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1.
The mechanism by which indole condenses with L-serine in the active site of tryptophan synthase was studied by the stopped-flow technique. The single turnover occurs by rapid binding of indole to the pre-formed enzyme--L-serine complex, followed by C--C bond formation, reprotonation of the alpha carbon carbanion of L-tryptophan, and its final release. The effects of isotopic substitution at C-3 of indole, of pH, and of the presence of indolepropanol phosphate on these processes were also studied. The mechanism of binding of indole complements the known mechanisms of binding of L-serine and L-tryptophan to give a detailed picture of the mechanism of catalysis. It invokes two competent species of enzyme--L-serine complexes, leading to a branched pathway for the central condensation process. The rates of dehydration of L-serine and reprotonation of the carbanion of L-tryptophan are probably limited by rearrangements at the active site. Analysis of absorption, fluorescence and circular dichroic spectra, as well as of published data on the stereoisomers obtained by reduction with borohydride, suggests that the rearrangement includes a reorientation of the pyridoxal phosphate C-4' atom. The mechanism provides a detailed framework for explaining all available information, including the activating effect of the alpha subunit on the reaction catalyzed by the beta 2 subunit.  相似文献   

2.
E W Miles  R S Phillips 《Biochemistry》1985,24(17):4694-4703
The photoaffinity reagent 6-azido-L-tryptophan was synthesized by chemical methods. It binds reversibly in the dark to the alpha 2 beta 2 complex of tryptophan synthase of Escherichia coli and forms a quinonoid intermediate with enzyme-bound pyridoxal phosphate (lambda max = 476 nm). The absorbance of this chromophore has been used for spectrophotometric titrations to determine the binding of 6-azido-L-tryptophan (the half-saturation value [S]0.5 = 6.3 microM). Photolysis of the quinonoid form of the alpha 2 beta 2 complex results in time-dependent inactivation of the beta 2 subunit but not of the alpha subunit. The extent of photoinactivation is directly proportional to the absorbance at 476 nm of the quinonoid intermediate prior to photolysis. The substrate L-serine is a competitive inhibitor of 6-azido-L-tryptophan binding and photoinactivation. The competitive inhibitors L-tryptophan, D-tryptophan, and oxindolyl-L-alanine also protect against photoinactivation. The results demonstrate that 6-azido-L-tryptophan is a quasi-substrate for the alpha 2 beta 2 complex of tryptophan synthase and that photolysis of the enzyme-quasi-substrate quinonoid intermediate results in photoinactivation. The modified alpha 2 beta 2 complex retains its ability to bind pyridoxal phosphate and to cleave indole-3-glycerol phosphate, a reaction catalyzed by the alpha subunit. 6-Azido-L-tryptophan (side-chain 1,2,3-14C3 labeled) was synthesized enzymatically from 6-azidoindole and uniformly labeled L-[14C]serine by the alpha 2 beta 2 complex of tryptophan synthase on a preparative scale and has been isolated. Incorporation of 14C label from 6-azido-L-[14C]tryptophan is stoichiometric with inactivation. Our finding that most of the incorporated 14C label is bound in an unstable linkage suggests that an active site carboxyl residue is the major site of photoaffinity labeling by 6-azido-L-tryptophan.  相似文献   

3.
To probe the structural and functional roles of active-site residues in the tryptophan synthase alpha(2)beta(2) complex from Salmonella typhimurium, we have determined the effects of mutation of His(86) in the beta subunit. His(86) is located adjacent to beta subunit Lys(87), which forms an internal aldimine with the pyridoxal phosphate and catalyzes the abstraction of the alpha-proton of L-serine. The replacement of His(86) by leucine (H86L) weakened pyridoxal phosphate binding approximately 20-fold and abolished the circular dichroism signals of the bound coenzyme and of a reaction intermediate. Correlation of these results with previous crystal structures indicates that beta-His(86) plays a structural role in binding pyridoxal phosphate and in stabilizing the correct orientation of pyridoxal phosphate in the active site of the beta subunit. The H86L mutation also altered the pH profiles of absorbance and fluorescence signals and shifted the pH optimum for the synthesis of L-tryptophan from pH 7.5 to 8.8. We propose that the interaction of His(86) with the phosphate of pyridoxal phosphate and with Lys(87) lowers the pK(a) of Lys(87) in the wild-type alpha(2)beta(2) complex and thereby facilitates catalysis by Lys(87) in the physiological pH range.  相似文献   

