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1.
P J Tonge  P R Carey 《Biochemistry》1989,28(16):6701-6709
By use of resonance Raman (RR) spectroscopy, the population of the reactive carbonyl group in active acylchymotrypsins has been characterized and correlated with acyl-enzyme reactivity. RR spectra have been obtained, with a flow system and 324- and 337.5-nm excitation, at low and active pH for six acylchymotrypsins, viz., (indoleacryloyl)-, (4-amino-3-nitrocinnamoyl)-, (furylacryloyl)-, [( 5-ethylfuryl)-acryloyl]-, (thienylacryloyl)-, and [( 5-methylthienyl)acryloyl]chymotrypsin. These acyl-enzymes represent a 100-fold range of deacylation rate constants. Good RR spectral quality has enabled us to obtain the vibrational spectrum of the carbonyl group at low and active pH in each acyl-enzyme. The measured pKa of the spectroscopic changes in the carbonyl region is identical with that for the deacylation kinetics, showing that the RR carbonyl features reflect the ionization state of His-57. A carbonyl population has been observed in the active acyl-enzymes in which the carbonyl oxygen atom of the reactive acyl linkage is hydrogen-bonded in the active site. The proportion of this hydrogen-bonded population, with respect to other observed non-hydrogen-bonded species, together with the degree of polarization of the carbonyl bond, as monitored by vC = 0, has been correlated with the deacylation rate constants of the acyl-enzymes. It is proposed that the hydrogen-bonded carbonyl species is located at or near the oxyanion hole and represents the ground state from which deacylation occurs. An increase in the proportion of the hydrogen-bonded population and an increase in polarization of the carbonyl bond result in an increase in deacylation rate constant.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
P J Tonge  P R Carey 《Biochemistry》1992,31(38):9122-9125
Comparison of spectroscopic, kinetic, and thermodynamic data for a series of functioning acylserine proteases suggests that the observed variation in deacylation rates can be accounted for by changes in the properties of the acyl-enzyme's ground state. The acyl-enzyme's catalytically crucial acyl carbonyl group is probed by resonance Raman spectroscopy. Its spectral frequency is used to gauge both the carbonyl bond length and the strength of hydrogen bonding (originating from groups making up the oxyanion hole) to the carbonyl oxygen atom. As the deacylation rate increases 16,300-fold through the series, a shift in carbonyl frequency, vC = O, of -54 cm-1 corresponds to a carbonyl bond length increase of 0.025 A. The decrease in vC = O is also consistent with an increase in hydrogen bond donor enthalpy of -27 kJ mol-1. Interestingly, this value resembles closely the decrease in activation energy for deacylation through the series, 24 kJ mol-1, demonstrating that the hydrogen bonds to the carbonyl oxygen atom can provide sufficient energy to account for the observed rate accelerations.  相似文献   

3.
Stabilization of an oxyanion transition state is important to catalysis of peptide bond hydrolysis in all proteases. For subtilisin BPN', a bacterial serine protease, structural data suggest that two hydrogen bonds stabilize the tetrahedral-like oxyanion intermediate: one from the main chain NH of Ser221 and another from the side chain NH2 of Asn155. Molecular dynamic studies (Rao, S., N., Singh, U., C. Bush, P. A., and Kollman, P. A. (1987) Nature 328, 551-554) have indicated the gamma-hydroxyl of Thr220 may be a third hydrogen bond donor even though it is 4A away in the static x-ray structure. We have probed the role of Thr220 by replacing it with serine, cysteine, valine, or alanine by site-directed mutagenesis. These substitutions were intended to alter the size and hydrogen bonding ability of residue 220. Removal of the gamma-hydroxyl group reduced the transition state stabilization energy (delta delta GT) by 1.8-2.1 kcal/mol depending upon the substitution. By comparison, removal of the gamma-methyl group in the Thr220 to serine mutation only decreased delta GT by 0.5 kcal/mol. The gamma-hydroxyl of Thr220 is most important for catalysis, not substrate binding, because virtually all of the effects were on kcat and not KM. The role of the Thr220 hydroxyl is functionally independent from the amide NH2 of Asn155 because the free energy effects of double alanine mutants at these two positions are additive. These data indicate that a distal hydrogen bond donor, namely the hydroxyl of Thr220, plays a functionally important role in stabilizing the oxyanion transition state in subtilisin which is independent of Asn155.  相似文献   

