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1.
Kim J  Raushel FM 《Biochemistry》2004,43(18):5334-5340
Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase (CPS) from Escherichia coli consists of a small subunit (approximately 42 kDa) and a large subunit (approximately 118 kDa) and catalyzes the biosynthesis of carbamoyl phosphate from MgATP, bicarbonate, and glutamine. The enzyme is able to utilize external ammonia as an alternative nitrogen source when glutamine is absent. CPS contains an internal molecular tunnel, which has been proposed to facilitate the translocation of reaction intermediates from one active site to another. Ammonia, the product from the hydrolysis of glutamine in the small subunit, is apparently transported to the next active site in the large subunit of CPS over a distance of about 45 A. The ammonia tunnel that connects these two active sites provides a direct path for the guided diffusion of ammonia and protection from protonation. Molecular damage to the ammonia tunnel was conducted in an attempt to induce leakage of ammonia directly to the protein exterior by the creation of a perforation in the tunnel wall. A hole in the tunnel wall was made by mutation of integral amino acid residues with alanine residues. The triple mutant alphaP360A/alphaH361A/betaR265A was unable to utilize glutamine for the synthesis of carbamoyl phosphate. However, the mutant enzyme retained full catalytic activity when external ammonia was used as the nitrogen source. The synchronization of the partial reactions occurring at the three active sites observed with the wild-type CPS was seriously disrupted with the mutant enzyme when glutamine was used as a nitrogen source. Overall, the catalytic constants of the mutant were consistent with the model where the channeling of ammonia has been disrupted due to the leakage from the ammonia tunnel to the protein exterior.  相似文献   

2.
The amidotransferase family of enzymes utilizes the ammonia derived from the hydrolysis of glutamine for a subsequent chemical reaction catalyzed by the same enzyme. The ammonia intermediate does not dissociate into solution during the chemical transformations. A well-characterized example of the structure and mechanism displayed by this class of enzymes is provided by carbamoyl phosphate synthetase (CPS). Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase is isolated from Escherichia coli as a heterodimeric protein. The smaller of the two subunits catalyzes the hydrolysis of glutamine to glutamate and ammonia. The larger subunit catalyzes the formation of carbamoyl phosphate using 2 mol of ATP, bicarbonate, and ammonia. Kinetic investigations have led to a proposed chemical mechanism for this enzyme that requires carboxy phosphate, ammonia, and carbamate as kinetically competent reaction intermediates. The three-dimensional X-ray crystal structure of CPS has localized the positions of three active sites. The nucleotide binding site within the N-terminal half of the large subunit is required for the phosphorylation of bicarbonate and subsequent formation of carbamate. The nucleotide binding site within the C-terminal domain of the large subunit catalyzes the phosphorylation of carbamate to the final product, carbamoyl phosphate. The three active sites within the heterodimeric protein are separated from one another by about 45 A. The ammonia produced within the active site of the small subunit is the substrate for reaction with the carboxy phosphate intermediate that is formed in the active site found within the N-terminal half of the large subunit of CPS. Since the ammonia does not dissociate from the protein prior to its reaction with carboxy phosphate, this intermediate must therefore diffuse through a molecular tunnel that connects these two sites with one another. Similarly, the carbamate intermediate, initially formed at the active site within the N-terminal half of the large subunit, is the substrate for phosphorylation by the ATP bound to the active site located in the C-terminal half of the large subunit. A molecular passageway has been identified by crystallographic methods that apparently facilitates diffusion between these two active sites within the large subunit of CPS. Synchronization of the chemical transformations is controlled by structural perturbations among the three active sites. Molecular tunnels between distant active sites have also been identified in tryptophan synthase and glutamine phosphoribosyl pyrophosphate amidotransferase and are likely architectural features in an expanding list of enzymes.  相似文献   

