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1.
The serP1 and serP2 genes found adjacently on the chromosome of Lactococcus lactis strains encode two members of the amino acid-polyamine-organocation (APC) superfamily of secondary transporters that share 61% sequence identity. SerP1 transports l-serine, l-threonine, and l-cysteine with high affinity. Affinity constants (Km) are in the 20 to 40 μM range. SerP2 is a dl-alanine/dl-serine/glycine transporter. The preferred substrate appears to be dl-alanine for which the affinities were found to be 38 and 20 μM for the d and l isomers, respectively. The common substrate l-serine is a high-affinity substrate of SerP1 and a low-affinity substrate of SerP2 with affinity constants of 18 and 356 μM, respectively. Growth experiments demonstrate that SerP1 is the main l-serine transporter responsible for optimal growth in media containing free amino acids as the sole source of amino acids. SerP2 is able to replace SerP1 in this role only in medium lacking the high-affinity substrates l-alanine and glycine. SerP2 plays an adverse role for the cell by being solely responsible for the uptake of toxic d-serine. The main function of SerP2 is in cell wall biosynthesis through the uptake of d-alanine, an essential precursor in peptidoglycan synthesis. SerP2 has overlapping substrate specificity and shares 42% sequence identity with CycA of Escherichia coli, a transporter whose involvement in peptidoglycan synthesis is well established. No evidence was obtained for a role of SerP1 and SerP2 in the excretion of excess amino acids during growth of L. lactis on protein/peptide-rich media.  相似文献   

2.
Escherichia coli K-12 provided with glucose and a mixture of amino acids depletes l-serine more quickly than any other amino acid even in the presence of ammonium sulfate. A mutant without three 4Fe4S l-serine deaminases (SdaA, SdaB, and TdcG) of E. coli K-12 is unable to do this. The high level of l-serine that accumulates when such a mutant is exposed to amino acid mixtures starves the cells for C1 units and interferes with cell wall synthesis. We suggest that at high concentrations, l-serine decreases synthesis of UDP-N-acetylmuramate-l-alanine by the murC-encoded ligase, weakening the cell wall and producing misshapen cells and lysis. The inhibition by high l-serine is overcome in several ways: by a large concentration of l-alanine, by overproducing MurC together with a low concentration of l-alanine, and by overproducing FtsW, thus promoting septal assembly and also by overexpression of the glycine cleavage operon. S-Adenosylmethionine reduces lysis and allows an extensive increase in biomass without improving cell division. This suggests that E. coli has a metabolic trigger for cell division. Without that reaction, if no other inhibition occurs, other metabolic functions can continue and cells can elongate and replicate their DNA, reaching at least 180 times their usual length, but cannot divide.The Escherichia coli genome contains three genes, sdaA, sdaB, and tdcG, specifying three very similar 4Fe4S l-serine deaminases. These enzymes are very specific for l-serine for which they have unusually high Km values (3, 32). Expression of the three genes is regulated so that at least one of the gene products is synthesized under all common growth conditions (25). This suggests an important physiological role for the enzymes. However, why E. coli needs to deaminate l-serine has been a long-standing problem of E. coli physiology, the more so since it cannot use l-serine as the sole carbon source.We showed recently that an E. coli strain devoid of all three l-serine deaminases (l-SDs) loses control over its size, shape, and cell division when faced with complex amino acid mixtures containing l-serine (32). We attributed this to starvation for single-carbon (C1) units and/or S-adenosylmethionine (SAM). C1 units are usually made from serine via serine hydroxymethyl transferase (GlyA) or via glycine cleavage (GCV). The l-SD-deficient triple mutant strain is starved for C1 in the presence of amino acids, because externally provided glycine inhibits GlyA and a very high internal l-serine concentration along with several other amino acids inhibits glycine cleavage. While the parent cell can defend itself by reducing the l-serine level by deamination, this crucial reaction is missing in the ΔsdaA ΔsdaB ΔtdcG triple mutant. We therefore consider these to be “defensive” serine deaminases.The fact that an inability to deaminate l-serine leads to a high concentration of l-serine and inhibition of GlyA is not surprising. However, it is not obvious why a high level of l-serine inhibits cell division and causes swelling, lysis, and filamentation. Serine toxicity due to inhibition of biosynthesis of isoleucine (11) and aromatic amino acids (21) has been reported but is not relevant here, since these amino acids are provided in Casamino Acids.We show here that at high internal concentrations, l-serine also causes problems with peptidoglycan synthesis, thus weakening the cell wall. Peptidoglycan is a polymer of long glycan chains made up of alternating N-acetylglucosamine and N-acetylmuramic acid residues, cross-linked by l-alanyl-γ-d-glutamyl-meso-diaminopimelyl-d-alanine tetrapeptides (1, 28). The glucosamine and muramate residues and the pentapeptide (from which the tetrapeptide is derived) are all synthesized in the cytoplasm and then are exported to be polymerized into extracellular peptidoglycan (2).In this paper, we show that lysis is caused by l-serine interfering with the first step of synthesis of the cross-linking peptide, the addition of l-alanine to uridine diphosphate-N-acetylmuramate. This interference is probably due to a competition between serine and l-alanine for the ligase, MurC, which adds the first l-alanine to UDP-N-acetylmuramate (7, 10, 15). As described here, the weakening of the cell wall by l-serine can be overcome by a variety of methods that reduce the endogenous l-serine pool or counteract the effects of high levels of l-serine.  相似文献   

