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1.
The interaction of type II R67 dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) with its cofactor nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADP(+)) has been studied using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). Doubly labeled [U-(13)C,(15)N]DHFR was obtained from Escherichia coli grown on a medium containing [U-(13)C]-D-glucose and (15)NH(4)Cl, and the 16 disordered N-terminal amino acids were removed by treatment with chymotrypsin. Backbone and side chain NMR assignments were made using triple-resonance experiments. The degeneracy of the amide (1)H and (15)N shifts of the tetrameric DHFR was preserved upon addition of NADP(+), consistent with kinetic averaging among equivalent binding sites. Analysis of the more titration-sensitive DHFR amide resonances as a function of added NADP(+) gave a K(D) of 131 +/- 50 microM, consistent with previous determinations using other methodology. We have found that the (1)H spectrum of NADP(+) in the presence of the R67 DHFR changes as a function of time. Comparison with standard samples and mass spectrometric analysis indicates a slow conversion of NADP(+) to NAD(+), i.e., an apparent NADP(+) phosphatase activity. Studies of this activity in the presence of folate and a folate analogue support the conclusion that this activity results from an interaction with the DHFR rather than a contaminating phosphatase. (1)H NMR studies of a mixture of NADP(+) and NADPH in the presence of the enzyme reveal that a ternary complex forms in which the N-4A and N-4B nuclei of the NADPH are in the proximity of the N-4 and N-5 nuclei of NADP(+). Studies using the NADP(+) analogue acetylpyridine adenosine dinucleotide phosphate (APADP(+)) demonstrated a low level of enzyme-catalyzed hydride transfer from NADPH. Analysis of DHFR backbone dynamics revealed little change upon binding of NADP(+). These additional catalytic activities and dynamic behavior are in marked contrast to those of type I DHFR.  相似文献   

2.
Heteronuclear NMR methods have been used to probe the conformation of four complexes of Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) in solution. (1)H(N), (15)N, and (13)C(alpha) resonance assignments have been made for the ternary complex with folate and oxidized NADP(+) cofactor and the ternary complex with folate and a reduced cofactor analog, 5,6-dihydroNADPH. The backbone chemical shifts have been compared with those of the binary complex of DHFR with the substrate analog folate and the binary complex with NADPH (the holoenzyme). Analysis of (1)H(N) and (15)N chemical shifts has led to the identification of marker resonances that report on the active site conformation of the enzyme. Other backbone amide resonances report on the presence of ligands in the pterin binding pocket and in the adenosine and nicotinamide-ribose binding sites of the NADPH cofactor. The chemical shift data indicate that the enzyme populates two dominant structural states in solution, with the active site loops in either the closed or occluded conformations defined by X-ray crystallography; there is no evidence that the open conformation observed in some X-ray structures of E. coli DHFR are populated in solution.  相似文献   

3.
The binding of NADP+ to dihydrofolate reductase (EC 1.5.1.3) in the presence and absence of substrate analogs has been studied using 1H and 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). NADP+ binds strongly to the enzyme alone and in the presence of folate, aminopterin, and methotrexate with a stoichiometry of 1 mol of NADP+/mol of enzyme. In the 13C spectra of the binary and ternary complexes, separate signals were observed for the carboxamide carbon of free and bound [13CO]NADP+ (enriched 90% in 13C). The 13C signal of the NADP+-reductase complex is much broader than that in the ternary complex with methotrexate because of exchange line broadening on the binary complex signal. From the difference in line widths (17.5 +/- 3.0 Hz) an estimate of the dissociation rate constant of the binary complex has been obtained (55 +/- 10 sec-1). The dissociation rate of the NADP+-reductase complex is not the rate-limiting step in the overall reaction. In the various complexes studied large 13C chemical shifts were measured for bound [13CO]NADP+ relative to free NADP+ (upfield shifts of 1.6-4.3 ppm). The most likely origin of the bound shifts lies in the effects on the shieldings of electric fields from nearby charged groups. For the NADP+-reductase-folate system two 13C signals from bound NADP+ are observed indicating the presence of more than one form of the ternary complex. The IH spectra of the binary and ternary complexes confirm both the stoichiometry and the value of the dissociation rate constant obtained from the 13C experiments. Substantial changes in the IH spectrum of the protein were observed in the different complexes and these are distinct from those seen in the presence of NADPH.  相似文献   

