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1.
Dirr HW  Wallace LA 《Biochemistry》1999,38(47):15631-15640
Helix 9 at the C-terminus of class alpha glutathione transferase (GST) polypeptides is a unique structural feature in the GST superfamily. It plays an important structural role in the catalytic cycle. Its contribution toward protein stability/folding as well as the binding of nonsubstrate ligands was investigated by protein engineering, conformational stability, enzyme activity, and ligand-binding methods. The helix9 sequence displays an unfavorable propensity toward helix formation, but tertiary interactions between the amphipathic helix and the GST seem to contribute sufficient stability to populate the helix on the surface of the protein. The helix's stability is enhanced further by the binding of ligands at the active site. The order of ligand-induced stabilization increases from H-site occupation, to G-site occupation, to the simultaneous occupation of H- and G-sites. Ligand-induced stabilization of helix9 reduces solvent accessible hydrophobic surface by facilitating firmer packing at the hydrophobic interface between helix and GST. This stabilized form exhibits enhanced affinity for the binding of nonsubstrate ligands to ligandin sites (i.e., noncatalytic binding sites). Although helix9 contributes very little toward the global stability of hGSTA1-1, its conformational dynamics have significant implications for the protein's equilibrium unfolding/refolding pathway and unfolding kinetics. Considering the high concentration of reduced glutathione in human cells (about 10 mM), the physiological form of hGSTA1-1 is most likely the thiol-complexed protein with a stabilized helix9. The C-terminus region (including helix9) of the class alpha polypeptide appears not to have been optimized for stability but rather for catalytic and ligandin function.  相似文献   

2.
Sayed Y  Wallace LA  Dirr HW 《FEBS letters》2000,465(2-3):169-172
A hydrophobic lock-and-key intersubunit motif involving a phenylalanine is a major structural feature conserved at the dimer interface of classes alpha, mu and pi glutathione transferases. In order to determine the contribution of this subunit interaction towards the function and stability of human class alpha GSTA1-1, the interaction was truncated by replacing the phenylalanine 'key' Phe-51 with serine. The F51S mutant protein is dimeric with a native-like core structure indicating that Phe-51 is not essential for dimerization. The mutation impacts on catalytic and ligandin function suggesting that tertiary structural changes have occurred at/near the active and non-substrate ligand-binding sites. The active site appears to be disrupted mainly at the glutathione-binding region that is adjacent to the lock-and-key intersubunit motif. The F51S mutant displays enhanced exposure of hydrophobic surface and ligandin function. The lock-and-key motif stabilizes the quaternary structure of hGSTA1-1 at the dimer interface and the protein concentration dependence of stability indicates that the dissociation and unfolding processes of the mutant protein remain closely coupled.  相似文献   

3.
Human glutathione transferase A1-1 (GST A1-1) has a flexible C-terminal segment that forms a helix (alpha 9) closing the active site upon binding of glutathione and a small electrophilic substrate such as 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (CDNB). In the absence of active-site ligands, the C-terminal segment is not fixed in one position and is not detectable in the crystal structure. A key residue in the alpha 9-helix is Phe 220, which can interact with both the enzyme-bound glutathione and the second substrate, and possibly guide the reactants into the transition state. Mutation of Phe 220 into Ala and Thr was shown to reduce the catalytic efficiency of GST A1-1. The mutation of an additional residue, Phe 222, caused further decrease in activity. The presence of a viscosogen in the reaction medium decreased the kinetic parameters K(cat) and K(cat)/K(m) for the conjugation of CDNB catalyzed by wild-type GST A1-1, in agreement with the view that product release is rate limiting for the substrate-saturated enzyme. The mutations cause a decrease of the viscosity dependence of both kinetic parameters, indicating that the motion of the alpha 9-helix is linked to catalysis in wild-type GST A1-1. The isomerization reaction with the alternative substrate Delta(5)-androstene-3,17-dione (AD) is affected in a similar manner by the viscosogens. The transition state energy of the isomerization reaction, like that of the CDNB conjugation, is lowered by Phe 220 as indicated by the effects of the mutations on K(cat)/K(m). The results demonstrate that Phe 220 and Phe 222, in the dynamic C-terminal segment, influence rate-determining steps in the catalytic mechanism of both the substitution and the isomerization reactions.  相似文献   

