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1.
The synthetic ketone peptide analogue of pepstatin, isovaleryl-L-valyl-[3-13C]-(3-oxo-4S)-amino-6-methylheptanoyl-L-al anyl-isoamylamide is a strong inhibitor of aspartyl proteases. When the peptide is added to porcine pepsin in H2O at pH 5.1, the 13C NMR chemical shift of the ketone carbon moves from 208 ppm for the inhibitor in solution to 99.07 ppm when bound to the enzyme active site. In 2H2O the bound shift is 98.71 ppm, 0.36 ppm upfield. For the analogous experiment contrasting H216O and H218O, the 13C chemical shift was 0.05 ppm to higher field for the heavier isotope. These data show that water, and not an enzyme nucleophile, adds to the peptide carbonyl to yield a tetrahedral diol adduct in the enzyme-catalyzed reaction, and provide a method for differentiating between covalent and non-covalent mechanisms.  相似文献   

2.
13C NMR spectroscopy was used to probe the structural interactions between carboxyl-13C-enriched oleic acid (18:1) and rat liver fatty acid binding protein (FABP) and the partitioning of 18:1 between FABP and unilamellar phosphatidylcholine (PC) vesicles. Spectra of systems containing 2-8 mol of 18:1/mol of FABP (but no PC) exhibited one carboxyl resonance (182.2 ppm) corresponding to FABP-bound 18:1. At pH values less than 8.0, an additional carboxyl resonance, corresponding to unbound 18:1 in a lamellar phase, was observed. Both resonances exhibited ionization shifts with estimated apparent pKa values of less than 5 (bound 18:1) and greater than 7 (unbound 18:1). The intensity of the resonance corresponding to FABP-bound 18:1 increased with increasing 18:1/FABP mole ratio and at 8/1 mole ratio indicated that at least 2 and 6 mol of 18:1/mol of FABP were FABP-bound at pH 7.4 and 8.6, respectively. NMR spectra of systems containing equal concentrations (w/v) of FABP and PC and from 1 to 4 mol of total fatty acid (FA)/mol of FABP exhibited two 18:1 carboxyl resonances (182.2 and 178.5 ppm, pH 7.4). The downfield resonance corresponded to FABP-bound 18:1 and the upfield resonance to PC vesicle bound 18:1. At 1/1 mole ratio (FA/FABP), the intensities of both resonances were approximately equal, but at 4/1 mole ratio the resonance for PC vesicle bound 18:1 was 3-fold more intense than that for FABP-bound 18:1. The following conclusions are reached: (i) The carboxyl groups of 18:1 bound to liver FABP experience only one type of binding environment (the aqueous milieu adjacent to the protein surface).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
Purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) catalyzes N-ribosidic bond phosphorolysis in 6-oxypurine nucleosides and deoxynucleosides to form purine and alpha-D-phosphorylated ribosyl products. The transition state has oxacarbenium ion character with partial positive charge near C-1', ionic stabilization from the nearby phosphate anion, and protonation at N-7 of the purine. Immucillin-H (ImmH) has a protonated N-7 and resembles the transition-state charge distribution when N-4' is protonated to the cation. It binds tightly to the PNPs with a K(d) value 56 pM for human PNP. Previous NMR studies of PNP.ImmH.PO(4) have shown that the N-4' of bound ImmH is a cation and is postulated to have a significant contribution to its tight binding. Several unassigned downfield proton resonances (>11 ppm) are specific to the PNP.ImmH.PO(4) complex, suggesting the existence of strong hydrogen bonds. In this study, two of the proton resonances in this downfield region have been assigned. Using (15)N-7-labeled ImmH, a resonance at 12.5 ppm has been assigned to N-7H. The N-7H resonance is shifted downfield by only approximately 1 ppm from its position for ImmH free in aqueous solution, consistent with only a small change in the hydrogen bonding on N-7H upon binding of ImmH to PNP. In contrast, the downfield resonance at 14.9 ppm in the PNP.ImmH.PO(4) complex is assigned to N-1H of ImmH by using saturation-transferred NOE measurements on the PNP.ImmH complex. The approximately 4 ppm downfield shift of the N-1H resonance from its position for ImmH free in solution suggests that the hydrogen bonding to the N-1H in the complex has a significant contribution to the binding of ImmH to PNP. The crystal structure shows Glu201 is in a direct hydrogen bond with N-1H and to O-6 through a water bridge. In the complex with 6-thio-ImmH, the N-1H resonance is shifted further downfield by an additional 1.5 ppm to 16.4 ppm, but the relative shift from the value for 6-thio-ImmH free in solution is the same as in the ImmH complex. Since the binding affinity to hPNP for 6-thio-ImmH is decreased 440-fold relative to that for ImmH, the loss in binding energy is primarily due to the hydrogen bond energy loss at the 6-thiol.  相似文献   

4.
