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1.
Residue Asp-189 plays an important dual role in thrombin: it defines the primary specificity for Arg side chains and participates indirectly in the coordination of Na(+). The former role is shared by other proteases with trypsin-like specificity, whereas the latter is unique to Na(+)-activated proteases in blood coagulation and the complement system. Replacement of Asp-189 with Ala, Asn, Glu, and Ser drastically reduces the specificity toward substrates carrying Arg or Lys at P1, whereas it has little or no effect toward the hydrolysis of substrates carrying Phe at P1. These findings confirm the important role of Asp-189 in substrate recognition by trypsin-like proteases. The substitutions also affect significantly and unexpectedly the monovalent cation specificity of the enzyme. The Ala and Asn mutations abrogate monovalent cation binding, whereas the Ser and Glu mutations change the monovalent cation preference from Na(+) to the smaller cation Li(+) or to the larger cation Rb(+), respectively. The observation that a single amino acid substitution can alter the monovalent cation specificity of thrombin from Na(+) (Asp-189) to Li(+) (Ser-189) or Rb(+) (Glu-189) is unprecedented in the realm of monovalent cation-activated enzymes.  相似文献   

2.
The protease domain of tissue plasminogen activator (tPA), a key fibrinolytic enzyme, was expressed in Escherichia coli with a yield of 1 mg per liter of media. The recombinant protein was titrated with the Erythrina caraffa trypsin inhibitor (ETI) and characterized in its interaction with plasminogen and the natural inhibitor plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1). Analysis of the catalytic properties of tPA using a library of chromogenic substrates carrying substitutions at P1, P2, and P3 reveals a strong preference for Arg over Lys at P1, unmatched by other serine proteases like thrombin or trypsin. In contrast to these proteases and plasmin, tPA shows little or no preference for Pro over Gly at P2. A specific inhibition of tPA by Cu2+ was discovered. The divalent cation presumably binds to H188 near D189 in the primary specificity pocket and inhibits substrate binding in a competitive manner with a Kd = 19 microM. In an attempt to engineer Na+ binding and enhanced catalytic activity in tPA, P225 was replaced with Tyr, the residue present in Na+-dependent allosteric serine proteases. The P225Y mutation did not result in cation binding, but caused a significant loss of specificity (up to 100-fold) toward chromogenic substrates and plasminogen and considerably reduced the inhibition by PAI-1 and ETI. Interestingly, the P225Y substitution enhanced the ability of Cu2+ to inhibit the enzyme. Elimination of the C136-C201 disulfide bond, that is absent in all Na+-dependent allosteric serine proteases, significantly enhanced the yield (5 mg per liter of media) of expression in E. coli, but caused no changes in the properties of the enzyme whether residue 225 was Pro or Tyr. These findings point out an unanticipated crucial role for residue 225 in controlling the catalytic activity of tPA, and suggest that engineering of a Na+-dependent allosteric enhancement of catalytic activity in this enzyme, must involve substantial changes in the region homologous to the Na+ binding site of allosteric serine proteases.  相似文献   

3.
Rezaie AR  He X 《Biochemistry》2000,39(7):1817-1825
The nature of residue 225 on a consensus loop in serine proteases determines whether a protease can bind Na(+). Serine proteases with a Pro at this position are unable to bind Na(+), but those with a Tyr or Phe can bind Na(+). Factor Xa (FXa), the serine protease of the prothrombinase complex, contains a Tyr at this position. Na(+) is also known to stimulate the amidolytic activity of FXa toward cleavage of small synthetic substrates, but the role of Na(+) in the prothrombinase complex has not been investigated. In this study, we engineered a Gla-domainless form of FX (GDFX) in which residue Tyr(225) was replaced with a Pro. We found that Na(+) stimulated the cleavage rate of chromogenic substrates by FXa or GDFXa approximately 8-24-fold with apparent dissociation constants [K(d(app))] of 37 and 182 mM in the presence and absence of Ca(2+), respectively. In contrast, Na(+) minimally affected the cleavage rate of these substrates by the mutant, and no K(d(app)) for Na(+) binding to the mutant could be estimated. Unlike the wild-type enzyme, the reactivity of the mutant with antithrombin was independent of Na(+) and impaired approximately 32-fold. Ca(2+) improved the reactivity of the mutant with antithrombin approximately 5-fold. Affinity of the mutant for binding to factor Va was weakened and its ability to activate prothrombin was severely impaired. Further studies with the wild-type prothrombinase complex revealed that FXa binds to factor Va with a similar K(d(app)) of 1. 1-1.8 nM in the presence of Na(+), K(+), Li(+), Ch(+), and Tris(+) and that the catalytic efficiency of prothrombinase is enhanced less than 1.5-fold by the specific effect of Na(+) in the reaction buffer. These results suggest that (1) the loop including residue 225 (225-loop) is a Na(+) binding site in FXa, (2) the Na(+)- and Ca(2+)-binding loops of FXa are allosterically linked, and (3) the Tyr conformer of the 225-loop is critical for factor Xa function; however, both Na(+)-bound and Na(+)-free forms of factor Xa in the prothrombinase complex can efficiently activate prothrombin.  相似文献   

