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1.
The oxidation of choline catalyzed by choline oxidase includes two reductive half-reactions where FAD is reduced by the alcohol substrate and by an aldehyde intermediate transiently formed in the reaction. Each reductive half-reaction is followed by an oxidative half-reaction where the reduced flavin is oxidized by oxygen. Here, we have used mutagenesis to prepare the Ser101Ala mutant of choline oxidase and have investigated the impact of this mutation on the structural and kinetic properties of the enzyme. The crystallographic structure of the Ser101Ala enzyme indicates that the only differences between the mutant and wild-type enzymes are the lack of a hydroxyl group on residue 101 and a more planar configuration of the flavin in the mutant enzyme. Kinetics established that replacement of Ser101 with alanine yields a mutant enzyme with increased efficiencies in the oxidative half-reactions and decreased efficiencies in the reductive half-reactions. This is accompanied by a significant decrease in the overall rate of turnover with choline. Thus, this mutation has revealed the importance of a specific residue for the optimization of the overall turnover of choline oxidase, which requires fine-tuning of four consecutive half-reactions for the conversion of an alcohol to a carboxylic acid.  相似文献   

2.
The reactions of several active site mutant forms of bacterial morphinone reductase (MR) with NADH and 2-cyclohexen-1-one as substrates have been studied by stopped-flow and steady-state kinetic methods and redox potentiometry. The enzymes were designed to (i) probe a role for potential proton donors (Tyr-72 and Tyr-356) in the oxidative half-reaction of MR; (ii) assess the function of a highly conserved tryptophan residue (Trp-106) in catalysis; (iii) investigate the role of Thr-32 in modulating the FMN reduction potential and catalysis. The Y72F and Y356F enzymes retained activity in both steady-state and stopped-flow kinetic studies, indicating they do not serve as key proton donors in the oxidative reaction of MR. Taken together with our recently published data (Messiha, H. L., Munro, A. W., Bruce, N. C., Barsukov, I., and Scrutton, N. S. (2005) J. Biol. Chem. 280, 4627-4631) that rule out roles for Cys-191 (corresponding with the proton donor, Tyr-196, in the structurally related OYE1 enzyme) and His-186 as proton donors, we infer solvent is the source of the proton in the oxidative half-reaction of MR. We demonstrate a key role for Thr-32 in modulating the reduction potential of the FMN, which is decreased approximately 50 mV in the T32A mutant MR. This effects a change in rate-limiting step in the catalytic cycle of the T32A enzyme with the oxidizing substrate 2-cyclohexenone. Despite the conservation of Trp-106 throughout the OYE family, we show this residue does not play a major role in catalysis, although affects on substrate and coenzyme binding are observed in a W106F enzyme. Our studies show some similarities, but also major differences, in the catalytic mechanism of MR and OYE1, and emphasize the need for caution in inferring mechanism by structural comparison of highly related enzymes in the absence of solution studies.  相似文献   

3.
Dewanti AR  Xu Y  Mitra B 《Biochemistry》2004,43(33):10692-10700
(S)-Mandelate dehydrogenase from Pseudomonas putida belongs to a FMN-dependent enzyme family that oxidizes (S)-alpha-hydroxyacids. Despite a high degree of sequence and structural similarity, this family can be divided into three subgroups based on the different oxidants utilized in the second oxidative half-reaction. Only the oxidases show high reactivity with molecular oxygen. Structural data indicate that the relative position of a peptide loop and the isoalloxazine ring of the FMN is slightly different in the oxidases compared to the dehydrogenases; the last residue on this loop is either an alanine or glycine. We examined the effect of the G81A, G81S, G81V, and G81D mutations in MDH on the overall reaction and especially on the suppression of activity with oxygen. G81A had a higher specificity for small substrates compared to that of wtMDH, though the affinity for (S)-mandelate was relatively unchanged. The rate of the first half-reaction was 20-130-fold slower for G81A and G81S; G81D and G81V had extremely low activity. Redox-potential measurements indicate that the reduction in activity is due to the decrease in electrophilicity of the FMN. The affinity for oxygen increased 10-15-fold for G81A and G81S relative to wtMDH; the rate of oxidation increased 2-fold for G81A. The increased reactivity with molecular oxygen did not correlate with the redox potentials and appears to primarily result from a higher affinity for oxygen. These results suggest that one of the ways the oxidase activity of MDH is controlled is through steric effects because of the relative positions of the FMN and the Gly81 loop.  相似文献   