Solid-state 13C NMR spectra of the M photocycle intermediate of bacteriorhodopsin (bR) have been obtained from purple membrane regenerated with retinal specifically 13C labeled at positions 5, 12, 13, 14, and 15. The M intermediate was trapped at -40 degrees C and pH = 9.5-10.0 in either 100 mM NaCl [M (NaCl)] or 500 mM guanidine hydrochloride [M (Gdn-HCl)]. The 13C-12 chemical shift at 125.8 ppm in M (NaCl) and 128.1 ppm in M (Gdn-HCl) indicates that the C13 = C14 double bond has a cis configuration, while the 13C-13 chemical shift at 146.7 ppm in M (NaCl) and 145.7 ppm in M (Gdn-HCl) demonstrates that the Schiff base is unprotonated. The principal values of the chemical shift tensor of the 13C-5 resonance in both M (NaCl) and M (Gdn-HCl) are consistent with a 6-s-trans structure and a negative protein charge localized near C-5 as was observed in dark-adapted bR. The approximately 5 ppm upfield shift of the 13C-5 M resonance (approximately 140 ppm) relative to 13C-5 bR568 and bR548 (approximately 145 ppm) is attributed to an unprotonated Schiff base in the M chromophore. Of particular interest in this study were the results obtained from 13C-14 M. In M (NaCl), a dramatic upfield shift was observed for the 13C-14 resonance (115.2 ppm) relative to unprotonated Schiff base model compounds (approximately 128 ppm). In contrast, in M (Gdn-HCl) the 13C-14 resonance was observed at 125.7 ppm. The different 13C-14 chemical shifts in these two M preparations may be explained by different C = N configurations of the retinal-lysine Schiff base linkage, namely, syn in NaCl and anti in guanidine hydrochloride.  相似文献   

5.
Direct observation of the tetrahedral intermediate in the EPSP synthase reaction pathway was provided by 13C NMR by examining the species bound to the enzyme active site under internal equilibrium conditions and using [2-13C]PEP as a spectroscopic probe. The tetrahedral center of the intermediate bound to the enzyme gave a unique signal appearing at 104 ppm. Separate signals were observed for free EPSP (152 ppm) and EPSP bound to the enzyme in a ternary complex with phosphate (161 ppm). These peak assignments account for our quantitation of the species bound to the enzyme and liberated upon quenching with either triethylamine or base. A comparison of quenching with acid, base, or triethylamine was conducted; the intermediate could be isolated by quenching with either triethylamine or 0.2 N KOH, allowing direct quantitation of the species bound to the enzyme. After long times of incubation during the NMR measurement, a signal at 107 ppm appeared. The compound giving rise to this resonance was isolated and identified as an EPSP ketal [Leo et al. (1990) J. Am. Chem. Soc. (in press)]. The rate of formation of the EPSP ketal was very slow, 3.3 X 10(-5) s-1, establishing that it is a side product of the normal enzymatic reaction, probably arising as a breakdown product of the tetrahedral intermediate. A slow formation of pyruvate was also observed and is attributable to the enzymatic hydrolysis of EPSP, with 5% of the enzyme sites occupied by EPSP and hydrolyzing EPSP at a rate of 4.7 X 10(-4) s-1. To look for additional signals that might arise from a covalent adduct which has been postulated to arise from reaction of enzyme with PEP, an NMR experiment was performed with an analogue of S3P lacking the 4- and 5-hydroxyl groups.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
