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1.
The kinetic mechanism by which Escherichia coli RecBCD helicase unwinds duplex DNA was studied using a fluorescence stopped-flow method. Single turnover DNA unwinding experiments were performed using a series of fluorescently labeled DNA substrates containing duplex DNA regions ranging from 24 bp to 60 bp. All or no DNA unwinding time courses were obtained by monitoring the changes in fluorescence resonance energy transfer between a Cy3 donor and Cy5 acceptor fluorescent pair placed on opposite sides of a nick in the duplex DNA. From these experiments one can determine the average rates of DNA unwinding as well as a kinetic step-size, defined as the average number of base-pairs unwound between two successive rate-limiting steps repeated during DNA unwinding. In order to probe how the kinetic step-size might relate to a mechanical step-size, we performed single turnover experiments as a function of [ATP] and temperature. The apparent unwinding rate constant, kUapp, decreases with decreasing [ATP], exhibiting a hyperbolic dependence on [ATP] (K1/2=176(+/-30) microM) and a maximum rate of kUapp=204(+/-4) steps s(-1) (mkUapp=709(+/-14) bp s(-1)) (10 mM MgCl2, 30 mM NaCl (pH 7.0), 5% (v/v) glycerol, 25.0 degrees C). kUapp also increases with increasing temperature (10-25 degrees C), with Ea=19(+/-1) kcal mol(-1). However, the average kinetic step-size, m=3.9(+/-0.5) bp step(-1), remains independent of [ATP] and temperature. This indicates that even though the values of the rate constants change, the same elementary kinetic step in the unwinding cycle remains rate-limiting over this range of conditions and this kinetic step remains coupled to ATP binding. The implications of the constancy of the measured kinetic step-size for the mechanism of RecBCD-catalyzed DNA unwinding are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
The mechanism of 3-dehydroquinate synthase was explored by incubating partially purified enzyme with mixtures of [1-14C]3-deoxy-D-arabino-heptulosonic acid 7-phosphate (DAHP) and one of the specifically tritiated substrates [4-3H]DAHP, [5-3H]DAHP, [6-3H]DAHP, (7RS)-[7-3H]DAHP, (7R)-[7-3H]DAHP, or (7S)-[7-3H]DAHP. Kinetic and secondary 3H isotope effects were calculated from 3H:14C ratios obtained in unreacted DAHP, 3-dehydroquinate, and 3-dehydroshikimate. 3H was not incorporated from the medium into 3-dehydroquinate, indicating that a carbanion (or methyl group) at C-7 is not formed. A kinetic isotope effect kH/k3H of 1.7 was observed at C-5, and afforded support for a mechanism involving oxidation of C-5 with NAD. A similar kinetic isotope effect was found at C-6 owing to removal of a proton in elimination of phosphate, which is reasonably assumed to be the next step in 3-dehydroquinate synthase. Hydrogen at C-7 of DAHP was not lost in the cyclization step of the reaction, indicating that the enol formed in phosphate elimination participated directly in an aldolase-type reaction with the carbonyl at C-2. In the dehydration of 3-dehydroquinate to 3-dehydroshikimate the (7R) proton from (7RS)- or (7R)-[7-3H]DAHP is lost, indicating that the 7R proton occupies the 2R position in dehydroquinate. Hence the cyclization step occurs with inversion of configuration at C-7. A kinetic isotope effect kH/k3H = 2.3 was observed in the conversion of (2R)-[2-3H]dehydroquinate to dehydroshikimate. Hence loss of a proton from the enzyme-dehydroquinate imine contributed to rate limitation in the reaction.  相似文献   

3.
4.
2-C-Methyl-D-erythritol-4-phosphate synthase (MEP synthase) catalyzes the rearrangement/reduction of 1-D-deoxyxylulose-5-phosphate (DXP) to methylerythritol-4-phosphate (MEP) as the first pathway-specific reaction in the MEP biosynthetic pathway to isoprenoids. Recombinant E. coli MEP was purified by chromatography on DE-52 and phenyl-Sepharose, and its steady-state kinetic constants were determined: k(cat) = 116 +/- 8 s(-1), K(M)(DXP) = 115 +/- 25 microM, and K(M)(NADPH) = 0.5 +/- 0.2 microM. The rearrangement/reduction is reversible; K(eq) = 45 +/- 6 for DXP and MEP at 150 microM NADPH. The mechanism for substrate binding was examined using fosmidomycin and dihydro-NADPH as dead-end inhibitors. Dihydro-NADPH gave a competitive pattern against NADPH and a noncompetitive pattern against DXP. Fosmidomycin was an uncompetitive inhibitor against NADPH and gave a pattern representative of slow, tight-binding competitive inhibition against DXP. These results are consistent with an ordered mechanism where NADPH binds before DXP.  相似文献   