4.
Buckman J  Miller SM 《Biochemistry》2000,39(34):10532-10541
EBP1-catalyzed reduction of alpha,beta-unsaturated ketones and aldehydes is proposed to proceed via transfer of hydride from the flavin to the beta-position of the olefinic bond, concomitant with or followed by uptake of a proton at the alpha-position. Structural analysis suggests that this proton is donated from Tyr206, and, hence, a protein was constructed in which it was replaced by phenylalanine. The mutation results in a slightly less stable protein than the wild type that nevertheless retains the fundamental flavin and phenol binding properties of EBP1 characterized previously. The pH profile for binding of phenol was characterized over the pH range 6.5-9.5 and was found to be simpler than that for the wild-type enzyme. Most importantly, a pK(a) of 8.7 that is perturbed to 9.4 upon binding of phenol to the wild-type enzyme is missing in the mutant, allowing assignment of this pK(a) to the Y206 hydroxyl group. Additionally, the pK(a) of phenol is further lowered from its value of 10.0 in solution to approximately 6.4 in the active site of the mutant, as compared to 7.1 in the wild type. Together, these perturbations lead to an increase of approximately 35-fold in the binding affinity of the mutant for phenol at high pH relative to the affinity of the wild-type enzyme. As expected, the mutation has little effect on the reductive half-reaction, in which a hydride equivalent is transferred from NADPH to the flavin. In contrast, the reduction of trans-2-hexenal by the reduced enzyme is significantly affected. The results indicate formation of a previously unobserved charge-transfer (CT) complex following formation of the Michaelis complex between substrate and reduced enzyme and preceding reduction of the substrate, which occurs at a greatly reduced rate (>/=440-fold) relative to wild type. Thus, while the oxidative half-reaction with wild-type enzyme is limited by the rate of formation of the CT complex, it is the chemical step that is rate-limiting in the reaction with EBP1:Y206F, consistent with the role of this residue as a general acid.  相似文献   

5.
Xenobiotic reductase A (XenA) from Pseudomonas putida 86 catalyzes the NADH/NADPH-dependent reduction of various substrates, including 2-cyclohexenone and 8-hydroxycoumarin. XenA is a member of the old yellow enzyme (OYE) family of flavoproteins and is structurally and functionally similar to other bacterial members of this enzyme class. A characteristic feature of XenA is the presence of a cysteine residue (Cys25) in the active site, where in most members of the OYE family a threonine residue is found that modulates the reduction potential of the FMN/FMNH- couple. We investigated the role of Cys25 by studying two variants in which the residue has been exchanged for a serine and an alanine residue. While the exchange against alanine has a remarkably small effect on the reduction potential, the reactivity and the structure of XenA, the exchange against serine increases the reduction potential by +82 mV, increases the rate constant of the reductive half-reaction and decreases the rate constant in the oxidative half-reaction. We determined six crystal structures at high to true atomic resolution (dmin 1.03-1.80 Å) of the three XenA variants with and without the substrate coumarin bound in the active site. The atomic resolution structure of XenA in complex with coumarin reveals a compressed active site geometry in which the isoalloxazine ring is sandwiched between coumarin and the protein backbone. The structures further reveal that the conformation of the active site and substrate interactions are preserved in the two variants, indicating that the observed changes are due to local effects only. We propose that Cys25 and the residues in its place determine which of the two half-reactions is rate limiting, depending on the substrate couple. This might help to explain why the genome of Pseudomonas putida encodes multiple xenobiotic reductases containing either cysteine, threonine or alanine in the active site.  相似文献   

