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1.
Escherichia coli ornithine transcarbamoylase displays a strict specificity toward its second substrate L-ornithine. After forming a binary complex with carbamoyl phosphate and undergoing an induced-fit isomerization (Miller, A. W., and Kuo, L. C. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 15023-15027), the enzyme selects only the minor, zwitterionic ornithine with an uncharged delta-amino group for transcarbamoylation. Formation of the productive ternary complex is linked to two enzymic ionizations (pK alpha 6.2 approximately 6.3 and 9.1 approximately 9.3) and two ornithine ionizations (pK alpha 8.5 and 10.6) (Kuo, L. C., Herzberg, W., and Lipscomb, W. N. (1985) Biochemistry 24, 4754-4761). To elucidate the mechanism through which substrate specificity is achieved, the binding of L-ornithine to two site-specific point mutants (Arg-57----Gly and Cys-273----Ala) of the enzyme has been examined. For the Gly-57 mutant enzyme, which does not undergo the induced-fit isomerization, affinity for ornithine drops by a factor of 500. The pH profile of the apparent equilibrium constant governing the association of L-ornithine to the binary complex of this mutant reveals that only two enzymic ionizations affect ornithine binding. The ionizations linked to L-ornithine are not detected. Hence, the preisomerized binary complex binds not only poorly but also indiscriminately all ionic species of L-ornithine. For the Ala-273 mutant enzyme, which exhibits the induced-fit isomerization, affinity of the amino acid is decreased by an order of magnitude. Ionizations of L-ornithine to yield a zwitterion for binding are detected in pH analyses for this mutant, but the pK alpha of 6.2 associated with the enzymic deprotonation in the wild type is absent. Therefore, Cys-273 is a binding site of L-ornithine. The D-isomer of ornithine is a very weak, deadend ligand to all three forms of the enzyme with affinities in the millimolar range. Employing the estimated affinities of D- and L-ornithine, the binding stereospecificity of the wild-type and mutant binary complexes toward the amino acid substrate may be evaluated. L-Ornithine binds preferentially over D-ornithine by two and four orders of magnitude in the absence and presence of protein isomerization, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
E M Meiering  M Bycroft  A R Fersht 《Biochemistry》1991,30(47):11348-11356
Phosphate is a competitive inhibitor of transesterification of GpC by the ribonuclease barnase. Barnase is significantly stabilized in the presence of phosphate against urea denaturation. The data are consistent with the existence of a single phosphate binding site in barnase with a dissociation constant, Kd, of 1.3 mM. The 2D 1H NMR spectrum of wild-type barnase with bound phosphate is assigned. Changes in chemical shifts and NOEs for wild type with bound phosphate compared with free wild type indicate that phosphate binds in the active site and that only small conformational changes occur on binding. Site-directed mutagenesis of the active site residues His-102, Lys-27, and Arg-87 to Ala increases the magnitude of Kd for phosphate by more than 20-fold. The 2D 1H NMR spectra of the mutants His-102----Ala, Lys-27----Ala, and Arg-87----Ala are assigned. Comparison with the spectra of wild-type barnase reveals that His-102----Ala and Lys-27----Ala have essentially the same structure as weild type, while some structural changes occur in Arg-87----Ala. It appears that phosphate binding by barnase is effected mainly by positively charge residues including His-102, Lys-27, and Arg-87. This may have applications for the design of phosphate binding sites in other proteins.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
Site-directed mutagenesis was used to create four mutant versions of Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamylase at three positions in the catalytic chain of the enzyme. The location of all the amino acid substitutions was near the carbamyl phosphate binding site as previously determined by X-ray crystallography. Arg-54, which interacts with both the anhydride oxygen and a phosphate oxygen of carbamyl phosphate, was replaced by alanine. This mutant enzyme was approximately 17,000-fold less active than the wild type, although the binding of substrates and substrate analogues was not altered substantially. Arg-105, which interacts with both the carbonyl oxygen and a phosphate oxygen of carbamyl phosphate, was replaced by alanine. This mutant enzyme exhibited an approximate 1000-fold loss of activity, while the activity of catalytic subunit isolated from this mutant enzyme was reduced by 170-fold compared to the wild-type catalytic subunit. The KD of carbamyl phosphate and the inhibition constants for acetyl phosphate and N-(phosphono-acetyl)-L-aspartate (PALA) were increased substantially by this amino acid substitution. Furthermore, this loss in substrate and substrate analogue binding can be correlated with the large increases in the aspartate and carbamyl phosphate concentrations at half of the maximum observed specific activity, [S]0.5. Gln-137, which interacts with the amino group of carbamyl phosphate, was replaced by both asparagine and alanine. The asparagine mutant exhibited only a small reduction in activity while the alanine mutant was approximately 50-fold less active than the wild type. The catalytic subunits of both these mutant enzymes were substantially more active than the corresponding holoenzymes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