5.
The kinetic properties of the rat intestinal microsomal 1-naphthol:UDPglucuronosyltransferase (EC 2.4.1.17) were investigated in fully activated microsomes prepared from isolated mucosal cells. The enzyme appeared to follow an ordered sequential bireactant mechanism in which 1-naphthol and UDP-glucuronic acid (UDPGlcUA) are the first and second binding substrates and UDP and 1-naphthol glucuronide the first and second products, respectively. Bisubstrate kinetic analysis yielded the following kinetic constants: Vmax = 102 +/- 6 nmol/min per mg microsomal protein, Km (UDPGlcUA) = 1.26 +/- 0.10 mM, Km (1-naphthol) = 96 +/- 10 microM and Ki (1-naphthol) = 25 +/- 7 microM. The rapid equilibrium random or ordered bireactant mechanisms, as well as the iso-Theorell-Chance mechanism, could be excluded by endproduct inhibition studies with UDP.UDP-N-acetylglucosamine (UDPGlcNAc), usually found to be an activator of UDP glucuronosyltransferase in liver microsomes, acted as a full competitive inhibitor towards UDPGlcUA in rat intestinal microsomes. With regard to 1-naphthol UDPGlcNAc exhibited a dual effect: both inhibition and activation was observed. The effect of activation by MgCl2 and Triton X-100 on the kinetic constants and the inhibition patterns of UDP and UDPGlcNAc were investigated. The results obtained suggest that latency in rat intestinal microsomes may be due to endproduct inhibition by UDP. This endproduct inhibition could be abolished by in vitro treatment with MgCl2 and Triton X-100.  相似文献   

6.
T Pape  W Wintermeyer    M V Rodnina 《The EMBO journal》1998,17(24):7490-7497
The kinetic mechanism of elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu)-dependent binding of Phe-tRNAPhe to the A site of poly(U)-programmed Escherichia coli ribosomes has been established by pre-steady-state kinetic experiments. Six steps were distinguished kinetically, and their elemental rate constants were determined either by global fitting, or directly by dissociation experiments. Initial binding to the ribosome of the ternary complex EF-Tu.GTP.Phe-tRNAPhe is rapid (k1 = 110 and 60/micromM/s at 10 and 5 mM Mg2+, 20 degreesC) and readily reversible (k-1 = 25 and 30/s). Subsequent codon recognition (k2 = 100 and 80/s) stabilizes the complex in an Mg2+-dependent manner (k-2 = 0.2 and 2/s). It induces the GTPase conformation of EF-Tu (k3 = 500 and 55/s), instantaneously followed by GTP hydrolysis. Subsequent steps are independent of Mg2+. The EF-Tu conformation switches from the GTP- to the GDP-bound form (k4 = 60/s), and Phe-tRNAPhe is released from EF-Tu.GDP. The accommodation of Phe-tRNAPhe in the A site (k5 = 8/s) takes place independently of EF-Tu and is followed instantaneously by peptide bond formation. The slowest step is dissociation of EF-Tu.GDP from the ribosome (k6 = 4/s). A characteristic feature of the mechanism is the existence of two conformational rearrangements which limit the rates of the subsequent chemical steps of A-site binding.  相似文献   