3.
Carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase catalyzes the production of carbamoyl phosphate through a reaction mechanism requiring one molecule of bicarbonate, two molecules of MgATP, and one molecule of glutamine. The enzyme from Escherichia coli is composed of two polypeptide chains. The smaller of these belongs to the Class I amidotransferase superfamily and contains all of the necessary amino acid side chains required for the hydrolysis of glutamine to glutamate and ammonia. Two homologous domains from the larger subunit adopt conformations that are characteristic for members of the ATP-grasp superfamily. Each of these ATP-grasp domains contains an active site responsible for binding one molecule of MgATP. High resolution x-ray crystallographic analyses have shown that, remarkably, the three active sites in the E. coli enzyme are connected by a molecular tunnel of approximately 100 A in total length. Here we describe the high resolution x-ray crystallographic structure of the G359F (small subunit) mutant protein of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase. This residue was initially targeted for study because it resides within the interior wall of the molecular tunnel leading from the active site of the small subunit to the first active site of the large subunit. It was anticipated that a mutation to the larger residue would "clog" the ammonia tunnel and impede the delivery of ammonia from its site of production to the site of utilization. In fact, the G359F substitution resulted in a complete change in the conformation of the loop delineated by Glu-355 to Ala-364, thereby providing an "escape" route for the ammonia intermediate directly to the bulk solvent. The substitution also effected the disposition of several key catalytic amino acid side chains in the small subunit active site.  相似文献   

4.
The x-ray crystal structure of the heterodimeric carbamoyl phosphate synthetase from Escherichia coli has identified an intermolecular tunnel that connects the glutamine binding site within the small amidotransferase subunit to the two phosphorylation sites within the large synthetase subunit. The tunneling of the ammonia intermediate through the interior of the protein has been proposed as a mechanism for the delivery of the ammonia from the small subunit to the large subunit. A series of mutants created within the ammonia tunnel were prepared by the placement of a constriction via site-directed mutagenesis. The degree of constriction within the ammonia tunnel of these enzymes was found to correlate to the extent of the uncoupling of the partial reactions, the diminution of carbamoyl phosphate formation, and the percentage of the internally derived ammonia that is channeled through the ammonia tunnel. NMR spectroscopy and a radiolabeled probe were used to detect and identify the enzymatic synthesis of N-amino carbamoyl phosphate and N-hydroxy carbamoyl phosphate from hydroxylamine and hydrazine. The kinetic results indicate that hydroxylamine, derived from the hydrolysis of gamma-glutamyl hydroxamate, is channeled through the ammonia tunnel to the large subunit. Discrimination between the passage of ammonia and hydroxylamine was observed among some of these tunnel-impaired enzymes. The overall results provide biochemical evidence for the tunneling of ammonia within the native carbamoyl phosphate synthetase.  相似文献   

5.
Miles BW  Raushel FM 《Biochemistry》2000,39(17):5051-5056
Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase from E. coli catalyzes the synthesis of carbamoyl phosphate through a series of four reactions occurring at three active sites connected by a molecular tunnel of 100 A. To understand the mechanism for coordination and synchronization among the active sites, the pre-steady-state time courses for the formation of phosphate, ADP, glutamate, and carbamoyl phosphate were determined. When bicarbonate and ATP were rapidly mixed with CPS, a stoichiometric burst of acid-labile phosphate and ADP was observed with a formation rate constant of 1100 min(-)(1). The burst phase was followed by a linear steady-state phase with a rate constant of 12 min(-)(1). When glutamine or ammonia was added to the initial reaction mixture, the magnitude and the rate of formation of the burst phase for either phosphate or ADP were unchanged, but the rate constant for the linear steady-state phase increased to an average value of 78 min(-)(1). These results demonstrate that the initial phosphorylation of bicarbonate is independent of the binding or hydrolysis of glutamine. The pre-steady-state time course for the hydrolysis of glutamine in the absence of ATP exhibited a burst of glutamate formation with a rate constant of 4 min(-)(1) when the reaction was quenched with base. In the presence of ATP and bicarbonate, the rate constant for the formation of the burst of glutamate was 1100 min(-)(1). The hydrolysis of ATP thus enhanced the hydrolysis of glutamine by a factor of 275, but there was no effect by glutamine on the initial phosphorylation of bicarbonate. The pre-steady-state time course for the formation of carbamoyl phosphate was linear with an overall rate constant of 72 min(-)(1). The absence of an initial burst of carbamoyl phosphate formation eliminates product release as a rate-determining step for CPS. Overall, these results have been interpreted to be consistent with a mechanism whereby the phosphorylation of bicarbonate serves as the initial trigger for the rest of the reaction cascade. The formation of the carboxy phosphate intermediate within the large subunit must induce a conformational change to the active site of the small subunit that enhances the hydrolysis of glutamine. Thus, ammonia is not released into the molecular tunnel until the activated bicarbonate is ready to form carbamate. The rate-limiting step for the steady-state assembly of carbamoyl phosphate is either the formation, migration, or phosphorylation of the carbamate intermediate.  相似文献   

