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1.
Aquifex aeolicus 3-deoxy-D-manno-octulosonate 8-phosphate synthase (KDO8PS) catalyzes the condensation of arabinose 5-phosphate (A5P) and phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) by favoring the activation of a water molecule coordinated to the active-site metal ion. Cys11, His185, Glu222 and Asp233 are the other metal ligands. Wild-type KDO8PS is purified with Zn(2+) or Fe(2+) in the active site, but maximal activity in vitro is achieved when the endogenous metal is replaced with Cd(2+). The H185G enzyme retains 8% of the wild-type activity. ICP mass spectrometry analysis indicates that loss of His185 decreases the enzyme affinity for Fe(2+), but not for Zn(2+). However, maximal activity is again achieved by substitution of the endogenous metal with Cd(2+). We have determined the X-ray structures of the Cd(2+) H185G enzyme in its substrate-free form, and in complex with PEP, and PEP plus A5P. These structures show a normal amount of Cd(2+) bound, suggesting that coordination by His185 is not essential to retain Cd(2+) in the active site. Nonetheless, there are significant changes in the coordination sphere of Cd(2+) with respect to the wild-type enzyme, as the carboxylate moiety of PEP binds directly to the metal ion and replaces water and His185 as ligands. These observations indicate that the primary function of His185 in A.aeolicus KDO8PS is to orient PEP in the active site of the enzyme in such a way that a water molecule on the sinister (si) side of PEP can be activated by direct coordination to the metal ion.  相似文献   

2.
Methods have been developed for the addition of different metal ion species to the three distinct pairs of metal sites (A, B, and C) found in the dimer of apoalkaline phosphatase. This allows the preparation of hybrid alkaline phosphatases in which A and B sites of each monomer contain two different species of metal ion or the A and B sites of one monomer contain the same species of metal ion, while the adjacent monomer contains a second species. The following hybrids have been characterized in detail: (Zn(II)ACd(II)B)2 alkaline phosphatase, (Zn(II)AMg(II)B)2 alkaline phosphatase, (Cd(II)AZn(II)B)2 alkaline phosphatase, and (Zn(II)AZn(II]B)(Cd(II)ACd(II)B) alkaline phosphatase. 31P and, where appropriate, 113Cd NMR have been used to monitor the behavior of the covalent (E-P) and noncovalent (E X P) phosphointermediates and of the A and B metal ions. From the pH dependencies of the E-P in equilibrium E X P in equilibrium E + Pi equilibria, it is clear that A site metal is the dominant influence in dephosphorylation of E-P and may have a coordinated water molecule, which ionizes to ZnOH- at a low pH providing the nucleophile for dephosphorylation. A site metal also serves to coordinate phosphate in the E X P complex. B site metal has a much smaller effect on dephosphorylation rates, although it does dramatically alter the Pi dissociation rate, which is the rate-limiting step for the native enzyme at alkaline pH, and is probably important in neutralizing the charge on the phosphoseryl residue, thus potentiating the nucleophilic attack of the OH- bound at A site. Phosphate dissociation is slowed markedly by replacement of B site zinc by cadmium. There is clear evidence for long range effects of subunit-subunit interactions, since metal ion and phosphate binding at one active center alters the environments of A and B site metal ions and phosphoserine at the other active site.  相似文献   

3.
Characterization of the zinc binding site of bacterial phosphotriesterase.   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The bacterial phosphotriesterase has been found to require a divalent cation for enzymatic activity. This enzyme catalyzes the detoxification of organophosphorus insecticides and nerve agents. In an Escherichia coli expression system significantly higher concentrations of active enzyme could be produced when 1.0 mM concentrations of Mn2+, Co2+, Ni2+, and Cd2+ were included in the growth medium. The isolated enzymes contained up to 2 equivalents of these metal ions as determined by atomic absorption spectroscopy. The catalytic activity of the various metal enzyme derivatives was lost upon incubation with EDTA, 1,10-phenanthroline, and 8-hydroxyquinoline-5-sulfonic acid. Protection against inactivation by metal chelation was afforded by the binding of competitive inhibitors, suggesting that at least one metal is at or near the active site. Apoenzyme was prepared by incubation of the phosphotriesterase with beta-mercaptoethanol and EDTA for 2 days. Full recovery of enzymatic activity could be obtained by incubation of the apoenzyme with 2 equivalents of Zn2+, Co2+, Ni2+, Cd2+, or Mn2+. The 113Cd NMR spectrum of enzyme containing 2 equivalents of 113Cd2+ showed two resonances at 120 and 215 ppm downfield from Cd(ClO4)2. The NMR data are consistent with nitrogen (histidine) and oxygen ligands to the metal centers.  相似文献   

