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1.
The alpha-chymotryptic ydrolysis of glycine esters   总被引:6,自引:4,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
1. The alpha-chymotrypsin-catalysed hydrolysis of N-acetylglycine ethyl and thiolethyl esters was investigated at pH7.90 and 25 degrees over a wide range of substrate concentrations. 2. The Lineweaver-Burk plots for these substrates are markedly curved, and it is shown that the curvature is due solely to the ;enzyme-blank' reaction. The rate of this reaction is proportional to free enzyme concentration in the range 10-100mum, with a pseudo-first-order rate constant of approx. 1x10(-3)sec.(-1). Correction for this reaction by the procedure described leads to linear plots. It is shown that the significance of the enzyme-blank reaction depends on the value of k(0)/K(m) for the substrate under investigation. 3. Interpretation of the curvature in the Lineweaver-Burk plots by previous workers in terms of activation by excess of substrate is shown to be erroneous. 4. Values of K(m) 387mm and k(0) 0.039sec.(-1), and K(m) 41mm and k(0) 0.23sec.(-1), were obtained for the ethyl and thiolethyl esters of N-acetylglycine respectively. The literature values for the methyl esters of N-acetyl- and N-propionyl-glycine have been corrected by the procedure described. The new values agree much better with current theories of alpha-chymotrypsin mechanism and specificity. 5. The kinetic parameters for the ethyl and thiolethyl esters indicate the absence of an electrophilic component in the catalytic mechanism of alpha-chymotrypsin, and the importance of the ester function in substrate binding.  相似文献   

2.
P F Guidinger  T Nowak 《Biochemistry》1991,30(36):8851-8861
The participation of lysine in the catalysis by avian liver phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase was studied by chemical modification and by a characterization of the modified enzyme. The rate of inactivation by 2,4-pentanedione is pseudo-first-order and linearly dependent on reagent concentration with a second-order rate constant of 0.36 +/- 0.025 M-1 min-1. Inactivation by pyridoxal 5'-phosphate of the reversible reaction catalyzed by phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase follows bimolecular kinetics with a second-order rate constant of 7700 +/- 860 M-1 min-1. A second-order rate constant of inactivation for the irreversible reaction catalyzed by the enzyme is 1434 +/- 110 M-1 min-1. Treatment of the enzyme with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate gives incorporation of 1 mol of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate per mole of enzyme or one lysine residue modified concomitant with 100% loss in activity. A stoichiometry of 1:1 is observed when either the reversible or the irreversible reactions catalyzed by the enzyme are monitored. A study of kobs vs pH suggests this active-site lysine has a pKa of 8.1 and a pH-independent rate constant of inactivation of 47,700 M-1 min-1. The phosphate-containing substrates IDP, ITP, and phosphoenolpyruvate offer almost complete protection against inactivation by pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. Modified, inactive enzyme exhibits little change in Mn2+ binding as shown by EPR. Proton relaxation rate measurements suggest that pyridoxal 5'-phosphate modification alters binding of the phosphate-containing substrates. 31P NMR relaxation rate measurements show altered binding of the substrates in the ternary enzyme.Mn2+.substrate complex. Circular dichroism studies show little change in secondary structure of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate modified phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase. These results indicate that avian liver phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase has one reactive lysine at the active site and it is involved in the binding and activation of the phosphate-containing substrates.  相似文献   

3.
1. Static titrations reveal an exact stoicheiometry between various haem derivatives and apoperoxidase prepared from one isoenzyme of the horseradish enzyme. 2. Carbon monoxide-protohaem reacts rapidly with apoperoxidase and the kinetics can be accounted for by a mechanism already applied to the reaction of carbon monoxide-haem derivatives with apomyoglobin and apohaemoglobin. 3. According to this mechanism a complex is formed first whose combination and dissociation velocity constants are 5x10(8)m(-1)sec.(-1) and 10(3)sec.(-1) at pH9.1 and 20 degrees . The complex is converted into carbon monoxide-haemoprotein in a first-order process with a rate constant of 235sec.(-1) for peroxidase and 364sec.(-1) for myoglobin at pH9.1 and 20 degrees . 4. The effects of pH and temperature were examined. The activation energy for the process of complex-isomerization is about 13kcal./mole. 5. The similarity in the kinetics of the reactions of carbon monoxide-haem with apoperoxidase and with apomyoglobin suggests structural similarities at the haem-binding sites of the two proteins.  相似文献   

