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1.
SecA is a translocation ATPase that drives protein translocation. D209N SecA, a dominant-negative mutant, binds ATP but is unable to hydrolyze it. This mutant was inactive to proOmpA translocation. However, it generated a translocation intermediate of 18 kDa. Further addition of wild-type SecA caused its translocation into either mature OmpA or another intermediate of 28 kDa that can be translocated into mature by a proton motive force. The addition of excess D209N SecA during translocation caused a topology inversion of SecG. Moreover, an intermediate of SecG inversion was identified when wild-type and D209N SecA were used in the same amounts. These results indicate that multiple SecA molecules drive translocation across a single translocon with SecG inversion. Here, we propose a revised model of proOmpA translocation in which a single catalytic cycle of SecA causes translocation of 10-13 kDa with ATP binding and hydrolysis, and SecG inversion is required when the next SecA cycle begins with additional ATP hydrolysis.  相似文献   

2.
3.
SecA is found in Escherichia coli both tightly associated with the cytoplasmic membrane where it functions as a translocation ATPase during protein export and free in the cytosol (R. J. Cabelli, K. M. Dolan, L. Qian, and D. B. Oliver, J. Biol. Chem. 266:24420-24427, 1991; D. B. Oliver and J. Beckwith, Cell 30:311-319, 1982; W. Wickner, A. J. M. Driessen, and F.-U. Hartl, Annu. Rev. Biochem. 60:101-124, 1991). Here we show that SecA can be immunoprecipitated from the cytosol in complex with both fully elongated and nascent species of the precursor of maltose-binding protein, an exported, periplasmic protein. In addition, under conditions in which the distribution of SecA between the cytosolic and membrane-bound states changes from that normally observed, the distribution of precursor maltose-binding protein changes in parallel. These results support the idea that cytosolic SecA plays a role in export. With the aim of determining the roles of the multiple binding sites for ATP on SecA, we compared the export defect in a culture of E. coli expressing a temperature-sensitive allele of secA with the defect in a culture treated with sodium azide. The results indicate that the mutational change and treatment with sodium azide inhibit export by affecting different steps in the cycle of ATP binding and hydrolysis by SecA.  相似文献   

4.
Incubation of [gamma-32P]ATP with a molar excess of the soluble, homogeneous ATPase from beef heart mitochondria (F1) results in binding of substrate primarily in a single, very high affinity (KA = 10(12) M-1) catalytic site and in a slow rate of hydrolysis characteristic of single site catalysis. Subsequent addition of millimolar concentrations of nonradioactive ATP as a cold chase, sufficient to fill catalytic sites on the enzyme, results in an acceleration of hydrolysis of bound radioactive ATP of as much as 10(6)-fold, that is, to Vmax rates (Cross, R.L., Grubmeyer, C., and Penefsky, H.S. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 12101-12105). For this reason, it was proposed that the high affinity catalytic site is a normal catalytic site on the molecule. Recently, Bullough et al. (Bullough, D.A., Verburg, J.G., Yoshida, M., and Allison, W.A. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 11675-11683) reported that when 5 to 20 microM concentrations of nonradioactive ATP were added as a cold chase to an enzyme-substrate complex consisting of F1 and ATP bound to the high affinity catalytic site, hydrolysis of the chase was commensurate with the turnover rate of the enzyme, whereas the hydrolysis of bound ATP was considerably slower. These authors suggested that the high affinity catalytic site on F1 is not a normal catalytic site. This paper shows, in experiments with a rapid mixing-chemical quench apparatus, that hydrolysis of ATP bound in the high affinity catalytic site is accelerated to Vmax rates following addition of 5 microM ATP as a cold chase. Hydrolysis of bound ATP appears to precede that of the chase. The weight of the available evidence continues to support the original suggestion that the high affinity catalytic site of beef heart F1 is a normal catalytic site.  相似文献   

