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1.
Activated human factor IX (factor IXa) was treated under mildly acidic conditions with a mixture of formaldehyde and morpholine. This reagent has been shown to react preferentially with gamma-carboxyglutamyl (Gla) residues and to convert these residues to gamma-methyleneglutamyl residues (Wright, S.F., Bourne, C.D., Hoke, R.A., Koehler, K.A., and Hiskey, R.G. (1984) Anal. Biochem. 139, 82-90). The modified enzyme was evaluated for coagulant activity and calcium-dependent fluorescence quenching. [14C]Formaldehyde was employed to allow quantitation of the modification and to facilitate localization of the modified residues in the primary structure of factor IXa. In the presence of the [14C]formaldehyde/morpholine reagent, factor IXa rapidly lost coagulant activity, which corresponded to incorporation of radiolabel. Examination of the relationship between protein modification (radiolabel incorporation) and the loss of coagulant activity suggested that modification of 1 mol of Gla/mol of factor IXa results in complete loss of factor IXa coagulant activity. Primary structure analysis of the radioactivity labeled factor IXa suggested that modification of any one of 11 Gla residues was responsible for the loss of coagulant activity. In the presence of calcium, modified factor IXa exhibited a smaller Gla-dependent decrease in protein fluorescence than native factor IXa, but the Gla-independent fluorescence change was the same for both proteins. It therefore appears that the Gla domain of factor IXa must be completely intact for the enzyme to undergo a functionally important calcium-dependent conformational change necessary for coagulant activity.  相似文献   

2.
Stanley TB  Humphries J  High KA  Stafford DW 《Biochemistry》1999,38(47):15681-15687
The binding of the gamma-glutamyl carboxylase to its protein substrates is mediated by a conserved 18 amino acid propeptide sequence found in all vitamin K-dependent proteins. We recently found that the apparent affinities of the naturally occurring propeptides for the carboxylase vary over a 100-fold range and that the propeptide of bone Gla protein has severely impaired affinity for the carboxylase [Stanley, T. B., et al. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 16940-16944 (1)]. Here we report a consensus propeptide sequence that binds tighter (K(i) = 0.43 nM) to the carboxylase than any known propeptide sequence. Comparing the factor IX propeptide to the propeptides of protein C, bone Gla protein, and prothrombin, the weakest binding propeptides, allowed us to predict which residues might be responsible for these substrates' relatively weak binding to the carboxylase. We then made propeptides with the predicted amino acid changes and determined their binding affinities. The reduced binding affinity of these propeptides relative to that of FIX is due to residues -15 in protein C, -10 and -6 in bone Gla protein, and -9 in prothrombin. A role for the -9 position was not previously recognized but is further shown by our identification of a new, naturally occurring mutation at this position in factor IX which causes a warfarin-sensitive hemophilia B phenotype. In addition, we find that propeptides with mutations found in warfarin-sensitive patients have reduced affinity for the carboxylase, suggesting a physiological relevance of propeptide binding affinity.  相似文献   

3.
The liver microsomal vitamin K-dependent carboxylase catalyzes the post-translational conversion of specific glutamyl to gamma-carboxyglutamyl (Gla) residues in precursor forms of a limited number of proteins. These proteins contain an amino-terminal extension (propeptide) that is presumed to serve as an enzyme recognition site to assure their normal processing. The free, noncovalently bound propeptide has also been shown to stimulate the in vitro activity of this enzyme. This peptide has now been shown to lower the app Km of a low-molecular-weight Glu site substrate while having no influence on the app Km of the other substrates, vitamin KH2, O2, and CO2/HCO3-. Propeptide addition was shown to have no influence on the ratio of the two products of the enzyme, Gla and vitamin K-2,3-epoxide. Stimulation of carboxylase activity by the propeptide from human factor X was observed in a number of rat tissues and in the liver of a number of different species. Stability of the enzyme in crude microsomal preparations was greatly enhanced by the presence of propeptide. These observations are consistent with the hypothesis that this region of the protein substrates for the carboxylase not only serves an enzyme recognition or docking function but also modulates the activity of the enzyme by altering the affinity for one of its substrates.  相似文献   

