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1.
Eliot AC  Sandmark J  Schneider G  Kirsch JF 《Biochemistry》2002,41(42):12582-12589
7,8-diaminopelargonic acid (DAPA) synthase (EC 2.6.1.62) is a pyridoxal phosphate (PLP)-dependent transaminase that catalyzes the transfer of the alpha-amino group from S-adenosyl-L-methionine (SAM) to 7-keto-8-aminopelargonic acid (KAPA) to form DAPA in the antepenultimate step in the biosynthesis of biotin. The wild-type enzyme has a steady-state kcat value of 0.013 s(-1), and the K(m) values for SAM and KAPA are 150 and <2 microM, respectively. The k(max) and apparent K(m) values for the half-reaction of the PLP form of the enzyme with SAM are 0.016 s(-1) and 300 microM, respectively, while those for the reaction with DAPA are 0.79 s(-1) and 1 microM. The R391A mutant enzyme exhibits near wild-type kinetic parameters in the reaction with SAM, while the apparent K(m) for DAPA is increased 180-fold. The 2.1 A crystal structure of the R391A mutant enzyme shows that the mutation does not significantly alter the structure. These results indicate that the conserved arginine residue is not required for binding the alpha-amino acid SAM, but it is important for recognition of DAPA.  相似文献   

2.
In biotin biosynthesis, DAPA aminotransferase encoded by the bioA gene catalyzes the formation of the intermediate 7,8-diaminopelargonic acid (DAPA) from 7-keto-8-aminopelargonic acid (KAPA). DAPA aminotransferases from Escherichia coli, Serratia marcescens, and Bacillus sphaericus use S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) as the amino donor. Our observation that SAM is not an amino donor for B. subtilis DAPA aminotransferase led to a search for an alternative amino donor for this enzyme. Testing of 26 possible amino acids in a cell-free extract assay revealed that only l-lysine was able to dramatically stimulate the in vitro conversion of KAPA to DAPA by the B. subtilis DAPA aminotransferase. The K(m) for lysine and KAPA was estimated to be between 2 and 25 mM, which is significantly higher than the K(m) of purified E. coli BioA for SAM (0.15 mM). This higher requirement for lysine resulted in accumulation of KAPA during fermentation of B. subtilis biotin producing strains. However, this pathway bottleneck could be relieved by either addition of exogenous lysine to the medium or by introduction of lysine deregulated mutations into the production strains.  相似文献   

3.
Apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease (AP endo, HAP1) recognizes abasic sites in ds DNA and makes a single nick in the backbone 5' to the abasic site. In this report we examine the roles of three conserved tyrosine residues in close proximity to the active site. We show that Tyr(128) and Tyr(269), which interact upstream and downstream of the abasic site, respectively, are involved in recognition and binding of abasic site-containing double stranded DNA. However, the two residues are not equivalent, as their effects are differentiated by changes in salt concentration. In sharp contrast, Tyr(171) is directly involved in catalysis as well as binding. Y171F, Y171H, and Y171A all show decreased catalytic efficiencies 25,000-50,000-fold from the WT enzyme. Both imidazole and basic pH markedly stimulate the WT enzyme. Imidazole stimulates Tyr(171) mutant enzymes when tyrosine is also present but basic pH eliminates remaining mutant activity. These results underscore the importance of tyrosines in AP endo catalysis. They render the current hypotheses regarding enzyme action unlikely and allow us to consider the possibility that the phenolate of Tyr(171) is the nucleophile that attacks the scissile phosphate.  相似文献   

