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1.
The interaction of dihydrofolate reductase (EC 1.5.1.3) from Escherichia coli with dihydrofolate and folate analogues has been studied by means of binding and spectroscopic experiments. The aim of the investigation was to determine the number and identity of the binary complexes that can form, as well as pKa values for groups on the ligand and enzyme that are involved with complex formation. The results obtained by ultraviolet difference spectroscopy indicate that, when bound to the enzyme, methotrexate and 2,4-diamino-6,7-dimethylpteridine exist in their protonated forms and exhibit pKa values for their N-1 nitrogens of above 10.0. These values are about five pH units higher than those for the compounds in free solution. The binding data suggest that both folate analogues interact with the enzyme to yield a protonated complex which may be formed by reaction of ionized enzyme with protonated ligand and/or protonated enzyme with unprotonated ligand. The protonated complex formed with 2,4-diamino-6,7-dimethylpteridine can undergo further protonation to form a protonated enzyme-protonated ligand complex, while that formed with methotrexate can ionize to give an unprotonated complex. A group on the enzyme with a pKa value of about 6.3 is involved with the interactions. However, the ionization state of this group has little effect on the binding of dihydrofolate to the enzyme. For the formation of an enzyme-dihydrofolate complex it is essential that the N-3/C-4 amide of the pteridine ring of the substrate be in its neutral form. It appears that dihydrofolate is not protonated in the binary complex.  相似文献   

2.
E A Williams  J F Morrison 《Biochemistry》1992,31(29):6801-6811
The kinetics of the NADPH-dependent reduction of 7,8-dihydrofolate, folate, and 7,8-dihydrobiopterin by human dihydrofolate reductase have been examined over the pH range from 4.0 to 9.5. The V and V/K profiles obtained with the three substrates indicate that a single ionizing residue at the active site of the enzyme must be protonated for catalysis. Both the maximum velocity of the reactions and the rate of interaction of the substrates with the enzyme-NADPH complex decrease in the order dihydrofolate greater than dihydrobiopterin much greater than folate. From the pK values of the V/K profiles, it can be concluded that, while dihydrofolate behaves as a sticky substrate and dihydrobiopterin exhibits slight stickiness, folate is not a sticky substrate. Further support for this conclusion comes from the results of deuterium isotope effects. The pK values obtained from both the V and V/Kfolate profiles are similar to the intrinsic pK value of 5.6 for both the free enzyme and the enzyme-NADPH complex. The folate analogue, 5-deazafolate, is not a substrate, but it undergoes strong interaction with the enzyme. This interaction, which is enhanced by the presence of NADPH, is due to protonation of the bound ligand that does not involve the single ionizing group at the active center of the enzyme. Difference spectra yield evidence for the protonation of bound 5-deazafolate and show that, on binding to the enzyme-NADPH complex, the pK of the N-8 atom is raised to about 10 from a value of about 4 in solution. The results are in accord with those of a recent paper on the three-dimensional structure of the enzyme-5-deazafolate complex [Davies, J.F., Delcamp, T.J., Prendergast, N.J., Ashfors, V.A., Freisheim, J.H., & Kraut, J. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 9467-9479] which indicate that there is hydrogen bond formation between N-8 of the ligand and the carbonyl group of Ile-7. However, the present findings do not support the idea that bound 5-deazafolate resembles the transition-state complex for folate reduction. Quinazolines also interact strongly with the enzyme but in a pH-independent manner. The dissociation constants for the binary complexes are an order of magnitude lower than that for the binding to the enzyme of unprotonated 5-deazafolate. This difference reflects the hydrophobic nature of the amino acid residues at the active site that are near the N-5 and N-8 nitrogens of bound pterins.  相似文献   

3.