6.
Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase (CPS) from Escherichia coli catalyzes the formation of carbamoyl phosphate from 2 mol of ATP, bicarbonate, and glutamine. CPS was inactivated by the glutamine analog, acivicin. In the presence of ATP and bicarbonate the second-order rate constant for the inactivation of the glutamine-dependent activities was 4.0 x 10(4) m(-1) s(-1). In the absence of ATP and bicarbonate the second-order rate constant for inactivation of CPS was reduced by a factor of 200. The enzyme was protected against inactivation by the inclusion of glutamine in the reaction mixture. The ammonia-dependent activities were unaffected by the incubation of CPS with acivicin. These results are consistent with the covalent labeling of the glutamine-binding site located within the small amidotransferase subunit. The binding of ATP and bicarbonate to the large subunit of CPS must also induce a conformational change within the amidotransferase domain of the small subunit that enhances the nucleophilic character of the thiol group required for glutamine hydrolysis. The acivicin-inhibited enzyme was crystallized, and the three-dimensional structure was determined by x-ray diffraction techniques. The thiol group of Cys-269 was covalently attached to the dihydroisoxazole ring of acivicin with the displacement of a chloride ion.  相似文献   

7.
Kim J  Howell S  Huang X  Raushel FM 《Biochemistry》2002,41(42):12575-12581
The X-ray crystal structure of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase (CPS) from Escherichia coli has unveiled the existence of two molecular tunnels within the heterodimeric enzyme. These two interdomain tunnels connect the three distinct active sites within this remarkably complex protein and apparently function as conduits for the transport of unstable reaction intermediates between successive active sites. The operational significance of the ammonia tunnel for the migration of NH3 is supported experimentally by isotope competition and protein modification. The passage of carbamate through the carbamate tunnel has now been assessed by the insertion of site-directed structural blockages within this tunnel. Gln-22, Ala-23, and Gly-575 from the large subunit of CPS were substituted by mutagenesis with bulkier amino acids in an attempt to obstruct and/or hinder the passage of the unstable intermediate through the carbamate tunnel. The structurally modified proteins G575L, A23L/G575S, and A23L/G575L exhibited a substantially reduced rate of carbamoyl phosphate synthesis, but the rate of ATP turnover and glutamine hydrolysis was not significantly altered. These data are consistent with a model for the catalytic mechanism of CPS that requires the diffusion of carbamate through the interior of the enzyme from the site of synthesis within the N-terminal domain of the large subunit to the site of phosphorylation within the C-terminal domain. The partial reactions of CPS have not been significantly impaired by these mutations, and thus, the catalytic machinery at the individual active sites has not been functionally perturbed.  相似文献   

8.
Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase plays a key role in both pyrimidine and arginine biosynthesis by catalyzing the production of carbamoyl phosphate from one molecule of bicarbonate, two molecules of MgATP, and one molecule of glutamine. The enzyme from Escherichia coli consists of two polypeptide chains referred to as the small and large subunits, which contain a total of three separate active sites that are connected by an intramolecular tunnel. The small subunit harbors one of these active sites and is responsible for the hydrolysis of glutamine to glutamate and ammonia. The large subunit binds the two required molecules of MgATP and is involved in assembling the final product. Compounds such as L-ornithine, UMP, and IMP allosterically regulate the enzyme. Here, we report the three-dimensional structure of a site-directed mutant protein of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase from E. coli, where Cys 248 in the small subunit was changed to an aspartate. This residue was targeted for a structural investigation because previous studies demonstrated that the partial glutaminase activity of the C248D mutant protein was increased 40-fold relative to the wild-type enzyme, whereas the formation of carbamoyl phosphate using glutamine as a nitrogen source was completely abolished. Remarkably, although Cys 248 in the small subunit is located at approximately 100 A from the allosteric binding pocket in the large subunit, the electron density map clearly revealed the presence of UMP, although this ligand was never included in the purification or crystallization schemes. The manner in which UMP binds to carbamoyl phosphate synthetase is described.  相似文献   