4.
Two loop segments (183-189 and 221-225) in the protease domain of factor Xa contribute to the formation of a Na(+)-binding site. Studies with factor Xa indicate that binding of a single Na(+) ion to this site influences its activity by altering the S1 specificity site, and substitution of Tyr(225) with Pro diminishes sensitivity to Na(+). Using full-length factor Xa(Y225P), the allosteric relationship between the Na(+) site and other structural determinants in factor Xa and prothrombinase was investigated. Direct binding and kinetic measurements with probes that target the S1 specificity pocket indicate that assembly of the mutant in prothrombinase corrected the impaired binding of these probes observed with free factor Xa(Y225P). This appears to result from the apparent allosteric linkage between the factor Va, S1, and Na(+)-binding sites, since binding of the cofactor to membrane-bound factor Xa(Y225P) enhances binding at the S1 site and vice versa. Additional studies revealed that the internal salt bridge (Ile(16)-Asp(194)) of factor Xa(Y225P) is partially destabilized, a process that is reversible upon occupation of the S1 site. The data establish that alterations at the factor Xa Na(+)-binding site shift the zymogen-protease equilibrium to a more zymogen-like state, and as a consequence binding of S1-directed probes and factor Va are adversely affected. Therefore, the zymogen-like characteristics of factor Xa(Y225P) have allowed for the apparent allosteric linkage between the S1, factor Va, and Na(+) sites to become evident and has provided insight into the structural transitions which accompany the conversion of factor X to factor Xa.  相似文献   

5.
Na(+) binding near the primary specificity pocket of thrombin promotes the procoagulant, prothrombotic, and signaling functions of the enzyme. The effect is mediated allosterically by a communication between the Na(+) site and regions involved in substrate recognition. Using a panel of 78 Ala mutants of thrombin, we have mapped the allosteric core of residues that are energetically linked to Na(+) binding. These residues are Asp-189, Glu-217, Asp-222, and Tyr-225, all in close proximity to the bound Na(+). Among these residues, Asp-189 shares with Asp-221 the important function of transducing Na(+) binding into enhanced catalytic activity. None of the residues of exosite I, exosite II, or the 60-loop plays a significant role in Na(+) binding and allosteric transduction. X-ray crystal structures of the Na(+)-free (slow) and Na(+)-bound (fast) forms of thrombin, free or bound to the active site inhibitor H-d-Phe-Pro-Arg-chloromethyl-ketone, document the conformational changes induced by Na(+) binding. The slow --> fast transition results in formation of the Arg-187:Asp-222 ion pair, optimal orientation of Asp-189 and Ser-195 for substrate binding, and a significant shift of the side chain of Glu-192 linked to a rearrangement of the network of water molecules that connect the bound Na(+) to Ser-195 in the active site. The changes in the water network and the allosteric core explain the thermodynamic signatures linked to Na(+) binding and the mechanism of thrombin activation by Na(+). The role of the water network uncovered in this study establishes a new paradigm for the allosteric regulation of thrombin and other Na(+)-activated enzymes involved in blood coagulation and the immune response.  相似文献   

6.
Enzymes activated by monovalent cations are abundantly represented in plants and in the animal world. The mechanism, of activation involves formation of a ternary intermediate with the enzyme-substrate complex, or binding of the cation to an allosteric site in the protein. Thrombin is a Na+-activated enzyme with procoagulant, anticoagulant and signaling roles. The binding of Na+ influences allosterically thrombin function and offers a paradigm for regulatory control of protease activity and specificity. Here we review the molecular basis of thrombin allostery as recently emerged from mutagenesis and structural studies. The role of Na+ in blood coagulation and the evolution of serine proteases are also discussed.  相似文献   