4.
Inactivation of dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase by 5-iodouracil   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
5-Iodouracil was a substrate for bovine liver dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase (DHPDHase) and was a potent inactivator of the enzyme. NADPH increased the rate of inactivation and thymine protected against inactivation. These findings suggest that 5-iodouracil was a mechanism-based inactivator. However, dithiothreitol and excess 5-iodouracil protected the enzyme against inactivation. Thus, a reactive product, presumably 5-iodo-5,6-dihydrouracil generated through the enzymatic reduction of 5-iodouracil, was released from DHPDHase during processing of 5-iodouracil. Since only 18% of [6-3H]5-iodouracil reduced by DHPDHase was covalently bound to the enzyme and radiolabel was not lost to the solvent as tritium, the partition coefficient for inactivation was 4.5. However, the enzymatic activity was completely titrated with 1.7 mol of 5-iodouracil per mol of enzyme-bound flavin. These results indicate that there was 0.31 mol of enzyme-bound inactivator per mol of enzyme flavin. This suggests there were 3.2 flavins per active site, which is consistent with the report of multiple flavins per enzymic subunit (Podschun, B., Wahler, G., and Schnackerz, K. D. (1989) Eur. J. Biochem. 185, 219-224). DHPDHase was inactivated by 2.1 mol of racemic 5-iodo-5,6-dihydrouracil per mol of active sites. The stoichiometry for inactivation of the enzyme by the nonenzymatically generated enantiomer of 5-iodo-5,6-dihydrouracil was calculated to be 1. Two radiolabeled fragments were isolated from a tryptic digest of DHPDHase inactivated with radiolabeled 5-iodouracil. The amino acid sequences of these peptides were Asn-Leu-Ser-X-Pro-His and Asn-Leu-Ser-X-Pro-His-Gly-Met-Gly-Glu-Arg where X was the modified amino acid containing radiolabel from [6-3H]5-iodouracil. Fast atom bombardment mass spectral analysis of the smaller peptide yielded a protonated parent ion mass of 782 daltons that was consistent with X being a S-(hexahydro-2,4-dioxo-5-pyrimidinyl)cysteinyl residue.  相似文献   

5.
The thiolase involved in biosynthesis of poly-beta-hydroxybutyrate in Zoogloea ramigera generates an acetyl-enzyme species during catalysis. Up to 0.86 [14C] acetyl eq/subunit of this homotetrameric enzyme is accumulated by acid precipitation in the presence of [14C]acetyl-CoA. Gel filtration of the same solutions produced only 7% acetyl-enzyme suggesting hydrolytic lability of the acetyl-enzyme during the 10-min isolation at 4 degrees C. In an effort to identify active site residues which may function as basic groups to deprotonate at C-2 of acetyl-CoA to generate the required nucleophilic equivalent in carbon-carbon bond formation, we have prepared and tested haloacetyl-thioesters, oxoesters, and amides in the panthetheine pivalate series (Davis, J. T., Moore, R. N., Imperiali, B., Pratt, A. J., Kobayashi, K., Masamune, S., Sinskey, A. J., and Walsh, C. T. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 82-89). The [14C]bromoacetyl-oxoester alkylatively inactivates thiolase irreversibly with stoichiometric incorporation of four labels/tetramer. Determination of amino acid composition of the radiolabeled tryptic peptide indicated trapping of Cys-89 (Peoples, O. P., Masamune, S., Walsh, C. T., and Sinskey, A. J. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 97-102), the same residue modified by iodoacetamide. When the bromoacetyl-thioester was used, inactivation was pH-dependent. The data are consistent with the competition of two processes, acylation, and alkylation. Direct (rather than secondary) alkylation of thiolase by the inactivator accounts for the significant 14C incorporation into thiolase with the thioester labeled with [14C] in the pantetheine pivalate moiety. It appears likely that the haloacetyl analogs described herein should be generally useful for affinity labeling other enzymes using acetyl-CoA as a substrate.  相似文献   