4.
Divalent metal derivatives of the hamster dihydroorotase domain.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Dihydroorotase (DHOase, EC 3.5.2.3) is a zinc enzyme that catalyzes the reversible cyclization of N-carbamyl-L-aspartate to L-dihydroorotate in the third reaction of the de novo pathway for biosynthesis of pyrimidine nucleotides. The recombinant hamster DHOase domain from the trifunctional protein, CAD, was overexpressed in Escherichia coli and purified. The DHOase domain contained one bound zinc atom at the active site which was removed by dialysis against the chelator, pyridine-2,6-dicarboxylate, at pH 6.0. The apoenzyme was reconstituted with different divalent cations at pH 7.4. Co(II)-, Zn(II)-, Mn(II)-, and Cd(II)-substituted DHOases had enzymic activity, but replacement with Ni(2+), Cu(2+), Mg(2+), or Ca(2+) ions did not restore activity. Atomic absorption spectroscopy showed binding of one Co(II), Zn(II), Mn(II), Cd(II), Ni(II), or Cu(II) to the enzyme, while Mg(II) and Ca(II) were not bound. The maximal enzymic activities of the active, reconstituted DHOases were in the following order: Co(II) --> Zn(II) --> Mn(II) --> Cd(II). These metal substitutions had major effects upon values for V(max); effects upon the corresponding K(m) values were less pronounced. The pK(a) values of the Co(II)-, Mn(II)-, and Cd(II)-substituted enzymes derived from pH-rate profiles are similar to that of Zn(II)-DHOase, indicating that the derived pK(a) value of 6.56 obtained for Zn-DHOase is not due to ionization of an enzyme-metal aquo complex, but probably a histidine residue at the active site. The visible spectrum of Co(II)-substituted DHOase exhibits maxima at 520 and 570 nm with molar extinction coefficients of 195 and 210 M(-1) cm(-1), consistent with pentacoordination of Co(II) at the active site. The spectra at high and low pH are different, suggesting that the environment of the metal binding site is different at these pHs where the reverse and forward reactions, respectively, are favored.  相似文献   

5.
The hammerhead ribozyme crystal structure identified a specific metal ion binding site referred to as the P9/G10.1 site. Although this metal ion binding site is approximately 20 A away from the cleavage site, its disruption is highly deleterious for catalysis. Additional published results have suggested that the pro-R(P) oxygen at the cleavage site is coordinated by a metal ion in the reaction's transition state. Herein, we report a study on Cd(2+) rescue of the deleterious phosphorothioate substitution at the cleavage site. Under all conditions, the Cd(2+) concentration dependence can be accounted for by binding of a single rescuing metal ion. The affinity of the rescuing Cd(2+) is sensitive to perturbations at the P9/G10.1 site but not at the cleavage site or other sites in the conserved core. These observations led to a model in which a metal ion bound at the P9/G10.1 site in the ground state acquires an additional interaction with the cleavage site prior to and in the transition state. A titration experiment ruled out the possibility that a second tight-binding metal ion (< 10 microM) is involved in the rescue, further supporting the single metal ion model. Additionally, weakening Cd(2+) binding at the P9/G10.1 site did not result in the biphasic binding curve predicted from other models involving two metal ions. The large stereospecific thio-effects at the P9/G10.1 and the cleavage site suggest that there are interactions with these oxygen atoms in the normal reaction that are compromised by replacement of oxygen with sulfur. The simplest interpretation of the substantial rescue by Cd(2+) is that these atoms interact with a common metal ion in the normal reaction. Furthermore, base deletions and functional group modifications have similar energetic effects on the transition state in the Cd(2+)-rescued phosphorothioate reaction and the wild-type reaction, further supporting the model that a metal ion bridges the P9/G10.1 and the cleavage site in the normal reaction (i.e., with phosphate linkages rather than phosphorothioate linkages). These results suggest that the hammerhead undergoes a substantial conformational rearrangement to attain its catalytic conformation. Such rearrangements appear to be general features of small functional RNAs, presumably reflecting their structural limitations.  相似文献   

