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1.
The pH dependence of the chemical reaction rate of p-bromophenacyl bromide (BPB) with His 48 of cobra (Naja naja atra) venom phospholipase A2, in which the alpha-NH2 group had been selectively modified to an alpha-keto group, was studied at 25 degrees C and ionic strength 0.1 in the absence of Ca2+. The pH-dependence curve was monophasic with a midpoint at pH 7.9, which corresponds to the pK value of His 48 of the alpha-NH2-modified enzyme, whereas the curve for the intact enzyme was biphasic, indicating participation of two ionizable groups with pK values of 7.3 and 8.55 (Teshima et al. (1982) J. Biochem. 91, 1778-1788). These two groups were thus identified as His 48 and the alpha-NH2 group, respectively. The pH dependence of the binding constant of Ca2+ to the alpha-NH2-modified enzyme was studied at 25 degrees C and ionic strength 0.1 by measuring the tryptophyl fluorescence changes. The pH-dependence curve was very similar to that for the intact enzyme (Teshima et al. (1981) J. Biochem. 89, 13-20), and it was interpreted in terms of participation of His 48 and Asp 49 (pK 5.4). The absence of participation of the alpha-NH2 group in the Ca2+ binding was thus confirmed. Bindings of monodispersed n-dodecylphosphorylcholine (n-C12PC) and micellar n-hexadecylphosphorylcholine (n-C16PC) to the alpha-NH2-modified enzyme were studied at 25 degrees C and ionic strength 0.1 by the aromatic circular dichroism (CD) and tryptophyl fluorescence methods, respectively. The binding constant of the monodispersed substrate was very similar to that for the intact enzyme (Teshima et al. (1981) J. Biochem. 89, 1163-1174). The binding constant of the micellar substrate to the modified enzyme in the presence of Ca2+ was also very similar to that for the intact enzyme-Ca2+ complex (Teshima et al. (1983) J. Biochem. 94, 223-232), and the pH-dependence curve was interpreted in terms of participation of His 48. On the other hand, the binding constant of the micellar substrate to the modified apoenzyme was much smaller than that for the intact apoenzyme. Nevertheless, the pH-dependence curve could be interpreted in terms of participation of His 48 and Asp 49. From these findings, it was concluded that the ionization state of the alpha-NH2 group of cobra venom phospholipase A2 is essentially irrelevant to the bindings of Ca2+ and also of the monodispersed and micellar substrates.  相似文献   