6.
The rat liver microsomal vitamin K-dependent carboxylase catalyzes the carboxylation of peptide-bound glutamyl residues to gamma-carboxyglutamyl (Gla) residues with the concomitant formation of vitamin K 2,3-epoxide (KO). These studies have demonstrated that the half-reaction, formation of KO, occurs in the absence of carboxylation at low glutamyl substrate concentration but that the ratio of KO/Gla approaches unity as the glutamyl substrate concentration is increased. Utilization of the carboxylase substrate Phe-Leu-[gamma-3H] Glu-Glu-Leu has demonstrated that the ratios of KO/gamma-C-H bonds cleaved and Gla/gamma-C-H bonds cleaved are equivalent at high substrate concentrations and that these ratios approach unity. At low substrate concentrations, KO formation occurs at a higher rate than gamma-H bond cleavage. These data are consistent with a mechanism involving the formation of an oxygenated intermediate from vitamin KH2 and O2 that is converted to KO during hydrogen abstraction from the gamma-position of the Glu substrate. In the absence of a Glu substrate, the intermediate is converted to KO by a mechanism not coupled to glutamyl activation.  相似文献   

7.
Lipoxygenases (LOXs) are multifunctional enzymes that catalyze the oxygenation of polyunsaturated fatty acids to hydroperoxy derivatives; they also convert hydroperoxy fatty acids to epoxy leukotrienes and other secondary products. LOXs undergo suicidal inactivation but the mechanism of this process is still unclear. We investigated the mechanism of suicidal inactivation of the rabbit 15-lipoxygenase by [1-(14)C]-(15S,5Z,8Z,11Z,13E)-15-hydroperoxyeicosa-5,8,11,13-tetraenoic acid (15-HpETE) and observed covalent modification of the enzyme protein. In contrast, nonlipoxygenase proteins (bovine serum albumin and human gamma-globulin) were not significantly modified. Under the conditions of complete enzyme inactivation we found that 1.3 +/- 0.2 moles (n = 10) of inactivator were bound per mole lipoxygenase, and this value did depend neither on the enzyme/inactivator ratio nor on the duration of the inactivation period. Covalent modification required active enzyme protein and proceeded to a similar extent under aerobic and anaerobic conditions. In contrast, [1-(14)C]-(15S,5Z,8Z,11Z,13E)-15-hydroxyeicosa-5,8,11,13-tetraenoic acid (15-HETE), which is no substrate for epoxy-leukotriene formation, did not inactivate the enzyme and protein labeling was minimal. Separation of proteolytic cleavage peptides (Lys-C endoproteinase digestion) by tricine SDS-PAGE and isoelectric focusing in connection with N-terminal amino acid sequencing revealed covalent modification of several active site peptides. These data suggest that 15-lipoxygenase-catalyzed conversion of (15S,5Z,8Z,11Z,13E)-15-hydroperoxyeicosa-5,8,11,13-tetraenoic acid to 14,15-epoxy-leukotriene leads to the formation of reactive intermediate(s), which are covalently linked to the active site. Therefore, this protein modification contributes to suicidal inactivation.  相似文献   

8.
R B Silverman  C George 《Biochemistry》1988,27(9):3285-3289
(Z)-4-Amino-2-fluorobut-2-enoic acid (1) is shown to be a mechanism-based inactivator of pig brain gamma-aminobutyric acid aminotransferase. Approximately 750 inactivator molecules are consumed prior to complete enzyme inactivation. Concurrent with enzyme inactivation is the release of 708 +/- 79 fluoride ions; transamination occurs 737 +/- 15 times per inactivation event. Inactivation of [3H]pyridoxal 5'-phosphate ([3H]PLP) reconstituted GABA aminotransferase by 1 followed by denaturation releases [3H]PMP with no radioactivity remaining attached to the protein. A similar experiment carried out with 4-amino-5-fluoropent-2-enoic acid [Silverman, R. B., Invergo, B. J., & Mathew, J. (1986) J. Med. Chem. 29, 1840-1846] as the inactivator produces no [3H]PMP; rather, another radioactive species is released. These results support an inactivation mechanism for 1 that involves normal catalytic isomerization followed by active site nucleophilic attack on the activated Michael acceptor. A general hypothesis for predicting the inactivation mechanism (Michael addition vs enamine addition) of GABA aminotransferase inactivators is proposed.  相似文献   