4.
A N Lane  K Kirschner 《Biochemistry》1991,30(2):479-484
The physiological synthesis of L-tryptophan from indoleglycerol phosphate and L-serine catalyzed by the alpha 2 beta 2 bienzyme complex of tryptophan synthase requires spatial and dynamic cooperation between the two distant alpha and beta active sites. The carbanion of the adduct of L-tryptophan to pyridoxal phosphate accumulated during the steady state of the catalyzed reaction. Moreover, it was formed transiently and without a lag in single turnovers, and glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate was released only after formation of the carbanion. These and further data prove first that the affinity for indoleglycerol phosphate and its cleavage to indole in the alpha subunit are enhanced substantially by aminoacrylate bound to the beta subunit. This indirect activation explains why the turnover number of the physiological reaction is larger than that of the indoleglycerol phosphate cleavage reaction. Second, reprotonation of nascent tryptophan carbanion is rate limiting for overall tryptophan synthesis. Third, most of the indole generated in the active site of the alpha subunit is transferred directly to the active site of the beta subunit and only insignificant amounts pass through the solvent. Comparison of the single turnover rate constants with the known elementary rate constants of the partial reactions catalyzed by the alpha and beta active sites suggests that the cleavage reaction rather than the transfer of indole or its condensation with aminoacrylate is rate limiting for the formation of nascent tryptophan.  相似文献   

5.
K Tanizawa  E W Miles 《Biochemistry》1983,22(15):3594-3603
Inactivation of the beta 2 subunit and of the alpha 2 beta 2 complex of tryptophan synthase of Escherichia coli by the arginine-specific dicarbonyl reagent phenylglyoxal results from modification of one arginyl residue per beta monomer. The substrate L-serine protects the holo beta 2 subunit and the holo alpha 2 beta 2 complex from both inactivation and arginine modification but has no effect on the inactivation or modification of the apo forms of the enzyme. This result and the finding that phenylglyoxal competes with L-serine in reactions catalyzed by both the holo beta 2 subunit and the holo alpha 2 beta 2 complex indicate that L-serine and phenylglyoxal both bind to the same essential arginyl residue in the holo beta 2 subunit. The apo beta 2 subunit is protected from phenylglyoxal inactivation much more effectively by phosphopyridoxyl-L-serine than by either pyridoxal phosphate or pyridoxine phosphate, both of which lack the L-serine moiety. The phenylglyoxal-modified apo beta 2 subunit binds pyridoxal phosphate and the alpha subunit but cannot bind L-serine or L-tryptophan. We conclude that the alpha-carboxyl group of L-serine and not the phosphate of pyridoxal phosphate binds to the essential arginyl residue in the beta 2 subunit. The specific arginyl residue in the beta 2 subunit which is protected by L-serine from modification by phenyl[2-14C]glyoxal has been identified as arginine-148 by isolating a labeled cyanogen bromide fragment (residues 135-149) and by digesting this fragment with pepsin to yield the labeled dipeptide arginine-methionine (residues 148-149). The primary sequence near arginine-148 contains three other basic residues (lysine-137, arginine-141, and arginine-150) which may facilitate anion binding and increase the reactivity of arginine-148. The conservation of the arginine residues 141, 148, and 150 in the sequences of tryptophan synthase from E. coli, Salmonella typhimurium, and yeast supports a functional role for these three residues in anion binding. The location and role of the active-site arginyl residues in the beta 2 subunit and in two other enzymes which contain pyridoxal phosphate, aspartate aminotransferase and glycogen phosphorylase, are compared.  相似文献   

