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1.
On the issue of interfacial activation of lipase in nonaqueous media   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The question of whether lipases can be activated by adsorption onto an interface in organic solvents was addressed using Rhizomucor miehei lipase as a model. In aqueous solution, this enzyme was shown to undergo a marked interfacial activation. However, lipase (either lyophilized or precipitated from water with acetone) suspended in ethanol or 2-(2-ethoxyethoxy)ethanol containing triolein exhibited no jump in catalytic activity when the concentration of triolein exceeded its solubility in these solvents, thereby resulting in formation of an interface. To test whether the lack of interfacial activation was due to the insolubility of the enzyme in organic media, lipase was covalently modified with poly(ethylene glycol). The modified lipase, although soluble in nonaqueous media, was still unable to undergo interfacial activation, regardless of the hydrophobicity of the interface. This inability was found to be caused by the absence of adsorption of lipase onto interfaces in organic solvents, presumably because of the absence of the hydrophobic effect (the driving force of lipase adsorption onto hydrophobic interfaces in water) in such media. The uncovered lack of interfacial adsorption and activation suggests that the short alpha-helical "lid" covering the active center of the lipase remains predominantly closed in nonaqueous media, thus contributing to diminished enzymatic activity. (c) 1996 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

2.
The activation of lipases has been postulated to proceed by interfacial activation, temperature switch activation, or aqueous activation. Recently, based on molecular dynamics (MD) simulation experiments, the T1 lipase activation mechanism was proposed to involve aqueous activation in addition to a double-flap mechanism. Because the open conformation structure is still unavailable, it is difficult to validate the proposed theory unambiguously to understand the behavior of the enzyme. In this study, we try to validate the previous reports and uncover the mystery behind the activation process using structural analysis and MD simulations. To investigate the effects of temperature and environmental conditions on the activation process, MD simulations in different solvent environments (water and water-octane interface) and temperatures (20, 50, 70, 80, and 100°C) were performed. Based on the structural analysis of the lipases in the same family of T1 lipase (I.5 lipase family), we proposed that the lid domain comprises α6 and α7 helices connected by a loop, thus forming a helix-loop-helix motif involved in interfacial activation. Throughout the MD simulations experiments, lid displacements were only observed in the water-octane interface, not in the aqueous environment with respect to the temperature effect, suggesting that the activation process is governed by interfacial activation coupled with temperature switch activation. Examining the activation process in detail revealed that the large structural rearrangement of the lid domain was caused by the interaction between the hydrophobic residues of the lid with octane, a nonpolar solvent, and this conformation was found to be thermodynamically favorable.  相似文献   

3.
The interfacial activation of many lipases at water/lipid interface is mediated by large conformational changes of a so‐called lid subdomain that covers up the enzyme active site. Here we investigated using molecular dynamic simulations in different explicit solvent environments (water, octane and water/octane interface) the molecular mechanism by which the lid motion of Burkholderia cepacia lipase might operate. Although B. cepacia lipase has so far only been crystallized in open conformation, this study reveals for the first time the major conformational rearrangements that the enzyme undergoes under the influence of the solvent, which either exposes or shields the active site from the substrate. In aqueous media, the lid switches from an open to a closed conformation while the reverse motion occurs in organic environment. In particular, the role of a subdomain facing the lid on B. cepacia lipase conformational rearrangements was investigated using position‐restrained MD simulations. Our conclusions indicate that the sole mobility of α9 helix side‐chains of B. cepacia lipase is required for the full completion of the lid conformational change which is essentially driven by α5 helix movement. The role of selected α5 hydrophobic residues on the lid movement was further examined. In silico mutations of two residues, V138 and F142, were shown to drastically modify the conformational behavior of B. cepacia lipase. Overall, our results provide valuable insight into the role played by the surrounding environment on the lid conformational rearrangement and the activation of B. cepacia lipase. Proteins 2009. © 2009 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