6.
A soluble cyclohexanone monooxygenase was purified 16.1-fold to homogeneity from a Xanthobacter sp. grown upon cyclohexane as sole source of carbon and energy. The native enzyme is a 50-kDa single polypeptide chain associated with FMN rather than FAD as flavin prosthetic group in a 1:1 stoichiometric relationship. The monooxygenase catalyses the transformation of cyclohexanone to the lactone 1-oxa-2-oxocycloheptane in an oxygen ring insertion reaction. Only related cycloalkanone substrates are accepted for oxygenation, no activity is shown towards straight-chain alkanones. Enzyme activity is strongly inhibited by sulphydryl-reactive agents, but is relatively insensitive to metal chelators, electron transport inhibitors and the metal ions Fe3+ and Cu2+. Cyclohexanone monooxygenase has Km values for cyclohexanone and NADPH of less than 0.5 microM and 12.5 microM respectively. Kinetic investigations under steady-state conditions demonstrate that the flavoprotein prosthetic group, FMN, is involved in the monooxygenase catalytic mechanism. The systematic name for the enzyme is cyclohexanone, NADPH:oxygen oxidoreductase (6-hydroxylating, 1,2-lactonizing) (EC 1.14.13.22).  相似文献   

7.
Mutants of flavin mononucleotide-binding protein (FMN-bp) were made by site-directed mutagenesis to investigate the role of carboxyl-terminal Leu122 of the pairing subunit in controlling redox potentials, binding the prosthetic group, and forming the tertiary and quaternary structure. We compared the oxidation-reduction potentials, FMN-binding properties, and higher structures of wild-type FMN-bp and four mutant proteins (L122Y, L122E, L122K and L122-deleted). We found that the redox potentials were affected by mutations. Also, the affinities of L122E, L122K and L122 deletion mutant apoproteins for FMN were lower than for the wild-type apoprotein, whereas the affinity of L122Y for FMN was increased. Analytical ultracentrifugation showed that the dissociation constants for dimerization of L122E and L122K were larger than for wild-type FMN-bp, whereas the dissociation constants for L122Y and the deletion mutant were lower than for the wild type. Finally, we determined the higher structures of L122Y, L122E and L122K mutants by X-ray crystallography. Our results show that the mutation of Leu122 in FMN-bp changes midpoint potentials, dissociation constants for FMN, and dimer formation, indicating that this residue is important in the pairing subunit.  相似文献   

8.
Na+-translocating NADH:quinone oxidoreductase (NQR) is a redox-driven sodium pump operating in the respiratory chain of various bacteria, including pathogenic species. The enzyme has a unique set of redox active prosthetic groups, which includes two covalently bound flavin mononucleotide (FMN) residues attached to threonine residues in subunits NqrB and NqrC. The reason of FMN covalent bonding in the subunits has not been established yet. In the current work, binding of free FMN to the apo-form of NqrC from Vibrio harveyi was studied showing very low affinity of NqrC to FMN in the absence of its covalent bonding. To study structural aspects of flavin binding in NqrC, its holo-form was crystallized and its 3D structure was solved at 1.56 Å resolution. It was found that the isoalloxazine moiety of the FMN residue is buried in a hydrophobic cavity and that its pyrimidine ring is squeezed between hydrophobic amino acid residues while its benzene ring is extended from the protein surroundings. This structure of the flavin-binding pocket appears to provide flexibility of the benzene ring, which can help the FMN residue to take the bended conformation and thus to stabilize the one-electron reduced form of the prosthetic group. These properties may also lead to relatively weak noncovalent binding of the flavin. This fact along with periplasmic location of the FMN-binding domains in the vast majority of NqrC-like proteins may explain the necessity of the covalent bonding of this prosthetic group to prevent its loss to the external medium.  相似文献   

