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1.
The Escherichia coli mutant of the proton-translocating ATPase KF11 (Kanazawa, H., Horiuchi, Y., Takagi, M., Ishino, Y., and Futai, M. (1980) J. Biochem. (Tokyo) 88, 695-703) has a defective beta subunit with serine being replaced by phenylalanine at codon 174. Four suppression mutants (RE10, RE17, RE18, and RE20) from this strain capable of growth on minimal plate agar supplemented by succinate were isolated. The original point mutation at codon 174 was intact in these strains. Additional point mutations, Ala-295 to Thr, Gly-149 to Ser, Leu-400 to Gln, Ala-295 to Pro, for RE10, RE17, RE18, and RE20, respectively, were identified by the polymerase chain reaction and sequencing. These mutations, except for RE10, were confirmed as a single mutation conferring a suppressive phenotype by genetic suppression assay using KF11 as the host cells. The results indicated that Ser-174 has functional interaction with Gly-149, Ala-295, and Leu-400. The residues are located within the previously estimated catalytic domain of the beta subunit, indicating that this domain is indeed folded for the active site of catalytic function. Growth rates of the revertants in the minimal medium with succinate increased compared with that of KF11, showing that ATP synthesis recovered to some extent. The ATP hydrolytic activity in the revertant membranes increased in RE17 and RE20 but did not in RE10 and RE18, suggesting that synthesis and hydrolysis are not necessarily reversible in the proton-translocating ATPase (F1F0).  相似文献   

2.
Complete nucleotide sequence of the genes for subunits of the H+ ATPase of E.coli has been determined and several hybrid plasmids carrying various portions of these genes have been constructed. Genetic complementation and recombination tests of about forty mutants of E.coli defective in the ATPase were performed using these plasmids for identifying the locations of the mutations. Two mutants defective in the delta subunit and a novel type of mutant defective in the b subunit of F0 were identified. The delta subunit mutants showed no proton conduction, suggesting that this subunit has an important role for the proton conduction. The ATPase of the b subunit mutant has a normal activity of proton channel portion, which phenotype is clearly different from that of mutants of the b subunit reported previously.  相似文献   

3.
We report evidence that adenylate kinase (AK) from Escherichia coli can be activated by the direct binding of a magnesium ion to the enzyme, in addition to ATP-complexed Mg2+. By systematically varying the concentrations of AMP, ATP, and magnesium in kinetic experiments, we found that the apparent substrate inhibition of AK, formerly attributed to AMP, was suppressed at low magnesium concentrations and enhanced at high magnesium concentrations. This previously unreported magnesium dependence can be accounted for by a modified random bi-bi model in which Mg2+ can bind to AK directly prior to AMP binding. A new kinetic model is proposed to replace the conventional random bi-bi mechanism with substrate inhibition and is able to describe the kinetic data over a physiologically relevant range of magnesium concentrations. According to this model, the magnesium-activated AK exhibits a 23- ± 3-fold increase in its forward reaction rate compared with the unactivated form. The findings imply that Mg2+ could be an important affecter in the energy signaling network in cells.Adenylate kinase (AK)2 is a ∼24-kDa enzyme involved in cellular metabolism that catalyzes the reversible phosphoryl transfer reaction (1) as in Reaction 1. Mg2+ATP+AMPreverseforwardMg2+ADP+ADPREACTION 1It is recognized to play an important role in cellular energetic signaling networks (2, 3). A deficiency in human AK function may lead to such illness as hemolytic anemia (48) and coronary artery disease (9); the latter is thought to be caused by a disruption of the AMP signaling network of AK (10). The ubiquity of AK makes it an ideal candidate for investigating evolutionary divergence and natural adaptation at a molecular level (11, 12). Indeed, extensive structure-function studies have been carried out for AK (reviewed in Ref. 13). Both structural and biophysical studies have suggested that large-amplitude conformational changes in AK are important for catalysis (1419). More recently, the functional roles of conformational dynamics have been investigated using NMR (2022), computer simulations (2327), and single-molecule spectroscopy (28). Given the critical role of AK in regulating cellular energy networks and its use as a model system for understanding the functional roles of conformational changes in enzymes, it is imperative that the enzymatic mechanism of AK be thoroughly characterized and understood.The enzymatic reaction of adenylate kinase has been shown to follow a random bi-bi mechanism using isotope exchange experiments (29). Isoforms of adenylate kinases characterized from a wide range of species have a high degree of sequence, structure, and functional conservation. Although all AKs appear to follow the same random bi-bi mechanistic framework (15, 2933), a detailed kinetic analysis reveals interesting variations among different isoforms. For example, one of the most puzzling discrepancies is the change in turnover rates with increasing AMP concentration between rabbit muscle AK and Escherichia coli AK. Although the reactivity of rabbit muscle AK is slightly inhibited at higher AMP concentrations (29, 32), E. coli AK exhibits its maximum turnover rate around 0.2 mm AMP followed by a steep drop, which plateaus at still higher AMP concentrations (3335). This observation has been traditionally attributed to greater substrate inhibition by AMP in E. coli AK compared with the rabbit isoform; yet, the issue of whether the reaction involves competitive or non-competitive inhibition by AMP at the ATP binding site remains unresolved (15, 33, 3537).Here, we report a comprehensive kinetic study of the forward reaction of AK, exploring concentrations of nucleotides and Mg2+ that are comparable to those inside E. coli cells, [Mg2+] ∼ 1–2 mm (38) and [ATP] up to 3 mm (39). We discovered a previously unreported phenomenon: an increase in the forward reaction rate of AK with increasing Mg2+ concentrations, where the stoichiometry of Mg2+ to the enzyme is greater than one. The new observation leads us to propose an Mg2+-activation mechanism augmenting the commonly accepted random bi-bi model for E. coli AK. Our model can fully explain AK’s observed kinetic behavior involving AMP, ATP, and Mg2+ as substrates, out-performing the previous model requiring AMP inhibition. The new Mg2+-activation model also explains the discrepancies in AMP inhibition behavior and currently available E. coli AK kinetic data. Given the central role of AK in energy regulation and our new experimental evidence, it is possible that Mg2+ and its regulation may participate in respiratory network through AK (4042), an exciting future research direction.  相似文献   