2.
The pH dependence of the binding constant of Ca2+ to a phospholipase A2 of Agkistrodon halys blomhoffii, in which the alpha-amino group had been selectively modified to an alpha-keto group, was studied at 25 degrees C and ionic strength 0.1 by the tryptophyl fluorescence method. The dependence was compared with the results for the intact enzyme (Ikeda et al. (1981) J. Biochem. 90, 1125-1130). The pH-dependence curve could be well interpreted in terms of the participation of the two ionizable groups Asp 49 and His 48, with pK values of 4.70 and 6.69, respectively. These values were slightly different from the respective pK values for the intact enzyme, 5.15 and 6.45. Ca2+ binding to the intact enzyme involves the participation of an additional ionizable group with a pK value of 7.30, which was thus assigned as alpha-amino group. The pH dependence of the binding constant of monodispersed n-dodecylphosphorylcholine (n-C12PC) to the alpha-NH2-modified enzyme was studied at 25 degrees C and ionic strength 0.1 by the aromatic circular dichroism (CD) method. The pH-dependence curve for the modified apoenzyme was interpreted as reflecting the participation of a single ionizable group with a pK value of 4.7, which was assigned to Asp 49 (to which a Ca2+ ion can coordinate) since the curve for the Ca2+ complex lacked this transition: the binding constant was independent of pH. The pH-dependence curves for the intact apoenzyme and its Ca2+ complex involve the participation of an additional ionizable group with pK values of 7.30 and 6.30, respectively (Ikeda & Samejima (1981) J. Biochem. 90, 799-804), which was assigned as the alpha-amino group. The hydrolysis of monodispersed 1,2-dihexanoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphorylcholine (diC6PC), catalyzed by the intact and the alpha-NH2-modified enzymes was studied by the pH stat method at 25 degrees C, pH 8.2, and ionic strength 0.1 in the presence of 3 mM Ca2+. The Km value for the modified enzyme was found to be very similar to that for the intact enzyme: this was compatible with the results of the direct binding study on the monodispersed n-C12PC under the same conditions. However, the kcat value was about 43% of the value for the intact enzyme, suggesting that the alpha-keto group introduced by the chemical modification perturbed the network of hydrogen bonds in the active site.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
The hydrolysis of 1,2-dihexanoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphorylcholine (diC6PC), catalyzed by a cobra (Naja naja atra) venom phospholipase A2, was studied at 25 degrees C ionic strength 0.1 in the presence of 3-10 mM Ca2+, which can saturate the Ca2+-binding site of the enzyme. The initial velocity data, obtained at various concentrations of the substrate below the critical micellar concentration (cmc), were analyzed according to the Michaelis-Menten equation. The Km value was practically independent of pH (between pH 6.75 and 10.30). This finding was consistent with the result of a direct binding study on monodispersed n-alkylphosphorylcholines (Teshima et al. (1981) J. Biochem. 89, 1163-1174). The hydrolysis of the substrate was competitively inhibited by the presence of monodispersed n-dodecylphosphorylcholine (n-C12PC). These results indicated that the substrate and n-C12PC compete for the same site on the enzyme molecule. The pH dependence curve of the kinetic parameter, kcat/Km, exhibited three transitions, below pH 8, between pH 8 and 9.5, and above pH 10. The analysis indicated the participation of three ionizable groups with pK values of 7.25, 8.50, and 10.4. The deprotonation of the first group and the protonation of the third group were found to be essential for the catalysis. The first group was assigned as His 48 in the active site on the basis of its pK value, which had been determined from the pH dependence of the binding constant of Ca2+ (Teshima et al. (1981) J. Biochem. 89, 13-20).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
The phospholipase A2 from the venom of A. halys blomhoffii was titrated with micellar n-hexadecylphosphorylcholine (an analog of lysolecithin) by following the tryptophyl fluorescence change at 25 degrees C and ionic strength 0.1. The data were analyzed by assuming that the micellar surface has multiple binding sites for the enzyme and that these sites are identical and mutually independent. The enzyme binding site was found to accommodate a constant number of the substrate (monomer) molecules, N = 10.0 and 6.7 for the apoenzyme and its Ca2+ complex, respectively. The binding constant of the enzyme to the substrate micelle was found to be enhanced by Ca2+ binding to the enzyme. The pH dependence of the binding constant of the apoenzyme to the micelle was well interpreted in terms of pK shifts of two ionizable groups from 5.16 to 5.67 and from 6.45 to 6.6. The pH-dependence curve for the enzyme-Ca2+ complex, which lacked the former transition, was interpreted in terms of the pK shift of a single ionizable group from 5.55 to 5.76. The former ionizable group was assigned as Asp 49, to which Ca2+ ion can coordinate, and the latter as His 48 in the active site. No participation of the alpha-amino group with a pK value of 7.30 was observed. The binding constant of the enzyme to the substrate micelle, Kmic = 0.45-2.3 X 10(6) M-1, was found to be far greater than that to the monomeric substrate, Kmon = 0.2-1.0 X 10(4) M-1. This was interpreted in terms of the presence of an additional weak substrate-binding site in the enzyme molecule.  相似文献   

5.
The pH dependence of kinetic parameters for the hydrolysis of mixed micelles of 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphorylcholine (diC16PC) with Triton X-100, catalyzed by the intact and the N-terminal alpha-NH2-modified phospholipases A2 (PLA2s) of Agkistrodon halys blomhoffii, was studied at 25 degrees C and ionic strength 0.1 in the presence of saturating amounts of Ca2+. The pH dependence of the kinetic parameters for the hydrolysis of monodispersed diC6PC, catalyzed by the modified enzyme, was also studied under the same conditions, and the data were compared with the previous results for the intact enzyme [Teshima, K. et al. (1986) J. Biochem. 100, 1655-1662]. The pK values of the catalytic group, His 48, and Tyr 52 were found to shift from 5.55 to 7.00 and from 10.50 to 11.50, respectively, on binding of the micellar substrates to the enzyme. On the other hand, no participation of these ionizable groups was observed for the binding of the monodispersed substrate. On the basis of the present finding and the X-ray crystallographic studies on bovine pancreatic PLA2 [Dijkstra, B.W. et. al. (1981) J. Mol. Biol. 147, 97-123] and on a PLA2 of Crotalus atrox venom [Brunie, S. et al. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 9742-9749], the hydrogen-bonding of Tyr 73, which is involved in the lipid-water interface recognition site, to His 48 and Tyr 52 in the active center was strongly suggested to be important for the hydrolysis of micellar substrates.  相似文献   