4.
M Fujioka  Y Takata 《Biochemistry》1981,20(3):468-472
The baker's yeast saccharopine dehydrogenase (EC 1.5.1.7) was inactivated by 2,3-butanedione following pseudo-first-order reaction kinetics. The pseudo-first-order rate constant for inactivation was linearly related to the butanedione concentration, and a value of 7.5 M-1 min-1 was obtained for the second-order rate constant at pH 8.0 and 25 degrees C. Amino acid analysis of the inactivated enzyme revealed that arginine was the only amino acid residue affected. Although as many as eight arginine residues were lost on prolonged incubation with butanedione, only one residue appears to be essential for activity. The modification resulted in the change in Vmax, but not in Km, values for substrates. The inactivation by butanedione was substantially protected by L-leucine, a competitive analogue of substrate lysine, in the presence of reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) and alpha-ketoglutarate. Since leucine binds only to the enzyme-NADH-alpha-ketoglutarate complex, the result suggests that an arginine residue located near the binding site for the amino acid substrate is modified. Titration with leucine showed that the reaction of butanedione also took place with the enzyme-NADH-alpha-ketoglutarate-leucine complex more slowly than with the free enzyme. The binding study indicated that the inactivated enzyme still retained the capacity to bind leucine, although the affinity appeared to be somewhat decreased. From these results it is concluded that an arginine residue essential for activity is involved in the catalytic reaction rather than in the binding of the coenzyme and substrates.  相似文献   

5.
T N Wells  A R Fersht 《Biochemistry》1986,25(8):1881-1886
The utilization of enzyme-substrate binding energy in catalysis has been investigated by experiments on mutant tyrosyl-tRNA synthetases that have been generated by site-directed mutagenesis. The mutants are poorer enzymes because they lack side chains that form hydrogen bonds with ATP and tyrosine during stages of the reaction. The hydrogen bonds are not directly involved in the chemical processes but are at some distance from the seat of reaction. The free energy profiles for the formation of enzyme-bound tyrosyl adenylate and the equilibria between the substrates and products were determined from a combination of pre-steady-state kinetics and equilibrium binding methods. By comparison of the profile of each mutant with wild-type enzyme, a picture is built up of how the course of reaction is affected by the influence of each side chain on the energies of the complexes of the enzyme with substrates, transition states, and intermediates (tyrosyl adenylate). As the activation reaction proceeds, the apparent binding energies of certain side chains with the tyrosine and nucleotide moieties increase, being weakest in the enzyme-substrate complex, stronger in the transition state, and strongest in the enzyme-intermediate complex. Most marked is the interaction of Cys-35 with the 3'-hydroxyl of the ribose. Removal of the side chain of Cys-35 leads to no change in the dissociation constant of ATP but causes a 10-fold lowering of the catalytic rate constant. It contributes no net apparent binding energy in the E X Tyr X ATP complex and stabilizes the transition state by 1.2 kcal/mol and the E X Tyr-AMP complex by 1.6 kcal/mol.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
The interaction of a fluorinated phosphonate with Zn-2+-and Mn-2+-alkaline phosphatase as studied by 19-F NMR revealed a stoichiometry of 1:1 for the binding of the phosphonate anion to the enzyme. In the presence of two metal ions, one fluorinated phosphonate ion was found to interact strongly with the enzyme, while a different interaction was observed when the number of metal ions per enzyme exceeded two. Phosphate replaced enzyme bound phosphonate, as is shown by the 19-F NMR spectra. No direct interaction between the fluorinated phosphonate and the metal ion responsible for enzyme activity was indicated by the 19-F NMR data. This observation supports the idea of a considerable distance between metal ion and substrate binding site in Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase.  相似文献   

