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1.
The enzyme chorismate mutase EcCM from Escherichia coli catalyzes one of the few pericyclic reactions in biology, the transformation of chorismate to prephenate. The isochorismate pyruvate lyase PchB from Pseudomonas aeroginosa catalyzes another pericyclic reaction, the isochorismate to salicylate transformation. Interestingly, PchB possesses weak chorismate mutase activity as well thus being able to catalyze two distinct pericyclic reactions in a single active site. EcCM and PchB possess very similar folds, despite their low sequence identity. Using molecular dynamics simulations of four combinations of the two enzymes (EcCM and PchB) with the two substrates (chorismate and isochorismate) we show that the electrostatic field due to EcCM at atoms of chorismate favors the chorismate to prephenate transition and that, analogously, the electrostatic field due to PchB at atoms of isochorismate favors the isochorismate to salicylate transition. The largest differences between EcCM and PchB in electrostatic field strengths at atoms of the substrates are found to be due to residue side chains at distances between 0.6 and 0.8 nm from particular substrate atoms. Both enzymes tend to bring their non‐native substrate in the same conformation as their native substrate. EcCM and to a lower extent PchB fail in influencing the forces on and conformations of the substrate such as to favor the other chemical reaction (isochorismate pyruvate lyase activity for EcCM and chorismate mutase activity for PchB). These observations might explain the difficulty of engineering isochorismate pyruvate lyase activity in EcCM by solely mutating active site residues.  相似文献   

2.
The FAD-dependent hydroxynitrile lyase from almond (Prunus amygdalus, PaHNL) catalyzes the cleavage of R-mandelonitrile into benzaldehyde and hydrocyanic acid. Catalysis of the reverse reaction-the enantiospecific formation of alpha-hydroxynitriles--is now widely utilized in organic syntheses as one of the few industrially relevant examples of enzyme-mediated C-C bond formation. Starting from the recently determined X-ray crystal structure, systematic docking calculations with the natural substrate were used to locate the active site of the enzyme and to identify amino acid residues involved in substrate binding and catalysis. Analysis of the modeled substrate complexes supports an enzymatic mechanism that includes the flavin cofactor as a mere "spectator" of the reaction and relies on general acid/base catalysis by the conserved His-497. Stabilization of the negative charge of the cyanide ion is accomplished by a pronounced positive electrostatic potential at the binding site. PaHNL activity requires the FAD cofactor to be bound in its oxidized form, and calculations of the pKa of enzyme-bound HCN showed that the observed inactivation upon cofactor reduction is largely caused by the reversal of the electrostatic potential within the active site. The suggested mechanism closely resembles the one proposed for the FAD-independent, and structurally unrelated HNL from Hevea brasiliensis. Although the actual amino acid residues involved in the catalytic cycle are completely different in the two enzymes, a common motif for the mechanism of cyanogenesis (general acid/base catalysis plus electrostatic stabilization of the cyanide ion) becomes evident.  相似文献   

3.
Acid-base catalysis in the argininosuccinate lyase reaction   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The pH variation of the kinetic parameters, Vmax and V/K, was examined for the forward and reverse reaction of bovine liver argininosuccinate lyase. In the forward reaction the Vmax profile showed one group that must be unprotonated for activity over the pH range 5-10. The V/K profile for argininosuccinate showed one group that must be unprotonated and two groups that must be protonated for activity. The Vmax profile for the reverse reaction showed only one group that must be protonated for activity. These results support the proposal that catalysis is facilitated in the forward reaction by a general base that abstracts a proton from C-3 of argininosuccinate and a general acid that donates a proton to the guanidinium nitrogen during carbon-nitrogen bond cleavage. The enzyme is completely inactivated by diethyl pyrocarbonate or a water-soluble carbodiimide at pH 6. These experiments suggest that a histidine and a carboxyl group are at or near the active site and are essential for catalytic activity. The observed shifts of the pH profiles of the forward reaction with temperature and organic solvent (25% dioxane) were also consistent with a histidine and carboxylate group.  相似文献   