4.
Pig pancreatic carboxylester lipase (cholesterol esterase, E.C. 3.1.1.13) was inactivated at a tributyrin/water interface. The apparent rate constant for inactivation increased with increase in the particle surface area of the tributyrin emulsion. The large energy of activation and entropy change for inactivation (33.7 Kcal.mol-1 and 35.8 cal.mol-1.deg-1, using 5 mM sonicated tributyrin at 37 degrees C, respectively) suggest that the observed inactivation reflects denaturation of the enzyme at the tributyrin/water interface. Bile salts protected the enzyme from irreversible inactivation at the tributyrin/water interface. The protection by bile salts was related both to their concentration and to the tributyrin concentration (substrate surface area). The protection by bile salts was not related to their concentration below or above their critical micellar concentration; the binding of bile salts to enzyme was probably the dominant protection factor. Similar stabilization was observed with other detergents such as Brij-35, Triton X-100, and sodium dodecyl sulfate. These results suggest that inactivation of carboxylester lipase occurs at a high-energy lipid-water interface and that an important role of bile salts in vivo is to stabilize carboxylester lipase at interfaces.  相似文献   

5.
This study was done to better understand how lipases are activated at an interface. We investigated the conformational and solvation changes occurring during the adsorption of Humicola lanuginosa lipase (HLL) onto a hydrophobic surface using Fourier transform infrared-attenuated total reflection spectroscopy. The hydrophobic surfaces were obtained by coating silicon attenuated total reflection crystal with octadecyltrichlorosilane. Analysis of vibrational spectra was used to compare the conformation of HLL adsorbed at the aqueous-solid interface with its conformation in solution. X-ray crystallography has shown that HLL exists in two conformations, the closed and open forms. The conformational changes in HLL caused by adsorption onto the surface were compared with those occurring in three reference proteins, bovine serum albumin, lysozyme, and alpha-chymotrypsin. Adsorbed protein layers were prepared using proteins solutions of 0.005 to 0.5 mg/mL. The adsorptions of bovine serum albumin, lysozyme, and alpha-chymotrypsin to the hydrophobic support were accompanied by large unfoldings of ordered structures. In contrast, HLL underwent no secondary structure changes at first stage of adsorption, but there was a slight folding of beta-structures as the lipase monolayer became complete. Solvation studies using deuterated buffer showed an unusual hydrogen/deuterium exchange of the peptide CONH groups of the adsorbed HLL molecules. This exchange is consistent with the lipase being in the native open conformation at the water/hydrophobic interface.  相似文献   

6.
A special class of proteins adopts an inactive conformation in aqueous solution and activates at an interface (such as the surface of lipid droplet) by switching their conformations. Lipase, an essential enzyme for breaking down lipids, serves as a model system for studying such interfacial proteins. The underlying conformational switch of lipase induced by solvent condition is achieved through changing the status of the gated substrate‐access channel. Interestingly, a lipase was also reported to exhibit pressure activation, which indicates it is drastically active at high hydrostatic pressure. To unravel the molecular mechanism of this unusual phenomenon, we examined the structural changes induced by high hydrostatic pressures (up to 1500 MPa) using molecular dynamics simulations. By monitoring the width of the access channel, we found that the protein undergoes a conformational transition and opens the access channel at high pressures (>100 MPa). Particularly, a disordered amphiphilic α5 region of the protein becomes ordered at high pressure. This positive correlation between the channel opening and α5 ordering is consistent with the early findings of the gating motion in the presence of a water–oil interface. Statistical analysis of the ensemble of conformations also reveals the essential collective motions of the protein and how these motions contribute to gating. Arguments are presented as to why heightened sensitivity to high‐pressure perturbation can be a general feature of switchable interfacial proteins. Further mutations are also suggested to validate our observations. Proteins 2016; 84:820–827. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

