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1.
The extreme C-terminus (Ser-490 to Lys-637) of the Escherichia coli EIImtl was subcloned to test structural and mechanistic proposals about the existence of an EIII-like domain in this enzyme. Oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis was used to produce a unique NcoI restriction site and, at the same time, to change Ser-490 into methionine in a flexible region in front of the proposed EIII-like domain. The 16-kDa C-terminal domain (CI) was overexpressed in Escherichia coli, purified, and analyzed in vitro for catalytic activity in the presence of an EIImtl mutated at its first phosphorylation site, His-554 (EII-H554A). The results presented show that this domain can be expressed as a structurally stable, enzymatically active entity which is able to restore the PEP-dependent phosphorylation activity of the mutant EIImtl-H554A to 25% of wild-type levels. To demonstrate the EIII activity of the CI domain in a more direct way, we also substituted it for EIIImtl in the Staphylococcus carnosus system. The CI domain was active in transferring the phosphoryl group to Staph. carnosus EII; however, it was 6.5 times less active compared to Staph. carnosus EIIImtl itself. EIIImtl from Staph. carnosus, on the other hand, was able to substitute for the isolated C-terminal domain in the E. coli mannitol phosphorylation assay; however, it appeared to be 2 or 3 times less effective.  相似文献   

2.
H H Pas  G T Robillard 《Biochemistry》1988,27(16):5835-5839
During a cycle of mannitol transport and phosphorylation, the phosphoryl group originating on P-enolpyruvate is transferred, consecutively, to two sites on the Escherichia coli mannitol-specific carrier (EIIMtl) before being placed on mannitol [Pas et al. (1988) Biochemistry (in press)]. The peptides constituting the two EIIMtl phosphorylation sites have been isolated and identified after labeling with [32P]-P-enolpyruvate. The first site is localized in peptide Leu 541-Lys 560. The hydrolysis characteristics of the phosphorylated peptide indicate that a histidine residue is phosphorylated. The second site is located in peptide Ile 380-Met 393, which contains the activity-linked cysteine (384) [Pas & Robillard (1988) Biochemistry (in press)]. The hydrolysis characteristics of the phosphopeptide indicate that Cys 384 is the site of phosphorylation.  相似文献   

3.
This review summarizes the recent developments in identifying the activity-linked cysteine as one of the phosphorylation sites on the mannitol-specific EII of the E. coli phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent mannitol transport system. Two phosphorylation sites have been identified, one being the HPr/P-HPr exchange site, the other being the mannitol/mannitol-P exchange site. The activity-linked cysteine and the second phosphorylation site are located in the same 14 residue peptide. Phosphorylation of the second site and phosphoryl group transfer to mannitol do not occur as long as the activity-linked cysteine is oxidized or alkylated.A kinetic scheme has been developed which accounts for the relationships between the redox state, the phosphorylation state and the activity of the carrier. Kinetics of the individual reactions determine whether the enzyme cycles through an oxidized/reduced state during a cycle of phosphorylation/dephosphorylation.Abbreviations DTT Dithiothreitol - glc glucose - mtl mannitol - mtl-P mannitol Phosphate - frc fructose - bgl -glucoside - nag N-acetylglucosamine - PTS Phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent Phosphotransferase System - PEP Phosphoenolpyruvate - P-enolpyruvate Phosphoenolpyruvate  相似文献   

4.
Sulfhydryl reagents affected the binding properties of the translocator domain, NIII, of enzyme IImtl in two ways: (i) the affinity for mannitol was reduced, and (ii) the exchange rate of bound and free mannitol was increased. The effect on the affinity was very much reduced after solubilization of enzyme IImtl in the detergent decylPEG. The effects were caused exclusively by reaction of the sulfhydryl reagents with the cysteine residue at position 384 in the primary sequence. Interaction between two domains is involved, since Cys384 is located in the cytoplasmic domain, CII. When Cys384 was mutated to serine, the enzyme exhibited the same binding properties as the chemically modified enzyme. The data support our proposal that phosphorylation of enzyme IImtl drastically reduces the activation energy for the translocation step through interaction between domains CII and NIII [Lolkema J. S., ten Hoeve-Duurkens, R. H., Swaving Dijkstra, D., & Robillard, G. T. (1991) Biochemistry (preceding paper in this issue)]. Functional interaction between the translocator domain, NIII, and domain CI was investigated by phosphorylation of His554, located in domain CI, in the C384S mutant. No effect on the binding properties was observed. In addition, the binding properties were insensitive to the presence of the soluble phosphotransferase components enzyme I and HPr.  相似文献   