6.
The bacterial tryptophan synthase bienzyme complexes (with subunit composition alpha 2 beta 2) catalyze the last two steps in the biosynthesis of L-tryptophan. For L-tryptophan synthesis, indole, the common metabolite, must be transferred by some mechanism from the alpha-catalytic site to the beta-catalytic site. The X-ray structure of the Salmonella typhimurium tryptophan synthase shows the catalytic sites of each alpha-beta subunit pair are connected by a 25-30 A long tunnel [Hyde, C. C., Ahmed, S. A., Padlan, E. A., Miles, E. W., & Davies, D. R. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 17857-17871]. Since the S. typhimurium and Escherichia coli enzymes have nearly identical sequences, the E. coli enzyme must have a similar tunnel. Herein, rapid kinetic studies in combination with chemical probes that signal the bond formation step between indole (or nucleophilic indole analogues) and the alpha-aminoacrylate Schiff base intermediate, E(A-A), bound to the beta-site are used to investigate tunnel function in the E. coli enzyme. If the tunnel is the physical conduit for the transfer of indole from the alpha-site to the beta-site, then ligands that block the tunnel should also inhibit the rate at which indole and indole analogues from external solution react with E(A-A). We have found that when D,L-alpha-glycerol 3-phosphate (GP) is bound to the alpha-site, the rate of reaction of indole and nucleophilic indole analogues with E(A-A) is strongly inhibited. These compounds appear to gain access to the beta-site via the alpha-site and the tunnel, and this access is blocked by the binding of GP to the alpha-site. However, when small nucleophiles such as hydroxylamine, hydrazine, or N-methylhydroxylamine are substituted for indole, the rate of quinonoid formation is only slightly affected by the binding of GP. Furthermore, the reactions of L-serine and L-tryptophan with alpha 2 beta 2 show only small rate effects due to the binding of GP. From these experiments, we draw the following conclusions: (1) L-Serine and L-tryptophan gain access to the beta-site of alpha 2 beta 2 directly from solution. (2) The small effects of GP on the rates of the L-serine and L-tryptophan reactions are due to GP-mediated allosteric interactions between the alpha- and beta-sites.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
It is important to understand how the cleavage of indoleglycerol phosphate, which is catalyzed by the alpha subunits in the alpha 2 beta 2 bienzyme complex of tryptophan synthase, is modulated by the presence of L-serine in the beta subunits. Steady-state kinetic data, including the dependence of kcat on pH, allowed values to be assigned to each of the eight rate constants of the minimal catalytic mechanism. An ionizing group having an apparent pK value near 7.5 must be protonated for activity. The alpha active site ligands indolepropanol phosphate, glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate, and glycerol 3-phosphate increase both the affinity and the molar absorbance of L-serine and L-tryptophan bound to the beta active site. These effects prove that the alpha sites communicate with the beta sites over a distance of 30 A. 6-Nitroindole readily condenses with glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate, but not with L-serine. The turnover numbers for 6-nitroindoleglycerol phosphate and 6-nitroindole increased about 10-fold in both directions in the presence of L-serine bound to the beta 2 subunits. These data prove that the alpha and beta active sites communicate reciprocally and explain why the turnover number for the physiological reaction of indoleglycerol phosphate with L-serine greatly exceeds that of the cleavage reaction of indoleglycerol phosphate.  相似文献   

