首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.

Background

Targeting the biosynthetic pathway of Coenzyme A (CoA) for drug development will compromise multiple cellular functions of the tubercular pathogen simultaneously. Structural divergence in the organization of the penultimate and final enzymes of CoA biosynthesis in the host and pathogen and the differences in their regulation mark out the final enzyme, dephosphocoenzyme A kinase (CoaE) as a potential drug target.

Methodology/Principal Findings

We report here a complete biochemical and biophysical characterization of the M. tuberculosis CoaE, an enzyme essential for the pathogen''s survival, elucidating for the first time the interactions of a dephosphocoenzyme A kinase with its substrates, dephosphocoenzyme A and ATP; its product, CoA and an intrinsic yet novel inhibitor, CTP, which helps modulate the enzyme''s kinetic capabilities providing interesting insights into the regulation of CoaE activity. We show that the mycobacterial enzyme is almost 21 times more catalytically proficient than its counterparts in other prokaryotes. ITC measurements illustrate that the enzyme follows an ordered mechanism of substrate addition with DCoA as the leading substrate and ATP following in tow. Kinetic and ITC experiments demonstrate that though CTP binds strongly to the enzyme, it is unable to participate in DCoA phosphorylation. We report that CTP actually inhibits the enzyme by decreasing its Vmax. Not surprisingly, a structural homology search for the modeled mycobacterial CoaE picks up cytidylmonophosphate kinases, deoxycytidine kinases, and cytidylate kinases as close homologs. Docking of DCoA and CTP to CoaE shows that both ligands bind at the same site, their interactions being stabilized by 26 and 28 hydrogen bonds respectively. We have also assigned a role for the universal Unknown Protein Family 0157 (UPF0157) domain in the mycobacterial CoaE in the proper folding of the full length enzyme.

Conclusions/Significance

In view of the evidence presented, it is imperative to assign a greater role to the last enzyme of Coenzyme A biosynthesis in metabolite flow regulation through this critical biosynthetic pathway.  相似文献   

2.
Walia G  Gajendar K  Surolia A 《PloS one》2011,6(1):e15228
Dephosphocoenzyme A kinase performs the transfer of the γ-phosphate of ATP to dephosphocoenzyme A, catalyzing the last step of coenzyme A biosynthesis. This enzyme belongs to the P-loop-containing NTP hydrolase superfamily, all members of which posses a three domain topology consisting of a CoA domain that binds the acceptor substrate, the nucleotide binding domain and the lid domain. Differences in the enzymatic organization and regulation between the human and mycobacterial counterparts, have pointed out the tubercular CoaE as a high confidence drug target (HAMAP database). Unfortunately the absence of a three-dimensional crystal structure of the enzyme, either alone or complexed with either of its substrates/regulators, leaves both the reaction mechanism unidentified and the chief players involved in substrate binding, stabilization and catalysis unknown. Based on homology modeling and sequence analysis, we chose residues in the three functional domains of the enzyme to assess their contributions to ligand binding and catalysis using site-directed mutagenesis. Systematically mutating the residues from the P-loop and the nucleotide-binding site identified Lys14 and Arg140 in ATP binding and the stabilization of the phosphoryl intermediate during the phosphotransfer reaction. Mutagenesis of Asp32 and Arg140 showed catalytic efficiencies less than 5-10% of the wild type, indicating the pivotal roles played by these residues in catalysis. Non-conservative substitution of the Leu114 residue identifies this leucine as the critical residue from the hydrophobic cleft involved in leading substrate, DCoA binding. We show that the mycobacterial enzyme requires the Mg(2+) for its catalytic activity. The binding energetics of the interactions of the mutant enzymes with the substrates were characterized in terms of their enthalpic and entropic contributions by ITC, providing a complete picture of the effects of the mutations on activity. The properties of mutants defective in substrate recognition were consistent with the ordered sequential mechanism of substrate addition for CoaE.  相似文献   