5.
The amino acid composition and sequence of EIIMtl is known [Lee, C. A., & Saier, M. H., Jr. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 10761-10767]. This information was combined, in the present study, with quantitative amino acid analysis to determine the molar concentration of the enzyme. The stoichiometry of phosphoryl group incorporation was then determined by phosphorylation of enzyme II from [14C]-phosphoenolpyruvate (pyruvate burst procedure). The native, reduced enzyme incorporated two phosphoryl groups per monomer. Both phosphoryl groups were shown to be transferred to mannitol. Oxidation or N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) labeling of Cys-384 resulted in incorporation of only one phosphoryl group per monomer, which was unable to be transferred to mannitol. The number of mannitol binding sites on enzyme II was determined by centrifugation using Amicon Centricon microconcentrators. The reduced unphosphorylated enzyme contained one high-affinity binding site (KD = 0.1 microM) per dimer and a second site with a KD in the micromolar range. Oxidation or NEM labeling did not change the number of binding sites.  相似文献   

6.
The Escherichia coli mannitol permease is an integral membrane protein that catalyzes the concomitant transport and phosphorylation of D-mannitol and also acts as the chemoreceptor for chemotaxis of E. coli to this hexitol. At least 4 aminoacyl residues in this protein have been suggested to be important in these activities: His-195, His-256, Cys-384, and His-554. Previous evidence has implicated His-554 and Cys-384 as residues that are covalently phosphorylated, in sequence, as intermediates in phosphotransfer to mannitol. We have constructed a number of site-specific mutants of the mannitol permease at these positions. The properties of proteins in which His-554 or Cys-384 has been changed are consistent with their essential roles in phosphorylation. We also used these mutants to show that intermolecular phosphotransfer between His-554 and Cys-384 can occur in vivo in membrane-bound heterodimers consisting of different mutant subunits. The properties of proteins with mutations at position 195 suggest an important role for this residue involving hydrogen bonding, while His-256 performs no significant function in the mannitol permease. Finally, the phosphorylation and chemoreception activities for each mutant protein were each roughly in the same proportion to these activities in the wild-type protein, showing that these functions of the mannitol permease are tightly coupled under normal physiological conditions.  相似文献   

7.
The cytoplasmic C-terminal domain, residues 348-637, and the membrane-bound N-terminal domain, residues 1-347, of EIImtl have been subcloned and expressed in Escherichia coli. The N-terminal domain, IICmtl, contains the mannitol binding site, and the C-terminal domain, IIBAmtl, contains the activity-linked phosphorylation sites, His-554 and Cys-384. Overexpression of the BA domain was achieved by a translational in-frame fusion of the gene with the cro ATG start codon, downstream of the strong PR promoter of phage lambda. The domain has been purified and characterized in in vitro complementation assays. It possessed no mannitol phosphorylation activity itself but was able to restore the phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent phosphorylation activity of two EIImtl phosphorylation site mutants, lacking His-554 or Cys-384. The complementary N-terminal domain was also expressed. Membranes possessing IICmtl were unable to phosphorylate mannitol at the expense of phosphoenolpyruvate. However, when the membranes were combined with the purified C-terminal domain, mannitol phosphorylation activity was restored. Mannitol transport and phosphorylation were also restored in vivo when the two plasmids encoding the N- and C-terminal domains were expressed in the same cell. These data demonstrate the existence of structurally and functionally distinct domains in EIImtl: a cytoplasmic domain with phosphorylating activity and a membrane-bound N-terminal domain which, in the presence of the cytoplasmic domain, is able to actively transport and phosphorylate mannitol. The ability to separate, overproduce, and purify structurally stable, enzymatically active domains opens the way for 3D structural studies as well as complete kinetic analysis of the activities of the individual domains and their interactions.  相似文献   

