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1.
The specific activity of subtilisin E, an alkaline serine protease of Bacillus subtilis, was substantially increased by optimizing the amino acid residue at position 31 (Ile in the wild-type enzyme) in the vicinity of the catalytic triad of the enzyme. Eight uncharged amino acids (Cys, Ser, Thr, Gly, Ala, Val, Leu, and Phe) were introduced at this site, which is next to catalytic Asp32, using site-directed mutagenesis. Mutant enzymes were expressed in Escherichia coli and were prepared from the periplasmic space. Only the Val and Leu substitutions gave active enzyme, and the Leu31 mutant was found to have a greatly increased activity compared to the wild-type enzyme. The other six mutant enzymes showed a marked decrease in activity. This result indicates that a branched-chain amino acid at position 31 is essential for the expression of subtilisin activity and that the level of the activity depends on side chain structure. The purified Leu31 mutant enzyme was analyzed with respect to substrate specificity, heat stability, and optimal temperature. It was found that the Leu31 replacement caused a prominent 2-6-fold increase in catalytic efficiency (kcat/Km) due to a larger kcat for peptide substrates.  相似文献   

2.
The hydroxyl group of a serine residue at position 195 acts as a nucleophile in the catalytic mechanism of the serine proteases. However, the chemically similar residue, threonine, is rarely used in similar functional context. Our structural modeling suggests that the Ser 195 --> Thr trypsin variant is inactive due to negative steric interaction between the methyl group on the beta-carbon of Thr 195 and the disulfide bridge formed by cysteines 42 and 58. By simultaneously truncating residues 42 and 58 and substituting Ser 195 with threonine, we have successfully converted the classic serine protease trypsin to a functional threonine protease. Substitution of residue 42 with alanine and residue 58 with alanine or valine in the presence of threonine 195 results in trypsin variants that are 10(2) -10(4) -fold less active than wild type in kcat/KM but >10(6)-fold more active than the Ser 195 --> Thr single variant. The substitutions do not alter the substrate specificity of the enzyme in the P1'- P4' positions. Removal of the disulfide bridge decreases the overall thermostability of the enzyme, but it is partially rescued by the presence of threonine at position 195.  相似文献   

3.
We are probing the determinants of catalytic function and substrate specificity in serine proteases by kinetic and crystallographic characterization of genetically engineered site-directed mutants of rat trypsin. The role of the aspartyl residue at position 102, common to all members of the serine protease family, has been tested by substitution with asparagine. In the native enzyme, Asp102 accepts a hydrogen bond from the catalytic base His57, which facilitates the transfer of a proton from the enzyme nucleophile Ser195 to the substrate leaving group. At neutral pH, the mutant is four orders of magnitude less active than the naturally occurring enzyme, but its binding affinity for model substrates is virtually undiminished. Crystallographic analysis reveals that Asn102 donates a hydrogen bond to His57, forcing it to act as donor to Ser195. Below pH 6, His57 becomes statistically disordered. Presumably, the di-protonated population of histidyl side chains are unable to hydrogen bond to Asn102. Steric conflict may cause His57 to rotate away from the catalytic site. These results suggest that Asp102 not only provides inductive and orientation effects, but also stabilizes the productive tautomer of His57. Three experiments were carried out to alter the substrate specificity of trypsin. Glycine residues at positions 216 and 226 in the substrate-binding cavity were replaced by alanine residues in order to differentially affect lysine and arginine substrate binding. While the rate of catalysis by the mutant enzymes was reduced in the mutant enzymes, their substrate specificity was enhanced relative to trypsin. The increased specificity was caused by differential effects on the catalytic activity towards arginine and lysine substrates. The Gly----Ala substitution at 226 resulted in an altered conformation of the enzyme which is converted to an active trypsin-like conformation upon binding of a substrate analog. In a third experiment, Lys189, at the bottom of the specificity pocket, was replaced with an aspartate with the expectation that specificity of the enzyme might shift to aspartate. The mutant enzyme is not capable of cleaving at Arg and Lys or Asp, but shows an enhanced chymotrypsin-like specificity. Structural investigations of these mutants are in progress.  相似文献   