7.
A simple method is presented for the determination of individual rate constants for substrate hydrolysis by serine proteases and other enzymes with similar catalytic mechanism. The method does not require solvent perturbation like viscosity changes, or solvent isotope effects, that often compromise nonspecifically the activity of substrate and enzyme. The rates of substrate diffusion into the active site (k1), substrate dissociation (k-1), acylation (k2), and deacylation (k3) in the accepted mechanism of substrate hydrolysis by serine proteases are derived from the temperature dependence of the Michaelis-Menten parameters kcat/Km and kcat. The method also yields the activation energies for these molecular events. Application to wild-type and mutant thrombins reveals how the various steps of the catalytic mechanism are affected by Na+-binding and site-directed mutations of the important residues Y225 in the Na+ binding environment and L99 in the S2 specificity site. Extension of this method to other proteases should enable the derivation of detailed information on the kinetic and energetic determinants of protease function.  相似文献   

8.
1. The mechanism of the inhibition of Na(+)-plus-K(+)-activated adenosine triphosphatase by calcium was investigated with an enzyme preparation from rabbit kidney cortex and with membranes of human erythrocytes. 2. CaATP, rather than ionic Ca(2+), acts as a competitive inhibitor, competing with MgATP in the Na(+)-plus-K(+)-activated adenosine-triphosphatase reaction. 3. There appears to be no competition between calcium and Na(+) for the activation of adenosine triphosphatase. 4. The inhibition of Na(+)-plus-K(+)-activated adenosine triphosphatase of cell membranes by low concentrations of CaATP and the consequent need of intact cells to keep the cytoplasmic concentration of calcium low relative to that of magnesium suggests a raison d'être for the mitochondrial calcium pump.  相似文献   

9.
During blood coagulation, factor IXa (FIXa) activates factor X (FX) requiring Ca2+, phospholipid, and factor VIIIa (FVIIIa). The serine protease domain of FIXa contains a Ca2+ site and is predicted to contain a Na+ site. Comparative homology analysis revealed that Na+ in FIXa coordinates to the carbonyl groups of residues 184A, 185, 221A, and 224 (chymotrypsin numbering). Kinetic data obtained at several concentrations of Na+ and Ca2+ with increasing concentrations of a synthetic substrate (CH3-SO2-d-Leu-Gly-Arg-p-nitroanilide) were fit globally, assuming rapid equilibrium conditions. Occupancy by Na+ increased the affinity of FIXa for the synthetic substrate, whereas occupancy by Ca2+ decreased this affinity but increased k(cat) dramatically. Thus, Na+-FIXa-Ca2+ is catalytically more active than free FIXa. FIXa(Y225P), a Na+ site mutant, was severely impaired in Na+ potentiation of its catalytic activity and in binding to p-aminobenzamidine (S1 site probe) validating that substrate binding in FIXa is linked positively to Na+ binding. Moreover, the rate of carbamylation of NH2 of Val16, which forms a salt-bridge with Asp194 in serine proteases, was faster for FIXa(Y225P) and addition of Ca2+ overcame this impairment only partially. Further studies were aimed at delineating the role of the FIXa Na+ site in macromolecular catalysis. In the presence of Ca2+ and phospholipid, with or without saturating FVIIIa, FIXa(Y225P) activated FX with similar K(m) but threefold reduced k(cat). Further, interaction of FVIIIa:FIXa(Y225P) was impaired fourfold. Our previous data revealed that Ca2+ binding to the protease domain increases the affinity of FIXa for FVIIIa approximately 15-fold. The present data indicate that occupancy of the Na+ site further increases the affinity of FIXa for FVIIIa fourfold and k(cat) threefold. Thus, in the presence of Ca2+, phospholipid, and FVIIIa, binding of Na+ to FIXa increases its biologic activity by approximately 12-fold, implicating its role in physiologic coagulation.  相似文献   