6.
E L Angleton  H E Van Wart 《Biochemistry》1988,27(19):7413-7418
Active site metal substitutions for both gamma- and zeta-collagenases from Clostridium histolyticum have been made by direct metal exchange. The incubation of Co(II), Cu(II), Ni(II), Cd(II), and Hg(II) with these native collagenases results in changes in activity that parallel those observed for the reconstitution of the respective apoenzymes with these metal ions. For both collagenases, the exchange reactions with Co(II) and Cu(II) are complete within 1 min. However, the changes in activity observed on addition of Ni(II), Cd(II), and Hg(II) to gamma-collagenase and Cd(II) and Hg(II) to zeta-collagenase are time dependent. The kinetic parameters Kcat and KM have been determined for each of the active metallospecies. The substitution of the active-site metal ion in gamma-collagenase results in changes in both kcat and KM, while the effect observed in zeta-collagenase is primarily on KM. This suggests that there are differences in the mechanisms of these two collagenases, at least with respect to the role of the zinc ion in catalysis.  相似文献   

7.
Lentil lectin (LcH) and pea lectin (PSA) belong to the class of D-glucose/D-mannose binding lectins and resemble concanavalin A (Con A) closely in physicochemical, structural, and biological properties. LcH and PSA, like Con A, are Ca2+-Mn2+ metalloproteins that require the metal ions for their saccharide binding and biological activities. Studies of the relationship between the metal ions binding and saccharide binding activity in LcH and PSA have been difficult due to the problem of metal ion replacement in these proteins. We now report a method of metal ion replacement in both lectins that allows substitution of the Mn2+ in the native proteins with a variety of transition metal ions, as well as substitution of the Ca2+ with Cd2+ in a particular complex. The following metal ion derivatives of both LcH and PSA have been prepared: Ca2+-Zn2+, Ca2+-Co2+, Ca2+-Ni2+, and Cd2+-Cd2+. All of these derivatives are as active as the native lectins, as demonstrated by precipitation with specific polysaccharides, saccharide inhibition of precipitation, and hemagglutination assays. The yields of these derivatives are good (generally greater than 70%), and the degree of metal ion incorporation is high (generally greater than 90%). The method of preparation is quite different from that for metal ion substitution in Con A, which proceeds via the apoprotein. In contrast, the apoproteins of LcH and PSA are unstable, aggregate above pH 4.0, and cannot be remetallized once formed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
113Cd and 31P NMR have been used to investigate the interactions of inhibitors with the metal ion of bovine carboxypeptidase A, using 113Cd as a replacement for the native zinc atom. In the absence of inhibitor and over the pH range 6-9, no 113Cd resonance is visible at room temperature. Upon lowering the temperature to 270 K, however, a broad resonance can be seen at 120 ppm. These results are discussed in terms of possible sources for this resonance modulation. Binding of low molecular weight inhibitors containing potential metal-coordinating moieties results in the appearance of a sharp 113Cd resonance. These inhibitors all bind to the metal ion, a fact which is reflected in the chemical shift of the cadmium resonance and, for L-phenylalanine phosphoramidate phenyl ester, by two-bond 113Cd-31P spin-spin coupling of 30 Hz in the 31P resonance of the bound inhibitor. For inhibitors that coordinate to the metal ion via oxygen, the 113Cd chemical shift is in the range 127-137 ppm, whereas for sulfur coordination there is a downfield shift of approximately 210 ppm. The complexes of 113Cd-substituted carboxypeptidase A with the D and L isomers of thiolactic acid are distinguished by a difference of 11 ppm in the chemical shift of their cadmium resonances. The enzyme complex formed with the macromolecular inhibitor from potatoes, which fills the S1 and S2 subsites, shows one or possibly two closely spaced broad 113Cd resonances. Both the chemical shift and the line width of the 113Cd resonances of the [113Cd]carboxypeptidase-inhibitor complexes give valuable structural and dynamic information about the enzyme active site.  相似文献   

