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1.
A kinetic scheme is presented for Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase that predicts steady-state kinetic parameters and full time course kinetics under a variety of substrate concentrations and pHs. This scheme was derived from measuring association and dissociation rate constants and pre-steady-state transients by using stopped-flow fluorescence and absorbance spectroscopy. The binding kinetics suggest that during steady-state turnover product dissociation follows a specific, preferred pathway in which tetrahydrofolate (H4F) dissociation occurs after NADPH replaces NADP+ in the ternary complex. This step, H4F dissociation from the E X NADPH X H4F ternary complex, is proposed to be the rate-limiting step for steady-state turnover at low pH because koff = VM. The rate constant for hydride transfer from NADPH to dihydrofolate (H2F), measured by pre-steady-state transients, has a deuterium isotope effect of 3 and is rapid, khyd = 950 s-1, essentially irreversible, Keq = 1700, and pH dependent, pKa = 6.5, reflecting ionization of a single group in the active site. This scheme accounts for the apparent pKa = 8.4 observed in the steady state as due to a change in the rate-determining step from product release at low pH to hydride transfer above pH 8.4. This kinetic scheme is a necessary background to analyze the effects of single amino acid substitutions on individual rate constants.  相似文献   

2.
J Thillet  J A Adams  S J Benkovic 《Biochemistry》1990,29(21):5195-5202
A kinetic mechanism is presented for mouse dihydrofolate reductase that predicts all the steady-state parameters and full time-course kinetics. This mechanism was derived from association and dissociation rate constants and pre-steady-state transients by using stopped-flow fluorescence and absorbance measurements. The major features of this kinetic mechanism are as follows: (1) the two native enzyme conformers, E1 and E2, bind ligands with varying affinities although only one conformer, E1, can support catalysis in the forward direction, (2) tetrahydrofolate dissociation is the rate-limiting step under steady-state turnover at low pH, and (3) the pH-independent rate of hydride transfer from NADPH to dihydrofolate is fast (khyd = 9000 s-1) and favorable (Keq = 100). The overall mechanism is similar in form to the Escherichia coli kinetic scheme (Fierke et al., 1987), although several differences are observed: (1) substrates and products predominantly bind the same form of the E. coli enzyme, and (2) the hydride transfer rate from NADPH to either folate or dihydrofolate is considerably faster for the mouse enzyme. The role of Glu-30 (Asp-27 in E. coli) in mouse DHFR has also been examined by using site-directed mutagenesis as a potential source of these differences. While aspartic acid is strictly conserved in all bacterial DHFRs, glutamic acid is conserved in all known eucaryotes. The two major effects of substituting Asp for Glu-30 in the mouse enzyme are (1) a decreased rate of folate reduction and (2) an increased rate of hydride transfer from NADPH to dihydrofolate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
The active sites of all bacterial and vertebrate dihydrofolate reductases that have been examined have a tryptophan residue near the binding sites for NADPH and dihydrofolate. In cases where the three-dimensional structure has been determined by X-ray crystallography, this conserved tryptophan residue makes hydrophobic and van der Waals interactions with the nicotinamide moiety of bound NADPH, and its indole nitrogen interacts with the C4 oxygen of bound folate through a bridge provided by a bound water molecule. We have addressed the question of why even the very conservative replacement of this tryptophan by phenylalanine does not seem to occur naturally. Human dihydrofolate reductase with this replacement of tryptophan by phenylalanine has increased rate constants for dissociation of substrates and products and a considerably decreased rate of hydride transfer. These cause some changes in steady-state kinetic behavior, including substantial increases in Michaelis constants for NADPH and dihydrofolate, but there is also a 3-fold increase in kcat. The branched mechanistic pathway for this enzyme has been completely defined and is sufficiently different from that of wild-type enzyme to cause changes in some transient-state kinetics. The most critical changes resulting from the amino acid substitution appear to be a 50% decrease in stability and a decrease in efficiency from 69% to 21% under intracellular conditions.  相似文献   

