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1.
L C Kuo  W Herzberg  W N Lipscomb 《Biochemistry》1985,24(18):4754-4761
The ornithine transcarbamoylase catalyzed reaction and its inhibition by L-norvaline have been investigated between pH 5.5 and 10.5. The steady-state turnover rate (kcat) of the enzyme from Escherichia coli increases with pH and plateaus above pH 9. Its change with pH conforms to a single protonation process with an apparent pKa of 7.3. The effect of pH on the apparent Michaelis constant (KMapp) of L-ornithine suggests that this diamino acid in its cationic form is not the substrate. Treating only the zwitterions of ornithine as substrate, the pH profile of the pseudo-first-order rate constant (kcat/KMz) of the reaction is a bell-shaped curve characterized by pKa's of 6.2 and 9.1 and asymptotic slopes of +/- 1. Similar pKa's (6.3 and 9.3) are obtained for the pKi profile of zwitterionic L-norvaline, a competitive inhibitor. The pKi profile further indicates that the alpha-amino group of the inhibitor must be charged for binding. Together, these pH profiles provide sufficient information to suggest that only the minor zwitterionic species of ornithine, H2N(CH2)3CH(NH3+)COO-, binds the enzyme productively. The selection of this substrate form by the enzyme leads to a Michaelis complex in which ornithine is poised for nucleophilic attack. Following such binding, the need for deprotonation of the delta-NH3+ group is avoided, and transcarbamoylation becomes energetically more feasible. Reaction schemes accounting for the effects of pH are proposed for the enzymic reaction.  相似文献   

2.
Escherichia coli ornithine transcarbamoylase displays a strict specificity toward its second substrate L-ornithine. After forming a binary complex with carbamoyl phosphate and undergoing an induced-fit isomerization (Miller, A. W., and Kuo, L. C. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 15023-15027), the enzyme selects only the minor, zwitterionic ornithine with an uncharged delta-amino group for transcarbamoylation. Formation of the productive ternary complex is linked to two enzymic ionizations (pK alpha 6.2 approximately 6.3 and 9.1 approximately 9.3) and two ornithine ionizations (pK alpha 8.5 and 10.6) (Kuo, L. C., Herzberg, W., and Lipscomb, W. N. (1985) Biochemistry 24, 4754-4761). To elucidate the mechanism through which substrate specificity is achieved, the binding of L-ornithine to two site-specific point mutants (Arg-57----Gly and Cys-273----Ala) of the enzyme has been examined. For the Gly-57 mutant enzyme, which does not undergo the induced-fit isomerization, affinity for ornithine drops by a factor of 500. The pH profile of the apparent equilibrium constant governing the association of L-ornithine to the binary complex of this mutant reveals that only two enzymic ionizations affect ornithine binding. The ionizations linked to L-ornithine are not detected. Hence, the preisomerized binary complex binds not only poorly but also indiscriminately all ionic species of L-ornithine. For the Ala-273 mutant enzyme, which exhibits the induced-fit isomerization, affinity of the amino acid is decreased by an order of magnitude. Ionizations of L-ornithine to yield a zwitterion for binding are detected in pH analyses for this mutant, but the pK alpha of 6.2 associated with the enzymic deprotonation in the wild type is absent. Therefore, Cys-273 is a binding site of L-ornithine. The D-isomer of ornithine is a very weak, deadend ligand to all three forms of the enzyme with affinities in the millimolar range. Employing the estimated affinities of D- and L-ornithine, the binding stereospecificity of the wild-type and mutant binary complexes toward the amino acid substrate may be evaluated. L-Ornithine binds preferentially over D-ornithine by two and four orders of magnitude in the absence and presence of protein isomerization, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
The mechanism of inhibition of ornithine transcarbamoylase by the bacterial toxin phaseolotoxin [N-delta-(phosphosulphamyl)ornithylalanylhomoarginine] was investigated. Ornithine transcarbamoylase was purified by affinity chromatography from Escherichia coli W argR- by using N-delta-(phosphonoacetyl)ornithine as the ligand. Under steady-state conditions phaseolotoxin inhibition was reversible and exhibited mixed kinetics with respect to carbamoyl phosphate. The apparent Ki and apparent K'i were 0.2 microM and 10 microM respectively. Inhibition with respect to ornithine was noncompetitive, with an apparent Ki of 0.9 microM. These data are consistent with competitive binding of phaseolotoxin to the carbamoyl phosphate-binding site of the enzyme. The toxin also appears to be able to bind to the enzyme-carbamoyl phosphate complex, although, since K'i is 50 times greater than Ki, this event is kinetically much less significant. In the presence of phaseolotoxin ornithine transcarbamoylase exhibited a transient phase of activity before a steady state. This is consistent with low rates of association and dissociation for the toxin with enzyme and the enzyme-toxin complex. Rate constants of 2.5 X 10(4)M-1 X s-1 and 5 X 10(-3)s-1 were estimated for the association and dissociation constants respectively.  相似文献   