4.
H T Cheung  B Birdsall  J Feeney 《FEBS letters》1992,312(2-3):147-151
13C NMR studies of 13C-labelled ligands bound to dihydrofolate reductase provide (DHFR) a powerful means of detecting and characterizing multiple bound conformations. Such studies of complexes of Escherichia coli DHFR with [4,7,8a,9-13C]- and [2,4a,6-13C]methotrexate (MTX) and [4,6,8a-13C]- and [2,4a,7,9-13C]folic acid confirm that in the binary complexes, MTX binds in two conformational forms and folate binds as a single conformation. Earlier studies on the corresponding complexes with Lactobacillus casei DHFR indicated that, in this case, MTX binds as a single conformation whereas folate binds in multiple conformational forms (both in its binary complex and ternary complex with NADP+); two of the bound conformational states for the folate complexes are very different from each other in that there is a 180 degrees difference in their pteridine ring orientation. In contrast, the two different conformational states observed for MTX bound to E. coli DHFR do not show such a major difference in ring orientation and bind with N1 protonated in both forms. The major difference appears to involve the manner in which the 4-NH2 group of MTX binds to the enzyme (although the same protein residues are probably involved in both interactions). Addition of either NADP+ or NADPH to the E. coli DHFR-MTX complex results in a single set of 13C signals for bound methotrexate consistent with only one conformational form in the ternary complexes.  相似文献   

5.
R67 dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) is a type II DHFR produced by bacteria as a resistance mechanism to the increased clinical use of the antibacterial drug trimethoprim. Type II DHFRs are not homologous in either sequence or structure with chromosomal DHFRs. The type II enzymes contain four identical subunits which form a homotetramer containing a single active site pore accessible from either end. Although the crystal structure of the complex of R67 DHFR with folate has been reported [Narayana et al. (1995) Nat. Struct. Biol. 2, 1018], the nature of the ternary complex which must form with substrate and cofactor is unclear. We have performed transferred NOE and interligand NOE (ILOE) studies to analyze the ternary complexes formed from NADP(+) and folate in order to probe the structure of the ternary complex. Consistent with previous studies of the binary complex formed from another type II DHFR, the ribonicotinamide bond of NADP(+) was found to adopt a syn conformation, while the adenosine moiety adopts an anti conformation. Large ILOE peaks connecting NADP(+) H4 and H5 with folate H9 protons are observed, while the absence of a large ILOE connecting NADP(+) H4 and H5 with folate H7 indicates that the relative orientation of the two ligands differs significantly from the orientation in the chromosomal enzyme. To obtain more detailed insight, we prepared and studied the folate analogue 2-deamino-2-methyl-5,8-dideazafolate (DMDDF) which contains additional protons in order to provide additional NOEs. For this analogue, the exchange characteristics of the corresponding ternary complex were considerably poorer, and it was necessary to utilize higher enzyme concentrations and higher temperature in order to obtain ILOE information. The results support a structure in which the NADP(+) and folate/DMDDF molecules extend in opposite directions parallel to the long axis of the pore, with the nicotinamide and pterin ring systems approximately stacked at the center. Such a structure leads to a ternary complex which is in many respects similar to the gas-phase theoretical calculations of the dihydrofolate-NADPH transition state by Andres et al. [(1996) Bioorg. Chem. 24, 10-18]. Analogous NMR studies performed on folate, DMDDF, and R67 DHFR indicate formation of a ternary complex in which two symmetry-related binding sites are occupied by folate and DMDDF.  相似文献   