4.
1. Stimulation of the Escherichia coli ATPase activity by urea and trypsin shows that the ATPase activity both in the membrane-bound and the solubilized form is partly masked. 2. A protein, inhibiting the ATPase activity of Escherichia coli, can be isolated by sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of purified ATPase. The inhibitor was identified with the smallest of the subunits of E. coli ATPase. 3. The molecular weight of the ATPase inhibitor is about 10,000, as determined by sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and deduced from the amino acid composition. 4. The inhibitory action is independent of pH, ionic strength or the presence of Mg2+ or ATP. 5. The ATPase inhibitor is heat-stable, insensitive to urea but very sensitive to trypsin degradation. 6. The Escherichia coli ATPase inhibitor does not inhibit the mitochondrial or the chloroplast ATPase.  相似文献   

5.
The uncB, E, F, and H genes of the Escherichia coli unc operon were cloned behind the lac promoter of plasmid pUC9, generating plasmid pBP101. These unc loci code, respectively, for the chi, omega, and psi subunits of the F0 sector and the delta subunit of the F1 sector of the H+-ATP synthase complex. Induction of expression of the four unc genes by the addition of isopropyl-beta-D-thiogalactoside resulted in inhibition of growth. During isopropyl-beta-D-thiogalactoside induction, the three subunits of F0 were integrated into the cytoplasmic membrane with a resultant increase in H+ permeability. A functional F0 was formed from plasmid pBP101 in a genetic background lacking all eight of the unc structural genes coding the F1F0 complex. In the unc deletion background, a reasonable correlation was observed between the amount of F0 incorporated into the membrane and the function measured, i.e., high-affinity binding of F1 and rate of F0-mediated H+ translocation. This correlation indicates that most or all of the F0 assembled in the membrane is active. Although the F0 assembled under these conditions binds F1, only partial restoration of NADH-dependent or ATP-dependent quenching of quinacrine fluorescence was observed with these membranes. Proteolysis of a fraction of the psi subunit may account for this partial deficiency. The experiments described demonstrate that a functional F0 can be assembled in vivo in E. coli strains lacking genes for the alpha, beta, gamma, and epsilon subunits of F1.  相似文献   