4.
W Xu  E R Kantrowitz 《Biochemistry》1989,28(26):9937-9943
Carbamoyl phosphate is held in the active site of Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamoylase by a variety of interactions with specific side chains of the enzyme. In particular, the carbonyl group of carbamoyl phosphate interacts with Thr-55, Arg-105, and His-134. Site-specific mutagenesis was used to create a mutant version of the enzyme in which Thr-55 was replaced by alanine in order to help define the role of this residue in the catalytic mechanism. The Thr-55----Ala holoenzyme exhibits a 4.7-fold reduction in maximal observed specific activity, no alteration in aspartate cooperativity, and a small reduction in carbamoyl phosphate cooperativity. The mutation also causes 14-fold and 35-fold increases in the carbamoyl phosphate and aspartate concentrations required for half the maximal observed specific activity, respectively. Circular dichroism spectroscopy has shown that saturating carbamoyl phosphate does not induce a conformational change in the Thr-55----Ala holoenzyme as it does for the wild-type holoenzyme. The kinetic properties of the Thr-55----Ala catalytic subunit are altered to a greater extent than the mutant holoenzyme. The mutant catalytic subunit cannot be saturated by either substrate under the experimental conditions. Furthermore, as opposed to the wild-type catalytic subunit, the Thr-55----Ala catalytic subunit shows cooperativity for aspartate and can be activated by N-(phosphonoacetyl)-L-aspartate in the presence of low concentrations of aspartate and high concentrations of carbamoyl phosphate. As deduced by circular dichroism spectroscopy, the conformation of the Thr-55----Ala catalytic subunit in the absence of active-site ligands is distinctly different from the wild-type catalytic subunit.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
The intramitochondrial localization of the urea cycle enzymes, carbamoyl phosphate synthetase and ornithine transcarbamoylase, has been examined by both in vitro and in situ studies. The following three lines of evidence are presented to establish that significant fractions of the rat liver enzymes are loosely associated with the inner mitochondrial membrane: 1) when the mitochondrion is fractionated, the enzymes partition between the matrix and membrane fractions in the absence of detergent and partition solely to the matrix in the presence of detergent; 2) the purified enzymes associate with purified inner membrane preparations; and, 3) protein A-gold electron microscopic immunocytochemical analysis of rat liver sections reveals a nonrandom arrangement of the enzyme, with the maximal enzyme density adjacent to the inner mitochondrial membrane. These findings serve as the basis for novel potential mechanisms for regulation of the activity of the enzymes and provide additional evidence for the extensive organization of the mitochondrial matrix. The membrane interaction might also serve as the organizing factor for a carbamoyl phosphate synthetase-ornithine transcarbamoylase or other multienzyme complex.  相似文献   