7.
Escherichia coli UvrD protein is a 3' to 5' SF1 DNA helicase involved in methyl-directed mismatch repair and nucleotide excision repair of DNA. Using stopped-flow methods we have examined the kinetic mechanism of translocation of UvrD monomers along single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) in vitro by monitoring the transient kinetics of arrival of protein at the 5'-end of the ssDNA. Arrival at the 5'-end was monitored by the effect of protein on the fluorescence intensity of fluorophores (Cy3 or fluorescein) attached to the 5'-end of a series of oligodeoxythymidylates varying in length from 16 to 124 nt. We find that UvrD monomers are capable of ATP-dependent translocation along ssDNA with a biased 3' to 5' directionality. Global non-linear least-squares analysis of the full kinetic time-courses in the presence of a protein trap to prevent rebinding of free protein to the DNA using the methods described in the accompanying paper enabled us to obtain quantitative estimates of the kinetic parameters for translocation. We find that UvrD monomers translocate in discrete steps with an average kinetic step-size, m=3.68(+/-0.03) nt step(-1), a translocation rate constant, kt=51.3(+/-0.6) steps s(-1), (macroscopic translocation rate, mkt=189.0(+/-0.7) nt s(-1)), with a processivity corresponding to an average translocation distance of 2400(+/-600) nt before dissociation (10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.3), 20 mM NaCl, 20% (v/v) glycerol, 25 degrees C). However, in spite of its ability to translocate rapidly and efficiently along ssDNA, a UvrD monomer is unable to unwind even an 18 bp duplex in vitro. DNA helicase activity in vitro requires a UvrD dimer that unwinds DNA with a similar kinetic step-size of 4-5 bp step(-1), but an approximately threefold slower unwinding rate of 68(+/-9) bp s(-1) under the same solution conditions, indicating that DNA unwinding activity requires more than the ability to simply translocate directionally along ss-DNA.  相似文献   

8.
The reaction mechanism of the esterase 2 (EST2) from Alicyclobacillus acidocaldarius was studied at the kinetic and structural level to shed light on the mechanism of activity and substrate specificity increase previously observed in its double mutant M211S/R215L. In particular, the values of kinetic constants (k1, k(-1), k2, and k3) along with activation energies (E1, E(-1), E2, and E3) were measured for wild type and mutant enzyme. The previously suggested substrate-induced switch in the reaction mechanism from kcat=k3 with a short acyl chain substrate (p-nitrophenyl hexanoate) to kcat=k2 with a long acyl chain substrate (p-nitrophenyl dodecanoate) was validated. The inhibition afforded by an irreversible inhibitor (1-hexadecanesulfonyl chloride), structurally related to p-nitrophenyl dodecanoate, was studied by kinetic analysis. Moreover the three-dimensional structure of the double mutant bound to this inhibitor was determined, providing essential information on the enzyme mechanism. In fact, structural analysis explained the observed substrate-induced switch because of an inversion in the binding mode of the long acyl chain derivatives with respect to the acyl- and alcohol-binding sites.  相似文献   

9.
Cloned soybean sterol methyltransferase was purified from Escherichia coli to gel electrophoretic homogeneity. From initial velocity experiments, catalytic constants for substrates best suited for the first and second C1 transfer activities, cycloartenol and 24(28)-methylenelophenol, were 0.01 and 0.001 s-1, respectively. Two-substrate kinetic analysis using cycloartenol and S-adenosyl-l-methionine (AdoMet) generated an intersecting line pattern characteristic of a ternary complex kinetic mechanism. The high energy intermediate analog 25-azacycloartanol was a noncompetitive inhibitor versus cycloartenol and an uncompetitive inhibitor versus AdoMet. The dead end inhibitor analog cyclolaudenol was competitive versus cycloartenol and uncompetitive versus AdoMet. 24(28)-Methylenecycloartanol and AdoHcy generated competitive and noncompetitive kinetic patterns, respectively, with respect to AdoMet. Therefore, 24(28)-methylenecycloartanol combines with the same enzyme form as does cycloartenol and must be released from the enzyme before AdoHcy. 25-Azacycloartanol inhibited the first and second C1 transfer activities with about equal efficacy (Ki = 45 nm), suggesting that the successive C-methylation of the Delta 24 bond occurs at the same active center. Comparison of the initial velocity data using AdoMet versus [2H3-methyl]AdoMet as substrates tested against saturating amounts of cycloartenol indicated an isotope effect on VCH3/VCD3 close to unity. [25-2H]24(28)-Methylenecycloartanol, [28E-2H]24 (28)-methylenelanosterol, and [28Z-2H]24(28)-methylene lanosterol were prepared and paired with AdoMet or [methyl-3H3]AdoMet to examine the kinetic isotope effects attending the C-28 deprotonation in the enzymatic synthesis of 24-ethyl(idene) sterols. The stereochemical features as well as the observation of isotopically sensitive branching during the second C-methylation suggests that the two methylation steps can proceed by a change in chemical mechanism resulting from differences in sterol structure, concerted versus carbocation; the kinetic mechanism remains the same during the consecutive methylation of the Delta 24 bond.  相似文献   