We have measured the 13C chemical shifts for trimethoprim molecules selectively enriched with 13C at the 2-, 4-, 5-, 6-, and 7-positions and the p-OCH3 position in their complexes with Lactobacillus casei dihydrofolate reductase in the presence and absence of coenzyme analogues. The C2 carbon shifts indicate that the pyrimidine ring is protonated at N1 in all the complexes of trimethoprim with the enzyme and coenzymes and in each case the pyrimidine ring is binding in a similar way to that of the corresponding part of methotrexate in the enzyme-methotrexate complex. The C6 carbon of trimethoprim shows a large upfield shift in all complexes (3.51 to 4.70 ppm) but no shift in the complex of 2,4-diaminopyrimidine with the enzyme: these shifts probably arise from steric interactions between the C1' and C2' carbons and the H6 proton, which approach van der Waals contact in the folded conformation adopted by trimethoprim when bound to the enzyme. The large shift observed for C6 in all complexes indicates that the basic folded conformation is present in all of them. A comparison of the 13C shifts in the enzyme-trimethoprim-NADPH complex with those in the enzyme-trimethoprim binary complex shows substantial changes even for carbons such as C6 and p-OCH3 (0.46 and -0.36 ppm, respectively), which are remote from the coenzyme: these are caused by ligand-induced conformational changes that may involve displacement of the helix containing residues 42-49.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
E K Jaffe  G D Markham 《Biochemistry》1987,26(14):4258-4264
13C NMR has been used to observe the equilibrium complex of [4-13C]-5-aminolevulinate ([4-13C]ALA) bound to porphobilinogen (PBG) synthase (5-aminolevulinate dehydratase), a 280,000-dalton protein. [4-13C]ALA (chemical shift = 205.9 ppm) forms [3,5-13C]PBG (chemical shifts = 121.0 and 123.0 ppm). PBG prepared from a mixture of [4-13C]ALA and [15N]ALA was used to assign the 121.0 and 123.0 ppm resonances to C5 and C3, respectively. For the enzyme-bound equilibrium complex formed from holoenzyme and [4-13C]ALA, two peaks of equal area with chemical shifts of 121.5 and 127.2 ppm are observed (line widths approximately 50 Hz), indicating that the predominant species is probably a distorted form of PBG. When excess free PBG is present, it is in slow exchange with bound PBG, indicating an exchange rate of less than 10 s-1, which is consistent with the turnover rate of the enzyme. For the complex formed from [4-13C]ALA and methyl methanethiosulfonate (MMTS) modified PBG synthase, which does not catalyze PBG formation, the predominant species is a Schiff base adduct (chemical shift = 166.5 ppm, line width approximately 50 Hz). Free ALA is in slow exchange with the Schiff base. Activation of the MMTS-modified enzyme-Schiff base complex with 113Cd and 2-mercaptoethanol results in the loss of the Schiff base signal and the appearance of bound PBG with the same chemical shifts as for the bound equilibrium complex with Zn(II) enzyme. Neither splitting nor broadening from 113Cd-13C coupling was observed.  相似文献   

8.
The interaction of 5-enolpyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate (EPSP) synthase, 4,5-dideoxyshikimate 3-phosphate (ddS3P), and [2-13C]-and [3-13C]phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) has been examined by 13C NMR spectroscopy. Although no resonances due to a dead-end intermediate complex could be detected, an enzyme active site specific formation of pyruvate was observed. The interaction of EPSP synthase with shikimate 3-phosphate (S3P) and [2-13C]- or [3-13C]PEP has been examined by 13C NMR spectroscopy. With [2-13C]PEP, in addition to the resonances due to [2-13C]PEP and [8-13C]EPSP, new resonances appeared at 164.8, 110.9, and 107.2 ppm. The resonance at 164.8 ppm has been assigned to enzyme-bound EPSP. The resonance at 110.9 ppm has been assigned to C-8 of an enzyme-free tetrahedral intermediate of the sort originally proposed by Levin and Sprinson [Levin, J. G., & Sprinson, D. B. (1964) J. Biol. Chem. 239, 1142-1150] and recently independently observed by Anderson et al. [Anderson, K. S., Sikorski, J. A., Benesi, A. J., & Johnson, K. A. (1988) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 