3.
Quinto G 《Applied microbiology》1966,14(6):1022-1026
Nutritional studies were performed on nine Bacteroides strains, by use of the methodology and media of anaerobic rumen microbiology. Ristella perfoetens CCI required l-arginine hydrochloride, l-tryptophan, l-leucine, l-histidine hydrochloride, l-cysteine hydrochloride, dl-valine, dl-tyrosine, and the vitamin calcium-d-pantothenate, since scant turbidity developed in media without these nutrients. R. perfoetens was stimulated by glycine, dl-lysine hydrochloride, dl-isoleucine, l-proline, l-glutamic acid, dl-alanine, dl-phenylalanine, dl-methionine, and the vitamins nicotinamide and p-aminobenzoic acid, since maximal turbidity developed more slowly in media without these nutrients than in complete medium. Medium A-23, which was devised for R. perfoetens, contained salts, 0.0002% nicotinamide and calcium d-pantothenate, 0.00001% p-aminobenzoic acid, 0.044% l-tryptophan, 0.09% l-glutamic acid, and 0.1% of the other 13 amino acids listed above. Zuberella clostridiformis and seven strains of R. pseudoinsolita did not require vitamins, and showed no absolute requirement for any one amino acid. Various strains produced maximal turbidity more slowly in media deficient in l-proline, glycine, l-glutamic acid, dl-serine, l-histidine hydrochloride, dl-alanine, or l-cysteine hydrochloride, than in complete medium. These eight strains grew optimally in medium A-23 plus 0.1% dl-serine but without vitamins.  相似文献   

4.
The biological sulphation of l-tyrosyl peptides   总被引:3,自引:3,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
1. A rat-liver supernatant preparation can achieve the biological O-sulphation of l-tyrosylglycine and l-tyrosyl-l-alanine at pH7·0. 2. The optimum concentrations of l-tyrosylglycine and l-tyrosyl-l-alanine in this system are 50mm and 60mm respectively. 3. l-Tyrosylglycine yields two sulphated products, whereas l-tyrosyl-l-alanine yields three sulphated products, when used as acceptor for sulphate in the rat-liver system. 4. With both substrates, one of the sulphated products has been identified as the O-sulphate ester of the corresponding parent peptide.  相似文献   