6.
The effects of amino acid substitutions in the carboxyl terminal region of the H(+)-ATPase a subunit (271 amino acid residues) of Escherichia coli were studied using a defined expression system for uncB genes coded by recombinant plasmids. The a subunits with the mutations, Tyr-263----end, Trp-231----end, Glu-219----Gln, and Arg-210----Lys (or Gln) were fully defective in ATP-dependent proton translocation, and those with Gln-252----Glu (or Leu), His-245----Glu, Pro-230----Leu, and Glu-219----His were partially defective. On the other hand, the phenotypes of the Glu-269----end, Ser-265----Ala (or end), and Tyr-263----Phe mutants were essentially similar to that of the wild-type. These results suggested that seven amino acid residues between Ser-265 and the carboxyl terminus were not required for the functional proton pathway but that all the other residues except Arg-210, Glu-219, and His-245 were required for maintaining the correct conformation of the proton pathway. The results were consistent with a report that Arg-210 is directly involved in proton translocation.  相似文献   

7.
The epitopes of two classes of monoclonal antibody and the binding site for the epsilon subunit have been mapped to the carboxyl-terminal region of the beta subunit of Escherichia coli F1-ATPase using partial CNBr cleavage, weak acid hydrolysis, and Western blots. One class of antibody, B-I, inhibits ATPase activity; the other class, B-II, recognizes an epitope not exposed on the surface of intact F1. Data from two-dimensional gels and blots of beta cleaved with CNBr/weak acid showed that the B-I epitope lies between Asp-381 and the carboxyl-terminal Leu-459, and the B-II epitope lies between Asp-345 and Met-380. Weak acid hydrolysis of the beta-epsilon product obtained by cross-linking F1 with a water-soluble carbodiimide yielded a fragment containing epsilon and a 13-kDa carboxyl-terminal fragment of beta indicating that epsilon interacts with this portion of beta as well. Fab fragments from the B-I antibody beta-6 could be cross-linked to the epsilon subunit in native F1 by various cross-linking agents demonstrating that the antibody and the epsilon subunit occupy adjacent, nonoverlapping sites on the beta subunit. Implications of these results for the roles of the epsilon subunit and of the carboxyl-terminal region of the beta subunit in F1 are discussed.  相似文献   

8.
To analyze relationships between the ternary and primary structures of the beta subunit of Escherichia coli F1 ATPase, we prepared two monoclonal antibodies beta 12 and beta 31 against the beta peptide. These antibodies bind to the beta subunit but do not bind to the F1 ATPase, resulting in no inhibition of the ATPase activities. Several different portions of the beta subunit peptide were prepared by constructing expression plasmids carrying the corresponding DNA segment of the beta subunit gene amplified by the polymerase chain reaction. Western blotting analysis using these peptides revealed that the antibodies bound to a peptide of 104 amino acid residues from the amino terminal end, which is outside the previously estimated catalytic domain between residues 140 and 350. These results indicated that the amino terminal portion of the maximal 104 residues is not exposed to the surface of the F1 ATPase. The binding spectrum of the antibodies to the subunit from various species including Vibrio alginolyticus and thermophilic bacterium PS3 indicated possible epitope sequences within the 104 residues. The ternary structure of the beta subunit, in terms of cleavage sites by endopeptidases, was analyzed using the antibodies. A 43-kDa peptide without binding ability to beta 12 and beta 31 appeared upon cleavage by lysyl endopeptidase. The results suggested that lysyl residues from around 70 to 100 from the amino terminus are exposed to the surface of the beta subunit.  相似文献   

9.
A sequence of 10 amino acids (I-C-S-D-K-T-G-T-L-T) of ion motive ATPases such as Na+/K+-ATPase is similar to the sequence of the beta subunit of H+-ATPases, including that of Escherichia coli (I-T-S-T-K-T-G-S-I-T) (residues 282-291). The Asp (D) residue phosphorylated in ion motive ATPase corresponds to Thr (T) of the beta subunit. This substitution may be reasonable because there is no phosphoenzyme intermediate in the catalytic cycle of F1-ATPase. We replaced Thr-285 of the beta subunit by an Asp residue by in vitro mutagenesis and reconstituted the alpha beta gamma complex from the mutant (or wild-type) beta and wild-type alpha and gamma subunits. The uni- and multisite ATPase activities of the alpha beta gamma complex with mutant beta subunits were about 20 and 30% of those with the wild-type subunit. The rate of ATP binding (k1) of the mutant complex under uni-site conditions was about 10-fold less than that of the wild-type complex. These results suggest that Thr-285, or the region in its vicinity, is essential for normal catalysis of the H+-ATPase. The mutant complex could not form a phosphoenzyme under the conditions where the H+/K+-ATPase is phosphorylated, suggesting that another residue(s) may also be involved in formation of the intermediate in ion motive ATPase. The wild-type alpha beta gamma complex had slightly different kinetic properties from the wild-type F1, possibly because it did not contain the epsilon subunit.  相似文献   