8.
This study explores the catalytic and allosteric roles of a flexible loop in tryptophan synthase. Trypsin is known to cleave the tryptophan synthase alpha 2 beta 2 complex in an alpha subunit loop at Arg-188. Cleavage yields an active "nicked" alpha 2 beta 2 derivative. The new results provide evidence that the alpha subunit loop serves two important roles: substrate binding and communicating the effects of substrate binding to the beta subunit. A role for the loop in substrate binding is supported by our finding that addition of a substrate analogue of the alpha subunit, alpha-glycerol 3-phosphate, decreases the rate of cleavage by trypsin. An allosteric role for the loop is supported by the finding although the native alpha 2 beta 2 complex is strongly inhibited by alpha-glycerol 3-phosphate, the nicked alpha 2 beta 2 complex is desensitized to this inhibition. The time course of proteolysis in the presence and absence of alpha-glycerol 3-phosphate is followed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis and by assays of activity in the presence and absence of alpha-glycerol 3-phosphate. We use spectroscopic measurements of the pyridoxal phosphate-L-tryptophan intermediates at the active site of the beta subunit to determine the affinity of the native and nicked enzymes for L-tryptophan and alpha-glycerol 3-phosphate. Although cleavage alters the equilibrium distribution of intermediates and reduces the affinity for alpha-glycerol 3-phosphate, it has little effect on the affinity for amino acids bound to the beta subunit. We conclude that the loop in the alpha subunit is important for ligand binding and for communicating the effects of ligand binding from the alpha subunit to the beta subunit in the alpha 2 beta 2 complex.  相似文献   

9.
Inhibition studies and affinity chromatography indicate that derivatives of tryptophanol phosphate are suitable ligands for the affinity chromatography of tryptophan synthase. A phenyl group on the spacer arm strengthens the interaction of immobilized tryptophanol phosphate with the enzyme. The alpha 2 beta 2 complex specifically requires the presence of 0.3--0.5 M phosphate ions for binding. The alpha subunit binds in dilute Tris buffer, but its binding is also enhanced by the presence of phosphate ions. The beta 2 subunit binds unspecifically but strongly to the affinity material and to a variety of other immobilized hydrophobic ligands. Binding studies with suspensions of affinity material show that the alpha subunit interacts rapidly and reversibly. Indoleglycerol phosphate and indolepropanol phosphate release bound alpha 2 beta 2 complex and alpha subunit in a competitive manner, indicating that the interaction occurs biospecifically, i.e. via the active site of alpha subunit. L-Serine is a non-competitive inhibitor of binding. These results are discussed with regard to the composite-active-site hypothesis [T. E. Creighton (1970) Eur. J. Biochem, 13, 1--10]. Both the alpha subunit and the alpha 2 beta 2 complex of tryptophan synthase from Escherichia coli can be obtained with high yields and in homogenous form by absorption to the affinity material from partially purified preparations. Elution is achieved with linear gradients either of indolepropanol phosphate or of indoleglycerol phosphate or, in the case of the complex, of L-serine. At the low concentrations of the complex found in crude extracts of wild-type E. coli cells, the unexpectedly high affinity of the beta 2 subunit for hydrophobic ligands leads to partial dissociation of the complex.  相似文献   

10.
Arginine 179 of the alpha subunit of tryptophan synthase of Salmonella typhimurium was changed to leucine by site-directed mutagenesis. The mutant alpha subunit was expressed in S. typhimurium, purified and crystallized as the alpha 2 beta 2 complex, and characterized by kinetic studies under steady-state reaction conditions. The rate of cleavage of indole 3-glycerol phosphate (alpha reaction) is reduced by 60% in the mutant alpha 2 beta 2 complex, whereas the rate of L-tryptophan synthesis from indole and L-serine (beta reaction) is unchanged. Thus, arginine 179 is not obligatory for catalysis, for binding of indole 3-glycerol phosphate, or for interaction of the alpha and beta 2 subunits. However, changing arginine 179 to leucine does have striking effects on ligand-dependent properties of this multienzyme complex. Ligands of the alpha subunit (DL-alpha-glycerophosphate and indole 3-propanol phosphate) which strongly inhibit the beta reaction of the native alpha 2 beta 2 complex have a slight stimulatory effect on the beta reaction of the mutant alpha 2 beta 2 complex. Likewise, L-serine, a ligand of the beta subunit which produces a 5-fold reduction in the Km for the alpha ligand indole 3-glycerol phosphate in the native alpha 2 beta 2 complex, has no effect on the mutant alpha 2 beta 2 complex. These results suggest that arginine 179 of the alpha subunit plays a role in the reciprocal transmission of substrate-induced conformational changes which occur between native alpha and beta 2 subunits in the alpha 2 beta 2 complex.  相似文献   