7.
p-Hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase (EC 1.14.13.2) from Pseudomonas fluorescens is a NADPH-dependent, FAD-containing monooxygenase catalyzing the hydroxylation of p-hydroxybenzoate to form 3,4-dihydroxybenzoate in the presence of NADPH and molecular oxygen. The mechanism of this three-substrate reaction was investigated in detail at pH 6.6, 4 degrees C, by steady state kinetics, stopped flow spectrophotometry, and equilibrium binding experiments. The initial velocity patterns are consistent with a ping-pong type mechanism which involves two ternary complexes between the enzyme and substrates. The first ternary complex is formed by random addition of p-hydroxybenzoate and NADPH to the enzyme, followed by the release of the first product (NADP+). The reduced enzyme . p-hydroxybenzoate complex now reacts with oxygen, the third substrate, to form the second ternary complex. The enzyme-bound p-hydroxybenzoate then reacts with the activated oxygen to give 3,4-dihydroxybenzoate which is released regenerating the oxidized enzyme for the next cycle. The binding of p-hydroxybenzoate to the oxidized enzyme to form a 1:1 complex causes large, characteristic spectral perturbations and fluorescence quenching. The dissociation constant for the enzyme . substrate complex was obtained by titrations in which absorbance and/or fluorescence quenching was measured. The binding constants of NADPH to the enzyme with and without p-hydroxybenzoate were determined kinetically by measuring the rate of reduction of the enzyme at different concentrations of NADPH. The reduction of the enzyme proceeds extremely slowly in the absence of p-hydroxybenzoate. The presence of the substrate causes a dramatic stimulation (140,000-fold) in the rate of enzyme reduction. The anaerobic reduction of the enzyme by NADPH in the presence of p-hydroxybenzoate produces a transient charge-transfer intermediate. On the basis of the proposed mechanism, the dissociation constants for p-hydroxybenzoate and NADPH as well as the Michaelis constants for all the three substrates were calculated from the initial velocity data. The agreement obtained between various kinetic parameters from the initial rate measurements and those calculated from the individual rate constants determined in rapid reactions, strongly supports the proposed mechanism for the p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase reaction.  相似文献   

8.
The binding of the bisubstrate ligand N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate (PALA) to the active sites of both the free catalytic subunit of aspartate transcarbamoylase and the intact holoenzyme causes conformational changes which have been studied extensively. However, no kinetic information has been available about the sequence of events occurring during the formation or dissociation of the complexes. Stopped flow kinetics, 31P saturation transfer NMR spectroscopy, and presteady-state kinetics were used to monitor the interaction of PALA with the catalytic subunit (or a derivative containing nitrotyrosyl chromophores which served as spectral probes). The various experimental approaches lead to a mechanism that includes a rapid binding of PALA with an "on" rate of about 10(8)M-1s-1 and an "off" rate of 28 s-1, followed by a much slower isomerization of the complex with a forward rate constant of 0.18 s-1. Analysis of the presteady-state bursts of enzyme activity when the protein is added to a mixture of substrates and PALA and of the lag in activity when the PALA complex with catalytic subunit is added to substrates yielded a rate constant for the reverse isomerization of 0.018s-1. Thus, the conformational change subsequent to PALA binding leads to a 10-fold increase in the equilibrium constant for complex formation. Stopped flow kinetic measurements of the spectral change resulting from mixing the complex of PALA and nitrated protein with native enzyme showed a slow process with a t1/2 of about 11 s, whereas 31P saturation transfer NMR experiments yielded at t1/2 of about 260 ms for the dissociation of PALA from the complex. This apparent disparity is understood in terms of the two-step binding scheme where rapid dissociation of the initial ligand X enzyme complex is measured by the NMR technique and the slow isomerization of the complex is responsible for the bulk of the stopped flow signal.  相似文献   

