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1.
Resistance to arsenic compounds in microorganisms   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15  
Abstract: Arsenic ions, frequently present as environmental pollutants, are very toxic for most microorganisms. Some microbial strains possess genetic determinants that confer resistance. In bacteria, these determinants are often found on plasmids, which has facilitated their study at the molecular level. Bacterial plasmids conferring arsenic resistance encode specific efflux pumps able to extrude arsenic from the cell cytoplasm thus lowering the intracellular concentration of the toxic ions. In Gram-negative bacteria, the efflux pump consists of a two-component ATPase complex. ArsA is the ATPase subunit and is associated with an integral membrane subunit, ArsB. Arsenate is enzymatically reduced to arsenite (the substrate of ArsB and the activator of ArsA) by the small cytoplasmic ArsC polypeptide. In Gram-positive bacteria, comparable arsB and arsC genes (and proteins) are found, but arsA is missing. In addition to the wide spread plasmid arsenic resistance determinant, a few bacteria confer resistance to arsenite with a separate determinant for enzymatic oxidation of more-toxic arsenite to less-toxic arsenate. In contrast to the detailed information on the mechanisms of arsenic resistance in bacteria, little work has been reported on this subject in algae and fungi.  相似文献   

2.
The products of the arsenical resistance operon of resistance plasmid R733 form an efflux system for arsenicals. Detoxification results from active efflux of the oxyanions, preventing their concentration from reaching toxic levels. The largest polypeptide encoded by the ars operon was purified. From N-terminal sequencing the purified protein, termed the ArsA protein, was shown to correspond to the product of the arsA gene. The purified protein was demonstrated to bind ATP by two methods. First, a photoadduct of the protein with [alpha-32P]ATP was formed by irradiation at 254 nm. Second, the purified protein bound a fluorescent ATP analogue, 2',3'-o-(2,4,6)trinitrophenyl ATP, with a half-maximal affinity of 2 microM. By both assays competition was observed with ATP or ADP, but not with AMP, GTP, CTP, or UTP. In both nucleotide binding assays, Mg2+ was required, but neither arsenite nor antimonate had any affect. In contrast, the ArsA protein exhibited an ATPase activity which was dependent on the presence of arsenite or antimonate. The results suggest that the ArsA protein is the catalytic subunit of an oxyanion-translocating ATPase.  相似文献   

3.
R-factor mediated bacterial resistance to arsenical salts occurs by active extrusion of the toxic oxyanions from cells of gram negative bacteria. The ars operon of the conjugative plasmid R773 encodes an anion pump. The pump has two polypeptide components. The catalytic subunit, the ArsA protein, is an oxyanion-stimulated ATPase. The membrane component, the ArsB protein, has been localized in the inner membrane of Escherichia coli. The ArsA and ArsB proteins have been postulated to form a membrane complex which functions as an anion-translocating ATPase. In this study evidence is presented showing that expression of the arsB gene is required to anchor the ArsA protein to the inner membrane. Binding studies with purified ArsA to membranes with and without the arsB gene product confirm this requirement. Membranes of uncA mutants containing both the ArsA and ArsB proteins exhibit arsenite(antimonite)-stimulated ATPase activity. These results support the model in which the ArsA protein is the catalytic energy transducing component of the anion pump, whereas the integral membrane ArsB protein serves as both the anion channel and membrane binding site for the ArsA protein.  相似文献   