9.
Crystalline ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (3-phospho-D-glycerate carboxy-lyase (dimerizing), EC 4.1.1.39) isolated from tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) leaf homogenates is irreversibly inactivated by incubation with potassium cyanate at pH 7.4. The rate of inactivation is pseudo first-order and linearly dependent on reagent concentration. In the presence of ribulosebisphosphate or high levels of CO2 and Mg2+ the rate constant for inactivation is reduced, suggesting that chemical modification occurs in the active site region of the enzyme. In contrast, neither the effector NADPH nor the activator Mg2+ alone significantly affect the rate of inactivation by cyanate; however, NADPH markedly enhances the protective effect of CO2 and Mg2+. Incubation of the carboxylase with potassium [14C] cyanate in the absence or presence of ribulosebisphosphate revealed that the substrate specifically reduces cyanate incorporation into the large catalytic subunits of the enzyme. Analysis of acid hydrolysates of the radioactive carboxylase indicated that the reagent carbamylates both NH2-terminal groups and lysyl residues in the large and small subunits. Comparison of the substrate-protected enzyme with the inactivated carboxylase revealed that ribulosebisphosphate preferentially reduces lysyl modification within the large subunit. The data here presented indicate that inactivation of ribulosebisphosphate carboxylase by cyanate or its reactive tautomer, isocyanic acid, results from the modification of lysyl residues within the catalytic subunit, presumably at the activator and substrate CO2 binding sites on the enzyme.  相似文献   

10.
S H Vollmer  R F Colman 《Biochemistry》1990,29(10):2495-2501
The affinity label 8-[(4-bromo-2,3-dioxobutyl)thio]adenosine 5'-triphosphate (8-BDB-TA-5'-TP) reacts covalently with rabbit muscle pyruvate kinase, incorporating 2 mol of reagent/mol of enzyme subunit upon complete inactivation. Protection against inactivation is provided by phosphoenolpyruvate, K+, and Mn2+ and only 1 mol of reagent/mol of subunit is incorporated [DeCamp, D.L., Lim, S., & Colman, R.F. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 7651-7658]. We have now identified the resultant modified residues. After reaction with 8-BDB-TA-5'-TP at pH 7.0, modified enzyme was incubated with [3H]NaBH4 to reduce the carbonyl groups of enzyme-bound 8-BDB-TA-5'-TP and to introduce a radioactive tracer into the modified residues. Following carboxymethylation and digestion with trypsin, the radioactive peptides were separated on a phenylboronate agarose column followed by reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography in 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid with an acetonitrile gradient. Gas-phase sequencing gave the cysteine-modified peptides Asn162-Ile-Cys-Lys165 and Cys151-Asp-Glu-Asn-Ile-Leu-Trp-Leu-Asp-Tyr-Lys161, with a smaller amount of Asn43-Thr-Gly-Ile-Ile-Cys-Thr-Ile-Gly-Pro-Ala-Ser-Arg55. Reaction in the presence of the protectants phosphoenolpyruvate, K+, and Mn2+ yielded Asn-Ile-Cys-Lys as the only labeled peptide, indicating that inactivation is caused by modification of Cys151 and Cys48.  相似文献   