110, 6577-6579]. The resonance at 107.2 ppm has been assigned to an enzyme-bound intermediate whose structure is closely related to that of the tetrahedral intermediate. With [3-13C]PEP, new resonances appeared at 88.9, 26.2, 25.5, and 24.5 ppm. The resonance at 88.9 ppm has been assigned to enzyme-bound EPSP. The resonance at 26.2 ppm, which was found to correlate with 1.48 ppm by isotope-edited multiple quantum coherence 1H NMR spectroscopy, has been assigned to the methyl group 4-hydroxy-4-methylketoglutarate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
D Davis  F O Garces 《Steroids》1992,57(11):563-568
The molecular structure of 3,3-difluoro-5 alpha-androstane-17 beta-ol acetate was analyzed by 1H, 13C, and 19F nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) techniques; two-dimensional NMR was used to assigned 1H and 13C resonances. The 1H NMR spectrum in deuterated chloroform shows three sharp singlets (delta = 0.74, 0.79, and 2.00 ppm) integrating for three protons each, an isolated triplet at 4.55 ppm integrating for one proton, and overlapping multiplets between 0.72 and 2.12 ppm integrating for 31 protons. The 13C spectrum shows 18 resonances between 10 and 55 ppm, and three additional resonances at 82.9, 124.0, and 171.5 ppm. The 19F[1H] spectrum shows two sets of doublets (observed 2J = 150 Hz) at 5.00 and -4.80 ppm. Multiplets arising from 19F-13C J-coupling provide the starting assignment for all resonances by means of 1H homonuclear correlation (COSY) and 1H-13C heteronuclear correlation spectroscopy.  相似文献   

10.
A c-type monoheme cytochrome c554 (13 kDa) was isolated from cells of Achromobacter cycloclastes IAM 1013 grown anaerobically as a denitrifier. The visible absorption spectrum indicates the presence of a band at 695 nm characteristic of heme-methionine coordination (low-spin form) coexisting with a minor high-spin form as revealed by the contribution at 630 nm. Magnetic susceptibility measurements support the existence of a small contribution of a high-spin form at all pH values, attaining a minimum at intermediate pH values. The mid-point redox potential determined by visible spectroscopy at pH 7.2 is +150 mV. The pH-dependent spin equilibrum and other relevant structural features were studied by 300-MHz 1H-NMR spectroscopy. In the oxidized form, the 1H-NMR spectrum shows pH dependence with pKa values at 5.0 and 8.9. According to these pKa values, three forms designated as I, II and III can be attributed to cytochrome c554. Forms I and II predominate at low pH values, and the 1H-NMR spectra reveal heme methyl proton resonances between 40 ppm and 22 ppm. These forms have a methionyl residue as a sixth ligand, and C6 methyl group of the bound methionine was identified in the low-field region of the NMR spectra. Above pH 9.6, form III predominates and the 1H-NMR spectrum is characterized by down-field hyperfine-shifted heme methyl proton resonances between 29 ppm and 22 ppm. Two new resonances are observed at congruent to 66 ppm and 54 ppm, and are taken as indicative of a new type of heme coordination (probably a lysine residue). These pH-dependent features of the 1H-NMR spectra are discussed in terms of the heme environment structure. The chemical shifts of the methyl resonances at different pH values exhibit anti-Curie temperature dependence. In the ferrous state, the 1H-NMR spectrum shows a methyl proton resonance at -3.9 ppm characteristic of methionine axial ligation. The electron-transfer rate between ferric and ferrous forms has been estimated to be smaller than 2 x 10(4) M-1 s-1 at pH 5. EPR spectroscopy was also used to probe the ferric heme environment. A prominent signal at gmax congruent to 3.58 and the overall lineshape of the spectrum indicate an almost axial heme environment.  相似文献   

11.