4.
Human glutathione transferase A1-1 (GST A1-1) has a flexible C-terminal segment that forms a helix (alpha9) closing the active site upon binding of glutathione and a small electrophilic substrate such as 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (CDNB). In the absence of active-site ligands, the C-terminal segment is not fixed in one position and is not detectable in the crystal structure. A key residue in the alpha9-helix is Phe 220, which can interact with both the enzyme-bound glutathione and the second substrate, and possibly guide the reactants into the transition state. Mutation of Phe 220 into Ala and Thr was shown to reduce the catalytic efficiency of GST A1-1. The mutation of an additional residue, Phe 222, caused further decrease in activity. The presence of a viscosogen in the reaction medium decreased the kinetic parameters k(cat) and k(cat)/K(m) for the conjugation of CDNB catalyzed by wild-type GST A1-1, in agreement with the view that product release is rate limiting for the substrate-saturated enzyme. The mutations cause a decrease of the viscosity dependence of both kinetic parameters, indicating that the motion of the alpha9-helix is linked to catalysis in wild-type GST A1-1. The isomerization reaction with the alternative substrate Delta(5)-androstene-3,17-dione (AD) is affected in a similar manner by the viscosogens. The transition state energy of the isomerization reaction, like that of the CDNB conjugation, is lowered by Phe 220 as indicated by the effects of the mutations on k(cat)/K(m). The results demonstrate that Phe 220 and Phe 222, in the dynamic C-terminal segment, influence rate-determining steps in the catalytic mechanism of both the substitution and the isomerization reactions.  相似文献   

5.
The C-terminal region in class Alpha glutathione transferase A1-1 (GSTA1-1), which forms an amphipathic alpha-helix (helix 9), is known to contribute to the catalytic and non-substrate ligand-binding functions of the enzyme. The region in the apo protein is proposed to be disordered which, upon ligand binding at the active-site, becomes structured and localised. Because Ile219 plays a pivotal role in the stability and localisation of the region, the role of tertiary interactions mediated by Ile219 in determining the conformation and dynamics of the C-terminal region were studied. Ligand-binding microcalorimetric and X-ray structural data were obtained to characterise ligand binding at the active-site and the associated localisation of the C-terminal region. In the crystal structure of the I219A hGSTA1-1.S-hexylglutathione complex, the C-terminal region of one chain is mobile and not observed (unresolved electron density), whereas the corresponding region of the other chain is localised and structured as a result of crystal packing interactions. In solution, the mutant C-terminal region of both chains in the complex is mobile and delocalised resulting in a hydrated, less hydrophobic active-site and a reduction in the affinity of the protein for S-hexylglutathione. Complete dehydration of the active-site, important for maintaining the highly reactive thiolate form of glutathione, requires the binding of ligands and the subsequent localisation of the C-terminal region. Thermodynamic data demonstrate that the mobile C-terminal region in apo hGSTA1-1 is structured and does not undergo ligand-induced folding. Its close proximity to the surface of the wild-type protein is indicated by the concurrence between the observed heat capacity change of complex formation and the type and amount of surface area that becomes buried at the ligand-protein interface when the C-terminal region in the apo protein assumes the same localised structure as that observed in the wild-type complex.  相似文献   

6.
In human glutathione transferase (GST) A1-1, the C-terminal region covers the active site and contributes to substrate binding. This region is flexible, but upon binding of an active-site ligand, it is stabilized as an amphipatic alpha-helix. The stabilization has implications for the catalytic activity of the enzyme. In the present study, residue M208 in GST A1-1 has been mutated to Lys and Glu, and residue F220 to Ala and Thr. These mutations are likely to destabilize the C-terminal region due to loss of hydrophobic interactions with the rest of the hydrophobic binding site. The rate constant for binding of glutathione to wild-type GST A1-1 is 450 mM(-)(1) s(-)(1) at 5 degrees C and pH 7.0, which is less than for an association limited by diffusion. However, the M208 and the F220 mutations increase the apparent on-rate constant for glutathione binding to 640-1170 mM(-)(1) s(-)(1). The binding data can be explained by a rapid reversible transition between different enzyme conformations occurring prior to glutathione binding, and restriction of the access to the active site by the C-terminal region. The effect of the mutations appears to be promotion of a less closed conformation, thereby facilitating the association of glutathione and enzyme. Both the M208 and F220 mutants display a lowered pK(a) value ( approximately 0.3 log unit) of the catalytically important Tyr9. Residue 208 does not interact directly with Tyr9 in the active site, and the shift in pK(a) value is therefore ascribed to the proposed dislocation of the C-terminal region caused by the mutation.  相似文献   