4.
The ArsAB ATPase is an efflux pump located in the inner membrane of Escherichia coli. This transport ATPase confers resistance to arsenite and antimonite by their extrusion from the cells. The pump is composed of two subunits, the catalytic ArsA subunit and the membrane subunit ArsB. The complex is similar in many ways to ATP-binding cassette ('ABC') transporters, which typically have two groups of six transmembrane-spanning helical segments and two nucleotide-binding domains (NBDs). The 45 kDa ArsB protein has 12 transmembrane-spanning segments. ArsB contains the substrate translocation pathway and is capable of functioning as an anion uniporter. The 63 kDa ArsA protein is a substrate-activated ATPase. It has two homologous halves, A1 and A2, which are clearly the result of an ancestral gene duplication and fusion. Each half has a consensus NBD. The mechanism of allosteric activation of the ArsA ATPase has been elucidated by a combination of molecular genetics and biochemical, structural and kinetic analyses. Conformational changes produced by binding of substrates, activator and/or products could be revealed by stopped-flow fluorescence measurements with single-tryptophan derivatives of ArsA. The results demonstrate that the rate-limiting step in the overall reaction is a slow isomerization between two conformations of the enzyme. Allosteric activation increases the rate of this isomerization such that product release becomes rate-limiting, thus accelerating catalysis. ABC transporters, which exhibit similar substrate activation of ATPase activity, can undergo similar conformational changes to overcome a rate-limiting step. Thus the ArsAB pump is a useful model for elucidating mechanistic aspects of the ABC superfamily of transport ATPases.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Characterization of the catalytic subunit of an anion pump   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
The ArsA protein, the 63-kDa catalytic subunit of an oxyanion-translocating ATPase, was purified by successive chromatography using Q-Sepharose, red agarose, and phenyl-Sepharose to a specific activity in excess of 1 mumol of ATP hydrolyzed per min per mg of protein. ATPase activity was dependent on the presence of the oxyanionic substrates. Inhibitors of other classes of ion-translocating ATPases had no effect on ArsA ATPase activity, including N,N'-dicyclohexyl-carbodiimide, azide, vanadate, and nitrate. The apparent Km for ATP was determined to be 0.13 mM. The optimal pH range for ATP hydrolysis was 7.5 to 7.8. ATPase activity required Mg2+ at a molar ratio of 2 ATP:1 Mg2+. Limited proteolysis by trypsin was used to study conformational changes produced upon binding of substrates to the ArsA protein. In the absence of substrates, the ArsA protein was rapidly cleaved by trypsin to a major product of 30 kDa. ATP was partially protected from trypsin digestion, while the anionic substrate antimonite alone had no effect on proteolysis. Combination of the two substrates nearly completely protected the ArsA protein from proteolysis. Proteolytic cleavage correlated with loss of anion-stimulated ATPase activity and substrate protection from cleavage correlated with retention of activity. These results demonstrate that ATP and antimonite together produce a conformational change which is different from that of the ArsA protein in the presence of either substrate alone and suggest interaction between the oxyanion and ATP binding sites.  相似文献   

7.
The ars operon of the conjugative R-factor R773 produces resistance to arsenicals in cells of Escherichia coli. The operon encodes an oxyanion pump which is composed of a membrane subunit, the 45.5-kDa ArsB protein, and a catalytic subunit, the 63-kDa ArsA protein. Purified ArsA protein is an arsenite(antimonite)-stimulated ATPase. From its amino acid sequence, as deduced from the nucleotide sequence, the ArsA protein has four tryptophanyl residues which could serve as intrinsic fluorescent probes for the study of substrate-induced conformational changes. Both static and dynamic measurements of tryptophan fluorescence were performed with the ArsA protein. Results from static anisotropy measurements indicated differences in molecular motion with addition of ATP, SbO2-, or Mg2+. These results were supported by time decay measurements of fluorescence anisotropy. The results of time decay measurements indicated a shorter correlation time, reflecting localized motion in the vicinity of the probe, and a longer correlation time, which could have arisen from rotation of the major portion of the molecule. The longer correlation time changed with addition of the various effectors, especially MgCl2, suggesting that binding of Mg2+ decreases probe mobility.  相似文献   

8.
The catalytic component of the oxyanion-translocating ATPase of the plasmid-encoded ars operon of Escherichia coli is a homodimer of the ArsA protein. This enzyme is an oxyanion-stimulated ATPase with two consensus nucleotide binding sequences in each subunit, one in the N-terminal (A1) half and one in the C-terminal (A2) half of the ArsA protein. The two halves of both the arsA gene and the ArsA protein exhibit similar nucleotide and amino acid sequences, respectively. The two halves of the arsA gene were subcloned into compatible plasmids. Neither alone was sufficient to confer resistance, but cells in which the arsA1 and arsA2 half genes were coexpressed were resistant to arsenicals. Genetic complementation was also observed in cells bearing plasmids with point mutations in the two halves of the arsA gene and between cells with plasmids carrying combinations of the arsA1 or arsA2 subclones and point mutations. In every case, complementation was observed only when one plasmid contained a wild-type arsA1 sequence and the other contained a wild-type arsA2 sequence. These results demonstrate that both sites are required for resistance but that the two nucleotide binding domains need not reside in a single polypeptide. We propose a model in which the ArsA dimer has two catalytic units, each composed of an A1 domain from one monomer and an A2 domain from the other monomer.  相似文献   