9.
The reaction of pentaerythritol tetranitrate reductase with reducing and oxidizing substrates has been studied by stopped-flow spectrophotometry, redox potentiometry, and X-ray crystallography. We show in the reductive half-reaction of pentaerythritol tetranitrate (PETN) reductase that NADPH binds to form an enzyme-NADPH charge transfer intermediate prior to hydride transfer from the nicotinamide coenzyme to FMN. In the oxidative half-reaction, the two-electron-reduced enzyme reacts with several substrates including nitroester explosives (glycerol trinitrate and PETN), nitroaromatic explosives (trinitrotoluene (TNT) and picric acid), and alpha,beta-unsaturated carbonyl compounds (2-cyclohexenone). Oxidation of the flavin by the nitroaromatic substrate TNT is kinetically indistinguishable from formation of its hydride-Meisenheimer complex, consistent with a mechanism involving direct nucleophilic attack by hydride from the flavin N5 atom at the electron-deficient aromatic nucleus of the substrate. The crystal structures of complexes of the oxidized enzyme bound to picric acid and TNT are consistent with direct hydride transfer from the reduced flavin to nitroaromatic substrates. The mode of binding the inhibitor 2,4-dinitrophenol (2,4-DNP) is similar to that observed with picric acid and TNT. In this position, however, the aromatic nucleus is not activated for hydride transfer from the flavin N5 atom, thus accounting for the lack of reactivity with 2,4-DNP. Our work with PETN reductase establishes further a close relationship to the Old Yellow Enzyme family of proteins but at the same time highlights important differences compared with the reactivity of Old Yellow Enzyme. Our studies provide a structural and mechanistic rationale for the ability of PETN reductase to react with the nitroaromatic explosive compounds TNT and picric acid and for the inhibition of enzyme activity with 2,4-DNP.  相似文献   

10.
l-Lactate oxidase (LOX) belongs to a family of flavin mononucleotide (FMN)-dependent α-hydroxy acid-oxidizing enzymes. Previously, the crystal structure of LOX (pH 8.0) from Aerococcus viridans was solved, revealing that the active site residues are located around the FMN. Here, we solved the crystal structures of the same enzyme at pH 4.5 and its complex with d-lactate at pH 4.5, in an attempt to analyze the intermediate steps. In the complex structure, the d-lactate resides in the substrate-binding site, but interestingly, an active site base, His265, flips far away from the d-lactate, as compared with its conformation in the unbound state at pH 8.0. This movement probably results from the protonation of His265 during the crystallization at pH 4.5, because the same flip is observed in the structure of the unbound state at pH 4.5. Thus, the present structure appears to mimic an intermediate after His265 abstracts a proton from the substrate. The flip of His265 triggers a large structural rearrangement, creating a new hydrogen bonding network between His265-Asp174-Lys221 and, furthermore, brings molecular oxygen in between d-lactate and His265. This mimic of the ternary complex intermediate enzyme-substrate-O2 could explain the reductive half-reaction mechanism to release pyruvate through hydride transfer. In the mechanism of the subsequent oxidative half-reaction, His265 flips back, pushing molecular oxygen into the substrate-binding site as the second substrate, and the reverse reaction takes place to produce hydrogen peroxide. During the reaction, the flip-flop action of His265 has a dual role as an active base/acid to define the major chemical steps. Our proposed reaction mechanism appears to be a common mechanistic strategy for this family of enzymes.  相似文献   

11.
Old yellow enzyme (OYE) is an NADPH oxidoreductase capable of reducing a variety of compounds. It contains flavin mononucleotide (FMN) as a prosthetic group. A ternary complex structure of OYE from Trypanosoma cruzi (TcOYE) with FMN and one of the substrates, p-hydroxybenzaldehyde, shows a striking movement around the active site upon binding of the substrate. From a structural comparison of other OYE complexed with 12-oxophytodienoate, we have constructed a complex structure with another substrate, prostaglandin H(2) (PGH(2)), to provide a proposed stereoselective reaction mechanism for the reduction of PGH(2) to prostaglandin F(2α) by TcOYE.  相似文献   