10.
Rapid kinetic studies of histrionicotoxin interactions with membrane-bound acetylcholine-receptor showed a conformational change in the receptor-histironicotoxin complex as reflected by a decrease in fluorescence intensity of the extrinsic probe ethidium. The simplest kinetic mechanism consistent with the observed data is one in which a rapid preequiliibrium exists between receptor and toxin (K = 3.33 micrometers), followed by a slow conformational change (k1 congruent to 2 X 10(-2) s-1 and k-1 congruent to 1.5 X 10(-3) s-1). The overall equilibrium constant (Kov) determined from a fit of the amplitude dependence on toxin concentration had a value of 0.25 micrometer. The data preclude kinetic mechanisms where histrionicotoxin acts as an effector, shifting equilibria between preexisting, discrete, and slowly interconverting receptor forms.  相似文献   

11.
In order to identify the forces involved in the binding and to understand the mechanism involved, equilibrium and kinetic studies were performed on the binding of the winged bean acidic lectin to human erythrocytes. The magnitudes of delta S and delta H were positive and negative respectively, an observation differing markedly from the lectin-simple sugar interactions where delta S and delta H are generally negative. Analysis of the sign and magnitudes of these values indicate that ionic and hydrogen bonded interactions prevail over hydrophobic interactions resulting in net -ve delta H (-37.12 kJ.mol-1) and +ve delta S (14.4 J.mole-1 K-1 at 20 degrees C), thereby suggesting that this entropy driven reaction also reflects conformational changes in the lectin and/or the receptor. Presence of two kinds of receptors for WBA II on erythrocytes, as observed by equilibrium studies, is consistent with the biexponential dissociation rate constants (at 20 degrees C K1 = 1.67 x 10(-3) M-1 sec-1 and K2 = 11.1 x 10(-3) M-1 sec-1). These two rate constants differed by an order of magnitude accounting for the difference in the association constants of the two receptors of WBA II. However, the association process remains monoexponential suggesting no observable difference in the association rates of the lectin molecule with both the receptors, under the experimental conditions studied. The thermodynamic parameters calculated from kinetic data correlate well with those observed by equilibrium. A two-step binding mechanism is proposed based on the kinetic parameters for WBA II-receptor interaction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Patel MP  Liu WS  West J  Tew D  Meek TD  Thrall SH 《Biochemistry》2005,44(50):16753-16765
Beta-ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein reductase (KACPR) catalyzes the NADPH-dependent reduction of beta-ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein (AcAc-ACP) to generate (3S)-beta-hydroxyacyl-ACP during the chain-elongation reaction of bacterial fatty acid biosynthesis. We report the evaluation of the kinetic and chemical mechanisms of KACPR using acetoacetyl-CoA (AcAc-CoA) as a substrate. Initial velocity, product inhibition, and deuterium kinetic isotope effect studies were consistent with a random bi-bi rapid-equilibrium kinetic mechanism of KACPR with formation of an enzyme-NADP(+)-AcAc-CoA dead-end complex. Plots of log V/K(NADPH) and log V/K(AcAc)(-)(CoA) indicated the presence of a single basic group (pK = 5.0-5.8) and a single acidic group (pK = 8.0-8.8) involved in catalysis, while the plot of log V vs pH indicated that at high pH an unprotonated form of the ternary enzyme complex was able to undergo catalysis. Significant and identical primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects were observed for V (2.6 +/- 0.4), V/K(NADPH) (2.6 +/- 0.1), and V/K(AcAc)(-)(CoA) (2.6 +/- 0.1) at pH 7.6, but all three values attenuated to values of near unity (1.1 +/- 0.03 or 0.91 +/- 0.02) at pH 10. Similarly, the large alpha-secondary deuterium kinetic isotope effect of 1.15 +/- 0.02 observed for [4R-(2)H]NADPH on V/K(AcAc)(-)(CoA) at pH 7.6 was reduced to a value of unity (1.00 +/- 0.04) at high pH. The complete analysis of the pH profiles and the solvent, primary, secondary, and multiple deuterium isotope effects were most consistent with a chemical mechanism of KACPR that is stepwise, wherein the hydride-transfer step is followed by protonation of the enolate intermediate. Estimations of the intrinsic primary and secondary deuterium isotope effects ((D)k = 2.7, (alpha)(-D)k = 1.16) and the correspondingly negligible commitment factors suggest a nearly full expression of the intrinsic isotope effects on (D)V/K and (alpha)(-D)V/K, and are consistent with a late transition state for the hydride transfer step. Conversely, the estimated intrinsic solvent effect ((D)2(O)k) of 5.3 was poorly expressed in the experimentally derived parameters (D)2(O)V/K and (D)2(O)V (both = 1.2 +/- 0.1), in agreement with the estimation that the catalytic commitment factor for proton transfer to the enolate intermediate is large. Such detailed knowledge of the chemical mechanism of KAPCR may now help guide the rational design of, or inform screening assay-design strategies for, potent inhibitors of this and related enzymes of the short chain dehydrogenase enzyme class.  相似文献   