9.
The ArsA ATPase is the catalytic subunit of a novel arsenite pump, with two nucleotide-binding consensus sequences in the N- and C-terminal halves of the protein. The single tryptophan-containing Trp159 ArsA was used to elucidate the elementary steps of the ATPase mechanism by fluorescence stopped-flow experiments. The binding and hydrolysis of MgATP is a multistep process with a minimal kinetic mechanism (Mechanism 1). A notable feature of the reaction is that MgATP binding induces a slow transient increase in fluorescence of ArsA, which is independent of the ATP concentration, indicative of the build-up of a pre-steady state intermediate. This finding, coupled with a phosphate burst, implies that the steady-state intermediate builds up subsequent to product release. We propose that the rate-limiting step is an isomerization between different conformational forms of ArsA. kcat is faster than the phosphate burst, indicating that both nucleotide binding sites of ArsA are catalytic. Consistent with this interpretation, approximately 2 mol of phosphate are released per mole of ArsA during the phosphate burst.  相似文献   

10.
Resistance to cadmium, cobalt, zinc, and nickel in microbes.   总被引:23,自引:0,他引:23  
D H Nies 《Plasmid》1992,27(1):17-28
The divalent cations of cobalt, zinc, and nickel are essential nutrients for bacteria, required as trace elements at nanomolar concentrations. However, at micro- or millimolar concentrations, Co2+, Zn2+, and Ni2+ (and "bad ions" without nutritional roles such as Cd2+) are toxic. These cations are transported into the cell by constitutively expressed divalent cation uptake systems of broad specificity, i.e., basically Mg2+ transport systems. Therefore, in case of a heavy metal stress, uptake of the toxic ions cannot be reduced by a simple down-regulation of the transport activity. As a response to the resulting metal toxicity, metal resistance determinants evolved which are mostly plasmid-encoded in bacteria. In contrast to that of the cation Hg2+, chemical reduction of Co2+, Zn2+, Ni2+, and Cd2+ by the cell is not possible or sensible. Therefore, other than mutations limiting the ion range of the uptake system, only two basic mechanisms of resistance to these ions are possible (and were developed by evolution): intracellular complexation of the toxic metal ion is mainly used in eucaryotes; the cadmium-binding components are phytochelatins in plant and yeast cells and metallothioneins in animals, plants, and yeasts. In contrast, reduced accumulation based on an active efflux of the cation is the primary mechanism developed in procaryotes and perhaps in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. All bacterial cation efflux systems characterized to date are plasmid-encoded and inducible but differ in energy-coupling and in the number and types of proteins involved in metal transport and in regulation. In the gram-positive multiple-metal-resistant bacterium Staphylococcus aureus, Cd2+ (and probably Zn2+) efflux is catalyzed by the membrane-bound CadA protein, a P-type ATPase. However, a second protein (CadC) is required for full resistance and a third one (CadR) is hypothesized for regulation of the resistance determinant. The czc determinant from the gram-negative multiple-metal-resistant bacterium Alcaligenes eutrophus encodes proteins required for Co2+, Zn2+, and Cd2+ efflux (CzcA, CzcB, and CzcC) and regulation of the czc determinant (CzcD). In the current working model CzcA works as a cation-proton antiporter, CzcB as a cation-binding subunit, and CzcC as a modifier protein required to change the substrate specificity of the system from Zn2+ only to Co2+, Zn2+, and Cd2+.  相似文献   

11.
The ArsD metallochaperone delivers trivalent metalloids, As(III) or Sb(III), to the ArsA ATPase, the catalytic subunit of the ArsAB As(III) efflux pump. Transfer of As(III) increases the affinity of ArsA for As(III), allowing resistance to environmental arsenic concentrations. As(III) transfer is channelled from chaperone to ATPase, implying that ArsD and ArsA form an interface at their metal binding sites. A genetic approach was used to test this hypothesis. Thirteen ArsD mutants exhibiting either weaker or stronger interaction with ArsA were selected by either repressed transactivator yeast two-hybrid or reverse yeast two-hybrid assays. Additionally, Lys-37 and Lys-62 were identified as being involved in ArsD function by site-directed mutagenesis and chemical modification. Substitution at either position with arginine was tolerated, suggesting participation of a positive charge. By yeast two-hybrid analysis K37A and K62A mutants lost interaction with ArsA. All 15 mutations were mapped on the surface of the ArsD structure, and their locations are consistent with a structural model generated by in silico docking. Four are close to metalloid binding site residues Cys-12, Cys-13 and Cys-18, and seven are on the surface of helix 1. These results suggest that the interface involves one surface of helix 1 and the metalloid binding site.  相似文献   

