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1.
Succinic semialdehyde dehydrogenase (SSADH) from cyanobacterium Synechococcus differs from other SSADHs in the γ-aminobutyrate shunt. Synechococcus SSADH (SySSADH) is a TCA cycle enzyme and completes a 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase-deficient cyanobacterial TCA cycle through a detour metabolic pathway. SySSADH produces succinate in an NADP+-dependent manner with a single cysteine acting as the catalytic residue in the catalytic loop. Crystal structures of SySSADH were determined in their apo form, as a binary complex with NADP+ and as a ternary complex with succinic semialdehyde and NADPH, providing details about the catalytic mechanism by revealing a covalent adduct of a cofactor with the catalytic cysteine in the binary complex and a proposed thiohemiacetal intermediate in the ternary complex. Further analyses showed that SySSADH is an oxidation-sensitive enzyme and that the formation of the NADP-cysteine adduct is a kinetically preferred event that protects the catalytic cysteine from H2O2-dependent oxidative stress. These structural and functional features of SySSADH provide a molecular basis for cofactor-dependent oxidation protection in 1-Cys SSADH, which is unique relative to other 2-Cys SSADHs employing a redox-dependent formation of a disulfide bridge.  相似文献   

2.
Plant glutathione transferases (GSTs) play a key role in the metabolism of various xenobiotics. In this report, the catalytic mechanism of the tau class GSTU4-4 isoenzyme from Glycine max (GmGSTU4-4) was investigated by site-directed mutagenesis and steady-state kinetic analysis. The catalytic properties of the wild-type enzyme and three mutants of strictly conserved residues (Ser13Ala, Asn48Ala and Pro49Ala) were studied in 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (CDNB) conjugation reaction. The results showed that the mutations significantly affect substrate binding and specificity. The effect of Ser13Ala mutation on the catalytic efficiency of the enzyme could be explained by assuming the direct involvement of Ser13 to the reaction chemistry and the correct positioning of GSH and CDNB in the ternary catalytic complex. Asn48 and Pro49 were found to have a direct role on the structural integrity of the GSH-binding site (G-site). Moreover, mutation of Asn48 and Pro49 residues may bring about secondary effects altering the thermal stability and the catalytic activity (kcat) of the enzyme without affecting the nature of the rate-limiting step of the catalytic reaction.  相似文献   

3.
The β-1,4-galactosyltransferase 7 (β4GalT7) enzyme is involved in proteoglycan synthesis. In the presence of a manganese ion, it transfers galactose from UDP-galactose to xylose on a proteoglycan acceptor substrate. We present here the crystal structures of human β4GalT7 in open and closed conformations. A comparison of these crystal structures shows that, upon manganese and UDP or UDP-Gal binding, the enzyme undergoes conformational changes involving a small and a long loop. We also present the crystal structures of Drosophila wild-type β4GalT7 and D211N β4GalT7 mutant enzymes in the closed conformation in the presence of the acceptor substrate xylobiose and the donor substrate UDP-Gal, respectively. To understand the catalytic mechanism, we have crystallized the ternary complex of D211N β4GalT7 mutant enzyme in the presence of manganese with the donor and the acceptor substrates together in the same crystal structure. The galactose moiety of the bound UDP-Gal molecule forms seven hydrogen bonds with the protein molecule. The nonreducing end of the xylose moiety of xylobiose binds to the hydrophobic acceptor sugar binding pocket created by the conformational changes, whereas its extended xylose moiety forms hydrophobic interactions with a Tyr residue. In the ternary complex crystal structure, the nucleophile O4 oxygen atom of the xylose molecule is found in close proximity to the C1 and O5 atoms of the galactose moiety. This is the first time that a Michaelis complex of a glycosyltransferase has been described, and it clearly suggests an SN2 type catalytic mechanism for the β4GalT7 enzyme.  相似文献   