11.
We have obtained a complete set of 20 variants of the alpha subunit of tryptophan synthase of Escherichia coli at position 49 in order to extend our previous studies on the effects of single amino acid replacements at position 49 on structure and function. Thirteen mutant alpha subunits have been newly constructed by site-directed mutagenesis using oligonucleotides. Six mutants were available from previous studies. We find that the wild type and all of the mutant alpha subunits form alpha 2 beta 2 complexes with the beta 2 subunit of tryptophan synthase with similar association constants and similarly stimulate the activity of the beta 2 subunit in the synthesis of L-tryptophan from L-serine and indole. Thus none of the changes at position 49 produces a change in the conformation of the alpha subunit which significantly interferes with normal subunit interaction. However, the 19 mutant alpha 2 beta 2 complexes are completely devoid of activity in reactions normally catalyzed by the active site of the alpha subunit. This is the first time that these several activities have been measured with a series of highly purified alpha subunits altered by mutation at a single site. Our finding that the mutant in which glutamic acid 49 is substituted by aspartic acid is totally devoid of alpha activity is especially significant and is strong evidence that glutamic acid 49 is an essential catalytic base in the reaction catalyzed by the alpha subunit. This result is consistent with the results of previous genetic studies, with evolutionary comparisons using sequence analysis, and with recent results from x-ray crystallography of the alpha 2 beta 2 complex of tryptophan synthase from Salmonella typhimurium.  相似文献   

12.
Y X Fan  P McPhie  E W Miles 《Biochemistry》1999,38(24):7881-7890
To characterize the conformational transitions that regulate the activity and specificity of the tryptophan synthase alpha 2 beta 2 complex, we have determined some effects of low concentrations of guanidine hydrochloride (GuHCl) and of urea on functional properties. We report the novel finding that GuHCl at low concentrations (0. 02-0.08 M) is a cation activator of the tryptophan synthase alpha 2 beta 2 complex. Molecular modeling studies show that GuH+ could bind at a previously identified cation binding site in the tryptophan synthase beta subunit. Addition of increasing concentrations of GuHCl has strikingly different effects on the rates of different reactions with L-serine or beta-chloro-L-alanine in the presence or absence of indole. Spectroscopic studies demonstrate that GuHCl alters the equilibrium distribution of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate intermediates formed in reactions at the active site of the beta subunit. Data analysis shows that GuHCl binds preferentially with the conformer of the enzyme that predominates when the aldimine of L-serine is formed and shifts the equilibrium in favor of this conformer. These results provide evidence that GuHCl exerts dual effects on tryptophan synthase as a cation, stimulating activity, and as a chaotropic agent, altering the distribution of conformational states that exhibit different reaction specificities. Our finding that the nonionic urea stabilizes the aldimine of L-serine in the presence, but not in the absence, of NaCl shows that cation binding plays an important role in the conformational transitions that regulate activity and the transmission of allosteric signals between the alpha and beta sites.  相似文献   