11.
To study the specific role of gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (Gla) residues in prothrombin, we have isolated a series of partially carboxylated prothrombin variants from a patient with a hereditary defect in vitamin K-dependent carboxylation (Goldsmith, G. H., Pence, R. E., Ratnoff, O. D., Adelstein, D. A., and Furie, B. (1982) J. Clin. Invest. 69, 1253-1260). The three variant prothrombins, purified by DEAE-Sephacel, immunoaffinity chromatography, and preparative gel electrophoresis, were indistinguishable from prothrombin in molecular weight, amino acid composition, and NH2-terminal amino acid sequence, with the exception of Gla residues. Variant prothrombin 1, with 8 Gla residues, had 66% of the coagulant activity of prothrombin, one high affinity metal-binding site (Kd = 15 nM), and three lower affinity sites (Kd = 2.7 microM); prothrombin contained two high affinity (36 nM) and four lower affinity sites (Kd = 1 microM). Ca(II) induced a 23% decrease in the intrinsic fluorescence of variant prothrombin 1 fragment 1, compared to a 35% decrease in that of prothrombin fragment 1. The phospholipid binding activity of variant prothrombin 1 was 44% that of prothrombin. Variant prothrombin 2 and variant prothrombin 3, with 4 and 6 Gla residues, respectively, had about 5% of prothrombin coagulant activity and a single high affinity and two lower affinity metal-binding sites and exhibited no phospholipid binding activity. Variant prothrombin 3 fragment 1 and variant prothrombin 2 fragment 1 demonstrated 18 and 13% of Ca(II)-induced fluorescence quenching, respectively. Abnormal prothrombin, with 1 Gla residue, had 8% of prothrombin coagulant activity, a single lower affinity (1 microM) metal-binding site, and 13% Ca(II)-induced fluorescence quenching of the fragment 1 species and did not bind to phospholipid. These results indicate that Gla residues define the metal binding properties of prothrombin. Most, if not all, of the Gla residues are required for complete prothrombin function, and the prothrombin coagulant activity correlates to the phospholipid binding activity of the prothrombin species.  相似文献   

12.
Covalent modification experiments were conducted in order to identify active site residues of the 18-kDa cytoplasmic phosphotyrosyl protein phosphatases. The enzyme was inactivated by diethyl pyrocarbonate, phenylglyoxal, cyclohexanedione, iodoacetate, iodoacetamide, phenylarsine oxide, and certain epoxides in a manner consistent with the modification of active site residues. Phenylglyoxal and cyclohexanedione both bind to the active site in a rapid preequilibrium process and thus act as active site-directed inhibitors. The pH dependencies of the inactivation by iodoacetate and by iodoacetamide were examined in detail and compared with rate data for the alkylation of glutathione as a model compound. The enzyme inactivation data permitted the determination of pKa values of two reactive cysteines at or near the active site. Although phosphomycin is simply a competitive inhibitor of the enzyme, it was found that 1,2-epoxy-3-(p-nitrophenoxy)propane (EPNP) and (R)- and (S)-benzylglycidol act as irreversible covalent inactivators, consistent with the importance of a hydrophobic moiety on the substrate in controlling substrate specificity. EPNP exhibits characteristics of an active site-directed inactivator, with a preequilibrium binding constant somewhat smaller than that of phosphate ion. The pH dependencies of inactivation of EPNP and (S)-benzylglycidol are identical to that observed for iodoacetamide and similar to that for iodoacetate, suggesting that they modify similar groups. Sequencing of the tryptic digests of the EPNP-labeled enzyme indicates that Cys-62 and Cys-145 are labeled. Phenylarsine oxide acts as a very slow, tight-binding inhibitor of the enzyme. The results are interpreted in terms of an active site model that incorporates a histidine-cysteine ion pair, similar to that present in papain.  相似文献   