3.
The native Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamoylase (ATCase, E.C. 2.1.3.2) provides a classic allosteric model for the feedback inhibition of a biosynthetic pathway by its end products. Both E. coli and Erwinia herbicola possess ATCase holoenzymes which are dodecameric (2(c3):3(r2)) with 311 amino acid residues per catalytic monomer and 153 and 154 amino acid residues per regulatory (r) monomer, respectively. While the quaternary structures of the two enzymes are identical, the primary amino acid sequences have diverged by 14 % in the catalytic polypeptide and 20 % in the regulatory polypeptide. The amino acids proposed to be directly involved in the active site and nucleotide binding site are strictly conserved between the two enzymes; nonetheless, the two enzymes differ in their catalytic and regulatory characteristics. The E. coli enzyme has sigmoidal substrate binding with activation by ATP, and inhibition by CTP, while the E. herbicola enzyme has apparent first order kinetics at low substrate concentrations in the absence of allosteric ligands, no ATP activation and only slight CTP inhibition. In an apparently important and highly conserved characteristic, CTP and UTP impose strong synergistic inhibition on both enzymes. The co-operative binding of aspartate in the E. coli enzyme is correlated with a T-to-R conformational transition which appears to be greatly reduced in the E. herbicola enzyme, although the addition of inhibitory heterotropic ligands (CTP or CTP+UTP) re-establishes co-operative saturation kinetics. Hybrid holoenzymes assembled in vivo with catalytic subunits from E. herbicola and regulatory subunits from E. coli mimick the allosteric response of the native E. coli holoenzyme and exhibit ATP activation. The reverse hybrid, regulatory subunits from E. herbicola and catalytic subunits from E. coli, exhibited no response to ATP. The conserved structure and diverged functional characteristics of the E. herbicola enzyme provides an opportunity for a new evaluation of the common paradigm involving allosteric control of ATCase.  相似文献   

4.
Y Zhang  E R Kantrowitz 《Biochemistry》1989,28(18):7313-7318
Lysine-60 in the regulatory chain of aspartate transcarbamoylase has been changed to an alanine by site-specific mutagenesis. The resulting enzyme exhibits activity and homotropic cooperativity identical with those of the wild-type enzyme. The substrate concentration at half the maximal observed specific activity decreases from 13.3 mM for the wild-type enzyme to 9.6 mM for the mutant enzyme. ATP activates the mutant enzyme to the same extent that it does the wild-type enzyme, but the concentration of ATP required to reach half of the maximal activation is reduced approximately 5-fold for the mutant enzyme. CTP at a concentration of 10 mM does not inhibit the mutant enzyme, while under the same conditions CTP at concentrations less than 1 mM will inhibit the wild-type enzyme to the maximal extent. Higher concentrations of CTP result in some inhibition of the mutant enzyme that may be due either to hetertropic effects at the regulatory site or to competitive binding at the active site. UTP alone or in the presence of CTP has no effect on the mutant enzyme. Kinetic competition experiments indicate that CTP is still able to displace ATP from the regulatory sites of the mutant enzyme. Binding measurements by equilibrium dialysis were used to estimate a lower limit on the dissociation constant for CTP binding to the mutant enzyme (greater than 1 x 10(-3) M). Equilibrium competition binding experiments between ATP and CTP verified that CTP still can bind to the regulatory site of the enzyme. For the mutant enzyme, CTP affinity is reduced approximately 100-fold, while ATP affinity is increased by 5-fold.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
The conversion of 2-C-methyl-d-erythritol 4-phosphate (MEP) to 2-C-methyl-d-erythritol 2,4-cyclodiphosphate (cMEDP) in the MEP entry into the isoprenoid biosynthetic pathway occurs in three consecutive steps catalyzed by the IspD, IspE, and IspF enzymes, respectively. In Agrobacterium tumefaciens the ispD and ispF genes are fused to encode a bifunctional enzyme that catalyzes the first (synthesis of 4-diphosphocytidyl-2-C-methyl d-erythritol) and third (synthesis of 2-C-methyl-d-erythritol 2,4-cyclodiphosphate) steps. Sedimentation velocity experiments indicate that the bifunctional IspDF enzyme and the IspE protein associate in solution, raising the possibility of substrate channeling among the active sites in these two proteins. Kinetic evidence for substrate channeling was sought by measuring the time courses for product formation during incubations of MEP, CTP, and ATP with the IspDF and IspE proteins with and without an excess of the inactive IspE(D152A) mutant in the presence or absence of 30% (v/v) glycerol. The time dependencies indicate that the enzyme-generated intermediates are not transferred from the IspD active site in IspDF to the active site of IspE or from the active site in IspE to the active site of the IspF module of IspDF.  相似文献   