4.
Chalcone isomerase form soybean is inactivated by treatment with diethyl pyrocarbonate (DEP). The competitive inhibitor 4',4-dihydroxychalcone provides kinetic protection against inactivation by DEP with a binding constant at the site of protection in agreement with its binding constant at the active site. Very high concentrations of the competitive inhibitors 4',4-dihydroxychalcone or morin hydrate offer a 10- to 40-fold maximal protection, suggesting a second slower mechanism for inactivation which cannot be prevented by blockage of the active site. Blockage of the only cysteine residue in chalcone isomerase with p-mercuribenzoate does not affect the rate constant for DEP-dependent inactivation and indicates that the modification of the cysteine residue is not responsible for the activity loss observed in the presence of DEP. Treatment of inactivated enzyme with hydroxylamine does not restore catalytic activity, indicating that the modification of histidine or tyrosine residues is not responsible for the activity loss. All five histidines of chalcone isomerase are modified by DEP at pH 5.7 and ionic strength 1.0 M. The rate constant for the modification of the histidine residues of chalcone isomerase is close to that for the reaction of N-acetyl histidine with DEP, indicating that the histidine residues are quite accessible to the modifying reagent. The rate of histidine modification is the same in native enzyme, in urea-denatured enzyme, and in the presence of a competitive inhibitor. In the presence of the competitive inhibitor morin hydrate, all of the histidine residues of chalcone isomerase can be modified without significant loss in catalytic activity. These results demonstrate that the histidine residues of chalcone isomerase are not essential for catalysis and therefore cannot function as nucleophilic catalysts as previously proposed.  相似文献   

5.
PchB from Pseudomonas aeruginosa possesses isochorismate pyruvate lyase (IPL) and weak chorismate mutase (CM) activity. Homology modeling based on a structurally characterized CM, coupled with randomization of presumed key active site residues (Arg54, Glu90, Gln91) and in vivo selection for CM activity, was used to derive mechanistic insights into the IPL activity of PchB. Mutation of Arg54 was incompatible with viability, and the CM and IPL activities of an engineered R54K variant were reduced 1,000-fold each. The observation that position 90 was tolerant to substitution but position 91 was essentially confined to Gln or Glu in functional variants rules out involvement of Glu90 in general base catalysis. Counter to the generally accepted mechanistic hypothesis for pyruvate lyases, we propose for PchB a rare [1,5]-sigmatropic reaction mechanism that invokes electrostatic catalysis in analogy to the [3,3]-pericyclic rearrangement of chorismate in CMs. A common catalytic principle for both PchB functions is also supported by the covariance of the catalytic parameters for the CM and IPL activities and the shared functional requirement for a protonated Glu91 in Q91E variants. The experiments demonstrate that focusing directed evolution strategies on the readily accessible surrogate activity of an enzyme can provide valuable insights into the mechanism of the primary reaction.  相似文献   

6.
Mutant 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductases of the halophilic archaeon Haloferax volcanii were constructed to test the proposed mechanism that phosphorylation downregulates the activity of higher eukarya HMG-CoA reductases via charge-charge interaction with the active site histidine. To first verify the sequence-based inference that His 398 is the catalytic histidine of the H. volcanii enzyme, enzyme H398Q was constructed, purified, and assayed for catalysis of three reactions: [1] reductive deacylation of HMG-CoA, [2] reduction of mevaldehyde, and [3] oxidative acylation of mevaldehyde. Enzyme H398Q had low activity for catalysis of reaction [1] or [3], but readily catalyzed mevaldehyde reduction. By analogy to hamster HMG-CoA reductase, we conclude that His 398 is the active site histidine. Mutant forms of the 403-residue H. volcanii enzyme were constructed to model phosphorylation and infer whether attenuated activity involved interaction with His 398. Chimeric H. volcanii-hamster enzymes constructed in an effort to create an active, phosphorylatable chimeric enzyme were inactive or not phosphorylated. We therefore added Asp at position 404 to mimic the introduction of negative charge that would accompany phosphorylation. Enzyme 404D/H398Q was inactive for reaction [1] or [3], but catalyzed reaction [2] at 35% the wild-type rate. These observations are consistent with the model that attenuation of catalytic activity results from an ionic interaction between the imidazolium cation of His 398 and the carboxylate anion of Asp 404.  相似文献   