W Xu  E R Kantrowitz 《Biochemistry》1989,28(26):9937-9943
Carbamoyl phosphate is held in the active site of Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamoylase by a variety of interactions with specific side chains of the enzyme. In particular, the carbonyl group of carbamoyl phosphate interacts with Thr-55, Arg-105, and His-134. Site-specific mutagenesis was used to create a mutant version of the enzyme in which Thr-55 was replaced by alanine in order to help define the role of this residue in the catalytic mechanism. The Thr-55----Ala holoenzyme exhibits a 4.7-fold reduction in maximal observed specific activity, no alteration in aspartate cooperativity, and a small reduction in carbamoyl phosphate cooperativity. The mutation also causes 14-fold and 35-fold increases in the carbamoyl phosphate and aspartate concentrations required for half the maximal observed specific activity, respectively. Circular dichroism spectroscopy has shown that saturating carbamoyl phosphate does not induce a conformational change in the Thr-55----Ala holoenzyme as it does for the wild-type holoenzyme. The kinetic properties of the Thr-55----Ala catalytic subunit are altered to a greater extent than the mutant holoenzyme. The mutant catalytic subunit cannot be saturated by either substrate under the experimental conditions. Furthermore, as opposed to the wild-type catalytic subunit, the Thr-55----Ala catalytic subunit shows cooperativity for aspartate and can be activated by N-(phosphonoacetyl)-L-aspartate in the presence of low concentrations of aspartate and high concentrations of carbamoyl phosphate. As deduced by circular dichroism spectroscopy, the conformation of the Thr-55----Ala catalytic subunit in the absence of active-site ligands is distinctly different from the wild-type catalytic subunit.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
Modeling of the tetrahedral intermediate within the active site of Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamoylase revealed a specific interaction with the side-chain of Gln137, an interaction not previously observed in the structure of the X-ray enzyme in the presence of N-phosphonacetyl-L-aspartate (PALA). Previous site-specific mutagenesis experiments showed that when Gln137 was replaced by alanine, the resulting mutant enzyme (Q137A) exhibited approximately 50-fold less activity than the wild-type enzyme, exhibited no homotropic cooperativity, and the binding of both carbamoyl phosphate and aspartate were extremely compromised. To elucidate the structural alterations in the mutant enzyme that might lead to such pronounced changes in kinetic and binding properties, the Q137A enzyme was studied by time-resolved, small-angle X-ray scattering and its structure was determined in the presence of PALA to 2.7 angstroms resolution. Time-resolved, small-angle X-ray scattering established that the natural substrates, carbamoyl phosphate and L-aspartate, do not induce in the Q137A enzyme the same conformational changes as observed for the wild-type enzyme, although the scattering pattern of the Q137A and wild-type enzymes in the presence of PALA were identical. The overall structure of the Q137A enzyme is similar to that of the R-state structure of wild-type enzyme with PALA bound. However, there are differences in the manner by which the Q137A enzyme coordinates PALA, especially in the side-chain positions of Arg105 and His134. The replacement of Gln137 by Ala also has a dramatic effect on the electrostatics of the active site. These data taken together suggest that the side-chain of Gln137 in the wild-type enzyme is required for the binding of carbamoyl phosphate in the proper orientation so as to induce conformational changes required for the creation of the high-affinity aspartate-binding site. The inability of carbamoyl phosphate to create the high-affinity binding site in the Q137A enzyme results in an enzyme locked in the low-activity low-affinity T state. These results emphasize the absolute requirement of the binding of carbamoyl phosphate for the creation of the high-affinity aspartate-binding site and for inducing the homotropic cooperativity in aspartate transcarbamoylase.  相似文献   

7.