4.
We have studied the structures of adducts formed between subtilisin BPN' and both benzeneboronic acid and 2-phenylethaneboronic acid by x-ray diffraction techniques. Electron density and difference maps at 2.5 A resolution were computed with phases calculated from a partially refined structure of the native enzyme (R = 0.23 at 2.0 A). Both adducts contain a covalent bond between Ogamma of the catalytic Ser-221 and the inhibitor boron atom. The boron atom is coordinated tetrahedrally, with one of the two additional boronic acid oxygen atoms lying in the "oxyanion hole" and the other at the leaving group site identified in previous studies (ROBERTUS, J.D., Kraut, J. ALDEN, R.A., and BIRKTOFT, J.J. (1972) Biochemistry 11, 4293-4303). Moreover, the previously postulated structure of the tetrahedral intermediate for substrate hydrolysis is isosteric with these boronic acid adducts, which can therefore be considered good models for the transition state complex (KOEHLER, K.K., and LIENHARD, G.E. (1972) Biochemistry 10, 2477-2483). These observations further support the suggestion that an important contribution to stabilization of this transition state complex, relative to both the Michaelis complex and the acyl intermediate, occurs as a consequence of hydrogen bond donation to the substrate carbonyl oxygen atom from the side chain amido group of Asn-155 and from the backbone amido group of Ser-221.  相似文献   

5.
The crystal structure of subtilisin BPN' complexed with a proteinaceous inhibitor SSI (Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor) was refined at 1.8 A resolution to an R-factor of 0.177 with a root-mean-square deviation from ideal bond lengths of 0.014 A. The work finally established that the SSI-subtilisin complex is a Michaelis complex with a distance between the O gamma of active Ser221 and the carbonyl carbon of the scissile peptide bond being an intermediate value between a covalent bond and a van der Waals' contact, 2.7 A. This feature, as well as the geometry of the catalytic triad and the oxyanion hole, is coincident with that found in other highly refined crystal structures of the complex of subtilisin Novo, subtilisin Carlsberg, bovine trypsin or Streptomyces griseus protease B with their proteinaceous inhibitors. The enzyme-inhibitor beta-sheet interaction is composed of two separate parts: that between the P1-P3 residues of SSI and the 125-127 chain segment (the "S1-3 site") of subtilisin and that between the P4-P6 residues of SSI and th 102-104 chain segment (the "S4-6 site") of subtilisin. The latter beta-interaction is unique to subtilisin. In contrast, the beta-sheet interaction previously found in the complex of subtilisin Novo and chymotrypsin inhibitor 2 or in the complex of subtilisin Carlsberg and Eglin C is distinct from the present complex in that the two types of beta-interactions are not separate. As for the flexibility of the molecules comprising the present complex, the following observations were made by comparing the B-factors for free and complexed SSI and comparing those for free and complexed subtilisin BPN'. The rigidification of the component molecules upon complex formation occurs in a very localized region: in SSI, the "primary" and "secondary" contact regions and the flanking region; in subtilisin BPN', the S1-3 and S4-6 sites and the flanking region.  相似文献   