7.
The hairpin ribozyme is a small catalytic RNA with reversible phosphodiester cleavage activity. Biochemical and structural studies exclude a requirement for divalent metal cation cofactors and implicate one active site nucleobase in particular, G8, in the catalytic mechanism. Our previous work demonstrated that the cleavage activity that is lost when G8 is replaced by an abasic residue is restored when certain nucleobases are provided in solution. The specificity and pH dependence of exogenous nucleobase rescue were consistent with several models of the rescue mechanism, including general acid base catalysis, electrostatic stabilization of negative charge in the transition state or a requirement for protonation to facilitate exogenous nucleobase binding. Detailed analyses of exogenous nucleobase rescue for both cleavage and ligation reactions now allow us to refine models of the rescue mechanism. Activity increased with increasing pH for both unmodified ribozyme reactions and unrescued reactions of abasic variants lacking G8. This similarity in pH dependence argues against a role for G8 as a general base catalyst, because G8 deprotonation could not be responsible for the pH-dependent transition in the abasic variant. Exogenous nucleobase rescue of both cleavage and ligation activity increased with decreasing pH, arguing against a role for rescuing nucleobases in general acid catalysis, because a nucleobase that contributes general acid catalysis in the cleavage pathway should provide general base catalysis in ligation. Analysis of the concentration dependence of cytosine rescue at high and low pH demonstrated that protonation promotes catalysis within the nucleobase-bound ribozyme complex but does not stabilize nucleobase binding in the ground state. These results support an electrostatic stabilization mechanism in which exogenous nucleobase binding counters negative charge that develops in the transition state.  相似文献   

8.
The active site of glucosamine-6-phosphate deaminase (EC 3.5.99.6, formerly 5.3.1.10) from Escherichia coli was first characterized on the basis of the crystallographic structure of the enzyme bound to the competitive inhibitor 2-amino-2-deoxy-glucitol 6-phosphate. The structure corresponds to the R allosteric state of the enzyme; it shows the side-chain of His143 in close proximity to the O5 atom of the inhibitor. This arrangement suggests that His143 could have a role in the catalysis of the ring-opening step of glucosamine 6-phosphate whose alpha-anomer is the true substrate. The imidazole group of this active-site histidine contacts the carboxy groups from Glu148 and Asp141, via its Ndelta1 atom [Oliva et al. (1995) Structure 3, 1323-1332]. These interactions change in the T state because the side chain of Glu148 moves toward the allosteric site, leaving at the active site the dyad Asp141-His143 [Horjales et al. (1999) Structure 7, 527-536]. In this research, a dual approach using site-directed mutagenesis and controlled chemical modification of histidine residues has been used to investigate the role of the active-site histidine. Our results support a multifunctional role of His143; in the forward reaction, it is involved in the catalysis of the ring-opening step of the substrate, glucosamine 6-P. In the reverse reaction, the substrate fructose 6-P binds in its open chain, carbonylic form. The role of His143 in the binding of both glucosamine 6-P and reaction intermediates in their extended-chain forms was demonstrated by binding experiments using the reaction intermediate analogue, 2-amino-2-deoxy-D-glucitol 6-phosphate. His143 was also shown to be a critical residue for the conformational coupling between active and allosteric sites. From the pH dependence of the reactivity of the active site histidine to diethyl dicarbonate, we observed a pK(a) change of 1.2 units to the acid side when the enzyme undergoes the allosteric T to R transition during which the side chain of Glu148 moves toward the active site. The kinetic study of the Glu148-Gln mutant deaminase shows that the loss of the carboxy group and its replacement with the corresponding amide modifies the k(cat) versus pH profile of the enzyme, suggesting that the catalytic step requiring the participation of His143 has become rate-limiting. This, in turn, indicates that the interaction Glu148-His143 in the wild-type enzyme in the R state contributes to make the enzyme functional over a wide pH range.  相似文献   