10.
A mutant gene for the gamma subunit of H+-translocating ATPase was cloned from Escherichia coli mutant NR70 isolated by B. P. Rosen [J. Bacteriol. 116, 1124-1129 (1973)]. Determination of its nucleotide sequence revealed a deletion of 21 base pairs between nucleotide residues 64 and 84, resulting in a deletion of seven amino acid residues (LysAlaMetGluMetValAla) from the amino-terminal portion. This deletion resulted in the loss of a hydrophobic domain of the subunit estimated by an analysis of its hydropathic character. Since F1 subunits are reported not to be assembled on the normal F0 portion of NR70, it is concluded that the hydrophobic domain deleted in the mutant subunit is important for assembly of the F1 portion. Introduction of a plasmid pNR70 carrying the mutant allele of NR70 into a wild-type strain gave no recombinants resistant to neomycin. This result suggested that the neomycin-resistant phenotype is not directly related to the defect in the gamma subunit of NR70.  相似文献   

11.
The catalytic part of chloroplast thylakoid ATPase, the chloroplast coupling factor CF1, is reversibly inactivated during incubation in the presence of Mg2+. The inactivation has two phases. Its fast phase occurs at basic pH of the incubation medium (k = 6 min-1), while the slow phase ( k = 0.1-0.2 min-1) depends on pH only slightly throughout the studied range (5.5-9.0). As followed from changes in the inactivation effect of magnesium ions, Mg2+ affinity for the enzyme decreases dramatically with decreasing medium pH. The pH-dependence of Mg2+ dissociation apparent constant suggests that the binding/dissociation equilibrium is determined by protonation/deprotonation of specific acid-base groups of the enzyme. The analysis of pH-dependence plots gives the equilibrium constant of magnesium dissociation (3-9 M) and the dissociation constant of the protonated groups pK 5.8-6.7). Sodium azide is known to stabilize the inactive CF1-MgADP complex; when added to the incubation medium it diminishes the Mg2+ dissociation constant and has no effect on the dissociation constant of the acid-base groups. At lower pH, Mg2+-inactivated CF1-ATPase reactivates. Octyl glucoside accelerates the reactivation, while Triton-100 affects it only slightly. The reactivation rate of membrane-bound CF1 (thylakoid ATPase) inactivated by preincubation with Mg2+ in the presence of gramicidin is a few times higher than that of isolated CF1. These results suggest that the reactivation of isolated and membrane-bound CF1-ATPase is determined by protonation of a limited number of acid-base groups buried in the enzyme molecule.  相似文献   

12.
Mutant genes for the gamma subunit of H+-translocating ATPase (H+-ATPase) were cloned from eight different strains of Escherichia coli isolated in this laboratory. Determination of their nucleotide sequences revealed that they are amber nonsense mutations: a Gln codon at position 15, 158, 227, 262, and 270, respectively, was replaced by a termination codon in these strains. As terminal Met is missing in the gamma subunit, these results indicate that these strains are capable of synthesizing fragments of gamma subunits of 13, 156, 225, 260, and 268 amino acid residues, respectively. Studies on the properties of membranes of these strains suggested the importance of the region between Gln 269 and the carboxyl terminus (residue 286) for forming a stable F1 complex with ATPase activity and the region between Gln 226 and Gln 261 for normal interaction of F1 with F0. The sequence from Gln 261 to Gln 269 also seemed to be important for stability of F1 assembly on the membranes. The high frequency of the nonsense mutations suggested that the number of essential residues is limited in this subunit. Comparison of the homologies of the amino acid sequences of the gamma subunits from four different sources confirmed this notion: 19% of amino acid residues are identically conserved in these four strains, and the conserved regions are the amino terminal and carboxyl terminal regions.  相似文献   