The ionization state of aspartate 26 in Lactobacillus casei dihydrofolate reductase has been investigated by selectively labeling the enzyme with [13Cgamma] aspartic acid and measuring the 13C chemical shifts in the apo, folate-enzyme, and dihydrofolate-enzyme complexes. Our results indicate that no aspartate residue has a pKa greater than approximately 4.8 in any of the three complexes studied. The resonance of aspartate 26 in the dihydrofolate-enzyme complex has been assigned by site-directed mutagenesis; aspartate 26 is found to have a pKa value of less than 4 in this complex. Such a low pKa value makes it most unlikely that the ionization of this residue is responsible for the observed pH profile of hydride ion transfer [apparent pKa = 6.0; Andrews, J., Fierke, C. A., Birdsall, B., Ostler, G., Feeney, J., Roberts, G. C. K., and Benkovic, S. J. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 5743-5750]. Furthermore, the downfield chemical shift of the Asp 26 (13)Cgamma resonance in the dihydrofolate-enzyme complex provides experimental evidence that the pteridine ring of dihydrofolate is polarized when bound to the enzyme. We propose that this polarization of dihydrofolate acts as the driving force for protonation of the electron-rich O4 atom which occurs in the presence of NADPH. After this protonation of the substrate, a network of hydrogen bonds between O4, N5 and a bound water molecule facilitates transfer of the proton to N5 and transfer of a hydride ion from NADPH to the C6 atom to complete the reduction process.  相似文献   

4.
The chemical and kinetic mechanisms of the reaction catalyzed by the catalytic trimer of aspartate transcarbamoylase have been examined. The variation of the kinetic parameters with pH indicated that at least four ionizing amino acid residues are involved in substrate binding and catalysis. The pH dependence of K(ia) for carbamoyl phosphate and the K(i) for N-(phosphonoacetyl)-L- aspartate revealed that a protonated residue with a pK value of 9.0 is required for the binding of carbamoyl phosphate. However, the variation with pH of K(i) for succinate, a competitive inhibitor of aspartate, and for cysteine sulfinate, a slow substrate, showed that a single residue with a pK value of 7.3 must be protonated for binding these analogues and, by inference, aspartate. The profile of log V against pH displayed a decrease in reaction rate at low and high pH, suggesting that two groups associated with the Michaelis complex, a deprotonated residue with a pK value of 7.2 and a protonated group with a pK value of 9.5, are involved in catalysis. By contrast, the catalytically productive form of the enzyme-carbamoyl phosphate complex, as illustrated in the bell-shaped pH dependence of log (V/K)(asp), is one in which a residue with a pK value of 7.0 must be protonated while a group with a pK value of 9.1 is deprotonated. This interpretation is supported by the results from the temperature dependence of the V and V/K profiles and from the pH dependence of pK(i) for the aspartate analogues.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
The pKa values of enzyme groups of Escherichia coli glutamine synthetase which affect catalysis and/or substrate binding were determined by measuring the pH dependence of Vmax and V/K. Analysis of these data revealed that two enzyme groups are required for catalysis with apparent pKa values of approximately 7.1 and 8.2. The binding of ATP is essentially independent of pH in the range studied while the substrate ammonia must be deprotonated for the catalytic reaction. Using methylamine and hydroxylamine in place of ammonia, the pKa value of the deprotonated amine substrate as expressed in the V/K profiles was shifted to a lower pKa value for hydroxylamine and a higher pKa value for methylamine. These data indicate that the amine substrate must be deprotonated for binding. Hydroxylamine is at least as good a substrate as ammonia judged by the kinetic parameters whereas methylamine is a poor substrate as expressed in both the V and V/K values. Glutamate binding was determined by monitoring fluorescence changes of the enzyme and the data indicate that a protonated residue (pKa = 8.3 +/- 0.2) is required for glutamate binding. Chemical modification by reductive methylation with HCHO indicated that the group involved in glutamate binding most likely is a lysine residue. In addition, the Ki value for the transition state analog, L-3-amino-3-carboxy-propanesulfonamide was measured as a function of pH and the results indicate that an enzyme residue must be protonated (pKa = 8.2 +/- 0.1) to assist in binding. A mechanism for the reaction catalyzed by glutamine synthetase is proposed from the kinetic data acquired herein. A salt bridge is formed between the gamma-phosphate group of ATP and an enzyme group prior to attack by the gamma-carboxyl of glutamate on ATP to form gamma-glutamyl phosphate. The amine substrate subsequently attacks gamma-glutamyl phosphate resulting in formation of the tetrahedral adduct before phosphate release. A base on the enzyme assists in the deprotonation of ammonia during its attack on gamma-glutamyl phosphate or after the protonated carbinol amine is formed. Based on the kinetic data with the three amine substrates, catalysis is not rate-limiting through the pH range 6-9.  相似文献   

6.