13.
H Wiesinger  H J Hinz 《Biochemistry》1984,23(21):4928-4934
The binding of indole and L-serine to the isolated alpha and beta 2 subunits and the native alpha 2 beta 2 complex of tryptophan synthase from Escherichia coli was investigated by direct microcalorimetry to reveal the energetic adaptation of ligand binding to the subunit structure of a multienzyme complex. In contrast to the general finding that negative heat capacity changes are associated with ligand binding to proteins, complex formation of indole and the alpha subunit involves a small positive change in heat capacity. This unusual result was considered as being indicative of a loosening of the protein structure. Such an interpretation is in good agreement with results of chemical accessibility studies (Freedberg & Hardman, 1971). Whereas the thermodynamic parameters of indole binding are not influenced by the subunit interaction, the large negative change in heat capacity of -6.5 kJ/(K X mol of beta 2) measured for the binding of L-serine to the isolated beta 2 subunit disappears completely when serine interacts with the tetrameric complex. These data demonstrate that the energy transduction pattern and therefore the functional roles of the substrates indole and L-serine vary strongly with the subunit structure of tryptophan synthase.  相似文献   

14.
The rate of quenching of the fluorescence of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate in the active site of the beta 2 subunit of tryptophan synthase from Escherichia coli was measured to estimate the accessibility of the coenzyme to the small molecules iodide and acrylamide. The alpha subunit and the substrate L-serine substantially reduced the quenching rate. For iodide, the order of decreasing quenching was: Schiff's base of N alpha-acetyl-lysine with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate greater than holo beta 2 subunit greater than holo alpha 2 beta 2 complex approximately equal to holo beta 2 subunit + L-serine greater than holo alpha 2 beta 2 complex + L-serine. The coenzyme in the beta 2 subunit is apparently freely accessible to both iodide and acrylamide (kappa approximately equal to 2 X 10(9) M-1 s-1), but the alpha subunit and L-serine decrease the rate by factors of 2-5. Quenching of the fluorescence of the single tryptophan residue of the beta 2 subunit revealed that the apo and holo forms exist in different states, whereas the alpha subunit stabilizes a third conformation. As the alpha subunit binds to the beta 2 subunit, the tryptophan residue, which is within 2.2 nm of the active site of the beta 2 subunit, probably rotates with respect to the plane of the ring of the coenzyme, such that fluorescence energy transfer from tryptophan to pyridoxal phosphate is greatly reduced. The alpha subunit strongly protects the active-site ligand indole propanol phosphate from quenching with acrylamide, consistent with the active site being deep in a cleft in the protein. Iodide induces dissociation of the holo alpha 2 beta 2 complex [E. W. Miles & M. Moriguchi (1977) J. Biol. Chem. 252, 6594-6599]. The effect of iodide on the fluorescence properties of holo alpha 2 beta 2 complex allows us to estimate an upper limit for the dissociation constant for the alpha 2 beta 2 complex of 10(-8) M, in the absence of iodide.  相似文献   

15.
The alpha subunit of the Escherichia coli tryptophan synthase catalyzes the reversible aldolytic reaction: Indole-3-glycerol phosphate in equilibrium indole + glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate. The use of 5-azidoindole as a photoaffinity label has made the generation of a number of enzyme-substrate complexes possible, each with a given degree of saturation of the two postulated indole sites. When assayed in the reverse reaction (indole-3-glycerol phosphate synthesis), samples of alpha subunit treated at concentrations of 5-azidoindole less than or equal to 2 mM show a progressive 30-40% activation. A gradual inactivation occurs only in samples irradiated at concentrations in excess of 2 mM 5-azidoindole, and this inactivation is complete at 8-10 mM. A quantitatively similar activation occurs in the forward reaction (indole synthesis), however inactivation in this case is incomplete, with complexes treated at 8-12 mM 5-azidoindole retaining 30-40% relative activity in this reaction. When treated alpha subunits were assayed for their abilities to complement the beta 2-subunit in the reactions indole + L-serine leads to L-tryptophan + H2O and indole-3-glycerol phosphate + L-serine leads to L-tryptophan + glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate, quantitatively lesser amounts of activation followed by total inactivation are observed over a similar range of 5-azidoindole concentrations.  相似文献   

