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1.
31P cross-polarization/magic angle sample spinning nuclear magnetic resonance spectra have been obtained for pyridoxal 5′-phosphate (PLP) bound to glycogen phosphorylase b (GPb) in two different crystalline forms, monoclinic and tetragonal. Analysis of the intensities of the spinning sidebands in the nuclear magnetic resonance spectra has enabled estimates of the principal values of the 31P chemical shift tensors to be obtained. Differences between the two sets of values suggest differences in the environment of the phosphate moiety of the pyridoxal phosphate in the two crystalline forms. The tensor for the tetragonal crystalline form, T state GPb, is fully consistent with those found for dianionic phosphate groups in model compounds. The spectrum for the monoclinic crystalline form, R state GPb, although closer to that of dianionic than monoanionic model phosphate compounds, deviates significantly from that expected for a simple dianion or monoanion. This is likely to result from specific interactions between the PLP phosphate group and residues in its binding site in the protein. A possible explanation for the spectrum of the monoclinic crystals is that the shift tensor is averaged by a proton exchange process between different ionization states of the PLP associated with the presence of a sulfate ion bound in the vicinity of the PLP.  相似文献   

2.
Starch phosphorylase from Corynebacterium callunae is a dimeric protein in which each mol of 90 kDa subunit contains 1 mol pyridoxal 5'-phosphate as an active-site cofactor. To determine the mechanism by which phosphate or sulfate ions bring about a greater than 500-fold stabilization against irreversible inactivation at elevated temperatures (> or = 50 degrees C), enzyme/oxyanion interactions and their role during thermal denaturation of phosphorylase have been studied. By binding to a protein site distinguishable from the catalytic site with dissociation constants of Ksulfate = 4.5 mM and Kphosphate approximately 16 mM, dianionic oxyanions induce formation of a more compact structure of phosphorylase, manifested by (a) an increase by about 5% in the relative composition of the alpha-helical secondary structure, (b) reduced 1H/2H exchange, and (c) protection of a cofactor fluorescence against quenching by iodide. Irreversible loss of enzyme activity is triggered by the release into solution of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate, and results from subsequent intermolecular aggregation driven by hydrophobic interactions between phosphorylase subunits that display a temperature-dependent degree of melting of secondary structure. By specifically increasing the stability of the dimer structure of phosphorylase (probably due to tightened intersubunit contacts), phosphate, and sulfate, this indirectly (1) preserves a functional active site up to approximately 50 degrees C, and (2) stabilizes the covalent protein cofactor linkage up to approximately 70 degrees C. The effect on thermostability shows a sigmoidal and saturatable dependence on the concentration of phosphate, with an apparent binding constant at 50 degrees C of approximately 25 mM. The extra stability conferred by oxyanion-ligand binding to starch phosphorylase is expressed as a dramatic shift of the entire denaturation pathway to a approximately 20 degrees C higher value on the temperature scale.  相似文献   

3.
S J Kohler  M P Klein 《Biochemistry》1976,15(5):967-974
31P nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) powder spectra have been used to obtain the principal values of the chemical shielding tensors of dipalmitoyellecithin (DPL), dipalmitoylphosphatidylethanolamine, and several related organophosphate mono- and diesters. In addition, the principal values and orientation of the phosphorylethanolamine shielding tensor were determined from 31P NMR spectra of a single crystal. In all compounds studied the shielding tensors were clearly monaxial. The monoester spectra are typified by the spectrum of phosphorylethanolamine with principal values of -67, -13, and 69 ppm relative to H3PO4. The diesters have a larger total anisotrophy, as indicated by the DPL values of -81, -25, and 108 ppm. These data as well as the orientation of the phosphorylethanolamine shielding tensor are correlated with the electron density distribution as determined by the bonding pattern of the phosphate. The spectrum of a DPL-water (1:1) mixture at 52 degrees C has a shift anisotrophy of 30 ppm and displays a shape characteristic of an axial tensor. This change from the rigid lattice DPL pattern is explained in terms of motional narrowing, and the shielding tensor data are used to interpret the motion of the phospholipid head group. Simple rotation about the P-O(glycerol) bond is excluded, and a more complex motion involving rotation about both the P-O (glycerol) and glycerol C(2)-C(3) bonds is postulated.  相似文献   