6.
I.r. difference spectra are presented for 3-(indol-3-yl)acryloyl-, cinnamoyl-, 3-(5-methylthien-2-yl)acryloyl-, dehydrocinnamoyl- and dihydrocinnamoyl-chymotrypsins at low pH, where the acyl-enzymes are catalytically inactive. At least two absorption bands are seen in each case in the ester carbonyl stretching region of the spectrum. Cinnamoyl-chymotrypsin substituted at the carbonyl carbon atom with 13C was prepared. A difference spectrum in which 13C-substituted acyl-enzyme was subtracted from [12C]acyl-enzyme shows two bands in the ester carbonyl region and thus confirms the assignment of the features to the single ester carbonyl group. The frequencies of the ester carbonyl bands are interpreted in terms of differential hydrogen-bonding. In each case a lower-frequency relatively narrow band is assigned to a productive potentially reactive binding mode in which the carbonyl oxygen atom is inserted in the oxyanion hole of the enzyme active centre. The higher-frequency band, which is broader, is assigned to a non-productive binding mode in each case, where a water molecule bridges from the carbonyl oxygen atom to His-57; this mode is equivalent to the crystallographically determined structure of 3-(indol-3-yl)acryloyl-chymotrypsin, i.e. the Henderson structure. A difference spectrum of dihydrocinnamoyl-chymotrypsin taken at higher pH shows resolution of a feature centred upon 1731 cm-1, which is assigned to a non-bonded conformer in which the carbonyl oxygen atom is not hydrogen-bonded. Perturbation of the protein spectrum in the presence of acyl groups is interpreted in terms of enhanced structural rigidity. It is reported that the ester carbonyl region of the difference spectrum of cinnamoyl-subtilisin is complicated by overlap of features that arise from protein perturbation. Measurements of carbonyl absorption frequencies in a number of solvents of the methyl esters of the acyl groups used to make acyl-enzymes have permitted determination of the apparent dielectric constants experienced by carbonyl groups in the enzyme active centre as well as a discussion of the effects of polarity. The ester carbonyl bond strengths of the various conformations were estimated by using simple harmonic oscillator theory and an empirical relation between the force constants and bond strengths. The fractional bond breaking induced by hydrogen-bonding was used to calculate rate enhancement factors by using absolute reaction rate theory.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
Crystallographic studies of the complex between beta-lactamase and clavulanate reveal a structure of two acyl-enzymes with covalent bonds at the active site Ser70, representing two different stages of inhibitor degradation alternately occupying the active site. Models that are consistent with biochemical data are derived from the electron density map and refined at 2.2 A resolution: cis enamine, in which the carboxylate group of the clavulanate molecule makes a salt bridge with Lys234 of beta-lactamase; decarboxylated trans enamine, which is oriented away from Lys234. For both acyl-enzymes, the carbonyl oxygen atom of the ester group occupies the oxyanion hole in a manner similar to that found in inhibitor binding to serine proteases. Whereas the oxygen atom in the trans product is optimally positioned in the oxyanion hole, that of the cis product clashes with the main-chain nitrogen atom of Ser70 and the beta-carbon atom of the adjacent Ala69. In contrast to cis to trans isomerization in solution that relieves the steric strain inherent in a cis double bond, at the enzyme-inhibitor interface two additional factors play an important role. The salt bridge enhances the stability of the cis product, while the steric strain introduced by the short contacts with the protein reduces its stability.  相似文献   

8.
Gao D  Zhan CG 《Proteins》2006,62(1):99-110
Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations and quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical (QM/MM) calculations were performed on the prereactive enzyme-substrate complex, transition states, intermediates, and product involved in the process of human butyrylcholinesterase (BChE)-catalyzed hydrolysis of (-)-cocaine. The computational results consistently reveal a unique role of the oxyanion hole (consisting of G116, G117, and A199) in BChE-catalyzed hydrolysis of cocaine, compared to acetylcholinesterase (AChE)-catalyzed hydrolysis of acetylcholine. During BChE-catalyzed hydrolysis of cocaine, only G117 has a hydrogen bond with the carbonyl oxygen (O31) of the cocaine benzoyl ester in the prereactive BChE-cocaine complex, and the NH groups of G117 and A199 are hydrogen-bonded with O31 of cocaine in all of the transition states and intermediates. Surprisingly, the NH hydrogen of G116 forms an unexpected hydrogen bond with the carboxyl group of E197 side chain and, therefore, is not available to form a hydrogen bond with O31 of cocaine in the acylation. The NH hydrogen of G116 is only partially available to form a weak hydrogen bond with O31 of cocaine in some structures involved in the deacylation. The change of the estimated hydrogen-bonding energy between the oxyanion hole and O31 of cocaine during the reaction process demonstrates how the protein environment can affect the energy barrier for each step of the BChE-catalyzed hydrolysis of cocaine. These insights concerning the effects of the oxyanion hole on the energy barriers provide valuable clues on how to rationally design BChE mutants with a higher catalytic activity for the hydrolysis of (-)-cocaine.  相似文献   

