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1.
The complex between active site-specific metal-depleted horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase and NADH has been studied with X-ray crystallographic methods to 2.9 A resolution. The electron density maps revealed that only the catalytic zinc ions are removed, whereas the non-catalytic zinc sites ae fully occupied. A gross conformational change in the protein induced by co-enzyme binding takes place in this enzyme species despite the absence of the metal ion in the catalytic center. This circumstance is of great importance in the understanding and further analysis of the trigger mechanisms operating during the conformation transition in alcohol dehydrogenase, since the catalytic center is located at the hinge region for a domain rotation in the subunit, and the metal atom is essential for catalysis. The overall protein structure is the same as that of an NADH complex of the native zinc enzyme and the co-enzyme is bound in a similar manner. The local structural changes observed are restricted to the empty metal binding site.  相似文献   

2.
Acetone was found to form a dead-end ternary complex with horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase and oxidized nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) when the reactants were incubated for a long time at relatively high concentrations. The complex formation was demonstrated by measuring the increase in absorbance at 320 nm, the quenching of protein fluorescence, and the loss of enzyme activity. Since acetone is a substrate of liver alcohol dehydrogenase, and the presence of acetaldehyde or pyrazole prevents acetone from forming the dead-end complex with liver alcohol dehydrogenase and NAD+, the acetone molecule in the complex may be bound to the substrate binding site of liver alcohol dehydrogenase. The dissociation of the complex was demonstrated by prolonged dialysis or by addition of reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) and iso-butyramide. A modified nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide was obtained as a main product from the dead-end complex after dissociation of the complex or denaturation of the apoenzyme. The modified nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide was found to exhibit an absorption spectrum similar to that of NADH; however, it was not oxidizable by liver alcohol dehydrogenase in the presence of acetaldehyde and exhibited no fluorescence.  相似文献   

3.
Insertion of nickel ions into the empty catalytic site of horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase yields an active enzyme with 65% metal substitution and about 12% intrinsic activity. The electronic absorption spectrum is characterized by bands at 357 nm (2900 M?1 cm?1, 407 nm (3500 M?1 cm?1), 505 nm (300 M?1 cm?1), 570 nm (?130 M?1 cm?1), and 680 nm (?80 M?1 cm?1). The absorption and CD spectra are similar to those of nickel(II) azurin and nickel(II) aspartate transcarbamoylase and prove coordination of the nickel(II) ions to sulfur in a distorted tetrahedral coordination geometry. Changes of the spectra upon ligand binding at the metal or conformation changes of the protein induced by coenzyme, or both, indicate alterations of the metal geometry.The chromophoric substrate trans-4-(N, N-dimethylamino)-cinnamaldehyde forms a ternary complex with Ni(II) liver alcohol dehydrogenase and the coenzyme analogue 1,4,5,6-tetrahydronicotinamide-adenine-dinucleotide, stable between pH 6 and 10. The corresponding ternary complex with NADH is only stable at pH > 9.0. The spectral redshifts induced in the substrate are 11 nm larger than those found in the zinc enzyme. We suggest direct coordination of the substrate to the catalytic metal ion which acts as a Lewis acid in both substrate coordination and catalysis.  相似文献   

4.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa alcohol dehydrogenase (PaADH; ADH, EC 1.1.1.1) catalyzes the reversible oxidation of primary and secondary alcohols to the corresponding aldehydes and ketones, using NAD as coenzyme. We crystallized the ternary complex of PaADH with its coenzyme and a substrate molecule and determined its structure at a resolution of 2.3 A, using the molecular replacement method. The PaADH tetramer comprises four identical chains of 342 amino acid residues each and obeys ~222-point symmetry. The PaADH monomer is structurally similar to alcohol dehydrogenase monomers from vertebrates, archaea, and bacteria. The stabilization of the ternary complex of PaADH, the coenzyme, and the poor substrate ethylene glycol (k(cat) = 4.5 sec(-1); Km > 200 mM) was due to the blocked exit of the coenzyme in the crystalline state, combined with a high (2.5 M) concentration of the substrate. The structure of the ternary complex presents the precise geometry of the Zn coordination complex, the proton-shuttling system, and the hydride transfer path. The ternary complex structure also suggests that the low efficiency of ethylene glycol as a substrate results from the presence of a second hydroxyl group in this molecule.  相似文献   