8.
The solution structure of the post-transition state complex between the isolated cytoplasmic A (IIAMtl) and phosphorylated B (phospho-IIBMtl) domains of the mannitol transporter of the Escherichia coli phosphotransferase system has been solved by NMR. The active site His-554 of IIAMtl was mutated to glutamine to block phosphoryl transfer activity, and the active site Cys-384 of IIBMtl (residues of IIBMtl are denoted in italic type) was substituted by serine to permit the formation of a stable phosphorylated form of IIBMtl. The two complementary interaction surfaces are predominantly hydrophobic, and two methionines on IIBMtl, Met-388 and Met-393, serve as anchors by interacting with two deep pockets on the surface of IIAMtl. With the exception of a salt bridge between the conserved Arg-538 of IIAMtl and the phosphoryl group of phospho-IIBMtl, electrostatic interactions between the two proteins are limited to the outer edges of the interface, are few in number, and appear to be weak. This accounts for the low affinity of the complex (Kd approximately 3.7 mm), which is optimally tuned to the intact biological system in which the A and B domains are expressed as a single polypeptide connected by a flexible 21-residue linker. The phosphoryl transition state can readily be modeled with no change in protein-protein orientation and minimal perturbations in both the backbone immediately adjacent to His-554 and Cys-384 and the side chains in close proximity to the phosphoryl group. Comparison with the previously solved structure of the IIAMtl-HPr complex reveals how IIAMtl uses the same interaction surface to recognize two structurally unrelated proteins and explains the much higher affinity of IIAMtl for HPr than IIBMtl.  相似文献   

9.
Enzyme IIImtl is part of the mannitol phosphotransferase system of Staphylococcus aureus and Staphylococcus carnosus and is phosphorylated by phosphoenolpyruvate in a reaction sequence requiring enzyme I (phosphoenolpyruvate-protein phosphotransferase) and the histidine-containing protein HPr. In this paper, we report the isolation of IIImtl from both S. aureus and S. carnosus and the characterization of the active center. After phosphorylation of IIImtl with [32P]PEP, enzyme I, and HPr, the phosphorylated protein was cleaved with endoproteinase Glu(C). The amino acid sequence of the S. aureus peptide carrying the phosphoryl group was found to be Gln-Val-Val-Ser-Thr-Phe-Met-Gly-Asn-Gly-Leu-Ala-Ile-Pro-His-Gly-Thr-Asp- Asp. The corresponding peptide from S. carnosus shows an equal sequence except that the first residue is Ala instead of Gln. These peptides both contain a single histidyl residue which we assume to carry the phosphoryl group. All proteins of the PTS so far investigated indeed carry the phosphoryl group attached to a histidyl residue. According to sodium dodecyl sulfate gels, the molecular weight of the IIImtl proteins was found to be 15,000. We have also determined the N-terminal sequence of both proteins. Comparison of the IIImtl peptide sequences and the C-terminal part of the enzyme IImtl of Escherichia coli reveals considerable sequence homology, which supports the suggestion that IImtl of E. coli is a fusion protein of a soluble III protein with a membrane-bound enzyme II. In particular, the homology of the active-center peptide of IIImtl of S. aureus and S. carnosus with the enzyme IImtl of E. coli allows one to predict the N-3 histidine phosphorylation site within the E. coli enzyme.  相似文献   