9.
The structure of Pyrococcus furiosus carboxypeptidase (PfuCP) has been determined to 2.2 A resolution using multiwavelength anomalous diffraction (MAD) methods. PfuCP represents the first structure of the new M32 family of carboxypeptidases. The overall structure is comprised of a homodimer. Each subunit is mostly helical with its most pronounced feature being a deep substrate binding groove. The active site lies at the bottom of this groove and contains an HEXXH motif that coordinates the metal ion required for catalysis. Surprisingly, the structure is similar to the recently reported rat neurolysin. Comparison of these structures as well as sequence analyses with other homologous proteins reveal several conserved residues. The roles for these conserved residues in the catalytic mechanism are inferred based on modeling and their location.  相似文献   

10.
Shim H  Raushel FM 《Biochemistry》2000,39(25):7357-7364
The active site of the bacterial phosphotriesterase (PTE) from Pseudomonas diminuta contains two divalent metal ions and a carboxylated lysine residue. The native enzyme contains two Zn(2+) ions, which can be replaced with Co(2+), Cd(2+), Ni(2+), or Mn(2+) without loss of catalytic activity. Carbon dioxide reacts with the side chain of lysine-169 to form a carbamate functional group within the active site, which then serves as a bridging ligand to the two metal ions. The activation of apo-PTE using variable concentrations of divalent metal ions and bicarbonate was measured in order to establish the mechanism by which the active site of PTE is self-assembled. The time courses for the activation of apo-PTE are pseudo-first-order, and the observed rate constants are directly proportional to the concentration of bicarbonate. In contrast, the apparent rate constants for the activation of apo-PTE decrease as the concentrations of the divalent cations are increased and then become constant at higher concentrations of the divalent metal ions. These results are consistent with a largely ordered kinetic mechanism for the assembly of the binuclear metal center where CO(2)/bicarbonate reacts with the apo-PTE prior to the binding of the two metal ions. When apo-PTE is titrated with 0-8 equiv of Co(2+), Cd(2+), or Zn(2+), the concentration of activated enzyme increases linearly until 2 equiv of metal ion is added and then remains constant at elevated levels of the divalent cations. These results are consistent with the synergistic binding of the two metal ions to the active site, and thus the second metal ion binds more tightly to the protein than does the first metal ion. Measurement of the mean dissociation constant indicates that metal binding to the binuclear metal center is strong [(K(alpha)K(beta))(1/2) = 6.0 x 10(-)(11) M and k(off) = 1.5 x 10(-)(3) min(-)(1) for Zn(2+)]. The removal of the carbamate bridge through the mutagenesis of Lys-169 demonstrates that the carbamate bridge is required for both efficient catalysis and overall stability of the metal center.  相似文献   

11.
The active site metal in horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase has been studied by metal-directed affinity labeling of the native zinc(II) enzyme and that substituted with cobalt(II) or cadmium(II). Reversible binding of bromoimidazolyl propionic acid to the cobalt enzyme blueshifts the visible absorption band originating from the catalytic cobalt atom at 655 to 630 nm. Binding of imidazole to the cobalt(II) enzyme redshifts the 655 nm band to 667 nm. Addition of bromoimidazolyl propionic acid blueshifts this 667 nm band back to 630 nm. This proves direct binding of the label to the active site metal in competition with imidazole. The affinity of the label for the reversible binding site in the three enzymes follows the order Zn ? Cd ? Co. After reversible complex formation, bromoimidazolyl propionic acid alkylates cysteine-46, one of the protein ligands to the active site metal. The nucleophilic reactivity of this metal-mercaptide bond in each reversible complex follows the order Co ? Zn ? Cd.  相似文献   