6.
The regulatory role of the allosteric site of CTP synthetase on flux through the enzyme in situ and on pyrimidine nucleotide triphosphate (NTP) pool balance was investigated using a mutant mouse T lymphoblast (S49) cell line which contains a CTP synthetase refractory to complete inhibition by CTP. Measurements of [3H]uridine incorporation into cellular pyrimidine NTP pools as a function of time indicated that CTP synthesis in intact wild type cells was markedly inhibited in a cooperative fashion by small increases in CTP pools, whereas flux across the enzyme in mutant cells was much less affected by changes in CTP levels. The cooperativity of the allosteric inhibition of the enzyme was greater in situ than in vitro. Exogenous manipulation of levels of GTP, an activator of the enzyme, indicated that GTP had a moderate effect on enzyme activity in situ, and changes in pools of ATP, a substrate of the enzyme, had small effects on CTP synthetase activity. The consequences of incubation with actinomycin D, cycloheximide, dibutyryl cyclic AMP, and 6-azauridine on the flux across CTP synthetase and on NTP pools differed considerably between wild type and mutant cells. Under conditions of growth arrest, an intact binding site for CTP on CTP synthetase was required to maintain a balance between the CTP and UTP pools in wild type cells. Moreover, wild type cells failed to incorporate H14CO3- into pyrimidine pools following growth arrest. In contrast, mutant cells incorporated the radiolabel at a high rate indicating loss of a regulatory function. These results indicated that uridine nucleotides are important regulators of pyrimidine nucleotide synthesis in mouse S49 cells, and CTP regulates the balance between UTP and CTP pools.  相似文献   

7.
Since crystallographic studies on Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamoylase (ATCase) indicate that Gln 231 is in the active site of the enzyme and participates in the binding of the substrate, aspartate, it seemed of interest to examine mutant enzymes in which Gln 231 was replaced by Asn or Ile. The two mutant forms containing amino acid substitutions were characterized by a combination of steady-state kinetics, hydrodynamic measurements, and equilibrium ligand binding techniques. Both mutant forms exhibited a dramatic reduction in the affinity of the protein for substrates and substrate analogues as well as a very large decrease in catalytic activity. Moreover, the amino acid substitutions introduced within the active site of the enzyme led to unusual allosteric properties in the mutant enzymes. Although the bisubstrate analogue N-(phosphonoacetyl)-L-aspartate promotes the characteristic global conformational change in the mutant forms that is observed with the wild-type enzyme, the combination of substrate and substrate analogue does not. Cooperativity with respect to substrate binding is largely reduced compared to wild-type ATCase. Also, the effector molecules ATP and CTP which bind to the regulatory chains have dramatic effects on the activity of the mutant enzymes containing replacements for Gln 231 in the catalytic chains. In stark contrast to the wild-type enzyme, in which effects of nucleotides are manifested primarily by changes in the K0.5 of the enzyme, ATP and CTP have large effects on the Vmax of the mutant enzymes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Serine acetyltransferase is a key enzyme in the sulfur assimilation pathway of bacteria and plants, and is known to form a bienzyme complex with O-acetylserine sulfhydrylase, the last enzyme in the cysteine biosynthetic pathway. The biological function of the complex and the mechanism of reciprocal regulation of the constituent enzymes are still poorly understood. In this work the effect of complex formation on the O-acetylserine sulfhydrylase active site has been investigated exploiting the fluorescence properties of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate, which are sensitive to the cofactor microenvironment and to conformational changes within the protein matrix. The results indicate that both serine acetyltransferase and its C-terminal decapeptide bind to the alpha-carboxyl subsite of O-acetylserine sulfhydrylase, triggering a transition from an open to a closed conformation. This finding suggests that serine acetyltransferase can inhibit O-acetylserine sulfhydrylase catalytic activity with a double mechanism, the competition with O-acetylserine for binding to the enzyme active site and the stabilization of a closed conformation that is less accessible to the natural substrate.  相似文献   