4.
Misquitta SA  Colman RF 《Biochemistry》2005,44(24):8608-8619
To study the communication between the two active sites of dimeric glutathione S-transferase A1-1, we used heterodimers containing one wild-type (WT) active site and one active site with a single mutation at either Tyr9, Arg15, or Arg131. Tyr9 and Arg15 are part of the active site of the same subunit, while Arg131 contributes to the active site of the opposite subunit. The V(max) values of Tyr9 and Arg15 mutant enzymes were less than 2% that of WT, indicating their importance in catalysis. In contrast, V(max) values of Arg131 mutant enzymes were about 50-90% of that of WT enzyme while K(m)(GSH) values were approximately 3-8 times that of WT, suggesting that Arg131 plays a role in glutathione binding. The mutant enzyme (with a His(6) tag) and the WT enzyme (without a His(6) tag) were used to construct heterodimers (WT-Y9F, WT-Y9T, WT-R15Q, WT-R131M, WT-R131Q, and WT-R131E) by incubation of a mixture of wild-type and mutant enzyme at pH 7.5 in buffer containing 1,6-hexanediol, followed by dialysis against buffer lacking the organic solvent. The resultant heterodimers were separated from the wild-type and mutant homodimers using chromatography on nickel-nitrilotriacetic acid agarose. The V(max) values of all heterodimers were lower than expected for independent active sites. Our experiments demonstrate that mutation of an amino acid residue in one active site affects the activity in the other active site. Modeling studies show that key amino acid residues and water molecules connect the two active sites. This connectivity is responsible for the cross-talk between the active sites.  相似文献   

5.
Structural residues are one of the major factors that modulate the catalytic specificity as well as having a role in stability of the glutathione S-transferases (GST). To understand how residues remote from the active site can affect enzymatic properties, four mutants, His144Ala, Val147Leu, Val147Ala and Arg96Ala, were generated. The selected residues appear to be in a putative intra-subunit interaction pathway from the exterior Asp150 to the active site Arg66 of AdGSTD3-3. The analysis of the four mutants suggested that the interaction formed between Asp150 and His144 is required for the packing of the hydrophobic core in domain 2. Mutations of both Asp150 and His144 impacted upon enzymatic properties. Two Val147 mutants also showed contribution to packing and support of the N-capping box motif by demonstrating shorter half-lives. The planar guanidinium of Arg96 is in a stacked geometry with the face of the aromatic ring of Phe140 in a cation-pi interaction. The Arg96 also interacts with several other residues one of which, Asp100, is in the active site. These interactions restrict movement of the residues in this region and as the data demonstrates when Arg96 is changed have dramatic impact on stability and enzyme properties. These findings indicate the significance of the roles played by residue interactions which can cause conformational changes and thereby influence the catalytic activity and stability of an enzyme.  相似文献   

6.
Lindner HA  Alary A  Boju LI  Sulea T  Ménard R 《Biochemistry》2005,44(48):15645-15651
The aminoacylase-1/metallopeptidase 20 (Acy1/M20) family is the largest metallopeptidase family. Several crystal structures feature a metal-binding and a dimerization-mediating domain, both arranged in an extended open conformation. We have recently shown [Lindner et al. (2003) J. Biol. Chem. 278, 44496-44504] that in human Acy1 the invariant residues Glu147 and His206 from the metal-binding and the dimerization domain, respectively, are recruited to the active site from opposite dimer subunits. We hypothesized that, to facilitate this, formation of the binary complex is associated with domain closure, which would also position additional residues in the functional active site of Acy1. These would include two partially conserved dimerization domain residues: an asparagine (Asn263) and an arginine (Arg276) from the same subunit as His206 and Glu147, respectively. In this paper, we investigate the significance of the three dimerization domain residues of human Acy1 His206, Asn263, and Arg276 and, additionally, the nearby Asp274 for catalysis using site-directed mutagenesis. Enzyme complementation assays confirm the putative subunit allocations of these residues, and steady-state kinetics support roles for all of them in catalysis but only involve the Arg276 in substrate-binding. The results are consistent with a model of the closed conformation for the structure of the related enzyme carboxypeptidase G2. This study demonstrates experimentally for the first time for a member of the Acy1/M20 family that several residues outside of the metal-binding domain are involved in binding and catalysis.  相似文献   