12.
Poly(A)-specific ribonuclease (PARN) is a highly poly(A)-specific 3'-exoribonuclease that efficiently degrades mRNA poly(A) tails. PARN belongs to the DEDD family of nucleases, and four conserved residues are essential for PARN activity, i.e. Asp-28, Glu-30, Asp-292, and Asp-382. Here we have investigated how catalytically important divalent metal ions are coordinated in the active site of PARN. Each of the conserved amino acid residues was substituted with cysteines, and it was found that all four mutants were inactive in the presence of Mg2+. However, in the presence of Mn2+, Zn2+, Co2+, or Cd2+, PARN activity was rescued from the PARN(D28C), PARN(D292C), and PARN(D382C) variants, suggesting that these three amino acids interact with catalytically essential metal ions. It was found that the shortest sufficient substrate for PARN activity was adenosine trinucleotide (A3) in the presence of Mg2+ or Cd2+. Interestingly, adenosine dinucleotide (A) was efficiently hydrolyzed in the presence of Mn2+, Zn2+, or Co2+, suggesting that the substrate length requirement for PARN can be modulated by the identity of the divalent metal ion. Finally, introduction of phosphorothioate modifications into the A substrate demonstrated that the scissile bond non-bridging phosphate oxygen in the pro-R position plays an important role during cleavage, most likely by coordinating a catalytically important divalent metal ion. Based on our data we discuss binding and coordination of divalent metal ions in the active site of PARN.  相似文献   

13.
Alkaline phosphatase from Escherichia coli contains three metal binding sites (A, B, and C) located at sites forming a triangle with sides of 4, 5, and 7 A (Wyckoff, H.W., Handschumacher, M., Murthy, K., and Sowadski, J.M. (1983) Adv. Enzymol. 55, 453). When all three sites are occupied by Cd(II) the enzyme has a very low turnover; at least 10(3) slower than the native Zn(II) enzyme. The slow turnover number has made the Cd(II) enzyme useful in NMR studies of the mechanism of alkaline phosphatase. The binding of arsenate to two forms of Cd(II) alkaline phosphatase (Cd(II)2alkaline phosphatase and Cd(II)6alkaline phosphatase) has been studied by 113Cd NMR. Cd(II)2alkaline phosphatase, pH 6.3, binds arsenate at only one monomer of the dimeric enzyme and causes migration of Cd(II) from the A site of one monomer to the B site of the arsenylated monomer. This same migration has previously been observed to accompany metal ion-dependent phosphate binding, but is much more rapid in the case of arsenate. The acceleration of migration induced by arsenate supports the conclusion based on the phosphate data that the substrate anion binds to the A site metal ion of one monomer prior to migration and that only the metal ion at A site is required for phosphorylation (arsenylation) of serine 102. The 113Cd chemical shifts of A and B site metal ions are very sensitive to the form of the bound arsenate, i.e. covalent (E-As) or noncovalent (E X As) complex. Like the analogous phosphate derivatives, the change of chemical shift of A site (to which phosphate is coordinated in the E X P complex) is much greater than that of the B site metal ion, when the arsenate shifts between the two intermediates, suggesting that arsenate is also coordinated to A site in the E X As intermediate. The chemical shifts of A and B site 113Cd(II) ions are considerably different in the arsenate and phosphate derivatives, while the C site 113Cd(II) ions have nearly identical chemical shifts. Thus the substrate appears to interact closely with both A and B sites, while C site appears relatively unimportant in phosphomonoester hydrolysis. The analogous behavior of arsenate and phosphate at the active center as evaluated by 113Cd NMR supports the validity of using the heavier arsenate derivative in x-ray diffraction studies.  相似文献   

14.
ZntA from Escherichia coli is a P-type ATPase that confers resistance to Pb(II), Zn(II), and Cd(II) in vivo. We had previously shown that purified ZntA shows ATP hydrolysis activity with the metal ions Pb(II), Zn(II), and Cd(II). In this study, we utilized the acylphosphate formation activity of ZntA to further investigate the substrate specificity of ZntA. The site of phosphorylation was Asp-436, as expected from sequence alignments. We show that in addition to Pb(II), Zn(II), and Cd(II), ZntA is active with Ni(II), Co(II), and Cu(II), but not with Cu(I) and Ag(I). Thus, ZntA is specific for a broad range of divalent soft metal ions. The activities with Ni(II), Co(II), and Cu(II) are extremely low; the activities with these non-physiological substrates are 10-20-fold lower compared with the values obtained with Pb(II), Zn(II), and Cd(II). Similar results were obtained with DeltaN-ZntA, a ZntA derivative lacking the amino-terminal metal binding domain. By characterizing the acylphosphate formation reaction in ZntA in detail, we show that a step prior to enzyme phosphorylation, most likely the metal ion binding step, is the slow step in the reaction mechanism in ZntA. The low activities with Ni(II), Co(II), and Cu(II) are because of a further decrease in the rate of binding of these metal ions. Thus, metal ion selectivity in ZntA and possibly other P1-type ATPases is based on the charge and the ligand preference of particular metal ions but not on their size.  相似文献   