4.
Association and dissociation rate constants obtained by stopped-flow spectroscopy have permitted definition of a kinetic scheme for recombinant human dihydrofolate reductase that correctly predicts full time course kinetics of the enzymatic reaction over a wide range of substrate and product concentrations. The scheme is complex compared with that for the bacterial enzyme and involves branched pathways. It successfully accounts for observed rapid hysteresis preceding steady state and for the nonhyperbolic dependence of steady-state rate on substrate and product concentrations. The major branch point in the catalytic cycle occurs at E.NADP.H4folate because either NADP or H4folate can dissociate from the ternary product complex (koff = 84 s-1 and 46 s-1, respectively). The rate of conversion of enzyme-bound substrates to products is very fast (k = 1360 s-1) and nearly unidirectional (Kequ = 37) so that other steps limit the catalytic rate. At saturating substrate concentrations these steps include release of NADP and H4folate from E.NADP.H4folate and release of products from the two abortive complexes E.NADPH.H4folate (koff = 225 s-1) and E.NADP.H4folate (koff = 4.6 s-1). Since NADP dissociates slowly from E.NADP.H2folate nearly 90% of the enzyme accumulates as this complex at steady state. Nonetheless, the catalytic rate is maintained at 12 s-1 by rapid flux of a small portion of the enzyme through an alternate branch. At physiological concentrations of substrates and products the steady-state rate is limited primarily by the rate of H2folate binding to E.NADPH so that the enzyme is extremely efficient.  相似文献   

5.
J T Chen  K Taira  C P Tu  S J Benkovic 《Biochemistry》1987,26(13):4093-4100
The role of Phe-31 of Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase in binding and catalysis was probed by amino acid substitution. Phe-31, a strictly conserved residue located in a hydrophobic pocket and interacting with the pteroyl moiety of dihydrofolate (H2F), was replaced by Tyr and Val. The kinetic behavior of the mutant enzymes in general is similar to that of the wild type. The rate-limiting step for both mutant enzymes is the release of tetrahydrofolate (H4F) from the E X NADPH X H4F ternary complex as determined for the wild type. The 2-fold increase in V for the two mutant enzymes arises from faster dissociation of H4F from the enzyme-product complex. The quantitative effect of these mutations is to decrease the rate of hydride transfer, although not to the extent that this step becomes partially rate limiting, but to accelerate the dissociation rates of tetrahydrofolate from product complexes so that the opposing effects are nearly compensating.  相似文献   

6.
The kinetic mechanism of NADPH-dependent aldehyde reductase II and aldose reductase, purified from human placenta, has been studied using L-glucuronate and DL-glyceraldehyde as their respective substrates. For aldehyde reductase II, the initial velocity and product inhibition studies (using NADP and gulonate) indicate that the enzyme reaction sequence is ordered with NADPH binding to the free enzyme and NADP being the last product to be released. Inhibition patterns using menadione (an analog of the aldehydic substrate) and ATP-ribose (an analog of NADPH) are also consistent with a compulsory ordered reaction sequence. Isotope effects of deuterium-substituted NADPH (NADPD) also corroborate the above reaction scheme and indicate that hydride transfer is not the sole rate-limiting step in the reaction sequence. For aldose reductase, initial velocity patterns, product, and dead-end inhibition studies indicate a random binding pattern of the substrates and an ordered release of product; the coenzyme is released last. A steady-state random mechanism is also consistent with deuterium isotope effects of NADPD on the reaction sequence catalyzed by this enzyme. However, the hydride transfer step seems to be more rate determining for aldose reductase than for aldehyde reductase II.  相似文献   

7.
D J Murphy  S J Benkovic 《Biochemistry》1989,28(7):3025-3031
The strictly conserved residue leucine-54 of Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase forms part of the hydrophobic wall which binds the p-aminobenzoyl side chain of dihydrofolate. In addition to the previously reported glycine-54 mutant, isoleucine-54 and asparagine-54 substitutions have been constructed and characterized with regard to their effects on binding and catalysis. NADP+ and NADPH binding is virtually unaffected with the exception of a 15-fold decrease in NADPH dissociation from the Gly-54 mutant. The synergistic effect of NADPH on tetrahydrofolate dissociation seen in the wild-type enzyme is lost in the isoleucine-54 mutant: little acceleration is seen in tetrahydrofolate dissociation when cofactor is bound, and there is no discrimination between reduced and oxidized cofactor. The dissociation constants for dihydrofolate and methotrexate increase in the order Leu less than Ile less than Asn less than Gly, varying by a maximum factor of 1700 for dihydrofolate and 6300 for methotrexate. Despite these large changes in binding affinity, the hydride transfer rate of 950 s-1 in the wild-type enzyme is decreased by a constant factor of ca. 30 (2 kcal/mol) regardless of the mutant. Thus, the contributions of residue 54 to binding and catalysis appear to have been separated.  相似文献   