13.
The steady-state and pre-steady-state kinetic parameters for the interaction of E with the fluorogenic substrate 2-aminobenzoyl-Thr-Ile-Nle-Phe(p-NO(2))-Gln-Arg-NH(2) were determined in 1.25 M NaCl, 0.1 M MES-TRIS at pH 6.0 at 25 degrees C. At low concentrations of enzyme, the values of the K(m) and k(cat) calculated from steady-state data were 2.1 microM and 7.4 s(-1), respectively. At high concentrations of enzyme, the time-courses of fluorescence enhancement associated with catalysis were very dependent on the excitation wavelength used to monitor the reaction. Because the absorbance spectrum of the substrate overlapped the fluorescence emission spectrum of the enzyme, these abnormalities were attributed to fluorescence energy transfer between the enzyme and the substrate in an enzyme-substrate intermediate. The kinetic data collected with lambda(ex) = 280 nm and lambda(em) > 435 nm were analyzed according to the following mechanism in which EX was the species with enhanced fluorescence relative to substrate or products: [formula see text]. The values of the kinetic parameters with (1)H(2)O as the solvent were K = 13 microM, k(2) = 150 s(-1), k(-2) = 25 s(-1), and k(3) = 11 s(-1). The values of the kinetic parameters with (2)H(2)O as the solvent were K = 13 microM, k(2) = 210 s(-1), k(-2) = 12 s(-1), and k(3) = 4.4 s(-1). These values yielded solvent isotope effects of 2 on k(cat) and 0.9 on k(cat)/K(m). From analysis of the complete time-course of the fluorescence change (lambda(ex) = 280 nm and lambda(em) > 435 nm) during the course of substrate hydrolysis, the intermediate EX was determined to be 6.3-fold more fluorescent than the product, which, in turn, was 4.5-fold more fluorescent than ES or S. Rapid quench experiments with 2 N HCl as the quenching reagent confirmed that EX was a complex between enzyme and substrate. Consequently, the small burst in fluorescence observed when monitoring with lambda(ex) = 340 nm (0.3 product equiv per enzyme equivalent) was attributed to the fluorescence change upon transfer of substrate from an aqueous environment to a nonaqueous environment in the enzyme. These results were consistent with carbon-nitrogen bond cleavage being the major contributor to k(cat).  相似文献   