7.
Human glutathione transferase A1-1 (GST A1-1) has a flexible C-terminal segment that forms a helix (α9) closing the active site upon binding of glutathione and a small electrophilic substrate such as 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (CDNB). In the absence of active-site ligands, the C-terminal segment is not fixed in one position and is not detectable in the crystal structure. A key residue in the α9-helix is Phe 220, which can interact with both the enzyme-bound glutathione and the second substrate, and possibly guide the reactants into the transition state. Mutation of Phe 220 into Ala and Thr was shown to reduce the catalytic efficiency of GST A1-1. The mutation of an additional residue, Phe 222, caused further decrease in activity. The presence of a viscosogen in the reaction medium decreased the kinetic parameters kcat and kcat/Km for the conjugation of CDNB catalyzed by wild-type GST A1-1, in agreement with the view that product release is rate limiting for the substrate-saturated enzyme. The mutations cause a decrease of the viscosity dependence of both kinetic parameters, indicating that the motion of the α9-helix is linked to catalysis in wild-type GST A1-1. The isomerization reaction with the alternative substrate Δ5-androstene-3,17-dione (AD) is affected in a similar manner by the viscosogens. The transition state energy of the isomerization reaction, like that of the CDNB conjugation, is lowered by Phe 220 as indicated by the effects of the mutations on kcat/Km. The results demonstrate that Phe 220 and Phe 222, in the dynamic C-terminal segment, influence rate-determining steps in the catalytic mechanism of both the substitution and the isomerization reactions.  相似文献   

8.
The Glu alpha-carboxylate of glutathione contributes to the catalytic function of the glutathione transferases. The catalytic efficiency of human glutathione transferase A1-1 (GST A1-1) in the conjugation reaction with 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene is reduced 15 000-fold if the decarboxylated analogue of glutathione, dGSH (GABA-Cys-Gly), is used as an alternative thiol substrate. The decrease is partially due to an inability of the enzyme to promote ionization of dGSH. The pK(a) value of the thiol group of the natural substrate glutathione decreases from 9.2 to 6.7 upon binding to GST A1-1. However, the lack of the Glu alpha-carboxylate in dGSH raised the pK(a) value of the thiol in the enzymatic reaction to that of the nonenzymatic reaction. Furthermore, K(M)(dGSH) was 100-fold higher than K(M)(GSH). The active-site residue Thr68 forms a hydrogen bond to the Glu alpha-carboxylate of glutathione. Introduction of a carboxylate into GST A1-1 by a T68E mutation increased the catalytic efficiency with dGSH 10-fold and reduced the pK(a) value of the active site bound dGSH by approximately 1 pH unit. The altered pK(a) value is consistent with a catalytic mechanism where the carboxylate contributes to ionization of the glutathione thiol group. With Delta(5)-androstene-3,17-dione as substrate the efficiency of the enzyme is decreased 24 000-fold while with 4-nitrocinnamaldehyde (NCA) the decrease is less than 150-fold. In the latter reaction NCA accepts a proton and, unlike the other reactions studied, may not be dependent on the Glu alpha-carboxylate for deprotonation of the thiol group. An additional function of the Glu alpha-carboxylate may be productive orientation of glutathione within the active site.  相似文献   