Single crystals of recombinant Escherichia coli ornithine transcarbamoylase suitable for x-ray analysis have been grown from polyethylene glycol and 2-methyl-2,4-pentanediol. The space group has been determined as P3(1) or P3(2), with one protein trimer of three identical 36.8-kDa subunits in the asymmetric unit. The unit cell dimensions are a = b = 105.1 A and c = 87.8 A. The crystals diffract well to 3-A resolution and are quite resistant to radiation damage. Single crystals have also been grown of a genetically engineered site-specific mutant for which the replacement of an arginine (Arg-57) to a glycine has been shown to not only drastically affect the enzyme activity but also its kinetic mechanism (Kuo, L. C., Miller, A. W., Lee, S., and Kozuma, C. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 8823-8832). The crystals of the Arg-57----Gly mutant protein are isomorphous to those of the wild type. Crystal soaking experiments using both wild-type and Arg-57----Gly crystals in the presence of various ligands have provided evidence of specific conformational changes upon substrate binding which supports our previous kinetic and spectroscopic observations.  相似文献   

8.
W Xu  E R Kantrowitz 《Biochemistry》1991,30(9):2535-2542
Carbamoyl phosphate is held in the active site of Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamoylase by a variety of interactions with specific side chains of the enzyme. In particular, oxygens of the phosphate of carbamoyl phosphate interact with Ser-52, Thr-53 (backbone), Arg-54, Thr-55, and Arg-105 from one catalytic chain, as well as Ser-80 and Lys-84 from an adjacent chain in the same catalytic subunit. In order to define the role of Ser-52 and Ser-80 in the catalytic mechanism, two mutant versions of the enzyme were created with Ser-52 or Ser-80 replaced by alanine. The Ser-52----Ala holoenzyme exhibits a 670-fold reduction in maximal observed specific activity, and a loss of both aspartate and carbamoyl phosphate cooperativity. This mutation also causes 23-fold and 5.6-fold increases in the carbamoyl phosphate and aspartate concentrations required for half the maximal observed specific activity, respectively. Circular dichroism spectroscopy indicates that saturating carbamoyl phosphate does not induce the same conformational change in the Ser-52----Ala holoenzyme as it does for the wild-type holoenzyme. The kinetic properties of the Ser-52----Ala catalytic subunit are altered to a lesser extent than the mutant holoenzyme. The maximal observed specific activity is reduced by 89-fold, and the carbamoyl phosphate concentration at half the maximal observed velocity increases by 53-fold while the aspartate concentration at half the maximal observed velocity increases 6-fold.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
We have investigated the putative carbamylphosphate- and ornithine-binding domains in ornithine transcarbamylase from rat liver using site-directed mutagenesis. Arg60, present in the phosphate-binding motif X-Ser-X-Arg-X and therefore implicated in the binding of the phosphate moiety of carbamylphosphate has been replaced with a leucine. This results in a dramatic reduction of catalytic activity, although the enzyme is synthesized in cells stably transfected with the mutant clone and imported, correctly processed and assembled into a homotrimer in mitochondria. The sole cysteine residue (Cys271) has been implicated in ornithine binding by the chemical modification studies of Marshall and Cohen in 1972 and 1980 (J. Biol. Chem., 247, 1654-1668, 1669-1682; 255, 7291-7295, 7296-7300). Replacement of this residue with serine did not eliminate enzyme activity but affected the Michaelis constant for ornithine (Kb), increasing it 5-fold from 0.71 to 3.7 mM and reduced the kcat at pH 8.5 by 20-fold. These changes represent a loss in apparent binding energy for the enzyme--ornithine complex of 2.9 kcal/mol, suggesting that Cys271 is normally involved in hydrogen bonding to the substrate, ornithine. The cysteine to serine substitution also caused the dissociation constant (Kii) for the competitive inhibitor, L-norvaline to be increased 10-fold, from 12 to 120 microM. The small loss in binding energy and relatively