9.
The four half-transamination reactions [the pyridoxal form of Escherichia coli aspartate aminotransferase (AspAT) with aspartate or glutamate and the pyridoxamine form of the enzyme with oxalacetate or 2-oxoglutarate] were followed in a stopped-flow spectrometer by monitoring the absorbance change at either 333 or 358 nm. The reaction progress curves in all cases gave fits to a monophasic exponential process. Kinetic analyses of these reactions showed that each half-reaction is composed of the following three processes: (1) the rapid binding of an amino acid substrate to the pyridoxal form of the enzyme; (2) the rapid binding of the corresponding keto acid to the pyridoxamine form of the enzyme; (3) the rate-determining interconversion between the two complexes. This mechanism was supported by the findings that the equilibrium constants for half- and overall-transamination reactions and the steady-state kinetic constants (Km and kcat) agreed well with the predicted values on the basis of the above mechanism using pre-steady-state kinetic parameters. The significant primary kinetic isotope effect observed in the reaction with deuterated amino acid suggests that the withdrawal of the alpha-proton of the substrates is rate determining. The pyridoxal form of E. coli AspAT reacted with a variety of amino acids as substrates. The Gibbs free energy difference between the transition state and the unbound state (unbound enzyme plus free substrate), as calculated from the pre-steady-state kinetic parameters, showed a linear relationship with the accessible surface area of amino acid substrate bearing an uncharged side chain.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
The steady-state kinetics of hydrolysis reaction catalysed by human prostatic acid phosphatase (PAP) by using 1-naphthyl phosphate, phenyl phosphate and phosphotyrosine as substrates has been studied at pH 5.5. The substrate binding curves were sigmoidal and Hill cooperation coefficient h was higher than 1 for each of the examined compounds. Thus, human prostatic acid phosphatase kinetics exhibits positive cooperativity towards the studied substrates. The extent of cooperativity was found to depend on the substrate used and on enzyme concentration. The highest cooperativity of PAP was observed for 1-naphthyl phosphate and the lowest for phosphotyrosine. When prostatic phosphatase concentration increased, Hill cooperation coefficient (h) and half saturation constant (K(0.5)) both grew, but the catalytic constant (k(cat)) remained constant, for each of the substrates studied. Ligand-induced association-dissociation equilibrium of the active oligomeric species (monomer-dimer-tetramer-oligomers) is suggested.  相似文献   

11.
The mechanism of action of the flavoprotein D-aspartate oxidase (EC 1.4.3.1) has been investigated by steady-state and stopped flow kinetic studies using D-aspartate and O2 as substrates in 50 mM KPi, 0.3 mM EDTA, pH 7.4, 4 degrees C. Steady-state results indicate that a ternary complex containing enzyme, O2, and substrate (or product) is an obligatory intermediate in catalysis. The kinetic parameters are turnover number = 11.1 s-1, Km(D-Asp) = 2.2 x 10(-3) M, Km(O2) = 1.7 x 10(-4) M. Rapid reaction studies show that 1) the reductive half reaction is essentially irreversible with a maximum rate of reduction of 180 s-1; 2) the free reduced enzyme cannot be the species which is reoxidized during turnover since its reoxidation by oxygen (second order rate constant equal to 5.3 x 10(2) M-1 s-1) is too slow to be of relevance in catalysis; 3) reduced enzyme can bind a ligand rapidly and be reoxidized as a complex at a rate faster than that observed for the free reduced enzyme; 4) the rate of reoxidation of reduced enzyme by oxygen during turnover is dependent on both O2 and D-aspartate concentrations (second order rate constant of reaction between O2 and reduced enzyme-substrate complex equal to 6.2 x 10(4) M-1 s-1); and 5) the rate-limiting step in catalysis occurs after reoxidation of the enzyme and before its reduction in the following turnover. A mechanism involving reduction of enzyme by substrate, dissociation of product from reduced enzyme, binding of a second molecule of substrate to the reduced enzyme, and reoxidation of the reduced enzyme-substrate complex is proposed for the enzyme-catalyzed oxidation of D-aspartate.  相似文献   

12.
4-Nitrophenyl and 2-napthyl monoesters of phenylphosphonic acid have been synthesized, and an enzyme catalyzing their hydrolysis was resolved from alkaline phosphatase of a commerical calf intestinal alkaline phosphatase preparation by extensive ion-exchange chromatography, chromatography on L-phenylalanyl-Sepharose with a decreasing gradient of (NH4) 2SO4, and gel filtration. Detergent-solubilized enzyme from fresh bovine intestine was purified after (NH4)2SO4 fractionation by the same technique. The purified enzyme is homogeneous by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and sedimentation equilibrium centrifugation. It has a molecular weight of 108,000, contains approximately 21% carbohydrate, and has an amino acid composition considerably different from that reported from alkaline phosphatase from the same tissue. The homogeneous intestinal enzyme, an efficient catalyst of phosphonate ester hydoolysis but not of phosphate monoester hydrolysis, was identified as a 5'-nucleotide phosphodiesterase by its ability to hydrolyze 4-nitrophenyl esters of 5'-TMP but not of 3'-TMP. Also consistent with this identification was the ability of the enzyme to hydrolyze 5'-ATP to 5'-AMP and PPi, NAD+ to 5'-AMP and NMN, TpT to 5'-TMP and thymidine, pApApApA to 5'-AMP, and only the single-stranded portion of tRNA from the 3'-OH end. Snake venom 5'-nucleotide phosphodiesterase also hydrolyzes phosphonate esters, but 3'-nucleotide phosphodiesterase of spleen and cyclic 3',5'-AMP phosphodiesterase do not. Thus, types of phosphodiesterases can be conveniently distinguished by their ability to hydrolyze phosphonate esters. As substrates for 5'-nucleotide phosphodiesterases, phosphonate esters are preferable to the more conventional esters of nucleotides and bis(4-nitrophenyl) phosphate because of their superior stability and ease of synthesis. Furthermore, the rate of hydrolysis of phosphonate esters under saturating conditions is greater than that of the conventional substrates. At substrate concentrations of 1 mM the rates of hydrolysis of phosphonate esters and of nucleotide esters are comparable and both superior to that of bis(4-nitrophenyl) phosphate.  相似文献   