5.
Oxygen treatment of horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase EE isozyme substituted with Cu(II) at the catalytic site leads to bleaching with concomitant reduction to Cu(I) of approximately 90% of total Cu(II). The Cu(II) of the remaining 'minor species' cannot be reduced nor does it interact with exogenous ligands, e.g. 2-mercaptoethanol, imidazole, pyrazole, or azide ions. The EPR spectrum is axial with a super-hyperfine splitting of 15.6 G indicating binding of one nitrogen atom to Cu(II). These data as well as the energies and intensities of the absorption and CD spectra suggest the Cu(II) ion of the minor species to be located in the catalytic site of HLADH in a position and geometry different from that of the major species.  相似文献   

6.
Examination of the model of the fixation site of the adenosine phosphate part of NAD+ on horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase led us to synthesize a NAD+ analogue N6-[N-(8-amino-3,6-dioxaoctyl)carbamoylmethyl]-NAD+ in order to alkylate the carboxylic acid group of Asp-273 and to convert the normally dissociable coenzyme into a permanently bound prosthetic group. This NAD+ analogue is coupled to the horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase in the ternary complex formed with pyrazole. In these conditions the degree of fixation varies between 0.4 and 0.58 coenzyme molecule/enzyme subunit molecule. The N6-[N-(8-amino-3,6-dioxaoctyl)carbamoylmethyl]NAD+ acts as a true prosthetic group which can be reduced and reoxidized by a coupled substrate reaction and the internal activity of this holoenzyme corresponds to the amount of analogue incorporated.  相似文献   

7.
8.
9.
Active site substituted Cd(II) horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase has been studied by Perturbed Angular Correlation of Gamma rays Spectroscopy during turnover conditions for benzaldehyde and 4-trans-(N,N-dimethylamino)cinnamaldehyde. The ternary complex between alcohol dehydrogenase NAD+ and Cl, and the binary complex between alcohol dehydrogenase and orthophenanthroline have also been studied. The Nuclear Quadrupole Interaction parameters have been interpreted in terms of different coordination geometries for Cd(II) in the catalytic zinc site of the enzyme. Calculation of the nuclear quadrupole interaction for cadmium in the catalytic site of the enzyme with and without coenzyme, based upon the four coordinated geometries determined from X-ray diffraction, agrees with the experimentally determined values. The ternary complexes between enzyme, NAD+ and either Cl or trifluoroethanol and the binary complex between enzyme and orthophenanthroline have almost identical spectral parameters which are not consistent with a four coordinated geometry, but are consistent with a five coordinated geometry. The nonprotein ligands for the ternary complex with trifluoroethanol are suggested to be an alkoxide group and a water molecule. The Nuclear Quadrupole Interaction parameters for the productive ternary complex between enzyme, NADH and an aldehyde is consistent with the four coordinated geometry predicted from X-ray diffraction data having the carbonyl group of the aldehyde substituting the water molecule as ligand to the metal.Abbreviations LADH Horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase - H4Zn2LADH derivative of LADH free of zinc in the catalytic site - 111CdZn2LADH derivative of LADH with 111Cd (carrier free) in the catalytic site - Cd2Zn2LADH derivative of LDH with 2 mole of Cd(II) per mole LADH in the catalytic site - PAC pertubed angular correlation of gamma rays - NQI Nuclear quadrupole interaction - AOM Angular overlap model - trifluoroethanol 2,2,2-trifluoroethanol - DACA trans-4-(N,N-dimethylamino)cinnamaldehyde - NAD+ and NADH oxidized and reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide - NADH2 reduced 1,4,5,6-tetrahydronicotinamide adenine dinucleotide The experimental work was carried out at the Niels Bohr Institute Risø, 4000 Roskilde and Blegdamsvej 19, 2100 Copenhagen, Denmark Offprint requests to: R. Bauer  相似文献   