7.
Hydrophilized and hydrophobized forms of the lipase from Mucor miehei were obtained by its chemical modification with cellobiose and N-hydroxysuccinimidyl palmitate with a modification degree of 4 in both cases. A comparative analysis of the regulation of the catalytic activities of the native and modified lipases was carried out in the system of reversed micelles of OT aerosol (AOT) in isooctane. The level of catalytic activity of all the lipase preparations in the micellar medium was found to be higher than that in aqueous solution. The chemical modification of lipase did not result in a change in the regulation of the oligomeric composition of the enzyme controlled by the degree of micelle hydration omega0 (micelle size). The kcat dependences on omega0 for each lipase preparation exhibit two maxima, corresponding to the functioning of lipase monomers and tetramers. The changes in the hydrophilic-lipophilic balance of the lipase surface significantly affect the character of the regulation of enzyme activity due to changes in the surfactant concentration (the number of micelles). The lipase hydrophobization results in a decrease in the enzyme activation effect with an increase in the AOT concentration in comparison with the native lipase. The lipase hydrophilization dramatically decreases the activity of lipase tetramer when the AOT concentration is increased. The catalytic activity of the monomer of hydrophilized lipase is practically independent of the AOT concentration. Kinetic data indicate a mixed type of activation of both oligomeric forms of the native and the hydrophobized lipase by AOT molecules and the noncompetitive type of the activation and AOT inhibition of the monomer and the tetramer of the hydrophilized lipase, respectively. The English version of the paper: Russian Journal of Bioorganic Chemistry, 2005, vol. 31, no. 6; see also http://www.maik.ru.  相似文献   

8.
In most lipases, a mobile lid covers the substrate binding site. In this closed structure, the lipase is assumed to be inactive. Upon activation of the lipase by contact with a hydrophobic solvent or at a hydrophobic interface, the lid opens. In its open structure, the substrate binding site is accessible and the lipase is active. The molecular mechanism of this interfacial activation was studied for three lipases (from Candida rugosa, Rhizomucor miehei, and Thermomyces lanuginosa) by multiple molecular dynamics simulations for 25 ns without applying restraints or external forces. As initial structures of the simulations, the closed and open structures of the lipases were used. Both the closed and the open structure were simulated in water and in an organic solvent, toluene. In simulations of the closed lipases in water, no conformational transition was observed. However, in three independent simulations of the closed lipases in toluene the lid gradually opened. Thus, pathways of the conformational transitions were investigated and possible kinetic bottlenecks were suggested. The open structures in toluene were stable, but in water the lid of all three lipases moved towards the closed structure and partially unfolded. Thus, in all three lipases opening and closing was driven by the solvent and independent of a bound substrate molecule.  相似文献   

9.
Hepatic triacylglycerol lipase (EC 3.1.1.3) hydrolyzes water-insoluble fatty acid esters, e.g., trioleoylglycerol (lipase activity) and water-soluble fatty acid esters, e.g., tributyrin (esterase activity). Esterase activity of hepatic triacylglycerol lipase is enhanced by triolein emulsion and phospholipid vesicles [1]. The catalytic mechanism and structure of human hepatic triacylglycerol lipase isolated from human post-heparin plasma and the effect of trypsin treatment on the lipase and esterase activities of the enzyme were examined. Treatment of hepatic triacylglycerol lipase with trypsin resulted in loss of its lipase activity, but had no effect on its esterase activity. Chromatography of hepatic triacylglycerol lipase on Bio-Gel A5m showed that hepatic triacylglycerol lipase binds to dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine vesicles. However, on chromatography of the trypsin-treated enzyme after incubation with dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine vesicles, a part of hepatic triacylglycerol lipase that retained esterase activity was eluted separately from the dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine vesicles. Addition of vesicles of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine to the trypsin-treated enzyme did not enhance its esterase activity. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that hepatic triacylglycerol lipase has a catalytic site that hydrolyzes tributyrin and a lipid interface recognition site, and that these sites are different: trypsin modified the lipid interface recognition site of the hepatic triacylglycerol lipase but not the catalytic site.  相似文献   