high residual catalytic activity of the mutant strongly suggests that a number of other residues are involved in the binding of ornithine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Zn2+ regulation of ornithine transcarbamoylase. II. Metal binding site   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Two types of conformational changes are mediated in Escherichia coli ornithine transcarbamoylase by the metal ion zinc. Upon binding of zinc in rapid equilibrium, the enzyme undergoes an allosteric transition. In the absence of substrates, the zinc-bound enzyme further undergoes a slow isomerization with a concomitant activity loss. Three metal ions are tightly complexed in the isomerized enzyme as determined by gel chromatography and atomic absorption spectroscopy. Since the enzyme is a trimer composed of identical subunits, one zinc ion is bound per enzyme monomer. With the application of site-directed mutagenesis, the cysteinyl residue at position 273 of the enzyme has been identified as a metal ligand. When this residue is replaced by an alanine, zinc is no longer a tight-binding inhibitor and does not promote isomerization. The alteration in the action of zinc on the mutant enzyme is attributed to a reduced metal affinity. The mutant enzyme, when saturated by the metal, displays an intrinsic allostery unchanged from that of the wild-type; an identical Hill coefficient of 1.5 is found for zinc binding to the Ala273 and wild-type enzymes. Cys273 is also a binding site of L-ornithine. At pH 8.5, the Ala273 enzyme binds the substrate analog L-norvaline ten times more weakly and exhibits a kcat/Kmorn that is 27 times less than that of the wild-type enzyme. This finding supports our earlier interpretation that the zinc-induced ornithine co-operativity of ornithine transcarbamoylase is caused by direct competition between L-ornithine and the metal for the same site. As controls, each of the remaining three cysteinyl residues of the bacterial ornithine transcarbamoylase has also been replaced with alanine. These sulfhydryl groups are found not to be related to zinc complexation, ornithine binding or enzyme allostery.  相似文献   

11.
D J Weber  A K Meeker  A S Mildvan 《Biochemistry》1991,30(25):6103-6114
The mechanism of the phosphodiesterase reaction catalyzed by staphylococcal nuclease is believed to involve concerted general acid-base catalysis by Arg-87 and Glu-43. The mutual interactions of Arg-87 and Glu-43 were investigated by comparing kinetic and thermodynamic properties of the single mutant enzymes E43S (Glu-43 to Ser) and R87G (Arg-87 to Gly) with those of the double mutant, E43S + R87G, in which both the basic and acidic functions have been inactivated. Denaturation studies with guanidinium chloride, CD, and 600-MHz 1D and 2D proton NMR spectra, indicate all enzyme forms to be predominantly folded in absence of the denaturant and reveal small antagonistic effects of the E43S and R87G mutations on the stability and structure of the wild-type enzyme. The free energies of binding of the divalent cation activator Ca2+, the inhibitor Mn2+, and the substrate analogue 3',5'-pdTp show simple additive effects of the two mutations in the double mutant, indicating that Arg-87 and Glu-43 act independently to facilitate the binding of divalent cations and of 3',5'-pdTP by the wild-type enzyme. The free energies of binding of the substrate, 5'-pdTdA, both in binary E-S and in active ternary E-Ca(2+)-S complexes, show synergistic effects of the two mutations, suggesting that Arg-87 and Glu-43 interact anticooperatively in binding the substrate, possibly straining the substrate by 1.6 kcal/mol in the wild-type enzyme. The large free energy barriers to Vmax introduced by the R87G mutation (delta G1 = 6.5 kcal/mol) and by the E43S mutation (delta G2 = 5.0 kcal/mol) are partially additive in the double mutant (delta G1+2 = 8.1 kcal/mol). These partially additive effects on Vmax are most simply explained by a cooperative component to transition state binding by Arg-87 and Glu-43 of -3.4 kcal/mol. The combination of anticooperative, cooperative, and noncooperative effects of Arg-87 and Glu-43 together lower the kinetic barrier to catalysis by 8.1 kcal/mol.  相似文献   

12.