16.
The alpha subunit is bound with negative cooperativity to the holo beta 2 subunit of tryptophan synthase in phosphate buffer. Thus it is feasible to measure separately the rates of formation both of the stable alpha beta 2 subcomplex from beta 2, and of the mature alpha 2 beta 2 complex from alpha beta 2, using stopped-flow techniques. Addition of each alpha subunit proceeds in two steps; an initial alpha beta protomer is formed rapidly, which subsequently isomerizes slowly to the equilibrium state. The rates of dissociation of both the alpha beta 2 and alpha 2 beta 2 complexes were measured by trapping released alpha subunit with enzymically inactive reduced beta 2 subunit. The reversal of the slow isomerization both determines the rate of dissociation, and accounts for the high overall affinity of the beta protomer for the alpha subunit. The data fit to a sequential assembly mechanism consisting of seven protein species and yields values for most of the rate constants and all of the microscopic equilibrium constants. Negative cooperativity arises from a weaker initial binding of the second alpha subunit, as expressed by its larger off-constant, possibly due to steric hindrance. The kinetics of binding of L-serine and indolepropanol phosphate during the assembly process shows that the beta protomer is already partially activated in the initial alpha beta complex. Full activation is achieved in the slow isomerization reaction. In contrast, the alpha subunit gains high affinity for indolepropanol phosphate only in the isomerization reaction. These observations indicate that the isomerization involves synchronous conformation changes of both alpha and beta protomers.  相似文献   

17.
The bacterial tryptophan synthase alpha(2)beta(2) complex catalyzes the final reactions in the biosynthesis of L-tryptophan. Indole is produced at the active site of the alpha-subunit and is transferred through a 25-30 A tunnel to the beta-active site, where it reacts with an aminoacrylate intermediate. Lane and Kirschner proposed a two-step nucleophilic addition-tautomerization mechanism for the reaction of indole with the aminoacrylate intermediate, based on the absence of an observed kinetic isotope effect (KIE) when 3-[(2)H]indole reacts with the aminoacrylate intermediate. We have now observed a KIE of 1.4-2.0 in the reaction of 3-[(2)H]indole with the aminoacrylate intermediate in the presence of monovalent cations, but not when an alpha-subunit ligand, disodium alpha-glycerophosphate (Na(2)GP), is present. Rapid-scanning stopped flow kinetic studies were performed of the reaction of indole and 3-[(2)H]indole with tryptophan synthase preincubated with L-serine, following the decay of the aminoacrylate intermediate at 350 nm, the formation of the quinonoid intermediate at 476 nm, and the formation of the L-Trp external aldimine at 423 nm. The addition of Na(2)GP dramatically slows the rate of reaction of indole with the alpha-aminoacrylate intermediate. A primary KIE is not observed in the reaction of 3-[(2)H]indole with the aminoacrylate complex of tryptophan synthase in the presence of Na(2)GP, suggesting binding of indole with tryptophan synthase is rate limiting under these conditions. The reaction of 2-methylindole does not show a KIE, either in the presence of Na(+) or Na(2)GP. These results support the previously proposed mechanism for the beta-reaction of tryptophan synthase, but suggest that the rate limiting step in quinonoid intermediate formation from indole and the aminoacrylate intermediate is deprotonation.  相似文献   

18.
Our studies, which are aimed at understanding the catalytic mechanism of the beta subunit of tryptophan synthase from Salmonella typhimurium, use site-directed mutagenesis to clarify the functional roles of several putative active site residues. Although previous chemical modification studies have suggested that histidine 86, arginine 148, and cysteine 230 are essential residues in the beta subunit, our present findings that beta subunits with single amino acid replacements at these positions have partial activity show that these 3 residues are not essential for catalysis or substrate binding. These conclusions are consistent with the recently determined three-dimensional structure of the tryptophan synthase alpha 2 beta 2 complex. Amino acid substitution of lysine 87, which forms a Schiff base with pyridoxal phosphate in the wild type beta subunit, yields an inactive form of the beta subunit which binds alpha subunit, pyridoxal phosphate, and L-serine. We also report a rapid and efficient method for purifying wild type and mutant forms of the alpha 2 beta 2 complex from S. typhimurium from an improved enzyme source. The enzyme, which is produced by a multicopy plasmid encoding the trpA and trpB genes of S. typhimurium expressed in Escherichia coli, is crystallized from crude extracts by the addition of 6% poly(ethylene glycol) 8000 and 5 mM spermine. This new method is also used in the accompanying paper to purify nine alpha 2 beta 2 complexes containing mutant forms of the alpha subunit.  相似文献   