7.
The sulfite dehydrogenase from Starkeya novella is the only known sulfite-oxidizing enzyme that forms a permanent heterodimeric complex between a molybdenum and a heme c-containing subunit and can be crystallized in an electron transfer competent conformation. Tyr236 is a highly conserved active site residue in sulfite oxidoreductases and has been shown to interact with a nearby arginine and a molybdenum-oxo ligand that is involved in catalysis. We have created a Tyr236 to Phe substitution in the SorAB sulfite dehydrogenase. The purified SDH(Y236F) protein has been characterized in terms of activity, structure, intramolecular electron transfer, and EPR properties. The substituted protein exhibited reduced turnover rates and substrate affinity as well as an altered reactivity toward molecular oxygen as an electron acceptor. Following reduction by sulfite and unlike SDH(WT), the substituted enzyme was reoxidized quickly in the presence of molecular oxygen, a process reminiscent of the reactions of the sulfite oxidases. SDH(Y236F) also exhibited the pH-dependent CW-EPR signals that are typically observed in vertebrate sulfite oxidases, allowing a direct link of CW-EPR properties to changes caused by a single-amino acid substitution. No quantifiable electron transfer was seen in laser flash photolysis experiments with SDH(Y236F). The crystal structure of SDH(Y236F) clearly shows that as a result of the substitution the hydrogen bonding network surrounding the active site is disturbed, resulting in an increased mobility of the nearby arginine. These disruptions underline the importance of Tyr236 for the integrity of the substrate binding site and the optimal alignment of Arg55, which appears to be necessary for efficient electron transfer.  相似文献   

8.
Jao SC  Huang LF  Hwang SM  Li WS 《Biochemistry》2006,45(6):1547-1553
Analysis of the pH-rate profile for catalysis of bradykinin cleavage by aminopeptidase P (AMPP), a manganese-containing hydrolase from Escherichia coli, was carried out to show that optimal catalytic function is obtained at neutral pH. On the basis of information derived from the crystal structure, peptidase sequence alignments, and the hydrolysis of organophosphate triesters, active site residues Arg153, Arg370, Trp88, Tyr387, and Arg404 were identified as potential catalytic residues. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to substitute these residues with Leu, Ala, Trp, Lys, or Phe. The kcat values for the Arg153, Arg370, and Trp88 mutants were nearly the same as that for the wild-type enzyme. The kcat values of the R404K, R404A, and Y387A mutants were lower by factors of 285, 400, and 16, respectively. Inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry and circular dichroism spectroscopy showed that Arg404 is not required for metal chelation or stabilization of protein secondary structure. The hydrogen bond network observed between the side chains of conserved residues Asp260, Arg404, and Tyr387 indicated that Arg404 participates in proton relay. This was further evidenced by the return of activity in the R404A mutant by the addition of guanidine. Also, reduced catalytic efficiency in the R404K mutant, which conserves the positive charge at the bridge site, shows that only the arginine group of Arg404 (not the ammonium group of Lys404) can participate in the hydrogen bond network. The hydrogen bond interaction between the Arg404 and the Tyr387 ring hydroxyl group is suggested by the reduced catalytic efficiency of the Y387F mutant.  相似文献   

9.
The vanadium-containing chloroperoxidase from the fungus Curvularia inaequalis is heterologously expressed to high levels in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Characterization of the recombinant enzyme reveals that this behaves very similar to the native chloroperoxidase. Site-directed mutagenesis is performed on four highly conserved active site residues to examine their role in catalysis. When the vanadate-binding residue His(496) is changed into an alanine, the mutant enzyme loses the ability to bind vanadate covalently resulting in an inactive enzyme. The negative charges on the vanadate oxygens are compensated by hydrogen bonds with the residues Arg(360), Arg(490), and Lys(353). When these residues are changed into alanines the mutant enzymes lose the ability to effectively oxidize chloride but can still function as bromoperoxidases. A general mechanism for haloperoxidase catalysis is proposed that also correlates the kinetic properties of the mutants with the charge and the hydrogen-bonding network in the vanadate-binding site.  相似文献   