9.
We have sought the structural basis for the differing substrate specificities of human glutathione transferase P1-1 (class Pi) and human glutathione transferase A1-1 (class Alpha) by adding an extra helix (helix 9), found in the electrophilic substrate-binding site (H-site) of the human class Alpha enzyme, at the C terminus of the human class Pi enzyme. This class Pi-chimera (CODA) was expressed in Escherichia coli, purified and characterized by kinetic and crystallographic approaches. The presence of the newly engineered tail in the H-site of the human Pi enzyme alters its catalytic properties towards those exhibited by the human Alpha enzyme, as assessed using cumene hydroperoxide (diagnostic for class Alpha enzymes) and ethacrynic acid (diagnostic for class Pi) as co-substrates. There is a change of substrate selectivity in the latter case, as the k(cat)/K(m)(EA) value decreases about 70-fold, compared to that of class Pi. With 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene as co-substrate there is a loss of catalytic activity to about 2% with respect to that of the Pi enzyme. Crystallographic and kinetic studies of the class Pi-chimera provide important clues to explain these altered catalytic properties. The new helix forms many complimentary interactions with the rest of the protein and re-models the original electrophilic substrate-binding site towards one that is more enclosed, albeit flexible. Of particular note are the interactions between Glu205 of the new tail and the catalytic residues, Tyr7 and Tyr108, and the thiol moiety of glutathione (GSH). These interactions may provide an explanation of the more than one unit increase in the pK(a) value of the GSH thiolate and affect both the turnover number and GSH binding, using 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene as co-substrate. The data presented are consistent with the engineered tail adopting a highly mobile or disordered state in the apo form of the enzyme.  相似文献   

10.
An Alpha-class glutathione transferase (GST) has been cloned from pig gonads. In addition to two conservative point mutations our nucleotide sequence presents a frame shift resulting from a missing A as compared to a previously published porcine GST A1-1 sequence. The deduced C-terminal amino-acid segment of the protein differs between the two variants. Repeated sequencing of cDNA isolated from different tissues and animals ruled out the possibility of a cloning artifact, and the deduced amino acid sequence of our clone showed higher similarity to related mammalian GST sequences. Hereafter, we refer to our cloned enzyme as GST A1-1 and to the previously published enzyme as GST A1-1. The study of the tissue distribution of the GSTA1 mRNA revealed high expression levels in many organs, in particular adipose tissue, liver, and pituitary gland. Porcine GST A1-1 was expressed in Escherichia coli and its kinetic properties were determined using alternative substrates. The catalytic activity in steroid isomerization reactions was at least 10-fold lower than the corresponding values for porcine GST A2-2, whereas the activity with 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene was approximately 8-fold higher. Differences in the H-site residues of mammalian Alpha-class GSTs may explain the catalytic divergence.  相似文献   

11.
A C-terminal helix (α9) adjacent to the active site on each subunit is a structural feature unique to the alpha isoform of glutathione transferases which contributes to the catalytic and ligandin functions of the enzyme. The ionisation state of Tyr-9, a residue critical to catalysis, influences α9 dynamics, although the mechanism is poorly understood. In this study, isothermal titration calorimetry was used to probe the binding energetics of G-site (glutathione and glutathione sulfonate) and H-site (ethacrynic acid) ligands to wild-type and a Y9F mutant of human glutathione transferase A1-1. Although previous studies have reported a favourable entropic component to the binding of conjugates occupying both sites, our data reveal that ligand binding is enthalpically driven when either the G- or H-site is occupied independently. Also, heat capacity changes demonstrate that α9 is fully localised by H-site but not G-site occupation. The Tyr-9 hydroxyl group contributes significantly to ligand binding energetics, although the effect differs between the two binding sites. G-site binding is made slightly enthalpically more favourable and entropically less favourable by the Y9F mutation. Binding to the H-site is more dramatically affected, with the K(d) for ethacrynic acid increasing 5 fold despite a more favourable ΔS. The heat capacity change is more negative for G-site binding in the absence of the Tyr-9 hydroxyl (ΔΔC(p)=-0.73 kJ mol(-1) K(-1)), but less negative for H-site binding to the Y9F mutant (ΔΔC(p)=0.63 kJ mol(-1) K(-1)). This suggests that the relationship between Tyr-9 and α9 is not independent of the ligand. Rather, Tyr-9 appears to function in orienting the ligand optimally for α9 closure.  相似文献   