9.
Kalp M  Carey PR 《Biochemistry》2008,47(45):11830-11837
The reactions between single crystals of the SHV-1 beta-lactamase enzyme and the carbapenems, meropenem, imipenem, and ertapenem, have been studied by Raman microscopy. Aided by quantum mechanical calculations, major populations of two acyl-enzyme species, a labile Delta (2)-pyrroline and a more tightly bound Delta (1)-pyrroline, have been identified for all three compounds. These isomers differ only in the position of the double bond about the carbapenem nucleus. This discovery is consonant with X-ray crystallographic findings that also identified two populations for meropenem bound in SHV-1: one with the acyl CO group in the oxyanion hole and the second with the acyl group rotated 180 degrees compared to its expected position [Nukaga, M., Bethel, C. R., Thomson, J. M., Hujer, A. M., Distler, A. M., Anderson, V. E., Knox, J. R., and Bonomo, R. A. (2008) J. Am. Chem. Soc. (in press)]. When crystals of the Delta (1)- and Delta (2)-containing acyl-enzymes were exposed to solutions with no carbapenem, rapid deacylation of the Delta (2) species was observed by kinetic Raman experiments. However, no change in the Delta (1) population was observed over 1 h, the effective lifetime of the crystal. These observations lead to the hypothesis that the stable Delta (1) species is due to the form seen by X-ray with the acyl carbonyl outside the oxyanion hole, while the Delta (2) species corresponds to the form with the carbonyl inside the oxyanion hole. Soak-in and soak-out Raman experiments also demonstrated that tautomeric exchange between the Delta (1) and Delta (2) forms does not occur on the crystalline enzyme. When meropenem or ertapenem was reacted with SHV-1 in solution, the Raman difference spectra demonstrated that only a major population corresponding to the Delta (1) acyl-enzyme could be detected. The 1003 cm (-1) mode of the phenyl ring positioned on the C3 side chain of ertapenem acts as an effective internal Raman intensity standard, and the ratio of its intensity to that of the 1600 cm (-1) feature of Delta (1) provides an estimate of the relative populations of Delta (1). In solution, I 1600/ I 1003 equals 2, and in the crystal, I 1600 /I 1003 equals 1. This is strong evidence that the Delta (1) and Delta (2) acyl-enzymes in the crystal are present in approximately equal amounts, in agreement with the X-ray data. However, in solution there are twice as many Delta (1) species per Phe group, and this represents approximately 100% of the active sites, which is consistent with the observed inhibition of the enzyme's activity.  相似文献   

10.
The acyl carbonyl group of [3-(5-methyl-2-thienyl)acryloyl]chymotrypsin (5MeTA-chymotrypsin) has been investigated by using both resonance Raman (RR) and Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopies. The spectrum of the acyl-enzyme carbonyl group has been obtained as a function of pH over the range 3.0-10.0 in the RR experiments and over the range 3.4-7.6 (p2H) in the FTIR experiments. The carbonyl spectral profiles obtained by using FTIR spectroscopy are substantially different from the carbonyl profiles obtained by using RR spectroscopy. The FTIR spectra were obtained by subtracting the spectrum of the free enzyme from that of the acyl-enzyme. Use of the active-site inhibitor phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride demonstrates that part of the intensity observed in the FTIR spectra of 5MeTA-chymotrypsin is due to a subtraction artifact giving rise to enzyme-associated bands, probably from peptide groups perturbed by substrate binding. The enzyme bands can be removed by subtracting the FTIR spectrum of 13C=O acyl-enzyme from that of 12C=O acyl-enzyme. Additionally, this procedure reveals that one of the acyl-enzyme carbonyl bands observed at 1727 cm-1 using RR spectroscopy is absent in the FTIR acyl-enzyme spectrum. However, a feature near 1720 cm-1 can be induced in the FTIR spectrum by actinic light in the near-UV region. Thus, it is proposed that the 1727 cm-1 RR carbonyl band results from a population of acyl-enzymes which is generated by exposure to the laser beam during RR data collection. When both the RR and FTIR data are adjusted to remove artifacts, they provide essentially identical carbonyl stretching profiles.  相似文献   