13.
Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase. An analysis of transient kinetics   总被引:7,自引:6,他引:1  
1. The hydrolysis of 2,4-dinitrophenyl phosphate by Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase at pH5.5 was studied by the stopped-flow technique. The rate of production of 2,4-dinitrophenol was measured both in reactions with substrate in excess of enzyme and in single turnovers with excess of enzyme over substrate. It was found that the step that determined the rate of the transient phase of this reaction was an isomerization of the enzyme occurring before substrate binding. 2. No difference was observed between the reaction after mixing a pre-equilibrium mixture of alkaline phosphatase and inorganic phosphate, with 2,4-dinitrophenyl phosphate at pH5.5 in the stopped-flow apparatus, and the control reaction in which inorganic phosphate was pre-equilibrated with the substrate. Since dephosphorylation is the rate-limiting step of the complete turnover at pH5.5, this observation suggests that alkaline phosphatase can bind two different ligands simultaneously, one at each of the active sites on the dimeric enzyme, even though only one site is catalytically active at any given time. 3. Kinetic methods are outlined for the distinction between two pathways of substrate binding, which include an isomerization either of the free enzyme or of the enzyme-substrate complex.  相似文献   

14.
1. The conversion of inactive (phosphorylated) pyruvate dehydrogenase complex into active (dephosphorylated) complex by pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphate phosphatase is inhibited in heart mitochondria prepared from alloxan-diabetic or 48h-starved rats, in mitochondria prepared from acetate-perfused rat hearts and in mitochondria prepared from normal rat hearts incubated with respiratory substrates for 6 min (as compared with 1 min). 2. This conclusion is based on experiments with isolated intact mitochondria in which the pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase reaction was inhibited by pyruvate or ATP depletion (by using oligomycin and carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone), and in experiments in which the rate of conversion of inactive complex into active complex by the phosphatase was measured in extracts of mitochondria. The inhibition of the phosphatase reaction was seen with constant concentrations of Ca2+ and Mg2+ (activators of the phosphatase). The phosphatase reaction in these mitochondrial extracts was not inhibited when an excess of exogenous pig heart pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphate was used as substrate. It is concluded that this inhibition is due to some factor(s) associated with the substrate (pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphate complex) and not to inhibition of the phosphatase as such. 3. This conclusion was verified by isolating pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphate complex, free of phosphatase, from hearts of control and diabetic rats an from heart mitochondria incubed for 1min (control) or 6min with respiratory substrates. The rates of re-activation of the inactive complexes were then measured with preparations of ox heart or rat heart phosphatase. The rates were lower (relative to controls) with inactive complex from hearts of diabetic rats or from heart mitochondria incubated for 6min with respiratory substrates. 4. The incorporation of 32Pi into inactive complex took 6min to complete in rat heart mitocondria. The extent of incorporation was consistent with three or four sites of phosphorylation in rat heart pyruvate dehydrogenase complex. 5. It is suggested that phosphorylation of sites additional to an inactivating site may inhibit the conversion of inactive complex into active complex by the phosphatase in heart mitochondria from alloxan-diabetic or 48h-starved rats or in mitochondria incubated for 6min with respiratory substrates.  相似文献   