5.
The x-ray structure of the unliganded aspartate transcarbamylase reveals that Arg-113 of the catalytic chain is involved in an important set of interactions at the interface between the catalytic and regulatory subunits (Honzatko, R.B., Crawford, J.L., Monaco, H.L., Ladner, J.E., Edwards, B.F.P., Evans, D.R., Warren, S.G., Wiley, D.C., Ladner, R.C., and Lipscomb, W. N. (1982) J. Mol. Biol. 160, 219-263). In order to disturb this interaction, site-directed mutagenesis has been used to replace Arg-113 with glycine. This modification results in a substantial weakening of the interface between the catalytic and regulatory subunits leading to a high tendency for dissociation. The unliganded mutant enzyme exhibits a pH dependence and a sensitivity toward mercurials analogous to that obtained for the relaxed conformation of the wild-type enzyme. Moreover, the presence of saturating concentrations of aspartate is accompanied by only a slight shift in the optimal pH for activity. The bisubstrate analog N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate induces a 2-fold increase in the sulfhydryl reactivity as compared to the 4-fold increase observed for the wild-type enzyme. Despite this change in the interactions at the interface between the catalytic and regulatory subunits, the mutant enzyme still retains homotropic and heterotropic effects and exhibits a normal affinity for aspartate. Together these data show that a substantial weakening of the catalytic-regulatory interface can occur without altering the allosteric properties of the enzyme. These results also indicate that the intersubunit interactions involving Arg-113, between the polar domain of the catalytic chain and the zinc domain of the regulatory chain, do not participate in the homotropic cooperativity of the enzyme.  相似文献   

6.
ATP-binding cassette (ABC) proteins constitute one of the widest families in all organisms, whose P-glycoprotein involved in resistance of cancer cells to chemotherapy is an archetype member. Although three-dimensional structures of several nucleotide-binding domains of ABC proteins are now available, the catalytic mechanism triggering the functioning of these proteins still remains elusive. In particular, it has been postulated that ATP hydrolysis proceeds via an acid-base mechanism catalyzed by the Glu residue adjacent to the Walker-B motif (Geourjon, C., Orelle, C., Steinfels, E., Blanchet, C., Deléage, G., Di Pietro, A., and Jault, J. M. (2001) Trends Biochem. Sci. 26, 539-544), but the involvement of such residue as the catalytic base in ABC transporters was recently questioned (Sauna, Z. E., Muller, M., Peng, X. H., and Ambudkar, S. V. (2002) Biochemistry, 41, 13989-14000). The equivalent glutamate residue (Glu504) of a half-ABC transporter involved in multidrug resistance in Bacillus subtilis, BmrA (formerly known as YvcC), was therefore mutated to Asp, Ala, Gln, Ser, and Cys residues. All these mutants were fully devoid of ATPase activity, yet they showed a high level of vanadate-independent trapping of 8-N3-alpha-32P-labeled nucleotide(s), following preincubation with 8-N3-[alpha-32P]ATP. However, and in contrast to the wild-type enzyme, the use of 8-N3-[gamma-32P]ATP unequivocally showed that all the mutants trapped exclusively the triphosphate form of the analogue, suggesting that they were not able to perform even a single hydrolytic turnover. These results demonstrate that Glu504 is the catalytic base for ATP hydrolysis in BmrA, and it is proposed that equivalent glutamate residues in other ABC transporters play the same role.  相似文献   

7.
SecA is the precursor protein binding subunit of the bacterial precursor protein translocase, which consists of the SecY/E protein as integral membrane domain. SecA is an ATPase, and couples the hydrolysis of ATP to the release of bound precursor proteins to allow their proton-motive-force-driven translocation across the cytoplasmic membrane. A putative ATP-binding motif can be predicted from the amino acid sequence of SecA with homology to the consensus Walker A-type motif. The role of this domain is not known. A lysine residue at position 106 at the end of the glycine-rich loop in the A motif of the Bacillus subtilis SecA was replaced by an asparagine through site-directed mutagenesis (K106N SecA). A similar replacement was introduced at an adjacent lysine residue at position 101 (K101N SecA). Wild-type and mutant SecA proteins were expressed to a high level and purified to homogeneity. The catalytic efficacy (kcat/km) of the K106N SecA for lipid-stimulated ATP hydrolysis was only 1% of that of the wild-type and K101N SecA. K106N SecA retained the ability to bind ATP, but its ATPase activity was not stimulated by precursor proteins. Mutant and wild-type SecA bind with similar affinity to Escherichia coli inner membrane vesicles and insert into a phospholipid mono-layer, in contrast to the wild type, membrane insertion of the K106N SecA was not prevented by ATP. K106N SecA blocks the ATP and proton-motive-force-dependent chase of a translocation intermediate to fully translocated proOmpA. It is concluded that the GKT motif in the amino-terminal domain of SecA is part of the catalytic ATP-binding site. This site may be involved in the ATP-driven protein recycling function of SecA which allows the release of SecA from its association with precursor proteins, and the phospholipid bilayer.  相似文献   