5.
1. The activities of l-serine dehydratase and l-serine–pyruvate aminotransferase were determined in rat liver during foetal and neonatal development. 2. l-Serine–pyruvate aminotransferase activity begins to develop in late-foetal liver, increases rapidly at birth to a peak during suckling and then decreases at weaning to the adult value. 3. l-Serine dehydratase activity is very low prenatally, but increases rapidly after birth to a transient peak. After a second transient peak around the time weaning begins, activity gradually rises to the adult value. Both of these peaks have similar isoenzyme compositions. 4. In foetal liver both l-serine dehydratase and l-serine–pyruvate aminotransferase activities are increased after injection in utero of glucagon or dibutyryl cyclic AMP. Cycloheximide or actinomycin D inhibited the prenatal induction of both enzymes and actinomycin D blocked the natural increase of l-serine dehydratase immediately after birth. Glucose or insulin administration also blocked the perinatal increase of l-serine dehydratase. 5. After the first perinatal peak of l-serine dehydratase, activity is increased by cortisol and this is inhibited by actinomycin D. After the second postnatal peak, activity is increased by amino acids or cortisol and this is insensitive to actinomycin D inhibition. Glucose administration blocks the cortisol-stimulated increase in l-serine dehydratase and also partially lowers the second postnatal peak of activity. 6. The developmental patterns of the enzymes are discussed in relation to the pathways of gluconeogenesis from l-serine. The regulation of enzyme activity by hormonal and dietary factors is discussed with reference to the changes in stimuli that occur during neonatal development and to their possible mechanisms of action.  相似文献   

6.
d-Serine is a physiological activator of NMDA receptors (NMDARs) in the nervous system that mediates several NMDAR-mediated processes ranging from normal neurotransmission to neurodegeneration. d-Serine is synthesized from l-serine by serine racemase (SR), a brain-enriched enzyme. However, little is known about the regulation of d-serine synthesis. We now demonstrate that the F-box only protein 22 (FBXO22) interacts with SR and is required for optimal d-serine synthesis in cells. Although FBXO22 is classically associated with the ubiquitin system and is recruited to the Skip1-Cul1-F-box E3 complex, SR interacts preferentially with free FBXO22 species. In vivo ubiquitination and SR half-life determination indicate that FBXO22 does not target SR to the proteasome system. FBXO22 primarily affects SR subcellular localization and seems to increase d-serine synthesis by preventing the association of SR to intracellular membranes. Our data highlight an atypical role of FBXO22 in enhancing d-serine synthesis that is unrelated to its classical effects as a component of the ubiquitin-proteasome degradation pathway.  相似文献   

7.
1. The route of l-threonine degradation was studied in four strains of the genus Pseudomonas able to grow on the amino acid and selected because of their high l-threonine aldolase activity. Growth and manometric results were consistent with the cleavage of l-threonine to acetaldehyde+glycine and their metabolism via acetate and serine respectively. 2. l-Threonine aldolases in these bacteria exhibited pH optima in the range 8.0–8.7 and Km values for the substrate of 5–10mm. Extracts exhibited comparable allo-l-threonine aldolase activities, Km values for this substrate being 14.5–38.5mm depending on the bacterium. Both activities were essentially constitutive. Similar activity ratios in extracts, independent of growth conditions, suggested a single enzyme. The isolate Pseudomonas D2 (N.C.I.B. 11097) represents the best source of the enzyme known. 3. Extracts of all the l-threonine-grown pseudomonads also possessed a CoA-independent aldehyde dehydrogenase, the synthesis of which was induced, and a reversible alcohol dehydrogenase. The high acetaldehyde reductase activity of most extracts possibly resulted in the underestimation of acetaldehyde dehydrogenase. 4. l-Serine dehydratase formation was induced by growth on l-threonine or acetate+glycine. Constitutively synthesized l-serine hydroxymethyltransferase was detected in extracts of Pseudomonas strains D2 and F10. The enzyme could not be detected in strains A1 and N3, probably because of a highly active `formaldehyde-utilizing' system. 5. Ion-exchange and molecular exclusion chromatography supported other evidence that l-threonine aldolase and allo-l-threonine aldolase activities were catalysed by the same enzyme but that l-serine hydroxymethyltransferase was distinct and different. These results contrast with the specificities of some analogous enzymes of mammalian origin.  相似文献   