Saccharopine dehydrogenase [N6-(glutaryl-2)-L-lysine:NAD oxidoreductase (L-lysine forming)] catalyzes the final step in the alpha-aminoadipate pathway for lysine biosynthesis. It catalyzes the reversible pyridine nucleotide-dependent oxidative deamination of saccharopine to generate alpha-Kg and lysine using NAD+ as an oxidizing agent. The proton shuttle chemical mechanism is proposed on the basis of the pH dependence of kinetic parameters, dissociation constants for competitive inhibitors, and isotope effects. In the direction of lysine formation, once NAD+ and saccharopine bind, a group with a pKa of 6.2 accepts a proton from the secondary amine of saccharopine as it is oxidized. This protonated general base then does not participate in the reaction again until lysine is formed at the completion of the reaction. A general base with a pKa of 7.2 accepts a proton from H2O as it attacks the Schiff base carbon of saccharopine to form the carbinolamine intermediate. The same residue then serves as a general acid and donates a proton to the carbinolamine nitrogen to give the protonated carbinolamine. Collapse of the carbinolamine is then facilitated by the same group accepting a proton from the carbinolamine hydroxyl to generate alpha-Kg and lysine. The amine nitrogen is then protonated by the group that originally accepted a proton from the secondary amine of saccharopine, and products are released. In the reverse reaction direction, finite primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects were observed for all parameters with the exception of V2/K(NADH), consistent with a steady-state random mechanism and indicative of a contribution from hydride transfer to rate limitation. The pH dependence, as determined from the primary isotope effect on DV2 and D(V2/K(Lys)), suggests that a step other than hydride transfer becomes rate-limiting as the pH is increased. This step is likely protonation/deprotonation of the carbinolamine nitrogen formed as an intermediate in imine hydrolysis. The observed solvent isotope effect indicates that proton transfer also contributes to rate limitation. A concerted proton and hydride transfer is suggested by multiple substrate/solvent isotope effects, as well as a proton transfer in another step, likely hydrolysis of the carbinolamine. In agreement, dome-shaped proton inventories are observed for V2 and V2/K(Lys), suggesting that proton transfer exists in at least two sequential transition states.  相似文献   

7.
The glutamate dehydrogenase catalyzed reduction of delta 1-pyrroline-2-carboxylic acid (PCA; an alpha-imino acid) with reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) to give L-proline and NADP+ is employed as a model for the redox step of the corresponding enzyme-catalyzed reductive amination of alpha-ketoglutarate. We demonstrate the reversibility of the model reaction and measure its equilibrium constant. The pH profiles for the model reactions show that the active substrates are the N-protonated imino acid in one direction and the proline anion with a neutral amino group in the other. The V/K value for the imino acid reduction is enhanced by a group Z of pK = 8.6 in the enzyme-NADPH complex, while that for the proline reaction is unaffected by any such group in the enzyme-NADP+ complex. The following conclusions emerge from a comparison of the pH dependence of the rates for the model reactions with that for the oxidative deamination of L-glutamate [Rife, J. E., & Cleland, W. W. (1980) Biochemistry 19, 2328]. The N-protonated form of alpha-iminoglutarate and the conjugate base of glutamate are the active substrates. The redox step is not sensitive to the protonation state of the groups that catalyze the hydrolysis of bound alpha-iminoglutarate. The group Z, which facilitates the PCA reaction, plays no role in the binding of alpha-ketoglutarate. We propose a chemical mechanism for the glutamate reaction where an unprotonated enzyme group of pK = 5.2 in enzyme-NADPH catalyzes the conversion of the alpha-iminoglutarate to the carbinolamine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
A Betz  J Hofsteenge  S R Stone 《Biochemistry》1992,31(4):1168-1172
The kinetics of the inhibition of human alpha-thrombin by recombinant hirudin have been studied over the pH range from 6 to 10. The association rate constant for hirudin did not vary significantly over this pH range. The dissociation constant of hirudin depended on the ionization state of groups with pKa values of about 7.1, 8.4, and 9.2. Optimal binding of hirudin to thrombin occurred when the groups with pKa values of 8.4 and 9.0 were protonated and the other group with a pKa of 7.1 was deprotonated. The pH kinetics of genetically engineered forms of hirudin were examined in an attempt to assign these pKa values to particular groups. By using this approach, it was possible to show that protonation His51 and ionization of acidic residues in the C-terminal region of hirudin were not responsible for the observed pKa values. In contrast, the pKa value of 8.4 was not observed when a form of hirudin with an acetylated alpha-amino group was examined, and, thus, this pKa value was assigned to the alpha-amino group of hirudin. The requirement for this group to be protonated for optimal binding to thrombin is discussed in terms of the crystal structure of the thrombin-hirudin complex. Examination of this structure allowed the other pKa values of 7.1 and 9.2 to be tentatively attributed to His57 and the alpha-amino group of Ile16 of thrombin.  相似文献   

9.