4.
A mutant of Escherichia coli resistant to serine hydroxamate which has a large increase in Km for serine of seryl-tRNA synthetase is described. The mutant serS gene was cloned and sequenced and was found to contain a single-base-pair mutation, resulting in the substitution of the residue alanine 262 by valine in motif 2. The methyl side chain of alanine 262 is not exposed at the active site, and molecular modeling indicated that replacement of alanine 262 by valine does not significantly affect the configuration of amino acids at the active site. This finding suggests that the residue at this position may be involved in a conformational change (possibly induced by ATP binding) which is necessary for optimal binding of the cognate amino acid.  相似文献   

5.
Aspartate-162 in the catalytic chain of aspartate transcarbamoylase is conserved in all of the sequences determined to date. The X-ray structure of the Escherichia coli enzyme indicates that this residue is located in a loop region (160's loop) that is near the interface between two catalytic trimers and is also close to the active site. In order to test whether this conserved residue is important for support of the internal architecture of the enzyme and/or involved in transmitting homotropic and heterotropic effects, the function of this residue was studied using a mutant version of the enzyme with an alanine at this position (Asp-162----Ala) created by site-specific mutagenesis. The Asp-162----Ala enzyme exhibits a 400-fold reduction in the maximal observed specific activity, approximately 2-fold and 10-fold decreases in the aspartate and carbamoyl phosphate concentrations at half the maximal observed specific activity respectively, a loss of homotropic cooperativity, and loss of response to the regulatory nucleotides ATP and CTP. Furthermore, equilibrium binding studies indicate that the affinity of the mutant enzyme for CTP is reduced more than 10-fold. The isolated catalytic subunit exhibits a 660-fold reduction in maximal observed specific activity compared to the wild-type catalytic subunit. The Km values for aspartate and carbamoyl phosphate for the Asp-162----Ala catalytic subunit were within 2-fold of the values observed for the wild-type catalytic subunit. Computer simulations of the energy-minimized mutant enzyme indicate that the space once occupied by the side chain of Asp-162 may be filled by other side chains, suggesting that Asp-162 is important for stabilizing the internal architecture of the wild-type enzyme.  相似文献   

6.
Changing a catalytic cysteine into a serine, and vice versa, generally leads to a dramatic decrease in enzymatic efficiency. Except a study done on thiol subtilisin, no extensive study was carried out for determining whether the decrease in activity is due to a low nucleophilicity of the introduced amino acid. In the present study, Cys149 of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase from Bacillus stearothermophilus was converted into a Ser residue. This leads to a drastic reduction of the kcat value. The rate-limiting step occurs before the hydride transfer step. Selective, but slow, inactivation is observed with specific, structurally different, inhibitors of serine protease. The esterolytic activity of serine mutant towards activated esters is also strongly decreased. The rate-limiting step of the esterase reaction also shifts from deacylation in the wild type to acylation in the mutant. Altogether, these results strongly suggest that the low catalytic efficiency of the Ser mutant is due to a poor nucleophilicity of the hydroxyl serine group within the active site of the enzyme. The fact that (1) the apo --> holo transition does not change esterolytic and inactivating efficiencies, and (2) Ser149 Asn176 double mutant exhibits the same chemical reactivity and esterolytic catalytic efficiency compared to the Ser149 single mutant indicates that the serine residue is not subject to His176 general base catalysis. A linear relationship between the catalytic dehydrogenase rate, the kcat/KM for esterolysis, and the concentration of OH- is observed, thus supporting the alcoholate entity as the attacking reactive species. Collectively this study shows that the active site environment of GAPDH is not adapted to increase the nucleophilicity of a serine residue. This is discussed in relation to what is known about Ser and Cys protease active sites.  相似文献   