12.
Theta class glutathione transferases (GST) from various species exhibit markedly different catalytic activities in conjugating the tripeptide glutathione (GSH) to a variety of electrophilic substrates. For example, the human theta 1-1 enzyme (hGSTT1-1) is 440-fold less efficient than the rat theta 2-2 enzyme (rGSTT2-2) with the fluorogenic substrate 7-amino-4-chloromethyl coumarin (CMAC). Large libraries of hGSTT1-1 constructed by error-prone PCR, DNA shuffling, or saturation mutagenesis were screened for improved catalytic activity towards CMAC in a quantitative fashion using flow cytometry. An iterative directed evolution approach employing random mutagenesis in conjunction with homologous recombination gave rise to enzymes exhibiting up to a 20,000-fold increase in k(cat)/K(M) compared to hGSTT1-1. All highly active clones encoded one or more mutations at residues 32, 176, or 234. Combinatorial saturation mutagenesis was used to evaluate the full complement of natural amino acids at these positions, and resulted in the isolation of enzymes with catalytic rates comparable to those exhibited by the fastest mutants obtained via directed evolution. The substrate selectivities of enzymes resulting from random mutagenesis, DNA shuffling, and combinatorial saturation mutagenesis were evaluated using a series of distinct electrophiles. The results revealed that promiscuous substrate activities arose in a stochastic manner, as they did not correlate with catalytic efficiency towards the CMAC selection substrate. In contrast, chimeric enzymes previously constructed by homology-independent recombination of hGSTT-1 and rGSTT2-2 exhibited very different substrate promiscuity profiles, and showed a more defined relationship between evolved and promiscuous activities.  相似文献   

13.
We propose Cys-X scanning as a semisynthetic approach to engineer the functional properties of recombinant proteins. As in the case of Ala scanning, key residues in the primary structure are identified, and one of them is replaced by Cys via site-directed mutagenesis. The thiol of the residue introduced is subsequently modified by alternative chemical reagents to yield diverse Cys-X mutants of the protein. This chemical approach is orthogonal to Ala or Cys scanning and allows the expansion of the repertoire of amino acid side chains far beyond those present in natural proteins. In its present application, we have introduced Cys-X residues in human glutathione transferase (GST) M2-2, replacing Met-212 in the substrate-binding site. To achieve selectivity of the modifications, the Cys residues in the wild-type enzyme were replaced by Ala. A suite of simple substitutions resulted in a set of homologous Met derivatives ranging from normethionine to S-heptyl-cysteine. The chemical modifications were validated by HPLC and mass spectrometry. The derivatized mutant enzymes were assayed with alternative GST substrates representing diverse chemical reactions: aromatic substitution, epoxide opening, transnitrosylation, and addition to an ortho-quinone. The Cys substitutions had different effects on the alternative substrates and differentially enhanced or suppressed catalytic activities depending on both the Cys-X substitution and the substrate assayed. As a consequence, the enzyme specificity profile could be changed among the alternative substrates. The procedure lends itself to large-scale production of Cys-X modified protein variants.  相似文献   

14.
We have investigated by molecular dynamics simulations the conformational fluctuations of the monomer of human apo-glutathione transferase P1-1. After attainment of steady-state dynamics, the structural fluctuations involve mainly the protein segments that participate also in the holo-apo transition discussed in the accompanying article (Stella et al., 1999:37:1-9.). The most mobile region is the C-terminal segment of helix 2. In contrast, helices 1, 6, 7, and 8 constitute a relatively rigid protein core. An "essential dynamics" analysis of the simulation shows that the largest fluctuations involve specific regions of glutathione transferases. In such regions, atomic motions are correlated. Motions of helix 2 are accounted for by the second most prominent principal component, which reveals a fluctuation between two distinct conformations. The residues that constitute the H-site undergo a breathing motion, possibly relevant during the binding of hydrophobic cosubstrates. Based on our simulation, several experimental findings can be rationalized, including the viscosity-dependent reactivity of Cys 47 and Cys 101 as well as the selective proteolysis of the peptide bond between Lys 44 and Ala 45. We have also modeled the structural changes that lead to the formation of an intrachain disulfide bridge between cysteines 47 and 101 and to the inactivation of the enzyme. The resulting structure maintains essentially the native fold except for helix 2, which closes the G-site. Proteins 1999;37:10-19.  相似文献   

