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We offer a new titration protocol for determining the dissociation constant and binding stoichiometry of protein-ligand complex, detectable by spectroscopic methods. This approach neither is limited to the range of protein or ligand concentrations employed during titration experiment nor relies on precise determinations of the titration "endpoint," i.e., the maximal signal changes upon saturation of protein by ligand (or vice versa). In this procedure, a fixed concentration of protein (or ligand) is titrated by increasing volumes of a stock ligand (or protein) solution, and the changes in the spectroscopic signal are recorded after each addition of the titrant. The signal for interaction between protein and ligand first increases, reaches a maximum value, and then starts decreasing due to dilution effect. The volume of the titrant required to achieve the maximum signal changes is utilized to calculate the dissociation constant and the binding stoichiometry of the protein-ligand complex according to the theoretical relationships developed herein. This procedure has been tested for the interaction of avidin with a chromophoric biotin analogue, 2-(4'-hydroxyazobenzene)benzoic acid by following the absorption signal of their interaction at 500 nm. The widespread applicability of this procedure to protein-ligand complexes detected by other spectroscopic techniques and its advantages over conventional methods are discussed.  相似文献   

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Proton incorporation at position C4 of the substrate-coenzyme Schiff base of aspartate transaminase is a stereospecific process. After carbamylation of the active site Lys-258, the stereospecificity of the reaction in 2H2O is retained. By a correlation method, it is shown that addition occurs from the si side of the complex and the pyridoxamine phosphate produced is deuterated at position pro-S of the pyridoxamine methylene group. These results constitute a demonstration for the stereochemstry of a half-transamination process of the phosphorylated coenzyme under single turnover conditions. They also illustrate that free Lys-258 is not required to maintain stereospecificity and cast doubts on the implication of this residue as a participant in C4 proton addition during catalysis by the native form of this mammalian enzyme.  相似文献   

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Tripeptidyl-peptidase II (TPP II) is a subtilisin-like serine protease which forms a large enzyme complex (>4MDa). It is considered a potential drug target due to its involvement in specific physiological processes. However, information is scarce concerning the kinetic characteristics of TPP II and its active site features, which are important for design of efficient inhibitors. To amend this, we probed the active site by determining the pH dependence of TPP II catalysis. Access to pure enzyme is a prerequisite for kinetic investigations and herein we introduce the first efficient purification system for heterologously expressed mammalian TPP II. The pH dependence of kinetic parameters for hydrolysis of two different chromogenic substrates, Ala-Ala-Phe-pNA and Ala-Ala-Ala-pNA, was determined for murine, human and Drosophila melanogaster TPP II as well as mutant variants thereof. The investigation demonstrated that TPP II, in contrast to subtilisin, has a bell-shaped pH dependence of k(cat)(app)/K(M) probably due to deprotonation of the N-terminal amino group of the substrate at higher pH. Since both the K(M) and k(cat)(app) are lower for cleavage of AAA-pNA than for AAF-pNA we propose that the former can bind non-productively to the active site of the enzyme, a phenomenon previously observed with some substrates for subtilisin. Two mutant variants, H267A and D387G, showed bell-shaped pH-dependence of k(cat)(app), possibly due to an impaired protonation of the leaving group. This work reveals previously unknown differences between TPP II orthologues and subtilisin as well as features that might be conserved within the entire family of subtilisin-like serine peptidases.  相似文献   

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Tripeptidyl-peptidase II (TPP II) is a subtilisin-like serine protease which forms a large enzyme complex (> 4 MDa). It is considered a potential drug target due to its involvement in specific physiological processes. However, information is scarce concerning the kinetic characteristics of TPP II and its active site features, which are important for design of efficient inhibitors. To amend this, we probed the active site by determining the pH dependence of TPP II catalysis. Access to pure enzyme is a prerequisite for kinetic investigations and herein we introduce the first efficient purification system for heterologously expressed mammalian TPP II. The pH dependence of kinetic parameters for hydrolysis of two different chromogenic substrates, Ala-Ala-Phe-pNA and Ala-Ala-Ala-pNA, was determined for murine, human and Drosophila melanogaster TPP II as well as mutant variants thereof. The investigation demonstrated that TPP II, in contrast to subtilisin, has a bell-shaped pH dependence of kcatapp/KM probably due to deprotonation of the N-terminal amino group of the substrate at higher pH. Since both the KM and kcatapp are lower for cleavage of AAA-pNA than for AAF-pNA we propose that the former can bind non-productively to the active site of the enzyme, a phenomenon previously observed with some substrates for subtilisin. Two mutant variants, H267A and D387G, showed bell-shaped pH-dependence of kcatapp, possibly due to an impaired protonation of the leaving group. This work reveals previously unknown differences between TPP II orthologues and subtilisin as well as features that might be conserved within the entire family of subtilisin-like serine peptidases.  相似文献   