4.
The ionization state of the phosphate group bound at the aspartate aminotransferase apoenzyme's active site has been investigated utilizing Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy following the band corresponding to the symmetric stretching of the dianionic phosphate. Unlike free phosphate, when inorganic phosphate is bound at the enzyme's active site, the integrated intensity value of the dianionic band does not change with pH within the studied range, and this value is similar to that for free dianionic phosphate at pH 8.3. From these results, we propose a dianionic state for the phosphate ion bound to cytosolic aspartate aminotransferase throughout the pH range of 5.7-8.3. The presence of other anions such as acetate and chloride or the substrate aspartate and its analogues produces a pH-dependent phosphate removal from the active site which is favored at low pH values. Elimination of the charged primary amine at the active-site Lys-258, through formation of a Schiff base with pyridoxal or chemical modification by carbamylation, also produces a pH-independent phosphate release. These results are interpreted as Lys-258 together with the active-site alpha-helix and other residues may be involved in stabilizing phosphate as a dianion in the apoenzyme phosphate pocket which anchors the phosphate ester of pyridoxal phosphate in the holoenzyme. It is proposed that the dianionic phosphate contributes to the apoenzyme's thermal stability through formation of strong hydrogen bond and salt bridges with the amino acid residues forming the phosphate binding pocket with assistance of Lys-258, and other active-site cationic components.  相似文献   

5.
In order to determine the ionization state of the 5'-phosphate of bound pyridoxal phosphate, a Fourier transform infrared spectroscopic study of cytosolic aspartate aminotransferase has been carried out. Dianionic and monoanionic phosphate monoesters give rise to two bands each in the infrared spectrum [Shimanouchi, T., Tsuboi, M., & Kyogoku, Y. (1964) Adv. Chem. Phys. 8, 435-498]. These bands can be identified in infrared spectra of the free coenzyme in solution. Due to interfering bands arising from the protein, only the band assigned to the symmetric stretching of the dianionic phosphate is observed in holoenzyme solutions. The integrated intensity of this band does not change with pH in the range 5.3-8.6, while for free pyridoxal phosphate, the integrated intensity of the same band changes with pH according to the pK value expected for the 5'-phosphate group in solution. Moreover, the value of the integrated intensity for the bound cofactor is close to the value given by free cofactor at pH 8-9. These results suggest that the 5'-phosphate of the bound cofactor remains mostly dianionic throughout the investigated pH range and disfavor other interpretations in terms of ionization of the phosphate group on the basis of the nuclear magnetic resonance 31P chemical shift-pH titration curve of holoenzyme [Schnackerz, K. D. (1984) in Chemical and Biological Aspects of Vitamin B6 Catalysis (Evangelopoulos, E. A., Ed.) Part A, pp 195-208, Alan R. Liss, New York].(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
The 31P NMR spectroscopy of three pyridoxal 5'-phosphate-dependent enzymes, monomeric D-serine dehydratase, tetrameric dialkylglycine decarboxylase and tetrameric tyrosine phenol-lyase, whose enzymatic activities are dependent on alkali metal ions, was studied. 31P NMR spectra of the latter two enzymes have never been reported, their 3D-structures, however, are available. The cofactor phosphate chemical shift of all three enzymes changes by approximately 3 ppm as a function of pH, indicating that the phosphate group changes from being monoanionic at low pH to dianionic at high pH. The 31P NMR signal of the phosphate group of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate provides a measure of the active site changes that occur when various alkali metal ions are bound. Structural information is used to assist in the interpretation of the chemical shift changes observed. For D-serine dehydratase, no structural data are available but nevertheless the metal ion arrangement in the PLP binding site can be predicted from 31P NMR data.  相似文献   