4.
Biphenyl dehydrogenase, a member of short-chain dehydrogenase/reductase enzymes, catalyzes the second step of the biphenyl/polychlorinated biphenyls catabolic pathway in bacteria. To understand the molecular basis for the broad substrate specificity of Pandoraea pnomenusa strain B-356 biphenyl dehydrogenase (BphBB-356), the crystal structures of the apo-enzyme, the binary complex with NAD+, and the ternary complexes with NAD+-2,3-dihydroxybiphenyl and NAD+-4,4′-dihydroxybiphenyl were determined at 2.2-, 2.5-, 2.4-, and 2.1-Å resolutions, respectively. A crystal structure representing an intermediate state of the enzyme was also obtained in which the substrate binding loop was ordered as compared with the apo and binary forms but it was displaced significantly with respect to the ternary structures. These five structures reveal that the substrate binding loop is highly mobile and that its conformation changes during ligand binding, starting from a disorganized loop in the apo state to a well organized loop structure in the ligand-bound form. Conformational changes are induced during ligand binding; forming a well defined cavity to accommodate a wide variety of substrates. This explains the biochemical data that shows BphBB-356 converts the dihydrodiol metabolites of 3,3′-dichlorobiphenyl, 2,4,4′-trichlorobiphenyl, and 2,6-dichlorobiphenyl to their respective dihydroxy metabolites. For the first time, a combination of structural, biochemical, and molecular docking studies of BphBB-356 elucidate the unique ability of the enzyme to transform the cis-dihydrodiols of double meta-, para-, and ortho-substituted chlorobiphenyls.  相似文献   

5.
The phenazine biosynthetic pathway is of considerable importance for the pharmaceutical industry. The pathway produces two products: phenazine-1,6-dicarboxylic acid and phenazine-1-carboxylic acid. PhzF is an isomerase that catalyzes trans-2,3-dihydro-3-hydroxyanthranilic acid isomerization and plays an essential role in the phenazine biosynthetic pathway. Although the PhzF crystal structure has been determined recently, an understanding of the detailed catalytic mechanism and the roles of key catalytic residues are still lacking. In this study, a computational strategy using a combination of molecular modeling, molecular dynamics simulations, and quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics simulations was used to elucidate these important issues. The Apo enzyme, enzyme–substrate complexes with negatively charged Glu45, enzyme–transition state analog inhibitor complexes with neutral Glu45, and enzyme–product complexes with negatively charged Glu45 structures were optimized and modeled using a 200 ns molecular dynamics simulation. Residues such as Gly73, His74, Asp208, Gly212, Ser213, and water, which play important roles in ligand binding and the isomerization reaction, were comprehensively investigated. Our results suggest that the Glu45 residue at the active site of PhzF acts as a general base/acid catalyst during proton transfer. This study provides new insights into the detailed catalytic mechanism of PhzF and the results have important implications for PhzF modification.  相似文献   

6.
HisA is a (βα)8 barrel enzyme that catalyzes the Amadori rearrangement of N′-[(5′-phosphoribosyl)formimino]-5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide ribonucleotide (ProFAR) to N′-((5′-phosphoribulosyl) formimino)-5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide-ribonucleotide (PRFAR) in the histidine biosynthesis pathway, and it is a paradigm for the study of enzyme evolution. Still, its exact catalytic mechanism has remained unclear. Here, we present crystal structures of wild type Salmonella enterica HisA (SeHisA) in its apo-state and of mutants D7N and D7N/D176A in complex with two different conformations of the labile substrate ProFAR, which was structurally visualized for the first time. Site-directed mutagenesis and kinetics demonstrated that Asp-7 acts as the catalytic base, and Asp-176 acts as the catalytic acid. The SeHisA structures with ProFAR display two different states of the long loops on the catalytic face of the structure and demonstrate that initial binding of ProFAR to the active site is independent of loop interactions. When the long loops enclose the substrate, ProFAR adopts an extended conformation where its non-reacting half is in a product-like conformation. This change is associated with shifts in a hydrogen bond network including His-47, Asp-129, Thr-171, and Ser-202, all shown to be functionally important. The closed conformation structure is highly similar to the bifunctional HisA homologue PriA in complex with PRFAR, thus proving that structure and mechanism are conserved between HisA and PriA. This study clarifies the mechanistic cycle of HisA and provides a striking example of how an enzyme and its substrate can undergo coordinated conformational changes before catalysis.  相似文献   