6.
Rochera L  Fresquet V  Rubio V  Cervera J 《FEBS letters》2002,514(2-3):323-328
The role of residues of the ornithine activator site is probed by mutagenesis in Escherichia coli carbamoyl phosphate synthetase (CPS). Mutations E783A, E783L, E892A and E892L abolish ornithine binding, E783D and T1042V decrease 2-3 orders of magnitude and E892D decreased 10-fold apparent affinity for ornithine. None of the mutations inactivates CPS. E783 mutations hamper carbamate phosphorylation and increase K(+) and MgATP requirements, possibly by perturbing the K(+)-loop near the carbamate phosphorylation site. Mutation E892A activates the enzyme similarly to ornithine, possibly by altering the position of K891 at the opening of the tunnel that delivers the carbamate to its phosphorylation site. T1042V also influences modulation by IMP and UMP, supporting signal transmission from the nucleotide effector to the ornithine site mediated by a hydrogen bond network involving T1042. Ornithine activation of CPS may be mediated by K(+)-loop and tunnel gating changes.  相似文献   

7.
Ligand-induced ultraviolet difference spectra have been determined for Escherichia coli ornithine transcarbamoylase. The most prominent feature of the spectra is an absorbance difference which resembles a single period of a sine wave spanning the 245-320 nm region with a maximum at approximately 270 nm and a minimum at around 295-300 nm. This broad absorbance difference is typical of a blue-shift 1La band of tryptophan. Superimposed on the broad band in the 275-310 nm region is a series of smaller, narrow peaks resulted from red-shifted 1Lb bands of tryptophan and tyrosine residues. At pH 8.5, only carbamoyl phosphate and its analog phosphonacetamide yield a large ultraviolet difference absorbance (approximately 1800 M-1 cm-1) when bound to the enzyme. The spectra obtained are essentially the same in lineshape to and 80% in intensity of that produced by the bisubstrate analogy, N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-ornithine. In contrast, inorganic phosphate, a product of the reaction, induces small protein absorbance changes (approximately 300 M-1 cm-1) mainly in the 275-310 nm range. When complexed to the free enzyme, L-ornithine yields a marginally discernible ultraviolet difference spectrum in the 275-310 nm region, and its analogs L-norvaline and L-citrulline provide no absorbance change. However, inorganic phosphate in combination with any of the L-amino acids produces a difference spectrum similar to that given by carbamoyl phosphate alone. Collectively, these spectra suggest that carbamoyl phosphate elicits an isomerization required for the formation of the ternary complex and are consistent with the compulsory ordered mechanism of the enzyme at pH 8.5 with carbamoyl phosphate being the first substrate bound. Below pH 8, there is a kinetically discernible amount of random binding, but ordered addition is still the preferred pathway (Wargnies B., Legrain, C., and Stalon, V. (1978) Eur J. Biochem. 89, 203-212). Reflecting this change, the difference absorbance of the enzyme bound with carbamoyl phosphate is also pH dependent. The 1La band in the carbamoyl phosphate difference spectrum diminishes by approximately 20% at low pH. The PALO-induced changes, however, are pH invariant suggesting that full extent of the induced-fit isomerization is always reached in the ternary complex.  相似文献   

8.
9.
10.
The first two steps of the de novo pyrimidine biosynthetic pathway in Saccharomyces cerevisiae are catalyzed by a 240-kDa bifunctional protein encoded by the ura2 locus. Although the constituent enzymes, carbamoyl phosphate synthetase (CPSase) and aspartate transcarbamoylase (ATCase) function independently, there are interdomain interactions uniquely associated with the multifunctional protein. Both CPSase and ATCase are feedback inhibited by UTP. Moreover, the intermediate carbamoyl phosphate is channeled from the CPSase domain where it is synthesized to the ATCase domain where it is used in the synthesis of carbamoyl aspartate. To better understand these processes, a recombinant plasmid was constructed that encoded a protein lacking the amidotransferase domain and the amino half of the CPSase domain, a 100-kDa chain segment. The truncated complex consisted of the carboxyl half of the CPSase domain fused to the ATCase domain via the pDHO domain, an inactive dihydroorotase homologue that bridges the two functional domains in the native molecule. Not only was the "half CPSase" catalytically active, but it was regulated by UTP to the same extent as the parent molecule. In contrast, the ATCase domain was no longer sensitive to the nucleotide, suggesting that the two catalytic activities are controlled by distinct mechanisms. Most remarkably, isotope dilution and transient time measurements showed that the truncated complex channels carbamoyl phosphate. The overall CPSase-ATCase reaction is much less sensitive than the parent molecule to the ATCase bisubstrate analogue, N-phosphonacetyl-L-aspartate (PALA), providing evidence that the endogenously produced carbamoyl phosphate is sequestered and channeled to the ATCase active site.  相似文献   

