depsipeptides (ester analogues of acyl-D-alanyl-D-alanine peptides) catalyzed by representative class C (Enterobacter cloacae P99) and class A (Bacillus cereus I, TEM-2, and Staphylococcus aureus PC1) beta-lactamases. The best of these substrates, and the one most used in this work, was m-[[(phenylacetyl)-glycyl]oxy]benzoic acid, whose rates of cleavage could be followed spectrophotometrically. The P99 enzyme also catalyzed the methanolysis of these substrates in aqueous methanol solutions. Quantitative evaluation of the effects of methanol on the kinetics of the competing hydrolysis and methanolysis reactions, and on the product distribution, supports a reaction mechanism involving an acyl-enzyme intermediate whose formation is rate-determining under conditions of substrate saturation. Consideration of the variation of these kinetic parameters with the structure of the depsipeptides and comparison with the analogous parameters for bicyclic beta-lactam substrates suggest that a variety of substrate binding modes exist on this enzyme. The class A enzymes, B. cereus beta-lactamase I and the TEM-2 beta-lactamase, catalyze depsipeptide and benzylpenicillin hydrolyses but not methanolysis. The acyl-enzyme derived from both types of substrate is thus shielded from external nucleophiles; the shielding is therefore not an effect, direct or indirect, of the thiazolidinyl group in the penicilloyl-enzyme. The class A beta-lactamase of the PC1 plasmid of S. aureus is distinctly different from the above two representatives of that class, in that it does catalyze methanolysis of depsipeptides (but not of benzylpenicillin). The methanolysis kinetics suggest that deacylation is rate-determining at saturation, a conclusion supported by the demonstration of an intermediate during the hydrolysis of m-[[(phenylacetyl)glycyl]oxy]benzoate, subsequent to leaving-group departure. The beta-lactamases have thus been shown to catalyze the hydrolysis of specific depsipeptides with comparable facility to that demonstrated by D-alanyl-D-alanine carboxypeptidase/transpeptidases. The former enzymes, however, differ in being unable to cleave the analogous peptides.  相似文献   

4.
An acyl-enzyme intermediate proposed in the reaction mechanism of lipase was inspected by the exchange of oxygen between substrate (oleic acid) and solvent (18O-labelled water). Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis supported the formation of an acyl-enzyme intermediate in the reaction mechanism through the observed incorporation of 18O into oleic acid. The incorporation did not occur in the absence of the lipase. When Ser residues were modified with diisopropylfluorophosphate, the activity of lipase OF 360 was markedly decreased. Photooxidation of His residues also resulted in a decrease in the activity of the lipase. Chemical modification studies suggested the existence of a charge relay system (Ser-His-Asp/Glu) in the active site. Based on these results, a model of the active site and reaction mechanism of the lipase are presented.  相似文献   

5.
Liver hypoxia still represents an important cause of liver injury during shock and liver transplantation. We have investigated the protective effects of beta-alanine against hypoxic injury using isolated perfused rat livers and isolated rat hepatocyte suspensions. Perfusion with hypoxic Krebs-Henseleit buffer increased liver weight and caused a progressive release of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) in the effluent perfusate. The addition of 5 mmol/l beta-alanine to the perfusion buffer completely prevented both weight increase and LDH leakage. These findings were confirmed by histological examinations showing that beta-alanine blocked the staining by trypan blue of either liver parenchymal and sinusoidal cells. Studies performed in isolated hepatocytes revealed that beta-alanine exerted its protective effects by interfering with Na+ accumulation induced by hypoxia. The addition of gamma-amino-butyric acid, which interfered with beta-alanine uptake by the hepatocytes or of Na+/H+ ionophore monensin, reverted beta-alanine protection in either hepatocyte suspensions or isolated perfused livers. We also observed that liver receiving beta-alanine were also protected against LDH leakage and weight increase caused by the perfusion with an hyposmotic (205 mosm) hypoxic buffer obtained by decreasing NaCl content from 118 to 60 mmol/l. This latter effect was not reverted by blocking K+ efflux from hepatocyte with BaCl(2) (1mmol/l). Altogether these results indicated that beta-alanine protected against hypoxic liver injury by preventing Na+ overload and by increasing liver resistance to osmotic stress consequent to the impairment of ion homeostasis during hypoxia.  相似文献   

6.
The reaction mechanism of carboxypeptidase Y catalyzed reactions is investigated. Presteady state and steady state kinetic measurements are performed on the hydrolysis and aminolysis of an ester and an amide substrate. It is found that deacylation is the rate determining step in hydrolysis of the ester, pivalic acid 4-nitrophenol and acylation in that of the amide, succinyl-L-alanyl-L-alalyl-L-propyl-L-phenylalanine 4-nitroanilide.