15.
Bacterial insertion sequences (ISs) from the IS200/IS605 family encode the smallest known DNA transposases and mobilize through single-stranded DNA transposition. Transposition by one particular family member, ISDra2 from Deinococcus radiodurans, is dramatically stimulated upon massive γ irradiation. We have determined the crystal structures of four ISDra2 transposase/IS end complexes; combined with in vivo activity assays and fluorescence anisotropy binding measurements, these have revealed the molecular basis of strand discrimination and transposase action. The structures also show that previously established structural rules of target site recognition that allow different specific sequences to be targeted are only partially conserved among family members. Furthermore, we have captured a fully assembled active site including the scissile phosphate bound by a divalent metal ion cofactor (Cd2(+)) that supports DNA cleavage. Finally, the observed active site rearrangements when the transposase binds a metal ion in which it is inactive provide a clear rationale for metal ion specificity.  相似文献   

16.
PRPP (phosphoribosylpyrophosphate) is an important metabolite essential for nucleotide synthesis and PRS (PRPP synthetase) catalyses synthesis of PRPP from R5P (ribose 5-phosphate) and ATP. The enzymatic activity of PRS is regulated by phosphate ions, divalent metal cations and ADP. In the present study we report the crystal structures of recombinant human PRS1 in complexes with SO4(2-) ions alone and with ATP, Cd2+ and SO4(2-) ions respectively. The AMP moiety of ATP binds at the ATP-binding site, and a Cd2+ ion binds at the active site and in a position to interact with the beta- and gamma-phosphates of ATP. A SO4(2-) ion, an analogue of the activator phosphate, was found to bind at both the R5P-binding site and the allosteric site defined previously. In addi-tion, an extra SO4(2-) binds at a site at the dimer interface between the ATP-binding site and the allosteric site. Binding of this SO4(2-) stabilizes the conformation of the flexible loop at the active site, leading to the formation of the active, open conformation which is essential for binding of ATP and initiation of the catalytic reaction. This is the first time that structural stabilization at the active site caused by binding of an activator has been observed. Structural and biochemical data show that mutations of some residues at this site influence the binding of SO4(2-) and affect the enzymatic activity. The results in the present paper suggest that this new SO4(2-)-binding site is a second allosteric site to regulate the enzymatic activity which might also exist in other eukaryotic PRSs (except plant PRSs of class II), but not in bacterial PRSs.  相似文献   

17.
Momb J  Thomas PW  Breece RM  Tierney DL  Fast W 《Biochemistry》2006,45(44):13385-13393
Lactone-hydrolyzing enzymes derived from some Bacillus species are capable of disrupting quorum sensing in bacteria that use N-acyl-l-homoserine lactones (AHLs) as intercellular signaling molecules. Despite the promise of these quorum-quenching enzymes as therapeutic and anti-biofouling agents, the ring opening mechanism and the role of metal ions in catalysis have not been elucidated. Labeling studies using (18)O, (2)H, and the AHL lactonase from Bacillus thuringiensis implicate an addition-elimination pathway for ring opening in which a solvent-derived oxygen is incorporated into the product carboxylate, identifying the alcohol as the leaving group. (1)H NMR is used to show that metal binding is required to maintain proper folding. A thio effect is measured for hydrolysis of N-hexanoyl-l-homoserine lactone and the corresponding thiolactone by AHL lactonase disubstituted with alternative metal ions, including Mn(2+), Co(2+), Zn(2+), and Cd(2+). The magnitude of the thio effect on k(cat) values and the thiophilicity of the metal ion substitutions vary in parallel and are consistent with a kinetically significant interaction between the leaving group and the active site metal center during turnover. X-ray absorption spectroscopy confirms that dicobalt substitution does not result in large structural perturbations at the active site. Finally, substitution of the dinuclear metal site with Cd(2+) results in a greatly enhanced catalyst that can hydrolyze AHLs 1600-24000-fold faster than other reported quorum-quenching enzymes.  相似文献   