7.
Ser72 at the active site of the Escherichia coli dUTPase has been mutated to an alanine, and the properties of the mutant have been investigated. The serine is absolutely conserved among the monomeric and trimeric dUTPases (including the bifunctional dCTP deaminase:dUTPases), and it has been proposed to promote catalysis by balancing negative charge at the oxygen that bridges the alpha- and beta-phosphorus of the substrate. In all reported complexes of dUTPases with the substrate analogue alpha,beta-imido-dUTP.Mg, the serine beta-OH is indeed hydrogen bonded to the alpha,beta-bridging nitrogen of the analogue. However, in the complex of the Asp90 --> Asn mutant dUTPase with the true substrate dUTP.Mg, the serine beta-OH points in the opposite direction and may form a hydrogen bond to Asn84 at the bottom of the pyrimidine pocket. Here we show that the replacement of the beta-OH by hydrogen reduces k cat from 5.8 to 0.008 s (-1) but also k -1 , the rate of substrate dissociation, from 6.2 to 0.1 s (-1) ( K M = 6 x 10 (-9) M). We conclude that the serine beta-OH exercises both ground state (GS) destabilization and transition state (TS) stabilization, effects not usually linked to a single residue. With experimental support, we argue that the beta-OH destabilizes the GS by imposing conformational constraints on the enzyme and that formation of the TS depends on a rotation of the serine side chain that not only relieves the constraints but brings the beta-OH into a position where it can electrostatically stabilize the TS. This rotation would also allow the beta-OH to promote both deamination and hydrolysis in the bifunctional deaminases. We find that the E. coli dUTPase does not catalyze the hydrolysis of the alpha,beta-imido-dUTP.Mg, suggesting that the analogue provides the hydrogen in the bond to the serine beta-OH.  相似文献   

8.
Eleven amino acid substitutions at Val-121 of human carbonic anhydrase II including Gly, Ala, Ser, Leu, Ile, Lys, and Arg, were constructed by site-directed mutagenesis. This residue is at the mouth of the hydrophobic pocket in the enzyme active site. The CO2 hydrase activity and the p-nitrophenyl esterase activity of these CAII variants correlate with the hydrophobicity of the residue, suggesting that the hydrophobic character of this residue is important for catalysis. The effects of these mutations on the steady-state kinetics for CO2 hydration occur mainly in kcat/Km and Km, consistent with involvement of this residue in CO2 association. The Val-121----Ala mutant, which exhibits about one-third normal CO2 hydrase activity, has been studied by x-ray crystallographic methods. No significant changes in the mutant enzyme conformation are evident relative to the wild-type enzyme. Since Val-121 is at the mouth of the hydrophobic pocket, its substitution by the methyl side chain of alanine makes the pocket mouth significantly wider than that of the wild-type enzyme. Hence, although a moderately wide (and deep) pocket is important for substrate association, a wider mouth to this pocket does not seriously compromise the catalytic approach of CO2 toward nucleophilic zinc-bound hydroxide.  相似文献   

9.
Site-directed mutagenesis was employed to investigate the role of Cys566 in the catalytic mechanism of rat liver NADPH-cytochrome P-450 oxidoreductase. Rat NADPH-cytochrome P-450 oxidoreductase and mutants containing either alanine or serine at position 566 were expressed in Escherichia coli and purified to homogeneity. Substitution of alanine at position 566 had no effect on enzymatic activity with the acceptors cytochrome c and ferricyanide but did increase trans-hydrogenase activity with 3-acetylpyridine adenine dinucleotide phosphate by 79%. The Km for NADPH was increased 2.5-fold, and the NADP+ KI was increased 4.8-fold compared with that found for the wild-type enzyme. The conservative substitution, Ser566, produced a 50% decrease in cytochrome c reductase activity whereas activity with ferricyanide was decreased 57%, and 3-acetylpyridine adenine dinucleotide phosphate activity was unaffected. The NADPH Km was increased 4.6-fold, and the NADP+ KI increased 7.6-fold. The dependence of cytochrome c reductase activity on the KCl concentration was markedly altered by the Cys566 substitutions. Maximum activity for the wild-type enzyme was observed at approximately 0.18 M KCl whereas maximum activity for the mutant enzymes was observed between 0.04 and 0.09 M KCl. The pH dependence of cytochrome c reductase activity, cytochrome c Km, and flavin content were unaffected by these substitutions. These results demonstrate that Cys566 is not essential for activity of rat liver NADPH-cytochrome P-450 oxidoreductase although the cysteine side chain does affect the interaction of NADPH with the enzyme.  相似文献   