6.
The phospholipase A2 of Trimeresurus flavoviridis was found to show monomer-dimer equilibria. Under conditions where the enzyme exists predominantly in the monomeric form, the chemical reaction rate of p-bromophenacyl bromide (BPB) with the catalytic group, His 48, was studied at 25 degrees C and ionic strength 0.2 by measuring the residual enzymic activity using a fluorescent substrate, 1,2-bis[4-(1-pyreno)butanoyl]-sn-glycero-3-phosphorylcholine (diPBPC). The pH-dependence curve of the reaction rate for the intact enzyme was practically the same as that for the modified enzyme, in which the N-terminal alpha-NH2 group had been selectively converted into an alpha-keto group. The pH-dependence curves were monophasic (sigmoidal) with a midpoint at pH 7.53, which corresponds to the pKa value of His 48. The pH dependences of the binding constants of Ca2+ to the intact and the alpha-NH2 modified enzymes were also studied at 25 degrees C and ionic strength 0.2 by measuring the changes in the tryptophyl fluorescence and/or aromatic CD spectra. The pH-dependence data for the modified enzyme were interpreted in terms of participation of Asp 49 (pKa 5.40) and His 48 (pKa 7.53), assuming that the protonation of Asp 49 competes with the Ca2+ binding. The pH-dependence data for the intact enzyme were similarly interpreted in terms of participation of the alpha-NH2 group (pKa 9.40) in addition to that of Asp 49 (pKa 5.40) and His 48 (pKa 7.53).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
The hydrolysis of 1,2-dihexanoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphorylcholine (diC6PC), catalyzed by the phospholipase A2 from the venom of Agkistrodon halys blomhoffii, was studied at 25 degrees C and the ionic strength of 0.1 in the presence of 3-33.3 mM Ca2+, which can saturate the Ca2+-binding site of the enzyme. The initial velocity data, obtained at various concentrations of the substrate below the critical micelle concentration (cmc), were analyzed according to the Michaelis-Menten equation. The pH-dependence curve of the Km value exhibited only one transition below pH 8. The analytical results indicated that the pK value of 6.30 of an ionizable group changed to 6.54 on the binding of the monodispersed substrate. This ionizable group was assigned as the alpha-amino group on the basis of its pK value, which had been determined from the pH dependence of the binding constant of monodispersed n-dodecylphosphorylcholine (n-C12PC) (Ikeda and Samejima (1981) J. Biochem. 90, 799-804, and Haruki et al. (1986) J. Biochem. 99, 99-109). The pH-dependence curve of the kcat value exhibited two transitions, below pH 6.5 and above pH 9.5. The analytical results indicated the participation of two ionizable groups with pK values of 5.55 and 10.50. Deprotonation of the former and protonation of the latter group were found to be essential for the catalysis. The former ionizable group was assigned as His 48 in the active site on the basis of its pK value, which had been determined from the pH dependence of the binding constant of Ca2+ (Ikeda et al. (1981) J. Biochem. 90, 1125-1130).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Phospholipases A2 (PLA2s) are classified into two groups, I and II, according to differences in the polypeptide-chain length and intramolecular disulfide bondings. The hydrolysis of monodispersed 1,2-dihexanoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphorylcholine (diC6PC), catalyzed by bovine pancreas PLA2 (Group I) was studied at 25 degrees C and ionic strength 0.2, and the initial velocity data were analyzed by means of the Michaelis-Menten equation. The Michaelis constant, Km, was found to be practically independent of Ca2+ concentration and also of pH value. The latter result indicates no participation of the ionizable groups in the active site in the substrate binding. The pH-dependence curve of the logarithm of the catalytic center activity, kcat, obtained in the presence of a practically saturating amount of Ca2+, showed three transitions ascribable to the participation of three ionizable groups with pK values of 5.00, 8.40, and 9.50. The respective groups were tentatively assigned to the catalytic group His 48, the N-terminal alpha-amino group, and invariant Tyr 52, which is located in close proximity to the imidazole ring of His 48. Deprotonation of His 48 and protonation of Tyr 52 were shown to be essential to the catalysis. The importance of the ionization state of the alpha-amino group was also indicated.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Sensitive, soluble chromogenic substrates for HIV-1 proteinase   总被引:14,自引:0,他引:14  
By replacement of the P1' residue in a capsid/nucleocapsid cleavage site mimic with 4-NO2-phenylalanine (Nph), an excellent chromogenic substrate, Lys-Ala-Arg-Val-Leu*Nph-Glu-Ala-Met, for HIV-1 proteinase (kappa cat = 20 s-1, Km = 22 microM) has been prepared. Substitution of the Leu residue in P1 with norleucine, Met, Phe, or Tyr had minimal effects on the kinetic parameters (kappa cat and kappa cat/Km) determined at different pH values, whereas peptides containing Ile or Val in P1 were hydrolyzed extremely slowly. The spectrophotometric assay has been used to characterize the proteinase further with respect to pH dependence, ionic strength dependence, and the effect of competitive inhibitors of various types.  相似文献   