10.
The membrane-bound beta-subunit of oxaloacetate decarboxylase from Klebsiella pneumoniae catalyzes the decarboxylation of carboxybiotin, which is coupled to Na(+) translocation and consumes a periplasmically derived proton. Upon site-directed mutagenesis of 20 polar and/or conserved residues within putative membrane-integral regions, the specific oxaloacetate decarboxylase activities were reduced to various extents, but only the enzyme with a Y229F mutation was completely inactive. We propose that Y229 is part of the network by which the proton of S382 is delivered to carboxybiotin, where it is consumed upon catalyzing the immediate decarboxylation of this acid-labile compound. Unlike S382 or D203, Y229 appears to be not involved in Na(+) binding, because in the Y229F orY229A mutants, the beta-subunit was protected from tryptic digestion by 50 mM NaCl like in the wild-type enzyme. Oxaloacetate decarboxylase with a betaC291E mutation was unstable in the absence of Na(+) and dissociated into an alpha-gamma subcomplex and the beta-subunit. The enzyme could only be isolated in the presence of 0. 5 M NaCl. These results are consistent with the notion that the beta-subunit changes its conformation upon Na(+) binding.  相似文献   

11.
Membrane-bound pyrophosphatase of the hyperthermophilic bacterium Thermotoga maritima(Tm-PPase), a homologue of H(+)-translocating pyrophosphatase, was expressed in Escherichia coli and isolated as inner membrane vesicles. In contrast to all previously studied H(+)-PPases, both native and recombinant Tm-PPases exhibited an absolute requirement for Na(+) but displayed the highest activity in the presence of millimolar levels of both Na(+) and K(+). Detergent-solubilized recombinant Tm-PPase was thermostable and retained the monovalent cation requirements of the membrane-embedded enzyme. Steady-state kinetic analysis of pyrophosphate hydrolysis by the wild-type enzyme suggested that two Na(+) binding sites and one K(+) binding site are involved in enzyme activation. The affinity of the site that binds Na(+) first is increased with increasing K(+) concentration. In contrast, only one Na(+) binding site (K(+)-dependent) and one K(+) binding site were involved in activation of the Asp(703) --> Asn variant. Thus, Asp(703) may form part of the K(+)-independent Na(+) binding site. Unlike all other membrane and soluble PPases, Tm-PPase did not catalyze oxygen exchange between phosphate and water. However, solubilized Tm-PPase exhibited low but measurable PP(i)-synthesizing activity, which also required Na(+) but was inhibited by K(+). These results demonstrate that T. maritima PPase belongs to a previously unknown subfamily of Na(+)-dependent H(+)-PPase homologues and may be an analogue of Na(+),K(+)-ATPase.  相似文献   

12.
The kinetic properties of the rat liver microsomal ATPase, with respect to Na(+), K(+) and AT P requirements were examined. Presence of Na(+) and K(+), or both hardly caused any stimulation of the enzyme activity. The Km values for Na(+) and K(+) were substantially low (0.32 and 0.05 mM, respectively), compared to those reported for the Na(+), K(+) ATPasesfrom different tissues. Substrate kinetics studies revealed that in the absence of Na(+) and K(+), ATP is an activator of the enzyme. The enzyme displayed increased activity with increase in the energy of activation in the absence of Na(+) and K(+). The activity was partially inhibited by ouabain only in the presence of Na(+) and K(+). The results suggest that the liver microsomal enzyme is not a Na(+), K(+) ATPase, but has requirement of monovalent cations for the regulation of its activity. Also, the beta3 subunit of the enzyme has a Km lowering effect.  相似文献   

13.
Using the patch-clamp method, we studied the influence of external alkali and organic monovalent cations on the single-channel properties of the adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-activated recombinant human P2X(7) receptor. The slope conductance of the hP2X(7) channel decreased and the reversal potential was shifted to more negative values as the ionic diameter of the organic test cations increased. From the relationship between single-channel conductance and the dimensions of the inward current carrier, the narrowest portion of the pore was estimated to have a mean diameter of approximately 8.5 A. Single-channel kinetics and permeation properties remained unchanged during receptor activation by up to 1 mM ATP(4-) for >1 min, arguing against a molecular correlate of pore dilation at the single P2X(7) channel level. Substitution of extracellular Na(+) by any other alkali or organic cation drastically increased the open probability of the channels by prolonging the mean open time. This effect seems to be mediated allosterically through an extracellular voltage-dependent Na(+) binding site with a K(d) of approximately 5 mM Na(+) at a membrane potential of -120 mV. The modulation of the ATP-induced hP2X(7) receptor gating by extracellular Na(+) could be well described by altering the rate constant from the open to the neighboring closed state in a C-C-C-O kinetic receptor model. We suggest that P2X(7) receptor-induced depolarization and associated K(+)-efflux may reduce Na(+) occupancy of the regulatory Na(+) binding site and thus increase the efficacy of ATP(4-) in a feed-forward manner in P2X(7) receptor-expressing cells.  相似文献   