12.
Tseng YY  Yu CW  Liao VH 《The FEBS journal》2007,274(10):2566-2572
Because arsenic is the most prevalent environmental toxin, it is imperative that we understand the mechanisms of metalloid detoxification. In prokaryotes, arsenic detoxification is accomplished by chromosomal and plasmid-borne operon-encoded efflux systems. Bacterial ArsA ATPase is the catalytic component of an oxyanion pump that is responsible for resistance to arsenite (As(III)) and antimonite (Sb(III)). Here, we describe the identification of a Caenorhabditis elegans homolog (asna-1) that encodes the ATPase component of the Escherichia coli As(III) and Sb(III) transporter. We evaluated the responses of wild-type and asna-1-mutant nematodes to various metal ions and found that asna-1-mutant nematodes are more sensitive to As(III) and Sb(III) toxicity than are wild-type animals. These results provide evidence that ASNA-1 is required for C. elegans' defense against As(III) and Sb(III) toxicity. A purified maltose-binding protein (MBP)-ASNA-1 fusion protein was biochemically characterized, and its properties compared with those of ArsAs. The ATPase activity of the ASNA-1 protein was dependent on the presence of As(III) or Sb(III). As(III) stimulated ATPase activity by 2 +/- 0.2-fold, whereas Sb(III) stimulated it by 4.6 +/- 0.15-fold. The results indicate that As(III)- and Sb(III)-stimulated ArsA ATPase activities are not restricted to bacteria, but extend to animals, by demonstrating that the asna-1 gene from the nematode, C. elegans, encodes a functional ArsA ATPase whose activity is stimulated by As(III) and Sb(III) and which is critical for As(III) and Sb(III) tolerance in the intact organism.  相似文献   

13.
The toxic metalloid arsenic is widely disseminated in the environment and causes a variety of health and environment problems. As an adaptation to arsenic-contaminated environments, organisms have developed resistance systems. Many ars operons contain only three genes, arsRBC. Five gene ars operons have two additional genes, arsD and arsA, and these two genes are usually adjacent to each other. ArsA from Escherichia coli plasmid R773 is an ATPase that is the catalytic subunit of the ArsAB As(III) extrusion pump. ArsD was recently identified as an arsenic chaperone to the ArsAB pump, transferring the trivalent metalloids As(III) and Sb(III) to the ArsA subunit of the pump. This increases the affinity of ArsA for As(III), resulting in increased rates if extrusion and resistance to environmentally relevant concentrations of arsenite. ArsD is a homodimer with three vicinal cysteine pairs, Cys12–Cys13, Cys112–Cys113 and Cys119–Cys120, in each subunit. Each vicinal pair binds one As(III) or Sb(III). ArsD mutants with alanines substituting for Cys112, Cys113, Cys119 or Cys120, individually or in pairs or truncations lacking the vicinal pairs, retained ability to interact with ArsA, to activate its ATPase activity. Cells expressing these mutants retained ArsD-enhanced As(III) efflux and resistance. In contrast, mutants with substitutions of conserved Cys12, Cys13 or Cys18, individually or in pairs, were unable to activate ArsA or to enhance the activity of the ArsAB pump. It is proposed that ArsD residues Cys12, Cys13 and Cys18, but not Cys112, Cys113, Cys119 or Cys120, are required for delivery of As(III) to and activation of the ArsAB pump.  相似文献   