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The unusually low pK(a) value of the general base catalyst Pro-1 (pK(a) = 6.4) in 4-oxalocrotonate tautomerase (4-OT) has been ascribed to both a low dielectric constant at the active site and the proximity of the cationic residues Arg-11 and Arg-39 [Stivers, J. T., Abeygunawardana, C., Mildvan, A. S., Hajipour, G., and Whitman, C. P. (1996) Biochemistry 35, 814-823]. In addition, the pH-rate profiles in that study showed an unidentified protonated group essential for catalysis with a pK(a) of 9.0. To address these issues, the pK(a) values of the active site Pro-1 and lower limit pK(a) values of arginine residues were determined by direct (15)N NMR pH titrations. The pK(a) values of Pro-1 and of the essential acid group were determined independently from pH-rate profiles of the kinetic parameters of 4-OT in arginine mutants of 4-OT and compared with those of wild type. The chemical shifts of all of the Arg Nepsilon resonances in wild-type 4-OT and in the R11A and R39Q mutants were found to be independent of pH over the range 4.9-9.7, indicating that no arginine is responsible for the kinetically determined pK(a) of 9.0 for an acidic group in free 4-OT. With the R11A mutant, where k(cat)/K(m) was reduced by a factor of 10(2.9), the pK(a) of Pro-1 was not significantly altered from that of the wild-type enzyme (pK(a) = 6.4 +/- 0.2) as revealed by both direct (15)N NMR titration (pK(a) = 6.3 +/- 0.1) and the pH dependence of k(cat)/K(m) (pK(a) = 6.4 +/- 0.2). The pH-rate profiles of both k(cat)/K(m) and k(cat) for the reaction of the R11A mutant with the dicarboxylate substrate, 2-hydroxymuconate, showed humps, i.e., sharply defined maxima followed by nonzero plateaus. The humps disappeared in the reaction with the monocarboxylate substrate, 2-hydroxy-2,4-pentadienoate, indicating that, unlike the wild-type enzyme which reacts only with the dianionic form of the dicarboxylic substrate, the R11A mutant reacts with both the 6-COOH and 6-COO(-) forms, with the 6-COOH form being 12-fold more active. This reversal in the preferred ionization state of the 6-carboxyl group of the substrate that occurs upon mutation of Arg-11 to Ala provides strong evidence that Arg-11 interacts with the 6-carboxylate of the substrate. In the R39Q mutant, where k(cat)/K(m) was reduced by a factor of 10(3), the kinetically determined pK(a) value for Pro-1 was 4.6 +/- 0.2, while the ionization of Pro-1 showed negative cooperativity with an apparent pK(a) of 7.1 +/- 0.1 determined by 1D (15)N NMR. From the Hill coefficient of 0.54, it can be shown that the apparent pK(a) value of 7.1 could result most simply from the averaging of two limiting pK(a) values of 4.6 and 8.2. Mutation of Arg-39, by altering the structure of the beta-hairpin which covers the active site, could result in an increase in the solvent exposure of Pro-1, raising its upper limit pK(a) value to 8.2. In the R39A mutant, the kinetically determined pK(a) of Pro-1 was also low, 5.0 +/- 0.2, indicating that in both the R39Q and R39A mutants, only the sites with low pK(a) values were kinetically operative. With the fully active R61A mutant, the kinetically determined pK(a) of Pro-1 (pK(a) = 6.5 +/- 0.2) agreed with that of wild-type 4-OT. It is concluded that the unusually low pK(a) of Pro-1 shows little contribution from electrostatic effects of the nearby cationic Arg-11, Arg-39, and Arg-61 residues but results primarily from a site of low local dielectric constant.  相似文献   

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The pyrophosphate-dependent phosphofructokinase from Propionibacterium freudenreichii is rapidly inactivated by low concentrations of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP). The inactivation is first order with respect to PLP and the rate increases linearly with PLP concentrations suggesting that over the concentration range used no significant E-PLP complex accumulates during inactivation. The rate of inactivation decreases at high and low pH and this is discussed in terms of the mechanism of Schiff base formation. The presence of any reactants decreases the rate of inactivation to 0 at infinite concentration. This protection against inactivation has been used to obtain the pH dependence of the dissociation constants of all enzyme-reactant binary complexes. Reduction of the PLP-inactivated enzyme with NaB[3H]4 indicates that about 7 lysines are modified in free enzyme and fructose 6-phosphate protects 2 of these from modification. The pH dependence of the enzyme-reactant dissociation constants suggests that the phosphates of fructose 6-phosphate, fructose 1,6-bisphosphate, inorganic phosphate, and Mg-pyrophosphate must be completely ionized and that lysines are present in the vicinity of the 1- and 6-phosphates of the sugar phosphate and bisphosphate probably directly coordinated to these phosphates.  相似文献   