9.
The URA7-encoded CTP synthetase [EC 6.3.4.2, UTP:ammonia ligase (ADP-forming)] in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is phosphorylated on a serine residue and stimulated by cAMP-dependent protein kinase (protein kinase A) in vitro. In vivo, the phosphorylation of CTP synthetase is mediated by the RAS/cAMP pathway. In this work, we examined the hypothesis that amino acid residue Ser424 contained in a protein kinase A sequence motif in the URA7-encoded CTP synthetase is the target site for protein kinase A. A CTP synthetase synthetic peptide (SLGRKDSHSA) containing the protein kinase A motif was a substrate (Km = 30 microM) for protein kinase A. This peptide also inhibited (IC50 = 45 microM) the phosphorylation of purified wild-type CTP synthetase by protein kinase A. CTP synthetase with a Ser424 --> Ala (S424A) mutation was constructed by site-directed mutagenesis. The mutated enzyme was not phosphorylated in response to the activation of protein kinase A activity in vivo. Purified S424A mutant CTP synthetase was not phosphorylated and stimulated by protein kinase A. The S424A mutant CTP synthetase had reduced Vmax and elevated Km values for ATP and UTP when compared with the protein kinase A-phosphorylated wild-type enzyme. The specificity constants for ATP and UTP for the S424A mutant CTP synthetase were 4.2- and 2.9-fold lower, respectively, when compared with that of the phosphorylated enzyme. In addition, the S424A mutant enzyme was 2.7-fold more sensitive to CTP product inhibition when compared with the phosphorylated wild-type enzyme. These data indicated that the protein kinase A target site in CTP synthetase was Ser424 and that the phosphorylation of this site played a role in the regulation of CTP synthetase activity.  相似文献   

10.
P Y Shi  N Maizels    A M Weiner 《The EMBO journal》1998,17(11):3197-3206
The CCA-adding enzyme repairs the 3''-terminal CCA sequence of all tRNAs. To determine how the enzyme recognizes tRNA, we probed critical contacts between tRNA substrates and the archaeal Sulfolobus shibatae class I and the eubacterial Escherichia coli class II CCA-adding enzymes. Both CTP addition to tRNA-C and ATP addition to tRNA-CC were dramatically inhibited by alkylation of the same tRNA phosphates in the acceptor stem and TPsiC stem-loop. Both enzymes also protected the same tRNA phosphates in tRNA-C and tRNA-CC. Thus the tRNA substrate must remain fixed on the enzyme surface during CA addition. Indeed, tRNA-C cross-linked to the S. shibatae enzyme remains fully active for addition of CTP and ATP. We propose that the growing 3''-terminus of the tRNA progressively refolds to allow the solitary active site to reuse a single CTP binding site. The ATP binding site would then be created collaboratively by the refolded CC terminus and the enzyme, and nucleotide addition would cease when the nucleotide binding pocket is full. The template for CCA addition would be a dynamic ribonucleoprotein structure.  相似文献   

11.
Regulation of pyrimidine nucleotide biosynthesis in Pseudomonas synxantha ATCC 9890 was investigated and the pyrimidine biosynthetic pathway enzyme activities were affected by pyrimidine supplementation in cells grown on glucose or succinate as a carbon source. In pyrimidine-grown ATCC 9890 cells, the activities of four de novo enzymes could be depressed which indicated possible repression of enzyme synthesis. To learn whether the pathway was repressible, pyrimidine limitation experiments were conducted using an orotate phosphoribosyltransferase (pyrE) mutant strain identified in this study. Compared to excess uracil growth conditions for the succinate-grown mutant strain cells, pyrimidine limitation of this strain caused dihydroorotase activity to increase about 3-fold while dihydroorotate dehydrogenase and orotidine 5'-monophosphate decarboxylase activities rose about 2-fold. Regulation of de novo pathway enzyme synthesis by pyrimidines appeared to be occurring. At the level of enzyme activity, aspartate transcarbamoylase activity in P. synxantha ATCC 9890 was strongly inhibited in vitro by pyrophosphate, UTP, ADP, ATP, CTP and GTP under saturating substrate concentrations.  相似文献   