14.
Thrombovascular diseases result from imbalanced haemostasis and comprise important health problems in the aging population worldwide. The activity of enzymes pertaining to the coagulation cascade of mammalians exhibit several control mechanisms in order to maintain a proper balance between bleeding and thrombosis. For instance, human coagulation serine proteases carrying a F225 or Y225 are allosteric modulated by the binding of Na+ in a water-filled channel connected to the primary specificity pocket (S1 subsite) of these enzymes. We have characterized the structure, topography and lipophilicity of this channel in the ligand-free fast (sodium-bound) and slow (sodium-free) forms of thrombin, in the sole available structure of activated protein C and in several structures of the coagulation factors VIIa, IXa and Xa, differing in the nature of the bound inhibitor and in the occupancy of exosite-I as well as the Ca2+ and Na+ binding sites. Opposite to thrombin, the aqueous channels in all other coagulation enzymes sheltering a Na+ binding site do not have an aperture on the enzyme surface opposite to the S1 subsite entrance. In these enzymes, the lack of the three-residue insertion in loop 1 (183-189) as found in thrombin allied to compensatory mutations in the positions 187-185 and 222 effects a constriction in the water-filled channel that ends up by segregating the ion binding site from the S1 subsite. We also disclosed major topographical changes on the thrombin's surface upon sodium release and transition to the slow form that culminate in the narrowing of the S1 subsite entrance and, strikingly, in the loss of communication between the primary specificity pocket and the exosite-I. Such observation is in accordance with existing experimental data demonstrating thermodynamic linkage between these distant regions on the thrombin surface. Conformational changes in F34, L40, R73 and T74 were the main responsible for this effect. A path by which these changes in the vicinity of exosite-I could be transmitted to the S1 subsite and, consequently, to the sodium binding site is proposed.  相似文献   

15.
Tetrammine cobalt(III) phosphate [Co(NH3)4PO4] inactivates Na+/K(+)-ATPase in the E2 conformational state, dependent on time and concentration, according to Eqn (1): Co(NH3)4PO4 + E2 Kd in equilibrium E2.Co(NH3)4PO4k2----E'2.Co(NH3)4PO4. The inactivation rate constant k2 for the formation of a stable E'2.Co(NH3)4PO4 at 37 degrees C was 0.057 min-1; the dissociation constant, Kd = 300 microM. The activation energy for the inactivation process was 149 kJ/mol. ATP and the uncleavable adenosine 5'-[beta, gamma-methylene]triphosphate competed with Co(NH3)4PO4 for its binding site with Ks = 0.41 mM and 5 mM, respectively. MgPO4 competed with Co(NH3)4PO4 linearly, with Ks = 50 microM, as did phosphate (Ks = 16 mM) and Mg2+ (Ks = 160 microM). It is concluded that the MgPO4 analogue binds to the MgPO4-binding subsite of the low-affinity ATP-binding site (of the E2 conformation). Also, Na+ (Ks = 860 microM) protected the enzyme against inactivation in a competitive manner. From the intersecting (slope and intercept linear) noncompetitive effect of Na+ against the inactivation by Co(NH3)4PO4, apparent affinities of K+ for the free enzyme of 41 microM, and for the E.Co(NH3)4PO4 complex of 720 microM, were calculated. Binding of Co(NH3)4PO4 to the enzyme inactivated Na+/K(+)-ATPase and K(+)-activated phosphatase, and, moreover, prevented the occlusion of 86Rb+; however, the activity of the Na(+)-ATPase, the phosphorylation capacity of the high-affinity ATP-binding site and the ATP/ADP-exchange reaction remained unchanged. With Co(NH3)432PO4 a binding capacity of 135 pmol unit enzyme was found. Phosphorylation and complete inactivation of the enzyme with Co(NH3)432PO4 or the 32P-labelled tetramminecobalt ATP ([gamma-32P]Co(NH3)4ATP) at the low-affinity ATP-binding site, allowed (independent of the purity of the Na+/K(+)-ATPase preparation) a further incorporation of radioactivity from 32P-labelled tetraaquachromium(III) ATP ([gamma-32P]CrATP) to the high-affinity ATP-binding site with unchanged phosphorylation capacity. However, inactivation and phosphorylation of Na+/K(+)-ATPase by [gamma-32P]CrATP prevented the binding of Co(NH3)4 32PO4 or [gamma-32P]Co(NH3)4ATP to the enzyme. [gamma-32P]CO(NH3)4ATP and Co(NH3)432PO4 are mutually exclusive. The data are consistent with the assumption of a cooperation of catalytic subunits within an (alpha,beta)2-diprotomer, which change their interactions during the Na+/K(+)-pumping process. Our findings seem not to support a symmetrical Repke and Stein model of enzyme action.  相似文献   