Ornithine carbamoyltransferase (OCT) from spinach (Spinacea oleracea L.) was purified to homogeneity and studied for some kinetic and structural properties. The enzyme showed a specific activity of 436 U mg–1, its molecular mass was approximately 118 kDa as estimated by Sephacryl S-200 gel filtration chromatography, the purified protein ran as a single band of 38 kDa in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacryamide gel electrophoresis. The enzyme catalyses an ordered bi-bi-sequential reaction in which carbamoyl phosphate binds first, followed by L-ornithine; L-citrulline leaves first, followed by phosphate. The Michaelis constant was 0.19 mM for L-ornithine and 13.1 µM for carbamoyl phosphate; the dissociation constant for the enzyme and carbamoyl phosphate complex was of 19 µM. The Km of the reaction decreases from pH 6.0 to pH 10.4. The enzyme is heat-labile, but it was protected from thermal inactivation by substrates; more by ornithine alone than by two substrates acting together.  相似文献   

13.
The mechanism of inhibition of ornithine transcarbamoylase by the bacterial toxin phaseolotoxin [N-delta-(phosphosulphamyl)ornithylalanylhomoarginine] was investigated. Ornithine transcarbamoylase was purified by affinity chromatography from Escherichia coli W argR- by using N-delta-(phosphonoacetyl)ornithine as the ligand. Under steady-state conditions phaseolotoxin inhibition was reversible and exhibited mixed kinetics with respect to carbamoyl phosphate. The apparent Ki and apparent K'i were 0.2 microM and 10 microM respectively. Inhibition with respect to ornithine was noncompetitive, with an apparent Ki of 0.9 microM. These data are consistent with competitive binding of phaseolotoxin to the carbamoyl phosphate-binding site of the enzyme. The toxin also appears to be able to bind to the enzyme-carbamoyl phosphate complex, although, since K'i is 50 times greater than Ki, this event is kinetically much less significant. In the presence of phaseolotoxin ornithine transcarbamoylase exhibited a transient phase of activity before a steady state. This is consistent with low rates of association and dissociation for the toxin with enzyme and the enzyme-toxin complex. Rate constants of 2.5 X 10(4)M-1 X s-1 and 5 X 10(-3)s-1 were estimated for the association and dissociation constants respectively.  相似文献   

14.
The replacement of Arg-54 by Ala in the active site of Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamoylase causes a 17,000-fold loss of activity but does not significantly influence the binding of substrates or substrate analogs (Stebbins, J.W., Xu, W., & Kantrowitz, E.R., 1989, Biochemistry 28, 2592-2600). In the X-ray structure of the wild-type enzyme, Arg-54 interacts with both the anhydride oxygen and a phosphate oxygen of carbamoyl phosphate (CP) (Gouaux, J.E. & Lipscomb, W.N., 1988, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 85, 4205-4208). The Arg-54-->Ala enzyme was crystallized in the presence of the transition state analog N-phosphonacetyl-L-aspartate (PALA), data were collected to a resolution limit of 2.8 A, and the structure was solved by molecular replacement. The analysis of the refined structure (R factor = 0.18) indicates that the substitution did not cause any significant alterations to the active site, except that the side chain of the arginine was replaced by two water molecules. 31P-NMR studies indicate that the binding of CP to the wild-type catalytic subunit produces an upfield chemical shift that cannot reflect a significant change in the ionization state of the CP but rather indicates that there are perturbations in the electronic environment around the phosphate moiety when CP binds to the enzyme. The pH dependence of this upfield shift for bound CP indicates that the catalytic subunit undergoes a conformational change with a pKa approximately 7.7 upon CP binding. Furthermore, the linewidth of the 31P signal of CP bound to the Arg-54-->Ala enzyme is significantly narrower than that of CP bound to the wild-type catalytic subunit at any pH, although the change in chemical shift for the CP bound to the mutant enzyme is unaltered. 31P-NMR studies of PALA complexed to the wild-type catalytic subunit indicate that the phosphonate group of the bound PALA exists as the dianion at pH 7.0 and 8.8, whereas in the Arg-54-->Ala catalytic subunit the phosphonate group of the bound PALA exists as the monoanion at pH 7.0 and 8.8. Thus, the side chain of Arg-54 is essential for the proper ionization of the phosphonate group of PALA and by analogy the phosphate group in the transition state. These data support the previously proposed proton transfer mechanism, in which a fully ionized phosphate group in the transition state accepts a proton during catalysis.  相似文献   

15.