7.
R Schinzel  D Palm  K D Schnackerz 《Biochemistry》1992,31(16):4128-4133
Changes in the active site of Escherichia coli maltodextrin phosphorylase created by substituting residues Lys533, Arg534, Tyr538, and Glu637 were monitored in the absence and presence of arsenate as substrate analogue using pyridoxal-P as 31P NMR reporter. The chemical shift of the cofactor phosphate group of wild-type E. coli phosphorylase is pH dependent with an apparent pK of 5.6 and limiting delta values of 0.71 and 3.6 ppm for the low- and high-pH values, respectively. The apparent pK value of 5.6 indicates that the phosphate group of the cofactor is in hydrogen bond linkage to Lys533. In all mutant enzymes in which the enzymatic activity was significantly reduced, effects on the 31P chemical shift pattern of pyridoxal-P were observed. The K533S, R534Q, E637D, and E637Q mutant enzymes show 0.6, 0.01, 0.2, or 0.1% residual activity, and the apparent pK values of the cofactor phosphate transition of E637D and E637Q mutant enzymes are altered. The Y538F mutant enzyme is a remarkable exception, displaying 12% activity and an environment of the cofactor quite similar to that in wild-type enzyme. This finding suggests that Tyr538, although involved in substrate binding and specificity, is not functionally essential. One crucial aspect of catalysis is the close contact of the phosphates of pyridoxal-P and of substrate rendered by a cluster of positively charged amino acids, Lys533, Lys539, and Arg534. The similar apparent pK values of wild-type and K533S mutant phosphorylase suggest that the cofactor phosphate and the hydroxyl group of Ser533 are linked by a hydrogen bond.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
We have carried out a Fourier transform infrared spectroscopic study of mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase in the spectral region where phosphate monoesters give rise to absorption. Infrared spectra in the above-mentioned region are dominated by protein absorption. Yet, below 1020 cm-1 protein interferences are minor, permitting the detection of the band arising from the symmetric stretching of dianionic phosphate monoesters [T. Shimanouchi, M. Tsuboi, and Y. Kyogoku (1964) Adv. Chem. Phys. 8, 435-498]. The integrated intensity of this band in several enzyme forms (pyridoxal phosphate, pyridoxamine phosphate, and sodium borohydride-reduced, pyridoxyl phosphate form) does not change with pH in the range 5-9. This behavior contrasts that of free pyridoxal phosphate (PLP) and pyridoxamine phosphate (PMP) in solution, where the dependence of the same infrared band intensity with pH can be correlated to the known pK values for the 5'-phosphate ester in solution. The integrated intensity value of this infrared band for the PLP enzyme form before and after reduction with sodium borohydride is close to that given by free PLP at pH 8-9. These results are taken as evidence that in the active site of mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase the 5'-phosphate group of PLP remains mostly dianionic even at a pH near 5. Thus, it is suggested that the chemical shift changes associated with pH titrations of various PLP forms reported in a previous 31P NMR study of this enzyme [M. E. Mattingly, J. R. Mattingly, and M. Martinez-Carrion (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 8872] are due to the fact that the phosphorus chemical shift senses the O-P-O bond distortions induced by the ionization of a nearby residue. Since no chemical shift changes were observed in pH titrations of the PMP forms (lacking an ionizable internal aldimine) of this isozyme, the Schiff base between PLP and Lys-258 at the active site is the most likely candidate for the ionizing group influencing the phosphorus chemical shift in this enzyme.  相似文献   

9.
Cystathionine β-synthase has been isolated from human liver in two enzymically active forms. Both enzymes, α and β possess a molecular weight of 250,000 and are dependent upon pyridoxal phosphate as a cofactor.  相似文献   