10.
We have constructed a series of deletion mutations of the cloned Escherichia coli K-12 mtlA gene, which encodes the mannitol-specific enzyme II of the phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP)-dependent carbohydrate phosphotransferase system. This membrane-bound permease consists of 637 amino acid residues and is responsible for the concomitant transport and phosphorylation of D-mannitol in E. coli. Deletions into the 3' end of mtlA were constructed by exonuclease III digestion. Restriction mapping of the resultant plasmids identified several classes of deletions that lacked approximately 5% to more than 75% of the gene. Immunoblotting experiments revealed that many of these plasmids expressed proteins within the size range predicted by the restriction analyses, and all of these proteins were membrane localized, which demonstrated that none of the C-terminal half of the permease is required for membrane insertion. Functional analyses of the deletion proteins, expressed in an E. coli strain deleted for the chromosomal copy of mtlA, showed that all but one of the strains containing confirmed deletions were inactive in transport and PEP-dependent phosphorylation of mannitol, but deletions removing up to at least 117 amino acid residues from the C terminus of the permease were still active in catalyzing phospho exchange between mannitol 1-phosphate and mannitol. A deletion protein that lacked 240 residues from the C terminus of the permease was inactive in phospho exchange but still bound mannitol with high affinity. These experiments localize sites important for transport and PEP-dependent phosphorylation to the extreme C terminus of the mannitol permease, sites important for phospho exchange to between residues 377 and 519, and sites necessary for mannitol binding to the N-terminal 60% of the molecule. The results are discussed with respect to the fact that the mannitol permease consists of structurally independent N- and C-terminal domains.  相似文献   

11.
The mannitol-specific enzyme II (mannitol permease) of the Escherichia coli phosphotransferase system (PTS) catalyzes the concomitant transport and phosphorylation of D-mannitol. Previous studies have shown that the mannitol permease (637 amino acid residues) consists of 2 structural domains of roughly equal size: an N-terminal, hydrophobic, membrane-bound domain and a C-terminal, hydrophilic, cytoplasmic domain. The C-terminal domain can be released from the membrane by mild proteolysis of everted membrane vesicles [Stephan, M.M., & Jacobson, G.R. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 8230-8234]. In this report, we show that phosphorylation of the intact permease by [32P]HPr (a general phosphocarrier protein of the PTS) followed by tryptic separation of the two domains resulted in labeling of only the C-terminal domain. Phosphorylation of the C-terminal domain occurred even in the complete absence of the N-terminal domain, showing that the former contains most, if not all, of the critical residues comprising the interaction site for phospho-HPr. The phosphorylated C-terminal domain, however, could not transfer its phospho group to mannitol, suggesting that the N-terminal domain is necessary for mannitol binding and/or phosphotransfer from the enzyme to the sugar. The elution profile of the C-terminal domain after molecular sieve chromatography showed that the isolated domain is monomeric, unlike the native permease which is likely a dimer in the membrane. Experiments employing a deletion mutation of the mtlA gene, which encodes a protein lacking the first phosphorylation site in the C-terminal domain (His-554) but retaining the second phosphorylation site (Cys-384), demonstrated that a phospho group could be transferred from phospho-HPr to Cys-384 of the deletion protein, and then to mannitol, only in the presence of the full-length permease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
The mannitol specific Enzyme II of the phosphoenolpyruvate: sugar phosphotransferase system of Escherichia coli catalyzes an exchange reaction in which a phosphoryl moiety is transferred from one molecule of the heat stable phosphocarrier protein HPr to another. An assay was developed for measuring this reaction. Unlabeled phospho-HPr and 125I-labeled free HPr were incubated together in the presence of Enzyme IImtl, and production of 125I-labeled phospho-HPr was measured. The reaction was concentration-dependent with respect to Enzyme IImtl and did not occur in its absence. The reaction occurred in the absence of Mg2+ in the presence of 10 mM EDTA. Treatment of Enzyme IImtl with the histidyl reagent diethylpyrocarbonate inactivated it with respect to the exchange reaction. Levels of N-ethylmaleimide which inactivate Enzyme IImtl with respect to both P-enolpyruvate-dependent phosphorylation of mannitol and mannitol/mannitol-1-P transphosphorylation did not affect its activity in the exchange reaction; however, treatment with another sulfhydryl reagent, p-chloromercuribenzoate, resulted in partial inactivation. The pH optimum for the Enzyme IImtl-catalyzed exchange reaction was about 7.5. Enzyme I and the glucose specific Enzyme III, two other E. coli phosphotransferase system proteins which, like Enzyme IImtl, interact directly with HPr, were also shown to catalyze 125I-HPr/HPr-P phosphoryl exchange.  相似文献   