K K Wong  J S Blanchard 《Biochemistry》1989,28(8):3586-3590
Human erythrocyte glutathione reductase catalyzes the pyridine nucleotide dependent reduction of oxidized glutathione (GSSG). The pH dependence of the kinetic parameters V and V/K for three reduced pyridine nucleotide substrates, the Ki's for three competitive inhibitors (versus NADPH), and the temperature dependence of the V pH profile have been determined. Below pH 8, V and V/K for NADPH, 2',3'-cyclic-NADPH, and NADH are pH independent. In the basic pH region, both V and V/K for the three substrates are pH dependent. All three of the V profiles decrease with increasing pH as a group with a pKa of approximately 9.2 is titrated. The V/K profiles for NADPH, 2',3'-cyclic-NADPH, and NADH decrease at high pH as a group with a pKa of greater than 9.8, 8.9, and 8.8, respectively, is deprotonated. The Ki's for ATP-ribose and 2',5'-ADP are pH independent below pH 8 but increase in the basic region as a group with a pKa of about 8.8 and 8.5, respectively, is deprotonated. The Ki of AADP is pH independent between pH 6 and 9. These studies suggest that binding interactions between the 2'-phosphate of NADPH and the enzyme are predominately nonionic. The temperature dependence of the pK observed in all V pH profiles allows the calculation of an enthalpy of ionization of 3.2 kcal/mol for this group. The high pK and low enthalpy of ionization suggest that the protonation state of the His-467'-Glu-472' ion pair observed in the structure of human erythrocyte glutathione reductase influences proton-transfer steps occurring in the oxidative half-reaction.  相似文献   

10.
Qian J  West AH  Cook PF 《Biochemistry》2006,45(39):12136-12143
Homocitrate synthase (acetyl-coenzyme A:2-ketoglutarate C-transferase; E.C. 2.3.3.14) catalyzes the condensation of AcCoA and alpha-ketoglutarate to give homocitrate and CoA. The enzyme was found to be a Zn-containing metalloenzyme using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. Dead-end analogues of alpha-ketoglutarate were used to obtain information on the topography of the alpha-ketoglutarate binding site. The alpha-carboxylate and alpha-oxo groups of alpha-ketoglutarate are required for optimum binding to coordinate to the active site Zn. Optimum positioning of the alpha-carboxylate, alpha-oxo, and gamma-carboxylate of alpha-ketoglutarate is likely mimicked by the location in space of the 2-carboxylate, pyridine nitrogen, and 4 carboxylate of pyridine 2,4-dicarboxylate. The pH dependence of the kinetic parameters was determined to obtain information on the chemical mechanism of homocitrate synthase. The V profile is bell shaped with slopes of 1 and -1, giving pKa values of 6.7 and 8.0, while V/K(AcCoA) exhibits a slope of 2 on the acidic side with an average pKa value of 6.6 and a slope of -2 on basic side of the profile with an average pKa value of 8.2. The V/K(alpha-Kg) pH-rate profile exhibits a single pKa of 6.9 on the acidic side and two on the basic side with an average value of 7.8. The pH dependence of the Ki for glyoxylate, a competitive inhibitor vs alpha-ketoglutarate, gives a pKa of 7.1 for a group, required to be protonated for optimum binding. Data suggest a chemical mechanism for the enzyme in which alpha-ketoglutarate first binds to the active site Zn via its alpha-carboxylate and alpha-oxo groups, followed by acetyl-CoA. A general base then accepts a proton from the methyl of acetyl-CoA, and a general acid protonates the carbonyl of alpha-ketoglutarate in the formation of homocitryl-CoA. The general acid then acts as a base in deprotonating Zn-OH2 in the hydrolysis of homocitryl-CoA to give homocitrate and CoA. A solvent deuterium kinetic isotope effect of 1 is measured for homocitrate synthase, while a small pH-independent primary kinetic deuterium isotope effect (approximately 1.3) is observed using deuterioacetyl-CoA. Data suggest rate-limiting condensation to form the alkoxide of homocitryl-CoA, followed by hydrolysis to give products.  相似文献   

11.