7.
Carbamate kinase (CK) makes ATP from ADP and carbamoyl phosphate (CP) in the final step of the microbial fermentative catabolism of arginine, agmatine, and oxalurate/allantoin. Two previously reported CK structures failed to clarify CP binding and catalysis and to reveal the significance of the protruding subdomain (PSD) that hangs over the CK active center as an exclusive and characteristic CK feature. We clarify now these three questions by determining two crystal structures of Enterococcus faecalis CK (one at 1.5 Å resolution and containing bound MgADP, and the other at 2.1 Å resolution and having in the active center one sulfate and two fixed water molecules that mimic one bound CP molecule) and by mutating active-center residues, determining the consequences of these mutations on enzyme functionality. Superimposition of the present crystal structures reconstructs the filled active center in the ternary complex, immediately suggesting in-line associative phosphoryl group transfer and a mechanism for enzyme catalysis involving N51, K209, K271, D210, and the PSD residue K128. The large respective increases and decreases in KmCP and kcat triggered by the mutations N51A, K128A, K209A, and D210N corroborate the ternary complex active-site architecture and the catalytic mechanism proposed. The extreme negative effects of K128A demonstrate a key role of the PSD in substrate binding and catalysis. The crystal structures reveal large rigid-body movements of the PSD towards the enzyme body that place K128 next to CP and bury the CP site. A mechanism that connects CP site occupation with the PSD approach, involving V206-I207 in the CP site and P162-S163 in the PSD stem, is identified. The effects of the V206A and V206L mutations support this mechanism. It is concluded that the PSD movement allows CK to select against the abundant CP/carbamate analogues acetylphosphate/acetate and bicarbonate, rendering CK highly selective for CP/carbamate.  相似文献   

8.
Protein prenylation is a post-translational modification where farnesyl or geranylgeranyl groups are enzymatically attached to a C-terminal cysteine residue. This modification is essential for the activity of small cellular GTPases, as it allows them to associate with intracellular membranes. Dissociated from membranes, prenylated proteins need to be transported through the aqueous cytoplasm by protein carriers that shield the hydrophobic anchor from the solvent. One such carrier is Rho GDP dissociation inhibitor (RhoGDI). Recently, it was shown that prenylated Rho proteins that are not associated with RhoGDI are subjected to proteolysis in the cell. We hypothesized that the role of RhoGDI might be not only to associate with prenylated proteins but also to regulate the prenylation process in the cell. This idea is supported by the fact that RhoGDI binds both unprenylated and prenylated Rho proteins with high affinity in vitro, and hence, these interactions may affect the kinetics of prenylation. We addressed this question experimentally and found that RhoGDI increased the catalytic efficiency of geranylgeranyl transferase-I in RhoA prenylation. Nevertheless, we did not observe formation of a ternary RhoGDI∗RhoA∗GGTase-I complex, indicating sequential operation of geranylgeranyltransferase-I and RhoGDI. Our results suggest that RhoGDI accelerates Rho prenylation by kinetically trapping the reaction product, thereby increasing the rate of product release.  相似文献   

9.
Arginine kinase (AK) is a key enzyme for energetic balance in invertebrates. Although AK is a well-studied system that provides fast energy to invertebrates using the phosphagen phospho-arginine, the structural details on the AK-arginine binary complex interaction remain unclear. Herein, we determined two crystal structures of the Pacific whiteleg shrimp (Litopenaeus vannamei) arginine kinase, one in binary complex with arginine (LvAK-Arg) and a ternary transition state analog complex (TSAC). We found that the arginine guanidinium group makes ionic contacts with Glu225, Cys271 and a network of ordered water molecules. On the zwitterionic side of the amino acid, the backbone amide nitrogens of Gly64 and Val65 coordinate the arginine carboxylate. Glu314, one of proposed acid–base catalytic residues, did not interact with arginine in the binary complex. This residue is located in the flexible loop 310–320 that covers the active site and only stabilizes in the LvAK-TSAC. This is the first binary complex crystal structure of a guanidine kinase in complex with the guanidine substrate and could give insights into the nature of the early steps of phosphagen biosynthesis.  相似文献   