10.
The lipase-catalyzed exchange of the carboxyl oxygens of 13,16-cis,cis-docosadienoic acid (DA) was studied in the presence of a nonsubstrate matrix lipid, 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylcholine. For mixed lipid films at the argon-water interface exposed to pancreatic carboxylester lipase (EC 1.1.1.13), the extent of oxygen exchange showed an abrupt increase as the abundance of DA in the interface was increased from 0.5 to 0.6 mole fraction. This compositional range was independent of the level of enzyme used and of the surface pressure, i.e., lipid packing density, of the film. Concomitant with the transition was a change in the apparent mechanism of exchange from coupled to random sequential. Like the extent of oxygen exchanged, the shift in mechanism was independent of all variables except the lipid composition of the interface. The absence of any chemical or physical change accompanying the exchange reaction precludes mechanistic explanations based on the generation of reaction products by the enzyme. Instead, the results suggest that the lateral distribution of DA in phosphatidylcholine-DA interfaces regulates the expression of carboxylester lipase activity and its apparent mechanism. Preliminary measurements give an average cluster size of 1825 molecules of DA when its mole fraction is 0.35. As the DA content of the interface reaches 0.5-0.6, there appears to be a lipid head-group based percolative transition in which DA becomes the continuum. Because this transition involves the lateral organization of the lipids themselves, other interfacially active enzymes may be regulated similarly.  相似文献   

11.
Hydrophilized and hydrophobized forms of the lipase from Mucor miehei were obtained by its chemical modification with cellobiose and N-succinimidyl palmitate with a modification degree of 4 in both cases. A comparative analysis of the regulation of the catalytic activities of the native and modified lipases was carried out in the system of reversed micelles of OT aerosol (AOT) in isooctane. The level of catalytic activity of all the lipase preparations in the micellar medium was found to be higher than that in aqueous solution. The chemical modification of lipase did not result in a change in the regulation of the oligomeric composition of the enzyme controlled by the degree of micelle hydration Ω0 (micelle size). The k cat dependences on Ω0 for each lipase preparation exhibit two maxima, corresponding to the functioning of lipase monomers and tetramers. The changes in the hydrophilic-lipophilic balance of the lipase surface significantly affect the character of the regulation of enzyme activity due to changes in the surfactant concentration (the number of micelles). The lipase hydrophobization results in a decrease in the enzyme activation effect with an increase in the AOT concentration in comparison with the native lipase. The lipase hydrophilization dramatically decreases the activity of lipase tetramer when the AOT concentration is increased. The catalytic activity of the monomer of hydrophilized lipase is practically independent of the AOT concentration. Kinetic data indicate a mixed type of activation of both oligomeric forms of the native and the hydrophobized lipase by AOT molecules and the noncompetitive type of the activation and AOT inhibition of the monomer and the tetramer of the hydrophilized lipase, respectively.  相似文献   

12.
Syndecans are a family of four transmembrane heparan sulfate proteoglycans that act as coreceptors for a variety of cell-surface ligands and receptors. Receptor activation in several cell types leads to shedding of syndecan-1 and syndecan-4 ectodomains into the extracellular space by metalloproteinase-mediated cleavage of the syndecan core protein. We have found that 3T3-L1 adipocytes express syndecan-1 and syndecan-4 and that their ectodomains are shed in response to insulin in a dose-, time-, and metalloproteinase-dependent manner. Insulin responsive shedding is not seen in 3T3-L1 fibroblasts. This shedding involves both Ras-MAP kinase and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase pathways. In response to insulin, adipocytes are known to secrete active lipoprotein lipase, an enzyme that binds to heparan sulfate on the luminal surface of capillary endothelia. Lipoprotein lipase is transported as a stable enzyme from its site of synthesis to its site of action, but the transport mechanism is unknown. Our studies indicate that shed adipocyte syndecans associate with lipoprotein lipase. The shed syndecan ectodomain can stabilize active lipoprotein lipase. These data suggest that syndecan ectodomains, shed by adipocytes in response to insulin, are physiological extracellular chaperones for lipoprotein lipase as it translocates from its site of synthesis to its site of action.  相似文献   