13.
The uncD gene for the beta subunit of Escherichia coli H+-ATPase was cloned downstream of the lac promoter and mutagenized (Glu-185----Gln or Lys) by an oligonucleotide-directed procedure. The recombinant plasmid was introduced into a strain in which the unc operon for subunits of H+-ATPase was deleted. The wild-type or mutant beta subunit synthesized amounted to about 10% total cell protein and was mainly found in the cytoplasmic fraction. These subunits could be purified to almost homogeneity by conventional procedures. The wild-type and two mutant beta subunits had essentially the same Kd values for 8-anilinonaphthalene-1-sulfonate, aurovertin, and ATP, although the fluorescence intensities of 8-anilinonaphthalene-1-sulfonate and aurovertin were significantly less when bound to the two mutant beta subunits than when bound to the wild-type subunit. The three beta subunits showed essentially the same circular dichroism spectra, indicating alpha-helical contents of about 16-18%. Thus, the mutations did not cause marked change of the secondary structure of the subunit. However, measurements of theta 208 during linear increase in temperature suggested that replacement of Glu-185 by Gln or Lys slightly changed the stability of the secondary structure. Only trace amounts of alpha beta gamma complexes could be reconstituted using the two mutant beta subunits. These results suggest that Glu-185 or the region in its vicinity may be essential for subunit assembly. The methods developed in this study should be useful for further studies on the beta subunit.  相似文献   

14.
Escherichia coli strain KF148(SD-) defective in translation of the uncC gene for the epsilon subunit of H(+)-ATPase could not support growth by oxidative phosphorylation due to lack of F1 binding to Fo (M. Kuki, T. Noumi, M. Maeda, A. Amemura, and M. Futai, 1988, J. Biol. Chem. 263, 17, 437-17, 442). Mutant uncC genes for epsilon subunits lacking different lengths from the amino terminus were constructed and introduced into strain KF148(SD-). F1 with an epsilon subunit lacking the 15 amino-terminal residues could bind to F0 in a functionally competent manner, indicating that these amino acid residues are not absolutely necessary for formation of a functional enzyme. However, mutant F1 in which the epsilon subunit lacked 16 amino-terminal residues showed defective coupling between ATP hydrolysis (synthesis) and H(+)-translocation, although the mutant F1 showed partial binding to Fo. These findings suggest that the epsilon subunit is essential for binding of F1 to F0 and for normal H(+)-translocation. Previously, Kuki et al. (cited above) reported that 60 residues were not necessary for a functional enzyme. However, the mutant with an epsilon subunit lacking 15 residues from the amino terminus and 4 residues from the carboxyl terminus was defective in oxidative phosphorylation, suggesting that both terminal regions affect the conformation of the region essential for a functional enzyme.  相似文献   

15.
A short sequence motif rich in glycine residues, Gly-X-X-X-X-Gly-Lys-Thr/Ser, has been found in many nucleotide-binding proteins including the beta subunit of Escherichia coli H(+)-ATPase (Gly-Gly-Ala-Gly-Val-Gly-Lys-Thr, residues 149-156). The following mutations were introduced in this region of the cloned E. coli unc operon carried by a plasmid pBWU1: Ala-151----Pro or Val; insertion of a Gly residue between Lys-155 and Thr-156; and replacement of the region by the corresponding sequence of adenylate kinase (Gly-Gly-Pro-Gly-Ser-Gly-Lys-Gly-Thr) or p21 ras protein (ras) (Gly-Ala-Gly-Gly-Val-Gly-Lys-Ser). All F0F1 subunits were synthesized in the deletion strain of the unc operon-dependent on pBWU1 with mutations, and essentially the same amounts of H(+)-ATPase with these mutant beta subunits were found in membranes. The adenylate kinase and Gly insertion mutants showed no oxidative phosphorylation or ATPase activity, whereas the Pro-151 mutants had higher ATPase activity than the wild-type, and the Val-151 and ras mutants had significant activity. It is striking that the enzyme with the ras mutation (differing in three amino acids from the beta sequence) had about half the membrane ATPase activity of the wild-type. These results together with the simulated three-dimensional structures of the wild-type and mutant sequences suggest that in mutant beta subunits with no ATPase activity projection of Thr-156 residues was opposite to that in the wild-type, and that the size and direction of projection of residue 151 are important for the enzyme activity.  相似文献   