The crystal structure of human ornithine transcarbamylase (OTCase) complexed with carbamoyl phosphate (CP) and L-norvaline (NOR) has been determined to 1.9-A resolution. There are significant differences in the interactions of CP with the protein, compared with the interactions of the CP moiety of the bisubstrate analogue N-(phosphonoacetyl)-L-ornithine (PALO). The carbonyl plane of CP rotates about 60 degrees compared with the equivalent plane in PALO complexed with OTCase. This positions the side chain of NOR optimally to interact with the carbonyl carbon of CP. The mixed-anhydride oxygen of CP, which is analogous to the methylene group in PALO, interacts with the guanidinium group of Arg-92; the primary carbamoyl nitrogen interacts with the main-chain carbonyl oxygens of Cys-303 and Leu-304, the side chain carbonyl oxygen of Gln-171, and the side chain of Arg-330. The residues that interact with NOR are similar to the residues that interact with the ornithine (ORN) moiety of PALO. The side chain of NOR is well defined and close to the side chain of Cys-303 with the side chains of Leu-163, Leu-200, Met-268, and Pro-305 forming a hydrophobic wall. C-delta of NOR is close to the carbonyl oxygen of Leu-304 (3.56 A), S-gamma atom of Cys-303 (4.19 A), and carbonyl carbon of CP (3.28 A). Even though the N-epsilon atom of ornithine is absent in this structure, the side chain of NOR is positioned to enable the N-epsilon of ornithine to donate a hydrogen to the S-gamma atom of Cys-303 along the reaction pathway. Binding of CP and NOR promotes domain closure to the same degree as PALO, and the active site structure of CP-NOR-enzyme complex is similar to that of the PALO-enzyme complex. The structures of the active sites in the complexes of aspartate transcarbamylase (ATCase) with various substrates or inhibitors are similar to this OTCase structure, consistent with their common evolutionary origin.  相似文献   

16.
Binding of carbamoyl phosphate to Escherichia coli ornithine transcarbamoylase and its relation to turnover have been examined as a function of pH under steady-state conditions. The pH profile of the dissociation constant of carbamoyl phosphate (Kiacp) shows that the affinity of the substrate increases as pH decreases. Two ionizing groups are involved in carbamoyl phosphate binding. Protonation of an enzymic group with pKa 9.6 results in productive binding of the substrate with a moderate affinity of Kiacp approximately 30 microM. Protonation of a second group further enhances binding by roughly another order of magnitude. This ionization occurs with a pKa that shifts from less than 6 in the free enzyme to 7.3 in the binary complex. However, tighter binding of carbamoyl phosphate due to this ionization does not contribute to catalysis. The turnover rate (kcat) of the enzyme diminishes in the acidic pH range and is governed by an ionization with a pKa of 7.2. Both the catalytic pKa of 7.2 and the productive binding pKa of 9.6 appear in the pH profile of kcat/KMcp. Together with earlier kinetic results (Kuo, L. C., Herzberg, W., and Lipscomb, W. N. (1985) Biochemistry 24, 4754-4761), these data suggest that the step which modulates kcat may occur prior to the binding of the second substrate L-ornithine.  相似文献   

17.