The kinetic effects observed in the presence of a nucleophile, L-valine amide, where aminolysis occurs in parallel to the hydrolysis reaction are analysed in details. The results are described satisfactorily by a reaction scheme which involves the binding of the added nucleophile, (i) to the free enzyme, resulting in a simple competitive effect, and (ii) to the acyl-enzyme with the formation of a complex between the enzyme and the aminolysis product, the dissociation of which is rate determining. That scheme can account for both increases and decreases of kinetic parameter values as a function of the nucleophile concentration. There is no indication of binding of the nucleophile to the enzyme-substrate complex before acylation takes place.  相似文献   

7.
Huang X  Aulabaugh A  Ding W  Kapoor B  Alksne L  Tabei K  Ellestad G 《Biochemistry》2003,42(38):11307-11315
Staphylococcus aureus sortase (SrtA) is a thiol transpeptidase. The enzyme catalyzes a cell wall sorting reaction in which a surface protein with a sorting signal containing a LPXTG motif is cleaved between the threonine and glycine residues. The resulting threonine carboxyl end of this protein is covalently attached to a pentaglycine cross-bridge of peptidoglycan. The transpeptidase activity of sortase has been demonstrated in in vitro reactions between a LPETG-containing peptide and triglycine. When a nucleophile is not available, sortase slowly hydrolyzes the LPETG peptide at the same site. In this study, we have analyzed the steady-state kinetics of these two types of reactions catalyzed by sortase. The kinetic results fully support a ping-pong mechanism in which a common acyl-enzyme intermediate is formed in transpeptidation and hydrolysis. However, each reaction has a distinct rate-limiting step: the formation of the acyl-enzyme in transpeptidation and the hydrolysis of the same acyl-enzyme in the hydrolysis reaction. We have also demonstrated in this study that the nucleophile binding site of S. aureus sortase SrtA is specific for diglycine. While S1' and S2' sites of the enzyme both prefer a glycine residue, the S1' site is exclusively selective for glycine. Lengthening of the polyglycine acceptor nucleophile beyond diglycine does not further enhance the binding and catalysis.  相似文献   

8.
HlyC, hemolysin-activating lysine-acyltransferase, catalyses the acylation (from acyl-acyl carrier protein [ACP]) of Escherichia coli prohemolysin (proHlyA) on the epsilon-amino groups of specific lysine residues, 564 and 690 of the 1024 amino acid primary structure, to form hemolysin (HlyA). Isothermal titration calorimetry was used to measure the thermodynamic properties of the protein acylation of proHlyA-derived structures, altered by substantial deletions and separation of the acylation sites into two different peptides and site directed mutation analyses of acylation sites. Acylation of proHlyA-derived proteins catalyzed by HlyC was overall an exothermic reaction driven by a negative enthalpy. The reaction, whose kinetics are compatible to a ping-pong mechanism, is composed of two partial reactions. The first, the formation of an acyl-HlyC intermediate, was entropically driven, most likely by noncovalent complex formation between acyl-ACP and HlyC; enthalpy-driven acyl transfer followed, resulting in acyl-HlyC and ACPSH product formation. The second partial reaction was an energetically unfavorable acyl transfer from acyl-enzyme intermediate to the final acyl acceptor, a proHlyA derivative. Overall the acylation of proHlyA-derived proteins catalyzed by HlyC was driven by the energetics of the acyl enzyme intermediate reaction. Of the two acylation sites, intactness of the site equivalent to proHlyA K564 was more important for acylation reaction thermodynamic stability.  相似文献   