12.
While enzyme activity is often regulated by a combination of substrate/effector availability and quaternary structure, many cytosolic enzymes may be further regulated through oligomerization into filaments. Cytidine-5′-triphosphate (CTP) synthase (CTPS) forms such filaments—a process that is promoted by the product CTP. The CTP analog and active chemotherapeutic metabolite gemcitabine-5′-triphosphate (dF-dCTP) is a potent inhibitor of CTPS; however, its effect on the enzyme's ability to form filaments is unknown. Alongside electron microscopy studies, dynamic light scattering showed that dF-dCTP induces Escherichia coli CTPS (EcCTPS) to form filaments in solution with lengths ≥ 30 nm in the presence of CTP or dF-dCTP. The substrate UTP blocks formation of filaments and effects their disassembly. EcCTPS variants were constructed to investigate the role of CTP-binding determinants in CTP- and dF-dCTP-dependent filament formation. Substitution of Glu 149 (i.e., E149D), which interacts with the ribose of CTP, caused reduced affinity for both CTP and dF-dCTP, and obviated filament formation. Phe 227 appears to interact with CTP through an edge-on interaction with the cytosine ring, yet the F227A and F227L variants bound CTP and dF-dCTP. F227A EcCTPS did not form filaments, while F227L EcCTPS formed shorter filaments in the presence of CTP or dF-dCTP. Hence, Phe 227 plays a role in filament formation, although replacement by a bulky hydrophobic amino acid is sufficient for limited filament formation. That dF-dCTP can induce filament formation highlights the fact that nucleotide analogs employed as chemotherapeutic agents may affect the filamentous states of enzymes and potentially alter their regulation in vivo.  相似文献   

13.
The reaction of phenylglyoxal with aspartate transcarbamylase and its isolated catalytic subunit results in complete loss of enzymatic activity (Kantrowitz, E. R., and Lipscomb, W. N. (1976) J. Biol. Chem. 251, 2688-2695). If N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate is used to protect the active site, we find that phenylglyoxal causes destruction of the enzyme's susceptibility to activation by ATP and inhibition by CTP. Furthermore, CTP only minimally protects the regulatory site from reaction with this reagent. The modified enzyme still binds CTP although with reduced affinity. After reaction with phenylglyoxal, the native enzyme shows reduced cooperativity. The hybrid with modified regulatory subunits and native catalytic subunits exhibits slight heterotropic or homotropic properties, while the reverse hybrid, with modified catalytic subunits and native regulatory subunits, shows much reduced homotropic properties but practically normal heterotropic interactions. The decrease in the ability of CTP to inhibit the enzyme correlates with the loss of 2 arginine residues/regulatory chain (Mr = 17,000). Under these reaction conditions, 1 arginine residue is also modified on each catalytic chain (Mr = 33,000). Reaction rate studies of p-hydroxymercuribenzoate, with the liganded and unliganded modified enzyme suggest that the reaction with phenylglyoxal locks the enzyme into the liganded conformation. The conformational state of the regulatory subunit is implicated as having a critical role in the expression of the enzyme's heterotropic and homotropic properties.  相似文献   