16.
The defective coupling factor F1 ATPase from a mutant strain (KF11) of Escherichia coli was purified to a practically homogeneous form. The final specific activity of Mg2+-ATPase was 6-9 units/mg protein, which is about 10-15 times lower than that of F1 ATPase from the wild-type strain. The mutant F1 had a ratio of Ca2+-ATPase to Mg2+-ATPase of about 3.5, whereas the wild-type F1 had ratio of about 0.8. The mutant F1 was more unstable than wild-type F1: on storage at -80 degrees C for 2 weeks, about 80% of its activity (dependent on Ca2+ or Mg2+) was lost, whereas none of the activity of the wild-type F1 was lost. The following results indicate that the mutation is in the beta subunit. (i) High Mg2+-ATPase activity (about 20 units/mg protein) was reconstituted when the beta subunit from wild type F1 was added to dissociated mutant F1 and the mixture was dialyzed against buffer containing ATP and Mg2+. (ii) Low ATPase activity having the same ratio of Ca2+-ATPase to Mg2+-ATPase as the mutant F1 was reconstituted when a mixture of the beta subunit from the mutant F1 and the alpha and gamma subunits from wild-type F1 was dialyzed against the same buffer. (iii) Tryptic peptide analysis of the beta subunit of the mutant showed a difference in a single peptide compared with the wild-type strain.  相似文献   

17.
The isolation of protein ATPase inhibitor was attempted directly from Escherichia coli membrane extracts to examine the possible presence of a Pullman-Monroy-type inhibitor [M. E. Pullman and G. C. Monroy (1963) J. Biol. Chem. 238, 3762-3769] distinct from the epsilon subunit of E. coli ATPase. Purification to homogeneity was achieved in a sequence of steps involving trichloracetic acid precipitation, DEAE-cellulose, Sephadex G75 chromatography, and a terminal isoelectric focusing step. An inhibitory protein was obtained and was identified by its physicochemical and inhibitory properties as the epsilon subunit of E. coli ATPase. The other inhibitory fraction observed in the purification procedure consisted of aggregated epsilon subunits.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Strain NR70, a mutant of E. coli lacking the Mg2+-adenosine triphosphatase (E.C. 3.6.1.3.) was previously shown to be defective in amino acid and sugar transport in whole cells and right-side-out membrane vesicles. It is shown here that the mutant is also deficient in the uptake of calcium into inverted membrane vesicles. Treatment of inverted vesicles from the wild-type strain with ethylenediamine tetraacetate removes the Mg2+-adenosine triphosphatase and results in an inability to transport calcium. Addition of a crude fraction containing the wild-type Mg2+-adenosine triphosphatase restores active uptake of calcium both to vesicles from the mutant and depleted vesicles from the wild-type.  相似文献   

20.
Directed mutagenesis of the beta-subunit of F1-ATPase from Escherichia coli   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis was used to generate six mutant strains of Escherichia coli which had the following specific amino acid substitutions in the beta-subunit of F1-ATPase: (i) Lys-155----Gln; (ii) Lys-155----Glu; (iii) Gly-149----Ile; (iv) Gly-154----Ile; (v) Tyr-297----Phe;(vi) Tyr-354----Phe. The effects of each mutation on growth of cells on succinate plates or limiting (3 mM) glucose and on cell membrane ATPase activity and ATP-driven pH gradient formation were studied. The results showed Lys-155 to be essential for catalysis, as has been predicted previously from sequence homology and structural considerations; however, the results appear to contradict the hypothesis that Lys-155 interacts with one of the substrate phosphate groups because the Lys-155----Glu mutation was less detrimental than Lys-155----Gln. Gly-149 and Gly-154 have been predicted to be involved in essential conformational changes in F1-ATPase by virtue of their position in a putative glycine-rich flexible loop structure. The mutation of Gly-154----Ile caused strong impairment of catalysis, but the Gly-149----Ile mutation produced only moderate impairment. The two tyrosine residues chosen for mutation were residues which have previously received much attention due to their being the sites of reaction of the inactivating chemical modification reagents 4-chloro-7-nitrobenzofurazan (Tyr-297) and p-fluorosulfonylbenzoyl-5'-adenosine (Tyr-354). We found that mutation of Tyr-297----Phe caused only minor impairment of catalysis, and mutation of Tyr-354----Phe produced no impairment. Therefore, a direct role for either of these tyrosine residues in catalysis is unlikely.  相似文献   

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