8.
Previously, we successfully cloned a d-cycloserine (d-CS) biosynthetic gene cluster consisting of 10 open reading frames (designated dcsA to dcsJ) from d-CS-producing Streptomyces lavendulae ATCC 11924. In this study, we put four d-CS biosynthetic genes (dcsC, dcsD, dcsE, and dcsG) in tandem under the control of the T7 promoter in an Escherichia coli host. SDS-PAGE analysis demonstrated that the 4 gene products were simultaneously expressed in host cells. When l-serine and hydroxyurea (HU), the precursors of d-CS, were incubated together with the E. coli resting cell suspension, the cells produced significant amounts of d-CS (350 ± 20 μM). To increase the productivity of d-CS, the dcsJ gene, which might be responsible for the d-CS excretion, was connected downstream of the four genes. The E. coli resting cells harboring the five genes produced d-CS at 660 ± 31 μM. The dcsD gene product, DcsD, forms O-ureido-l-serine from O-acetyl-l-serine (OAS) and HU, which are intermediates in d-CS biosynthesis. DcsD also catalyzes the formation of l-cysteine from OAS and H2S. To repress the side catalytic activity of DcsD, the E. coli chromosomal cysJ and cysK genes, encoding the sulfite reductase α subunit and OAS sulfhydrylase, respectively, were disrupted. When resting cells of the double-knockout mutant harboring the four d-CS biosynthetic genes, together with dcsJ, were incubated with l-serine and HU, the d-CS production was 980 ± 57 μM, which is comparable to that of d-CS-producing S. lavendulae ATCC 11924 (930 ± 36 μM).  相似文献   

9.
Neurofibrillary tangles (NFT) and β-amyloid plaques are the neurological hallmarks of both Alzheimer''s disease and an unusual paralytic illness suffered by Chamorro villagers on the Pacific island of Guam. Many Chamorros with the disease suffer dementia, and in some villages one-quarter of the adults perished from the disease. Like Alzheimer''s, the causal factors of Guamanian amyotrophic lateral sclerosis/parkinsonism dementia complex (ALS/PDC) are poorly understood. In replicated experiments, we found that chronic dietary exposure to a cyanobacterial toxin present in the traditional Chamorro diet, β-N-methylamino-l-alanine (BMAA), triggers the formation of both NFT and β-amyloid deposits similar in structure and density to those found in brain tissues of Chamorros who died with ALS/PDC. Vervets (Chlorocebus sabaeus) fed for 140 days with BMAA-dosed fruit developed NFT and sparse β-amyloid deposits in the brain. Co-administration of the dietary amino acid l-serine with l-BMAA significantly reduced the density of NFT. These findings indicate that while chronic exposure to the environmental toxin BMAA can trigger neurodegeneration in vulnerable individuals, increasing the amount of l-serine in the diet can reduce the risk.  相似文献   

10.
The regulatory gene aldR was identified 95 bp upstream of the ald gene encoding l-alanine dehydrogenase in Mycobacterium smegmatis. The AldR protein shows sequence similarity to the regulatory proteins of the Lrp/AsnC family. Using an aldR deletion mutant, we demonstrated that AldR serves as both activator and repressor for the regulation of ald gene expression, depending on the presence or absence of l-alanine. The purified AldR protein exists as a homodimer in the absence of l-alanine, while it adopts the quaternary structure of a homohexamer in the presence of l-alanine. The binding affinity of AldR for the ald control region was shown to be increased significantly by l-alanine. Two AldR binding sites (O1 and O2) with the consensus sequence GA-N2-ATC-N2-TC and one putative AldR binding site with the sequence GA-N2-GTT-N2-TC were identified upstream of the ald gene. Alanine and cysteine were demonstrated to be the effector molecules directly involved in the induction of ald expression. The cellular level of l-alanine was shown to be increased in M. smegmatis cells grown under hypoxic conditions, and the hypoxic induction of ald expression appears to be mediated by AldR, which senses the intracellular level of alanine.  相似文献   