10.
The catalytic (C) subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase [protein kinase A (PKA)] is a major target of cAMP signaling, and its regulation is of fundamental importance to biological processes. One mode of regulation is N-myristylation, which has eluded structural and functional characterization so far because most crystal structures are of the non-myristylated enzyme, are phosphorylated on Ser10, and generally lack electron density for the first 13 residues. We crystallized myristylated wild-type (WT) PKA and a K7C mutant as binary (bound to a substrate peptide) and ternary [bound to a substrate peptide and adenosine-5′-(β,γ-imido)triphosphate] complexes. There was clear electron density for the entire N-terminus in the binary complexes, both refined to 2.0 Å, and K7C ternary complex, refined to 1.35 Å. The N-termini in these three structures display a novel conformation with a previously unseen helix from residues 1 to 7. The K7C mutant appears to have a more stable N-terminus, and this correlated with a significant decrease in the B-factors for the N-terminus in the myr-K7C complexes compared to the WT binary complex. The N-terminus of the myristylated WT ternary complex, refined to 2.0 Å, was disordered as in previous structures. In addition to a more ordered N-terminus, the myristylated K7C mutant exhibited a 53% increase in kcat. The effect of nucleotide binding on the structure of the N-terminus in the WT protein and the kinetic changes in the K7C protein suggest that myristylation or occupancy of the myristyl binding pocket may serve as a site for allosteric regulation in the C-subunit.  相似文献   

11.
l-3-Hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase reversibly catalyzes the conversion of l-3-hydroxyacyl-CoA to 3-ketoacyl-CoA concomitant with the reduction of NAD(+) to NADH as part of the beta-oxidation spiral. In this report, crystal structures have been solved for the apoenzyme, binary complexes of the enzyme with reduced cofactor or 3-hydroxybutyryl-CoA substrate, and an abortive ternary complex of the enzyme with NAD(+) and acetoacetyl-CoA. The models illustrate positioning of cofactor and substrate within the active site of the enzyme. Comparison of these structures with the previous model of the enzyme-NAD(+) complex reveals that although significant shifting of the NAD(+)-binding domain relative to the C-terminal domain occurs in the ternary and substrate-bound complexes, there are few differences between the apoenzyme and cofactor-bound complexes. Analysis of these models clarifies the role of key amino acids implicated in catalysis and highlights additional critical residues. Furthermore, a novel charge transfer complex has been identified in the course of abortive ternary complex formation, and its characterization provides additional insight into aspects of the catalytic mechanism of l-3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