10.
Protein arginine methyltransferases (PRMTs) catalyze the transfer of methyl groups from S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) to the guanidinium group of arginine residues in a number of important cell signaling proteins. PRMT1 is the founding member of this family, and its activity appears to be dysregulated in heart disease and cancer. To begin to characterize the catalytic mechanism of this isozyme, we assessed the effects of mutating a number of highly conserved active site residues (i.e., Y39, R54, E100, E144, E153, M155, and H293), which are believed to play key roles in SAM recognition, substrate binding, and catalysis. The results of these studies, as well as pH-rate studies, and the determination of solvent isotope effects (SIEs) indicate that M155 plays a critical role in both SAM binding and the processivity of the reaction but is not responsible for the regiospecific formation of asymmetrically dimethylated arginine (ADMA). Additionally, mutagenesis studies on H293, combined with pH studies and the lack of a normal SIE, do not support a role for this residue as a general base. Furthermore, the lack of a normal SIE with either the wild type or catalytically impaired mutants suggests that general acid/base catalysis is not important for promoting methyl transfer. This result, combined with the fact that the E144A/E153A double mutant retains considerably more activity then the single mutants alone, suggests that the PRMT1-catalyzed reaction is primarily driven by bringing the substrate guanidinium into the proximity of the S-methyl group of SAM and that the prior deprotonation of the substrate guanidinium is not required for methyl transfer.  相似文献   

11.
Y6 and Y115 are key amino acids involved in enzyme-substrate interactions in mu-class glutathione S-transferase (GST). They provide electrophilic assistance and stabilize substrates through their hydroxyl groups. Two site-directed mutants (Y7F and Y116F) and the wild-type shrimp GSTs were expressed in Escherichia coli, and the steady-state kinetic parameters were determined using CDNB as the second substrate. The mutants were modeled based on a crystal structure of a mu-class GST to obtain further insights about the changes at the active site. The Y116F mutant had an increase in kcat contrary to Y7F compared to the wild type. Molecular modeling showed that the shrimp GST has a H108 residue that may contribute to compensate and lead to a less deleterious change when conserved tyrosine residues are mutated. This work indicates that shrimp GST is a useful model to understand the catalysis mechanisms in this critical enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
Sellers VM  Wu CK  Dailey TA  Dailey HA 《Biochemistry》2001,40(33):9821-9827
The terminal step in heme biosynthesis, the insertion of ferrous iron into protoporphyrin IX to form protoheme, is catalyzed by the enzyme ferrochelatase (EC 4.99.1.1). A number of highly conserved residues identified from the crystal structure of human ferrochelatase as being in the active site were examined by site-directed mutagenesis. The mutants Y123F, Y165F, Y191H, and R164L each had an increased K(m) for iron without an altered K(m) for porphyrin. The double mutant R164L/Y165F had a 6-fold increased K(m) for iron and a 10-fold decreased V(max). The double mutant Y123F/Y191F had low activity with an elevated K(m) for iron, and Y123F/Y165F had no measurable activity. The mutants H263A/C/N, D340N, E343Q, E343H, and E343K had no measurable enzyme activity, while E343D, E347Q, and H341C had decreased V(max)s without significant alteration of the K(m)s for either substrate. D340E had near-normal kinetic parameters, while D383A and H231A had increased K(m)s for iron. On the basis of these data and the crystal structure of human ferrochelatase, it is proposed that residues E343, H341, and D340 form a conduit from H263 in the active site to the protein exterior and function in proton extraction from the porphyrin macrocycle. The role of H263 as the porphyrin proton-accepting residue is central to catalysis since metalation only occurs in conjunction with proton abstraction. It is suggested that iron is transported from the exterior of the enzyme at D383/H231 via residues W227 and Y191 to the site of metalation at residues R164 and Y165 which are on the opposite side of the active site pocket from H263. This model should be general for mitochondrial membrane-associated eucaryotic ferrochelatases but may differ for bacterial ferrochelatases since the spatial orientation of the enzyme within prokaryotic cells may differ.  相似文献   