The carbon-13 NMR spectrum of oxaloacetate bound in the active site of citrate synthase has been obtained at 90.56 MHz. In the binary complex with enzyme, the positions of the resonances of oxaloacetate are shifted relative to those of the free ligand as follows: C-1 (carboxylate), -2.5 ppm; C-2 (carbonyl), +4.3 ppm; C-3 (methylene), -0.6 ppm; C-4 (carboxylate), +1.3 ppm. The change observed in the carbonyl chemical shift is successively increased in ternary complexes with the product [coenzyme A (CoA)], a substrate analogue (S-acetonyl-CoA), and an acetyl-CoA enolate analogue (carboxymethyl-CoA), reaching a value of +6.8 ppm from the free carbonyl resonance. Binary complexes are in intermediate to fast exchange on the NMR time scale with free oxaloacetate; ternary complexes are in slow exchange. Line widths of the methylene resonance in the ternary complexes suggest complete immobilization of oxaloacetate in the active site. Analysis of line widths in the binary complex suggests the existence of a dynamic equilibrium between two or more forms of bound oxaloacetate, primarily involving C-4. The changes in chemical shifts of the carbonyl carbon indicate strong polarization of the carbonyl bond or protonation of the carbonyl oxygen. Some of this carbonyl polarization occurs even in the binary complex. Development of positive charge on the carbonyl carbon enhances reactivity toward condensation with the carbanion/enolate of acetyl-CoA in the mechanism which has been postulated for this enzyme. The very large change in the chemical shift of the reacting carbonyl in the presence of an analogue of the enolate of acetyl-CoA supports this interpretation.  相似文献   

12.
Y C Chang  R D Scott  D J Graves 《Biochemistry》1986,25(8):1932-1939
19F NMR spectroscopic properties of glycogen phosphorylase reconstituted with 6-fluoropyridoxal (6-FPAL) and 6-fluoropyridoxal phosphate (6-FPLP) were investigated. Analysis of the contribution of chemical shift anisotropy to the line width of the 6-FPLP-enzyme signal shows that the coenzyme molecule is tightly bound to the protein. The chemical shift of the fluorine nucleus in the free 6-FPLP protein is pH independent from pH 6 to pH 9.1. When the 6-FPLP-enzyme forms complexes with AMP, AMP plus glucose-1-P, and AMP plus inorganic phosphate, signals at -11.0, -13.1, and -10.4 ppm are observed, respectively. These different chemical shifts indicate that the protein in each complex has a distinct conformation. The exchange rate between the 6-FPLP-protein-AMP complex and the same complex with bound glucose-1-P is estimated to be 3300 +/- 700 s-1, and that between the 6-FPLP-protein-AMP complex and with bound inorganic phosphate is 500 +/- 100 s-1. The former exchange rate is 13 times faster than that of the same process for the 6-FPAL-enzyme. Analysis of the effects of temperature on the 19F line shape of the 6-FPLP enzyme in the presence of ligands shows that the exchange rates between different complexes drop significantly between 20 and 10 degrees C. Within this temperature range, Arrhenius plots of the enzymatic activities of the native and 6-FPLP-enzymes at varied temperatures also show a pronounced curvature.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
G Viggiano  N T Ho  C Ho 《Biochemistry》1979,18(23):5238-5247
The proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectrum of human adult deoxyhemoglobin in D2O in the region from 6 to 20 ppm downfield from the proton resonance of residual water shows a number of hyperfine shifted proton resonances that are due to groups on or near the alpha and beta hemes. The sensitivity of these resonances to the ligation of the heme groups and the assignment of these resonances to the alpha and beta chains provide an opportunity to investigate the cooperative oxygenation of an intact hemoglobin molecule in solution. By use of the nuclear magnetic resonance correlation spectroscopy technique, at least two resonances, one at approximately 18 ppm downfield from HDO due to the beta chain and the other at approximately 12 ppm due to the alpha chain, can be used to study the binding of oxygen to the alpha and beta chains of hemoglobin. The present results using approximately 12% hemoglobin concentration in 0.1 M Bistris buffer at pD 7 and 27 degrees C with and without organic phosphate show that there is no significant line broadening on oxygenation (from 0 to 50% saturation) to affect the determination of the intensities or areas of these resonances. It is found that the ratio of the intensity of the alpha-heme resonance at 12 ppm to that of the beta-heme resonance at 18 ppm is constant on oxygenation in the absence of organic phosphate but decreases in the presence of 2,3-diphosphoglycerate or inositol hexaphosphate, with the effect of the latter being the stronger. On oxygenation, the intensities of the alpha-heme resonance at 12 ppm and of the beta-heme resonance at 18 ppm decreases more than the total number of deoxy chains available as measured by the degree of O2 saturation of hemoglobin. This shows the sensitivity of these resonances to structural changes which are believed to occur in the unligated subunits upon the ligation of their neighbors in an intact tetrameric hemoglobin molecule. A comparison of the nuclear magnetic resonance data with the populations of the partially saturated hemoglobin tetramers (i.e., hemoglobin with one, two, or three oxygen molecules bound) leads to the conclusion that in the presence of organic phosphate the hemoglobin molecule with one oxygen bound maintains the beta-heme resonance at 18 ppm but not the alpha-heme resonance at 12 ppm. These resluts suggest that some cooperativity must exist in the deoxy quaternary structure of the hemoglobin molecule during the oxygenation process. Hence, these results are not consistent with the requirements of two-state concerted models for the oxygenation of hemoglobin. In addition, we have investigated the effect of D2O on the oxygenation of hemoglobin by measuring the oxygen dissociation curves of normal adult hemoglobin as a function of pH in D2O andH2O media. We have found that (1) the pH dependence of the oxygen equilibrium of hemoglobin (the Bohr effect) in higher pH in comparison to that in H2O medium and (2) the Hill coefficients are essentially the same in D2O and H2O media over the pH range from 6.0 to 8.2...  相似文献   

14.