14.
An analysis of the kinetic mechanism of the microsomal NADPH-linked progesterone 5 alpha-reductase obtained from female rat anterior pituitaries was performed. Initial velocity, product inhibition and dead-end inhibition studies indicate that the kinetic mechanism for the progesterone 5 alpha-reductase is equilibrium ordered sequential. Analysis of the initial velocity data resulted in intersecting double reciprocal plots suggesting a sequential mechanism [apparent Km(progesterone) = 88.2 +/- 8.2 nM; apparent Kia(NADPH) = 7.7 +/- 1.1 microM]. Furthermore, the plot of 1/v vs 1/progesterone intersected on the ordinate which is indicative of an equilibrium ordered mechanism. Additional support for ordered substrate binding was provided by the product inhibition studies with NADPH versus NADP and progesterone versus NADP. NADP is a competitive inhibitor versus NADPH (apparent Kis = 7.8 +/- 1.0 microM) and a noncompetitive inhibitor versus progesterone (apparent Kis = 9.85 +/- 2.1 microM and apparent Kii = 63.2 +/- 12.5 microM). These inhibition patterns suggest that NADPH binds prior to progesterone. In sum, these kinetic studies indicate that NADPH binds to the microsomal enzyme in rapid equilibrium and preferentially precedes the binding of progesterone.  相似文献   

15.
The angiotensin I-converting enzyme (peptidyl-dipeptide hydrolase, EC 3.4.15.1) inhibitor, ramiprilat (2-[N-[(S)-1-ethoxycarbonyl-3-phenylpropyl]-L-Ala]-(1S,3S,5S)-2- azabicyclo[3.3.0]octane-3-carboxylic acid), is shown to exist in tow conformational isomers, cis and trans, which interconvert around the amide bond. The two conformers were separated by reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. The conformers were identified by nuclear Overhauser effect measurements. From line shape analysis the isomerization rate constants were determined to be kcis----trans = 15 s-1 and ktrans----cis = 5 s-1 at 368 K in [2H]phosphate buffer (p2H 7.5). By enzyme kinetic studies using 3-(2-furylacryloyl)-L-Phe-Gly-Gly as substrate, the trans conformer was found to be the most potent enzyme inhibitor, whereas the cis conformer had a very low inhibitory effect. A new inhibition mechanism is presented for this type of slow, tight-binding inhibitors that contain an amide bond. This mechanism involves an equilibrium between the two conformers and the enzyme-bound inhibitor complex.  相似文献   

16.
J B Kempton  S G Withers 《Biochemistry》1992,31(41):9961-9969
The beta-glucosidase from Agrobacterium faecalis (previously Alcaligenes faecalis) has been subjected to a detailed kinetic investigation with a range of substrates to probe its specificity and mechanism. It has a relatively broad specificity for the substrate sugar moiety and exhibits a classical pH dependence for its kinetic parameters with three different substrates and an identical pH dependence for its inactivation by a mechanism-based inactivator, cyclophellitol. Measurement of kcat and Km values for a series of aryl glucoside substrates has allowed construction of a Bronsted plot, the concave-downward shape of which is consistent with the anticipated two-step mechanism involving a glucosyl-enzyme intermediate which is formed and hydrolyzed via oxocarbonium ion-like transition states. The slope of the leaving group-dependent portion of the Bronsted plot (beta 1g = -0.7) indicates a large degree of bond cleavage at the transition state. Secondary deuterium kinetic isotope effects measured for five different aryl glucosides are also consistent with this mechanism and further suggest that the transition state for formation of the glucosyl-enzyme intermediate, probed with the slower substrates for which kH/kD = 1.06, is more SN2-like than that for its hydrolysis (for which kH/kD = 1.11). Reasons for this difference are proposed, and values of Ki for several ground-state and transition-state analogue inhibitors are presented which support the concept of sp2-hybridized transition states.  相似文献   

17.
18.
p300/CBP-associated factor (PCAF) is a histone acetyltransferase that plays an important role in the remodeling of chromatin and the regulation of gene expression. It has been shown to catalyze preferentially acetylation of the epsilon-amino group of lysine 14 in histone H3. In this study, the kinetic mechanism of PCAF was evaluated with a 20-amino acid peptide substrate derived from the amino terminus of histone H3 (H3-20) and recombinant bacterially expressed PCAF catalytic domain (PCAF(cat)). The enzymologic behavior of full-length PCAF and PCAF(cat) were shown to be similar. PCAF-catalyzed acetylation of the substrate H3-20 was shown to be specific for Lys-14, analogous to its behavior with the full-length histone H3 protein. Two-substrate kinetic analysis displayed an intersecting line pattern, consistent with a ternary complex mechanism for PCAF. The dead-end inhibitor analog desulfo-CoA was competitive versus acetyl-CoA and noncompetitive versus H3-20. The dead-end analog inhibitor H3-20 K14A was competitive versus H3-20 and uncompetitive versus acetyl-CoA. The potent bisubstrate analog inhibitor H3-CoA-20 was competitive versus acetyl-CoA and noncompetitive versus H3-20. Taken together, these inhibition patterns support an ordered BiBi kinetic mechanism for PCAF in which acetyl-CoA binding precedes H3-20 binding. Viscosity experiments suggest that diffusional release of product is not rate-determining for PCAF catalysis. These results provide a mechanistic framework for understanding the detailed catalytic behavior of an important subset of the histone acetyltransferases and have significant implications for molecular regulation of and inhibitor design for these enzymes.  相似文献   