15.
The kinetics of binding L-arginine and three alternative substrates (homoarginine, N-methylarginine, and N-hydroxyarginine) to neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) were characterized by conventional and stopped-flow spectroscopy. Because binding these substrates has only a small effect on the light absorbance spectrum of tetrahydrobiopterin-saturated nNOS, their binding was monitored by following displacement of imidazole, which displays a significant change in Soret absorbance from 427 to 398 nm. Rates of spectral change upon mixing Im-nNOS with increasing amounts of substrates were obtained and found to be monophasic in all cases. For each substrate, a plot of the apparent rate versus substrate concentration showed saturation at the higher concentrations. K(-)(1), k(2), k(-)(2), and the apparent dissociation constant were derived for each substrate from the kinetic data. The dissociation constants mostly agreed with those calculated from equilibrium spectral data obtained by titrating Im-nNOS with each substrate. We conclude that nNOS follows a two-step, reversible mechanism of substrate binding in which there is a rapid equilibrium between Im-nNOS and the substrate S followed by a slower isomerization process to generate nNOS'-S: Im-nNOS + S if Im-nNOS-S if nNOS'-S + Im. All four substrates followed this general mechanism, but differences in their kinetic values were significant and may contribute to their varying capacities to support NO synthesis.  相似文献   

16.
A Betz  P W Wong  U Sinha 《Biochemistry》1999,38(44):14582-14591
Recently, peptidylketothiazoles have been shown to be potent inhibitors of proteases, but the details of the interaction have not yet been studied. In the work presented here, the interaction of factor Xa, a coagulation protease, with the transition state inhibitor BnSO(2)-D-Arg-Gly-Arg-ketothiazole (C921-78) is characterized. C921-78 is a tight and selective inhibitor of the coagulation protease factor Xa (K(d) = 14 pM). The hydrolytic activity of factor Xa was inhibited by C921-78 in a time-dependent manner. The rate-limiting step of the bimolecular combination of inhibitor and enzyme was competitive with the substrate. Conversely, the inhibitor could be displaced from the active site of the enzyme after exposure of the preformed complex to an excess of substrate or to the active site inhibitor dansyl-Glu-Gly-Arg-chloromethyl ketone (DEGR-CMK) in a slow reaction. The formation of the C921-78-factor Xa complex resulted in a 60% increase in the magnitude of the fluorescence emission spectrum. Rapid mixing of the enzyme and inhibitor produces a monophasic fluorescence increase, compatible with spectral transition in a single step. The rate constant for this reaction increased hyperbolically with the concentration of C921-78, but the amplitude remained constant. These results are consistent with the initial formation of an enzyme-inhibitor complex (EI), followed by a unimolecular conversion of EI to EI linked to a spectral transition. The rate constants of the isomerization provide an estimate of 300000-fold stabilization. Thus, the inhibition of factor Xa by C921-78 follows a mechanism similar to that described classically for slow tight binding inhibitors. However, the two steps of the reaction cannot be kinetically separated by the rapid equilibrium assumption, and therefore, the formation of EI is partially rate-limiting, too. The driving energy for the unusually fast isomerization step may result from the highly favorable interactions of the inhibitor in the primary binding site.  相似文献   

17.
The stopped flow method has been used to determine the pH dependence of the kinetics of the binding of NADPH to chicken liver fatty acid synthase over the pH range 6.0-8.5. The kinetics is consistent with a one-step binding mechanism, and the pH dependence of the second order rate constant indicates that an ionizable group either on the enzyme or on NADPH with a pK alpha of 6.1 is of importance in the binding process. The isotope rate effects have been determined for the steady state reaction with (S)- and (R)-[4-2H] NADPH as substrates and are very small. The pH dependence of the rate constant characterizing the reduction of acetoacetyl by NADPH on the enzyme (beta-ketoacyl reductase) and the isotope rate effects on this constant with (S)-[4-2H]NADPH as substrate also have been measured with the stopped flow method. A small pH-dependent isotope rate effect is found; these results suggest hydride transfer is not rate limiting for the beta-ketoacyl reductase reaction on the enzyme surface. The pH dependence of this rate constant is bell shaped and is very similar to that of the turnover number for the overall reaction; this suggests that the beta-ketoacyl reductase reaction may be partially rate limiting for the overall reaction when the enzyme is saturated with substrates.  相似文献   