9.
Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase from Escherichia coli catalyzes the formation of carbamoyl phosphate from bicarbonate, glutamine, and two molecules of ATP. The enzyme consists of a large synthetase subunit and a small amidotransferase subunit. The small subunit is structurally bilobal. The N-terminal domain is unique compared to the sequences of other known proteins. The C-terminal domain, which contains the direct catalytic residues for the amidotransferase activity of CPS, is homologous to other members of the Triad glutamine amidotransferases. The two domains are linked by a hinge-like loop, which contains a type II beta turn. The role of this loop in the hydrolysis of glutamine and the formation of carbamoyl phosphate was probed by site-directed mutagenesis. Based upon the observed kinetic properties of the mutants, the modifications to the small subunit can be separated into two groups. The first group consists of G152I, G155I, and Delta155. Attempts to disrupt the turn conformation were made by the deletion of Gly-155 or substitution of the two glycine residues with isoleucine. However, these mutations only have minor effects on the kinetic properties of the enzyme. The second group includes L153W, L153G/N154G, and a ternary complex consisting of the intact large subunit plus the separate N- and C-terminal domains of the small subunit. Although the ability to synthesize carbamoyl phosphate is retained in these enzymes, the hydrolysis of glutamine is partially uncoupled from the synthetase reaction. It is concluded that the hinge loop, but not the type-II turn structure of the loop per se, is important for maintaining the proper interface interactions between the two subunits and the catalytic coupling of the partial reactions occurring within the separate subunits of CPS.  相似文献   

10.
Fan Y  Lund L  Yang L  Raushel FM  Gao YQ 《Biochemistry》2008,47(9):2935-2944
Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase (CPS) is a member of the amidotransferase family of enzymes that uses the hydrolysis of glutamine as a localized source of ammonia for biosynthetic transformations. Molecular dynamics simulations for the transfer of ammonia and ammonium through a tunnel in the small subunit of CPS resulted in five successful trajectories for ammonia transfer, while ammonium was immobilized in a water pocket inside the small subunit of the heterodimeric protein. The observed molecular tunnel for ammonia transport is consistent with that suggested by earlier X-ray crystallography and site-directed mutation studies. His-353, Ser-47, and Lys-202, around the active site center in the small subunit, function cooperatively to deliver ammonia from the site of formation to the interface with the large subunit, via the exchange of hydrogen bonds with a critical water cluster within the tunnel. The NH 3 forms and breaks hydrogen bonds to Gly-292, Ser-35, Pro-358, Gly-293, and Thr-37 in a stepwise fashion "macroscopically" as it travels through the hydrophilic passage toward the subunit interface. The potential of mean force calculations along the ammonia transfer pathway indicates a low free-energy path for the translocation of ammonia with two barriers of 3.9 and 5.5 kcal/mol, respectively. These low free-energy barriers are consistent with the delivery of ammonia from the site of formation into a water reservoir toward the exit of the tunnel and migration through the hydrophilic leaving passage, respectively. The high overall free-energy barrier of 22.4 kcal/mol for the transport of ammonium additionally substantiates that the tunnel in the small subunit of CPS is not an ammonium but an ammonia channel.  相似文献   

11.
S G Miran  S H Chang  F M Raushel 《Biochemistry》1991,30(32):7901-7907
Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase from Escherichia coli catalyzes the formation of carbamoyl phosphate from ATP, bicarbonate, and glutamine. The amidotransferase activity of this enzyme is catalyzed by the smaller of the two subunits of the heterodimeric protein. The roles of four conserved histidine residues within this subunit were probed by site-directed mutagenesis to asparagine. The catalytic activities of the H272N and H341N mutants are not significantly different than that of the wild-type enzyme. The H353N mutant is unable to utilize glutamine as a nitrogen source in the synthetase reaction or the partial glutaminase reaction. However, binding to the glutamine active site is not impaired in the H353N enzyme since glutamine is found to activate the partial ATPase reaction by 40% with a Kd of 54 microM. The H312N mutant has a Michaelis constant for glutamine that is 2 orders of magnitude larger than the wild-type value, but the maximal rate of glutamine hydrolysis is unchanged. These results are consistent with His-353 functioning as a general acid/base catalyst for proton transfers while His-312 serves a critical role for the binding of glutamine to the active site.  相似文献   