10.
Previously it has been shown that the binding of porcine pancreatic phospholipase A2 to lipid-water interfaces is governed by the pK of the alpha-NH3+ group of the N-terminal alanine. Chemically modified phospholipases A2 in which the N-terminal Ala has been replaced by D-Ala or in which the polypeptide chain has been elongated with DL-Ala no longer display activity toward micellar substrate. The activity of DL-Ala-1-, [D-Ala1]-, and [Gly1]phospholipases A2 on substrate monolayers, which allow a continuous change in the packing density of the lipid molecule, was investigated. At pH 6 [Gly1]phospholipase A2 behaves like the native enzyme on lecithin monolayers. DL-Ala1- and [D-Ala1]phospholipases A2, although they are active in this system, showed a weaker lipid penetration capacity at this pH. Studies on the pH and Ca2+ ion dependency of the pre-steady-state kinetics and of the activity of these radiolabeled proteins showed that [D-Ala1]phospholipase A2 does not possess a second low-affinity site for Ca2+ ions in contrast to the native phospholipase A2. This second low-affinity Ca2+ binding site, which is also absent in [Gly1]phospholipase A2, is induced in the latter enzyme by the presence of lipid-water interfaces.  相似文献   

11.
The localization of the previously postulated interface recognition site (IRS) in porcine pancreatic phospholipase A2, required for a specific interaction between the enzyme and organized lipid-water interfaces, was investigated by ultraviolet difference spectroscopy, by measurements of the intrinsic fluorescence of the unique Trp residue, and by protection experiments against specific tryptic hydrolysis. Using the enzymically nondegradable substrate analogues: CnH(2n+1)(0-)OOCH2CH2N+(CH3)3-(H,OH), it is shown that the rather hydrophobic N-terminal sequence of the enzyme, viz., Ala-Leu-Trp-Gln-Phe-Arg, is directly involved in the interaction with the lipid-water interface. Besides hydrophobic probably also polar interactions contribute to the binding process. At neutral or acidic pH the presence of a salt bridge between the N-terminal alpha-NH3+ group and a negatively charged side chain stablizes the interface recognition site and allows the enzyme to penetrate micellar surfaces, even in the absence of metal ion. At alkaline pH, interaction of the enzyme with micellar interfaces requires the presence of Ca2+ (Ba2+) ions.  相似文献   