A detailed kinetic analysis of the catalytic trimer of aspartate transcarbamoylase containing the active site substitution H134A was performed to investigate the role of His 134 in the catalytic mechanism. Replacement of histidine by alanine resulted in decreases in the affinities for the two substrates, carbamoyl phosphate and aspartate, and the inhibitor succinate, by factors of 50, 10, and 6, respectively, and yielded a maximum velocity that was 5% that of the wild-type enzyme. However, the pK values determined from the pH dependence of the kinetic parameters, log V and log (V/K) for aspartate, the pK(i) for succinate, and the pK(ia) for carbamoyl phosphate, were similar for both the mutant and the wild-type enzymes, indicating that the protonated form of His 134 does not participate in binding and catalysis between pH 6.2 and 9.2. 13C and 15N isotope effects were studied to determine which steps in the catalytic mechanism were altered by the amino acid substitutions. The 13(V/K) for carbamoyl phosphate exhibited by the catalytic trimer containing alanine at position 134 revealed an isotope effect of 4.1%, probably equal to the intrinsic value and, together with quantitative analysis of the 15N isotope effects, showed that formation of the tetrahedral intermediate is rate-determining for the mutant enzyme. Thus, His 134 plays a role in the chemistry of the reaction in addition to substrate binding. The initial velocity pattern for the reaction catalyzed by the H134A mutant intersected to the left of the vertical axis, negating an equilibrium ordered kinetic mechanism.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
The function of arginine residue 166 in the active site of Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase was investigated by site-directed mutagenesis. Two mutant versions of alkaline phosphatase, with either serine or alanine in the place of arginine at position 166, were generated by using a specially constructed M13 phage carrying the wild-type phoA gene. The mutant enzymes with serine and alanine at position 166 have very similar kinetic properties. Under conditions of no external phosphate acceptor, the kcat for the mutant enzymes decreases by approximately 30-fold while the Km increases by less than 2-fold. When kinetic measurements are carried out in the presence of a phosphate acceptor, 1.0 M Tris, the kcat for the mutant enzymes is reduced by less than 3-fold, while the Km increases by more than 50-fold. For both mutant enzymes, in either the absence or the presence of a phosphate acceptor, the catalytic efficiency as measured by the kcat/Km ratio decreases by approximately 50-fold as compared to the wild type. Measurements of the Ki for inorganic phosphate show an increase of approximately 50-fold for both mutants. Phenylglyoxal, which inactivates the wild-type enzyme, does not inactivate the Arg-166----Ala enzyme. This result indicates that Arg-166 is the same arginine residue that when chemically modified causes loss of activity [Daemen, F.J.M., & Riordan, J.F. (1974) Biochemistry 13, 2865-2871]. The data reported here suggest that although Arg-166 is important for activity is not essential. The analysis of the kinetic data also suggests that the loss of arginine-166 at the active site of alkaline phosphatase has two different effects on the enzyme. First, the binding of the substrate, and phosphate as a competitive inhibitor, is reduced; second, the rate of hydrolysis of the covalent phosphoenzyme may be diminished.  相似文献   

20.
Sohn J  Rudolph J 《Biophysical chemistry》2007,125(2-3):549-555
Using a combination of steady-state and single-turnover kinetics, we probe the temperature dependence of substrate association and chemistry for the reaction of Cdc25B phosphatase with its Cdk2-pTpY/CycA protein substrate. The transition state for substrate association is dominated by an enthalpic barrier (DeltaH(++) of 13 kcal/mol) and has a favorable entropic contribution of 4 kcal/mol at 298 K. Phosphate transfer from Cdk2-pTpY/CycA to enzyme (DeltaH(++) of 12 kcal/mol) is enthalpically more favorable than for the small molecule substrate p-nitrophenyl phosphate (DeltaH(++) of 18 kcal/mol), yet entropically less favorable (TDeltaS(++) of 2 vs. -6 kcal/mol at 298 K, respectively). By measuring the temperature dependence of binding and catalysis for several hotspot mutants involved in binding of protein substrate, we determine the enthalpy-entropy compensations for changes in rates of association and phosphate transfer compared to the wild type system. We conclude that the transition state for enzyme-substrate association involves tight and specific contacts at the remote docking site and that phospho-transfer from Cdk2-pTpY/CycA to the pre-organized active site of the enzyme is accompanied by unfavorable entropic rearrangements that promote rapid product dissociation.  相似文献   

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