14.
Most investigations of the allosteric properties of the regulatory enzyme aspartate transcarbamoylase (ATCase) from Escherichia coli are based on the sigmoidal dependence of enzyme activity on substrate concentration and the effects of the inhibitor, CTP, and the activator, ATP, on the saturation curves. Interpretations of these effects in terms of molecular models are complicated by the inability to distinguish between changes in substrate binding and catalytic turnover accompanying the allosteric transition. In an effort to eliminate this ambiguity, the binding of the 3H-labeled bisubstrate analog N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate (PALA) to aspartate transcarbamoylase in the absence and presence of the allosteric effectors ATP and CTP has been measured directly by equilibrium dialysis at pH 7 in phosphate buffer. PALA binds with marked cooperativity to the holoenzyme with an average dissociation constant of 110 nM. ATP and CTP alter both the average affinity of ATCase for PALA and the degree of cooperativity in the binding process in a manner analogous to their effects on the kinetic properties of the enzyme; the average dissociation constant of PALA decreases to 65 nM in the presence of ATP and increases to 266 nM in the presence of CTP while the Hill coefficient, which is 1.95 in the absence of effectors, becomes 1.35 and 2.27 in the presence of ATP and CTP, respectively. The isolated catalytic subunit of ATCase, which lacks the cooperative kinetic properties of the holoenzyme, exhibits only a very slight degree of cooperativity in binding PALA. The dissociation constant of PALA from the catalytic subunit is 95 nM. Interpretation of these results in terms of a thermodynamic scheme linking PALA binding to the assembly of ATCase from catalytic and regulatory subunits demonstrates that saturation of the enzyme with PALA shifts the equilibrium between holoenzyme and subunits slightly toward dissociation. Ligation of the regulatory subunits by either of the allosteric effectors leads to a change in the effect of PALA on the association-dissociation equilibrium.  相似文献   

15.
We previously proposed a molecular mechanism for the activation of smooth muscle myosin light chain kinase (smMLCK) by calmodulin (CaM). According to this model, smMLCK is autoinhibited in the absence of Ca2+/CaM due to the interaction of a pseudosubstrate prototope, contained within the CaM binding/regulatory region, with the active site of the enzyme. Binding of Ca2+/CaM releases the autoinhibition and allows access of the protein substrate to the active site of the enzyme, resulting in phosphorylation of the myosin light chains. We now provide direct experimental evidence that the pseudosubstrate prototope can associate with the active site. We constructed a smMLCK mutant in which the five-amino acid phosphorylation site of the myosin light chain substrate was inserted into the pseudosubstrate sequence of the CaM binding domain without disrupting the ability of the enzyme to bind Ca2+/CaM. We demonstrate that this mutant undergoes intramolecular autophosphorylation at the appropriate inserted serine residue in the absence of CaM and that this autophosphorylation activates the enzyme. Binding of Ca2+/CaM to the mutant enzyme stimulated myosin light chain substrate phosphorylation but strongly inhibited autophosphorylation, presumably by removing the pseudosubstrate from the active site. These results confirm that the pseudosubstrate sequence has access to the catalytic site and that the activation of the enzyme is accompanied by its removal from this position due to Ca2+/CaM binding as predicted by the model.  相似文献   

16.
S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase (AdoMetDC) is a critical enzyme in the polyamine biosynthetic pathway and a subject of many structural and biochemical investigations for anti-cancer and anti-parasitic therapy. The enzyme undergoes an internal serinolysis reaction as a post-translational modification to generate the active site pyruvoyl group for the decarboxylation process. The crystal structures of AdoMetDC from Homo sapiens, Solanum tuberosum, Thermotoga maritima, and Aquifex aeolicus have been determined. Numerous crystal structures of human AdoMetDC and mutants have provided insights into the mechanism of autoprocessing, putrescine activation, substrate specificity, and inhibitor design to the enzyme. The comparison of the human and potato enzyme with the T. maritima and A. aeolicus enzymes supports the hypothesis that the eukaryotic enzymes evolved by gene duplication and fusion. The residues implicated in processing and activity are structurally conserved in all forms of the enzyme, suggesting a divergent evolution of AdoMetDC.  相似文献   