11.
Functional interaction among catalytic residues in subtilisin BPN'   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
P Carter  J A Wells 《Proteins》1990,7(4):335-342
Variants of the serine protease, subtilisin BPN', in which the catalytic triad residues (Ser-221, His-64, and Asp-32) are replaced singly or in combination by alanine retain activities with the substrate N-succinyl-L-Ala-L-Ala-L-Pro-L-Phe-p-nitroanilide (sAAPF-pna) that are at least 10(3) to 10(4) above the non-enzymatic rate [Carter, P., Wells, J.A. Nature (London) 322:564-568, 1988]. A possible source of the residual activity was the hydrogen bond with the N delta 2 of Asn-155 that helps to stabilize the oxyanion generated in the tetrahedral transition state during amide bond hydrolysis by the wild-type enzyme. Replacing Asn-155 by Gly (N155G) lowers the turnover number (kcat) for sAAPF-pna by 150-fold with virtually no change in the Michaelis constant (KM). However, upon combining the N155G and S221A mutations to give N155G:S221A, kcat is actually 5-fold greater than for the S221A enzyme. Thus, the catalytic role of Asn-155 is dependent upon the presence of Ser-221. The residual activity of the N155G:S221A enzyme (approximately 10(4)-fold above the uncatalyzed rate) is not an artifact because it can be completely inhibited by the third domain of the turkey ovomucoid inhibitor (OMTKY3), which forms a strong 1:1 complex with the active site. The mutations N155G and S221A individually weaken the interaction between subtilisin and OMTKY3 by 1.8 and 2.0 kcal/mol, respectively, and in combination by 2.1 kcal/mol. This is consistent with disruption of stabilizing interactions around the reactive site carbonyl of the OMTKY3 inhibitor.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
IR spectra of rosamycin and its solutions in inert (CCl4 and C2Cl4), proton acceptor (tetrahydrofuran, hexametapol and diethylamine) and proton donor (CHCl3 and CH3OD) solvents were studied at various concentrations (0.1 to 0.001 mol/l) and temperatures (20 to 100 degrees C) in the region of the vC = O and vOH absorption bands (1600-1800 and 3200 3650 sm 1). It was found that the absorption bands at 3480 and 3560 sm-1 observed in the spectra of rosamycin diluted solutions in the inert solvents referred to variations of vOH...N of the aminosugar fragment and to vOH...O = C of the ester group of the macrocycle. Bands at 1697 and 1717 sm-1 referred to vC = O of the ketone and aldehyde carbonyl groups and band at 1728 sm-1 referred to vC = O of the ester group whose carbonyl was involved in the C = H...HO intramolecular hydrogen bond. Intensity of vC = O band (1745 sm-1) of the free ester group was nought. However, it increased with using the proton acceptor solvents. OH...N and OH...O = C intramolecular hydrogen bonds stabilized rosamycin molecule conformation. Mechanism of rosamycin interaction with the proton donor and acceptor molecules was elucidated. It was shown that tertiary nitrogen was the center of rosamycin molecule protonation.  相似文献   

13.
The first naturally occurring split intein was found in the dnaE gene of Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 and belongs to a subclass of inteins without a penultimate histidine residue. We describe two high-resolution crystal structures, one derived from an excised Ssp DnaE intein and the second from a splicing-deficient precursor protein. The X-ray structures indicate that His147 in the conserved block F activates the side-chain N(delta) atom of the intein C-terminal Asn159, leading to a nucleophilic attack on the peptide bond carbonyl carbon atom at the C-terminal splice site. In this process, Arg73 appears to stabilize the transition state by interacting with the carbonyl oxygen atom of the scissile bond. Arg73 also seems to substitute for the conserved penultimate histidine residue in the formation of an oxyanion hole, as previously identified in other inteins. The finding that the precursor structure contains a zinc ion chelating the highly conserved Cys160 and Asp140 reveals the structural basis of Zn2+-mediated inhibition of protein splicing. Furthermore, it is of interest to observe that the carbonyl carbon atom of Asn159 and N(eta) of Arg73 are 2.6 angstroms apart in the free intein structure and 10.6 angstroms apart in the precursor structure. The orientation change of the aromatic ring of Tyr-1 following the initial acyl shift may be a key switching event contributing to the alignment of Arg73 and the C-terminal scissile bond, and may explain the sequential reaction property of the Ssp DnaE intein.  相似文献   