11.
The analysis of the urine contents can be informative of physiological homoeostasis, and it has been speculated that the levels of urinary d-serine (d-ser) could inform about neurological and renal disorders. By analysing the levels of urinary d-ser using a d-ser dehydratase (DSD) enzyme, Ito et al. (Biosci. Rep.(2021) 41, BSR20210260) have described abundant levels of l-erythro-β-hydroxyasparagine (l-β-EHAsn), a non-proteogenic amino acid which is also a newly described substrate for DSD. The data presented support the endogenous production l-β-EHAsn, with its concentration significantly correlating with the concentration of creatinine in urine. Taken together, these results could raise speculations that l-β-EHAsn might have unexplored important biological roles. It has been demonstrated that l-β-EHAsn also inhibits serine racemase with Ki values (40 μM) similar to its concentration in urine (50 μM). Given that serine racemase is the enzyme involved in the synthesis of d-ser, and l-β-EHAsn is also a substrate for DSD, further investigations could verify if this amino acid would be involved in the metabolic regulation of pathways involving d-ser.  相似文献   

12.
The effect of 0.5 millimolar O-acetyl-l-serine added to the nutrient solution on sulfate assimilation of Lemna minor L., cultivated in the light or in the dark, or transferred from light to the dark, was examined. During 24 hours after transfer from light to the dark the extractable activity of adenosine 5′-phosphosulfate sulfotransferase, a key enzyme of sulfate assimilation, decreased to 10% of the light control. Nitrate reductase (EC 1.7.7.1.) activity, measured for comparison, decreased to 40%. Adenosine 5′-triphosphate (ATP) sulfurylase (EC 2.7.7.4.) and O-acetyl-l-serine sulfhydrylase (EC 4.2.99.8.) activities were not affected by the transfer. When O-acetyl-l-serine was added to the nutrient solution at the time of transfer to the dark, adenosine 5′-phosphosulfate sulfotransferase activity was still at 50% of the light control after 24 hours, ATP sulfurylase and O-acetyl-l-serine sulfhydrylase activity were again not affected, and nitrate reductase activity decreased as before. Addition of O-acetyl-l-serine at the time of the transfer caused a 100% increase in acid-soluble SH compounds after 24 hours in the dark. In continuous light the corresponding increase was 200%. During 24 hours after transfer to the dark the assimilation of 35SO42− into organic compounds decreased by 80% without O-acetyl-l-serine but was comparable to light controls in its presence. The addition of O-acetyl-l-serine to Lemna minor precultivated in the dark for 24 hours induced an increase in adenosine 5′-phosphosulfate sulfotransferase activity so that a constant level of 50% of the light control was reached after an additional 9 hours. Cycloheximide as well as 6-methyl-purine inhibited this effect. In the same type of experiment O-acetyl-l-serine induced a 100-fold increase in the incorporation of label from 35SO42− into cysteine after additional 24 hours in the dark. Taken together, these results show that exogenous O-acetyl-l-serine has a regulatory effect on assimilatory sulfate reduction of L. minor in light and darkness. They are in agreement with the idea that this compound is a limiting factor for sulfate assimilation and seem to be in contrast to the proposed strict light control of sulfate assimilation.  相似文献   

13.
Properties of an Aminotransferase of Pea (Pisum sativum L.)   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0  
A transaminase (aminotransferase, EC 2.6.1) fraction was partially purified from shoot tips of pea (Pisum sativum L. cv. Alaska) seedlings. With α-ketoglutarate as co-substrate, the enzyme transaminated the following aromatic amino acids: d,l-tryptophan, d,l-tyrosine, and d,l-phenylalanine, as well as the following aliphatic amino acids: d,l-alanine, d,l-methionine, and d,l-leucine. Of other α-keto acids tested, pyruvate and oxalacetate were more active than α-ketoglutarate with d,l-tryptophan. Stoichiometric yields of indolepyruvate and glutamate were obtained with d,l-tryptophan and α-ketoglutarate as co-substrates. The specific activity was three times higher with d-tryptophan than with l-tryptophan.  相似文献   