6.
To elucidate the influence of local motion of the polypeptide chain on the catalytic mechanism of an enzyme, we have measured (15)N relaxation data for Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase in three different complexes, representing different stages in the catalytic cycle of the enzyme. NMR relaxation data were analyzed by the model-free approach, corrected for rotational anisotropy, to provide insights into the backbone dynamics. There are significant differences in the backbone dynamics in the different complexes. Complexes in which the cofactor binding site is occluded by the Met20 loop display large amplitude motions on the picosecond/nanosecond time scale for residues in the Met20 loop, the adjacent betaF-betaG loop and for residues 67-69 in the adenosine binding loop. Formation of the closed Met20 loop conformation in the ternary complex with folate and NADP(+), results in attenuation of the motions in the Met20 loop and the betaF-betaG loop but leads to increased flexibility in the adenosine binding loop. New fluctuations on a microsecond/millisecond time scale are observed in the closed E:folate:NADP(+) complex in regions that form hydrogen bonds between the Met20 and the betaF-betaG loops. The data provide insights into the changes in backbone dynamics during the catalytic cycle and point to an important role of the Met20 and betaF-betaG loops in controlling access to the active site. The high flexibility of these loops in the occluded conformation is expected to promote tetrahydrofolate-assisted product release and facilitate binding of the nicotinamide ring to form the Michaelis complex. The backbone fluctuations in the Met20 loop become attenuated once it closes over the active site, thereby stabilizing the nicotinamide ring in a geometry conducive to hydride transfer. Finally, the relaxation data provide evidence for long-range motional coupling between the adenosine binding loop and distant regions of the protein.  相似文献   

7.
Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) has several flexible loops surrounding the active site that play a functional role in substrate and cofactor binding and in catalysis. We have used heteronuclear NMR methods to probe the loop conformations in solution in complexes of DHFR formed during the catalytic cycle. To facilitate the NMR analysis, the enzyme was labeled selectively with [(15)N]alanine. The 13 alanine resonances provide a fingerprint of the protein structure and report on the active site loop conformations and binding of substrate, product, and cofactor. Spectra were recorded for binary and ternary complexes of wild-type DHFR bound to the substrate dihydrofolate (DHF), the product tetrahydrofolate (THF), the pseudosubstrate folate, reduced and oxidized NADPH cofactor, and the inactive cofactor analogue 5,6-dihydroNADPH. The data show that DHFR exists in solution in two dominant conformational states, with the active site loops adopting conformations that closely approximate the occluded or closed conformations identified in earlier X-ray crystallographic analyses. A minor population of a third conformer of unknown structure was observed for the apoenzyme and for the disordered binary complex with 5,6-dihydroNADPH. The reactive Michaelis complex, with both DHF and NADPH bound to the enzyme, could not be studied directly but was modeled by the ternary folate:NADP(+) and dihydrofolate:NADP(+) complexes. From the NMR data, we are able to characterize the active site loop conformation and the occupancy of the substrate and cofactor binding sites in all intermediates formed in the extended catalytic cycle. In the dominant kinetic pathway under steady-state conditions, only the holoenzyme (the binary NADPH complex) and the Michaelis complex adopt the closed loop conformation, and all product complexes are occluded. The catalytic cycle thus involves obligatory conformational transitions between the closed and occluded states. Parallel studies on the catalytically impaired G121V mutant DHFR show that formation of the closed state, in which the nicotinamide ring of the cofactor is inserted into the active site, is energetically disfavored. The G121V mutation, at a position distant from the active site, interferes with coupled loop movements and appears to impair catalysis by destabilizing the closed Michaelis complex and introducing an extra step into the kinetic pathway.  相似文献   