13.
The mechanism of action of hepatic triacylglycerol lipase (EC 3.1.1.3) was examined by comparing the hydrolysis of a water-soluble substrate, tributyrin, with that of triolein by hepatic triacylglycerol lipase purified from human post-heparin plasma. The hydrolyzing activities toward tributyrin and triolein were coeluted from heparin-Sepharose at an NaCl concentration of 0.7 M. The maximal velocity of hepatic triacylglycerol lipase (Vmax) for tributyrin was 17.9 mumol/mg protein per h and the Michaelis constant (Km) value was 0.12 mM, whereas the Vmax for triolein was 76 mumol/mg per h and the Km value was 2.5 mM. The hydrolyses of tributyrin and triolein by hepatic triacylglycerol lipase were inhibited to similar extends by procainamide, NaF, Zn2+, Cu2+, Mn2+, SDS and sodium deoxycholate. Triolein hydrolysis was inhibited by the addition of tributyrin. Triolein hydrolysis was also inhibited by the addition of dipalmitoylphosphaidylcholine vesicles. In contrast, the additions of triolein emulsified with Triton X-100 and dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine vesicles enhanced the rate of tributyrin hydrolysis by hepatic triacylglycerol lipase. In the presence of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine, the Vmax and Km values of hepatic triacylglycerol lipase for tributyrin were 41 mumol/mg protein per h and 0.12 mM, respectively, indicating that the enhancement of hepatic triacylglycerol lipase activity for tributyrin by dipalmitoylphosphatidycholine vesicles was mainly due to increase in the Vmax. The enhancement of hepatic triacylglycerol lipase activity for tributyrin by phospholipid was not correlated with the amount of tributyrin associated with the phospholipid vesicles. On Bio-Gel A5m column chromatography, glycerol tri[1-14C]butyrate was not coeluted with triolein emulsion, and hepatic triacylglycerol lipase activity was associated with triolein emulsion even in the presence of 2 mM tributyrin. These results suggest that hepatic triacylglycerol lipase has a catalytic site for esterase activity and a separate site for lipid interface recognition, and that on binding to a lipid interface the conformation of the enzyme changes, resulting in enhancement of the esterase activity.  相似文献   

14.
Lipases (EC 3.1.1.3) are ubiquitous hydrolases for the carboxyl ester bond of water-insoluble substrates, such as triacylglycerols, phospholipids, and other insoluble substrates, acting in aqueous as well as in low-water media, thus being of considerable physiological significance with high interest also for their industrial applications. The hydrolysis reaction follows a two-step mechanism, or “interfacial activation,” with adsorption of the enzyme to a heterogeneous interface and subsequent enhancement of the lipolytic activity. Among lipases, Candida antarctica lipase B (CALB) has never shown any significant interfacial activation, and a closed conformation of CALB has never been reported, leading to the conclusion that its behavior was due to the absence of a lid regulating the access to the active site. The lid open and closed conformations and their protonation states are observed in the crystal structure of CALB at 0.91 Å resolution. Having the open and closed states at atomic resolution allows relating protonation to the conformation, indicating the role of Asp145 and Lys290 in the conformation alteration. The findings explain the lack of interfacial activation of CALB and offer new elements to elucidate this mechanism, with the consequent implications for the catalytic properties and classification of lipases.  相似文献   

15.
为获得不依赖油水界面激活的黑曲霉脂肪酶 (ANL) 突变体,在生物信息学分析基础上,对黑曲霉脂肪酶盖子结构域两侧铰链区的氨基酸残基进行了置换突变,获得两个黑曲霉脂肪酶突变体 (ANL-Ser84Gly和ANL-Asp99Pro)。对不同浓度对硝基苯丁酸酯的水解活性检测结果表明:ANL-Ser84Gly的催化活性仍依赖油水界面,而ANL-Asp99Pro的催化活性不再依赖油水界面。底物特异性检测结果表明:较ANL而言,ANL-Ser84Gly的比活力显著降低,其水解对硝基苯棕榈酸酯、对硝基苯豆蔻酸酯、对硝基  相似文献   