12.
Protein prenylation is a widespread process that involves the transfer of either a farnesyl or a geranylgeranyl moiety to one or more C-terminal cysteines of the target protein. Rab geranylgeranyl transferase (RabGGTase) is responsible for the largest number of individual protein prenylation events in the cell. A decade-long effort to crystallize the catalytic ternary complex of RabGGTase has remained fruitless, prompting us to use a computational approach to predict the structure of this 200-kDa assembly. On the basis of high resolution structures of two sub-complexes, we have generated a composite model where the rigid parts of the protein are represented by precomputed grid potentials, whereas the mobile parts are described in atomic details using Internal Coordinate Mechanics. Selection of the best docking solution of the flexible parts on the grid is followed by explicit atomistic refinement of the lowest energy conformations enabling realistic modeling of complex structures. Using this approach we demonstrate that the flexible C terminus of Rab7 substrate forms a series of progressively weaker and less specific interactions that channel it into the active site of RabGGTase. We have validated the computational model through biochemical experiments and demonstrated that to be prenylated RabGTPase must possess at least nine amino acids between the prenylation motif and the hydrophobic sequence anchoring the beginning of the Rab C terminus on the enzyme. This sequence, known as the C-terminal interacting motif is shown to play a dual role in Rab prenylation by contributing a significant fraction of binding energy to the catalytic complex assembly and by orienting the C terminus of RabGTPase in the vicinity of the active site of RabGGTase. This mechanism is unique to RabGGTase when compared with other prenyltransferases, which encode the specificity for their cognate substrates directly at their active site.Elucidation of structures of biomacromolecules is essential for understanding their functions. Structural biology provides us with submolecular level views of enzymatic reactions, protein-ligand and protein-protein interactions. Although the main methods of protein structure determination such as x-ray crystallography, NMR, and electron microscopy are biased toward well ordered structures, in reality conformational changes and transitions between ordered and disordered states are common and important features of protein function and regulation. It has become very clear over the last several years that sections of proteins and sometimes entire proteins do not display a defined structure in solution and become structured only in the presence of a ligand or a binding partner protein (1). Furthermore, the binding of an isolated disordered peptide fragment to a target protein without the support of the rest of the complex is frequently undetectable. If crystallographic studies can be performed on only a part of a large system, it may be exceedingly difficult to reproduce this ordered interaction in a crystal structure, and there are limitations to the application of NMR methods.Recent advances in realistic computer simulations give us an opportunity to address this problem. However, the large number of degrees of freedom of large systems presents a distinct challenge. Here ICM3 global optimizer was applied as an efficient macromolecular docking procedure to predicting the behavior of functionally locally disordered protein fragments upon macromolecular assembly (2, 3). This has been successfully applied to peptide folding, protein docking and interface refinement (4), small molecule docking (5), and virtual screening (6). To deal with a large complex, a part of the system that can be assumed to stay relatively unchanged is replaced by precomputed grid potentials as is done routinely in small molecule docking (e.g. Ref. 5). In this case, a smaller molecule or a peptide can be docked to the grid potentials to generate a set of conformers for further refinement. This technique was demonstrated to correctly predict the docking of a series of peptides to PTB and SH2 domains in an unbiased simulation (7). Addition of explicit atomistic refinement to the best scored conformations was shown to reproduce the unusual binding geometries of the HLA peptides (8) to the major histocompatibility class I receptors.A well documented case of a protein complex with a functionally important locally disordered region is Rab geranylgeranyl transferase (RabGGTase). RabGGTase is a member of the protein prenyltransferase family that catalyzes covalent attachment of either farnesyl or geranylgeranyl moieties onto the conserved C-terminal cysteines of intracellular proteins (9). RabGGTase attaches geranylgeranyl moieties to the C terminus of more than 60 members of the Rab GTPase family: central regulators of intracellular vesicular transport (10). The C terminus of Rab GTPases is naturally disordered, a feature that is important for their biological function (11). Unlike other protein prenyltransferases RabGGTase does not recognize a four-amino acid C-terminal sequence, known as a CAAX box, but requires an adaptor protein termed the Rab escort protein (REP) for substrate binding and selection. REP recruits newly synthesized Rab GTPases and then presents them to the RabGGTase. The proteins form a tight catalytic ternary complex in which two geranylgeranyl groups are transferred onto the C terminus of Rab GTPase (11-13). Recently, RabGGTase came into the spot-light due to the observation that its chemical inhibition induced apoptosis in cancer cells, promoting the search for new inhibitors of this enzyme (14, 15). Development of RabGGTase-specific inhibitors requires understanding of the mechanistic and thermodynamic basis of its function. Although we recently solved the structures of an isoprenoid stabilized REP·RabGGTase complex and of prenylated and unprenylated Rab7·REP complexes, the structure of the ternary Rab·REP·RabGGTase complex remains unknown (16, 17) (Fig. 1A). It transpired from the analysis of the available subcomplex structures that the REP molecule plays a central role in assembling the catalytic ternary complex by forming binding interfaces with both Rab GTPase and RabGGTase (17, 18). In the case of the REP-Rab interaction, one large interface is formed between the Rab-binding platform of REP and the GTPase domain of Rab, and a smaller one between the hydrophobic C-terminal binding region (CBR) of REP and the hydrophobic CBR interacting motif (CIM) of Rab GTPases (17, 18) (Fig. 1). Formation of the complex with Rab GTPases increases the affinity of REP for RabGGTase by nearly three orders of magnitude and leads to the formation of the catalytic ternary complex via interaction of domain 2 of REP with the α-subunit of RabGGTase (13, 16). Despite these advances, details of the Rab prenylation mechanism remain unknown, and the following important questions remain open. How does RabGGTase process all Rab family members despite the high variability in the sequence and the length of their C terminus? What structural mechanism, and which amino acids, ensures proper positioning of the Rab C terminus into the catalytic center of RabGGTase? To address these issues, we have generated a computational model of the entire Rab·REP·RabGGTase ternary complex and performed an extensive search for low energy conformations of the C terminus, which was invisible in structures of the individual proteins. Based on the resulting models we designed a series of biochemical experiments to validate the computational model and demonstrate that the CIM functions as an anchor concentrating the prenylatable Rab C terminus toward the active site of RabGGTase. The model provides an explanation for the lack of requirement for conservation of the C terminus of Rab GTPases and elucidates structural determinants of the assembly of the functional ternary complex.Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.Structures used for model building. A, structure of the Rab7·REP-1 complex. REP-1 is displayed in surface representation and is shaded gray. Rab7 is displayed as ribbons and colored according to secondary structure. The disordered C terminus of Rab7 is drawn as a red line. B, REP-1·RabGTase complex. REP-1 is displayed as in A while RabGGTase is displayed in ribbon representation with the α subunit colored in orange and the β subunit in blue. C, model of the Rab7·REP-1·RabGGTase complex displayed as in A and B. The disordered C terminus of Rab7 is not displayed.  相似文献   