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Understanding how self-cleaving ribozymes mediate catalysis is crucial in light of compelling evidence that human and bacterial gene expression can be regulated through RNA self-cleavage. The hairpin ribozyme catalyzes reversible phosphodiester bond cleavage through a mechanism that does not require divalent metal cations. Previous structural and biochemical evidence implicated the amidine group of an active site adenosine, A38, in a pH-dependent step in catalysis. We developed a way to determine microscopic pK(a) values in active ribozymes based on the pH-dependent fluorescence of 8-azaadenosine (8azaA). We compared the microscopic pK(a) for ionization of 8azaA at position 38 with the apparent pK(a) for the self-cleavage reaction in a fully functional hairpin ribozyme with a unique 8azaA at position 38. Microscopic and apparent pK(a) values were virtually the same, evidence that A38 protonation accounts for the decrease in catalytic activity with decreasing pH. These results implicate the neutral unprotonated form of A38 in a transition state that involves formation of the 5'-oxygen-phosphorus bond.  相似文献   

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S Marston  A Weber 《Biochemistry》1975,14(17):3868-3873
We measured the binding of [14C]iodoacetamide labeled heavy meromyosin subfragment-1 (S-1) to F-actin by sedimenting the actin-S-1 complex and assaying the radioactivity remaining in the supernatant. The apparent dissociation constants (Kd) at 25 degrees, pH 7.0, were 0.01 to 0.04 muM at 0.027 and 0.08 ionic strengths and 0.07 to 0.14 muM at 0.14 ionic strength. Kd was not altered when the troponin-tropomyosin complex was bound on the actin, nor was it affected by free calcium concentration in the range 10(-4) to 10(-9) M. Measurements of the displacement of labeled S-1 from actin by native S-1 showed labeling had not altered Kd. In control experiments we found that at the low actin concentrations used (0.001-0.5 muM) not all of the actin sedimented and, furthermore, the data suggested that some of the S-1 in the supernatant was bound to supernatant actin. Our estimation of Kd, based on the assumption that all the supernatant S-1 was free, therefore resulted in an apparent Kd greater than the true Kd. We minimized the effect of the supernatant actin artefact by using only the data for high ratios of S-1 to actin, where no less than 75% of the actin sedimented; we estimate that the true Kd values could not be less than half the apparent Kd values.  相似文献   

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The temperature dependence of the oxygen equilibrium of tadpole hemoglobin has been determined between 0 degrees and 32 degrees for the unfractionated but phosphate-free lysate and between 12 degrees and 32 degrees for each of the four isolated components between pH 6 and 10 in 0.05 M cacodylate, Tris, or glycine buffers containing 0.1 M NaCl and 1 mM EDTA. Under these conditions the Bohr effect (defined as deltalog p50/deltapH) of the unfractionated lysate is positive at low temperatures between pH 6 and 8.5 and is negative above pH 8.5 to 8.8 at any temperature. As the temperature rises the Bohr effect below pH 8.5 changes greatly. In the interval pH 7.0 to 7.5, the magnitude of the Bohr effect decreases from + 0.28 at 0 degrees to zero at about 24 degrees and becomes negative, as in mammalian hemoglobins, above this temperature. Measurements with the isolated components show that the temperature dependence of oxygen binding for Components I and II and for Components III and IV is very similar. For both sets of components the apparent overall enthalpy of oxygenation at pH 7.5 is about -16.4 kcal/mol and -12.6 kcal/mol at pH 9.5. The measured enthalpies include contributions from the active Bohr groups, the buffer ions themselves, the hemoglobin groups contributing buffering, and any pH-dependent, oxygenation-dependent binding of ions such as chloride by the hemoglobin. The apportioning of the total enthalpy among these various processes remains to be determined. Between pH 8 and 10.5 tadpole oxyhemoglobin undergoes a pH-dependent dissociation from tetramer to dimer. The pH dependence of the apparent tetramer-dimer dissociation constant indicates that at pH 9.5 the dissociation of each tetramer is accompanied by the release of approximately 2 protons. In this pH range the oxygen equilibrium measurements indicate that about 0.5 proton is released for each oxygen molecule bound. The results are consistent with the conclusion that one acid group per alphabeta dimer changes its pK from about 10 to 8 or below upon dissociation of the tetramer.  相似文献   