9.
Ruzzini AC  Horsman GP  Eltis LD 《Biochemistry》2012,51(29):5831-5840
meta-Cleavage product (MCP) hydrolases catalyze C-C bond fission in the aerobic catabolism of aromatic compounds by bacteria. These enzymes utilize a Ser-His-Asp triad to catalyze hydrolysis via an acyl-enzyme intermediate. BphD, which catalyzes the hydrolysis of 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoic acid (HOPDA) in biphenyl degradation, catalyzed the hydrolysis of an ester analogue, p-nitrophenyl benzoate (pNPB), with a k(cat) value (6.3 ± 0.5 s(-1)) similar to that of HOPDA (6.5 ± 0.5 s(-1)). Consistent with the breakdown of a shared intermediate, product analyses revealed that BphD catalyzed the methanolysis of both HOPDA and pNPB, partitioning the products to benzoic acid and methyl benzoate in similar ratios. Turnover of HOPDA was accelerated up to 4-fold in the presence of short, primary alcohols (methanol > ethanol > n-propanol), suggesting that deacylation is rate-limiting during catalysis. In the steady-state hydrolysis of HOPDA, k(cat)/K(m) values were independent of methanol concentration, while both k(cat) and K(m) values increased with methanol concentration. This result was consistent with a simple model of nucleophilic catalysis. Although the enzyme could not be saturated with pNPB at methanol concentrations of >250 mM, k(obs) values from the steady-state turnover of pNPB at low methanol concentrations were also consistent with a nucleophilic mechanism of catalysis. Finally, transient-state kinetic analysis of pNPB hydrolysis by BphD variants established that substitution of the catalytic His reduced the rate of acylation by more than 3 orders of magnitude. This suggests that for pNPB hydrolysis, the serine nucleophile is activated by the His-Asp dyad. In contrast, rapid acylation of the H265Q variant during C-C bond cleavage suggests that the serinate forms via a substrate-assisted mechanism. Overall, the data indicate that ester hydrolysis proceeds via the same acyl-enzyme intermediate as that of the physiological substrate but that the serine nucleophile is activated via a different mechanism.  相似文献   

10.
A Witkowski  A K Joshi  Y Lindqvist  S Smith 《Biochemistry》1999,38(36):11643-11650
beta-Ketoacyl synthases involved in the biosynthesis of fatty acids and polyketides exhibit extensive sequence similarity and share a common reaction mechanism, in which the carbanion participating in the condensation reaction is generated by decarboxylation of a malonyl or methylmalonyl moiety; normally, the decarboxylation step does not take place readily unless an acyl moiety is positioned on the active-site cysteine residue in readiness for the ensuing condensation reaction. Replacement of the cysteine nucleophile (Cys-161) with glutamine, in the beta-ketoacyl synthase domain of the multifunctional animal fatty acid synthase, completely inhibits the condensation reaction but increases the uncoupled rate of malonyl decarboxylation by more than 2 orders of magnitude. On the other hand, replacement with Ser, Ala, Asn, Gly, and Thr compromises the condensation reaction without having any marked effect on the decarboxylation reaction. The affinity of the beta-ketoacyl synthase for malonyl moieties, in the absence of acetyl moieties, is significantly increased in the Cys161Gln mutant compared to that in the wild type and is similar to that exhibited by the wild-type beta-ketoacyl synthase in the presence of an acetyl primer. These results, together with modeling studies of the Cys --> Gln mutant from the crystal structure of the Escherichia coli beta-ketoacyl synthase II enzyme, suggest that the side chain carbonyl group of the Gln-161 can mimic the carbonyl of the acyl moiety in the acyl-enzyme intermediate so that the mutant adopts a conformation analogous to that of the acyl-enzyme intermediate. Catalysis of the decarboxylation of malonyl-CoA requires the dimeric form of the Cys161Gln fatty acid synthase and involves prior transfer of the malonyl moiety from the CoA ester to the acyl carrier protein domain and subsequent release of the acetyl product by transfer back to a CoA acceptor. These results suggest that the role of the Cys --> Gln beta-ketoacyl synthases found in the loading domains of some modular polyketide synthases likely is to act as malonyl, or methylmalonyl, decarboxylases that provide a source of primer for the chain extension reactions catalyzed by associated modules containing fully competent beta-ketoacyl synthases.  相似文献   