12.
Residue 31 of porcine pancreatic phospholipase A2 (PLA2) is located at the entrance to the active site. To study the role of residue 31 in PLA2, six mutant enzymes were produced by site-directed mutagenesis, replacing Leu by either Trp, Arg, Ala, Thr, Ser or Gly. Direct binding studies indicated a three to six times greater affinity of the Trp31 PLA2 for both monomeric and micellar substrate analogs, relative to the wild-type enzyme. The other five mutants possess an unchanged affinity for monomers of the product analog n-decylphosphocholine and for micelles of the diacyl substrate analog rac-1,2-dioctanoylamino-dideoxy-glycero-3-phosphocholine. The affinities for micelles of the monoacyl product analog n-hexadecylphosphocholine were decreased 9-20 times for these five mutants. Kinetic studies with monomeric substrates showed that the mutants have Vmax values which range between 15 and 70% relative to the wild-type enzyme. The Vmax values for micelles of the zwitterionic substrate 1,2-dioctanoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine were lowered 3-50 times. The Km values for the monomeric substrate and the Km values for the micellar substrate were hardly affected in the case of five of the six mutants, but were considerably decreased when Trp was present at position 31. The results of these investigations point to a versatile role for the residue at position 31: involvement in the binding and orientating of monomeric substrate (analogs), involvement in the binding of the enzyme to micellar substrate analogs and possibly involvement in shielding the active site from excess water.  相似文献   

13.
Bindings of cobra venom phospholipases A2 to micelles of n-hexadecylphosphorylcholine were studied by the tryptophyl fluorescence method at 25 degrees C and ionic strength 0.1. The data were analyzed by assuming that the micellar surface has multiple binding sites for the enzyme and these sites are identical and mutually independent. The enzyme binding site was found to accommodate a constant number of substrate (monomer) molecules, N = 10, 5 or 13 for N. naja atra apoenzyme and its Ca2+ complex, and N. naja kaouthia apoenzyme, respectively. The binding constant of the enzymes to the micelle, Kmic = 0.18-3.1 X 10(6) M-1, was 9-160 times greater than that to the monomeric substrate, Kmon = 2 X 10(4) M-1 (Teshima et al. (1981) J. Biochem. 89, 1163-1174). This was interpreted in terms of the presence of an additional substrate-binding site in the enzyme molecule. The binding constant of the enzyme-Ca2+ complex to the micelle was smaller than that for the apoenzyme over a wide range of pH. The pH dependence of the binding constant of the apoenzyme to the micelle was well interpreted in terms of pK shifts of two ionizable groups from 5.4 to 5.53 and 7.55 to 7.95. The pH dependence curve for the Ca2+ complex, which lacked the former transition, was interpreted in terms of the pK shift of only a single ionizable group from 7.25 to 7.55. The former ionizable group was assigned as Asp 49, to which Ca2+ can coordinate, and the latter as His 48 in the active site on the basis of the reported pK values of these ionizable groups in the apoenzyme and Ca2+ complex (Teshima et al. (1981) J. Biochem. 89, 13-20 and Teshima et al. (1982) J. Biochem. 91, 1777-1788). No participation of the alpha-amino group with a pK value of 8.55 was observed.  相似文献   

14.
Phospholipases A2 are classified into two groups, I and II, according to differences in the polypeptide-chain length and the intramolecular-disulfide bondings. The effects of Ca2+ on the kinetic parameters for the hydrolysis of monodispersed and micellar phosphatidylcholines, catalyzed by a cobra (Naja naja atra) enzyme (Group I) and by mamushi (Agkistrodon halys blomhoffii) and habu (Trimeresurus flavoviridis) enzymes (Group II), were studied by the pH-statassay method at 25 degrees C, pH 8.0-8.2, and ionic strength 0.1-0.2. The results were compared with those reported for the other Group I and II enzymes. The Ca2+ binding was clearly shown to be essential for the catalysis of all the phospholipases A2. However, the substrate binding to Group I enzymes was found to be independent of the Ca2+ binding. On the other hand, the substrate binding to Group II enzymes was facilitated more than 10 times by the binding of Ca2+ to the enzymes. This was interpreted in terms of conformation changes of the peptide loop of residues 26 to 44 accompanying the Ca2+ binding. The latter result, but not the former, seems compatible with the hypothesis for interpreting the catalytic mechanism of phospholipases A2 that an intermediate complex should be stabilized by the coordination of the bound Ca2+ ion with the phosphoryl group and the carbonyl oxygen atom of the ester bond at the sn-2 position of the bound substrate molecule [Verheij et al. (1980) Biochemistry 19, 743-750 and (1981) Rev. Physiol. Biochem. Pharmacol. 91, 91-203]. According to the similarity in the primary and tertiary structures of the active sites of both types of enzymes [Renetseder et al. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 11627-11634], it is supposed that similar intermediate complexes may occur even for Group I enzymes, at least in the transition state of the productive complexes.  相似文献   