8.
L Y Li  S J Benkovic 《Biochemistry》1991,30(6):1470-1478
The alpha C-helix of Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase has been converted to its counterpart in Lactobacillus casei by a triple mutation in the helix (H45R, W47Y, and I50F). These changes result in a 2-fold increase in the steady-state reaction rate (kcat = 26 s-1) that is limited by an increased off rate for the release of tetrahydrofolate (koff = 40 s-1 versus 12 s-1). On the other hand the mutant protein exhibits a 10-fold increase in the KM value (6.8 microM) for dihydrofolate and a 10-fold decrease in the rate of hydride transfer (85 s-1) from NADPH to dihydrofolate. The elevated rate of tetrahydrofolate release upon the rebinding of NADPH, a characteristic of the wild-type enzyme-catalyzed reaction, is diminished. The intrinsic pKa (6.4) of the mutant enzyme binary complex with NADPH is similar to that of the wild type, but the pKa of the ternary complex is increased to 7.3, about on pH unit higher than the wild-type value. Further mutagenesis (G51P and an insertion of K52) was conducted to incorporate a hairpin turn unique to the C-terminus of the alpha C-helix of the L. casei enzyme in order to adjust a possible dislocation of the new helix. The resultant pentamutant enzyme shows restoration of many of the kinetic parameters, such as kcat (12 s-1), KM (1.1 microM for dihydrofolate), and khyd (526 s-1), to the wild-type values. The synergism in the product release is also largely restored. A substrate-induced conformational change responsible for the fine tuning of the catalytic process was found to be associated with the newly installed hairpin structure. The Asp27 residue of the mutant enzyme was found to be reprotonated before tetrahydrofolate release.  相似文献   

9.
The binding constants of substrate, inhibitors and coenzymes to native Lactobacillus casei dihydrofolate reductase and to the enzyme modified (at Trp-21) by N-bromosuccinimide have been determined using fluorimetric and spectrophotometric methods. The modification leads to only modest decreases (factors of 2-4) in the binding of substrate or substrate analogues, but the effects of coenzyme binding are much larger. The binding of NADPH is decreased by a factor of 200, but that of NADP+ by only a factor of 4, indicating a clear difference in their mode of interaction with the enzyme. The nature of this difference is discussed in the light of crystallographic and n.m.r. studies of the enzyme.  相似文献   

10.
Previous studies have shown that the interaction of P450 reductase with bound NADP(H) is essential to ensure fast electron transfer through the two flavin cofactors. In this study we investigated in detail the interaction of the house fly flavoprotein with NADP(H) and a number of nucleotide analogues. 1,4,5,6-Tetrahydro-NADP, an analogue of NADPH, was used to characterize the interaction of P450 reductase with the reduced nucleotide. This analogue is inactive as electron donor, but its binding affinity and rate constant of release are very close to those for NADPH. The 2'-phosphate contributes about 5 kcal/mol of the binding energy of NADP(H). Oxidized nicotinamide does not interact with the oxidized flavoprotein, while reduced nicotinamide contributes 1.3 kcal/mol of the binding energy. Oxidized P450 reductase binds NADPH with a K(d) of 0.3 microM, while the affinity of the reduced enzyme is considerably lower, K(d) = 1.9 microM. P450 reductase catalyzes a transhydrogenase reaction between NADPH and oxidized nucleotides, such as thionicotinamide-NADP(+), acetylpyridine-NADP(+), or [(3)H]NADP(+). The reverse reaction, reduction of [(3)H]NADP(+) by the reduced analogues, is also catalyzed by P450 reductase. We define the mechanism of the transhydrogenase reaction as follows: NADPH binding, hydride ion transfer, and release of the NADP(+) formed. An NADP(+) or its analogue binds to the two-electron-reduced flavoprotein, and the electron-transfer steps reverse to transfer hydride ion to the oxidized nucleotide, which is released. Measurements of the flavin semiquinone content, rate constant for NADPH release, and transhydrogenase turnover rates allowed us to estimate the steady-state distribution of P450 reductase species during catalysis, and to calculate equilibrium constants for the interconversion of catalytic intermediates. Our results demonstrate that equilibrium redox potentials of the flavin cofactors are not the sole factor governing rapid electron transfer during catalysis, but conformational changes must be considered to understand P450 reductase catalysis.  相似文献   