11.
The efflux and exchange of beta-alanine were studied in synaptic plasma membrane vesicles from rat brain. The mechanism of beta-alanine translocation has been probed by comparing the ion dependence of net efflux to that of exchange. Dilution-induced efflux requires the simultaneous presence of internal sodium and chloride ions while influx is dependent on the presence of these two ions on the outside [Zafra, F., Aragón, M. C., Valdivieso, F. and Giménez, C. (1984) Neurochem Res. 9, 695-707]. These data show that the release of beta-alanine occurs via the carrier system and that it is cotransported with sodium and chloride ions. beta-Alanine efflux from the membrane vesicles is stimulated by external beta-alanine. This exchange does not require external sodium and chloride but it is dependent on the external concentration of beta-alanine. Half-maximal stimulation is obtained at a beta-alanine concentration similar to the Km for beta-alanine influx. Results of the direct measurements of the coupling of sodium and chloride to the transport of beta-alanine by using a kinetic approach allow us to propose a stoichiometry for the translocation cycle catalyzed by the beta-alanine transporter of three sodium ions and one chloride ion per beta-alanine zwitterion. To account for all the observed effects of external ions, beta-alanine concentrations and membrane potential on beta-alanine influx and efflux, a kinetic model of the Na+/Cl-/beta-alanine cotransport system is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Kinetics of the lipase-catalyzed synthesis of glucose esters in acetone   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
A simple kinetic model derived from a ping-pong bi-bi mechanism is proposed to describe the lipase-catalyzed esterification of glucose with fatty acids. The mathematical expressions derived from this model have been tested using several sets of data obtained from reactions carried out under different reaction conditions. The predicted values provide very good fits of the experimental data for temperatures from 30 to 60 degrees C, enzyme loadings from 90 to 180 mg, and fatty acid concentrations from 0.33M to 1M. Experiments conducted at different temperatures permit one to estimate an activation energy of approximately 12 kcal/mol for the rate-limiting step of the reaction (formation of the acyl-enzyme complex). The model also considers the kinetics of inactivation of the biocatalyst during the reaction.  相似文献   

13.
The mechanism of action of bovine pancreatic carboxypeptidase. Aalpha (peptidyl-L-amino acid hydrolase; EC 3.4.12.2) has been investigated by application of cryoenzymologic methods. Kinetic studies of the hydrolysis of the specific ester substrate O-(trans-p-chlorocinnamoyl)-L-beta-phenyllactate have been carried out with both the native and the Co2+-substituted enzyme in the 25 to --45 degrees C temperature range. In the --25 to --45 degrees C temperature range with enzyme in excess, a biphasic reaction is observed for substrate hydrolysis characterized by rate constants for the fast (kf) and the slow (ks) processes. In Arrhenius plots, ks extrapolates to kcat at 25 degrees C for both enzymes in aqueous solution, indicating that the same catalytic rate-limiting step is observed. The slow process is analyzed for both metal enzymes, as previously reported (Makinen, M. W., Yamamura, K., and Kaiser, E. T. (1976) Proc Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 73, 3882-3886), to involve the deacylation of a mixed anhydride acyl-enzyme intermediate. Near --60 degrees C the acyl-enzyme intermediate of both metal enzymes can be stabilized for spectral characterization. The pH and temperature dependence of ks reveals a catalytic ionizing group with a metal ion-dependent shift in pKa and an enthalpy of ionization of 7.2 kcal/mol for the native enzyme and 6.2 kcal/mol for the Co2+ enzyme. These parameters identify the ionizing catalytic group as the metal-bound water molecule. Extrapolation of the pKa data to 25 degrees C indicates that this ionization coincides with that observed in the acidic limb of the pH profile of log(kcat/Km(app)) for substrate hydrolysis under steady state conditions. The results indicate that in the esterolytic reaction of carboxypeptidase. A deacylation of the mixed anhydride intermediate is catalyzed by a metal-bound hydroxide group.  相似文献   

14.
1. Titration in sodium barbiturate buffer of acrosin, a serine proteinase from sperm acrosomes, with the ester substrate 4-methylumbelliferyl p-guanidinobenzoate gave rise to an incomplete 'burst' of 4-methylumbelliferone. Studies of the effects on the reaction of activators of acrosin (Ca2+, water-miscible solvents) showed that titrations carried out in barbiturate buffer containing 1M-CaCl2 and diluted with 0.2 vol. of dimethylsulphoxide produced a rapid quantitative burst within 4 min at 20 degrees C. 2. The net post-burst production of 4-methylumbelliferone was neglibible because (a) the acyl-enzyme was very stable, and (b) the slow post-burst formation of 4-methylumbelliferone (turnover of acyl-enzyme) was virtually equal to the slow photolytic destruction of 4-methylumbelliferone that was liberated during the burst. 3. The standard procedure permits titrations of 20-100pmol of acrosin, i.e. amounts normally taken for conventional rate assays, and with these amounts the impurities present in crude enzme fractions did not interfere. The burst was judged to be quantitative on the basis of comparisons with titrations of acrosin with p-nitrophenyl p'-quanidinobenzoate. 4. The burst reaction of trypsin with the 4-methylumbelliferyl ester was inhibited by high Ca2+ concentrations and by dimethyl sulphoxide. 5. The association and dissociation of complexes of both acrosin and trypsin with protein-type inhibitors (Kunitz pancreatic trypsin inhibitor and a spermatozoal acrosin inhibitor) are rather slow. It is thus possible, in certain cases, to use the ester to titrate both total enzyme in an inhibitor-enzyme mixture and net enzyme, i.e. the stoicheiometric excess of enzyme over inhibitor.  相似文献   