8.
Association and dissociation rate constants obtained by stopped-flow spectroscopy have permitted definition of a kinetic scheme for recombinant human dihydrofolate reductase that correctly predicts full time course kinetics of the enzymatic reaction over a wide range of substrate and product concentrations. The scheme is complex compared with that for the bacterial enzyme and involves branched pathways. It successfully accounts for observed rapid hysteresis preceding steady state and for the nonhyperbolic dependence of steady-state rate on substrate and product concentrations. The major branch point in the catalytic cycle occurs at E.NADP.H4folate because either NADP or H4folate can dissociate from the ternary product complex (koff = 84 s-1 and 46 s-1, respectively). The rate of conversion of enzyme-bound substrates to products is very fast (k = 1360 s-1) and nearly unidirectional (Kequ = 37) so that other steps limit the catalytic rate. At saturating substrate concentrations these steps include release of NADP and H4folate from E.NADP.H4folate and release of products from the two abortive complexes E.NADPH.H4folate (koff = 225 s-1) and E.NADP.H4folate (koff = 4.6 s-1). Since NADP dissociates slowly from E.NADP.H2folate nearly 90% of the enzyme accumulates as this complex at steady state. Nonetheless, the catalytic rate is maintained at 12 s-1 by rapid flux of a small portion of the enzyme through an alternate branch. At physiological concentrations of substrates and products the steady-state rate is limited primarily by the rate of H2folate binding to E.NADPH so that the enzyme is extremely efficient.  相似文献   

9.
M T Mas  R F Colman 《Biochemistry》1984,23(8):1675-1683
The interaction of the 2'-phosphate-containing nucleotides (NADP+, NADPH, 2'-phosphoadenosine 5'-diphosphoribose, and adenosine 2',5'-bisphosphate) with NADP+ -specific isocitrate dehydrogenase was studied by using 31P NMR spectroscopy. The separate resonances corresponding to free and bound nucleotides, characteristic for slow exchange of nuclei on the NMR time scale, were observed in the spectra of the enzyme (obtained in the presence of excess ligand) with NADP+ and NADPH in the absence and presence of Mg2+ and with 2'-phosphoadenosine 5'-diphosphoribose in the absence of metal or in the presence of the substrate magnesium isocitrate. The position of the 31P resonance of the bound 2'-phosphate group in these spectra is invariant (delta = 6) in the pH range 5-8, indicating that the pK of this group is much lower in the complexes with the enzyme than that (pK = 6.13) in the free nucleotides. The additional downfield shift of this resonance by 1.8 ppm beyond that (delta = 4.22) of the dianionic form of the 2'-phosphate in free nucleotides suggests interaction with a positively charged group(s) and/or distortion of P-O-P angles as the result of binding to the enzyme. A single resonance of 2'-phosphate was observed in the spectrum of the enzyme complex with 2'-phosphoadenosine 5'-diphosphoribose in the presence of Mg2+, with the chemical shift dependent on the nucleotide to enzyme ratio, characteristic for the fast exchange situation. Addition of metal does not perturb the environment of the 2'-phosphate in the complexes of NADP+ and NADPH with isocitrate dehydrogenase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
The ferredoxin nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate reductase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa ( pa-FPR) in complex with NADP (+) has been characterized by X-ray crystallography and in solution by NMR spectroscopy. The structure of the complex revealed that pa-FPR harbors a preformed NADP (+) binding pocket where the cofactor binds with minimal structural perturbation of the enzyme. These findings were complemented by obtaining sequential backbone resonance assignments of this 29518 kDa enzyme, which enabled the study of the pa-FPR-NADP complex by monitoring chemical shift perturbations induced by addition of NADP (+) or the inhibitor adenine dinucleotide phosphate (ADP) to pa-FPR. The results are consistent with a preformed NADP (+) binding site and also demonstrate that the pa-FPR-NADP complex is largely stabilized by interactions between the protein and the 2'-P AMP portion of the cofactor. Analysis of the crystal structure also shows a vast network of interactions between the two cofactors, FAD and NADP (+), and the characteristic AFVEK (258) C'-terminal extension that is typical of bacterial FPRs but is absent in their plastidic ferredoxin NADP (+) reductase (FNR) counterparts. The conformations of NADP (+) and FAD in pa-FPR place their respective nicotinamide and isoalloxazine rings 15 A apart and separated by residues in the C'-terminal extension. The network of interactions among NADP (+), FAD, and residues in the C'-terminal extension indicate that the gross conformational rearrangement that would be necessary to place the nicotinamide and isoalloxazine rings parallel and adjacent to one another for direct hydride transfer between NADPH and FAD in pa-FPR is highly unlikely. This conclusion is supported by observations made in the NMR spectra of pa-FPR and the pa-FPR-NADP complex, which strongly suggest that residues in the C'-terminal sequence do not undergo conformational exchange in the presence or absence of NADP (+). These findings are discussed in the context of a possible stepwise electron-proton-electron transfer of hydride in the oxidation of NADPH by FPR enzymes.  相似文献   