12.
The catalytic functions of the amino-terminal and carboxyl-terminal halves of the large subunit of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase from Escherichia coli have been identified using site-directed mutagenesis. Glycine residues at positions 176, 180, and 722 within the putative mononucleotide-binding site were replaced with isoleucine residues. Each of these mutations resulted in at least a 1 order of magnitude reduction in the Vmax for carbamoyl phosphate synthesis. The mutations on the amino-terminal half, G176I and G180I, caused slight reduction in the rate of synthesis of ATP from ADP and carbamoyl phosphate (the partial ATP synthesis reaction) but the bicarbonate-dependent ATPase reaction velocity was reduced to less than 10% of the wild-type rate. The mutant G722I, which is on the carboxy-terminal half, caused the partial ATP synthesis reaction to be reduced by 1 order of magnitude but the bicarbonate-dependent ATPase reaction was reduced only slightly. All three mutations are within regions which show homology to the putative glycine-rich loops of many ATP-binding proteins. These results have been interpreted to suggest that the two homologous halves of the large subunit of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase each contain a binding site for ATP. The NH2-terminal domain contains the portion of the large subunit that is primarily involved with the phosphorylation of bicarbonate to carboxy phosphate while the COOH-terminal domain contains the region of the enzyme that catalyzes the phosphorylation of carbamate to carbamoyl phosphate.  相似文献   

13.
The X-ray crystal structure of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase (CPS) from Escherichia coli revealed the existence of a molecular tunnel that has been proposed to facilitate the translocation of reaction intermediates between remotely located active sites. Five highly conserved glutamate residues, including Glu-25, Glu-383, Glu-577, Glu-604, and Glu-916, are close together in two clusters in the interior wall of the molecular tunnel that enables the intermediate carbamate to migrate from the site of synthesis to the site of utilization. Two arginines, Arg-306 and Arg-848, are located at either end of the carbamate tunnel and participate in the binding of ATP at each of the two active sites within the large subunit of CPS. The mutation of Glu-25 or Glu-577 results in a diminution in the overall rate of carbamoyl phosphate formation. Similar effects are observed upon mutation of Arg-306 and Arg-848 to alanine residues. The conserved glutamate and arginine residues may function in concert with one another to control entry of carbamate into the tunnel prior to phosphorylation to carbamoyl phosphate. The electrostatic environment of tunnel interior may help to stabilize the tunnel architecture and prevent decomposition of carbamate through protonation.  相似文献   

14.
Huang X  Raushel FM 《Biochemistry》1999,38(48):15909-15914
Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase from Escherichia coli catalyzes the formation of carbamoyl phosphate from bicarbonate, glutamine, and two molecules of ATP. The enzyme consists of a large synthetase subunit, and a small amidotransferase subunit, which belongs to the Triad family of glutamine amidotransferases. Previous studies have established that the reaction mechanism of the small subunit proceeds through the formation of a gamma-glutamyl thioester with Cys-269. The roles in the hydrolysis of glutamine played by the conserved residues, Glu-355, Ser-47, Lys-202, and Gln-273, were determined by mutagenesis. In the X-ray crystal structure of the H353N mutant, Ser-47 and Gln-273 interact with the gamma-glutamyl thioester intermediate [Thoden, J. B., Miran, S. G., Phillips, J. C., Howard, A. J., Raushel, F. M., and Holden, H. M. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 8825-8831]. The mutants E355D and E355A have elevated values of K(m) for glutamine, but the overall carbamoyl phosphate synthesis reaction is unperturbed. E355Q does not significantly affect the bicarbonate-dependent ATPase or glutaminase partial reactions. However, this mutation almost completely uncouples the two partial reactions such that no carbamoyl phosphate is produced. The partial recovery of carbamoyl phosphate synthesis activity in the double mutant E355Q/K202M argues that the loss of activity in E355Q is at least partly due to additional interactions between Gln-355 and Lys-202 in E355Q. The mutants S47A and Q273A have elevated K(m) values for glutamine while the V(max) values are comparable to that of the wild-type enzyme. It is concluded that contrary to the original proposal for the catalytic triad, Glu-355 is not an essential residue for catalysis. The results are consistent with Ser-47 and Gln-273 playing significant roles in the binding of glutamine.  相似文献   