13.
The site of phosphorylation of the chemotaxis response regulator CheY is aspartate 57. When Asp-57 is replaced with an asparagine, the resultant protein can be phosphorylated at an alternative site. We report here that phosphorylation of this mutant protein, CheY D57N, at the alternative site affords the protein activity in vivo in the absence of CheZ. Using a direct phosphopeptide mapping approach, we identified the alternate phosphorylation site as serine 56. Introduction of a Ser-->Ala substitution at this position in wild-type CheY had no effect on function. However, replacement of Ser-56 with Ala in CheY D57N abrogated the activity seen in vivo for the CheY D57N single mutant protein, and no phosphorylation of the CheY S56A/D57N double mutant protein was observed in vitro. Construction and analysis of double mutants CheY D57N/T87A and CheY D57N/K109R, which were both inactive, suggested that phosphorylation at Ser-56 or Asp-57 may activate the protein by similar mechanisms. In contrast to CheY D57N, mutant CheY D57E displayed no activity in vivo, despite its ability to be phosphorylated in vitro. Acid-base stability analysis indicated that CheY D57E phosphorylates on an acidic residue, presumably Glu-57. These data suggest that a key determinant of the ability of a phosphoryl group to activate CheY is proximity to the hydrophobic core of the protein, with consequent opportunity to reposition key residues, irrespective of the chemical nature of the linkage attaching the phosphoryl group to CheY.  相似文献   

14.
Purified mannitol-specific enzyme II (EIImtl), in the presence of the detergent Lubrol, catalyzes the phosphorylation of mannitol from P-HPr via a classical ping-pong mechanism involving the participation of a phosphorylated EIImtl intermediate. This intermediate has been demonstrated by using radioactive phosphoenolpyruvate. Upon addition of mannitol, at least 80% of the enzyme-bound phosphoryl groups can be converted to mannitol 1-phosphate. The EIImtl concentration dependence of the exchange reaction indicates that self-association is a prerequisite for catalytic activity. The self-association can be achieved by increasing the EIImtl concentration or at low concentrations of EIImtl by adding HPr or bovine serum albumin. The equilibrium is shifted toward the dissociated form by mannitol 1-phosphate, resulting in a mannitol 1-phosphate induced inhibition. Mannitol does not affect the association state of the enzyme. Both mannitol and mannitol 1-phosphate also act as classical substrate inhibitors. The apparent Ki of each compound, however, is approximately equal to its apparent Km, suggesting that mannitol and mannitol 1-phosphate bind at the same site on EIImtl. Due to strong inhibition provided by mannitol and mannitol 1-phosphate in the exchange reaction, the kinetics of this reaction cannot be used to determine whether the reaction proceeds via a ping-pong or an ordered reaction mechanism.  相似文献   

15.
The solution structure of the cytoplasmic B domain of the mannitol (Mtl) transporter (II(Mtl)) from the mannitol branch of the Escherichia coli phosphotransferase system has been solved by multidimensional NMR spectroscopy with extensive use of residual dipolar couplings. The ordered IIB(Mtl) domain (residues 375-471 of II(Mtl)) consists of a four-stranded parallel beta-sheet flanked by two helices (alpha(1) and alpha(3)) on one face and helix alpha(2) on the opposite face with a characteristic Rossmann fold comprising two right-handed beta(1)alpha(1)beta(2) and beta(3)alpha(2)beta(4) motifs. The active site loop is structurally very similar to that of the eukaryotic protein tyrosine phosphatases, with the active site cysteine (Cys-384) primed in the thiolate state (pK(a) < 5.6) for nucleophilic attack at the phosphorylated histidine (His-554) of the IIA(Mtl) domain through stabilization by hydrogen bonding interactions with neighboring backbone amide groups at positions i + 2/3/4 from Cys-384 and with the hydroxyl group of Ser-391 at position i + 7. Modeling of the phosphorylated state of IIB(Mtl) suggests that the phosphoryl group can be readily stabilized by hydrogen bonding interactions with backbone amides in the i + 2/4/5/6/7 positions as well as with the hydroxyl group of Ser390 at position i + 6. Despite the absence of any significant sequence identity, the structure of IIB(Mtl) is remarkably similar to the structures of bovine protein tyrosine phosphatase (which contains two long insertions relative to IIB(Mtl)) and the cytoplasmic B component of enzyme II(Chb), which fulfills an analogous role to IIB(Mtl) in the N,N'-diacetylchitobiose branch of the phosphotransferase system. All three proteins utilize a cysteine residue in the nucleophilic attack of a phosphoryl group covalently bound to another protein.  相似文献   