15.
16.
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   

17.
Transient kinetic methods have been used to study the influence of NAD(+) on the rate of elementary processes of the reversible oxidative phosphorylation of d-glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate catalysed by d-glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase. In the pH range 5-8 NAD(+) is bound to the enzyme during the following elementary processes of the mechanism: phosphorolysis of the acyl-enzyme, its formation from 1,3-diphosphoglycerate and the enzyme and the formation and breakdown of the glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate-enzyme complex. The rates of these four elementary processes only equal or exceed the turnover rate of the enzyme when NAD(+) is bound and are as much as 10(4) times the rates in the absence of NAD(+). Autocatalysis of the reductive dephosphorylation of 1,3-diphosphoglycerate occurs when glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate release is rate determining because NAD(+) is a reaction product. An important feature of the enzyme mechanism is that the negative-free-energy change of a chemical reaction, acyl-enzyme formation, is linked in a simple way to the positive-free-energy change of a dissociation reaction, NAD(+) release.  相似文献   

18.
Wang S  Eisenberg D 《Biochemistry》2006,45(6):1554-1561
Pantothenate synthetase (PS) from Mycobacterium tuberculosis represents a potential target for antituberculosis drugs. PS catalyzes the ATP-dependent condensation of pantoate and beta-alanine to form pantothenate. Previously, we determined the crystal structure of PS from M. tuberculosis and its complexes with AMPCPP, pantoate, and pantoyl adenylate. Here, we describe the crystal structure of this enzyme complexed with AMP and its last substrate, beta-alanine, and show that the phosphate group of AMP serves as an anchor for the binding of beta-alanine. This structure confirms that binding of beta-alanine in the active site cavity can occur only after formation of the pantoyl adenylate intermediate. A new crystal form was also obtained; it displays the flexible wall of the active site cavity in a conformation incapable of binding pantoate. Soaking of this crystal form with ATP and pantoate gives a fully occupied complex of PS with ATP. Crystal structures of these complexes with substrates, the reaction intermediate, and the reaction product AMP provide a step-by-step view of the PS-catalyzed reaction. A detailed reaction mechanism and its implications for inhibitor design are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Previous interpretations of the mechanism of trypsin- and chymotrypsin-catalysed reactions in terms of two intermediates, the Michaelis complex and an acyl-enzyme, were based on steady-state studies and on the observation of individual steps under sub-optimum conditions. In the present paper new methods for the rapid analysis of chemical events and for the spectrophotometric detection of individual steps are applied to these two enzymes. These methods can be used to study reactions with specific amino acid ester substrates. It can be shown that there are at least three distinct steps between the Michaelis complex and the release of ethanol; the latter is likely to correspond to acyl-enzyme formation. The relative rates of these three steps are measured by rapid-flow techniques from observations of the displacement of chromophoric inhibitors and reactions with specific substrates containing chromophores, as well as from ethanol analyses during a single turnover of the enzyme reactions. It is concluded that the reactions of trypsin and chymotrypsin with their specific substrates involve the formation of a specially reactive conformation of the enzyme–substrate complex and that the rate constants involved in this rearrangement are at least as important for the overall reaction as those of the subsequent formation and decomposition of the acyl-enzyme.  相似文献   

20.
S L Johnson  P T Tuazon 《Biochemistry》1977,16(6):1175-1183
The rate of the primary acid modification reaction of 1,4-dihydronicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) and 1,4-dihydro-3-acetylpyridine adenine dinucleotide (APADH) and their analogues has been studied over a wide pH range (pH 1-7) with a variety of general acid catalysts. The rate depends on [H+] at moderate pH and becomes independent of [H+] at low pH. This behavior is attributed to substrate protonation at the carbonyl group (pK of NADH = 0.6). The reaction is general acid catalyzed; large solvent deuterium isotope effects are observed for the general acid and lyonium ion terms. Most buffers cause a linear rate increase with increasing buffer concentration, but certain buffers cause a hyperbolic rate increase. The nonlinear buffer effects are due to complexation of the buffer with the substrate, rather than to a change in rate-limiting step. The rate-limiting step is a proton transfer from the general acid species to the C5 position of the substrate. Anomerization is not a necessary first step in the case of the primary acid modification reaction of beta-NADH, in which beta to alpha anomerization takes place.  相似文献   

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