16.
Small unilamelar vesicles of anionic phospholipids (SUV), such as 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylglycero-sn-3-phosphoglycerol (POPG), provide an interface where Thermomyces lanuginosa triglyceride lipase (TlL) binds and adopts a catalytically active conformation for the hydrolysis of substrate partitioned in the interface, such as tributyrin or p-nitrophenylbutyrate, with an increase in catalytic rate of more than 100-fold for the same concentration of substrate [Berg et al. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 6615-6627.]. This interfacial activation is not seen with large unilamelar vesicles (LUV) of the same composition, or with vesicles of zwitterionic phospholipids such as 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylglycero-sn-3-phosphocholine (POPC), independently of the vesicle size. Tryptophan fluorescence experiments show that lipase binds to all those types of vesicles with similar affinity, but it adopts different forms that can be correlated with the enzyme catalytic activity. The spectral change on binding to anionic SUV corresponds to the catalytically active, or "open" form of the enzyme, and it is not modified in the presence of substrate partitioned in the vesicles, as demonstrated with inactive mutants. This indicates that the displacement of the lid characteristic of lipase interfacial activation is induced by the anionic phospholipid interface without blocking the accessibility of the active site to the substrate. Experiments with a mutant containing only Trp89 in the lid show that most of the spectral changes on binding to POPG-SUVs take place in the lid region that covers the active site; an increase in Trp anisotropy indicates that the lid becomes less flexible in the active form, and quenching experiments show that it is significantly buried from the aqueous phase. On the other hand, results with a mutant where Trp89 is changed to Leu show that the environment of the structural tryptophans in positions 117, 221, and 260 is somehow altered on binding, although their mobility and solvent accessibility remains the same as in the inactive form in solution. The form of TlL bound to POPC-SUV or -LUV vesicles as well as to LUV vesicles of POPG has the same spectral signatures and corresponds to an inactive or "closed" form of the enzyme. In these interfaces, the lid is highly flexible, and Trp89 remains accessible to solvent. Resonance energy transfer experiments show that the orientation of TlL in the interface is different in the active and inactive forms. A model of interaction consistent with these data and the available X-ray structures is proposed. This is a unique system where the composition and physical properties of the lipid interface control the enzyme activity.  相似文献   

17.
A monolayer reaction system employing tripropionin and siliconized glass beads was used to study the effects of taurodeoxycholate and colipase on the catalytic activity, interfacial stability, and interfacial affinity of porcine pancreatic lipase B (EC 3.1.1.3) The stability and catalytic activity of lipase at the bead-water interface are governed by the same two ionizable groups with pKa values (in the absence of cofactors) of 5.6 and 9.3. Colipase alone or with bile salt caused only a slight perturbation of these values. At low concentrations, 0 to 0.3mM, taurodeoxycholate increases the stability of lipase by 5-fold. At higher concentrations, 0.3 to 0.8 mM, but still below its critical micelle concentration, taurodeoxycholate prevents the adsorption of lipase to the bead-water interface. This appears to be the major mechanism by which this bile salt inhibits lipolysis. Colipase exerts small positive effects on lipase stability and catalytic activity. More importantly, colipase enables the adsorption of lipase in the presence of bile salt, thereby reversing the inhibition.  相似文献   

18.
Jung SK  Jeong DG  Lee MS  Lee JK  Kim HK  Ryu SE  Park BC  Kim JH  Kim SJ 《Proteins》2008,71(1):476-484
The M37 lipase from Photobacterium lipolyticum shows an extremely low activation energy and strong activity at low temperatures, with optimum activity seen at 298 K and more than 75% of the optimum activity retained down to 278 K. Though the M37 lipase is most closely related to the filamentous fungal lipase, Rhizomucor miehei lipase (RML) at the primary structure level, their activity characteristics are completely different. In an effort to identify structural components of cold adaptation in lipases, we determined the crystal structure of the M37 lipase at 2.2 A resolution and compared it to that of nonadapted RML. Structural analysis revealed that M37 lipase adopted a folding pattern similar to that observed for other lipase structures. However, comparison with RML revealed that the region beneath the lid of the M37 lipase included a significant and unique cavity that would be occupied by a lid helix upon substrate binding. In addition, the oxyanion hole was much wider in M37 lipase than RML. We propose that these distinct structural characteristics of M37 lipase may facilitate the lateral movement of the helical lid and subsequent substrate hydrolysis, which might explain its low activation energy and high activity at low temperatures.  相似文献   