13.
The backbone dynamics of Y14F mutant of Delta(5)-3-ketosteroid isomerase (KSI) from Comamonas testosteroni has been studied in free enzyme and its complex with a steroid analogue, 19-nortestosterone hemisuccinate (19-NTHS), by (15)N NMR relaxation measurements. Model-free analysis of the relaxation data showed that the single-point mutation induced a substantial decrease in the order parameters (S(2)) in free Y14F KSI, indicating that the backbone structures of Y14F KSI became significantly mobile by mutation, while the chemical shift analysis indicated that the structural perturbations of Y14F KSI were more profound than those of wild-type (WT) KSI upon 19-NTHS binding. In the 19-NTHS complexed Y14F KSI, however, the key active site residues including Tyr14, Asp38 and Asp99 or the regions around them remained flexible with significantly reduced S(2) values, whereas the S(2) values for many of the residues in Y14F KSI became even greater than those of WT KSI upon 19-NTHS binding. The results thus suggest that the hydrogen bond network in the active site might be disrupted by the Y14F mutation, resulting in a loss of the direct interactions between the catalytic residues and 19-NTHS.  相似文献   

14.
Martucci WE  Vargo MA  Anderson KS 《Biochemistry》2008,47(34):8902-8911
The essential enzyme TS-DHFR from Cryptosporidium hominis undergoes an unusually rapid rate of catalysis at the conserved TS domain, facilitated by two nonconserved residues, Ala287 and Ser290, in the folate tail-binding region. Mutation of these two residues to their conserved counterparts drastically affects multiple steps of the TS catalytic cycle. We have determined the crystal structures of all three mutants (A287F, S290G, and A287F/S290G) in complex with active site ligands dUMP and CB3717. The structural data show two effects of the mutations: an increased distance between the ligands in the active site and increased flexibility of the folate ligand in the partially open enzyme state that precedes conformational change to the active catalytic state. The latter effect is able to be rescued by the mutants containing the A287F mutation. In addition, the conserved water network of TS is altered in each of the mutants. The structural results point to a role of the folate tail-binding residues in closely positioning ChTS ligands and restricting ligand flexibility in the partially open state to allow for a rapid transition to the active closed state and enhanced rate of catalysis. These results provide an explanation on how folate tail-binding residues at one end of the active site affect long-range interactions throughout the TS active site and validate these residues as targets for species-specific drug design.  相似文献   

15.
Aryl-alcohol oxidase provides H(2)O(2) for lignin biodegradation, a key process for carbon recycling in land ecosystems that is also of great biotechnological interest. However, little is known of the structural determinants of the catalytic activity of this fungal flavoenzyme, which oxidizes a variety of polyunsaturated alcohols. Different alcohol substrates were docked on the aryl-alcohol oxidase molecular structure, and six amino acid residues surrounding the putative substrate-binding site were chosen for site-directed mutagenesis modification. Several Pleurotus eryngii aryl-alcohol oxidase variants were purified to homogeneity after heterologous expression in Emericella nidulans, and characterized in terms of their steady-state kinetic properties. Two histidine residues (His502 and His546) are strictly required for aryl-alcohol oxidase catalysis, as shown by the lack of activity of different variants. This fact, together with their location near the isoalloxazine ring of FAD, suggested a contribution to catalysis by alcohol activation, enabling its oxidation by flavin-adenine dinucleotide (FAD). The presence of two aromatic residues (at positions 92 and 501) is also required, as shown by the conserved activity of the Y92F and F501Y enzyme variants and the strongly impaired activity of Y92A and F501A. By contrast, a third aromatic residue (Tyr78) does not seem to be involved in catalysis. The kinetic and spectral properties of the Phe501 variants suggested that this residue could affect the FAD environment, modulating the catalytic rate of the enzyme. Finally, L315 affects the enzyme k(cat), although it is not located in the near vicinity of the cofactor. The present study provides the first evidence for the role of aryl-alcohol oxidase active site residues.  相似文献   