13.
beta-Ethynyltyramine has been shown to be a potent, mechanism-based inhibitor of dopamine beta-hydroxylase (DBH). This is evidenced by pseudo-first-order, time-dependent inactivation of enzyme, a dependence of inactivation on the presence of ascorbate and oxygen cosubstrates, the ability of tyramine (substrate) and 1-(3,5-difluoro-4-hydroxybenzyl)imidazole-2-thione (competitive multisubstrate inhibitor) to protect against inactivation, and a high affinity of beta-ethynyltyramine for enzyme. Inactivation of DBH by beta-ethynyltyramine is accompanied by stoichiometric, covalent modification of the enzyme. Analysis of the tryptic map following inactivation by [3H]-beta-ethynyltyramine reveals that the radiolabel is associated with a single, 25 amino acid peptide. The sequence of the modified peptide is shown to be Cys-Thr-Gln-Leu-Ala-Leu-Pro-Ala-Ser-Gly-Ile-His-Ile-Phe-Ala-Ser-Gln-Leu- His*- Thr-His-Leu-Thr-Gly-Arg, where His* corresponds to a covalently modified histidine residue. In studies using the separated enantiomers of beta-ethynyltyramine, we have found the R enantiomer to be a reversible, competitive inhibitor versus tyramine substrate with a Ki of 7.9 +/- 0.3 microM. The S enantiomer, while also being a competitive inhibitor (Ki = 33.9 +/- 1.4 microM), is hydroxylated by DBH to give the expected beta-ethynyloctopamine product and also efficiently inactivates the enzyme [kinact(app) = 0.18 +/- 0.02 min-1; KI(app) = 57 +/- 8 microM]. The partition ratio for this process is very low and has been estimated to be about 2.5. This establishes an approximate value for kcat of 0.45 min(-1) and reveals that (S)-beta-ethynyltyramine undergoes a slow turnover relative to that of tyramine (kcat approximately 50 s(-1), despite the nearly 100-fold higher affinity of the inactivator for enzyme.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
Saxl RL  Reston J  Nie Z  Kalman TI  Maley F 《Biochemistry》2003,42(15):4544-4551
Evidence is presented that 5-imidazolylpropynyl-2'-deoxyuridine 5'-monophosphate (IP-dUMP) is a mechanism-based, irreversible inactivator of Escherichia coli thymidylate synthase (TS), which covalently modifies Tyr94 at the active site of the enzyme. The inactivation of TS was time and concentration dependent and did not require the folate cofactor. Due to the rapidity of the inactivation process, accurate kinetic parameters could be determined only in the presence of saturating concentrations (1000K(M)) of the competing substrate, dUMP. Under these conditions, a K(I) of 0.36 +/- 0.09 microM and an inactivation rate constant (k(inact)) of 0.53 +/- 0.15 min(-1) were obtained from Kitz-Wilson plots. Electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) determined a 412 amu mass increase of TS after inhibition by IP-dUMP with no mass difference being detected for the TS mutants Tyr94Phe or Cys146Ala, thus indicating the importance of these residues for complex formation. The change in WT-TS mass was consistent with covalent modification by IP-dUMP, which was confirmed by proteolytic digestion of the modified protein followed by ESI-MS. By these means, a 43-residue trypsin peptide (residues 54-96), a 16-residue endoAspN peptide (residues 89-104), and an 8-residue endoAspN/endoLysC peptide (residues 89-96), each containing the IP-dUMP adduct, were observed. MS/MS analysis of the IP-dUMP-endoAspN peptide identified a modified 3-residue daughter ion, YGK (residues 94-96). A mechanistic scheme requiring the participation of Cys146 is proposed for the covalent modification of IP-dUMP by Tyr94, which, unlike an earlier proposal [Kalman, T. I., Nie, Z., and Kamat, A. (2001) Nucleosides Nucleotides Nucleic Acids 20, 869-871], does not require the release of imidazole for the activation of the inhibitor.  相似文献   