12.
The mechanism of flavin reduction in morphinone reductase (MR) and pentaerythritol tetranitrate (PETN) reductase, and flavin oxidation in MR, has been studied by stopped-flow and steady-state kinetic methods. The temperature dependence of the primary kinetic isotope effect for flavin reduction in MR and PETN reductase by nicotinamide coenzyme indicates that quantum mechanical tunneling plays a major role in hydride transfer. In PETN reductase, the kinetic isotope effect (KIE) is essentially independent of temperature in the experimentally accessible range, contrasting with strongly temperature-dependent reaction rates, consistent with a tunneling mechanism from the vibrational ground state of the reactive C-H/D bond. In MR, both the reaction rates and the KIE are dependent on temperature, and analysis using the Eyring equation suggests that hydride transfer has a major tunneling component, which, unlike PETN reductase, is gated by thermally induced vibrations in the protein. The oxidative half-reaction of MR is fully rate-limiting in steady-state turnover with the substrate 2-cyclohexenone and NADH at saturating concentrations. The KIE for hydride transfer from reduced flavin to the alpha/beta unsaturated bond of 2-cyclohexenone is independent of temperature, contrasting with strongly temperature-dependent reaction rates, again consistent with ground-state tunneling. A large solvent isotope effect (SIE) accompanies the oxidative half-reaction, which is also independent of temperature in the experimentally accessible range. Double isotope effects indicate that hydride transfer from the flavin N5 atom to 2-cyclohexenone, and the protonation of 2-cyclohexenone, are concerted and both the temperature-independent KIE and SIE suggest that this reaction also proceeds by ground-state quantum tunneling. Our results demonstrate the importance of quantum tunneling in the reduction of flavins by nicotinamide coenzymes. This is the first observation of (i) three H-nuclei in an enzymic reaction being transferred by tunneling and (ii) the utilization of both passive and active dynamics within the same native enzyme.  相似文献   

13.
Xu D  Enroth C  Lindqvist Y  Ballou DP  Massey V 《Biochemistry》2002,41(46):13627-13636
An active site residue in phenol hydroxylase (PHHY), Pro364, was mutated to serine to investigate its role in enzymatic catalysis. In the presence of phenol, the reaction between the reduced flavin of P364S and oxygen is very fast, but only 13% of the flavin is utilized to hydroxylate the substrate, compared to nearly 100% for the wild-type enzyme. The oxidative half-reaction of PHHY using m-cresol as a substrate is similarly affected by the mutation. Pro364 was suggested to be important in stabilizing the transition state of the oxygen transfer step by forming a hydrogen bond between its carbonyl oxygen and the C4a-hydroperoxyflavin [Ridder, L., Mullholland, A. J., Rietjens, I. M. C. M., and Vervoort, J. (2000) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 122, 8728-8738]. The P364S mutation may weaken this interaction by increasing the flexibility of the peptide chain; hence, the transition state would be destabilized to result in a decreased level of hydroxylation of phenol. However, when the oxidative half-reaction was studied using resorcinol as a substrate, the P364S mutant form was not significantly different from the wild-type enzyme. The rate constants for all the reaction steps as well as the hydroxylation efficiency (coupling between NADPH oxidation and resorcinol consumption) are comparable to those of the wild-type enzyme. It is suggested that the function of Pro364 in catalysis, stabilization of the transition state, is not as important in the reaction with resorcinol, possibly because the position of hydroxylation is different with resorcinol than with phenol and m-cresol.  相似文献   