19.
Silva RG  Schramm VL 《Biochemistry》2011,50(42):9158-9166
The reversible phosphorolysis of uridine to generate uracil and ribose 1-phosphate is catalyzed by uridine phosphorylase and is involved in the pyrimidine salvage pathway. We define the reaction mechanism of uridine phosphorylase from Trypanosoma cruzi by steady-state and pre-steady-state kinetics, pH-rate profiles, kinetic isotope effects from uridine, and solvent deuterium isotope effects. Initial rate and product inhibition patterns suggest a steady-state random kinetic mechanism. Pre-steady-state kinetics indicated no rate-limiting step after formation of the enzyme-products ternary complex, as no burst in product formation is observed. The limiting single-turnover rate constant equals the steady-state turnover number; thus, chemistry is partially or fully rate limiting. Kinetic isotope effects with [1'-(3)H]-, [1'-(14)C]-, and [5'-(14)C,1,3-(15)N(2)]uridine gave experimental values of (α-T)(V/K)(uridine) = 1.063, (14)(V/K)(uridine) = 1.069, and (15,β-15)(V/K)(uridine) = 1.018, in agreement with an A(N)D(N) (S(N)2) mechanism where chemistry contributes significantly to the overall rate-limiting step of the reaction. Density functional theory modeling of the reaction in gas phase supports an A(N)D(N) mechanism. Solvent deuterium kinetic isotope effects were unity, indicating that no kinetically significant proton transfer step is involved at the transition state. In this N-ribosyl transferase, proton transfer to neutralize the leaving group is not part of transition state formation, consistent with an enzyme-stabilized anionic uracil as the leaving group. Kinetic analysis as a function of pH indicates one protonated group essential for catalysis and for substrate binding.  相似文献   

20.
The kinetic mechanism of S-adenosylhomocysteine hydrolase was investigated by stopped-flow spectrofluorometry at pH 7.0 and 25 degrees C. Pre-steady-state kinetic steps were identified with chemical steps proposed for the mechanism of this enzyme (Palmer, J.L., and Abeles, R.H. (1979) J. Biol. Chem. 254, 1217-1226). The steady-state kinetic constants for the hydrolysis or synthesis of S-adenosylhomocysteine were in good agreement with those values calculated from the pre-steady-state rate constants. The equilibrium constant for dehydration of 3'-ketoadenosine to 3'-keto-4',5'-dehydroadenosine on the enzyme was 3. The analogous equilibrium constant for addition of L-homocysteine to S-3'-keto-4',5'-dehydroadenosylhomocysteine on the enzyme was 0.3. The elimination of H2O from adenosine in solution had an equilibrium constant of 1.4 (aH2O = 1). Thus, the equilibrium constants for these elimination reactions on the enzyme were probably not perturbed significantly from those in solution. The equilibrium constant for the reduction of enzyme-bound NAD+ by adenosine was 8, and the analogous constant for the reduction of the enzyme by S-adenosylhomocysteine was 4. The equilibrium constant for the reduction of NAD+ by a secondary alcohol in solution was 5 x 10(-5) at pH 7.0. Consequently, the reduction of enzyme-bound NAD+ by adenosine was 10(5)-fold more favorable than the reduction of free NAD+. The magnitude of the first-order rate constants for the interconversion of enzyme-bound intermediates varied over a relatively small range (3-80 s-1). Similarly, the magnitude of the equilibrium constants among enzyme-bound intermediates varied over a narrow range (0.3-10). These results were consistent with the overall reversibility of the reaction.  相似文献   

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