11.
Oligonucleotide-directed, site-specific mutagenesis was used to convert phenylalanine-31 of human recombinant dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) to leucine. This substitution was of interest in view of earlier chemical modification studies (Kumar et al., 1981) and structural studies based on X-ray crystallographic data (Matthews et al., 1985a,b) which had implicated the corresponding residue in chicken liver DHFR, Tyr-31, in the binding of dihydrofolate. Furthermore, this particular substitution allowed testing of the significance of protein sequence differences between mammalian and bacterial reductases at this position with regard to the species selectivity of trimethoprim. Both wild-type (WT) and mutant (F31L) enzymes were expressed and purified by using a heterologous expression system previously described (Prendergast et al., 1988). Values of the inhibition constants (Ki values) for trimethoprim were 1.00 and 1.08 microM for WT and F31L, respectively. Thus, the presence of phenylalanine at position 31 in human dihydrofolate reductase does not contribute to the species selectivity of trimethoprim. The Km values for nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (reduced) (NADPH) and dihydrofolate were elevated 10.8-fold and 9.4-fold, respectively, for the mutant enzyme, whereas the Vmax increased only 1.8-fold. Equilibrium dissociation constants (KD values) were obtained for the binding of NADPH and dihydrofolate in binary complexes with each enzyme. The KD for NADPH is similar in both WT and F31L, whereas the KD for dihydrofolate is 43-fold lower in F31L. Values for dihydrofolate association rate constants (kon) with enzyme and enzyme-NADPH complexes were measured by stopped-flow techniques.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
The role of the active site residue phenylalanine-31 (Phe31) for recombinant human dihydrofolate reductase (rHDHFR) has been probed by comparing the kinetic behavior of wild-type enzyme (wt) with mutant in which Phe31 is replaced by leucine (F31L rHDHFR). At pH 7.65 the steady-state kcat is almost doubled, but the rate constant for hydride transfer is decreased to less than half that for wt enzyme, as is the rate of the obligatory isomerization of the substrate complex that precedes hydride transfer. Although steady-state measurements indicated that the mutation causes large increases in Km for both substrates, dissociation constants for many complexes are decreased. These apparent paradoxes are due to major mutation-induced decreases in rate constants (koff) for dissociation of folate, dihydrofolate, and tetrahydrofolate from all of their complexes. This results in a mechanism proceeding almost entirely by only one of the two pathways used by wt enzyme. Other consequences of these changes are a much altered dependence of steady-state kcat on pH, inhibition rather than activation by tetrahydrofolate, absence of hysteresis in transient-state kinetics, and a decrease in enzyme efficiency under physiological conditions. The results indicate that there is no quantitative correlation between dihydrofolate binding and the rate of hydride transfer for this enzyme.  相似文献   