10.
Leader peptidase (LP) is the enzyme responsible for proteolytic cleavage of the amino acid leader sequence from bacterial preproteins. Recent data indicate that LP may be an unusual serine proteinase which operates without involvement of a histidine residue (M. T. Black, J. G. R. Munn, and A. E. Allsop, Biochem. J. 282:539-543, 1992; M. Sung and R. E. Dalbey, J. Biol. Chem. 267:13154-13159, 1992) and that, therefore, one or more alternative residues must perform the function of a catalytic base. With the aid of sequence alignments, site-specific mutagenesis of the gene encoding LP (lepB) from Escherichia coli has been employed to investigate the mechanism of action of the enzyme. Various mutant forms of plasmid-borne LP were tested for their abilities to complement the temperature-sensitive activity of LP in E. coli IT41. Data are presented which indicate that the only conserved amino acid residue possessing a side chain with the potential to ionize, and therefore with the potential to transfer protons, which cannot be substituted with a neutral side chain is lysine at position 145. The data suggest that the catalytic activity of LP is dependent on the operation of a serine-lysine catalytic dyad.  相似文献   

11.
Water-soluble quinoprotein glucose dehydrogease (PQQGDH-B) is a dimeric enzyme whose application for glucose sensing is the focus of much attention. We attempted to increase the thermal stability of PQQGDH-B by introducing a disulfide bond at the dimer interface. The Ser residue at position 415 was selected for substitution with Cys, as structural information revealed that its side chains face each other at the dimer interface of PQQGDH-B. PQQGDH-B with Ser415Cys showed 30-fold greater thermal stability at 55°C than did the wild-type enzyme without any decrease in catalytic activity. After incubation at 70°C for 10 min, Ser415Cys retained 90% of the GDH activity of the wild-type enzyme. Disulfide bond formation between the mutant subunits was confirmed by analyses with sodium dodecylsulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence and absence of reductants. Our results indicate that the introduction of one Cys residue in each monomer of PQQGDH-B resulted in formation of a disulfide bond at the dimer interface and thus achieved a large increase in the thermal stability of the enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
The function of arginine residue 166 in the active site of Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase was investigated by site-directed mutagenesis. Two mutant versions of alkaline phosphatase, with either serine or alanine in the place of arginine at position 166, were generated by using a specially constructed M13 phage carrying the wild-type phoA gene. The mutant enzymes with serine and alanine at position 166 have very similar kinetic properties. Under conditions of no external phosphate acceptor, the kcat for the mutant enzymes decreases by approximately 30-fold while the Km increases by less than 2-fold. When kinetic measurements are carried out in the presence of a phosphate acceptor, 1.0 M Tris, the kcat for the mutant enzymes is reduced by less than 3-fold, while the Km increases by more than 50-fold. For both mutant enzymes, in either the absence or the presence of a phosphate acceptor, the catalytic efficiency as measured by the kcat/Km ratio decreases by approximately 50-fold as compared to the wild type. Measurements of the Ki for inorganic phosphate show an increase of approximately 50-fold for both mutants. Phenylglyoxal, which inactivates the wild-type enzyme, does not inactivate the Arg-166----Ala enzyme. This result indicates that Arg-166 is the same arginine residue that when chemically modified causes loss of activity [Daemen, F.J.M., & Riordan, J.F. (1974) Biochemistry 13, 2865-2871]. The data reported here suggest that although Arg-166 is important for activity is not essential. The analysis of the kinetic data also suggests that the loss of arginine-166 at the active site of alkaline phosphatase has two different effects on the enzyme. First, the binding of the substrate, and phosphate as a competitive inhibitor, is reduced; second, the rate of hydrolysis of the covalent phosphoenzyme may be diminished.  相似文献   