14.
Amino acid uptake in fungi is mediated by general and specialized members of the yeast amino acid transporter (YAT) family, a branch of the amino acid polyamine organocation (APC) transporter superfamily. PrnB, a highly specific l-proline transporter, only weakly recognizes other Put4p substrates, its Saccharomyces cerevisiae orthologue. Taking advantage of the high sequence similarity between the two transporters, we combined molecular modeling, induced fit docking, genetic, and biochemical approaches to investigate the molecular basis of this difference and identify residues governing substrate binding and specificity. We demonstrate that l-proline is recognized by PrnB via interactions with residues within TMS1 (Gly56, Thr57), TMS3 (Glu138), and TMS6 (Phe248), which are evolutionary conserved in YATs, whereas specificity is achieved by subtle amino acid substitutions in variable residues. Put4p-mimicking substitutions in TMS3 (S130C), TMS6 (F252L, S253G), TMS8 (W351F), and TMS10 (T414S) broadened the specificity of PrnB, enabling it to recognize more efficiently l-alanine, l-azetidine-2-carboxylic acid, and glycine without significantly affecting the apparent Km for l-proline. S253G and W351F could transport l-alanine, whereas T414S, despite displaying reduced proline uptake, could transport l-alanine and glycine, a phenotype suppressed by the S130C mutation. A combination of all five Put4p-ressembling substitutions resulted in a functional allele that could also transport l-alanine and glycine, displaying a specificity profile impressively similar to that of Put4p. Our results support a model where residues in these positions determine specificity by interacting with the substrates, acting as gating elements, altering the flexibility of the substrate binding core, or affecting conformational changes of the transport cycle.  相似文献   

15.
Shin S  Moore TS 《Plant physiology》1990,93(1):154-159
A base exchange reaction for synthesis of phosphatidylethanolamine by the endoplasmic reticulum of castor bean (Ricinus comminus L. var Hale) endosperm has been examined. The calculated Michaelis-Menten constant of the enzyme for ethanolamine was 5 micromolar and the optimal pH was 7.8 in the presence of 2 millimolar CaCl2. l-Serine, N-methylethanolamine and N,N-dimethylethanolamine all reduced ethanolamine incorporation, while d-serine and myo-inositol had little effect. These inhibitions of ethanolamine incorporation were found to be noncompetitive and ethanolamine also noncompetitively inhibited l-serine incorporation by exchange. The activity of the ethanolamine base exchange enzyme was affected by several detergents, with the best activity being obtained with the zwitterionic defjtergent 3-3-cholamidopropyl) dimethylammonio-2-hydroxyl-1-propanesulfonate.  相似文献   

16.
Serine palmitoyltransferase (SPT) catalyzes the condensation of l-serine and palmitoyl-CoA, which is the rate-limiting step in the de novo synthesis of sphingolipids. SPT activity is commonly measured by monitoring the incorporation of radiolabeled l-serine into 3-ketodihydrosphingosine. In this article, we introduce several adaptations of the established protocol to improve sensitivity, reproducibility, and practicability of the assay. A significant improvement of this new protocol is the possibility to measure SPT activity in total cell lysate instead of microsomes. The assay is furthermore extended by the introduction of a nonradioactive, HPLC-based detection protocol. The suggested HPLC method offers several advantages, most importantly, a 20-fold lower detection limit compared with the radioactive assay and the possibility to use an internal standard to correct for variation in the extraction.  相似文献   

17.
The direct fermentative production of l-serine by Corynebacterium glutamicum from sugars is attractive. However, superfluous by-product accumulation and low l-serine productivity limit its industrial production on large scale. This study aimed to investigate metabolic and bioprocess engineering strategies towards eliminating by-products as well as increasing l-serine productivity. Deletion of alaT and avtA encoding the transaminases and introduction of an attenuated mutant of acetohydroxyacid synthase (AHAS) increased both l-serine production level (26.23 g/L) and its productivity (0.27 g/L/h). Compared to the parent strain, the by-products l-alanine and l-valine accumulation in the resulting strain were reduced by 87 % (from 9.80 to 1.23 g/L) and 60 % (from 6.54 to 2.63 g/L), respectively. The modification decreased the metabolic flow towards the branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs) and induced to shift it towards l-serine production. Meanwhile, it was found that corn steep liquor (CSL) could stimulate cell growth and increase sucrose consumption rate as well as l-serine productivity. With addition of 2 g/L CSL, the resulting strain showed a significant improvement in the sucrose consumption rate (72 %) and the l-serine productivity (67 %). In fed-batch fermentation, 42.62 g/L of l-serine accumulation was achieved with a productivity of 0.44 g/L/h and yield of 0.21 g/g sucrose, which was the highest production of l-serine from sugars to date. The results demonstrated that combined metabolic and bioprocess engineering strategies could minimize by-product accumulation and improve l-serine productivity.  相似文献   