11.
Dismutation of dihydrofolate by dihydrofolate reductase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
R L Blakley  L Cocco 《Biochemistry》1984,23(11):2377-2383
Degradation of 7,8-dihydrofolate (H2folate) in the presence of dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) has been shown due not to an oxygenase activity of the reductase as previously reported but to dismutation of H2folate to folate and 5,6,7,8-tetrahydrofolate (H4folate). The reaction can be followed spectrophotometrically or by analysis of the reaction mixture by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). The products have also been isolated and characterized. Oxygen uptake during the reaction is much less than stoichiometric with H2folate disappearance and is attributed to autoxidation of the H4folate formed. The dismutation activity is a property of highly purified Streptococcus faecium DHFR isoenzyme 2 (but not isoenzyme 1) and of Lactobacillus casei DHFR, but not of bovine liver DHFR. The activity is dependent on tightly bound NADP+ and/or NADPH. Removal of the nucleotide results in loss of dismutation activity, which is restored by adding NADP+ or NADPH. Maximum activity is obtained when approximately 1 mol equiv of nucleotide is added per mol of DHFR. It is proposed that in the dismutation reaction bound NADP(H) is alternately reduced and oxidized by incoming molecules of H2folate with release of folate and H4folate, respectively. The relatively slow rate of folate formation presumably limits the rate of the overall reaction. The equilibrium constant for the dismutation reaction is 19.4 +/- 7.4 at 22 degrees C and pH 7.0. Calculation of standard oxidation-reduction potentials at pH 7 gave values of -0.230 V for the H2folate/H4 folate pair and -0.268 V for the folate/H2folate pair. The mechanism by which NADP+ is retained by the enzyme from some sources during purification procedures is unclear.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
1. Nicotinamide nucleotide transhydrogenase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa was purified to apparent homogeneity with an improved method employing affinity chromatography on N6-(6aminohexyl)-adenosine 2', 5'-bisphosphate-Sepharose 4B. 2. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the purified transhydrogenase carried out in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulphate, indicated a minimal molecular weight of 55000 +/- 2000. 3. The kinetic and regulatory properties of the purified transhydrogenase resembled those of the crude enzyme, i.e., NADPH, adenosine 2'-monophosphate and Ca2+ were activators whereas NADP+ was inhibitory. 4. Nicotinamide nucleotide-specific release of binding of the transhydrogenase to N6-(6-aminohexyl)-adenosine-2',5'-bisphosphate-Sepharose and N6-(-aminohexyl)-adenosine-5'-monophosphate-Sepharose suggests the presence of at least two separate binding sites for nicotinamide nucleotides, one that is specific for NADP(H) and one that binds both NAD(H) and NADP(H). 5. Binding of transhydrogenase to N6-)6-aminohexyl)-adenosine-2',5'-bisphosphate-Sepharose and activation of the enzyme by adenosine-2',5'-bisphophate showed a marked pH dependence. In contrast, inhibition of the Ca2+-activated enzyme by adenosine 2',5'-bisphosphate was virtually constant at various pH values. This descrepancy was interpreted to indicate the existence of separate nucleotide-binding effector and active sites.  相似文献   