14.
The ArsA ATPase is the catalytic subunit of the ArsAB oxyanion pump in Escherichia coli that is responsible for extruding arsenite or antimonite from inside the cell, thereby conferring resistance. Either antimonite or arsenite stimulates ArsA ATPase activity. In this study, the role of histidine residues in ArsA activity was investigated. Treatment of ArsA with diethyl pyrocarbonate (DEPC) resulted in complete loss of catalytic activity. The inactivation could be reversed upon subsequent incubation with hydroxylamine, suggesting specific modification of histidine residues. ATP and oxyanions afforded significant protection against DEPC inactivation, indicating that the histidines are located at the active site. ArsA has 13 histidine residues located at position 138, 148, 219, 327, 359, 368, 388, 397, 453, 465, 477, 520, and 558. Each histidine was individually altered to alanine by site-directed mutagenesis. Cells expressing the altered ArsA proteins were resistant to both arsenite and antimonite. The results indicate that no single histidine residue plays a direct role in catalysis, and the inhibition by DEPC may be caused by steric hindrance from the carbethoxy group.  相似文献   

15.
The ArsA ATPase is the catalytic subunit of the ArsAB pump encoded by the arsRDABC operon of Escherichia coli plasmid R773. ArsD is a metallochaperone that delivers As(III) to ArsA, increasing its affinity for As(III), thus conferring resistance to environmental concentrations of arsenic. R773 ArsD is a homodimer with three vicinal cysteine pairs, Cys(12)-Cys(13), Cys(112)-Cys(113), and Cys(119)-Cys(120), in each subunit. Each vicinal pair binds As(III) or Sb(III). Alignment of the primary sequence of homologues of ArsD indicates that only the first vicinal cysteine pair, Cys(12)-Cys(13), and an additional cysteine, Cys(18), are conserved. The effect of cysteine-to-alanine substitutions and truncations were examined. By yeast two-hybrid analysis, nearly all of the ArsD mutants were able to interact with wild type ArsD, indicating that the mutations do not interfere with dimerization. ArsD mutants with alanines substituting for Cys(112), Cys(113), Cys(119), or Cys(120) individually or in pairs or truncations lacking the vicinal pairs retained ability to interact with ArsA and to activate its ATPase activity. Cells expressing these mutants retained ArsD-enhanced As(III) efflux and resistance. In contrast, mutants with substitutions of conserved Cys(12), Cys(13), or Cys(18), individually or in pairs, were unable to activate ArsA or to enhance the activity of the ArsAB pump. We propose that ArsD residues Cys(12), Cys(13), and Cys(18), but not Cys(112), Cys(113), Cys(119), or Cys(120), are required for delivery of As(III) to and activation of the ArsAB pump.  相似文献   

16.
The ATPase activity of ArsA, the catalytic subunit of the plasmid-encoded, ATP-dependent extrusion pump for arsenicals and antimonials in Escherichia coli, is allosterically activated by arsenite or antimonite. Magnesium is essential for ATPase activity. To examine the role of Asp45, mutants were constructed in which Asp45 was changed to Glu, Asn, or Ala. Cells expressing these mutated arsA genes lost arsenite resistance to varying degrees. Purified D45A and D45N enzymes were inactive. The purified D45E enzyme exhibited approximately 5% of the wild type activity with about a 5-fold decrease in affinity for Mg2+. Intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence was used to probe Mg2+ binding. ArsA containing only Trp159 exhibited fluorescence enhancement upon the addition of MgATP, which was absent in D45N and D45A. As another measure of conformation, limited trypsin digestion was used to estimate the surface accessibility of residues in ArsA. ATP and Sb(III) synergistically protected wild type ArsA from trypsin digestion. Subsequent addition of Mg2+ increased trypsin sensitivity. D45N and D45A remained protected by ATP and Sb(III) but lost the Mg2+ effect. D45E exhibited an intermediate Mg2+ response. These results indicate that Asp45 is a Mg2+-responsive residue, consistent with its function as a Mg2+ ligand.  相似文献   

17.
The complete nucleotide sequence of the tetracycline resistance plasmid pAG1 from the gram-positive soil bacterium Corynebacterium glutamicum 22243 (formerly Corynebacterium melassecola 22243) was determined. The R-plasmid has a size of 19,751 bp and contains at least 18 complete open reading frames. The resistance determinant of pAG1 revealed homology to gram-negative tetracycline efflux and repressor systems of Tet classes A through J. The highest levels of amino acid sequence similarity were observed to the transmembrane tetracycline efflux protein TetA(A) and to the tetracycline repressor TetR(A) of transposon Tn1721 with 64 and 56% similarity, respectively. This is the first time a repressor-regulated tet gene has been found in gram-positive bacteria. A new class of tetracycline resistance and repressor proteins, termed TetA(Z) and TetR(Z), is proposed.  相似文献   