15.
Wallace LA  Dirr HW 《Biochemistry》1999,38(50):16686-16694
Glutathione transferases function as detoxification enzymes and ligand-binding proteins for many hydrophobic endogenous and xenobiotic compounds. The molecular mechanism of folding of urea-denatured homodimeric human glutathione transferase A1-1 (hGSTA1-1) was investigated. The kinetics of change were investigated using far-UV CD, Trp20 fluorescence, fluorescence-detected ANS binding, acrylamide quenching of Trp20 fluorescence, and catalytic reactivation. The very early stages of refolding (millisecond time range) involve the formation of structured monomers with native-like secondary structure and exposed hydrophobic surfaces that have a high binding capacity for the amphipathic dye ANS. Dimerization of the monomeric intermediates was detected using Trp fluorescence and occurs as fast and intermediate events. The intermediate event was distinguished from the fast event because it is limited by a preceding slow trans-to-cis isomerization reaction (optically silent in this study). At high concentrations of hFKBP, dimerization is not limited by the isomerization reaction, and only the fast event was detected. The fast (tau = 200 ms) and intermediate (tau = 2.5 s) events show similar urea-, temperature-, and ionic strength-dependent properties. The dimeric intermediate has a partially functional active site ( approximately 20%). Final reorganization to form the native tertiary and quaternary structures occurs during a slow, unimolecular, urea- and ionic strength-independent event. During this slow event (tau = 250 s), structural rearrangements at the domain interface occur at/near Trp20 and result in burial of Trp20. The slow event results in the regain of the fully functional dimer. The role of the C-terminus helix 9 (residues 210-221) as a structural determinant for this final event is proposed.  相似文献   

16.
We have previously expressed hexa-histidine-tagged human glutathione transferase GST T1-1 at very high levels in an Escherichia colilacZ mutagenicity assay strain. Ethylene dibromide (EDB), which is activated by GST T1-1, produces a potent response in the mutation assay. We have now constructed and expressed two SNP variants of wild-type GST T1-1:D141N and E173K. The EDB activation activities of both variant enzymes, as measured by the lacZ mutagenicity assay, are greatly reduced The D141N variant behaved similarly to the wild-type enzyme, in terms of expression level and specific activities for conjugation of glutathione with 1,2-epoxy-3-(p-nitrophenoxy)propane (EPNP), ethylene diiodide (EDI), and 4-nitrobenzyl chloride (NBCl), and for peroxidative detoxication of cumene hydroperoxide (CuOOH). In contrast, variant E173K is poorly expressed, has no detectable activity with EPNP, NBCl, or CuOOH, and has EDI activity much lower than that of the wild-type enzyme. The circular dichroism (CD) thermal denaturation profiles of the wild-type protein and variant D141N show a sharp two-state transition between native and denatured states. Variant E173K showed a very different profile, consistent with improper or incomplete protein folding. Our results show that SNP variants can give rise to GSTT1-1 proteins with significantly altered properties.  相似文献   

17.
The glutathione S-transferase enzymes (GSTs) have a tyrosine or serine residue at their active site that hydrogen bonds to and stabilizes the thiolate anion of glutathione, GS(-). The importance of this hydrogen bond is obvious, in light of the enhanced nucleophilicity of GS(-) versus the protonated thiol. Several A-class GSTs contain a C-terminal segment that undergoes a ligand-dependent local folding reaction. Here, we demonstrate the effects of the Y9F substitution on binding affinity for glutathione conjugates and on rates of the order-disorder transition of the C terminus in rat GST A1-1. The equilibrium binding affinity of the glutathione conjugate, GS-NBD (NBD-Cl, 7-chloro-4-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1, 3-diazole), was decreased from 4.09 microm to 0.641 microm upon substitution of Tyr-9 with Phe. This result was supported by isothermal titration calorimetry, with K(d) values of 1.51 microm and 0.391 microm for wild type and Y9F, respectively. The increase in binding affinity for the mutant is associated with dramatic decreases in rates for the C-terminal order-disorder transition, based on a stopped-flow kinetic analysis. The same effects were observed, qualitatively, for a second GSH conjugate, GS-ethacrynic acid. Apparently, the phenolic hydroxyl group of Tyr-9 is critical for orchestrating C-terminal dynamics and efficient product release, in addition to its role in lowering the pK(a) of GSH.  相似文献   