13.
N10-Formyltetrahydrofolate synthetase from bacteria and yeast catalyzes a slow formate-dependent ADP formation in the absence of H4folate. The synthesis of formyl phosphate by the enzyme was detected by trapping the intermediate as formyl hydroxamate. That the "formate kinase" activity was part of the catalytic center of N10-formyltetrahydrofolate synthetase was shown by demonstrating coordinate inactivation of the "kinase" and synthetase activities by heat and a sulfhydryl reagent, similar effects of monovalent cations, similar Km values for substrates, and similar Ki values for the inhibitor phosphonoacetaldehyde for both activities. The relative rates of the kinase activities for the bacterial and yeast enzymes are about 10(-4) and 4 x 10(-6) of their respective synthetase activities. These slow rates for the kinase reaction can be explained by the slow dissociation of ADP and formyl phosphate from the enzyme. This conclusion is supported by rapid-quench studies where a "burst" of ADP formation (6.4 s-1) was observed that is considerably faster than the steady-state rate (0.024 s-1). The demonstration of enzyme-bound products by a micropartition assay and the lack of a significant formate-stimulated exchange between ADP and ATP provide further evidence for the slow release of the products from the enzyme. The synthesis of N10-CHO-H4folate when H4folate was added to the E-formyl phosphate-ADP complex is also characterized by a "burst" of product formation. The rate of this burst phase at 5 degrees C occurs with a rate constant of 18 s-1 compared to 14 s-1 for the overall reaction at the same temperature. These results provide further evidence for formyl phosphate as an intermediate in the reaction and are consistent with the sequential mechanism of the normal catalytic pathway. Positional isotope exchange experiments using [beta,gamma-18O]ATP showed no evidence for exchange during turnover experiments in the presence of either H4folate or the competitive inhibitor pteroyltriglutamate. The absence of scrambling of the 18O label as observed by 31P NMR suggests that the central complex may impose restraints to limit free rotation of the P beta oxygens of the product ADP.  相似文献   

14.
The methyltetrahydrofolate:corrinoid/iron-sulfur protein methyltransferase (MeTr) from Clostridium thermoacetium catalyzes transfer of the N5-methyl group of (6S)-methyltetrahydrofolate (CH3-H4folate) to the cob(I)amide center of a corrinoid/iron-sulfur protein (CFeSP), forming H4folate and methylcob(III)amide. We have investigated binding of 13C-enriched (6R,S)-CH3-H4folate and (6R)-CH3-H4folate to MeTr by 13C NMR, equilibrium dialysis, fluorescence quenching, and proton uptake experiments. The results described here and in the accompanying paper [Seravalli, J., Shoemaker, R. K., Sudbeck, M. J., and Ragsdale, S. W. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 5728-5735] constitute the first evidence for protonation of the pterin ring of CH3-H4folate. The pH dependence of the chemical shift in the 13C NMR spectrum for the N5-methyl resonance indicates that MeTr decreases the acidity of the N5 tertiary amine of CH3-H4folate by 1 pK unit in both water and deuterium oxide. Binding of (6R,S)-CH3H4folate is accompanied by the uptake of one proton. These results are consistent with a mechanism of activation of CH3-H4folate by protonation to make the methyl group more electrophilic and the product H4folate a better leaving group toward nucleophilic attack by cob(I)amide. When MeTr is present in excess over (6R,S)-13CH3-H4folate, the 13C NMR signal is split into two broad signals that reflect the bound states of the two diastereomers. This unexpected ability of MeTr to bind both isomers was confirmed by the observation of MeTr-bound (6R)-13CH3-H4folate by NMR and by the measurement of similar dissociation constants for (6R)- and (6S)-CH3-H4folate diastereomers by fluorescence quenching experiments. The transversal relaxation time (T2) of 13CH3-H4folate bound to MeTr is pH independent between pH 5.50 and 7.0, indicating that neither changes in the protonation state of bound CH3-H4folate nor the previously observed pH-dependent MeTr conformational change contribute to broadening of the 13C resonance signal. The dissociation constant for (6R,S)-CH3-H4folate is also pH independent, indicating that the role of the pH-dependent conformational change is to stabilize the transition state for methyl transfer, and not to favor the binding of CH3-H4folate.  相似文献   