J F Morrison  S R Stone 《Biochemistry》1988,27(15):5499-5506
The variations with pH of the kinetic parameters and primary deuterium isotope effects for the reaction of NADPH with dihydrofolate reductase from Escherichia coli have been determined. The aims of the investigations were to elucidate the chemical mechanism of the reaction and to obtain information about the location of the rate-limiting steps. The V and V/KNADPH profiles indicate that a single ionizing group at the active center of the enzyme must be protonated for catalysis, whereas the Ki profiles show that the binding of NADPH to the free enzyme and of ATP-ribose to the enzyme-dihydrofolate complex is pH independent. From the results of deuterium isotope effects on V/KNADPH, it is concluded that NADPH behaves as a sticky substrate. It is this stickiness that raises artificially the intrinsic pK value of 6.4 for the Asp-27 residue of the enzyme-dihydrofolate complex [Howell, E. E., Villafranca, J. E., Warren, M. S., Oatley, S. J., & Kraut, J. (1986) Science (Washington, D.C.) 231, 1123] to an observed value of 8.9. Thus, the binary enzyme complex is largely protonated at neutral pH. The elevation of the intrinsic pK value of 6.4 for the ternary enzyme-NADPH-dihydrofolate complex to 8.5 is not due to the kinetic effects of substrates. Rather, it is the consequence of the lower, pH-independent rate of product release and the faster pH-dependent catalytic step. At neutral pH, the proportion of enzyme present as a protonated ternary enzyme-substrate complex is sufficient to keep catalysis faster than product release.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
The pH dependence of the initial reaction rate catalyzed by the isolated bovine heart ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase (bc1 complex) varying decylbenzoquinol (DBH) and decylbenzoquinone (DB) concentrations was determined. The affinity for DBH was increased threefold by the protonation of a group with pKa = 5.7 +/- 0.2, while the inhibition constant (Ki) for DB decreased 22 and 2.8 times when groups with pKa = 5.2 +/- 0.6 and 7.7 +/- 0.2, respectively, were protonated. This suggests stabilization of the protonated form of the acidic group by DBH binding. Initial rates were best fitted to a kinetic model involving three protonatable groups. The protonation of the pKa approximately 5.7 group blocked catalysis, indicating its role in proton transfer. The kinetic model assumed that the deprotonation of two groups (pKa values of 7.5 +/- 0.03 and approximately 9.2) decreases the catalytic rate by diminishing the redox potential of the iron-sulfur (Fe-S) cluster. The protonation of the pKa approximately 7.5 group also decreased the reaction rate by 80-86%, suggesting its role as acceptor of a proton from ubiquinol. The lack of effect on the Km for DBH when the pKa 7.5-7.7 group is deprotonated suggests that hydrogen bonding to this residue is not the main factor that determines substrate binding to the Qo site. The possible relationship of the pKa 5.2-5.7 and pKa 7.5-7.7 groups with Glu272 of cytochrome b and His161 of the Fe-S protein is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
L J Hyland  T A Tomaszek  T D Meek 《Biochemistry》1991,30(34):8454-8463
The pH dependence of the peptidolytic reaction of recombinant human immunodeficiency virus type 1 protease has been examined over a pH range of 3-7 for four oligopeptide substrates and two competitive inhibitors. The pK values obtained from the pKis vs pH profiles for the unprotonated and protonated active-site aspartyl groups, Asp-25 and Asp-25', in the monoprotonated enzyme form were 3.1 and 5.2, respectively. Profiles of log V/K vs pH for all four substrates were "bell-shaped" in which the pK values for the unprotonated and protonated aspartyl residues were 3.4-3.7 and 5.5-6.5, respectively. Profiles of log V vs pH for these