16.
Jia Y  Lu Z  Huang K  Herzberg O  Dunaway-Mariano D 《Biochemistry》1999,38(43):14165-14173
PEP mutase catalyzes the conversion of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) to phosphonopyruvate in biosynthetic pathways leading to phosphonate secondary metabolites. A recent X-ray structure [Huang, K., Li, Z., Jia, Y., Dunaway-Mariano, D., and Herzberg, O. (1999) Structure (in press)] of the Mytilus edulis enzyme complexed with the Mg(II) cofactor and oxalate inhibitor reveals an alpha/beta-barrel backbone-fold housing an active site in which Mg(II) is bound by the two carboxylate groups of the oxalate ligand and the side chain of D85 and, via bridging water molecules, by the side chains of D58, D85, D87, and E114. The oxalate ligand, in turn, interacts with the side chains of R159, W44, and S46 and the backbone amide NHs of G47 and L48. Modeling studies identified two feasible PEP binding modes: model A in which PEP replaces oxalate with its carboxylate group interacting with R159 and its phosphoryl group positioned close to D58 and Mg(II) shifting slightly from its original position in the crystal structure, and model B in which PEP replaces oxalate with its phosphoryl group interacting with R159 and Mg(II) retaining its original position. Site-directed mutagenesis studies of the key mutase active site residues (R159, D58, D85, D87, and E114) were carried out in order to evaluate the catalytic roles predicted by the two models. The observed retention of low catalytic activity in the mutants R159A, D85A, D87A, and E114A, coupled with the absence of detectable catalytic activity in D58A, was interpreted as evidence for model A in which D58 functions in nucleophilic catalysis (phosphoryl transfer), R159 functions in PEP carboxylate group binding, and the carboxylates of D85, D87 and E114 function in Mg(II) binding. These results also provide evidence against model B in which R159 serves to mediate the phosphoryl transfer. A catalytic motif, which could serve both the phosphoryl transfer and the C-C cleavage enzymes of the PEP mutase superfamily, is proposed.  相似文献   

17.
G protein-coupled receptor kinase-interactor 1 (Git1) is involved in cell motility control by serving as an adaptor that links signaling proteins such as Pix and PAK to focal adhesion proteins. We previously demonstrated that Git1 was a multiply tyrosine-phosphorylated protein, its primary phosphorylation site was Tyr-554 in the vicinity of the focal adhesion targeting-homology (FAH) domain, and this site was selectively dephosphorylated by protein tyrosine phosphatase receptor type Z (Ptprz). In the present study, we showed that Tyr-554 phosphorylation reduced the association of Git1 with the FAH-domain-binding proteins, paxillin and Hic-5, based on immunoprecipitation experiments using the Tyr-554 mutants of Git1. The Tyr-554 phosphorylation of Git1 was higher, and its binding to paxillin was consistently lower in the brains of Ptprz-deficient mice than in those of wild-type mice. We then investigated the role of Tyr-554 phosphorylation in cell motility control using three different methods: random cell motility, wound healing, and Boyden chamber assays. The shRNA-mediated knockdown of endogenous Git1 impaired cell motility in A7r5 smooth muscle cells. The motility defect was rescued by the exogenous expression of wild-type Git1 and a Git1 mutant, which only retained Tyr-554 among the multiple potential tyrosine phosphorylation sites, but not by the Tyr-554 phosphorylation-defective or phosphorylation-state mimic Git1 mutant. Our results suggested that cyclic phosphorylation-dephosphorylation at Tyr-554 of Git1 was crucial for dynamic interactions between Git1 and paxillin/Hic-5 in order to ensure coordinated cell motility.  相似文献   