8.
To investigate residues involved in the formation of the noncatalytic nucleotide binding sites of the vacuolar proton-translocating adenosine triphosphatase (V-ATPase), cysteine scanning mutagenesis of the VMA2 gene that encodes the B subunit in yeast was performed. Replacement of the single endogenous cysteine residue at position 188 gave rise to a Cys-less form of the B subunit (Vma2p) which had near wild-type levels of activity and which was used in the construction of 16 single cysteine-containing mutants. The ability of adenine nucleotides to prevent reaction of the introduced cysteine residues with the sulfhydryl reagent 3-(N-maleimidopropionyl)biocytin (biotin-maleimide) was evaluated by Western blot. Biotin-maleimide labeling of the purified V-ATPase from the wild-type and the mutants S152C, L178C, N181C, A184C, and T279C was reduced after reaction with the nucleotide analog 3'-O-(4-benzoyl)benzoyladenosine 5'-triphosphate (BzATP). These results suggest the proximity of these residues to the nucleotide binding site on the B subunit. In addition, we have examined the level of endogenous nucleotide bound to the wild-type V-ATPase and to a mutant (the A subunit mutant R483Q) which is postulated to be altered at the noncatalytic site and which displays a marked nonlinearity in ATP hydrolysis (MacLeod, K. J., Vasilyeva, E., Baleja, J. D., and Forgac, M. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 150-156). The R483Q mutant contained 2.6 mol of ATP/mol of V-ATPase compared with the wild-type enzyme, which contained 0.8 mol of ATP/mol of V-ATPase. These results suggest that binding of additional ATP to the noncatalytic sites may modulate the catalytic activity of the enzyme.  相似文献   

9.
Photosystem II (PSII) is the photosynthetic enzyme catalyzing the oxidation of water and reduction of plastoquinone (Q). This reaction occurs at a catalytic site containing four manganese atoms and cycling among five oxidation states, the Sn states, where n refers to the number of oxidizing equivalents stored. Biochemical and spectroscopic techniques have been used previously to conclude that aspartate 170 in the D1 subunit influences the structure and function of the PSII active site (Boerner, R. J., Nguyen, A. P., Barry, B. A., and Debus, R. J. (1992) Biochemistry 31, 6660-6672). Substitution of glutamate for aspartate 170 resulted in an assembled manganese cluster, which was capable of enzymatic turnover, but at lower steady-state oxygen evolution rates. Here, we obtained the difference (light-minus-dark) Fourier transform IR spectrum associated with the S2Q--minus-S1Q transition by illumination of oxygen-evolving wild-type and DE170D1 PSII preparations at 200 K. These spectra are known to be dominated by contributions from carboxylic acid and carboxylate residues that are close to or ligating the manganese cluster. Substitution of glutamate for aspartate 170 results in alterations in the S2Q--minus-S1Q spectrum; the alterations are consistent with a change in carboxylate coordination to manganese or calcium. In particular, the spectra are consistent with a shift from bridging/bidentate carboxylates in wild-type PSII to unidentate carboxylate ligation in DE170D1 PSII.  相似文献   