18.
Cytosolic glutathione transferases (GSTs) are major detoxification enzymes in aerobes. Each subunit has two distinct domains and an active site consisting of a G-site for binding GSH and an H-site for an electrophilic substrate. While the active site is located at the domain interface, the role of the stability of this interface in the catalytic function of GSTs is poorly understood. Domain 1 of class alpha GSTs has a conserved tryptophan (Trp21) in helix 1 that forms a major interdomain contact with helices 6 and 8 in domain 2. Replacing Trp21 with an alanine is structurally non-disruptive but creates a cavity between helices 1, 6 and 8 thus reducing the packing density and van der Waals contacts at the domain interface. This results in destabilization of the protein and a marked reduction in catalytic activity. While functionality at the G-site is not adversely affected by the W21A mutation, the H-site becomes more accessible to solvent and less favorable for the electrophilic substrate 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (CDNB). Not only does the mutation result in a reduction in the energy for stabilizing the transition state formed in the SNAr reaction between the substrates GSH and CDNB, it also compromises the ability of the enzyme to form and stabilize a transition state analogue (Meisenheimer complex) formed between GSH and 1,3,5-trinitrobenzene (TNB). The study demonstrates that the stability of the domain–domain interface plays a role in mediating the catalytic functionality of the active site, particularly the H-site, of class alpha GSTs.  相似文献   

19.
The folding and assembly of the dimeric glutathione transferases (GST) involves the association of two structurally distinct domains per subunit. A prominent and conserved domain-domain interaction in class alpha GSTs is formed by the packing of the indole side chain of Trp-20 from domain I into a hydrophobic pocket in domain II. Stability studies have shown that partial dissociation of the domains near Trp-20 occurs as an initial fast event during the unfolding kinetics of human GSTA1-1 (Wallace et al., Biochemistry 37 (1998) 5320-5328; Wallace et al., Biochem. J. 336 (1998) 413-418). The contribution of Trp-20 toward stabilising the domain-domain interface was investigated by mutating it to either a phenylalanine (W20F) or alanine (W20A) and determining the functionality (catalysis and non-substrate ligand binding) and stability (thermal- and urea-induced denaturation) of the mutant proteins. The replacement of Trp-20 did not impact on the protein's gross structural properties. Functionally, the W20F was non-disruptive, whereas the cavity-creating W20A mutation was. Both mutants destabilised the native state with W20A exerting the greatest effect. Reduced m-values as well as the protein concentration dependence of the urea unfolding transitions for W20F GSTA1-1 suggest the presence of a dimeric intermediate at equilibrium that is not observed with wild-type protein. Unfolding kinetics monitored by stopped-flow tyrosine fluorescence was mono-exponential and corresponded to the global unfolding of the protein during which the dimeric intermediate unfolds to two unfolded monomers. The similar unfolding kinetics data for wild-type and W20F A1-1 indicates that the global unfolding event was not affected by amino acid replacement. We propose that the packing interactions at the conserved Trp-20 plays an important role in stabilising the intrasubunit domain I-domain II interface of class alpha GSTs.  相似文献   

20.
A study of the kinetics of a heterodimeric variant of glutathione transferase (GST) A1-1 has led to the conclusion that, although the wild-type enzyme displays all-of-the-sites reactivity in nucleophilic aromatic substitution reactions, it demonstrates half-of-the-sites reactivity in addition reactions. The heterodimer, designed to be essentially catalytically inactive in one subunit due to a single point mutation (D101K), and the two parental homodimers were analyzed with seven different substrates, exemplifying three types of reactions catalyzed by glutathione transferases (nucleophilic aromatic substitution, addition, and double-bond isomerization reactions). Stopped-flow kinetic results suggested that the wild-type GST A1-1 behaved with half-of-the-sites reactivity in a nucleophilic aromatic substitution reaction, but steady-state kinetic analyses of the GST A1-D101K heterodimer revealed that this was presumably due to changes to the extinction coefficient of the enzyme-bound product. In contrast, steady-state kinetic analysis of the heterodimer with three different substrates of addition reactions provided evidence that the wild-type enzyme displayed half-of-the-sites reactivity in association with these reactions. The half-of-the-sites reactivity was shown not to be dependent on substrate size, the level of saturation of the enzyme with glutathione, or relative catalytic rate.  相似文献   

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