9.
The catalysis of disfavored chemical reactions, especially those with no known natural enzyme counterparts, is one of the most promising achievements of catalytic antibody research. Antibodies 5C8, 14B9, 17F6, and 26D9, elicited by two different transition-state analogues, catalyze disfavored endo-tet cyclization reactions of trans-epoxy alcohols, in formal violation of Baldwin's rules for ring closure. Thus far, neither chemical nor enzyme catalysis has been capable of emulating the extraordinary activity and specificity of these antibodies. X-ray structures of two complexes of Fab 5C8 with the original hapten and with an inhibitor have been determined to 2.0 A resolution. The Fab structure has an active site that contains a putative catalytic diad, consisting of AspH95 and HisL89, capable of general acid/base catalysis. The stabilization of a positive charge that develops along the reaction coordinate appears to be an important factor for rate enhancement and for directing the reaction along the otherwise disfavored pathway. Sequence analysis of the four catalytic antibodies, as well as four inactive antibodies that strongly bind the transition-state analogues, suggests a conserved catalytic mechanism. The occurrence of the putative base HisL89 in all active antibodies, its absence in three out of the four analyzed inactive antibodies, and the rarity of a histidine at this position in immunoglobulins support an important catalytic role for this residue.  相似文献   

10.
Oxalate decarboxylase (OXDC) from the wood-rotting fungus Flammulina velutipes, which catalyzes the conversion of oxalate to formic acid and CO(2) in a single-step reaction, is a duplicated double-domain germin family enzyme. It has agricultural as well as therapeutic importance. We reported earlier the purification and molecular cloning of OXDC. Knowledge-based modeling of the enzyme reveals a beta-barrel core in each of the two domains organized in the hexameric state. A cluster of three histidines suitably juxtaposed to coordinate a divalent metal ion exists in both the domains. Involvement of the two histidine clusters in the catalytic mechanism of the enzyme, possibly through coordination of a metal cofactor, has been hypothesized because all histidine knockout mutants showed total loss of decarboxylase activity. The atomic absorption spectroscopy analysis showed that OXDC contains Mn(2+) at up to 2.5 atoms per subunit. Docking of the oxalate in the active site indicates a similar electrostatic environment around the substrate-binding site in the two domains. We suggest that the histidine coordinated manganese is critical for substrate recognition and is directly involved in the catalysis of the enzyme.  相似文献   

11.
Cloning and expression of a human ATP-citrate lyase cDNA.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A full-length cDNA clone of 4.3 kb encoding the human ATP-citrate lyase enzyme has been isolated by screening a human cDNA library with the recently isolated rat ATP-citrate lyase cDNA clone [Elshourbagy et al. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 1430]. Nucleic-acid sequence data indicate that the cDNA contains the complete coding region for the enzyme, which is 1105 amino acids in length with a calculated molecular mass of 121,419 Da. Comparison of the human and rat ATP-citrate lyase cDNA sequences reveals 96.3% amino acid identity throughout the entire sequence. Further sequence analysis identified the His765 catalytic phosphorylation site, the ATP-binding site, as well as the CoA binding site. The human ATP-citrate lyase cDNA clone was subcloned into a mammalian expression vector for expression in African green monkey kidney cells (COS) and Chinese hamster ovary cells (CHO) cells. Transfected COS cells expressed detectable levels of an enzymatically active recombinant ATP-citrate lyase enzyme. Stable, amplified expression of ATP-citrate lyase in CHO cells as achieved by using coamplification with dihydrofolate reductase. Resistant cells expressed high levels of enzymatically active ATP-citrate lyase (3 pg/cell/d). Site-specific mutagenesis of His765----Ala diminishes the catalytic activity of the expressed ATP-citrate lyase protein. Since catalysis of ATP-citrate lyase is postulated to involve the formation of phosphohistidine, these results are consistent with the pattern of earlier observations of the significance of the histidine residue in catalysis of the human ATP-citrate lyase.  相似文献   