10.
The heterodimeric human MSH2-MSH6 protein initiates DNA mismatch repair (MMR) by recognizing mismatched bases that result from replication errors. Msh2(G674A) or Msh6(T1217D) mice that have mutations in or near the ATP binding site of MSH2 or ATP hydrolysis catalytic site of MSH6 develop cancer and have a reduced lifespan due to loss of the MMR pathway (Lin, D. P., Wang, Y., Scherer, S. J., Clark, A. B., Yang, K., Avdievich, E., Jin, B., Werling, U., Parris, T., Kurihara, N., Umar, A., Kucherlapati, R., Lipkin, M., Kunkel, T. A., and Edelmann, W. (2004) Cancer Res. 64, 517-522; Yang, G., Scherer, S. J., Shell, S. S., Yang, K., Kim, M., Lipkin, M., Kucherlapati, R., Kolodner, R. D., and Edelmann, W. (2004) Cancer Cell 6, 139-150). Mouse embryonic fibroblasts from these mice retain an apoptotic response to DNA damage. Mutant human MutSα proteins MSH2(G674A)-MSH6(wt) and MSH2(wt)-MSH6(T1219D) are profiled in a variety of functional assays and as expected fail to support MMR in vitro, although they retain mismatch recognition activity. Kinetic analyses of DNA binding and ATPase activities and examination of the excision step of MMR reveal that the two mutants differ in their underlying molecular defects. MSH2(wt)-MSH6(T1219D) fails to couple nucleotide binding and mismatch recognition, whereas MSH2(G674A)-MSH6(wt) has a partial defect in nucleotide binding. Nevertheless, both mutant proteins remain bound to the mismatch and fail to promote efficient excision thereby inhibiting MMR in vitro in a dominant manner. Implications of these findings for MMR and DNA damage signaling by MMR proteins are discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Studies of ligand binding to acetylcholinesterase (AChE) have demonstrated two sites of interaction. An acyl-enzyme intermediate is formed at the acylation site, and catalytic activity can be inhibited by ligand binding to a peripheral site. The three-dimensional structures of AChE-ligand complexes reveal a narrow and deep active site gorge and indicate that ligands specific for the acylation site at the base of the gorge must first traverse the peripheral site near the gorge entrance. In recent studies attempting to clarify the role of the peripheral site in the catalytic pathway for AChE, we showed that ligands which bind specifically to the peripheral site can slow the rates at which other ligands enter and exit the acylation site, a feature we called steric blockade [Szegletes, T., Mallender, W. D., and Rosenberry, T. L. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 4206-4216]. We also demonstrated that cationic substrates can form a low-affinity complex at the peripheral site that accelerates catalytic hydrolysis at low substrate concentrations but results in substrate inhibition at high concentrations because of steric blockade of product release [Szegletes, T., Mallender, W. D., Thomas, P. J., and Rosenberry, T. L. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 122-133]. In this report, we demonstrate that a key residue in the human AChE peripheral site with which the substrate acetylthiocholine interacts is D74. We extend our kinetic model to evaluate the substrate affinity for the peripheral site, indicated by the equilibrium dissociation constant K(S), from the dependence of the substrate hydrolysis rate on substrate concentration. For human AChE, a K(S) of 1.9+/-0.7 mM obtained by fitting this substrate inhibition curve agreed with a K(S) of 1.3+/-1.0 mM measured directly from acetylthiocholine inhibition of the binding of the neurotoxin fasciculin to the peripheral site. For Torpedo AChE, a K(S) of 0.5+/- 0.2 mM obtained from substrate inhibition agreed with a K(S) of 0.4+/- 0.2 mM measured with fasciculin. Introduction of the D72G mutation (corresponding to D74G in human AChE) increased the K(S) to 4-10 mM in the Torpedo enzyme and to about 33 mM in the human enzyme. While the turnover number k(cat) was unchanged in the human D74G mutant, the roughly 20-fold decrease in acetylthiocholine affinity for the peripheral site in D74G resulted in a corresponding decrease in k(cat)/K(app), the second-order hydrolysis rate constant, in the mutant. In addition, we show that D74 is important in conveying to the acylation site an inhibitory conformational effect induced by the binding of fasciculin to the peripheral site. This inhibitory effect, measured by the relative decrease in the first-order phosphorylation rate constant k(OP) for the neutral organophosphate 7-[(methylethoxyphosphonyl)oxy]-4-methylcoumarin (EMPC) that resulted from fasciculin binding, decreased from 0.002 in wild-type human AChE to 0.24 in the D74G mutant.  相似文献   