18.
5-Aminolevulinate synthase (ALAS) is the first enzyme of the heme biosynthetic pathway in non-plant eukaryotes and the alpha-subclass of purple bacteria. The pyridoxal 5'-phosphate cofactor at the active site undergoes changes in absorptive properties during substrate binding and catalysis that have allowed us to study the kinetics of these reactions spectroscopically. Rapid scanning stopped-flow experiments of murine erythroid 5-aminolevulinate synthase demonstrate that reaction with glycine plus succinyl-CoA results in a pre-steady-state burst of quinonoid intermediate formation. Thus, a step following binding of substrates and initial quinonoid intermediate formation is rate-determining. The steady-state spectrum of the enzyme is similar to that formed in the presence of 5-aminolevulinate, suggesting that release of this product limits the overall rate. Reaction of either glycine or 5-aminolevulinate with ALAS is slow (kf = 0.15 s-1) and approximates kcat. The rate constant for reaction with glycine is increased at least 90-fold in the presence of succinyl-CoA and most likely represents a slow conformational change of the enzyme that is accelerated by succinyl-CoA. The slow rate of reaction of 5-aminolevulinate with ALAS is 5-aminolevulinate-independent, suggesting that it also represents a slow isomerization of the enzyme. Reaction of succinyl-CoA with the enzyme-glycine complex to form a quinonoid intermediate is a biphasic process and may be irreversible. Taken together, the data suggest that turnover is limited by release of 5-aminolevulinate or a conformational change associated with 5-aminolevulinate release.  相似文献   

19.
V C Sekhar  B V Plapp 《Biochemistry》1988,27(14):5082-5088
The binding of NAD+ to liver alcohol dehydrogenase was studied by stopped-flow techniques in the pH range from 6.1 to 10.9 at 25 degrees C. Varying the concentrations of NAD+ and a substrate analogue used to trap the enzyme-NAD+ complex gave saturation kinetics. The same maximum rate constants were obtained with or without the trapping agent and by following the reaction with protein fluorescence or absorbance of a ternary complex. The data fit a mechanism with diffusion-controlled association of enzyme and NAD+, followed by an isomerization with a forward rate constant of 500 s-1 at pH 8: E E-NAD+ *E-NAD+. The isomerization may be related to the conformational change determined by X-ray crystallography of free enzyme and enzyme-coenzyme complexes. Overall bimolecular rate constants for NAD+ binding show a bell-shaped pH dependence with apparent pK values at 6.9 and 9.0. Acetimidylation of epsilon-amino groups shifts the upper pK to a value of 11 or higher, suggesting that Lys-228 is responsible for the pK of 9.0. Formation of the enzyme-imidazole complex abolishes the pK value of 6.9, suggesting that a hydrogen-bonded system extending from the zinc-bound water to His-51 is responsible for this pK value. The rates of isomerization of E-NAD+ and of pyrazole binding were maximal at pH below a pK of about 8, which is attributable to the hydrogen-bonded system. Acetimidylation of lysines or displacement of zinc-water with imidazole had little effect on the rate of isomerization of the E-NAD+ complex.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
The tetrahedral intermediate formed at the active site of 5-enolpyruvoylshikimate-3-phosphate synthase by reaction of shikimate 3-phosphate with phosphoenolpyruvate was isolated, and its properties in solution and in reaction with enzyme were examined. The intermediate was moderately stable at pH 7.0, with a half-life of 45 min, and showed increasing lifetimes with increasing pH (t1/2 greater than 48 h at pH greater than or equal to 12). The intermediate bound to the enzyme rapidly, with a second order rate constant of 5 x 10(7) M-1 s-1. Upon binding to the enzyme, it reacted to form both products (5-enolpyruvoylshikimate 3-phosphate, Pi) and substrates (shikimate 3-phosphate, phosphoenolpyruvate) in proportions predicted by the rate constants defined previously for reactions occurring at the active enzyme site (Anderson, K.S. Sikorski, J.A., and Johnson, K. A. (1988b) Biochemistry 27, 7395-7406). The kinetics of binding and dissociation of stable phosphonate analogs of the tetrahedral intermediate (Alberg, D., and Bartlett, P.A. (1989) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 111, 2337) were also examined. In comparison to the intermediate, the analogs bound to the enzyme 300-10,000 fold more slowly and at least 300-20,000 times mroe weakly. These results clarify the definitions for kinetic competence of enzyme intermediates and call into question the significance of the slow binding of analogs of transition states or enzyme intermediates.  相似文献   

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