12.
Virtually all of the eukaryotic low-molecular weight protein tyrosine phosphatases (LMW PTPases) studied to date contain a conserved, high-pK(a) histidine residue that is hydrogen bonded to a conserved active site asparagine residue of the phosphate binding loop. However, in the putative enzyme encoded by the genome of the trichomonad parasite Tritrichomonas foetus, this otherwise highly conserved histidine is replaced with a glutamine residue. We have cloned the gene, expressed the enzyme, demonstrated its catalytic activity, and examined the structural and functional roles of the glutamine residue using site-directed mutagenesis, kinetic measurements, and NMR spectroscopy. Titration studies of the two native histidine residues in the T. foetus enzyme as monitored by (1)H NMR revealed that H44 has a pK(a) of 6.4 and H143 has a pK(a) of 5.3. When a histidine residue was introduced in place of the native glutamine at position 67, a pK(a) of 8.2 was measured for this residue. Steady state kinetic methods were employed to study how mutation of the native glutamine to alanine, asparagine, and histidine affected the catalytic activity of the enzyme. Examination of k(cat)/K(m) showed that Q67H exhibits a substrate selectivity comparable to that of the wild-type (WT) enzyme, while Q67N and Q67A show reduced activity. The effect of pH on the reaction rate was examined. Importantly, the pH-rate profile of the WT TPTP enzyme revealed a much more clearly defined acidic limb than that which can be observed for other wild-type LMW PTPases. The pH-rate curve of the Q67H mutant shows a shift to a lower pH optimum relative to that seen for the wild-type enzyme. The Q67N and Q67A mutants showed curves that were shifted to higher pH optima. Although the active site of this enzyme is likely to be similar to that of other LMW PTPases, the hydrogen bonding and electrostatic changes afford new insight into factors affecting the pH dependence and catalysis by this family of enzymes.  相似文献   

13.
The active site, the substrate binding site, and the metal binding sites of the diisopropylfluorophosphatase (DFPase) from Loligo vulgaris have been modified by means of site-directed mutagenesis to improve our understanding of the reaction mechanism. Enzymatic characterization of mutants located in the major groove of the substrate binding pocket indicates that large hydrophobic side chains at these positions are favorable for substrate turnover. Moreover, the active site residue His287 proved to be beneficial, but not essential, for DFP hydrolysis. In most cases, hydrophobic side chains at position 287 led to significant catalytic activities although reduced relative to the wild-type enzyme. With respect to the Ca-1 binding site, where catalysis occurs, various mutants indicated that the net charge at this calcium-binding site as well as the relative positions of the charged calcium ligands is crucial for catalytic activity. The importance of the electrostatic potential at the active site was furthermore revealed by various mutations of residues lining the interior of the central water-filled tunnel, which traverses the entire protein structure. In this respect, the structural features of residue His181, which is located at the opposite end of the DFPase tunnel relative to the active site, were characterized extensively. It was concluded that a tunnel-spanning hydrogen bond network, which includes a large number of apparently slow exchanging water molecules, relays any modifications in the electrostatics of the system to the active site, thus affecting the catalytic reactivity of the enzyme.  相似文献   

14.
Reaction ofKlebsiella aerogenes urease with diethylpyrocarbonate (DEP) led to a pseudo-first-order loss of enzyme activity by a reaction that exhibited saturation kinetics. The rate of urease inactivation by DEP decreased in the presence of active site ligands (urea, phosphate, and boric acid), consistent with the essential reactive residue being located proximal to the catalytic center. ThepH dependence for the rate of inactivation indicated that the reactive residue possessed apK a of 6.5, identical to that of a group that must be deprotonated for catalysis. Full activity was restored when the inactivated enzyme was treated with hydroxylamine, compatible with histidinyl or tyrosinyl reactivity. Spectrophotometric studies were consistent with DEP derivatization of 12 mol of histidine/mol of native enzyme. In the presence of active site ligands, however, approximately 4 mol of histidine/mol of protein were protected from reaction. Each protein molecule is known to possess two catalytic units; hence, we propose that urease possesses at least one essential histidine per catalytic unit.  相似文献   