12.
Structural studies of Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamoylase suggest that the R state of the enzyme is stabilized by an interaction between Ser-171 of the aspartate domain and both the backbone carbonyl of His-134 and the side chain of Gln-133 of the carbamoyl phosphate domain of a catalytic chain [Ke, H.-M., Lipscomb, W.N., Cho, Y., & Honzatko, R. B. (1988) J. Mol. Biol. 204, 725-747]. In the present study, site-specific mutagenesis is used to replace Ser-171 by alanine, thereby eliminating the interactions between Ser-171 and both Gln-133 and His-134. The Ser-171----Ala holoenzyme exhibits no cooperativity, more than a 140-fold loss of activity, little change in the carbamoyl phosphate concentration at half the maximal observed specific activity, and a 7-fold increase in the aspartate concentration at half the maximal observed specific activity. Although the Ser-171----Ala enzyme exhibits no homotropic cooperativity, it is still activated by N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate (PALA), but not by succinate, in the presence of saturating carbamoyl phosphate and subsaturating aspartate. At subsaturating concentrations of aspartate, the Ser-171----Ala enzyme is still activated by ATP but is inhibited less by CTP than is the wild-type enzyme. At saturating concentrations of aspartate, the Ser-171----Ala enzyme is activated by ATP and inhibited by CTP to an even greater extent than at subsaturating concentrations of aspartate. At saturating aspartate, the wild-type enzyme is neither activated by ATP nor inhibited by CTP.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
14.
A mutant cell line was selected from wild type S49 lymphoblasts that expressed a novel high affinity purine base transport system not found in parental cells or any other mammalian cell line (Aronow, B., Toll, D., Patrick, J., Hollingsworth, P., McCartan, K., and Ullman, B. (1986) Mol. Cell. Biol. 6, 2957-2962). In order to determine whether this nucleobase transport system was bidirectional, mutant cell lines possessing this high affinity base transport capability were derived from a nucleoside transport-deficient derivative of an adenylosuccinate synthetase-deficient S49 cell line. The resulting progeny excreted significantly greater amounts of purine into the cell culture medium than parental cells. This purine was identified as hypoxanthine. These results demonstrate genetically that the high affinity purine base transport system can mediate both the influx and efflux of hypoxanthine.  相似文献   

15.
Ding H  Hunt JF  Mukerji I  Oliver D 《Biochemistry》2003,42(29):8729-8738
SecA ATPase promotes the biogenesis of membrane and secretory proteins into and across the cytoplasmic membrane of Eubacteria. SecA binds to translocon component SecYE and substrate proteins and undergoes ATP-dependent conformational cycles that are coupled to the stepwise translocation of proteins. Our recent crystal structure of B. subtilis SecA [Hunt, J. F., Weinkauf, S., Henry, L., Fak, J. J., McNicholas, P., Oliver, D. B., and Deisenhofer, J. (2002) Science 297, 2018-2026] showed two different dimer interactions in the lattice which both buried significant solvent-accessible surface area in their interface and could potentially be responsible for formation of the physiological dimer in solution. In this paper, we utilize fluorescence resonance energy transfer methodology with genetically engineered SecA proteins containing unique pairs of tryptophan and fluorophore-labeled cysteine residues to determine the oligomeric structure of SecA protein in solution. Our results show that of the two dimers interactions observed in the crystal structure, SecA forms an antiparallel dimer in solution that maximizes the buried solvent-accessible surface area and intermolecular contacts. At the submicromolar protein concentrations used in the fluorescence experiments, we saw no evidence for the formation of higher-order oligomers of SecA based on either the alternative dimer or the 3(1) helical fiber observed in the crystal lattice. Our studies are consistent with previous ones demonstrating the existence of a dimerization determinant within the C-domain of SecA as well as those documenting the interaction of N- and C-domains of SecA. Our results also provide a valuable starting point for a determination of whether the subunit status of SecA changes during the protein translocation as well as studies designed to elucidate the conformational dynamics of this multidomain protein during its translocation cycle.  相似文献   