10.
Previous crystallographic studies on glycogen phosphorylase have described the different conformational states of the protein (T and R) that represent the allosteric transition and have shown how the properties of the 5'-phosphate group of the cofactor pyridoxal phosphate are influenced by these conformational states. The present work reports a study on glycogen phosphorylase b (GPb) complexed with a modified cofactor, pyridoxal 5'-diphosphate (PLPP), in place of the natural cofactor. Solution studies (Withers, S.G., Madsen, N.B., & Sykes, B.D., 1982, Biochemistry 21, 6716-6722) have shown that PLPP promotes R-state properties of the enzyme indicating that the cofactor can influence the conformational state of the protein. GPb complexed with pyridoxal 5'-diphosphate (PLPP) has been crystallized in the presence of IMP and ammonium sulfate in the monoclinic R-state crystal form and the structure refined from X-ray data to 2.8 A resolution to a crystallographic R value of 0.21. The global tertiary and quaternary structure in the vicinity of the Ser 14 and the IMP sites are nearly identical to those observed for the R-state GPb-AMP complex. At the catalytic site the second phosphate of PLPP is accommodated with essentially no change in structure from the R-state structure and is involved in interactions with the side chains of two lysine residues (Lys 568 and Lys 574) and the main chain nitrogen of Arg 569. Superposition of the T-state structure shows that were the PLPP to be incorporated into the T-state structure there would be a close contact with the 280s loop (residues 282-285) that would encourage the T to R allosteric transition. The second phosphate of the PLPP occupies a site that is distinct from other dianionic binding sites that have been observed for glucose-1-phosphate and sulfate (in the R state) and for heptulose-2-phosphate (in the T state). The results indicate mobility in the dianion recognition site, and the precise position is dependent on other linkages to the dianion. In the modified cofactor the second phosphate site is constrained by the covalent link to the first phosphate of PLPP. The observed position in the crystal suggests that it is too far from the substrate site to represent a site for catalysis.  相似文献   

11.
The detailed environment of the essential cofactor pyridoxal 5'-phosphate in glycogen phosphorylase b, resulting from crystallographic refinement at 1.9-A resolution, is described. The pyridoxal ring is buried in a nonpolar site containing three aromatic rings while the 5'-phosphate group is highly solvated and makes only three direct contacts to the protein. The pyridine nitrogen interacts via a water with protein atoms [main chain carbonyl oxygen (Asn-133) and OH of tyrosine (Tyr-90)]. The crystal structures of three active derivatives of phosphorylase reconstituted with 5'-deoxypyridoxal 5'-methylenephosphonate (PDMP), 6-fluoropyridoxal 5'-phosphate (6-FPLP), and pyridoxal (PL) in place of the natural cofactor have been determined at 2.5-A resolution. The results for PDMP-phosphorylase show a closer proximity of the phosphonate group to the NZ atom of a lysine (Lys-574) than that observed in the native enzyme, consistent with 31P NMR studies that have shown a change in ionization state of the phosphonate group compared to the native cofactor phosphate. The replacement of the polar 5'-ester linkage by a CH2 group results in a small shift of a water and its hydrogen-bonded tyrosine (Tyr-648). In 6-FPLP-phosphorylase the fluorine is accommodated with no significant change in structure. It is suggested that substitution of the electronegative fluorine at the 6-position may result in lower activity of 6-FPLP-phosphorylase through a strengthening of hydrogen-bonded interactions to the pyridine nitrogen N1.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Summary Phosphorylases (EC 2.4.1.1) from potato and rabbit muscle are similar in many of their structural and kinetic properties, despite differences in regulation of their enzyme activity. Rabbit muscle phosphorylase is subject to both allosteric and covalent controls, while potato phosphorylase is an active species without any regulatory mechanism. Both phosphorylases are composed of subunits of approximately 100 000 molecular weight, and contain a firmly bound pyridoxal 5-phosphate. Their actions follow a rapid equilibrium random Bi Bi mechanism. From the sequence comparison between the two phosphorylases, high homologies of widely distributed regions have been found, suggesting that they may have evolved from the same ancestral protein. By contrast, the sequences of the N-terminal region are remarkably different from each other. Since this region of the muscle enzyme forms the phosphorylatable and AMP-binding sites as well as the subunit-subunit contact region, these results provide the structural basis for the difference in the regulatory properties between potato and rabbit muscle phosphorylases. Judged from CD spectra, the surface structures of the potato enzyme might be significantly different from that of the muscle enzyme. Indeed, the subunit-subunit interaction in the potato enzyme is tighter than that in the muscle enzyme, and the susceptibility of the two enzymes toward modification reagents and proteolytic enzymes are different. Despite these differences, the structural and functional features of the cofactor, pyridoxal phosphate, site are surprisingly well conserved in these phosphorylases. X-ray crystallographic studies on rabbit muscle phosphorylase have shown that glucose-1-phosphate and orthophosphate bind to a common region close to the 5-phosphate of the cofactor. The muscle enzyme has a glycogen storage site for binding of the enzyme to saccharide substrate, which is located away from the cofactor site. We have obtained, in our reconstitution studies, evidence for binding of saccharide directly to the cofactor site of potato phosphorylase. This difference in the topography of the functional sites explains the previously known different specificities for saccharide substrates in the two phosphorylases. Based on a combination of these and other studies, it is now clear that the 5-phosphate group of pyridoxal phosphate plays a direct role in the catalysis of this enzyme. Information now available on the reaction mechanism of phosphorylase is briefly described.  相似文献   