17.
The allosteric effectors of aspartate transcarbamoylase from Escherichia coli, CTP and ATP, associate with both the regulatory and the catalytic moieties of the enzyme. Studies with isolated, active subunits yield one binding site per regulatory dimer and one per catalytic trimer. Investigations of effector association with hybrid enzymes, containing either the three regulatory dimers or the two catalytic trimers in inactivated forms, indicate that the data obtained with isolated subunits can be used to analyze the binding patterns of these ligands to the native hexamer. Thus, the nonlinear Scatchard plots, characteristic of the binding of CTP and ATP to the native enzyme, can be interpreted in terms of three effector molecules associating with the regulatory subunits, and two binding to the catalytic moiety of the enzyme. Results with native protein in the presence of saturating concentrations of active site ligands support these assignments. The differences between the binding isotherms of CTP and ATP to the enzyme are due to their different affinities to the two types of subunits. The apparent half-of-the-site saturation of the regulatory moiety of aspartate transcarbamoylase supports the concept that this protein has a tendency to exist in an asymmetric state.  相似文献   

18.
The Saccharomyces cerevisiae URA7-encoded CTP synthetase is phosphorylated and stimulated by protein kinases A and C. Previous studies have revealed that Ser424 is the target site for protein kinase A. Using a purified S424A mutant CTP synthetase enzyme, we examined the effect of Ser424 phosphorylation on protein kinase C phosphorylation. The S424A mutation in CTP synthetase caused a 50% decrease in the phosphorylation of the enzyme by protein kinase C and an 80% decrease in the stimulatory effect on CTP synthetase activity by protein kinase C. The S424A mutation caused increases in the apparent Km values of CTP synthetase and ATP of 20-and 2-fold, respectively, in the protein kinase C reaction. The effect of the S424A mutation on the phosphorylation reaction was dependent on time and protein kinase C concentration. A CTP synthetase synthetic peptide (SLGRKDSHSA) containing Ser424 was a substrate for protein kinase C. Comparison of phosphopeptide maps of the wild type and S424A mutant CTP synthetase enzymes phosphorylated by protein kinases A and C indicated that Ser424 was also a target site for protein kinase C. Phosphorylation of Ser424 accounted for 10% of the total phosphorylation of CTP synthetase by protein kinase C. The incorporation of [methyl-3H]choline into phosphocholine, CDP-choline, and phosphatidylcholine in cells carrying the S424A mutant CTP synthetase enzyme was reduced by 48, 32, and 46%, respectively, when compared with control cells. These data indicated that phosphorylation of Ser424 by protein kinase A or by protein kinase C was required for maximum phosphorylation and stimulation of CTP synthetase and that the phosphorylation of this site played a role in the regulation of phosphatidylcholine synthesis by the CDP-choline pathway.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Dehydroquinase, the third enzyme of the shikimate biosynthetic pathway, is inactivated by iodoacetate. Iodoacetate behaves as an affinity label for the Escherichia coli enzyme with a Ki of 30 mM and a limiting inactivation rate of 0.014 min-1 at pH 7.0 and 25 degrees C. Affinity labeling is mediated by the negative charge of the reagent since iodoacetamide does not inactivate the enzyme. 2.1-2.3 mol of carboxymethyl groups are incorporated per mol of protein monomer resulting in 90% inactivation of enzymic activity. The majority of the bound label (80%) is split equally between 2 methionine residues, Met-23 and Met-205, which were identified by sequencing radiolabelled peptide fragments isolated after proteolytic digestion. An equilibrium mixture of the substrate (dehydroquinate) and product (dehydroshikimate) substantially reduces the inactivation rate and specifically decreases the incorporation of label at both of these site, implicating them as being in or near the active site of the enzyme. Sequence alignments with other biosynthetic dehydroquinases show that of the 2 methionine residues only Met-205 is conserved. N-terminal alignments of all the available dehydroquinase sequences (both catabolic and biosynthetic classes) revealed that Met-23, although itself not conserved, resides within a cluster of conserved sequence which may constitute part of the dehydroquinate binding site. A consensus sequence was derived from these alignments and used to probe the protein sequence data banks. A related sequence was found in dehydroquinate synthase, the enzyme which precedes dehydroquinase in the shikimate pathway. These results suggest that we have identified part of the dehydroquinate binding site in both enzymes.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号