15.
Reaction ofKlebsiella aerogenes urease with diethylpyrocarbonate (DEP) led to a pseudo-first-order loss of enzyme activity by a reaction that exhibited saturation kinetics. The rate of urease inactivation by DEP decreased in the presence of active site ligands (urea, phosphate, and boric acid), consistent with the essential reactive residue being located proximal to the catalytic center. ThepH dependence for the rate of inactivation indicated that the reactive residue possessed apK a of 6.5, identical to that of a group that must be deprotonated for catalysis. Full activity was restored when the inactivated enzyme was treated with hydroxylamine, compatible with histidinyl or tyrosinyl reactivity. Spectrophotometric studies were consistent with DEP derivatization of 12 mol of histidine/mol of native enzyme. In the presence of active site ligands, however, approximately 4 mol of histidine/mol of protein were protected from reaction. Each protein molecule is known to possess two catalytic units; hence, we propose that urease possesses at least one essential histidine per catalytic unit.  相似文献   

16.
Chemical modification studies of manganese(III)-containing acid phosphatase [EC 3.1.3.2] were carried out to investigate the contributions of specific amino-acid side-chains to the catalytic activity. Incubation of the enzyme with N-ethylmaleimide at pH 7.0 caused a significant loss of the enzyme activity. The inactivation followed pseudo-first-order kinetics. Double log plots of pseudo-first-order rate constant vs. concentration gave a straight line with a slope of 1.02, suggesting that the reaction of one molecule of reagent per active site is associated with activity loss. The enzyme was protected from inactivation by the presence of molybdate or phosphate ions. Amino acid analyses of the N-ethylmaleimide-modified enzyme showed that the 96%-inactivated enzyme had lost about one histidine and one-half lysine residue per enzyme subunit without any significant decrease in other amino acids, and also demonstrated that loss of catalytic activity occurred in parallel with the loss of histidine residue rather than that of lysine residue. Molybdate ions also protected the enzyme against modification of the histidine residue. The enzyme was inactivated by photooxidation mediated by methylene blue according to pseudo-first-order kinetics. The pH profile of the inactivation rates of the enzyme showed that an amino acid residue having a pKa value of approximately 7.2 was involved in the inactivation. These studies indicate that at least one histidine residue per enzyme subunit participates in the catalytic function of Mn(III)-acid phosphatase.  相似文献   

17.
Bisphosphoglycerate mutase is an erythrocyte-specific enzyme whose main function is to synthesize 2,3-diphosphoglycerate, the allosteric effector of hemoglobin. In addition to its main 2,3-diphosphoglycerate synthase activity, the enzyme displays phosphatase and mutase activities both involving 2,3-diphosphoglycerate in their reaction. The three activities have been demonstrated to be catalysed at a unique active site. To study the structure of such an active site we have developed a recombinant system producing mutants of human bisphosphoglycerate mutase in Escherichia coli, by site-directed mutagenesis. For this purpose the human bisphosphoglycerate mutase cDNA that we had previously cloned has been used to construct a procaryotic high level expression vector bearing the "tac" promoter. Human bisphosphoglycerate mutase produced in E. coli, a species which does not normally synthesize this enzyme, represented 8% of the total soluble bacterial protein and displayed the three catalytic activities (synthase, mutase, and phosphatase) characteristic of the enzyme. Since it has been suggested that the carboxyl-terminal region may be implicated in the catalytic activity of the enzyme, three variants deleted in this part of the protein were produced. Our results indicate that a minimal deletion of 7 amino acid residues in the carboxyl-terminal portion of the human bisphosphoglycerate mutase completely abolished the three catalytic activities of the enzyme. In contrast, the effects of the deletion of the last two lysine residues were limited to a 38% reduction in the synthase activity. These results show that the carboxyl-terminal amino acid residues are either directly or indirectly implicated in the three catalytic functions of the human bisphosphoglycerate mutase, and that the two terminal lysine residues are not essential for the major part of the enzymatic mechanism of the enzyme.  相似文献   