10.
J G Weers  A H Maki 《Biochemistry》1986,25(10):2897-2904
Triplet-singlet energy transfer has been studied in the complex formed between auramine O (AO) and horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase with optically detected magnetic resonance (ODMR) spectroscopy. The results show that Trp-15 and Tyr residues transfer triplet energy mainly by a trivial process, whereas Trp-314 transfers triplet energy by a F?rster process with two observed lifetimes at 77 K of 170 and 50 ms. The different F?rster energy-transfer lifetimes are ascribed either to quenching of the two Trp-314 residues of the dimer by a single asymmetrically bound AO or to two distinct conformations of the enzyme-dye complex with differing separations and/or orientations of donor and acceptor. Individual spin sublevel transfer rate constants are reported for the major decay component with the 170-ms Trp triplet-state lifetime; these are found to be highly selective with kxtr much greater than kytr and kztr.  相似文献   

11.
M R Eftink  K Bystr?m 《Biochemistry》1986,25(21):6624-6630
The association of the coenzyme NAD+ to liver alcohol dehydrogenase (LADH) is known to be pH dependent, with the binding being linked to the shift in the pK of some group on the protein from a value of 9-10, in the free enzyme, to 7.5-8 in the LADH-NAD+ binary complex. We have further characterized the nature of this linkage between NAD+ binding and proton dissociation by studying the pH dependence (pH range 6-10) of the proton release, delta n, and enthalpy change, delta Ho(app), for formation of both binary (LADH-NAD+) and ternary (LADH-NAD+-I, where I is pyrazole or trifluoroethanol) complexes. The pH dependence of both delta n and delta Ho(app) is found to be consistent with linkage to a single acid dissociating group, whose pK is perturbed from 9.5 to 8.0 upon NAD+ binding and is further perturbed to approximately 6.0 upon ternary complex formation. The apparent enthalpy change for NAD+ binding is endothermic between pH 7 and pH 10, with a maximum at pH 8.5-9.0. The pH dependence of the delta Ho(app) for both binary and ternary complex formation is consistent with a heat of protonation of -7.5 kcal/mol for the coupled acid dissociating group. The intrinsic enthalpy changes for NAD+ binding and NAD+ plus pyrazole binding to LADH are determined to be approximately 0 and -11.0 kcal/mol, respectively. Enthalpy change data are also presented for the binding of the NAD+ analogues adenosine 5'-diphosphoribose and 3-acetylpyridine adenine dinucleotide.  相似文献   

12.
The crystals of holoenzyme from native and cross-linked alcohol dehydrogenase exhibit electron transfer from NADH to phenazinium methosulfate (PMS), and then to the tetrazolium salt sodium 3,3'-{1-[(phenylamino)carbonyl]-3,4-tetrazolium}-bis(4-methoxy-6-nitro)benzenesulfonate (XXT). The slow dissociation of the cofactor and/or the conformational change associated can now be bypassed. The reduction product, formazan, did not diffuse out of the crystals in buffer and the crystals turned colored. In the presence of dimethyl sulfoxide or dimethoxyethane, the formazan diffused out to the solution. The reaction rates were found to be, respectively, 18% and 15% of the redox reaction rate of ethanol with cinnamaldehyde, close to the activity determined for the enzyme in solution in the presence of dimethoxyethane. The use of system PMS-tetrazolium salt is a useful tool to visualize the activity of dehydrogenases and other electron transferring systems in the crystalline state. The adsorption of formazan by the alcohol dehydrogenase crystals occurs in solution.  相似文献   