18.
Mazelis M  Liu ES 《Plant physiology》1967,42(12):1763-1768
Serine transhydroxymethylase (EC 2.1.2.1) has been purified 46-fold from cauliflower (Brassica oleracea var. botrytis L.). The enzyme was completely dependent on the presence of tetrahydrofolic acid for the conversion of serine to glycine. The addition of pyridoxal phosphate gave a large increase in the reaction rate. A double pH optimum was observed with maxima at 7.5 and 9.5. The enzyme is specific for l-serine. The d-isomer is neither a substrate nor an inhibitor. The Michaelis constants for l-serine, tetrahydrofolic acid, and pyridoxal phosphate were 300 μm, 760 μm, and 24 μm, respectively. The addition of K+ also stimulated the reaction rate considerably. The effect was quite specific since all other metal ions tested either had very little: influence or were extremely inhibitory.  相似文献   

19.
5-Aminolevulinate (ALA), an essential metabolite in all heme-synthesizing organisms, results from the pyridoxal 5′-phosphate (PLP)-dependent enzymatic condensation of glycine with succinyl-CoA in non-plant eukaryotes and α-proteobacteria. The predicted chemical mechanism of this ALA synthase (ALAS)-catalyzed reaction includes a short-lived glycine quinonoid intermediate and an unstable 2-amino-3-ketoadipate intermediate. Using liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry to analyze the products from the reaction of murine erythroid ALAS (mALAS2) with O-methylglycine and succinyl-CoA, we directly identified the chemical nature of the inherently unstable 2-amino-3-ketoadipate intermediate, which predicates the glycine quinonoid species as its precursor. With stopped-flow absorption spectroscopy, we detected and confirmed the formation of the quinonoid intermediate upon reacting glycine with ALAS. Significantly, in the absence of the succinyl-CoA substrate, the external aldimine predominates over the glycine quinonoid intermediate. When instead of glycine, l-serine was reacted with ALAS, a lag phase was observed in the progress curve for the l-serine external aldimine formation, indicating a hysteretic behavior in ALAS. Hysteresis was not detected in the T148A-catalyzed l-serine external aldimine formation. These results with T148A, a mALAS2 variant, which, in contrast to wild-type mALAS2, is active with l-serine, suggest that active site Thr-148 modulates ALAS strict amino acid substrate specificity. The rate of ALA release is also controlled by a hysteretic kinetic mechanism (observed as a lag in the ALA external aldimine formation progress curve), consistent with conformational changes governing the dissociation of ALA from ALAS.  相似文献   