16.
The roles of ATP binding and hydrolysis by MutS in mismatch repair are poorly understood. MutS E694A, in which Glu-694 of the Walker B motif is substituted with alanine, is defective in hydrolysis of bound ATP and has been reported to support MutL-dependent activation of the MutH d(GATC) endonuclease in a trans DNA activation assay (Junop, M. S., Obmolova, G., Rausch, K., Hsieh, P., and Yang, W. (2001) Mol. Cell 7, 1-12). Because the MutH trans activation assay used in these previous studies was characterized by high background and low efficiency, we have re-evaluated the activities of MutS E694A. In contrast to native MutS, which can be isolated in a nucleotide-free form, purified MutS E694A contains 1.0 mol of bound ATP per dimer equivalent, and substoichiometric levels of bound ADP (0.08-0.58 mol/dimer), consistent with the suggestion that the ADP.MutS.ATP complex comprises a significant fraction of the protein in solution (Bjornson, K. P. and Modrich, P. (2003) J. Biol. Chem. 278, 18557-18562). In the presence of Mg2+, endogenous ATP is hydrolyzed with a rate constant of 0.12 min-1 at 30 degrees C, and hydrolysis yields a protein that displays increased specificity for heteroduplex DNA. As observed with wild type MutS, ATP can promote release of MutS E694A from a mismatch. However, the mutant protein is defective in the methyl-directed, mismatch- and MutL-dependent cis activation of MutH endonuclease on a 6.4-kilobase pair heteroduplex, displaying only 1 to 2% of the activity of wild type MutS. The mutant protein also fails to support normal assembly of the MutS.MutL.DNA ternary complex. Although a putative ternary complex can be observed in the presence of MutS E694A, assembly of this structure displays little if any dependence on a mismatched base pair.  相似文献   

17.
SecA, the dimeric ATPase subunit of bacterial protein translocase, catalyses translocation during ATP-driven membrane cycling at SecYEG. We now show that the SecA protomer comprises two structural modules: the ATPase N-domain, containing the nucleotide binding sites NBD1 and NBD2, and the regulatory C-domain. The C-domain binds to the N-domain in each protomer and to the C-domain of another protomer to form SecA dimers. NBD1 is sufficient for single rounds of SecA ATP hydrolysis. Multiple ATP turnovers at NBD1 require both the NBD2 site acting in cis and a conserved C-domain sequence operating in trans. This intramolecular regulator of ATP hydrolysis (IRA) mediates N-/C-domain binding and acts as a molecular switch: it suppresses ATP hydrolysis in cytoplasmic SecA while it releases hydrolysis in SecY-bound SecA during translocation. We propose that the IRA switch couples ATP binding and hydrolysis to SecA membrane insertion/deinsertion and substrate translocation by controlling nucleotide-regulated relative motions between the N-domain and the C-domain. The IRA switch is a novel essential component of the protein translocation catalytic pathway.  相似文献   

18.
Ding H  Mukerji I  Oliver D 《Biochemistry》2003,42(46):13468-13475
The SecA ATPase motor is a central component of the eubacterial protein translocation machinery. It is comprised of N- and C-domain substructures, where the N-domain is comprised of two nucleotide-binding domains that flank a preprotein-binding domain (PPXD), while the C-domain binds phospholipids as well as SecB chaperone. Our recent crystal structure of Bacillus subtilis SecA protomer [Hunt, J. F., Weinkauf, S., Henry, L., Fak, J. J., McNicholas, P., Oliver, D. B., and Deisenhofer, J. (2002) Science 297, 2018-2026] along with experimental support for the correct dimer structure [Ding, H., Hunt, J. F., Mukerji, I., and Oliver, D. (2003) Biochemistry 42, 8729-8738] have now allowed us to study SecA structural dynamics during interaction with various translocation ligands and to relate these findings to current models of SecA-dependent protein translocation. In this paper, we utilized fluorescence resonance energy transfer methodology with genetically engineered SecA proteins containing unique pairs of tryptophan and fluorophore-labeled cysteine residues within the PPXD and C-domains of SecA to investigate the interaction of these two domains and their response to temperature, model membranes, and nucleotide. Consistent with the crystal structure of SecA, we found that the PPXD and C-domains are proximal to one another in the ground state. Increasing temperature or binding to model membranes promoted a loosening of PPXD and C-domain association, while ADP binding promoted a tighter association. A similar pattern of PPXD and C-domain association was obtained also for Escherichia coli SecA protein. Furthermore, a hyperactive Azi-PrlD SecA protein of E. coli had increased PPXD and C-domain separation, consistent with its activation in the ground state. Interestingly, PPXD and C-domain separation occurred prior to the onset of major temperature-induced conformational changes in both the PPXD and C-domains of SecA. Our results support a model in which PPXD and C-domain proximity is important for regulating the initial stages of SecA activation, and they serve also as a template for future structural studies aimed at elucidation of the chemomechanical cycle of SecA-dependent protein translocation.  相似文献   