13.
14.
The geometry of seven NAD+ analogues bound to horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase (LADH) modified only in their nicotinamide group, have been studied using AMBER molecular mechanics energy-minimization procedures. Starting geometries were taken from X-ray crystallographic data for NAD+/Me2SO/LADH reported by Eklund and co-workers. In this study the NAD+ analogues were encaged by the constituent amino acids of the enzyme within a range of 0.6 nm from the initial NAD+/Me2SO/Zn2+ complex. The calculational method used is able to rationalize individual substituent effects and to evaluate the essential interactions between NAD+ analogue, enzyme, Me2SO and Zn2+ without the necessity of additional X-ray data. The results presented here demonstrate that the reactivity of NAD+ derivatives as reported in literature can be qualitatively related to the position of the pyridine moiety in the active site.  相似文献   

15.
1H-NMR and electronic spectroscopic data are reported for the interaction of the effector molecule imidazole and the inhibitor molecule pyrazole with horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase whose catalytic zinc ions were replaced by Co(II). In addition 13C-NMR and optical data are given for the binding of acetate to this enzyme species. For the binary complex with imidazole an assignment of the protons of the metal-coordinated imidazole has been made and it was found that the rate of exchange of the effector molecule is slow on the NMR time scale. In the presence of NADH which is bound to the open conformation of the binary complex, the most pronounced change is a shift of the -CH2 protons of the metal-coordinated cysteine residues which is attributed to hydrogen bonding interactions between the carboxamide group of the nicotinamide moiety with cysteine 46. The 1H-NMR spectra of the binary complex of Co(II)-HLADH with pyrazole show resonances assigned to the protons in the 3-and 4-positions of the bound inhibitor, the NH proton resonance is not detectable. In the ternary complex with pyrazole and NAD+ only the resonances of the -CH2 protons (beyond 150 ppm) are changed whereas the protons of histidine 67 and the bound inhibitor are unchanged. The data demonstrate that the coordination environment of the catalytic metal ion is changed very little when the protein changes from the open to the closed conformation. The only changes observed are the -CH2 proton resonances of the metal-coordinating cysteines which are sensitive to local conformational changes within the ternary complex Co(II)-HLADH · Imidazole · NADH in the open conformation or global changes in the ternary complex Co(II)-HLADH · Pyrazole · NAD+ in the closed conformation. Acetate which can be regarded as a substrate model was shown to induce a similar change in the optical spectra of the Co(II) enzyme as all other anions observed so far. From the optical changes a dissociation constant of acetate at the catalytic metal site of 200±50 mM was calculated and from the changes of the 13C-NMR linewidth of 13C acetate direct bonding of the anion to the catalytic Co(II) ion can be demonstrated to occur under the conditions of rapid exchange. The implications of these data for the assessment of tetracoordination around the catalytic metal ion as well as the chemical nature of intermediates occurring along the catalytic pathway are discussed.This work has been performed with contribution of the project Projetto Strategico Biotechnologie CNR and with financial support from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, NATO, Bundesminister für Forschung und Technologie, and the Universität des Saarlandes  相似文献   

16.
17.
Quenching of the fluorescence of the complex between horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase (alcohol:NAD+ oxidoreductase (EC 1.1.1.1) and auramine O complex is inconsistent with a simple competitive displacement of auramine O by ethanol. Instead, the action of ethanol requires an explanation in terms of a solvent effect, or the formation of an enzyme-auramine O-ethanol ternary complex. The latter complex would have to be the low-affinity variety similar to the enzyme-NADH-ethanol ternary complex encountered in the kinetic system.  相似文献   