15.
Phenylacetone, 4-phenyl-2-butanone, and 4-oxopentyltrimethylammonium chloride were tested as potential transition state analogs for eel acetylcholinesterase (acetylcholine hydrolase, EC 3.1.1.7). Phenylacetone is a competitive inhibitor of the enzyme but not a transition state analog, since its binding constant is similar to that for the substrate phenyl acetate. 4-Phenyl-2-butanone binds 6-18 times more tightly than the inhibitors 4-phenyl-2-butanol and N-benzylacetamide and the substrate benzyl acetate and also blocks inactivation of the enzyme with methanesulfonyl fluoride. However, its binding is independent of pH in the range 5-7.5, whereas both V and V/Km for benzyl acetate hydrolysis decrease with decreasing pH in this range. These data indicate a specific but weak interaction between the ketone carbonyl and the enzyme, but probably do not justify considering this compound a transition state analog. 4-oxopentyltrimethylammonium iodide has previously been shown to bind about 125 times more strongly than the substrate acetylcholamine. It also binds about 375 times more strongly than the alcohol 4-hydroxypentyltrimethylammonium iodide. Furthermore, the ketone protects the enzyme from inactivation by methansulfony fluoride, while the corresponding quaternary ammonium alcohol accelerates this inactivation reaction. This additional information confirms that the ketone is a transition state analog.  相似文献   

16.
In porcine cytosolic aspartate aminotransferase, a dimeric enzyme, the amino-terminal region anchoring onto the neighboring subunit is linked to the adjoining floppy peptide segment (residues 12-47), an integral part of the small domain whose facile movement upon substrate binding is a striking "induced fit" feature of this enzyme. To assess the contribution by the amino-terminal region to small domain movement and protein stability, a series of enzyme derivatives truncated on the amino-terminal side (residues 1-9) was prepared by using oligonucleotide-directed in vitro mutagenesis. Deletion of residues 1-3 showed no effect on catalytic activity and heat stability. Del 1-5 mutant enzyme with an extra methionine at position 5 showed only 43% of the kappa cat value (in the overall transamination) of the wild-type enzyme. Further deletion up to residue 9 resulted in a slight decrease in kappa cat values. Del 1-9 mutant enzyme still retained a kappa cat value of 33% that of wild-type enzyme. Km values for aspartate and 2-oxoglutarate increased sharply upon deletion of residues 1-9. Accordingly, Del 1-9 mutant enzyme showed a striking decrease in the kappa cat/Km value, to only 2% of that for the wild-type enzyme. Deletion of amino-terminal residues 1-9 resulted also in a large decrease in thermostability and in an enhanced susceptibility to limited proteolysis by protease 401, which is known to cleave at Leu20 of the wild-type enzyme. These findings indicate that an increase in the conformational freedom of the floppy segment (residues 12-47) would occur upon the loss of most of the anchorage region, thereby presenting an entropic barrier to conformational changes that facilitate substrate binding with high affinity.  相似文献   

17.
Prolyl oligopeptidase, an enzyme implicated in memory disorders, is a member of a new serine peptidase family. Crystallographic studies (Fülöp et al., 1998) revealed a novel oxyanion binding site containing a tyrosine residue, Tyr473. To study the importance of Tyr473 OH, we have produced prolyl oligopeptidase and its Tyr473Phe variant in Escherichia coli. The specificity rate constant, k(cat)/Km, for the modified enzyme decreased by a factor of 8-40 with highly specific substrates, Z-Gly-Pro-Nap, and a fluorogenic octapeptide. With these compounds, the decline in k(cat) was partly compensated for by reduction in Km, a difference from the extensively studied subtilisin. With the less specific suc-Gly-Pro-Nap, the Km value, which approximates Ks, was not significantly changed, resulting in greater diminution (approximately 500-fold) in k(cat)/Km. The second-order rate constant for the reaction with Z-Pro-prolinal, a slow tight-binding transition-state analogue inhibitor, and the Ki values for a slow substrate and two product-like inhibitors were not significantly affected by the Tyr473 OH group. The mechanism of transition-state stabilization was markedly dependent upon the nature of substrate and varied with pH as the enzyme interconverted between its two catalytically competent forms.  相似文献   