14.
Boubacar AK  Pethe S  Mahy JP  Lederer F 《Biochemistry》2007,46(45):13080-13088
Flavocytochrome b2, a flavohemoprotein, catalyzes the oxidation of lactate at the expense of the physiological acceptor cytochrome c in the yeast mitochondrial intermembrane space. The mechanism of electron transfer from the substrate to monoelectronic acceptors via FMN and heme b2 has been intensively studied over the years. Each prosthetic group is bound to a separate domain, N-terminal for the heme, C-terminal for the flavin. Each domain belongs to a distinct evolutionary family. In particular, the flavodehydrogenase domain is homologous to a number of well-characterized l-2-hydroxy acid-oxidizing enzymes. Among these, some are oxidases for which the oxidative half-reaction produces hydrogen peroxide at the expense of oxygen. For bacterial mandelate dehydrogenase and flavocytochrome b2, in contrast, the oxidative half-reaction requires monoelectronic acceptors. Several crystal structures indicate an identical fold and a highly conserved active site among family members. All these enzymes form anionic semiquinones and bind sulfite, properties generally associated with oxidases, whereas electron transferases are expected to form neutral semiquinones and to yield superoxide anion. Thus, flavocytochrome b2 is a highly unusual dehydrogenase-electron transferase, and one may wonder how its flavin reacts with oxygen. In this work, we show that the separately engineered flavodehydrogenase domain produces superoxide anion in its slow reaction with oxygen. This reaction apparently also takes place in the holoenzyme when oxygen is the sole electron acceptor, because the heme domain autoxidation is also slow; this is not unexpected, in view of the heme domain mobility relative to the tetrameric flavodehydrogenase core (Xia, Z. X., and Mathews, F. S. (1990) J. Mol. Biol. 212, 837-863). Nevertheless, this reaction is so slow that it cannot compete with the normal electron flow in the presence of monoelectronic acceptors, such as ferricyanide and cytochrome c. An inspection of the available structures of family members does not provide a rationale for the difference between the oxidases and the electron transferases.  相似文献   

15.
Buckman J  Miller SM 《Biochemistry》2000,39(34):10521-10531
The transient kinetics of the reaction of the estrogen binding protein (EBP1) from Candida albicans in which hydride is transferred from NADPH to trans-2-hexenal (HXL) in two half-reactions were analyzed using UV-visible spectrophotometric and fluorometric stopped-flow techniques. The simplest model of the first half-reaction involves four steps including very rapid, tight binding (K(d) 相似文献   

16.
Eliot AC  Sandmark J  Schneider G  Kirsch JF 《Biochemistry》2002,41(42):12582-12589
7,8-diaminopelargonic acid (DAPA) synthase (EC 2.6.1.62) is a pyridoxal phosphate (PLP)-dependent transaminase that catalyzes the transfer of the alpha-amino group from S-adenosyl-L-methionine (SAM) to 7-keto-8-aminopelargonic acid (KAPA) to form DAPA in the antepenultimate step in the biosynthesis of biotin. The wild-type enzyme has a steady-state kcat value of 0.013 s(-1), and the K(m) values for SAM and KAPA are 150 and <2 microM, respectively. The k(max) and apparent K(m) values for the half-reaction of the PLP form of the enzyme with SAM are 0.016 s(-1) and 300 microM, respectively, while those for the reaction with DAPA are 0.79 s(-1) and 1 microM. The R391A mutant enzyme exhibits near wild-type kinetic parameters in the reaction with SAM, while the apparent K(m) for DAPA is increased 180-fold. The 2.1 A crystal structure of the R391A mutant enzyme shows that the mutation does not significantly alter the structure. These results indicate that the conserved arginine residue is not required for binding the alpha-amino acid SAM, but it is important for recognition of DAPA.  相似文献   

17.
Xu D  Ballou DP  Massey V 《Biochemistry》2001,40(41):12369-12378
Three residues in the active site of the flavoprotein phenol hydroxylase (PHHY) were independently changed by site-directed mutagenesis. One of the mutant forms of PHHY, Tyr289Phe, is reduced by NADPH much slower than is the wild-type enzyme, although it has a slightly higher redox potential than the wild-type enzyme. In the structure of the wild-type enzyme, residue Tyr289 is hydrogen-bonded with the FAD when the latter is at the "out" position but has no direct contact with the flavin when it is "in". The oxidative half-reaction of PHHY is not significantly affected by this mutation, contrary to the concept that Tyr289 is a critical residue in the hydroxylation reaction [Enroth, C., Neujahr, H., Schneider, G., and Lindqvist, Y. (1998) Structure 6, 605-617; Ridder, L., Mullholland, A. J., Rietjens, I. M. C. M., and Vervoort, J. (2000) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 122, 8728-8738]. Tyr289 may help stabilize the FAD in the out conformation where it can be reduced by NADPH. For the Asp54Asn mutant form of PHHY, the initial step of the oxidative half-reaction is significantly slower than for the wild-type enzyme. Asp54Asn utilizes less than 20% of the reduced flavin for hydroxylating the substrate with the remainder forming H(2)O(2). Similar changes are observed when Arg281, a residue between Asp54 and the solvent, is mutated to Met. These two residues are suggested to be part of the active site environment the enzyme provides for the flavin cofactor to function optimally in the oxidative half-reaction. In the construction of the mutant forms of PHHY, it was determined that 11 of the previously reported amino acid residues in the sequence of PHHY were incorrect.  相似文献   