Previous solid state 13C-NMR studies of bacteriorhodopsin (bR) have inferred the C = N configuration of the retinal-lysine Schiff base linkage from the [14-13C]retinal chemical shift (1-3). Here we verify the interpretation of the [14-13C]-retinal data using the [epsilon-13C]lysine 216 resonance. The epsilon-Lys-216 chemical shifts in bR555 (48 ppm) and bR568 (53 ppm) are consistent with a C = N isomerization from syn in bR555 to anti in bR568. The M photointermediate was trapped at pH 10.0 and low temperatures by illumination of samples containing either 0.5 M guanidine-HCl or 0.1 M NaCl. In both preparations, the [epsilon-13C]Lys-216 resonance of M is 6 ppm downfield from that of bR568. This shift is attributed to deprotonation of the Schiff base nitrogen and is consistent with the idea that the M intermediate contains a C = N anti chromophore. M is the only intermediate trapped in the presence of 0.5 M guanidine-HCl, whereas a second species, X, is trapped in the presence of 0.1 M NaCl. The [epsilon-13C]Lys-216 resonance of X is coincident with the signal for bR568, indicating that X is either C = N anti and protonated or C = N syn and deprotonated.  相似文献   

15.
[5,8-13C2]Spermidine was prepared by synthesis, and its binding to macromolecular structures of Escherichia coli was studied. When added to E. coli cells, the two signals of [13C]spermidine (C-5, 47.8 ppm, and C-8, 39.6 ppm; JC-C = 5.8 Hz) were strongly broadened due to binding to macromolecules. When [13C]spermidine was added to E. coli tRNA, the C-5 resonance broadened to v1/2 = 4.7 Hz, whereas the C-8 resonance broadened to v1/2 = 2.7 Hz. tRNA-bound [13C]spermidine could be chased by [12C]spermidine or spermine, but not by putrescine or cadaverine. By using mixtures of [5-13C]- and [8-13C]spermidines (where 13C-13C coupling was avoided), it was possible to estimate a dissociation constant (Kd) of 3 x 10(-3) M using the C-5 v1/2obs values and a Kd of 2.10(-3) M using the C-8 v1/2obs values. The number of spermidine-binding sites (n) could also be estimated by fitting the bound spermidine molar fraction versus tRNA concentration. Values of n = 12 +/- 2 and 14 +/- 3 were obtained for C-5 and C-8, respectively. Measurements of line narrowing at increasing Mg2+ concentrations indicated that approximately 11 spermidines (of the 12-14 bound ones) could be displaced by the former, whereas 3 spermidines remain strongly bound to the tRNA backbone. Measurements of free and bound T1 allowed the determination of a correlation time of 10(-10)s for tRNA-bound spermidine.  相似文献   

16.