11.
L-ribulokinase is unusual among kinases since it phosphorylates all four 2-ketopentoses with almost the same k(cat) values. The K(m)'s differ, however, being 0.14 mM for L- and 0.39 mM for d-ribulose and 3.4 mM for l- and 16 mM for d-xylulose. In addition, L-arabitol is phosphorylated at C-5 (K(m) 4 mM) and ribitol (adonitol) is phosphorylated to D-ribitol-5-phosphate (K(m) 5.5 mM), but D-arabitol, xylitol, and aldopentoses are not substrates. The K(m)'s for MgATP depend on the substrates, being 0.02 mM with L-ribulose, 0.027 mM with D-ribulose and L-xylulose, and 0.3-0.5 mM with the other substrates. In the absence of a sugar substrate there is an ATPase with K(m) of 7 mM and k(cat) 1% of that with sugar substrates. The initial velocity pattern is intersecting, and MgAMPPNP is competitive vs MgATP and uncompetitive vs L-ribulose. L-Erythrulose is competitive vs L-ribulose and when MgATP concentration is varied induces substrate inhibition which is partial. These data show that the mechanism is random, but there is a high level of synergism in the binding of sugar and MgATP, and the path in which the sugar adds first is strongly preferred.  相似文献   

12.
Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase (CPS) from Escherichia coli catalyzes the formation of carbamoyl phosphate, which is subsequently employed in both the pyrimidine and arginine biosynthetic pathways. The reaction mechanism is known to proceed through at least three highly reactive intermediates: ammonia, carboxyphosphate, and carbamate. In keeping with the fact that the product of CPS is utilized in two competing metabolic pathways, the enzyme is highly regulated by a variety of effector molecules including potassium and ornithine, which function as activators, and UMP, which acts as an inhibitor. IMP is also known to bind to CPS but the actual effect of this ligand on the activity of the enzyme is dependent upon both temperature and assay conditions. Here we describe the three-dimensional architecture of CPS with bound IMP determined and refined to 2.1 A resolution. The nucleotide is situated at the C-terminal portion of a five-stranded parallel beta-sheet in the allosteric domain formed by Ser(937) to Lys(1073). Those amino acid side chains responsible for anchoring the nucleotide to the polypeptide chain include Lys(954), Thr(974), Thr(977), Lys(993), Asn(1015), and Thr(1017). A series of hydrogen bonds connect the IMP-binding pocket to the active site of the large subunit known to function in the phosphorylation of the unstable intermediate, carbamate. This structural analysis reveals, for the first time, the detailed manner in which CPS accommodates nucleotide monophosphate effector molecules within the allosteric domain.  相似文献   

13.
Substrate specificity of Escherichia coli thymidine phosphorylase to thymidine derivatives modified at 5' -, 3' -, and 2' ,3' - positions of the sugar moiety was studied. Equilibrium and kinetic constants (K(m), K(I), k(cat)) of the phosphorolysis reaction have been determined for 20 thymidine analogs. The results are compared with X-ray and molecular dynamics data. The most important hydrogen bonds in the enzyme-substrate complex are revealed.  相似文献   

14.
The activity and cooperativity of Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamoylase (ATCase) vary as a function of pH, with a maximum of both parameters at approximately pH 8.3. Here we report the first X-ray structure of unliganded ATCase at pH 8.5, to establish a structural basis for the observed Bohr effect. The overall conformation of the active site at pH 8.5 more closely resembles the active site of the enzyme in the R-state structure than other T-state structures. In the structure of the enzyme at pH 8.5 the 80's loop is closer to its position in R-state structures. A unique electropositive channel, comprised of residues from the 50's region, is observed in this structure, with Arg54 positioned in the center of the channel. The planar angle between the carbamoyl phosphate and aspartate domains of the catalytic chain is more open at pH 8.5 than in ATCase structures determined at lower pH values. The structure of the enzyme at pH 8.5 also exhibits lengthening of a number of interactions in the interface between the catalytic and regulatory chains, whereas a number of interactions between the two catalytic trimers are shortened. These alterations in the interface between the upper and lower trimers may directly shift the allosteric equilibrium and thus the cooperativity of the enzyme. Alterations in the electropositive environment of the active site and alterations in the position of the catalytic chain domains may be responsible for the enhanced activity of the enzyme at pH 8.5.  相似文献   