15.
The 2.2-A crystal structure of chicken liver dihydrofolate reductase (EC 1.5.1.3, DHFR) has been solved as a ternary complex with NADP+ and biopterin (a poor substrate). The space group and unit cell are isomorphous with the previously reported structure of chicken liver DHFR complexed with NADPH and phenyltriazine [Volz, K. W., Matthews, D. A., Alden, R. A., Freer, S. T., Hansch, C., Kaufman, B. T., & Kraut, J. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 2528-2536]. The structure contains an ordered water molecule hydrogen-bonded to both hydroxyls of the biopterin dihydroxypropyl group as well as to O4 and N5 of the biopterin pteridine ring. This water molecule, not observed in previously determined DHFR structures, is positioned to complete a proposed route for proton transfer from the side-chain carboxylate of E30 to N5 of the pteridine ring. Protonation of N5 is believed to occur during the reduction of dihydropteridine substrates. The positions of the NADP+ nicotinamide and biopterin pteridine rings are quite similar to the nicotinamide and pteridine ring positions in the Escherichia coli DHFR.NADP+.folate complex [Bystroff, C., Oatley, S. J., & Kraut, J. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 3263-3277], suggesting that the reduction of biopterin and the reduction of folate occur via similar mechanisms, that the binding geometry of the nicotinamide and pteridine rings is conserved between DHFR species, and that the p-aminobenzoylglutamate moiety of folate is not required for correct positioning of the pteridine ring in ground-state ternary complexes. Instead, binding of the p-aminobenzoylglutamate moiety of folate may induce the side chain of residue 31 (tyrosine or phenylalanine) in vertebrate DHFRs to adopt a conformation in which the opening to the pteridine binding site is too narrow to allow the substrate to diffuse away rapidly. A reverse conformational change of residue 31 is proposed to be required for tetrahydrofolate release.  相似文献   

16.
The surface accessibility of the histidine, tyrosine, and tryptophan residues of Lactobacillus casei dihydrofolate reductase has been determined from 360-MHz 1H photochemically induced dynamic nuclear polarization (photo-CIDNP) NMR experiments. In the absence of ligands, four (or perhaps five) of the seven histidine residues and at least one of the four tryptophan residues are accessible to a flavin dye molecule. One of the five tyrosine residues is also slightly accessible. Of the accessible histidine residues, one becomes inaccessible on the binding of NADP+ and one on the binding of p-aminobenzoyl glutamate. These have been assigned to residues which interact directly with these two ligands. One histidine residue (probably His-22) shows an increase in accessibility on addition of folate or methotrexate to the enzyme . NADP+ complex. In addition, the binding of several ligands, notably trimethoprim, leads to an increase in the accessibility of a tryptophan residue. This is clear evidence for ligand-induced conformational changes in dihydrofolate reductase and allows us to identify some of the residues involved.  相似文献   

17.
Dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) has several flexible active site loops that facilitate ligand binding and catalysis. Previous studies of backbone dynamics in several complexes of DHFR indicate that the time scale and amplitude of motion depend on the conformation of the active site loops. In this study, information on dynamics is extended to methyl-containing side chains. To understand the role of side chain dynamics in ligand binding and loop conformation, methyl deuterium relaxation rates of Escherichia coli DHFR in binary folate and ternary folate:NADP+ complexes have been measured, together with chi(1) rotamer populations for threonine, isoleucine, and valine residues, determined from measurements of 3J(CgammaCO) and 3J(CgammaN) coupling constants. The results indicate that, in addition to backbone motional restriction in the adenosine-binding site, side chain flexibility in the active site and the surrounding active site loops is diminished upon binding NADP+. Resonances for several methyls in the active site and the surrounding active site loops were severely broadened in the folate:NADP+ ternary complex, suggesting the presence of motion on the chemical shift time scale. The side chains of Ile14 and Ile94, which pack against the nicotinamide and pterin rings of the cofactor and substrate, respectively, exhibit rotamer disorder in the ternary folate:NADP+ complex. Conformational fluctuations of these side chains may play a role in transition state stabilization; the observed line broadening for Ile14 suggests motions on a microsecond/millisecond time scale.  相似文献   