13.
Yuan H  Gadda G 《Biochemistry》2011,50(5):770-779
Choline oxidase catalyzes the flavin-dependent, two-step oxidation of choline to glycine betaine with the formation of an aldehyde intermediate. In the first oxidation reaction, the alcohol substrate is initially activated to its alkoxide via proton abstraction. The substrate is oxidized via transfer of a hydride from the alkoxide α-carbon to the N(5) atom of the enzyme-bound flavin. In the wild-type enzyme, proton and hydride transfers are mechanistically and kinetically uncoupled. In this study, we have mutagenized an active site serine proximal to the C(4a) and N(5) atoms of the flavin and investigated the reactions of proton and hydride transfers by using substrate and solvent kinetic isotope effects. Replacement of Ser101 with threonine, alanine, cysteine, or valine resulted in biphasic traces in anaerobic reductions of the flavin with choline investigated in a stopped-flow spectrophotometer. Kinetic isotope effects established that the kinetic phases correspond to the proton and hydride transfer reactions catalyzed by the enzyme. Upon removal of Ser101, there is an at least 15-fold decrease in the rate constants for proton abstraction, irrespective of whether threonine, alanine, valine, or cysteine is present in the mutant enzyme. A logarithmic decrease spanning 4 orders of magnitude is seen in the rate constants for hydride transfer with increasing hydrophobicity of the side chain at position 101. This study shows that the hydrophilic character of a serine residue proximal to the C(4a) and N(5) flavin atoms is important for efficient hydride transfer.  相似文献   

14.
Mutagenesis of the absolutely conserved residue Asp101 of the non-specific monoesterase alkaline phosphatase (E.C. 3.1.3.1) from E. coli has produced an enzyme with increased kcat. The carboxyl group of the Asp101 residue has been proposed to be involved in the positioning of Arg166 and the formation of the helix that contains the active site Ser102. The crystal structure of the Asp101-->Ser mutant has been refined at 2.5 A to a final crystallographic R-factor of 0.173. The altered active site structure of the mutant is compared with that of the wild-type as well as with the structures of the mutant enzyme soaked in two known alkaline phosphatase inhibitors (inorganic phosphate and arsenate). The changes affect primarily the side chain of Arg166 which, by losing the hydrogen bond interaction with the carboxyl side chain of Asp101, becomes more flexible. This analysis, in conjunction with product inhibition studies of the mutant enzyme, suggests that at high pH (> 7) the enzyme achieves a quicker catalytic turnover by allowing a faster release of the product.  相似文献   

15.
The existence of an oxyanion hole in cysteine proteases able to stabilize a transition-state complex in a manner analogous to that found with serine proteases has been the object of controversy for many years. In papain, the side chain of Gln19 forms one of the hydrogen-bond donors in the putative oxyanion hole, and its contribution to transition-state stabilization has been evaluated by site-directed mutagenesis. Mutation of Gln19 to Ala caused a decrease in kcat/KM for hydrolysis of CBZ-Phe-Arg-MCA, which is 7700 M-1 s-1 in the mutant enzyme as compared to 464,000 M-1 s-1 in wild-type papain. With a Gln19Ser variant, the activity is even lower, with a kcat/KM value of 760 M-1 s-1. The 60- and 600-fold decreases in kcat/KM correspond to changes in free energy of catalysis of 2.4 and 3.8 kcal/mol for Gln19Ala and Gln19Ser, respectively. In both cases, the decrease in activity is in large part attributable to a decrease in kcat, while KM values are only slightly affected. These results indicate that the oxyanion hole is operational in the papain-catalyzed hydrolysis of CBZ-Phe-Arg-MCA and constitute the first direct evidence of a mechanistic requirement for oxyanion stabilization in the transition state of reactions catalyzed by cysteine proteases. The equilibrium constants Ki for inhibition of the papain mutants by the aldehyde Ac-Phe-Gly-CHO have also been determined. Contrary to the results with the substrate, mutation at position 19 of papain has a very small effect on binding of the inhibitor.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
The roles of invariant residues at the active site of transaldolase B from Escherichia coli have been probed by site-directed mutagenesis. The mutant enzymes D17A, N35A, E96A, T156A, and S176A were purified from a talB-deficient host and analyzed with respect to their 3D structure and kinetic behavior. X-ray analysis showed that side chain replacement did not induce unanticipated structural changes in the mutant enzymes. Three mutations, N35A, E96A, and T156A resulted mainly in an effect on apparent kcat, with little changes in apparent Km values for the substrates. Residues N35 and T156 are involved in the positioning of a catalytic water molecule at the active site and the side chain of E96 participates in concert with this water molecule in proton transfer during catalysis. Substitution of Ser176 by alanine resulted in a mutant enzyme with 2.5% residual activity. The apparent Km value for the donor substrate, fructose 6-phosphate, was increased nearly fivefold while the apparent Km value for the acceptor substrate, erythrose 4-phosphate remained unchanged, consistent with a function for S176 in the binding of the C1 hydroxyl group of the donor substrate. The mutant D17A showed a 300-fold decrease in kcat, and a fivefold increase in the apparent Km value for the acceptor substrate erythrose 4-phosphate, suggesting a role of this residue in carbon-carbon bond cleavage and stabilization of the carbanion/enamine intermediate.  相似文献   