19.
Vick JE  Gerlt JA 《Biochemistry》2007,46(50):14589-14597
The molecular details of the processes involved in divergent evolution of "new" enzymatic functions are ill-defined. Likely starting points are either a progenitor promiscuous for the new reaction or a progenitor capable of catalyzing the new reaction following a single substitution that results from a single base change. However, the molecular (sequence) pathway by which the selective advantage provided by this protein can be improved and ultimately optimized is unclear. In the mechanistically diverse enolase superfamily, we discovered that a monofunctional progenitor could acquire the ability to catalyze a "new" reaction by a single base change: the D297G mutant of the monofunctional l-Ala-d/l-Glu epimerase (AEE) from Escherichia coli catalyzed a low level of the o-succinylbenzoate synthase (OSBS) reaction as well as a reduced level of the AEE reaction [Schmidt, D. M. Z., Mundorff, E. C., Dojka, M., Bermudez, E., Ness, J. E., Govindarajan, S., Babbitt, P. C., Minshull, J., and Gerlt, J. A. (2003) Biochemistry 42, 8387-8393]. We then discovered that the selective advantage and OSBS activity of the D297G mutant are both enhanced by the I19F substitution [Vick, J. E., Schmidt, D. M. Z., and Gerlt, J. A. (2005) Biochemistry 44, 11722-11729]. Both the D297G and I19F substitutions are positioned to alter the substrate specificity so that the substrate for the OSBS reaction is more productively positioned vis a vis the active site catalytic groups. We now report that both the selective advantage and OSBS activity of the D297G/I19F double mutant are enhanced by the R24C (one base change from the wild type Arg codon), R24W (two base changes from the wild type Arg codon and one base change from the R24C codon), and L277W (one base change from the wild type Leu codon) substitutions. The effects of the R24C and L277W mutants are "additive" in the D297G/I19F/R24C/L277W mutant. The greatest selective advantage and OSBS activity are associated with the D297G/I19F/R24W mutant. These "new" substitutions that enhance both the selective advantage and kinetic constants are positioned in the active site where they can alter the specificity, highlighting that the evolution of the "new" OSBS function can be accomplished by changes in substrate specificity.  相似文献   

20.
Protein I is a neuron-specific, synaptic phosphoprotein highly localized on the surface of synaptic vesicles. We have recently isolated anti-Protein I IgG by affinity chromatography and shown that these antibodies inhibit specifically the phosphorylation of Protein I (Naito, S., and Ueda, T. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 10657-10663). In an effort to characterize Protein I-associated synaptic vesicles with respect to the types of neurotransmitters, we have now developed a procedure, using the affinity-purified anti-Protein I IgG, which allows immunoprecipitation of those synaptic vesicles which contain Protein I. The isolated vesicles are largely free of contamination from other intracellular organelles and plasma membranes. We present evidence that these vesicles isolated from bovine cortex are able to accumulate L-glutamate specifically in an ATP-dependent, temperature-dependent but Na-independent manner. Thus, the structurally similar aminoacid neurotransmitters aspartate and gamma-aminobutyric acid, as well as other neurotransmitters such as dopamine, norepinephrine, serotonin, acetylcholine, and glycine, failed to show a significant ATP-dependent uptake into these vesicles. Moreover, the ATP-dependent glutamate uptake was not inhibited effectively by glutamine, aspartate, or gamma-aminobutyric acid. The ATP-dependent glutamate uptake requires ATP hydrolysis; thus there was little accumulation of glutamate in the absence of ATP or Mg2+, or when ATP was replaced by an unhydrolyzable beta, gamma-methylene ATP analog. The glutamate uptake appears to be driven at least in part by a membrane potential generated by Mg2+-ATPase, similar to that of the catecholamine and serotonin uptakes into storage granules. These observations suggest that Protein I may be involved in some aspect of the function of glutamate-containing synaptic vesicles in the brain.  相似文献   

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