The chemical shift of the carboxylate carbon of Z-tryptophan is increased from 179.85 to 182.82 ppm and 182.87 ppm on binding to thermolysin and stromelysin-1 respectively. The chemical shift of Z-phenylalanine is also increased from 179.5 ppm to 182.9 ppm on binding to thermolysin. From pH studies we conclude that the pK(a) of the inhibitor carboxylate group is lowered by at least 1.5 pK(a) units when it binds to either enzyme. The signal at ~183 ppm is no longer observed when the active site zinc atom of thermolysin or stromelysin-1 is replaced by cobalt. We estimate that the distance of the carboxylate carbon of Z-[1-(13)C]-L-tryptophan is ≤3.71? from the active site cobalt atom of thermolysin. We conclude that the side chain of Z-[1-(13)C]-L-tryptophan is not bound in the S(2)' subsite of thermolysin. As the chemical shifts of the carboxylate carbons of the bound inhibitors are all ~183 ppm we conclude that they are all bound in a similar way most probably with the inhibitor carboxylate group directly coordinated to the active site zinc atom. Our spectrophotometric results confirm that the active site zinc atom is tetrahedrally coordinated when the inhibitors Z-tryptophan or Z-phenylalanine are bound to thermolysin.  相似文献   

17.
L C Kurz  C Frieden 《Biochemistry》1987,26(25):8450-8457
The 13C NMR spectra of [2-13C]- and [6-13C]purine ribosides have been obtained free in solution and bound to the active site of adenosine deaminase. The positions of the resonances of the bound ligand are shifted relative to those of the free ligand as follows: C-2, -3.7 ppm; C-6, -73.1 ppm. The binary complexes are in slow exchange with free purine riboside on the NMR time scale, and the dissociation rate constant is estimated to be 13.5 s-1 from the slow exchange broadening of the free signal. In aqueous solution, protonation of purine riboside at N-1 results in changes in 13C chemical shift relative to those of the free base as follows: C-2, -4.9 ppm; C-6, -7.9 ppm. The changes in chemical shift that occur when purine riboside binds to the enzyme indicate that the hybridization of C-6 changes from sp2 to sp3 in the binary complex with formation of a new bond to oxygen or sulfur. A change in C-2 hybridization can be eliminated as can protonation at N-1 as the sole cause of the chemical shift changes. The kinetic constants for the adenosine deaminase catalyzed hydrolysis of 6-chloro- and 6-fluoropurine riboside have been compared, and the reactivity order implies that carbon-halogen bond breaking does not occur in the rate-determining step. These observations support a mechanism for the enzyme in which formation of a tetrahedral intermediate is the most difficult chemical step. Enzymic stabilization of this intermediate may be an important catalytic strategy used by the enzyme to lower the standard free energy of the preceding transition state.  相似文献   

18.
Wei Y  Lin J  Frey PA 《Biochemistry》2001,40(37):11279-11287
UDP-galactose 4-epimerase contains the coenzyme NAD+ bound tightly at the active site. NAD+ functions as the coenzyme for the interconversion of UDP-galactose and UDP-glucose by reversibly mediating their dehydrogenation to the common intermediate UDP-4-ketohexopyranoside. The epimerase structure and spectrophotometric data indicate that NAD+ may engage in electrostatic interactions with amino acid side chains that may regulate the reactivity of NAD+. In this work, we carried out NMR studies of [nicotinamide-4-13C]NAD+ bound to wild-type epimerase and epimerases mutated at amino acid residues in contact with NAD+. The 4-13C NMR chemical shifts revealed the following: The 4-13C chemical shift in wild-type epimerase is 149.9 ppm; mutation of Ser 124 to Ala changes it slightly by 0.2 ppm to 150.1 ppm; mutation of Tyr 149 to Phe results in a downfield perturbation of 2.7 ppm to 152.6 ppm; and the simultaneous mutation of Ser 124 to Ala and Tyr 149 to Phe also causes a downfield perturbation of 2.8 ppm to 152.7 ppm. Mutation of Lys 153 to Met results in a 13C chemical shift of 150.8 ppm, which is 0.9 ppm downfield from that of wild type and 1.8 ppm upfield from that of Y149F-epimerase. The 13C chemical shifts of nicotinamide C4 of NAD+ in these epimerases are correlated with their respective reactivities with NaBH3CN. In addition, reactivity of NAD+ in wild-type and S124A-epimerases displays pH dependence, with higher rates at lower pH where Tyr 149 in these two enzymes is protonated. The results support an electrostatic model in which repulsion between positively charged Lys 153 and N1 of the nicotinamide ring increases the reactivity of NAD+, while the phenolate of Tyr 149 opposes the positive electrostatic field and attenuates the reactivity of NAD+. Ser 124 has very little effect on the electron distribution within the nicotinamide ring or the reactivity of NAD+. The effects of binding the substrate analogue P1-uridyl-P2-methyl diphosphate (Me-UDP) on the 4-13C chemical shifts are opposite to those induced by the mutations. MeUDP perturbs the 4-13C chemical shift 2.9 ppm downfield in the wild-type and S124A-epimerases but has little or no effect in the cases of Y149F- or K153M-epimerases. The results support the postulate that NAD+ activation induced by uridine nucleotides is brought about by a conformational change of epimerase that repositions Tyr 149 at an increased distance from nicotinamide N1 of NAD+ while maintaining the electrostatic repulsion between Lys 153 and nicotinamide N1 of NAD+.  相似文献   

19.