substrates were "wave-shaped" in which V was shifted to a constant lower value upon protonation of a residue of pK = 4.2-5.2. These results indicate that substrates bind only to a form of HIV-1 protease in which one of the two catalytic aspartyl residues is protonated. Solvent kinetic isotope effects were measured over a pH (D) range of 3-7 for two oligopeptide substrates, Ac-Arg-Ala-Ser-Gln-Asn-Tyr-Pro-Val-Val-NH2 and Ac-Ser-Gln-Asn-Tyr-Pro-Val-Val-NH2. The pH-independent value for DV/K was 1.0 for both substrates, and DV = 1.5-1.7 and 2.2-3.2 at low and high pH (D), respectively. The attentuation of both V and DV at low pH (D) is consistent with a change in rate-limiting step from a chemical one at high pH (D) to one in which a product release step or an enzyme isomerization step becomes partly rate-limiting at low pH (D). Proton inventory data is in accord with the concerted transfer of two protons in the transition state of a rate-limiting chemical step in which the enzyme-bound amide hydrate adduct collapses to form the carboxylic acid and amine products.  相似文献   

14.
The variation with pH of the kinetic parameters associated with the mutase and dehydrogenase reactions catalyzed by chorismate mutase-prephenate dehydrogenase has been determined with the aim of elucidating the role that ionizing amino acid residues play in binding and catalysis. The pH dependency of log V for the dehydrogenase reaction shows that the enzyme possesses a single ionizing group with a pK value of 6.5 that must be unprotonated for catalysis. This same group is observed in the V/Kprephenate, as well as in the V/KNAD, profile. The V/Kprephenate profile exhibits a second ionizing residue with a pK value of 8.4 that must be protonated for the binding of prephenate to the enzyme. For the mutase reaction, the V/Kchorismate profile indicates the presence of three ionizing residues at the active site. Two of these residues, with similar pK values of about 7, must be protonated, while the third, with a pK value of 6.3, must be unprotonated. It can be concluded that all three groups are concerned with the binding of chorismate to the enzyme since the maximum velocity of the mutase reaction is essentially independent of pH. This conclusion is confirmed by the finding that the Ki profile for the competitive inhibitor, (3-endo,8-exo)-8-hydroxy-2-oxabicyclo[3.3]non-6-ene-3,5-dicarboxylic acid, shows the same three ionizing groups as observed in the V/Kchorismate profile. By contrast, the Ki profile for carboxyethyldihydrobenzoate shows only one residue, with a pK value of 7.3, that must be protonated for binding of the inhibitor.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
M Y Yoon  P F Cook 《Biochemistry》1987,26(13):4118-4125
The pH dependence of kinetic parameters and inhibitor dissociation constants for the adenosine cyclic 3',5'-monophosphate dependent protein kinase reaction has been determined. Data are consistent with a mechanism in which reactants selectively bind to enzyme with the catalytic base unprotonated and an enzyme group required protonated for peptide (Leu-Arg-Arg-Ala-Ser-Leu-Gly) binding. Binding of the peptide apparently locks both of the above enzyme residues in their correct protonation state. MgATP preferentially binds fully ionized and requires an enzyme residue (probably lysine) to be protonated. The maximum velocity and V/KMgATP are pH independent. The V/K for Ser-peptide is bell-shaped with pK values of 6.2 and 8.5 estimated. The pH dependence of 1/Ki for Leu-Arg-Arg-Ala-Ala-Leu-Gly is also bell-shaped, giving pK values identical with those obtained for V/KSer-peptide, while the Ki for MgAMP-PCP increases from a constant value of 650 microM above pH 8 to a constant value of 4 mM below pH 5.5. The Ki for uncomplexed Mg2+ obtained from the Mg2+ dependence of V and V/KMgATP is apparently pH independent.  相似文献   

16.