16.
3-Hydroxyanthranilic acid 3,4-dioxygenase (3HAO) is a non-heme ferrous extradiol dioxygenase in the kynurenine pathway from tryptophan. It catalyzes the conversion of 3-hydroxyanthranilate (HAA) to quinolinic acid (QUIN), an endogenous neurotoxin, via the activation of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors and the precursor of NAD(+) biosynthesis. The crystal structure of 3HAO from S. cerevisiae at 2.4 A resolution shows it to be a member of the functionally diverse cupin superfamily. The structure represents the first eukaryotic 3HAO to be resolved. The enzyme forms homodimers, with two nickel binding sites per molecule. One of the bound nickel atoms occupies the proposed ferrous-coordinated active site, which is located in a conserved double-strand beta-helix domain. Examination of the structure reveals the participation of a series of residues in catalysis different from other extradiol dioxygenases. Together with two iron-binding residues (His49 and Glu55), Asp120, Asn51, Glu111, and Arg114 form a hydrogen-bonding network; this hydrogen-bond network is key to the catalysis of 3HAO. Residues Arg101, Gln59, and the substrate-binding hydrophobic pocket are crucial for substrate specificity. Structure comparison with 3HAO from Ralstonia metallidurans reveals similarities at the active site and suggests the same catalytic mechanism in prokaryotic and eukaryotic 3HAO. Based on sequence comparison, we suggest that bicupin of human 3HAO is the first example of evolution from a monocupin dimer to bicupin monomer in the diverse cupin superfamilies. Based on the model of the substrate HAA at the active site of Y3HAO, we propose a mechanism of catalysis for 3HAO.  相似文献   

17.
Gamma-secretase performs the final processing step in the generation of amyloid-beta (Abeta) peptides, which are believed to be causative for Alzheimer's disease. Presenilins (PS) are required for gamma-secretase activity and the presence of two essential intramembranous aspartates (D257 and D385) has implicated this region as the putative catalytic centre of an aspartyl protease. The presence of several key hydrogen-bonding residues around the active site of classical aspartyl proteases led us to investigate the role of both the critical aspartates and two nearby conserved hydrogen bond donors in PS1. Generation of cell lines stably overexpressing the D257E, D385E, Y256F and Y389F engineered mutations has enabled us to determine their role in enzyme catalysis and binding of a transition state analogue gamma-secretase inhibitor. Here we report that replacement of either tyrosine residue alters gamma-secretase cleavage specificity, resulting in an increase in the production of the more pathogenic Abeta42 peptide in both cells and membranous enzyme preparations, without affecting inhibitor binding. In contrast, replacement of either of the aspartate residues precludes inhibitor binding in addition to inactivation of the enzyme. Together, these data further incriminate the region around the intramembranous aspartates as the active site of the enzyme, targeted by transition state analogue inhibitors, and highlight the roles of individual residues.  相似文献   

18.
The reactions of several active site mutant forms of bacterial morphinone reductase (MR) with NADH and 2-cyclohexen-1-one as substrates have been studied by stopped-flow and steady-state kinetic methods and redox potentiometry. The enzymes were designed to (i) probe a role for potential proton donors (Tyr-72 and Tyr-356) in the oxidative half-reaction of MR; (ii) assess the function of a highly conserved tryptophan residue (Trp-106) in catalysis; (iii) investigate the role of Thr-32 in modulating the FMN reduction potential and catalysis. The Y72F and Y356F enzymes retained activity in both steady-state and stopped-flow kinetic studies, indicating they do not serve as key proton donors in the oxidative reaction of MR. Taken together with our recently published data (Messiha, H. L., Munro, A. W., Bruce, N. C., Barsukov, I., and Scrutton, N. S. (2005) J. Biol. Chem. 280, 4627-4631) that rule out roles for Cys-191 (corresponding with the proton donor, Tyr-196, in the structurally related OYE1 enzyme) and His-186 as proton donors, we infer solvent is the source of the proton in the oxidative half-reaction of MR. We demonstrate a key role for Thr-32 in modulating the reduction potential of the FMN, which is decreased approximately 50 mV in the T32A mutant MR. This effects a change in rate-limiting step in the catalytic cycle of the T32A enzyme with the oxidizing substrate 2-cyclohexenone. Despite the conservation of Trp-106 throughout the OYE family, we show this residue does not play a major role in catalysis, although affects on substrate and coenzyme binding are observed in a W106F enzyme. Our studies show some similarities, but also major differences, in the catalytic mechanism of MR and OYE1, and emphasize the need for caution in inferring mechanism by structural comparison of highly related enzymes in the absence of solution studies.  相似文献   