18.
The complex of Lactobacillus casei dihydrofolate reductase with trimethoprim and NADP+ exists in solution as a mixture of approximately equal amounts of two slowly interconverting conformational states [Gronenborn, A., Birdsall, B., Hyde, E. I., Roberts, G. C. K., Feeney, J., & Burgen, A. S. V. (1981) Mol. Pharmacol. 20, 145]. These have now been further characterized by multinuclear NMR experiments, and a partial structural model has been proposed. 1H NMR spectra at 500 MHz show that the environments of six of the seven histidine residues differ between the two conformations. The characteristic 1H and 31P chemical shifts of nuclei of the coenzyme in the two conformations of the complex are identical in analogous complexes formed with a number of trimethoprim analogues, indicating that the nature of the two conformations is the same in each case. The pyrophosphate 31P resonances have been assigned to the two conformations, and integration of the 31P spectrum shows that the ratio of conformation I to conformation II varies from 0.4 to 2.3 in the complexes with the various trimethoprim analogues, the ratio for the trimethoprim complex itself being 1.2. Transferred NOE experiments, together with the 1H and 13C chemical shifts, indicate that in conformation II of the complex the nicotinamide ring of the coenzyme has swung away from the enzyme surface into solution; this is made possible by changes in the conformation of the pyrophosphate moiety. In conformation I, by contrast, the nicotinamide ring remains bound to the enzyme. 13C and 15N experiments show that trimethoprim is protonated on N1 in both conformations of the ternary complex. Analysis of the 1H chemical shifts of trimethoprim in terms of ring current effects shows that in conformation I of the ternary complex trimethoprim retains the same conformation as in its binary complex, but 13C, 15N, and 19F [using 2,4-diamino-5-(3,5-dimethoxy-4-fluoro-benzyl)pyrimidine] experiments show that the environment of both the pyrimidine ring and benzyl ring is affected by the proximity of the coenzyme. Less information is available about the conformation of the inhibitor in conformation II of the complex, but its environment is similar to that in the binary enzyme-inhibitor complex. The implications of the existence of these two conformations of the enzyme for understanding cooperativity in binding between NADP+ and trimethoprim are briefly discussed.  相似文献   

19.
C Bystroff  S J Oatley  J Kraut 《Biochemistry》1990,29(13):3263-3277
The crystal structure of dihydrofolate reductase (EC 1.5.1.3) from Escherichia coli has been solved as the binary complex with NADP+ (the holoenzyme) and as the ternary complex with NADP+ and folate. The Bragg law resolutions of the structures are 2.4 and 2.5 A, respectively. The new crystal forms are nonisomorphous with each other and with the methotrexate binary complex reported earlier [Bolin, J. T., Filman, D. J., Matthews, D. A., Hamlin, R. C., & Kraut, J. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 13650-13662]. In general, NADP+ and folate binding conform to predictions, but the nicotinamide moiety of NADP+ is disordered in the holoenzyme and ordered in the ternary complex. A mobile loop (residues 16-20) involved in binding the nicotinamide is also disordered in the holoenzyme. We report a detailed analysis of the binding interactions for both ligands, paying special attention to several apparently strained interactions that may favor the transition state for hydride transfer. Hypothetical models are presented for the binding of 7,8-dihydrofolate in the Michaelis complex and for the transition-state complex.  相似文献   

20.
The complex of Lactobacillus casei dihydrofolate reductase with the substrate folate and the coenzyme NADP+ has been shown to exist in solution as a mixture of three slowly interconverting conformations whose proportions are pH-dependent and which differ in the orientation of the pteridine ring of the substrate in the binding site. The Asp26----Asn mutant of L. casei dihydrofolate reductase has been prepared by oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis and studied by one- and two-dimensional 1H-NMR spectroscopy. NMR studies of the mutant enzyme--folate--NADP+ complex show that this exists to greater than 90% in a single conformation over the pH* range 5-7.1. The single conformation observed corresponds to conformation I (the 'methotrexate-like' conformation) of the wild-type enzyme--folate--NADP+ complex. These observations demonstrate that Asp26 is the ionizable group controlling the pH-dependence of the conformational equilibrium seen in the wild-type enzyme.  相似文献   

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