15.
Single crystals of recombinant Escherichia coli ornithine transcarbamoylase suitable for x-ray analysis have been grown from polyethylene glycol and 2-methyl-2,4-pentanediol. The space group has been determined as P3(1) or P3(2), with one protein trimer of three identical 36.8-kDa subunits in the asymmetric unit. The unit cell dimensions are a = b = 105.1 A and c = 87.8 A. The crystals diffract well to 3-A resolution and are quite resistant to radiation damage. Single crystals have also been grown of a genetically engineered site-specific mutant for which the replacement of an arginine (Arg-57) to a glycine has been shown to not only drastically affect the enzyme activity but also its kinetic mechanism (Kuo, L. C., Miller, A. W., Lee, S., and Kozuma, C. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 8823-8832). The crystals of the Arg-57----Gly mutant protein are isomorphous to those of the wild type. Crystal soaking experiments using both wild-type and Arg-57----Gly crystals in the presence of various ligands have provided evidence of specific conformational changes upon substrate binding which supports our previous kinetic and spectroscopic observations.  相似文献   

16.
17.
18.
Substrate specificity of CTP synthetase from Escherichia coli   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The stoichiometry of the enzymatic reaction catalyzed by CTP synthetase from Escherichia coli was analyzed by high-performance liquid chromatography. The results revealed that for every mole of UTP transformed to CTP, one mole of ATP was converted to ADP. The substrate specificity of CTP synthetase from E. coli was investigated by means of UTP analogs. Chemical modification of UTP involved either the uracil, ribose or 5'-triphosphate part. None of the UTP analogs studied proved to be a substrate. The capacity of the UTP analogs to inhibit CTP synthetase was investigated. From the UTP derivatives employed only 2-thiouridine 5'-triphosphate was found to inhibit the enzyme competitively with reasonable affinity: Ki/Km(UTP) = 1. This study indicated that the three main structural elements of the UTP molecule: uracil, ribose and 5'-triphosphate moiety, contribute to substrate specificity. The behaviour of a limited number of CTP analogs as product-like inhibitors supported this view.  相似文献   

19.
20.
The catalytic functions of the amino-terminal and carboxyl-terminal halves of the large subunit of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase from Escherichia coli have been identified using site-directed mutagenesis. Glycine residues at positions 176, 180, and 722 within the putative mononucleotide-binding site were replaced with isoleucine residues. Each of these mutations resulted in at least a 1 order of magnitude reduction in the Vmax for carbamoyl phosphate synthesis. The mutations on the amino-terminal half, G176I and G180I, caused slight reduction in the rate of synthesis of ATP from ADP and carbamoyl phosphate (the partial ATP synthesis reaction) but the bicarbonate-dependent ATPase reaction velocity was reduced to less than 10% of the wild-type rate. The mutant G722I, which is on the carboxy-terminal half, caused the partial ATP synthesis reaction to be reduced by 1 order of magnitude but the bicarbonate-dependent ATPase reaction was reduced only slightly. All three mutations are within regions which show homology to the putative glycine-rich loops of many ATP-binding proteins. These results have been interpreted to suggest that the two homologous halves of the large subunit of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase each contain a binding site for ATP. The NH2-terminal domain contains the portion of the large subunit that is primarily involved with the phosphorylation of bicarbonate to carboxy phosphate while the COOH-terminal domain contains the region of the enzyme that catalyzes the phosphorylation of carbamate to carbamoyl phosphate.  相似文献   

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