16.
Age-related changes in ouabain binding to synaptic plasma membranes isolated from cerebral cortices of C57BL/6 mice were investigated to examine whether the density of Na+, K(+)-ATPase decreases with advancing age. Specific binding of [3H]ouabain did not change until around 20 months of age, but a 22% decrease in binding was found in the late senescent stage (29 months). Scatchard analysis of the binding revealed that the maximum number of binding sites (Bmax) was lower in aged mice, while the binding affinity (Kd) for ouabain receptor remained unchanged with aging. These results indicate that the density of Na+,K(+)-ATPase enzyme sites in the plasma membranes of brain synapses decreases in aged mice. Since the activity of Na+,K(+)-ATPase has been found to start declining at a much earlier stage [Tanaka, Y. & Ando, S. (1990) Brain Res. 506, 46-52; Ando, S. & Tanaka, Y. (1990) Gerontology 36, 10-14] than that at which the decrease of Bmax is manifested, at least two mechanisms may underlie the age-related decrease of the enzyme activity. We speculate that the lipid microenvironment which regulates the enzyme activity starts to change at the early stage of senescence, followed by the decrease in the enzyme content in the later stage, that is, both changes cooperatively diminish the Na+,K(+)-ATPase activity in senescence.  相似文献   

17.
Na(+)/K(+)-ATPase (NKA) exports 3Na(+) and imports 2K(+) at the expense of the hydrolysis of 1ATP under physiological conditions. In the absence of K(+), it can mediate electroneutral Na(+)/Na(+) exchange. In the electroneutral Na(+)/Na(+) exchange mode, NKA produces a transient current containing fast, medium and slow components in response to a sudden voltage step. These three components of the transient current demonstrate the sequential release of Na(+) ions from three binding sites. Our data from oocytes provide further experimental support for the existence of these components. Oligomycin is an NKA inhibitor that favors the 2Na(+)-occluded state without affecting the conformational state of the NKA. We studied the effects of oligomycin on both K(+)-activated currents and transient currents in wild-type Bufo NKA and a mutant form of Bufo NKA, NKA: G813A. Oligomycin blocked almost all of the K(+)-activated current, although the three components of the transient current showed different sensitivities to oligomycin. The oligomycin-inhibited charge movement measured using a P/4 protocol had a rate coefficient similar to the medium transient component. The fast component of the transient current elicited by a short voltage step also showed sensitivity to oligomycin. However, the slow component was not totally inhibited by oligomycin. Our results indicate that the second and third sodium ions might be released to the extracellular medium by a mechanism that is not shared by the first sodium ion.  相似文献   

18.
(1) Ethylenediamine is an inhibitor of Na+- and K+-activated processes of Na+/K+-ATPase, i.e. the overall Na+/K+-ATPase activity, Na+-activated ATPase and K+-activated phosphatase activity, the Na+-activated phosphorylation and the Na+-free (amino-buffer associated) phosphorylation. (2) The I50 values (I50 is the concentration of inhibitor that half-maximally inhibits) increase with the concentration of the activating cations and the half-maximally activating cation concentrations (Km values) increase with the inhibitor concentration. (3) Ethylenediamine is competitive with Na+ in Na+-activated phosphorylation and with the amino-buffer (triallylamine) in Na+-free phosphorylation. Significant, though probably indirect, effects can also be noted on the affinity for Mg2+ and ATP, but these cannot account for the inhibition. (4) Inhibition parallels the dual protonated or positively charged ethylenediamine concentration (charge distance 3.7 A). (5) Direct investigation of interaction with activating cations (Na+, K+, Mg+, triallylamine) has been made via binding studies. All these cations drive ethylenediamine from the enzyme, but K+ and Mg+ with the highest efficiency and specificity. Ethylenediamine binding is ouabain-insensitive, however. (6) Ethylenediamine neither inhibits the transition to the phosphorylation enzyme conformation, nor does it affect the rate of dephosphorylation. Hence, we provisionally conclude that ethylenediamine inhibits the phosphoryl transfer between the ATP binding and phosphorylation site through occupation of cation activation sites, which are 3-4 A apart.  相似文献   