13.
Human novel reductase 1 (NR1) is an NADPH dependent diflavin oxidoreductase related to cytochrome P450 reductase (CPR). The FAD/NADPH- and FMN-binding domains of NR1 have been expressed and purified and their redox properties studied by stopped-flow and steady-state kinetic methods, and by potentiometry. The midpoint reduction potentials of the oxidized/semiquinone (-315 +/- 5 mV) and semiquinone/dihydroquinone (-365 +/- 15 mV) couples of the FAD/NADPH domain are similar to those for the FAD/NADPH domain of human CPR, but the rate of hydride transfer from NADPH to the FAD/NADPH domain of NR1 is approximately 200-fold slower. Hydride transfer is rate-limiting in steady-state reactions of the FAD/NADPH domain with artificial redox acceptors. Stopped-flow studies indicate that hydride transfer from the FAD/NADPH domain of NR1 to NADP+ is faster than hydride transfer in the physiological direction (NADPH to FAD), consistent with the measured reduction potentials of the FAD couples [midpoint potential for FAD redox couples is -340 mV, cf-320 mV for NAD(P)H]. The midpoint reduction potentials for the flavin couples in the FMN domain are -146 +/- 5 mV (oxidized/semiquinone) and -305 +/- 5 mV (semiquinone/dihydroquinone). The FMN oxidized/semiquinone couple indicates stabilization of the FMN semiquinone, consistent with (a) a need to transfer electrons from the FAD/NADPH domain to the FMN domain, and (b) the thermodynamic properties of the FMN domain in CPR and nitric oxide synthase. Despite overall structural resemblance of NR1 and CPR, our studies reveal thermodynamic similarities but major kinetic differences in the electron transfer reactions catalysed by the flavin-binding domains.  相似文献   

14.
In the x-ray structure of the human dihydrofolate reductase, phenylalanine 31 and phenylalanine 34 have been shown to be involved in hydrophobic interactions with bound substrates and inhibitors. Using oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis and a bacterial expression system producing the wild-type and mutant human dihydrofolate reductases at levels of 10% of the bacterial protein, we have constructed, expressed, and purified a serine 31 (S31) mutant and a serine 34 (S34) mutant. Fluorescence titration experiments indicated that S31 bound the substrate H2folate 10-fold tighter and the coenzyme NADPH 2-fold tighter than the wild-type human dihydrofolate reductase. The serine 31 mutation had little effect on the steady-state kinetic properties of the enzyme but produced a 100-fold increase in the dissociation constant (Kd) for the inhibitor methotrexate. The serine 34 mutant had much greater alterations in its properties than S31; specifically, S34 had a 3-fold reduction in the Km for NADPH, a 24-fold increase in the Km for H2folate, a 3-fold reduction in the overall reaction rate kcat, and an 80,000-fold increase in the Kd for methotrexate. In addition, the pH dependence of the steady-state kinetic parameters of S34 were different from that of the wild-type enzyme. These results suggest that phenylalanine 31 and phenylalanine 34 make very different contributions to ligand binding and catalysis in the human dihydrofolate reductase.  相似文献   

15.
The steady-state kinetics of the oxidative decarboxylation of 6-phosphogluconate catalysed by 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase from sheep liver in triethanolamine and phosphate buffers (pH 7.0) have been reinvestigated. In triethanolamine buffer the enzyme is inhibited by high NADP+ concentrations in the presence of low fixed concentrations of 6-phosphogluconate. Data are consistent with an asymmetric sequential mechanism in which NADP+ and 6-phosphogluconate bind randomly and product release is ordered. The pathway through the enzyme--6-phosphogluconate complex appears to be preferred in triethanolamine buffer. Pre-steady-state studies of the oxidative decarboxylation reaction at pH 6.0-8.0 show that hydride transfer is greater than 900 s-1. After the fast formation of NADPH in amounts equivalent to about half of the enzyme-active-centre concentration, the rate of NADPH formation is equal to the steady-state rate. Two possible interpretations are considered. Rapid fluorescence measurements of the displacement of NADPH from its complex with the enzyme at pH 6.0 and 7.0 indicate that the dissociation of NADPH is fast (greater than 800 s-1) and cannot be the rate-limiting step in oxidative decarboxylation. Coenzyme binding studies at equilibrium have been extended to include the determination of the dissociation constants for the binary complexes of enzyme with NADPH and NADP+ at pH 6.0-8.0 and the dissociation constant for NADPH in the ternary enzyme--6-phosphogluconate--NADPH complex in triethanolamine buffer, pH 7.0.  相似文献   