18.
M R Eftink  R L Biltonen 《Biochemistry》1983,22(22):5123-5134
The pH, ionic strength, and solvent deuterium isotope dependence of the steady-state kinetics of the ribonuclease A catalyzed hydrolysis of cytidine cyclic 2',3'-phosphate has been investigated by using, primarily, the technique of flow microcalorimetry to monitor the kinetics. The pH dependence of the Michaelis-Menten parameters has been analyzed by assuming the participation of His-12 and -119 of the enzyme and a third ionizing group, postulated to be on the pyrimidine ring of the substrate, to determine the pH-independent rate constant kc, and Michaelis constant Km. The reported pH analysis, together with existing NMR data and chemical modification studies, allows an assignment of the functional roles of His-12 and -119 as being those of general acid and general base catalytic residues, respectively. At high pH, the apparent Km value is found to increase to unity. This drop in affinity between the enzyme and the substrate at high pH indicates that the substrate binds to the enzyme primarily through an electrostatic interaction with the active-site histidine residues, particularly His-12. The apparent absence of an interaction with the riboside portion of the substrate is suggested to be due to the fact that the substrate exists in a syn conformation about its glycosidic bond and thus cannot interact optimally with the enzyme's binding pocket. This will result in a relative destabilization of the enzyme-substrate complex, which can then be relieved upon the formation of the transition state. The ionic strength dependence of ribonuclease activity is shown to be primarily a result of its effect on the pKa of the histidine residues and a concomitant change in the value of Km.  相似文献   

19.
Purification, assay and kinetic features of HIV-1 proteinase   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
1) The aspartic proteinase of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) was purified from cultures of recombinant E. coli. The enzyme preparation is homogeneous as judged by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and isoelectric focusing. 2) A rapid assay procedure for the proteinase was established which makes use of the cleavage of a radiolabeled decapeptide and the separation of substrate and labeled product by ion-exchange resin. 3) Activity of the enzyme is optimal at an ionic strength of 2.5-3.5M; also, the inhibitor pepstatin is a more potent inhibitor at higher ionic strength. This can be attributed to a tighter binding of both substrate and inhibitor in high-salt buffer. 4) The Km value of the decapeptide substrate is independent of the pH in the range of 3.5-7.5, while kcat shows a bell-shaped curve with a maximum at pH 5.2. The shape of the curve can be attributed to pKa values of 4.2 and 6.2 of groups on the enzyme. Pepstatin inhibition is optimal below pH 5.5, but becomes weak above pH 6.  相似文献   

20.
The purpose of this study was to characterize the interrelationship between free calcium (Ca2+) and magnesium (Mg2+) in the Ca2+ ATPase enzyme cycle of kidney membranes. Experiments were performed with basolateral membranes from rat renal cortex and microdissected proximal and distal tubules from mice. Results were similar in the three types of preparations. We first investigated the effect of ATP concentration on Ca2(+)- and Mg2(+)-dependent ATP hydrolysis. With 0.2 microM Ca2+, the enzyme activity, as a function of ATP concentration, showed two saturable components: a high affinity component with a Km of 33 microM ATP and a low affinity component with a Km of 0.63 mM ATP. These components may represent either two distinct sites of ATP binding or two forms of the same site. For the sake of simplicity, it was assumed that the two components correspond to a high affinity and a low affinity substrate site. At the high affinity site (ATP = 50 microM), the Ca2+ dependence of ATP hydrolysis followed a single Michaelis-Menten kinetics with Km for Ca2+ of 0.08 microM. The addition of 1 mM Mg2+ resulted in a relatively constant increase in ATP hydrolysis at all Ca2+ concentrations, indicating that the effects of the two cations were additive. With high ATP concentration (ATP = 3 mM), Ca2+ also induced an ATP hydrolysis according to a saturable process, with a Km for Ca2+ of 0.2 microM. In contrast with what occurred with low concentrations of ATP, addition of millimolar Mg2+ completely curtailed the sensitivity of the enzyme to Ca2+.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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