18.
Clostridium perfringens cells were cultivated on a large scale using an automatic system. 2) N-Acetylneuraminate lyase, which is a cytosolic enzyme, was liberated from the bacteria by cell lysis using lysozyme in hypotonic solution. The enzyme was purified 770-fold by precepitation with ammonium sulfate, filtration on Sephadex A-50 and final preparative electrophoresis in a 7.5% polyacrylamide gel. Yield: 12 mg from 1 kg wet cell paste; specific activity: 167 nkat/mg protein. 3) The enzyme preparation appeared homogeneous in analytical disc electrophoresis, in gel electrophroesis in 0.1% sodium dodecylsulfate or 8m urea and in immunoelectrophoresis. Contaminating enzyme activities were not detected. 4) The isoelectric point of pH 4.7 was found for the enzyme. At 278 nm a molar extinction coefficient of 6.4 x 10(4)M-1 Xcm-1 was determined. The enzyme exhibited a Km value for N-acetylneuraminic acid of 2.8mM at its pH optimum of pH 7.2. The pH dependence of the Km value gives evidence that an ionizing guoup in the active center of the enzyme with a pKe value of 6.4 may be involved in the catalytic reaction. Pyruvate inhibited the cleavage reaction of N-acetylneuraminic acid competitively; Ki = 2.9mM. 5) An average molecular weight of 99200 was determined for the native enzyme using different methods. After denaturation in sokium dodecylsulfate or urea, a mean molecular weight of only 50000 could be demonstrated, indicating the existence of two enzyme subunits. The lyase molecule was shown by electron microscopy, using a negative staining technique, to consist of two hemispherical parts. 6) Two active sites per native enzyme molecule, probably corresponding to one active site per subunit, were found by incubation of the enzyme with radioactive pyruvate followed by borohydride reduction. The results obtained from chemical modification of the lyase with 5-diazonium-1H-tetrazole and iodocaetamide under various conditionsare interpreted as evidence for the presence of two reactive histidine residues in the enzyme molecule. It is probable that one residue per subunit forms the nucleophilic group participating in enzyme catalysis. A model suggesting the mechanism of reversible cleavage of N-acylneuraminic acids by the lyase is presented.  相似文献   

19.
Escherichia coli isocitrate lyase (EC 4.1.3.1.) can be phosphorylated in vitro by an ATP-dependent reaction. The enzyme becomes phosphorylated by an endogenous kinase when partially purified sonic extracts are incubated with [gamma-32P]ATP. Treatment of isocitrate lyase with diethyl pyrocarbonate, a histidine-modifying reagent, blocked incorporation of [32P]phosphate from [gamma-32P]ATP. The isoelectric point of the enzyme was altered by treatment with phosphoramidate, a histidine phosphorylating agent, which suggests that isocitrate lyase can be phosphorylated at a histidine residue(s). Immunoprecipitated 32P-labeled isocitrate lyase was subjected to alkaline hydrolysis, mixed with chemically synthesized phosphohistidine standards, and analyzed by anion exchange chromatography. Characterization of the phosphoamino acid was based on the demonstration that the 32P-labeled product from alkali-hydrolyzed isocitrate lyase comigrated with synthetic 1-phosphohistidine. In addition, loss of catalytic activity after treatment with potato acid phosphatase indicates that catalytically active isocitrate lyase is the phosphorylated form of the enzyme.  相似文献   

20.
Within the scope of improving the efficiency of pancreatic enzyme replacement therapy in cystic fibrosis, the feasibility of shifting the pH-activity profile of pancreatic lipase toward acidic values was investigated by site specific mutagenesis in different regions of the catalytic cavity. We have shown that introducing a negative charge close to the catalytic histidine induced a shift of the pH optimum toward acidic values but strongly reduced the lipase activity. On the other hand, a negative charge in the entrance of the catalytic cleft gives rise to a lipase with improved properties and twice more active than the native enzyme at acidic pH.  相似文献   

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