18.
Lim K  Read RJ  Chen CC  Tempczyk A  Wei M  Ye D  Wu C  Dunaway-Mariano D  Herzberg O 《Biochemistry》2007,46(51):14845-14853
Pyruvate phosphate dikinase (PPDK) catalyzes the reversible conversion of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP), AMP, and Pi to pyruvate and ATP. The enzyme contains two remotely located reaction centers: the nucleotide partial reaction takes place at the N-terminal domain, and the PEP/pyruvate partial reaction takes place at the C-terminal domain. A central domain, tethered to the N- and C-terminal domains by two closely associated linkers, contains a phosphorylatable histidine residue (His455). The molecular architecture suggests a swiveling domain mechanism that shuttles a phosphoryl group between the two reaction centers. In an early structure of PPDK from Clostridium symbiosum, the His445-containing domain (His domain) was positioned close to the nucleotide binding domain and did not contact the PEP/pyruvate-binding domain. Here, we present the crystal structure of a second conformational state of C. symbiosum PPDK with the His domain adjacent to the PEP-binding domain. The structure was obtained by producing a three-residue mutant protein (R219E/E271R/S262D) that introduces repulsion between the His and nucleotide-binding domains but preserves viable interactions with the PEP/pyruvate-binding domain. Accordingly, the mutant enzyme is competent in catalyzing the PEP/pyruvate half-reaction but the overall activity is abolished. The new structure confirms the swivel motion of the His domain. In addition, upon detachment from the His domain, the two nucleotide-binding subdomains undergo a hinge motion that opens the active-site cleft. A similar hinge motion is expected to accompany nucleotide binding (cleft closure) and release (cleft opening). A model of the coupled swivel and cleft opening motions was generated by interpolation between two end conformations, each with His455 positioned for phosphoryl group transfer from/to one of the substrates. The trajectory of the His domain avoids major clashes with the partner domains while preserving the association of the two linker segments.  相似文献   

19.
Recently we reported the phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP)-dependent phosphorylation of a 55-kilodalton protein of Streptococcus faecalis catalyzed by enzyme I and histidine-containing protein (HPr) of the phosphotransferase system (J. Deutscher, FEMS Microbiol. Lett. 29:237-243, 1985). The purified 55-kilodalton protein was found to exhibit dihydroxyacetone kinase activity. Glycerol was six times more slowly phosphorylated than dihydroxyacetone. The Kms were found to be 0.7 mM for ATP, 0.45 mM for dihydroxyacetone, and 0.9 mM for glycerol. PEP-dependent phosphorylation of dihydroxyacetone kinase stimulated phosphorylation of both substrates about 10-fold. Fructose 1,6-diphosphate at concentrations higher than 2 mM inhibited the activity of phosphorylated and unphosphorylated dihydroxyacetone kinase in a noncompetitive manner. The rate of PEP-dependent phosphorylation of dihydroxyacetone kinase was about 200-fold slower than the phosphorylation rate of III proteins (also called enzyme III or factor III), which so far have been considered the only phosphoryl acceptors of histidyl-phosphorylated HPr. P-Dihydroxyacetone kinase was found to be able to transfer its phosphoryl group in a backward reaction to HPr. Following [32P]PEP-dependent phosphorylation and tryptic digestion of dihydroxyacetone kinase, we isolated a labeled peptide composed of 37 amino acids, as determined by amino acid analysis. The single histidyl residue of this peptide most likely carries the phosphoryl group in phosphorylated dihydroxyacetone kinase.  相似文献   

20.
HPr, a central component of the phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent phosphotransferase system, can exist in Escherichia coli in a phosphorylated (PHPr) and a nonphosphorylated form. We show that, beside the normal transfer of the phosphoryl group from PHPr to enzymes II and III, PHPr can phosphorylate other HPr molecules in an autocatalytic exchange reaction. The reaction is very fast but is inhibited by labeling the protein with Bolton-Hunter reagent. We demonstrate that the exchange reaction can be used to determine the delta G degree of the phosphoryl group of mutant forms of PHPr relative to wild-type PHPr. Two HPr mutants were constructed by site-directed mutagenesis, HPr P11E and HPr E68A. Both show altered phosphoryl group potentials but show no significantly altered KM or Vmax values compared to wild-type HPr, illustrating the sensitivity of the exchange process. The exchange reaction does not occur between HPr from E. coli and HPr from Staphylococcus carnosus.  相似文献   

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