15.
Aquifex aeolicus, an extreme hyperthermophile, has neither a full-length carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase (CPSase) resembling the enzyme found in all mesophilic organisms nor a carbamate kinase-like CPSase such as those present in several hyperthermophilic archaea. However, the genome has open reading frames encoding putative proteins that are homologous to the major CPSase domains. The glutaminase, CPS.A, and CPS.B homologs from A. aeolicus were cloned, overexpressed in Escherichia coli, and purified to homogeneity. The isolated proteins could catalyze several partial reactions but not the overall synthesis of carbamoyl phosphate. However, a stable 124-kDa complex could be reconstituted from stoichiometric amounts of CPS.A and CPS.B proteins that synthesized carbamoyl phosphate from ATP, bicarbonate, and ammonia. The inclusion of the glutaminase subunit resulted in the formation of a 171-kDa complex that could utilize glutamine as the nitrogen-donating substrate, although the catalytic efficiency was significantly compromised. Molecular modeling, using E. coli CPSase as a template, showed that the enzyme has a similar structural organization and interdomain interfaces and that all of the residues known to be essential for function are conserved and properly positioned. A steady state kinetic study at 78 degrees C indicated that although the substrate affinity was similar for bicarbonate, ammonia, and glutamine, the K(m) for ATP was appreciably higher than that of any known CPSase. The A. aeolicus complex, with a split gene encoding the major synthetase domains and relatively inefficient coupling of amidotransferase and synthetase functions, may be more closely related to the ancestral precursor of contemporary mesophilic CPSases.  相似文献   

16.
Carbamoyl phosphate synthetases (CPSs) utilize either glutamine or ammonia for the ATP-dependent generation of carbamoyl phosphate. In glutamine-utilizing CPSs (e.g. the single Escherichia coli CPS and mammalian CPS II), the hydrolysis of glutamine to yield ammonia is catalyzed at a triad-type glutamine amidotransferase domain. Non-glutamine-utilizing CPSs (e.g. rat and human CPS I), lacking the catalytic cysteine residue, can generate carbamoyl phosphate only in the presence of free ammonia. Frog CPS I (fCPS I), unlike mammalian CPS Is, retains most of the glutamine amidotransferase residues conserved in glutamine-utilizing CPSs, including an intact catalytic triad, and could therefore be expected to use glutamine. Our work with native fCPS I provides the first demonstration of the inability of this enzyme to bind/utilize glutamine. To determine why fCPS I is unable to utilize glutamine, we compared sequences of glutamine-using and non-glutamine-using CPSs to identify residues that are present or conservatively substituted in all glutamine-utilizing CPSs but absent in fCPS I. We constructed the site-directed mutants Q273E, L270K, Q273E/N240S, and Q273E/L270K in E. coli CPS and have determined that simultaneous occurrence of the two substitutions, Gln-->Glu and Leu-->Lys, found in the frog CPS I glutamine amidotransferase domain are sufficient to eliminate glutamine utilization by the E. coli enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
The enzymes carbamoyl phosphate synthetase (CPS) and carbamate kinase (CK) make carbamoyl phosphate in the same way: by ATP-phosphorylation of carbamate. The carbamate used by CK is made chemically, whereas CPS itself synthesizes its own carbamate in a process involving the phosphorylation of bicarbonate. Bicarbonate and carbamate are analogs and the phosphorylations are carried out by homologous 40 kDa regions of the 120 kDa CPS polypeptide. CK can also phosphorylate bicarbonate and is a homodimer of a 33 kDa subunit that was believed to resemble the 40 kDa regions of CPS. Such belief is disproven now by the CK structure reported here. The structure does not conform to the biotin carboxylase fold found in the 40 kDa regions of CPS, and presents a new type of fold possibly shared by homologous acylphosphate-making enzymes. A molecular 16-stranded open beta-sheet surrounded by alpha-helices is the hallmark of the CK dimer. Each subunit also contains two smaller sheets and a large crevice found at the location expected for the active center. Intersubunit interactions are very large and involve a central hydrophobic patch and more hydrophilic peripheral contacts. The crevice holds a sulfate that may occupy the site of an ATP phosphate, and is lined by conserved residues. Site-directed mutations tested at two of these residues inactivate the enzyme. These findings support active site location in the crevice. The orientation of the crevices in the dimer precludes their physical cooperation in the catalytic process. Such cooperation is not needed in the CK reaction but is a requirement of the mechanism of CPSs.  相似文献   