13.
The flash excitation of the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate cofactor of glycogen phosphorylase b by an ultraviolet laser produces a transient state from a proton transfer of the bound cofactor. The rate of decay of this transient state is sensitive to the ionization state of the cofactor. This proved a useful probe for the ionization state of the 5'-phosphate group of the cofactor on the binding by the enzyme of various substrates. The decay rate data show, for the binding of glucose 1-phosphate, a partially negative 5'-HPO4- and evidence for a PO4-PO4 interaction. The data is interpreted in terms of a dynamic shift of substrates at the active site.  相似文献   

14.
R J Uhing  S R Lentz  D J Graves 《Biochemistry》1981,20(9):2537-2544
Dimethoxyethane, a good activator of phosphorylase b, has been used to study mechanisms of phosphorylase activation and the catalytic reaction. Activation can be explained best by an alteration of the allosteric equilibrium in favor of the active R conformation. Lesser effects are seen with phosphorylase a, and activation does not alter appreciably the equilibrium between the dimeric and tetrameric forms. With 20% 1,2-dimethoxyethane, the Vm value of phosphorylase b is 74% of that obtained in the presence of adenosine monophosphate. In the presence of 10% 1,2-dimethoxyethane, the Ki value for glucose inhibition is increased 3-fold, but inhibition by 1,5-gluconolactone is increased. The allosteric activation of glycogen phosphorylase results in a change in pK1 for the pH-activity profile. The formation of the dianionic form of the phosphoryl group of the coenzyme, pyridoxal phosphate, may account for this change. By analogy to the effects of anions and a change in dielectric on the acid hydroylsis of glucose 1-phosphate, it is suggested that the dianion of the coenzyme could stabilize the developing positive charge of an oxonium ion intermediate. Dimethoxyethane also affects the interaction of pyridoxal phosphate with phosphorylase. It influences the rates of both resolution and reconstitution. Good preparations of apophosphorylase a can be made by using 1,2-dimethoxyethane in the resolution medium.  相似文献   