15.
The interaction of rat liver acetyl-CoA carboxylase with a 2',3'-dialdehyde derivative of ATP (oATP) has been studied. The degree of the enzyme inactivation has been found to depend on the oATP concentration and the incubation time. ATP was proved to be the only substrate which protected the inactivation. Acetyl-CoA did not effect inactivation, while HCO3- accelerated the process. Ki values for oATP in the absence and presence of HCO3- were 0.35 +/- 0.04 and 0.5 +/- 0.06 mM, and those of the modification constant (kmod) were 0.11 and 0.26 min-1 respectively. oATP completely inhibited the [14C]ADP in equilibrium ATP exchange and did not effect the [14C]acetyl-CoA in equilibrium malonyl-CoA exchange. Incorporation of approximately 1 equivalent of [3H]oATP per acetyl-CoA carboxylase subunit has been shown. No recovery of the modified enzyme activity has been observed in Tris or beta-mercaptoethanol containing buffers, and treatment with NaB3H4 has not led to 3H incorporation. The modification elimination of the ATP triphosphate chain. The results indicated the affinity modification of acetyl-CoA carboxylase by oATP. It was shown that the reagent apparently interacted selectively with the epsilon-amino group of lysine in the ATP-binding site to form a morpholine-like structure.  相似文献   

16.
The triphosphate form of 9-[(2-hydroxyethoxy)-methyl]guanine (acyclovir), ACVTP, inactivates the herpes simplex virus type 1 DNA polymerase. ACVTP does not innately inactivate resting polymerase, but becomes an inactivator only while being processed as an alternative substrate. Pseudo first-order rates of inactivation were measured at varying concentrations of ACVTP and fixed concentrations of the natural substrate, deoxyguanosine triphosphate. These studies indicated that a reversible enzyme-ACVTP (Michaelis-type) complex is formed at the active site prior to inactivation. The formation of this complex was competitively retarded by deoxyguanosine triphosphate. An apparent dissociation constant (KD) of 3.6 +/- 0.2 (S.D.) nM was determined for ACVTP from this reversible complex. A second method for the estimation of the KD which used the extrapolated initial velocities produced a value of 5.9 +/- 0.4 (S.D.) nM. The rate of conversion of the reversible complex to the inactivated complex, at saturating ACVTP, was calculated to be 0.24 min-1. No reactivation of enzyme activity was detected following isolation of the inactivated complex by rapid desalting on Sephadex G-25. Under these conditions, an overall reactivation rate of 1.5 X 10(-5) min-1 could have been easily detected. Therefore, the overall inhibition constant must have been less than 3 pM. In contrast, when host DNA polymerase alpha was incubated with 14 microM ACVTP, only 60% inhibition of enzyme activity was observed, but inactivation was not detected. These data indicate that ACVTP functions as a suicide inactivator of the herpes simplex virus type 1 DNA polymerase, and is only a weak reversible inhibitor of DNA polymerase alpha.  相似文献   

17.
The interaction of rat liver acetyl-CoA carboxylase with a 2',3'-dialdehyde derivative of ATP (oATP) has been studied. The degree of the enzyme inactivation has been found to depend on the oATP concentration and the incubation time. ATP was the only reaction substrate which provided protection from inactivation. Acetyl-CoA did not affect inactivation, while HCO3- accelerated the process. Ki values for oATP in the absence and the presence of HCO3- were 0.35 +/- 0.04 and 0.5 +/- 0.06 mM, and those of the modification constant (k) were 0.11 and 0.26 min-1, respectively. oATP completely inhibited the reaction of [14C]ADP in equilibrium ATP exchange, whereas produced actually no effect on [14C]acetyl-CoA equilibrium with malonyl-CoA exchange. Incorporation of about one equivalent of [3H]oATP per acetyl-CoA carboxylase subunit has been shown. No restoration of the modified enzyme activity has been observed in Tris or beta-mercaptoethanol containing buffers, and treatment with NaB[3H]4 has not led to 3H incorporation. The modification process involves elimination of the triphosphate chain of oATP. The results obtained indicate the affinity character of oATP-mediated modification of acetyl-CoA carboxylase. The reagent apparently interacts selectively with the epsilon-amino group of lysine in the ATP-binding site to form a morpholine-like structure.  相似文献   