19.
We have explored CD44 (a hyaluronan (HA) receptor) interaction with a Na(+)-H(+) exchanger (NHE1) and hyaluronidase-2 (Hyal-2) during HA-induced cellular signaling in human breast tumor cells (MDA-MB-231 cell line). Immunological analyses demonstrate that CD44s (standard form) and two signaling molecules (NHE1 and Hyal-2) are closely associated in a complex in MDA-MB-231 cells. These three proteins are also significantly enriched in cholesterol and ganglioside-containing lipid rafts, characterized as caveolin and flotillin-rich plasma membrane microdomains. The binding of HA to CD44 activates Na(+)-H(+) exchange activity which, in turn, promotes intracellular acidification and creates an acidic extracellular matrix environment. This leads to Hyal-2-mediated HA catabolism, HA modification, and cysteine proteinase (cathepsin B) activation resulting in breast tumor cell invasion. In addition, we have observed the following: (i) HA/CD44-activated Rho kinase (ROK) mediates NHE1 phosphorylation and activity, and (ii) inhibition of ROK or NHE1 activity (by treating cells with a ROK inhibitor, Y27632, or NHE1 blocker, S-(N-ethyl-N-isopropyl) amiloride, respectively) blocks NHE1 phosphorylation/Na(+)-H(+) exchange activity, reduces intracellular acidification, eliminates the acidic environment in the extracellular matrix, and suppresses breast tumor-specific behaviors (e.g. Hyal-2-mediated HA modification, cathepsin B activation, and tumor cell invasion). Finally, down-regulation of CD44 or Hyal-2 expression (by treating cells with CD44 or Hyal-2-specific small interfering RNAs) not only inhibits HA-mediated CD44 signaling (e.g. ROK-mediated Na(+)-H(+) exchanger reaction and cellular pH changes) but also impairs oncogenic events (e.g. Hyal-2 activity, hyaluronan modification, cathepsin B activation, and tumor cell invasion). Taken together, our results suggest that CD44 interaction with a ROK-activated NHE1 (a Na(+)-H(+) exchanger) in cholesterol/ganglioside-containing lipid rafts plays a pivotal role in promoting intracellular/extracellular acidification required for Hyal-2 and cysteine proteinase-mediated matrix degradation and breast cancer progression.  相似文献   

20.
Little is known on the role of disulfide bonds in the catalytic domain of serine proteases. The Cys-191-Cys-220 disulfide bond is located between the 190 strand leading to the oxyanion hole and the 220-loop that contributes to the architecture of the primary specificity pocket and the Na+ binding site in allosteric proteases. Removal of this bond in thrombin produces an approximately 100-fold loss of activity toward several chromogenic and natural substrates carrying Arg or Lys at P1. Na+ activation is compromised, and no fluorescence change can be detected in response to Na+ binding. A 1.54-A resolution structure of the C191A/C220A mutant in the free form reveals a conformation similar to the Na+-free slow form of wild type. The lack of disulfide bond exposes the side chain of Asp-189 to solvent, flips the backbone O atom of Gly-219, and generates disorder in portions of the 186 and 220 loops defining the Na+ site. This conformation, featuring perturbation of the Na+ site but with the active site accessible to substrate, offers a possible representation of the recently identified E* form of thrombin. Disorder in the 186 and 220 loops and the flip of Gly-219 are corrected by the active site inhibitor H-D-Phe-Pro-Arg-CH(2)Cl, as revealed by the 1.8-A resolution structure of the complex. We conclude that the Cys-191-Cys-220 disulfide bond confers stability to the primary specificity pocket by shielding Asp-189 from the solvent and orients the backbone O atom of Gly-219 for optimal substrate binding. In addition, the disulfide bond stabilizes the 186 and 220 loops that are critical for Na+ binding and activation.  相似文献   

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