18.
Ion efflux systems involved in bacterial metal resistances   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15  
Summary Studying metal ion resistances gives us important insights into environmental processes and provides an understanding of basic living processes. This review concentrates on bacterial efflux systems for inorganic metal cations and anions, which have generally been found as resistance systems from bacteria isolated from metal-polluted environments. The protein products of the genes involved are sometimes prototypes of new families of proteins or of important new branches of known families. Sometimes, a group of related proteins (and presumedly the underlying physiological function) has still to be defined. For example, the efflux of the inorganic metal anion arsenite is mediated by a membrane protein which functions alone in Gram-positive bacteria, but which requires an additional ATPase subunit in some Gram-negative bacteria. Resistance to Cd2+ and Zn2+ in Gram-positive bacteria is the result of a P-type efflux ATPase which is related to the copper transport P-type ATPases of bacteria and humans (defective in the human hereditary diseases Menkes' syndrome and Wilson's disease). In contrast, resistance to Zn2+, Ni2+, Co2+ and Cd2+ in Gram-negative bacteria is based on the action of proton-cation antiporters, members of a newly-recognized protein family that has been implicated in diverse functions such as metal resistance/nodulation of legumes/cell division (therefore, the family is called RND). Another new protein family, named CDF for cation diffusion facilitator has as prototype the protein CzcD, which is a regulatory component of a cobalt-zinc-cadmium resistance determinant in the Gram-negative bacteriumAlcaligenes eutrophus. A family for the ChrA chromate resistance system in Gram-negative bacteria has still to be defined.  相似文献   

19.
The ArsA ATPase is the catalytic subunit of the ArsAB As(III) efflux pump. It receives trivalent As(III) from the intracellular metallochaperone ArsD. The interaction of ArsA and ArsD allows for resistance to As(III) at environmental concentrations. A quadruple mutant in the arsD gene encoding a K2A/K37A/K62A/K104A ArsD is unable to interact with ArsA. An error-prone mutagenesis approach was used to generate random mutations in the arsA gene that restored interaction with the quadruple arsD mutant in yeast two-hybrid assays. A number of arsA genes with multiple mutations were isolated. These were analyzed in more detail by separation into single arsA mutants. Three such mutants encoding Q56R, F120I and D137V ArsA were able to restore interaction with the quadruple ArsD mutant in yeast two-hybrid assays. Each of the three single ArsA mutants also interacted with wild type ArsD. Only the Q56R ArsA derivative exhibited significant metalloid-stimulated ATPase activity in vitro. Purified Q56R ArsA was stimulated by wild type ArsD and to a lesser degree by the quadruple ArsD derivative. The F120I and D137V ArsAs did not show metalloid-stimulated ATPase activity. Structural models generated by in silico docking suggest that an electrostatic interface favors reversible interaction between ArsA and ArsD. We predict that mutations in ArsA propagate changes in hydrogen bonding and salt bridges to the ArsA–ArsD interface that affect their interactions.  相似文献   

20.
The linker peptide of the ArsA ATPase   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Plasmid R773 encodes an As(III)/Sb(III)-translocating ATPase that confers resistance to those metalloids in Escherichia coli. The catalytic subunit of the pump, the ArsA ATPase, consists of homologous N- and C-terminal nucleotide-binding domains connected by a 25-residue linker. The role of this linker sequence was examined by deletion of five, 10, 15 or 23 residues or insertion of five glycine residues. Cells expressing arsA with the 5-residue insertion had wild-type arsenite resistance. Resistance of cells expressing modified arsA genes with deletions was dependent on the linker length. Cells with five or 10 deleted residues exhibited slightly reduced resistance. Deletion of 15 or 23 residues resulted in further decreases in resistance. Each altered ArsA was purified. The enzyme with the 5-residue insertion had the same affinity for ATP and Sb(III) as the wild-type enzyme. Enzymes with 5-, 10-, 15- or 23-residue deletions exhibited decreased affinity for both Sb(III) and ATP. The enzyme with a 23-residue deletion exhibited only basal ATPase activity and was unable to be allosterically activated by Sb(III). These results suggest that the linker has evolved to a length optimal for bringing the two halves of the protein into proper contact with each other, facilitating catalysis.  相似文献   

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