18.
Imidazole glycerol phosphate synthase catalyzes formation of the imidazole ring in histidine biosynthesis. The enzyme is also a glutamine amidotransferase, which produces ammonia in a glutaminase active site and channels it through a 30-A internal tunnel to a cyclase active site. Glutaminase activity is impaired in the resting enzyme, and stimulated by substrate binding in the cyclase active site. The signaling mechanism was investigated in the crystal structure of a ternary complex in which the glutaminase active site was inactivated by a glutamine analogue and the unstable cyclase substrate was cryo-trapped in the active site. The orientation of N(1)-(5'-phosphoribulosyl)-formimino-5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide ribonucleotide in the cyclase active site implicates one side of the cyclase domain in signaling to the glutaminase domain. This side of the cyclase domain contains the interdomain hinge. Two interdomain hydrogen bonds, which do not exist in more open forms of the enzyme, are proposed as molecular signals. One hydrogen bond connects the cyclase domain to the substrate analogue in the glutaminase active site. The second hydrogen bond connects to a peptide that forms an oxyanion hole for stabilization of transient negative charge during glutamine hydrolysis. Peptide rearrangement induced by a fully closed domain interface is proposed to activate the glutaminase by unblocking the oxyanion hole. This interpretation is consistent with biochemical results [Myers, R. S., et al., (2003) Biochemistry 42, 7013-7022, the accompanying paper in this issue] and with structures of the free enzyme and a binary complex with a second glutamine analogue.  相似文献   

19.
Supernatant malate dehydrogenase from pig heart, a dimeric protein containing two very similar or identical subunits, shows negatively cooperative (anticooperative) interactions between NADH binding sites in the presence, but not in the absence, of 0.1 M L-malate. This behavior is observed consitently whether the technique used employs protein fluorescence quenching, NADH fluorescence enhancement, or ultrafiltration dialysis. Fluorescence titration shows that L-malate is also anticooperatively bound in the presence of saturating concentrations of NADH. The data are consistent with an "induced asymmetry" model in which conformational change accompanies the formation of the ternary complex. Two of the three chromatographically resolvable forms of the enzyme have been tested and found to have anticooperative behavior.  相似文献   

20.
Substitution of Co(II) for the catalytic site Zn(II) of horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase (LADH) yields an active enzyme derivative, CoIIE, with characteristic Co(II) charge-transfer and d-d electronic transitions that are sensitive to the events which take place during catalysis [Koerber, S. C., MacGibbon, A. K. H., Dietrich, H., Zeppezauer, M., & Dunn, M. F. (1983) Biochemistry 22, 3424-3431]. In this study, UV-visible spectroscopy and rapid-scanning stopped-flow (RSSF) kinetic methods are used to detect and identify intermediates in the LADH catalytic mechanism. In the presence of the inhibitor isobutyramide, the pre-steady-state phase of alcohol (RCH2OH) oxidation at pH above 7 is characterized by the formation and decay of an intermediate with lambda max = 570, 640, and 672 nm for both aromatic and aliphatic alcohols (benzyl alcohol, p-nitrobenzyl alcohol, anisyl alcohol, ethanol, and methanol). By comparison with the spectrum of the stable ternary complex formed with oxidized nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) and 2,2',2'-trifluoroethoxide ion (TFE-), CoIIE(NAD+, TFE-), the intermediate which forms is proposed to be the alkoxide ion (RCH2O-) complex, CoIIE(NAD+, RCH2O-). The timing of reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) formation indicates that intermediate decay is limited by the interconversion of ternary complexes, i.e., CoIIE(NAD+, RCH2O-) in equilibrium CoIIE(NADH, RCHO). From competition experiments, we infer that, at pH values below 5, NAD+ and alcohol form a CoIIE(NAD+, RCH2OH) ternary complex. RSSF studies carried out as a function of pH indicate that the apparent pKa values for the ionization of alcohol within the ternary complex, i.e., CoIIE(NAD+, RCH2OH) in equilibrium CoIIE(NAD+, RCH2O-) + H+, fall in the range 5-7.5. Using pyrazole as the dead-end inhibitor, we find that the single-turnover time courses for the reduction of benzaldehyde, p-nitrobenzaldehyde, anisaldehyde, and acetaldehyde at pH above 7 all show evidence for the formation and decay of an intermediate. Via spectral comparisons with CoIIE-(NAD+, TFE-) and with the intermediate formed during alcohol oxidation, we identify the intermediate as the same CoIIE(NAD+, RCH2O-) ternary complex detected during alcohol oxidation.  相似文献   

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