D Grobelny  R E Galardy 《Biochemistry》1985,24(22):6145-6152
The collagenase from Clostridium histolyticum is a mixture of several collagenases, all of which are zinc metalloproteases. This enzyme catalyzes the cleavage of the X-Gly peptide bond in the repeating sequence of collagen: -Gly-Pro-X-Gly-Pro-X-. Thus the S3, S2, and S1 subsites on the enzyme appear to be occupied by the sequence -Gly-Pro-X- and the S1', S2', and S3' subsites also by -Gly-Pro-X-. Short peptides up to and including N alpha-acyltetrapeptides containing the repeat sequence do not detectably inhibit the enzyme (IC50 greater than 10 mM). However, peptide aldehydes of the form aminoacyl-X-glycinal, presumably occupying the S1, S2, ..., Sn subsites, are inhibitors. The most potent of these was Pro6-Gly-Pro-glycinal, with an IC50 of 340 +/- 70 microM. The single peptide aldehyde investigated, which could occupy the S1' and S2' subsites, 4-oxobutanoyl-L-proline, did not inhibit collagenase (IC50 greater than 20 mM). The peptide ketone 5-benzamido-4-oxo-6-phenylhexanoyl-Pro-Ala (XXV), which could occupy the S1-S3' subsites, inhibits collagenase with an IC50 of 120 +/- 50 microM, over 80-fold more potently than its parent peptide analogue benzoyl-Phe-Gly-Pro-Ala (XXIII). The alcohol analogue of XXV, 5-benzamido-4-hydroxy-6-phenylhexanoyl-Pro-Ala (XXVI), is over 60-fold less potent with an IC50 of 8 +/- 2mM. Extending the peptide ketone XXV to occupy the S2-S3' subsites gave 5-(N alpha-carbobenzoxy-L-prolinamido)-4-oxo-6-phenylhexanoyl-Pro -Ala (XXVII). Surprisingly, XXVII had an IC50 of only 5.2 +/- 2 mM.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
113Cd and 31P NMR have been used to investigate the interactions of inhibitors with the metal ion of bovine carboxypeptidase A, using 113Cd as a replacement for the native zinc atom. In the absence of inhibitor and over the pH range 6-9, no 113Cd resonance is visible at room temperature. Upon lowering the temperature to 270 K, however, a broad resonance can be seen at 120 ppm. These results are discussed in terms of possible sources for this resonance modulation. Binding of low molecular weight inhibitors containing potential metal-coordinating moieties results in the appearance of a sharp 113Cd resonance. These inhibitors all bind to the metal ion, a fact which is reflected in the chemical shift of the cadmium resonance and, for L-phenylalanine phosphoramidate phenyl ester, by two-bond 113Cd-31P spin-spin coupling of 30 Hz in the 31P resonance of the bound inhibitor. For inhibitors that coordinate to the metal ion via oxygen, the 113Cd chemical shift is in the range 127-137 ppm, whereas for sulfur coordination there is a downfield shift of approximately 210 ppm. The complexes of 113Cd-substituted carboxypeptidase A with the D and L isomers of thiolactic acid are distinguished by a difference of 11 ppm in the chemical shift of their cadmium resonances. The enzyme complex formed with the macromolecular inhibitor from potatoes, which fills the S1 and S2 subsites, shows one or possibly two closely spaced broad 113Cd resonances. Both the chemical shift and the line width of the 113Cd resonances of the [113Cd]carboxypeptidase-inhibitor complexes give valuable structural and dynamic information about the enzyme active site.  相似文献   

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