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Pyruvate decarboxylase (PDC, EC 4.1.1.1) is a thiamin diphosphate-dependent enzyme about which there is a large body of structural and functional information. The active site contains several absolutely conserved ionizable groups and all of these appear to be important, as judged by the fact that mutation diminishes or abolishes catalytic activity. Previously we have shown [Schenk, G., Leeper, F.J., England, R., Nixon, P.F. & Duggleby, R.G. (1997) Eur. J. Biochem. 248, 63-71] that the activity is pH-dependent due to changes in kcat/Km while kcat itself is unaffected by pH. The effect on kcat/Km is determined by a group with a pKa of 6.45; the identity of this group has not been determined, although H113 is a possible candidate. Here we mutate five crucial residues in the active site with ionizable side-chains (D27, E50, H113, H114 and E473) in turn, to residues that are nonionizable or should have a substantially altered pKa. Each protein was purified and characterized kinetically. Unexpectedly, the pH-dependence of kcat/Km is largely unaffected in all mutants, ruling out the possibility that any of these five residues is responsible for the observed pKa of 6.45. We conjecture that the kcat/Km profile reflects the protonation of an alcoholate anion intermediate of the catalytic cycle.  相似文献   

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Nucleoside diphosphate (NDP) kinase phosphorylates nucleoside diphosphates with little specificity for the base and the sugar. Although nucleotide analogues used in antiviral therapies are also metabolized to their triphosphate form by NDP kinase, their lack of the 3'-hydroxyl of the ribose, which allows them to be DNA chain terminators, severely impairs the catalytic efficiency of NDP kinase. We have analyzed the kinetics parameters of several mutant NDP kinases modified on residues (Lys16, Tyr56, Asn119) interacting with the gamma-phosphate and/or the 3'-OH of the Mg2+-ATP substrate. We compared the relative contributions of the active-site residues and the substrate 3'-OH for point mutations on Lys16, Tyr56 and Asn119. Analysis of additional data from pH profiles identify the ionization state of these residues in the enzyme active form. X-ray structure of K16A mutant NDP kinase shows no detectable rearrangement of the residues of the active site.  相似文献   

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《Life sciences》1993,53(3):PL33-PL38
An in vitro preparation of rabbit thoracic aorta was tested in order to determine whether isometric contractile force induced by endothelin-1 (ET-1) in this preparation is change when the tissue is exposed to ultraviolet (UV) light. After constriction of an aortic segment to a steady-state level of tension with ET-1, a flash of UV light induced a transient decrease in tension that returned exponentially to equilibrium. This response was endothelium-independent and sensitive to the extracellular sodium concentration. The rate of return to the baseline tension after photorelaxation increased with increasing concentrations of ET-1. UV light had only a slight photorelaxing effect at very low and very high ET-1 concentrations and a much larger effect at concentrations near the A50 value of ET-1. Since an irreversible antagonist does not yet exist for ET-1, the partial irreversible blockade method for getting the dissociation constant (KD) functionally was not possible. The relaxation method, using UV light as a perturbation of ligand-receptor equilibrium, was used instead to obtain KD as well as the forward (k1) and reverse (k2) rate constants of ET-1 in this issue.  相似文献   

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Binding of ligands to the catalytic center of mammalian triosephosphate isomerase (TPI) induces a conformational change(s) that enhances the specific deamidation of Asn71 at the subunit interface. Deamidation initiates dissociation and degradation of the enzyme in vivo and in vitro. We have utilized circular dichroism spectroscopy to examine the conformational changes in the enzyme upon ligand binding and subunit dissociation/reassociation. Native TPI from rabbit, chicken, and yeast exhibit similar spectra at pH 7.5, but are substantially different at pH 9.5. Covalent reaction of the active site Glu 165 with the substrate analogue 3-chloroacetol phosphate results in a conformational change (decrease in beta-sheet) which is similar in TPI from all three species. Reversible dissociation of the dimeric enzyme in guanidine followed by dialysis, although permitting full recovery of catalytic activity, results in refolded dimers with decreased alpha-helix. These conformational changes induced by ligand binding, pH, or reversible dissociation explain, in part, the differences in the chemical and physical properties of the enzyme from the three species at alkaline pH, the increased lability of the dissociated/reassociated enzyme, and corroborate 31P NMR data on substrate-induced conformational changes. These studies also support the concept of molecular wear and tear whereby ligand binding at the catalytic center induces conformational changes that increase the probability of covalent modification and ultimate degradation of the protein.  相似文献   

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