19.
Plasmodium falciparum dihydroorotate dehydrogenase (pfDHODH) is a flavin-dependent mitochondrial enzyme that provides the only route to pyrimidine biosynthesis in the parasite. Clinically significant inhibitors of human DHODH (e.g., A77 1726) bind to a pocket on the opposite face of the flavin cofactor from dihydroorotate (DHO). This pocket demonstrates considerable sequence variability, which has allowed species-specific inhibitors of the malarial enzyme to be identified. Ubiquinone (CoQ), the physiological oxidant in the reaction, has been postulated to bind this site despite a lack of structural evidence. To more clearly define the residues involved in CoQ binding and catalysis, we undertook site-directed mutagenesis of seven residues in the structurally defined A77 1726 binding site, which we term the species-selective inhibitor site. Mutation of several of these residues (H185, F188, and F227) to Ala substantially decreased the affinity of pfDHODH-specific inhibitors (40-240-fold). In contrast, only a modest increase in the Kmapp for CoQ was observed, although mutation of Y528 in particular caused a substantial reduction in kcat (40-100-fold decrease). Pre-steady-state kinetic analysis by single wavelength stopped-flow spectroscopy showed that the mutations had no effect on the rate of the DHO-dependent reductive half-reaction, but most reduced the rate of the CoQ-dependent flavin oxidation step (3-20-fold decrease), while not significantly altering the Kdox for CoQ. As with the mutants, inhibitors that bind this site block the CoQ-dependent oxidative half-reaction without affecting the DHO-dependent step. These results identify residues involved in inhibitor binding and electron transfer to CoQ. Importantly, the data provide compelling evidence that the binding sites for CoQ and species-selective site inhibitors do not overlap, and they suggest instead that inhibitors act either by blocking the electron path between flavin and CoQ or by stabilizing a conformation that excludes CoQ binding.  相似文献   

20.
Brosius JL  Colman RF 《Biochemistry》2002,41(7):2217-2226
Tetrameric adenylosuccinate lyase (ASL) of Bacillus subtilis catalyzes the cleavage of adenylosuccinate to form AMP and fumarate. We previously reported that two distinct subunits contribute residues to each active site, including the His68 and His89 from one and His141 from a second subunit [Brosius, J. L., and Colman, R. F. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 13336-13343]. Glu(275) is 2.8 A from His141 in the ASL crystal structure, and Lys268 is also in the active site region; Glu275 and Lys268 come from a third, distinct subunit. Using site-directed mutagenesis, we have replaced Lys268 by Arg, Gln, Glu, and Ala, with specific activities of the purified mutant enzymes being 0.055, 0.00069, 0.00028, and 0.0, respectively, compared to 1.56 units/mg for wild-type (WT) enzyme. Glu275 was substituted by Gln, Asp, Ala, and Arg; none of these homogeneous mutant enzymes has detectable activity. Circular dichroism and light scattering reveal that neither the secondary structure nor the oligomeric state of the Lys268 mutant enzymes has been perturbed. Native gel electrophoresis and circular dichroism indicate that the Glu275 mutant enzymes are tetramers, but their conformation is altered slightly. For K268R, the K(m)s for all substrates are similar to WT enzyme. Binding studies using [2-3H]-adenylosuccinate reveal that none of the Glu275 mutant enzymes, nor inactive K268A, can bind substrate. We propose that Lys268 participates in binding substrate and that Glu275 is essential for catalysis because of its interaction with His141. Incubation of H89Q with K268Q or E275Q leads to restoration of up to 16% WT activity, while incubation of H141Q with K268Q or E275Q results in 6% WT activity. These complementation studies provide the first functional evidence that a third subunit contributes residues to each intersubunit active site of ASL. Thus, adenylosuccinate lyase has four active sites per enzyme tetramer, each of which is formed from regions of three subunits.  相似文献   

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