The maximum velocity of the malic enzyme (L-malate: NADP+ oxidoreductase (oxaloacetate-decarboxylating), EC 1.1.1.40) reductive carboxylation of pyruvate and V/KCO2 are pH-independent from pH 5.5 to pH 8.5. V/K for pyruvate exhibits pK values values of 6.50 +/- 0.25 and 7.25 +/- 0.25. These data suggest that the binding of pyruvate locks the protonation state of enzyme. In addition, the pK values are within experimental error identical for the pH dependence of V/Kmalate and V/Kpyruvate. Thus, the catalytic groups appear to have reverse protonation states in the two reaction directions. The ratio of (V/Kmalate)/(V/Kpyruvate) is 100, suggesting that the protonation state of enzyme is optimum in the malate oxidative decarboxylation direction. Thus, the group with a pK of about 6 is unprotonated and the group with a pK of 7.5 is protonated for malate decarboxylation, and the opposite is true for pyruvate reductive carboxylation.  相似文献   

17.
Titration of Asp-85, the proton acceptor and part of the counterion in bacteriorhodopsin, over a wide pH range (2-11) leads us to the following conclusions: 1) Asp-85 has a complex titration curve with two values of pKa; in addition to a main transition with pKa = 2.6 it shows a second inflection point at high pH (pKa = 9.7 in 150-mM KCl). This complex titration behavior of Asp-85 is explained by interaction of Asp-85 with an ionizable residue X'. As follows from the fit of the titration curve of Asp-85, deprotonation of X' increases the proton affinity of Asp-85 by shifting its pKa from 2.6 to 7.5. Conversely, protonation of Asp-85 decreases the pKa of X' by 4.9 units, from 9.7 to 4.8. The interaction between Asp-85 and X' has important implications for the mechanism of proton transfer. In the photocycle after the formation of M intermediate (and protonation of Asp-85) the group X' should release a proton. This deprotonated state of X' would stabilize the protonated state of Asp-85.2) Thermal isomerization of the chromophore (dark adaptation) occurs on transient protonation of Asp-85 and formation of the blue membrane. The latter conclusion is based on the observation that the rate constant of dark adaptation is directly proportional to the fraction of blue membrane (in which Asp-85 is protonated) between pH 2 and 11. The rate constant of isomerization is at least 10(4) times faster in the blue membrane than in the purple membrane. The protonated state of Asp-85 probably is important for the catalysis not only of all-trans <=> 13-cis thermal isomerization during dark adaptation but also of the reisomerization of the chromophore from 13-cis to all-trans configuration during N-->O-->bR transition in the photocycle. This would explain why Asp-85 stays protonated in the N and O intermediates.  相似文献   

18.