14.
P Carter  L Abrahmsén  J A Wells 《Biochemistry》1991,30(25):6142-6148
A mutant of the serine protease, subtilisin BPN', in which the catalytic His64 is replaced by Ala (H64A), is very specific for substrates containing a histidine, presumably by the substrate-bound histidine assisting in catalysis [Carter, P., & Wells, J.A. (1987) Science (Washington, D.C.) 237, 394-399]. Here we probe the catalytic mechanism of H64A subtilisin for cleaving His and non-His substrates. We show that the ratio of aminolysis to hydrolysis is the same for ester and amide substrates as catalyzed by the H64A subtilisin. This is consistent with formation of a common acyl-enzyme intermediate for H64A subtilisin, analogous to the mechanism of the wild-type enzyme. However, the catalytic efficiencies (kcat/KM) for amidase and esterase activities with His-containing substrates are reduced by 5000-fold and 14-fold, respectively, relative to wild-type subtilisin BPN, suggesting that acylation is more compromised than deacylation in the H64A mutant. High concentrations of imidazole are much less effective than His substrates in promoting hydrolysis by the H64A variant, suggesting that the His residue on the bound (not free) substrate is involved in catalysis. The reduction in catalytic efficiency kcat/KM for hydrolysis of the amide substrate upon replacement of the oxyanion stabilizing asparagine (N155G) is only 7-fold greater for wild-type than H64A subtilisin. In contrast, the reductions in kcat/KM upon replacement of the catalytic serine (S221A) or aspartate (D32A) are about 3000-fold greater for wild-type than H64A subtilisin, suggesting that the functional interactions between the Asp32 and Ser221 with the substrate histidine are more compromised in substrate-assisted catalysis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
Chen CC  Herzberg O 《Biochemistry》2001,40(8):2351-2358
The serine-beta-lactamases hydrolyze beta-lactam antibiotics in a reaction that proceeds via an acyl-enzyme intermediate. The double mutation, E166D:N170Q, of the class A enzyme from Staphylococcus aureus results in a protein incapable of deacylation. The crystal structure of this beta-lactamase, determined at 2.3 A resolution, shows that except for the mutation sites, the structure is very similar to that of the native protein. The crystal structures of two acyl-enzyme adducts, one with benzylpenicillin and the other with cephaloridine, have been determined at 1.76 and 1.86 A resolution, respectively. Both acyl-enzymes show similar key features, with the carbonyl carbon atom of the cleaved beta-lactam bond covalently bound to the side chain of the active site Ser70, and the carbonyl oxygen atom in an oxyanion hole. The thiadolizine ring of the cleaved penicillin is located in a slightly different position than the dihydrothiazine ring of cephaloridine. Consequently, the carboxylate moieties attached to the rings form different sets of interactions. The carboxylate group of benzylpenicillin interacts with the side chain of Gln237. The carboxylate group of cephaloridine is located between Arg244 and Lys234 side chains and also interacts with Ser235 hydroxyl group. The interactions of the cephaloridine resemble those seen in the structure of the acyl-enzyme of beta-lactamase from Escherichia coli with benzylpenicillin. The side chains attached to the cleaved beta-lactam rings of benzylpenicillin and cephaloridine are located in a similar position, which is different than the position observed in the E. coli benzylpenicillin acyl-enzyme complex. The three modes of binding do not show a trend that explains the preference for benzylpenicillin over cephaloridine in the class A beta-lactamases. Rather, the conformational variation arises because cleavage of the beta-lactam bond provides additional flexibility not available when the fused rings are intact. The structural information suggests that specificity is determined prior to the cleavage of the beta-lactam ring, when the rigid fused rings of benzylpenicillin and cephaloridine each form different interactions with the active site.  相似文献   

16.
We have measured the tritium outexchange of subtilisin BPN'. A consistent and rather small group of hydrogens was isolated by their sensitivity to inhibitor binding. The viscosity dependence of exchange from these inhibitor protected hydrogens was then examined in 0.05 M MES buffer, pH 6.5 and 10 degrees C. The viscosity of the reaction medium was varied by added glycerol and ethylene glycol. The exchange rates were corrected to be compared at identical hydroxyl ion and water activity. The salient observation is the strikingly similar viscosity coupling behavior when compared to the deacylation step of ester hydrolysis catalyzed by the same enzyme (Ng and Rosenberg, Biophysical Chemistry, 39 (1991) 57). We have obtained a viscosity coupling constant of 0.68 -/+ 0.18 for hydrogen exchange in glycerol (cf. 0.65 -/+ 0.11 for deacylation in glycerol, sucrose, glucose and fructose); 1.67 -/+ 0.07 for outexchange (cf. 1.92 -/+ 0.09 for deacylation), in the presence of ethylene glycol. The two reactions are very chemically dissimilar, yet they show very similar viscosity coupling behavior. This together with the well established role of structural fluctuations in hydrogen exchange implies a similar role of structural fluctuations in the deacylation step of subtilisin BPN' catalyzed ester hydrolysis.  相似文献   