15.
Adenosine monophosphofluoridate has been synthesised and purified to remove all contaminating AMP. This AMP analogue fails to activate glycogen phosphorylase b, even at high concentration, but inhibits the AMP activation with a Ki value of 3 mM. Activation of phosphorylase b by adenosine phosphoramidate has been re-investigated in the light of these findings and a purified sample of this nucleotide analogue has been shown to produce little or no activation of the enzyme. These findings are interpreted in terms of an absolute requirement of the nucleotide activatorsite in phosphorylase for a nucleotide with a dianionic phosphate. The implications of this for the role of the phosphate moiety in the proposed mechanism of activation are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
The three-dimensional structures of the isoleucine ketimine and the pyridoxamine phosphate forms of human mitochondrial branched chain aminotransferase (hBCATm) have been determined crystallographically at 1.9 A resolution. The hBCATm-catalyzed transamination can be described in molecular terms together with the earlier solved pyridoxal phosphate forms of the enzyme. The active site lysine, Lys202, undergoes large conformational changes, and the pyridine ring of the cofactor tilts by about 18 degrees during catalysis. A major determinant of the enzyme's substrate and stereospecificity for L-branched chain amino acids is a group of hydrophobic residues that form three hydrophobic surfaces and lock the side chain in place. Short-chain aliphatic amino acid side chains are unable to interact through van der Waals contacts with any of the surfaces whereas bulky aromatic side chains would result in significant steric hindrance. As shown by modeling, and in agreement with previous biochemical data, glutamate but not aspartate can form hydrogen bond interactions. The carboxylate group of the bound isoleucine is on the same side as the phosphate group of the cofactor. These active site interactions are largely retained in a model of the human cytosolic branched chain aminotransferase (hBCATc), suggesting that residues in the second tier of interactions are likely to determine the specificity of hBCATc for the drug gabapentin. Finally, the structures reveal a unique role for cysteine residues in the mammalian BCAT. Cys315 and Cys318, which immediately follow a beta-turn (residues 311-314) and are located just outside the active site, form an unusual thiol-thiolate hydrogen bond. This beta-turn positions Thr313 for its interaction with the pyridoxal phosphate oxygens and substrate alpha-carboxylate group.  相似文献   

17.
Despite much work, many key aspects of the mechanism of the dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) catalyzed reduction of dihydrofolate remain unresolved. In bacterial forms of DHFR both substrate and water access to the active site are controlled by the conformation of the mobile M20 loop. In vertebrate DHFRs only one conformation of the residues corresponding to the M20 loop has been observed. Access to the active site was proposed to be controlled by residue 31. MD simulations of chicken DHFR complexed with substrates and cofactor revealed a closing of the side chain of Tyr 31 over the active site on binding of dihydrofolate. This conformational change was dependent on the presence of glutamate on the para-aminobenzoylamide moiety of dihydrofolate. In its absence, the conformation remained open. Although water could enter the active site and hydrogen bond to N5 of dihydrofolate, indicating the feasibility of water as the proton donor, this was not controlled by the conformation of Tyr 31. The water accessibility of the active site was low for both conformations of Tyr 31. However, when hydride was transferred from NADPH to C6 of dihydrofolate before protonation, the average time during which water was found in hydrogen bonding distance to N5 of dihydrofolate in the active site increased almost fivefold. These results indicated that water can serve as the Broensted acid for the protonation of N5 of dihydrofolate during the DHFR catalyzed reduction.  相似文献   

18.
Modification of pyridoxal-reconstituted phosphorylase b with two arginine-directed reagents, butanedione and [14C]phenylglyoxal, has been investigated and compared with the results obtained on the active and inactive conformations of the native enzyme; the reactivity of the various arginine residues has been directly described using autoradiography of chymotryptic maps derived from [14C]phenylglyoxal-labelled phosphorylase. In the native enzyme this method demonstrates that the same arginine residue (568) is reactive on both activated phosphorylase a and b, non-reactive on inactive forms of phosphorylase and protected by glucose 1-phosphate. Another residue is reactive, but its reactivity does not drastically depend upon phosphorylase conformation; it interacts with glucose 1-phosphate. In the pyridoxal-reconstituted phosphorylase, the residue Arg-568 is reactive. This reactivity does not correlated in a simple manner with the ionisation state of the coenzyme, since it is high when this group is either absent or in a dianionic form, and low when it is monoanionic. The reactivity of Arg-568 rather correlates with the quaternary structure of the enzyme. The protection offered by glucose 1-phosphate, pyrophosphate and phosphite on this pyridoxal-reconstituted phosphorylase also provides information about the relative disposition of the substrate, the coenzyme and this particular arginine residue.  相似文献   