18.
Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase (CPS) from Escherichia coli catalyzes the formation of carbamoyl phosphate, which is subsequently employed in both the pyrimidine and arginine biosynthetic pathways. The reaction mechanism is known to proceed through at least three highly reactive intermediates: ammonia, carboxyphosphate, and carbamate. In keeping with the fact that the product of CPS is utilized in two competing metabolic pathways, the enzyme is highly regulated by a variety of effector molecules including potassium and ornithine, which function as activators, and UMP, which acts as an inhibitor. IMP is also known to bind to CPS but the actual effect of this ligand on the activity of the enzyme is dependent upon both temperature and assay conditions. Here we describe the three-dimensional architecture of CPS with bound IMP determined and refined to 2.1 A resolution. The nucleotide is situated at the C-terminal portion of a five-stranded parallel beta-sheet in the allosteric domain formed by Ser(937) to Lys(1073). Those amino acid side chains responsible for anchoring the nucleotide to the polypeptide chain include Lys(954), Thr(974), Thr(977), Lys(993), Asn(1015), and Thr(1017). A series of hydrogen bonds connect the IMP-binding pocket to the active site of the large subunit known to function in the phosphorylation of the unstable intermediate, carbamate. This structural analysis reveals, for the first time, the detailed manner in which CPS accommodates nucleotide monophosphate effector molecules within the allosteric domain.  相似文献   

19.
Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase (CPS) catalyzes the production of carbamoyl phosphate which is subsequently employed in the metabolic pathways responsible for the synthesis of pyrimidine nucleotides or arginine. The catalytic mechanism of the enzyme occurs through three highly reactive intermediates: carboxyphosphate, ammonia, and carbamate. As isolated from Escherichia coli, CPS is an alpha, beta-heterodimeric protein with its three active sites separated by nearly 100 A. In addition, there are separate binding sites for the allosteric regulators, ornithine, and UMP. Given the sizable distances between the three active sites and the allosteric-binding pockets, it has been postulated that domain movements play key roles for intramolecular communication. Here we describe the structure of CPS from E. coli where, indeed, such a domain movement has occurred in response to nucleotide binding. Specifically, the protein was crystallized in the presence of a nonhydrolyzable analogue, AMPPNP, and its structure determined to 2.1 A resolution by X-ray crystallographic analysis. The B-domain of the carbamoyl phosphate synthetic component of the large subunit closes down over the active-site pocket such that some atoms move by more than 7 A relative to that observed in the original structure. The trigger for this movement resides in the hydrogen-bonding interactions between two backbone amide groups (Gly 721 and Gly 722) and the beta- and gamma-phosphate groups of the nucleotide triphosphate. Gly 721 and Gly 722 are located in a Type III' reverse turn, and this type of secondary structural motif is also observed in D-alanine:D-alanine ligase and glutathione synthetase, both of which belong to the "ATP-grasp" superfamily of proteins. Details concerning the geometries of the two active sites contained within the large subunit of CPS are described.  相似文献   

20.
The cloned carAB operon of Escherichia coli coding for the small and large subunits of carbamyl phosphate synthetase has been used to construct a recombinant plasmid with a 4.16 kilobase ClaI fragment of the car operon that lacks the major promoters, P1 and P2. The plasmid, pHN12, carries a functional carB gene. A mutant E. coli strain lacking both subunits of carbamyl phosphate synthetase when transformed with pHN12 overproduces the large subunit by 200-fold (8-10% of the cellular protein). The elevated levels of the large subunit enable the transformed cells to utilize NH3 but not glutamine as nitrogen donor for carbamyl phosphate synthesis. The large subunit has been purified from the overexpressing strain. The purified native large subunit is capable of synthesizing carbamyl phosphate from ammonia, HCO-3, and ATP. The kinetic properties of the large subunit compared with the holoenzyme indicate that the Michaelis constants of the large subunit for HCO-3 and ATP are modulated by its association with the small glutamine binding subunit.  相似文献   

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