13.
Three mechanisms have been suggested to describe the inhibition of acetylcholinesterase (EC. 3.1.1.7) by an excess of acetylcholine.
  1. Substrate inhibition occurs through the reaction of acetylcholine with acetylated enzyme. The deacetylation of this ternary complex is supposed to be completely inhibited.
  2. A ternary complex is formed as in (i). However, the deacetylation is not completely inhibited.
  3. A two-site-mechanism is discussed. Acetylcholine binds either to the active site or to the modifier site. Binding to the latter changes the activity of the active site.
Steady state treatment was applied to (i)–(iii). A least squares fit led to catalytic parameters. It is demonstrated that mechanism (ii) is the most simple one which can describe satisfactorily the experimental data. Limits for a set of rate constants are derived from the catalytic parameters. A numerical integration shows that the steady state approximation may be used even when the mechanisms are rather complex.  相似文献   

14.
Kinetic methods for studying the reactions of the “general” fatty acyl CoA dehydrogenase under three sets of substrate and enzyme concentration conditions have been developed. The reaction of butyryl-CoA and electron transfer flavoprotein (ETF) can be studied either under steady-state conditions with enzyme at catalytic concentration or under single-turnover conditions with enzyme in excess. Under the latter conditions, acyl-CoA dehydrogenase acts both as a catalyst and an ultimate electron-transfer acceptor. The reductive half-reaction of butyryl-CoA and enzyme can also be studied in a separate kinetic experiment. Comparison of the pH dependences of the rate constants and isotope effects of the steady-state reaction of butyryl-CoA and ETF with the same parameters for the reductive half-reaction is consistent with a mechanism involving transfer of electrons from butyryl-CoA to ETF within a ternary complex. An alternative mechanism in which the reductive half-reaction takes place prior to the binding and reaction of ETF seems unlikely because the pH 8.5 isotope effect on the reductive half-reaction is much larger than that on the complete reaction in spite of the fact that the rates of the reactions are comparable. The pH dependence of the Km for substrate and KI for inhibitor is consistent with a mechanism for transfer of electrons within the ternary complex which involves protonation of the C group of substrates. The protonation labilizes the C-2 proton and base catalysis of the removal of the C-2 proton results in the production of the active enzyme-substrate species, namely the C-2 anion of substrate.  相似文献   