20.
d-Serine is an endogenous coagonist for the N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor and is involved in excitatory neurotransmission in the brain. Mammalian pyridoxal 5′-phosphate-dependent serine racemase, which is localized in the mammalian brain, catalyzes the racemization of l-serine to yield d-serine and vice versa. The enzyme also catalyzes the dehydration of d- and l-serine. Both reactions are enhanced by Mg·ATP in vivo. We have determined the structures of the following three forms of the mammalian enzyme homolog from Schizosaccharomyces pombe: the wild-type enzyme, the wild-type enzyme in the complex with an ATP analog, and the modified enzyme in the complex with serine at 1.7, 1.9, and 2.2 Å resolution, respectively. On binding of the substrate, the small domain rotates toward the large domain to close the active site. The ATP binding site was identified at the domain and the subunit interface. Computer graphics models of the wild-type enzyme complexed with l-serine and d-serine provided an insight into the catalytic mechanisms of both reactions. Lys-57 and Ser-82 located on the protein and solvent sides, respectively, with respect to the cofactor plane, are acid-base catalysts that shuttle protons to the substrate. The modified enzyme, which has a unique “lysino-d-alanyl” residue at the active site, also exhibits catalytic activities. The crystal-soaking experiment showed that the substrate serine was actually trapped in the active site of the modified enzyme, suggesting that the lysino-d-alanyl residue acts as a catalytic base in the same manner as inherent Lys-57 of the wild-type enzyme.d-Serine, which is present at a high level in the mammalian brain, serves as an endogenous coagonist for the N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA)5 receptor selectively localized on the postsynaptic membrane of the excitatory synapse (15) and is involved in excitatory neurotransmission and higher brain functions such as learning and memory (3, 6, 7). Stimulation of the NMDA receptor requires the binding of d-serine as well as the agonist l-glutamate. The major enzyme for d-serine synthesis from l-serine in the brain is considered to be pyridoxal 5′-phosphate (PLP)-dependent serine racemase (SR) (810). d-Serine and SR are localized on protoplasmic astrocytes that have the α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionic acid receptor. Glutamate released from presynaptic neurons approaches and activates the α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionic acid receptor, which in turn induces SR to produce d-serine and is followed by d-serine release from astrocytes that act on the NMDA receptor. Recently, it was shown that not only glia but also neurons synthesize and release d-serine involved in signaling (11). SR also catalyzes α,β-elimination of water from d- or l-serine to form pyruvate and ammonia as well as the conversion of l-serine into d-serine and vice versa and is presumed to link d-serine synthesis and energy metabolism of astrocytes (12) and to control the d-serine level (13). Mg·ATP, which is fully bound to SR under physiological conditions, stimulates racemization and the α,β-elimination reaction catalyzed by SR (12, 14).SR was first discovered in pupae of the silkworm Bombyx mori (15), which was followed by purification of the enzyme from a rat brain and cloning of the mouse and human genes (8, 9). The primary structure of mammalian SR is distinct from those of racemases from prokaryotes but is similar to those of fold-type II PLP-dependent enzymes (1618). We have cloned and expressed the Schizosaccharomyces pombe gene homologous to human and mouse SRs, the sequence identities being 35.1 and 37.4%, respectively, in Escherichia coli. The protein product is a bifunctional enzyme that catalyzes racemization and the α,β-elimination reaction of D, l-serine as mammalian SR does. SR from S. pombe (spSR) comprises 322 residues (the N-terminal Met is removed in the purified enzyme) and one PLP per subunit, the subunit molecular weight being 34,917. The mammalian SR homolog, spSR, is an interesting target enzyme for the development of a novel therapeutic compound controlling the d-serine level because d-serine is the product of an SR-catalyzed reaction. In our recent report, the active site of spSR was shown to be modified with its natural substrate serine by mass spectroscopic and x-ray studies (19). Interestingly, the catalytic lysine, which originally forms a Schiff base with PLP, is converted to a lysino-d-alanyl residue through the reaction with the substrate, serine (Fig. 1). The modified enzyme exhibits racemase (54% of the wild-type enzyme) and α,β-elimination (68% of the wild-type enzyme) activities with the amino group of the d-alanyl moiety of the lysinoalanyl residue forming a Schiff base with PLP in place of the lysine (19). In addition, the mammalian SR seems to be possibly modified to have a lysinoalanyl residue at the active site, as observed in spSR (20).Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.Covalent modification of the active site. The catalytic Lys-57 in spSRw is converted to lysino-d-alanyl residue. The α-amino group (indicated with “α”) of the d-alanyl moiety in the residue acts as a catalytic base in spSRm. The circled P is a phosphate group.Although the structure of modified spSR (spSRm) has been determined (19), the structure-function relationship of essential wild-type spSR (spSRw), the binding mode of activator Mg·ATP, the catalytic base to shuttle protons to the substrate d-serine, and the substrate recognition of the modified enzyme have not yet been uncovered. We now report the three-dimensional structures of unliganded spSRw in the open form, spSRw·AMP-PCP in the open form, and spSRm·serine in the closed form.  相似文献   

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