M Murata  K Nagayama  S Ohnishi 《Biochemistry》1987,26(13):4056-4062
The membrane fusion activity of melittin and its succinylated derivative was studied as a function of pH by the transfer of spin-labeled phosphatidylcholine as well as by internal content mixing and electron microscopy. The protonation process of the carboxyl groups introduced into melittin was studied by 13C NMR spectroscopy using derivative prepared with [1,4(-13)C]succinic anhydride. Melittin causes fusion of sonicated phosphatidylcholine vesicles in a wide range of pH. In marked contrast, melittin with all four amino groups succinylated induces fusion only at acidic pH lower than 5.2, with the maximum at pH 5.1. The fusion reactions are very rapid, reaching a saturation level within 1 min. The fusion efficiency depends on the peptide-to-phospholipid ratio in the reaction mixture. Trypsinized succinylated melittin, which has lost the four positively charged C-terminal residues, causes aggregation of vesicles at acidic pH but cannot induce fusion. The 13C NMR peaks for the carboxyl and carbonyl groups of succinylated melittin shifted to higher field as the pH was lowered. The pKa value of the four carboxyl groups was obtained as 5.19 and 4.83 in the presence and absence of vesicles, respectively. The pKa value in the presence of vesicles agrees quite well with the half-maximal pH for fusion of 5.15, indicating that the fusion activity is triggered by protonation of the carboxyl groups in the hydrophobic segment of the peptide. The higher shift of pKa value in the presence of vesicles can be due to stabilization of the protonated form by entrance into lipid bilayer hydrocarbon layer.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
We have applied site-directed mutagenesis methods to change the conserved tryptophan-22 in the substrate binding site of Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase to phenylalanine (W22F) and histidine (W22H). The crystal structure of the W22F mutant in a binary complex with the inhibitor methotrexate has been refined at 1.9-A resolution. The W22F difference Fourier map and least-squares refinement show that structural effects of the mutation are confined to the immediate vicinity of position 22 and include an unanticipated 0.4-A movement of the methionine-20 side chain. A conserved bound water-403, suspected to play a role in the protonation of substrate DHF, has not been displaced by the mutation despite the loss of a hydrogen bond with tryptophan-22. Steady-state kinetics, stopped-flow kinetics, and primary isotope effects indicate that both mutations increase the rate of product tetrahydrofolate release, the rate-limiting step in the case of the wild-type enzyme, while slowing the rate of hydride transfer to the point where it now becomes at least partially rate determining. Steady-state kinetics show that below pH 6.8, kcat is elevated by up to 5-fold in the W22F mutant as compared with the wild-type enzyme, although kcat/Km(dihydrofolate) is lower throughout the observed pH range. For the W22H mutant, both kcat and kcat/Km(dihydrofolate) are substantially lower than the corresponding wild-type values. While both mutations weaken dihydrofolate binding, cofactor NADPH binding is not significantly altered. Fitting of the kinetic pH profiles to a general protonation scheme suggests that the proton affinity of dihydrofolate may be enhanced upon binding to the enzyme. We suggest that the function of tryptophan-22 may be to properly position the side chain of methionine-20 with respect to N5 of the substrate dihydrofolate.  相似文献   

20.
Stopped-flow fluorometry was used to study the kinetics of the reactive center loop insertion occurring during the reaction of N-((2-(iodoacetoxy)ethyl)-N-methyl)amino-7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-3-diazole (NBD) P9 plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) with tissue-(tPA) and urokinase (uPA)-type plasminogen activators and human pancreatic elastase at pH 5.5-8.5. The limiting rate constants of reactive center loop insertion (k(lim)) and concentrations of proteinase at half-saturation (K(0.5)) for tPA and uPA and the specificity constants (k(lim)/K(0.5)) for elastase were determined. The pH dependences of k(lim)/K(0.5) reflected inactivation of each enzyme due to protonation of His57 of the catalytic triad. However, the specificity of the inhibitory reaction with tPA and uPA was notably higher than that for the substrate reaction catalyzed by elastase. pH dependences of k(lim) and K(0.5) obtained for tPA revealed an additional ionizable group (pKa, 6.0-6.2) affecting the reaction. Protonation of this group resulted in a significant increase in both k(lim) and K(0.5) and a 4.6-fold decrease in the specificity of the reaction of tPA with NBD P9 PAI-1. Binding of monoclonal antibody MA-55F4C12 to PAI-1 induced a decrease in k(lim) and K(0.5) at any pH but did not affect either the pKa of the group or an observed decrease in k(lim)/K(0.5) due to protonation of the group. In contrast to tPA, the k(lim) and K(0.5) for the reactions of uPA with NBD P9 PAI-1 or its complex with the monoclonal antibody were independent of pH in the 6.5-8.5 range. Since slightly acidic pH is a feature of a number of malignant tumors, alterations in PAI-1/tPA kinetics could play a role in the cancerogenesis. Changes in the protonation state of His(188), which is placed closely to the S1 site and is unique for tPA, has been proposed to contribute to the observed pH dependences of k(lim) and K(0.5).  相似文献   

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