18.
The metallo-beta-lactamases require zinc or cadmium for hydrolyzing beta-lactam antibiotics and are inhibited by mercurial compounds. To data, there are no clinically useful inhibitors of this class of enzymes. The crystal structure of the Zn(2+)-bound enzyme from Bacteroides fragilis contains a binuclear zinc center in the active site. A hydroxide, coordinated to both zinc atoms, is proposed as the moiety that mounts the nucleophilic attack on the carbonyl carbon atom of the beta-lactam ring. To study the metal coordination further, the crystal structures of a Cd(2+)-bound enzyme and of an Hg(2+)-soaked zinc-containing enzyme have been determined at 2.1 A and 2.7 A, respectively. Given the diffraction resolution, the Cd(2+)-bound enzyme exhibits the same active-site architecture as that of the Zn(2+)-bound enzyme, consistent with the fact that both forms are enzymatically active. The 10-fold reduction in activity of the Cd(2+)-bound molecule compared with the Zn(2+)-bound enzyme is attributed to fine differences in the charge distribution due to the difference in the ionic radii of the two metals. In contrast, in the Hg(2+)-bound structure, one of the zinc ions, Zn2, was ejected, and the other zinc ion, Zn1, remained in the same site as in the 2-Zn(2+)-bound structure. Instead of the ejected zinc, a mercury ion binds between Cys 104 and Cys 181, 4.8 A away from Zn1 and 3.9 A away from the site where Zn2 is located in the 2-Zn(2+)-bound molecule. The perturbed binuclear metal cluster explains the inactivation of the enzyme by mercury compounds.  相似文献   

19.
Three high-resolution crystal structures of Cd(II)-substituted carboxypeptidase A (CPA) have been determined by X-ray diffraction from crystals prepared in three different buffer systems to assess the effect of pH and ionic strength on the Cd(II) coordination geometry. All crystallize in the space group P2(1) with identical cell dimensions. Cd-CPA(7.5): Cd(II)-substituted CPA prepared at pH 7.5 with [Cl(-)]=2 mM determined to 1.70 A resolution ( R=17.4% and R(free)=19.8%); Cd-CPA(5.5): Cd(II)-substituted CPA prepared at pH 5.5 with [Cl(-)]=2 mM to 2.00 A resolution ( R=16.1% and R(free)=18.6%); Cd-CPA(7.5)-Cl: Cd(II)-substituted CPA prepared at pH 7.5 with [Cl(-)]=250 mM to 1.76 A resolution ( R=16.7% and R(free)=17.8%). No noticeable structural changes were observed between the three structures. Two water molecules coordinate to Cd(II), in contrast to the single water molecule coordinating to Zn(II) in the Zn-CPA structure. No binding sites for anions could be identified, even in the structure with a high concentration of chloride ions. It is suggested that the anion inhibition is due to weak outer-sphere association of Cl(-) ions at several binding sites, shielding the strong positive charge distribution at the surface of the protein near the active site. Based on structural data and a sequence alignment of 18 non-redundant carboxypeptidases, a more elaborate version of the earlier reaction model is proposed that also addresses the transport of water to and from the active site. Conserved residues whose function was not addressed previously delineate the proposed pathways used in the transport of water during catalysis.  相似文献   

20.
Maderia M  Hunsicker LM  DeRose VJ 《Biochemistry》2000,39(40):12113-12120
The hammerhead ribozyme is a catalytic RNA that requires divalent metal cations for activity under moderate ionic strength. Two important sites that are proposed to bind metal ions in the hammerhead ribozyme are the A9/G10.1 site, located at the junction between stem II and the conserved core, and the scissile phosphate (P1.1). (31)P NMR spectroscopy in conjunction with phosphorothioate substitutions is used in this study to investigate these putative metal sites. The (31)P NMR feature of a phosphorothioate appears in a unique spectral window and can be monitored for changes upon addition of metals. Addition of 1-2 equiv of Cd(2+) to the hammerhead with an A9-S(Rp) or A9-S(S)(Rp) substitution results in a 2-3 ppm upfield shift of the (31)P NMR resonance. In contrast, the P1.1-S(Rp) and P1.1-S(Sp) (31)P NMR features shift slightly and in opposite directions, with a total change in delta of 相似文献   

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