16.
Nidetzky B  Klimacek M  Mayr P 《Biochemistry》2001,40(34):10371-10381
Microbial xylose reductase, a representative aldo-keto reductase of primary sugar metabolism, catalyzes the NAD(P)H-dependent reduction of D-xylose with a turnover number approximately 100 times that of human aldose reductase for the same reaction. To determine the mechanistic basis for that physiologically relevant difference and pinpoint features that are unique to the microbial enzyme among other aldo/keto reductases, we carried out stopped-flow studies with wild-type xylose reductase from the yeast Candida tenuis. Analysis of transient kinetic data for binding of NAD(+) and NADH, and reduction of D-xylose and oxidation of xylitol at pH 7.0 and 25 degrees C provided estimates of rate constants for the following mechanism: E + NADH right arrow over left arrow E.NADH right arrow over left arrow E.NADH + D-xylose right arrow over left arrow E.NADH.D-xylose right arrow over left arrow E.NAD(+).xylitol right arrow over left arrow E.NAD(+) right arrow over left arrow E.NAD(+) right arrow over left arrow E + NAD(+). The net rate constant of dissociation of NAD(+) is approximately 90% rate limiting for k(cat) of D-xylose reduction. It is controlled by the conformational change which precedes nucleotide release and whose rate constant of 40 s(-)(1) is 200 times that of completely rate-limiting E.NADP(+) --> E.NADP(+) step in aldehyde reduction catalyzed by human aldose reductase [Grimshaw, C. E., et al. (1995) Biochemistry 34, 14356-14365]. Hydride transfer from NADH occurs with a rate constant of approximately 170 s(-1). In reverse reaction, the E.NADH --> E.NADH step takes place with a rate constant of 15 s(-1), and the rate constant of ternary-complex interconversion (3.8 s(-1)) largely determines xylitol turnover (0.9 s(-1)). The bound-state equilibrium constant for C. tenuis xylose reductase is estimated to be approximately 45 (=170/3.8), thus greatly favoring aldehyde reduction. Formation of productive complexes, E.NAD(+) and E.NADH, leads to a 7- and 9-fold decrease of dissociation constants of initial binary complexes, respectively, demonstrating that 12-fold differential binding of NADH (K(i) = 16 microM) vs NAD(+) (K(i) = 195 microM) chiefly reflects difference in stabilities of E.NADH and E.NAD(+). Primary deuterium isotope effects on k(cat) and k(cat)/K(xylose) were, respectively, 1.55 +/- 0.09 and 2.09 +/- 0.31 in H(2)O, and 1.26 +/- 0.06 and 1.58 +/- 0.17 in D(2)O. No deuterium solvent isotope effect on k(cat)/K(xylose) was observed. When deuteration of coenzyme selectively slowed the hydride transfer step, (D)()2(O)(k(cat)/K(xylose)) was inverse (0.89 +/- 0.14). The isotope effect data suggest a chemical mechanism of carbonyl reduction by xylose reductase in which transfer of hydride ion is a partially rate-limiting step and precedes the proton-transfer step.  相似文献   

17.
Pennati A  Zanetti G  Aliverti A  Gadda G 《Biochemistry》2008,47(11):3418-3425
Despite a number of studies, the formation of the Michaelis complexes between ferredoxin-NADP (+) reductases and NADP(H) eluded detailed investigations by rapid kinetic techniques because of their high formation rates. Moreover, the reversible nature of the reaction of hydride ion transfer between these enzymes and NADPH prevented the obtainment of reliable estimates of the rate constant of the hydride transfer step. Here we show that by working at a high salt concentration, the mechanism of the reaction with NADPH of FprA, a Mycobacterium tuberculosis homologue of adrenodoxin reductase, is greatly simplified, making it amenable to investigation by rapid reaction techniques. The approach presented herein allowed for the first time the observation of the formation of the Michaelis complex between an adrenodoxin reductase-like enzyme and NADPH, and the determination of the related rate constants for association and dissociation. Furthermore, the rate constant for the reaction of hydride ion transfer between NADPH and FAD could be unambiguously assessed. It is proposed that the approach described should be applicable to other ferredoxin reductase enzymes, providing a valuable experimental tool for the study of their kinetic properties.  相似文献   