15.
PhaA from Ralstonia eutropha (RePhaA) is the first enzyme in the polyhydroxyalbutyrate (PHB) biosynthetic pathway and catalyzes the condensation of two molecules of acetyl-CoA to acetoacetyl-CoA. To investigate the molecular mechanism underlying PHB biosynthesis, we determined the crystal structures of the RePhaA protein in apo- and CoA-bound forms. The RePhaA structure adopts the type II biosynthetic thiolase fold forming a tetramer by means of dimerization of two dimers. The crystal structure of RePhaA in complex with CoA revealed that the enzyme contained a unique Phe219 residue, resulting that the ADP moiety binds in somewhat different position compared with that bound in other thiolase enzymes. Our study provides structural insight into the substrate specificity of RePhaA. Results indicate the presence of a small pocket near the Cys88 covalent catalytic residue leading to the possibility of the enzyme to accommodate acetyl-CoA as a sole substrate instead of larger acyl-CoA molecules such as propionyl-CoA. Furthermore, the roles of key residues involved in substrate binding and enzyme catalysis were confirmed by site-directed mutagenesis.  相似文献   

16.
We have examined aspects of the second catalytic activity of alcohol dehydrogenase from horse liver (LADH), which involves an apparent dismutation of an aldehyde substrate into alcohol and acid in the presence of LADH and NAD. Using the substrate p-trifluoromethylbenzaldehyde, we have observed various bound complexes by 19F NMR in an effort to further characterize the mechanism of the reaction. The mechanism appears to involve the catalytic activity of LADH · NAD · aldehyde complex which reacts to form an enzyme · NADH · acid complex. The affinity of the acid product for LADH · NADH is weak and the acid product readily desorbs from the ternary complex. The resulting LADH · NADH can then react with a second molecule of aldehyde to form NAD and the corresponding alcohol. The result is the conversion of two molecules of aldehyde to one each of acid and alcohol, with LADH and NAD acting catalytically. This sequence of reactions can also explain the slow formation of acid product observed when alcohol and NAD are incubated with the enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
Carnitine acyltransferases catalyze the reversible exchange of acyl groups between coenzyme A (CoA) and carnitine. They have important roles in many cellular processes, especially the oxidation of long-chain fatty acids in the mitochondria for energy production, and are attractive targets for drug discovery against diabetes and obesity. To help define in molecular detail the catalytic mechanism of these enzymes, we report here the high resolution crystal structure of wild-type murine carnitine acetyltransferase (CrAT) in a ternary complex with its substrates acetyl-CoA and carnitine, and the structure of the S554A/M564G double mutant in a ternary complex with the substrates CoA and hexanoylcarnitine. Detailed analyses suggest that these structures may be good mimics for the Michaelis complexes for the forward and reverse reactions of the enzyme, representing the first time that such complexes of CrAT have been studied in molecular detail. The structural information provides significant new insights into the catalytic mechanism of CrAT and possibly carnitine acyltransferases in general.  相似文献   