18.
UDP-N-acetylglucosamine:glycoprotein N-acetylglucosamine-1-phosphotransferase (GlcNAc-phosphotransferase) from the soil amoeba Acanthamoeba castellanii has been purified over 100,000-fold by means of wheat germ agglutinin-Sepharose affinity chromatography, DEAE-cellulose chromatography, concanavalin A-Sepharose affinity chromatography, orange A-agarose dye chromatography, and gel filtration on Superose 6. The most purified enzyme has an estimated specific activity of at least 5 mumol of GlcNAc-phosphate transferred/min/mg of protein using alpha-methylmannoside as acceptor. The molecular weight of the native enzyme is approximately 250,000, as determined by gel filtration and glycerol gradients in H2O and D2O. A protein with an apparent M(r) of 97,000 in small scale preparations and its putative proteolytic fragment of 43,000 in large scale preparations co-purifies with the enzyme activity. This protein is covalently modified with GlcNAc-[32P]phosphate when the enzyme preparation is incubated with [beta-32P]UDP-GlcNAc in the absence of an acceptor substrate. The labeling of the 97(43)-kDa protein requires active enzyme and is completely inhibited by the addition of the acceptor substrate alpha-methylmannoside. The GlcNAc-[32P]phosphate transferred to the protein is not bound to serine, threonine, tyrosine, or mannose residues. The 97(43)-kDa protein with covalently bound GlcNAc-P does not serve as a kinetically competent enzyme-substrate intermediate. However, preincubation of GlcNAc-phosphotransferase with UDP-GlcNAc does result in a decrease in the Vmax of the enzyme in subsequent assays. Taken together, these data are consistent with the 97(43)-kDa protein being a subunit of GlcNAc-phosphotransferase.  相似文献   

19.
The interaction of 4-(N-chloroethyl-N-methylamino)-benzyl-gamma-amide ATP (I) and the corresponding beta-amide of ADP (II) with rat liver acetyl-CoA carboxylase was studied. Both analogs were shown to cause affinity modification of the enzyme. ATP and GoAS Ac protected the enzyme against inactivation. HCO3- increased the rate of carboxylase inactivation by analogs I and II (2.5- and 1.5-fold, respectively). The alkylating amides did not influence the rate of the bicarbonate-dependent [14C]-ADP-ATP exchange and inhibited the enzyme-catalyzed reaction of [14C]-CoAs Ac----CoAS Mal exchange, which testifies to the localization of the modified group in the CoAS Ac-binding site of the enzyme active center. Based on the affinity modification and analog size, it was found that the distance between the ATP- and CoAS Ac-binding sites of the enzyme active center can vary from 0.8 to 1.2 nm.  相似文献   

20.
The vitamin K-dependent gamma-glutamyl carboxylase catalyzes the modification of specific glutamates in a number of proteins required for blood coagulation and associated with bone and calcium homeostasis. All known vitamin K-dependent proteins possess a conserved eighteen-amino acid propeptide sequence that is the primary binding site for the carboxylase. We compared the relative affinities of synthetic propeptides of nine human vitamin K-dependent proteins by determining the inhibition constants (Ki) toward a factor IX propeptide/gamma-carboxyglutamic acid domain substrate. The Ki values for six of the propeptides (factor X, matrix Gla protein, factor VII, factor IX, PRGP1, and protein S) were between 2-35 nM, with the factor X propeptide having the tightest affinity. In contrast, the inhibition constants for the propeptides of prothrombin and protein C are approximately 100-fold weaker than the factor X propeptide. The propeptide of bone Gla protein demonstrates severely impaired carboxylase binding with an inhibition constant of at least 200,000-fold weaker than the factor X propeptide. This study demonstrates that the affinities of the propeptides of the vitamin K-dependent proteins vary over a considerable range; this may have important physiological consequences in the levels of vitamin K-dependent proteins and the biochemical mechanism by which these substrates are modified by the carboxylase.  相似文献   

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