17.
M.NgoMXV is one of the few atypical DNA:m4C methyltransferases that does not possess a serine residue in its predicted active site. We previously reported a homology model of M.NgoMXV and argued that the aspartate side chain at a corresponding position, similarly to some DNA:m6 A-specific enzymes, is essential for the methyltransferase activity (Radlinska et al., 1999). Here we report the corrected amino acid sequence of M.NgoMXV and the analysis of substitution of D68 with alanine or serine, which both render the enzyme totally inactive.  相似文献   

18.
Three mutant Escherichia coli aspartate aminotransferases in which Val39 was changed to Ala, Leu, and Phe by site-directed mutagenesis were prepared and characterized. Among the three mutant and the wild-type enzymes, the Leu39 enzyme had the lowest Km values for dicarboxylic substrates. The Km values of the Ala39 enzyme for dicarboxylates were essentially the same as those of the wild-type (Val39) enzyme. These two mutant enzymes showed essentially the same kcat values for dicarboxylic substrates as did the wild-type enzyme. On the other hand, incorporation of a bulky side-chain at position 39 (Phe39 enzyme) decreased both the affinity (1/Km) and catalytic ability (kcat) toward dicarboxylic substrates. These results show that the position 39 residue is involved in the modulation of both the binding of dicarboxylic substrates to enzyme and the catalytic ability of the enzyme. Although the replacement of Val39 with other residues altered both the kcat and Km values toward various substrates including dicarboxylic and aromatic amino acids and the corresponding oxo acids, it did not alter the ratio of the kcat/Km value of the enzyme toward a dicarboxylic substrate to that for an aromatic substrate. The affinity for aromatic substrates was not affected by changing the residue at position 39. These data indicate that, although the side chain bulkiness of the residue at position 39 correlates well with the activity toward aromatic substrates in the sequence alignment of several aminotransferases [Seville, M., Vincent M.G., & Hahn, K. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 8344-8349], the residue does not seem to be involved in the recognition of aromatic substrates.  相似文献   

19.
The role of the serine residue found at position 237 in the carbapenemase Sme-1 has been investigated by constructing a mutant in which Ser-237 was replaced by an alanine. The S237A mutant showed a catalytic behavior against penicillins and aztreonam very similar to that of Sme-1. By contrast, S237A was characterized by a reduced catalytic efficiency against cephems, such as cephalothin and cephaloridine. In addition, the weak activity of Sme-1 against the cephamycin cefoxitin was hardly detectable with the mutant enzyme. Finally, the Ser-237-->Ala mutation resulted in a marked decrease in catalytic activity against imipenem, showing that Ser-237 contributes to the carbapenemase activity of the class A beta-lactamase Sme-1.  相似文献   

20.
Prokaryotic DNA methyltransferase SssI (M.SssI) methylates C5 position of cytosine residue in CpG sequences. To obtain functionally active M.SssI and its mutants as His6-tagged proteins, bacterial strains have been produced. To test a possible role of Ser300 in recognition of CpG site by this enzyme, M.SssI mutants containing Ser300 replacements with Gly or Pro have been obtained. These replacements have practically no effect on DNA binding and methylation by M.SssI except small disturbance of DNA binding affinity in the case of S300P mutant. It indicates that there are no interactions of both the side chain and, probably, the main chain of Ser300 with DNA. A replacement of highly conserved Va1188 residue with Ala has been performed. Vall88 may participate in the stabilization of the flipped target cytosine during reaction. The replacement results in a 5-fold decrease of dissociation constant of the enzyme-substrate complex and a 2-fold decrease of initial velocity of DNA methylation. Though there are no noticeable differences in the functioning of the mutant in comparison with the wild-type enzyme, the formation of contact between Val 188 and cytosine could not be excluded. In the case of V 188A mutant the contact may be probably formed between Ala and cytosine residue.  相似文献   

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