18.
We report the identification, expression, and characterization of a second Dihydroorotate dehydrogenase (DHODase A) from the human pathogen Enterococcus faecalis. The enzyme consists of a polypeptide chain of 322 amino acids that shares 68% identity with the cognate type A enzyme from the bacterium Lactococcus lactis. E. faecalis DHODase A catalyzed the oxidation of l-dihydroorotate while reducing a number of substrates, including fumarate, coenzyme Q(0), and menadione. The steady-state kinetic mechanism has been determined with menadione as an oxidizing substrate at pH 7.5. Initial velocity and product inhibition data suggest that the enzyme follows a two-site nonclassical ping-pong kinetic mechanism. The absorbance of the active site FMN cofactor is quenched in a concentration-dependent manner by titration with orotate and barbituric acid, two competitive inhibitors with respect to dihydroorotate. In contrast, titration of the enzyme with menadione had no effect on FMN absorbance, consistent with nonoverlapping binding sites for dihyroorotate and menadione, as suggested from the kinetic mechanism. The reductive half-reaction has been shown to be only partially rate limiting, and an attempt to evaluate the slow step in the overall reaction has been made by simulating orotate production under steady-state conditions. Our data indicate that the oxidative half-reaction is a rate-limiting segment, while orotate, most likely, retains significant affinity for the reduced enzyme, as suggested by the product inhibition pattern.  相似文献   

19.
L-Methionine gamma-lyase from Pseudomonas putida has a conserved tyrosine residue (Tyr114) in the active site as in all known sequences of y-family pyridoxal 5'-phosphate dependent enzymes. A mutant form of L-methionine y-lyase in which Tyr114 was replaced by phenylalanine (Y114F) resulted in 910-fold decrease in kcat for alpha,gamma-elimination of L-methionine, while the Km remained the same as the wild type enzyme. The Y114F mutant had the reduced kcat by only 28- and 16-fold for substrates with an electron-withdrawing group at the gamma-position, namely O-acetyl-L-homoserine and L-methionine sulfone, respectively, and also the similar reduction of kcat for alpha,beta-elimination and deamination substrates. The hydrogen exchange reactions of substrate and the spectral changes of the substrate-enzyme complex catalyzed by the mutant enzyme suggested that gamma-elimination process for L-methionine is the rate-limiting determination step in alpha,gamma-elimination overall reaction of the Y114F mutant. These results indicate that Tyr114 of L-methionine gamma-lyase is important in y-elimination of the substrate.  相似文献   

20.
Cholesterol oxidase is a monomeric flavoenzyme that catalyzes the oxidation and isomerization of cholesterol to cholest-4-en-3-one. Two forms of the enzyme are known, one containing the cofactor non-covalently bound to the protein and one in which the cofactor is covalently linked to a histidine residue. The x-ray structure of the enzyme from Brevibacterium sterolicum containing covalently bound FAD has been determined and refined to 1.7-A resolution. The active site consists of a cavity sealed off from the exterior of the protein. A model for the steroid substrate, cholesterol, can be positioned in the pocket revealing the structural factors that result in different substrate binding affinities between the two known forms of the enzyme. The structure suggests that Glu(475), located at the active site cavity, may act as the base for both the oxidation and the isomerization steps of the catalytic reaction. A water-filled channel extending toward the flavin moiety, inside the substrate-binding cavity, may act as the entry point for molecular oxygen for the oxidative half-reaction. An arginine and a glutamate residue at the active site, found in two conformations are proposed to control oxygen access to the cavity from the channel. These concerted side chain movements provide an explanation for the biphasic mode of reaction with dioxygen and the ping-pong kinetic mechanism exhibited by the enzyme.  相似文献   

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