19.
Human purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) is a homotrimer, containing three nonconserved tryptophan residues at positions 16, 94, and 178, all remote from the catalytic site. The Trp residues were replaced with Tyr to produce Trp-free PNP (Leuko-PNP). Leuko-PNP showed near-normal kinetic properties. It was used (1) to determine the tautomeric form of guanine that produces strong fluorescence when bound to PNP, (2) for thermodynamic binding analysis of binary and ternary complexes with substrates, (3) in temperature-jump perturbation of complexes for evidence of multiple conformational complexes, and (4) to establish the ionization state of a catalytic site tyrosine involved in phosphate nucleophile activation. The (13)C NMR spectrum of guanine bound to Leuko-PNP, its fluorescent properties, and molecular orbital electronic transition analysis establish that its fluorescence originates from the lowest singlet excited state of the N1H, 6-keto, N7H guanine tautomer. Binding of guanine and phosphate to PNP and Leuko-PNP are random, with decreased affinity for formation of ternary complexes. Pre-steady-state kinetics and temperature-jump studies indicate that the ternary complex (enzyme-substrate-phosphate) forms in single binding steps without kinetically significant protein conformational changes as monitored by guanine fluorescence. Spectral changes of Leuko-PNP upon phosphate binding establish that the hydroxyl of Tyr88 is not ionized to the phenolate anion when phosphate is bound. A loop region (residues 243-266) near the purine base becomes highly ordered upon substrate/inhibitor binding. A single Trp residue was introduced into the catalytic loop of Leuko-PNP (Y249W-Leuko-PNP) to determine effects on catalysis and to introduce a fluorescence catalytic site probe. Although Y249W-Leuko-PNP is highly fluorescent and catalytically active, substrate binding did not perturb the fluorescence. Thermodynamic boxes, constructed to characterize the binding of phosphate, guanine, and hypoxanthine to native, Leuko-, and Y249W-Leuko-PNPs, establish that Leuko-PNP provides a versatile protein scaffold for introduction of specific Trp catalytic site probes.  相似文献   

20.
The replacement of Arg-54 by Ala in the active site of Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamoylase causes a 17,000-fold loss of activity but does not significantly influence the binding of substrates or substrate analogs (Stebbins, J.W., Xu, W., & Kantrowitz, E.R., 1989, Biochemistry 28, 2592-2600). In the X-ray structure of the wild-type enzyme, Arg-54 interacts with both the anhydride oxygen and a phosphate oxygen of carbamoyl phosphate (CP) (Gouaux, J.E. & Lipscomb, W.N., 1988, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 85, 4205-4208). The Arg-54-->Ala enzyme was crystallized in the presence of the transition state analog N-phosphonacetyl-L-aspartate (PALA), data were collected to a resolution limit of 2.8 A, and the structure was solved by molecular replacement. The analysis of the refined structure (R factor = 0.18) indicates that the substitution did not cause any significant alterations to the active site, except that the side chain of the arginine was replaced by two water molecules. 31P-NMR studies indicate that the binding of CP to the wild-type catalytic subunit produces an upfield chemical shift that cannot reflect a significant change in the ionization state of the CP but rather indicates that there are perturbations in the electronic environment around the phosphate moiety when CP binds to the enzyme. The pH dependence of this upfield shift for bound CP indicates that the catalytic subunit undergoes a conformational change with a pKa approximately 7.7 upon CP binding. Furthermore, the linewidth of the 31P signal of CP bound to the Arg-54-->Ala enzyme is significantly narrower than that of CP bound to the wild-type catalytic subunit at any pH, although the change in chemical shift for the CP bound to the mutant enzyme is unaltered. 31P-NMR studies of PALA complexed to the wild-type catalytic subunit indicate that the phosphonate group of the bound PALA exists as the dianion at pH 7.0 and 8.8, whereas in the Arg-54-->Ala catalytic subunit the phosphonate group of the bound PALA exists as the monoanion at pH 7.0 and 8.8. Thus, the side chain of Arg-54 is essential for the proper ionization of the phosphonate group of PALA and by analogy the phosphate group in the transition state. These data support the previously proposed proton transfer mechanism, in which a fully ionized phosphate group in the transition state accepts a proton during catalysis.  相似文献   

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