18.
Hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases (HSDs) are essential for the biosynthesis and mechanism of action of all steroid hormones. We report the complete kinetic mechanism of a mammalian HSD using rat 3alpha-HSD of the aldo-keto reductase superfamily (AKR1C9) with the substrate pairs androstane-3,17-dione and NADPH (reduction) and androsterone and NADP(+) (oxidation). Steady-state, transient state kinetics, and kinetic isotope effects reconciled the ordered bi-bi mechanism, which contained 9 enzyme forms and permitted the estimation of 16 kinetic constants. In both reactions, loose association of the NADP(H) was followed by two conformational changes, which increased cofactor affinity by >86-fold. For androstane-3,17-dione reduction, the release of NADP(+) controlled k(cat), whereas the chemical event also contributed to this term. k(cat) was insensitive to [(2)H]NADPH, whereas (D)k(cat)/K(m) and the (D)k(lim) (ratio of the maximum rates of single turnover) were 1.06 and 2.06, respectively. Under multiple turnover conditions partial burst kinetics were observed. For androsterone oxidation, the rate of NADPH release dominated k(cat), whereas the rates of the chemical event and the release of androstane-3,17-dione were 50-fold greater. Under multiple turnover conditions full burst kinetics were observed. Although the internal equilibrium constant favored oxidation, the overall K(eq) favored reduction. The kinetic Haldane and free energy diagram confirmed that K(eq) was governed by ligand binding terms that favored the reduction reactants. Thus, HSDs in the aldo-keto reductase superfamily thermodynamically favor ketosteroid reduction.  相似文献   

19.
Roitel O  Scrutton NS  Munro AW 《Biochemistry》2003,42(36):10809-10821
Cys-999 is one component of a triad (Cys-999, Ser-830, and Asp-1044) located in the FAD domain of flavocytochrome P450 BM3 that is almost entirely conserved throughout the diflavin reductase family of enzymes. The role of Cys-999 has been studied by steady-state kinetics, stopped-flow spectroscopy, and potentiometry. The C999A mutants of BM3 reductase (containing both FAD and FMN cofactors) and the isolated FAD domain are substantially compromised in their capacity to reduce artificial electron acceptors in steady-state turnover with either NADPH or NADH as electron donors. Stopped-flow studies indicate that this is due primarily to a substantially slower rate of hydride transfer from nicotinamide coenzyme to FAD cofactor in the C999A enzymes. The compromised rates of hydride transfer are not attributable to altered thermodynamic properties of the flavins. A reduced enzyme-NADP(+) charge-transfer species is populated following hydride transfer in the wild-type FAD domain, consistent with the slow release of NADP(+) from the 2-electron-reduced enzyme. This intermediate does not accumulate in the C999A FAD domain or wild-type and C999A BM3 reductases, suggesting more rapid release of NADP(+) from these enzyme forms. Rapid internal electron transfer from FAD to FMN in wild-type BM3 reductase releases NADP(+) from the nicotinamide-binding site, thus preventing the inhibition of enzyme activity through the accumulation of a stable FADH(2)-NADP(+) charge-transfer complex. Hydride transfer is reversible, and the observed rate of oxidation of the 2-electron-reduced C999A BM3 reductase and FAD domain is hyperbolically dependent on NADP(+) concentration. With the wild-type BM3 reductase and FAD domain, the rate of flavin oxidation displays an unusual dependence on NADP(+) concentration, consistent with a two-site binding model in which two coenzyme molecules bind to catalytic and regulatory regions (or sites) within a bipartite coenzyme binding site. A kinetic model is proposed in which binding of coenzyme to the regulatory site hinders sterically the release of NADPH from the catalytic site. The results are discussed in the light of kinetic and structural studies on mammalian cytochrome P450 reductase.  相似文献   

20.
A kinetic mechanism is presented for Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase which describes the full time course of the enzymatic reaction over a wide range of substrate and enzyme concentrations at pH 7.2 and 20 degrees C. Specific rate constants were estimated by computer simulation of the full time course of single turnover, burst, and steady-state experiments using both nondeuterated and deuterated NADPH. The mechanism involves the random addition of substrates, but the substrates and enzyme are not at equilibrium prior to the chemical transformation step. The rate-limiting step follows the chemical transformation, and the maximum velocity of the reaction is limited by the release of the product tetrahydrofolate. The full time course of the reaction is markedly affected by the formation of the enzyme-NADPH-tetrahydrofolate abortive complex, but not by the enzyme-NADP-dihydrofolate abortive complex.  相似文献   

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