18.
Cellobiohydrolase from Melanocarpus albomyces (Cel7B) is a thermostable, single-module, cellulose-degrading enzyme. It has relatively low catalytic activity under normal temperatures, which allows structural studies of the binding of unmodified substrates to the native enzyme. In this study, we have determined the crystal structure of native Ma Cel7B free and in complex with three different cello-oligomers: cellobiose (Glc2), cellotriose (Glc3), and cellotetraose (Glc4), at high resolution (1.6–2.1 Å). In each case, four molecules were found in the asymmetric unit, which provided 12 different complex structures. The overall fold of the enzyme is characteristic of a glycoside hydrolase family 7 cellobiohydrolase, where the loops extending from the core β-sandwich structure form a long tunnel composed of multiple subsites for the binding of the glycosyl units of a cellulose chain. The catalytic residues at the reducing end of the tunnel are conserved, and the mechanism is expected to be retaining similarly to the other family 7 members. The oligosaccharides in different complex structures occupied different subsite sets, which partly overlapped and ranged from −5 to +2. In four cellotriose and one cellotetraose complex structures, the cello-oligosaccharide also spanned over the cleavage site (−1/+1). There were surprisingly large variations in the amino acid side chain conformations and in the positions of glycosyl units in the different cello-oligomer complexes, particularly at subsites near the catalytic site. However, in each complex structure, all glycosyl residues were in the chair (4C1) conformation. Implications in relation to the complex structures with respect to the reaction mechanism are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
HMG-CoA lyase (HMGCL) is crucial to ketogenesis, and inherited human mutations are potentially lethal. Detailed understanding of the HMGCL reaction mechanism and the molecular basis for correlating human mutations with enzyme deficiency have been limited by the lack of structural information for enzyme liganded to an acyl-CoA substrate or inhibitor. Crystal structures of ternary complexes of WT HMGCL with the competitive inhibitor 3-hydroxyglutaryl-CoA and of the catalytically deficient HMGCL R41M mutant with substrate HMG-CoA have been determined to 2.4 and 2.2 Å, respectively. Comparison of these β/α-barrel structures with those of unliganded HMGCL and R41M reveals substantial differences for Mg2+ coordination and positioning of the flexible loop containing the conserved HMGCL “signature” sequence. In the R41M-Mg2+-substrate ternary complex, loop residue Cys266 (implicated in active-site function by mechanistic and mutagenesis observations) is more closely juxtaposed to the catalytic site than in the case of unliganded enzyme or the WT enzyme-Mg2+-3-hydroxyglutaryl-CoA inhibitor complex. In both ternary complexes, the S-stereoisomer of substrate or inhibitor is specifically bound, in accord with the observed Mg2+ liganding of both C3 hydroxyl and C5 carboxyl oxygens. In addition to His233 and His235 imidazoles, other Mg2+ ligands are the Asp42 carboxyl oxygen and an ordered water molecule. This water, positioned between Asp42 and the C3 hydroxyl of bound substrate/inhibitor, may function as a proton shuttle. The observed interaction of Arg41 with the acyl-CoA C1 carbonyl oxygen explains the effects of Arg41 mutation on reaction product enolization and explains why human Arg41 mutations cause drastic enzyme deficiency.  相似文献   

20.
Dextranase is an enzyme that hydrolyzes dextran α-1,6 linkages. Streptococcus mutans dextranase belongs to glycoside hydrolase family 66, producing isomaltooligosaccharides of various sizes and consisting of at least five amino acid sequence regions. The crystal structure of the conserved fragment from Gln100 to Ile732 of S. mutans dextranase, devoid of its N- and C-terminal variable regions, was determined at 1.6 Å resolution and found to contain three structural domains. Domain N possessed an immunoglobulin-like β-sandwich fold; domain A contained the enzyme''s catalytic module, comprising a (β/α)8-barrel; and domain C formed a β-sandwich structure containing two Greek key motifs. Two ligand complex structures were also determined, and, in the enzyme-isomaltotriose complex structure, the bound isomaltooligosaccharide with four glucose moieties was observed in the catalytic glycone cleft and considered to be the transglycosylation product of the enzyme, indicating the presence of four subsites, −4 to −1, in the catalytic cleft. The complexed structure with 4′,5′-epoxypentyl-α-d-glucopyranoside, a suicide substrate of the enzyme, revealed that the epoxide ring reacted to form a covalent bond with the Asp385 side chain. These structures collectively indicated that Asp385 was the catalytic nucleophile and that Glu453 was the acid/base of the double displacement mechanism, in which the enzyme showed a retaining catalytic character. This is the first structural report for the enzyme belonging to glycoside hydrolase family 66, elucidating the enzyme''s catalytic machinery.  相似文献   

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