19.
S A Ahmed  B Martin  E W Miles 《Biochemistry》1986,25(15):4233-4240
Although tryptophan synthase catalyzes a number of pyridoxal phosphate dependent beta-elimination and beta-replacement reactions that are also catalyzed by tryptophanase, a principal and puzzling difference between the two enzymes lies in the apparent inability of tryptophan synthase to catalyze beta-elimination of indole from L-tryptophan. We now demonstrate for the first time that the beta 2 subunit and the alpha 2 beta 2 complex of tryptophan synthase from Escherichia coli and from Salmonella typhimurium do catalyze a slow beta-elimination reaction with L-tryptophan to produce indole, pyruvate, and ammonia. The rate of the reaction is about 10-fold higher in the presence of the alpha subunit. The rate of indole production is increased about 4-fold when the aminoacrylate produced is converted to S-(hydroxyethyl)-L-cysteine by a coupled beta-replacement reaction with beta-mercaptoethanol. The rate of L-tryptophan cleavage is also increased when the indole produced is removed by extraction with toluene or by condensation with D-glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate to form indole-3-glycerol phosphate in a reaction catalyzed by the alpha subunit of tryptophan synthase. The amount of L-tryptophan cleavage is greatest in the presence of both beta-mercaptoethanol and D-glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate, which cause the removal of both products of cleavage. The cleavage reaction is not due to contaminating tryptophanase since the activity is not inhibited by (3R)-2,3-dihydro-L-tryptophan, a specific inhibitor of tryptophanase, but is inhibited by (3S)-2,3-dihydro-L-tryptophan, a specific inhibitor of tryptophan synthase. The cleavage reaction is also inhibited by D-tryptophan, the product of a slow racemization reaction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
The mechanism of the tryptophan synthase alpha(2)beta(2) complex from Salmonella typhimurium is explored by determining the effects of pH, of temperature, and of isotopic substitution on the pyridoxal phosphate-dependent reaction of L-serine with indole to form L-tryptophan. The pH dependence of the kinetic parameters indicates that three ionizing groups are involved in substrate binding and catalysis with pK(a)1 = 6.5, pK(a)2 = 7.3, and pK(a)3 = 8.2-9. A significant primary isotope effect (approximately 3.5) on V and V/K is observed at low pH (pH 7), but not at high pH (pH 9), indicating that the base that accepts the alpha-proton (betaLys-87) is protonated at low pH, slowing the abstraction of the alpha-proton and making this step at least partially rate-limiting. pK(a)2 is assigned to betaLys-87 on the basis of the kinetic isotope effect results and of the observation that the competitive inhibitors glycine and oxindolyl-L-alanine display single pK(i) values of 7.3. The residue with this pK(a) (betaLys-87) must be unprotonated for binding glycine or oxindolyl-L-alanine, and, by inference, L-serine. Investigations of the temperature dependence of the pK(a) values support the assignment of pK(a)2 to betaLys-87 and suggest that the ionizing residue with pK(a)1 could be a carboxylate, possibly betaAsp-305, and that the residue associated with a conformational change at pK(a)3 may be betaLys-167. The occurrence of a closed to open conformational conversion at high pH is supported by investigations of the effects of pH on reaction specificity and on the equilibrium distribution of enzyme-substrate intermediates.  相似文献   

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