19.
He XL  Dukkipati A  Wang X  Garcia KC 《Peptides》2005,26(6):1035-1043
The natriuretic peptide system of hormones and receptors poses an abundance of interesting biophysical questions regarding receptor structure, hormone recognition, and receptor activation. Functional and biochemical data have implicated a series of conformational changes as the mechanism by which NP receptor activation is achieved. We have explored the structural basis of hormone recognition by the NP clearance receptor, termed NPR-C. While NPR-C does not contain the classical guanylyl-cyclase activity in its intracellular domains, its extracellular domain is highly similar to the GC-coupled members of this family. The 1:2 stoichiometry of hormone binding to NPR-C is also used by NPR-A and -B to bind hormones. The structure of NPR-C in both quiescent and hormone-bound forms reveals the hormone intercalates within the interface of a receptor dimer, inducing a large-scale conformational change in the membrane proximal regions. This mechanism of hormone recognition will be conserved across the entire NPR family. The allosteric response of the NPR-C ectodomain to ligand binding is likely a glimpse of the general activation signal of these receptors, despite their differing downstream signaling cascades. In this review, we discuss our results on NPR-C and their relevance to the NPR family as a whole, as well as its place as a basic new paradigm for receptor activation.  相似文献   

20.
Pancreatic carboxylester lipase catalyzes the exchange of 18O between water and 13,16-cis,cis-doco-sadienoic acid (DA) in monolayers at the argon-buffer interface (Muderhwa, J.M., Schmid, P.C., and Brockman, H.L. (1992) Biochemistry 31, 141). In mixed monolayers of 18O, 18O-DA and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC), both the extent and mechanism of 18O exchange show characteristics of a critical transition in the range of 0.5-0.6 mol fraction of DA (Muderhwa, J.M., and Brockman, H. L. (1992) Biochemistry 31, 149). To determine if the regulatory behavior exhibited on this type of surface is limited to members of the carboxylester lipase gene family (cholinesterases), comparable experiments were performed with a genetically and functionally unrelated lipase, pancreatic colipase-dependent lipase (PL). PL readily catalyzed the exchange of 18O between water and the carboxyl group of DA with enzyme at either monolayer or catalytic levels in the fatty acid-buffer interface. The oxygen exchange reaction obeyed a random, sequential mechanism, indicating that the dissociation of the enzyme.DA complex is much faster than the rate-limiting step in the overall exchange process. Kinetic analysis of oxygen exchange in pure DA monolayers showed a first-order dependence on interfacial PL and DA concentrations from which kcat/Km values were calculated. The oxygen exchange reaction proceeded with a rate constant of 16 x 10(-2) cm2 pmol-1 s-1, a value comparable to that for hydrolysis of the ester substrate, 1,3-dioleoylglycerol. With a monolayer of PL adsorbed to the interfacial phase, kcat/Km for oxygen exchange was about 600-fold lower than the value obtained with catalytic levels of adsorbed enzyme, indicating a possible restriction of substrate diffusion in the protein-covered fatty acid monolayer. With constant bulk PL concentration and mixed lipid monolayers containing DA and the non-substrate lipid, POPC, the extent of oxygen exchange increased abruptly as the abundance of DA in the interface was increased from 0.5 to 0.6 mol fraction. Concomitant with this critical transition was a change in the apparent mechanism of oxygen exchange from coupled to random, sequential. For both the extent of oxygen exchange and its mechanism shift, the critical transition was independent of the lipid packing density, i.e. surface pressure, of the interface. These results show that PL responds similarly to carboxylester lipase with respect to changes in interfacial lipid mole fraction in DA-POPC surfaces.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

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