17.
Two new inhibitors in which the terminal α-carboxyl groups of Z-Ala-Ala-Phe-COOH and Z-Ala-Pro-Phe-COOH have been replaced with a proton to give Z-Ala-Ala-Phe-H and Z-Ala-Pro-Phe-H, respectively, have been synthesized. Using these inhibitors, we estimate that for α-chymotrypsin and subtilisin Carlsberg the terminal carboxylate group decreases the level of inhibitor binding 3-4-fold while a glyoxal group increases the level of binding by 500-2000-fold. We show that at pH 7.2 the effective molarities of the catalytic hydroxyl group of the active site serine are 41000-229000 and 101000-159000 for α-chymotrypsin and subtilisin Carlsberg, respectively. It is estimated that oxyanion stabilization and the increased effective molarity of the catalytic serine hydroxyl group can account for the catalytic efficiency of the reaction. We argue that substrate binding induces the formation of a strong hydrogen bond or low-barrier hydrogen bond between histidine-57 and aspartate-102 that increases the pK(a) of the active site histidine, allowing it to be an effective general base catalyst for the formation of the tetrahedral intermediate and increasing the effective molarity of the catalytic hydroxyl group of serine-195. A catalytic mechanism for acyl intermediate formation in the serine proteases is proposed.  相似文献   

18.
Using molecular dynamics simulations, we have obtained an important insight into the structural and dynamical changes exerted by a nonaqueous solvent on the serine protease subtilisin Carlsberg. Our findings show that the structural properties of the subtilisin–acetonitrile (MeCN) system were sensitive to the amount of water present at the protein surface. A decrease or lack of water promoted the enzyme–MeCN interaction, which increased structural changes of the enzyme primarily at the surface loops. This effect caused variations on the secondary and tertiary structure of the protein and induced the opening of a pathway for the solvent to the protein core. Also, disturbance of the oxyanion hole was observed due to changes in the orientation in the Asn-155 side chain. The disruption of the oxyanion hole and the changes of the tertiary structure should affect the optimal activity of the enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
The force driving the conversion from the acyl intermediate to the tetrahedral intermediate in the deacylation reaction of serine proteases remains unclear. The crystal structure of 6‐guanidinohexanoyl trypsin was determined at pH 7.0, near the optimum reaction pH, at 1.94 Å resolution. In this structure, three water molecules are observed around the catalytic site. One acts as a nucleophile to attack the acyl carbonyl carbon while the other two waters fix the position of the catalytic water through a hydrogen bond. When the acyl carbonyl oxygen oscillates thermally, the water assumes an appropriate angle to catalyze the deacylation. Proteins 2013. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

20.
Wilkinson AS  Ward S  Kania M  Page MG  Wharton CW 《Biochemistry》1999,38(13):3851-3856
Time-resolved infrared difference spectroscopy has been used to show that the carbonyl group of the acylenzyme reaction intermediate in the Citrobacter freundii beta-lactamase-catalyzed hydrolysis of methicillin can assume at least four conformations. A single-turnover experiment shows that all four conformations decline during deacylation with essentially the same rate constant. The conformers are thus in exchange on the reaction time scale, assuming that deacylation takes place only from the conformation which is most strongly hydrogen bonded or from a more minor species not visible in these experiments. All conformers have the same (10 cm-1) narrow bandwidth compared with a model ethyl ester in deuterium oxide (37 cm-1) which shows that all conformers are well ordered relative to free solution. The polarity of the carbonyl group environment in the conformers varies from 'ether-like' to strongly hydrogen bonding (20 kJ/mol), presumably in the oxyanion hole of the enzyme. From the absorption intensities, it is estimated that the conformers are populated approximately proportional to the hydrogen bonding strength at the carbonyl oxygen. A change in the difference spectrum at 1628 cm-1 consistent with a perturbation (relaxation) of protein beta-sheet occurs slightly faster than deacylation. Consideration of chemical model reactions strongly suggests that neither enamine nor imine formation in the acyl group is a plausible explanation of the change seen at 1628 cm-1. A turnover reaction supports the above conclusions and shows that the conformational relaxation occurs as the substrate is exhausted and the acylenzymes decline. The observation of multiple conformers is discussed in relation to the poor specificity of methicillin as a substrate of this beta-lactamase and in terms of X-ray crystallographic structures of acylenzymes where multiple forms are not apparently observed (or modeled). Infrared spectroscopy has shown itself to be a useful method for assessment of the uniqueness of enzyme-substrate interactions in physiological turnover conditions as well as for determination of ordering, hydrogen bonding, and protein perturbation.  相似文献   

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