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1.
The chloroplast enzyme phosphoribulokinase is reversibly deactivated by oxidation of Cys16 and Cys55 to a disulfide. Although not required for catalysis, Cys16 is an active-site residue positioned at the nucleotide-binding domain (Porter and Hartman, 1988). The hyperreactivity of Cys16 has heretofore limited further active-site characterization by chemical modification. To overcome this limitation, the partially active enzyme,S-methylated at Cys16, has been probed with a potential affinity reagent. Treatment of methylated enzyme with bromoacetylethanolamine phosphate results in essentially complete loss of catalytic activity. Inactivation follows pseudo-first-order kinetics and exhibits a rate saturation with an apparentK d of 3–4 mM. ATP, but not ribulose 5-phosphate, affords substantial protection. Complete inactivation correlates with incorporation of 1 mol of [14C]reagent per mole of enzyme subunit. Amino acid analysis of the [14C]-labeled enzyme demonstrates that only cysteine is modified, and mapping of tryptic digests shows that Cys55 is a major site of alkylation. These results indicate that Cys55 is also located in the ATP-binding domain of the active-site.  相似文献   

2.
The chloroplast enzyme phosphoribulokinase is reversibly deactivated by oxidation of Cys16 and Cys55 to a disulfide. Although not required for catalysis, Cys16 is an active-site residue positioned at the nucleotide-binding domain (Porter and Hartman, 1988). The hyperreactivity of Cys16 has heretofore limited further active-site characterization by chemical modification. To overcome this limitation, the partially active enzyme,S-methylated at Cys16, has been probed with a potential affinity reagent. Treatment of methylated enzyme with bromoacetylethanolamine phosphate results in essentially complete loss of catalytic activity. Inactivation follows pseudo-first-order kinetics and exhibits a rate saturation with an apparentK d of 3–4 mM. ATP, but not ribulose 5-phosphate, affords substantial protection. Complete inactivation correlates with incorporation of 1 mol of [14C]reagent per mole of enzyme subunit. Amino acid analysis of the [14C]-labeled enzyme demonstrates that only cysteine is modified, and mapping of tryptic digests shows that Cys55 is a major site of alkylation. These results indicate that Cys55 is also located in the ATP-binding domain of the active-site.  相似文献   

3.
Phosphoribulokinase (PRK) is one of several chloroplastic enzymes whose activity is regulated by thiol-disulfide exchange via thioredoxin. Activation entails reduction of an active-site disulfide bond between Cys16 and Cys55. Bifunctional cross-linking reagents have been used to approximate the interresidue distance between Cys16 and Cys55, an issue which impinges on the relative conformational states of the activated and deactivated forms of the enzyme. Spinach PRK is rapidly inactivated by stoichiometric levels of 4,4'-difluoro-3,3'-dinitrodiphenyl sulfone (FNPS) or 1,5-difluoro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (DFNB), which span 9 and 3.5 A, respectively. ATP, but not ribulose 5-phosphate, retards the rate of inactivation, suggesting that modification has occurred at the nucleotide binding domain of the active site. Sulfhydryl modification is indicated by partial reversibility of inactivation as effected by exogenous thiols. Tryptic mapping by reverse-phase chromatography of [14C]carboxymethylated enzyme, subsequent to its reaction with either FNPS or DFNB, demonstrates modification of Cys16 and Cys55 by both reagents, and formation of only one major chromophoric peptide in each case. On the basis of the sequence analysis of the purified chromophoric peptides, Cys16 and Cys55 are cross-linked by both FNPS and DFNB. Thus, the intrasubunit distance between the beta-sulfhydryls of Cys16 and Cys55 is dynamic rather than static. Diminished conformational flexibility upon oxidation of the regulatory sulfhydryls to a disulfide may be partially responsible for the concomitant loss of enzymatic activity.  相似文献   

4.
The Calvin Cycle enzyme phosphoribulokinase is activated in higher plants by the reversible reduction of a disulfide bond, which is located at the active site. To determine the possible contribution of the two regulatory residues (Cys16 and Cys55) to catalysis, site-directed mutagenesis has been used to replace each of them in the spinach enzyme with serine or alanine. The only other cysteinyl residues of the kinase, Cys244 and Cys250, were also replaced individually by serine or alanine. A comparison of specific activities of native and mutant enzymes reveals that substitutions at positions 244 or 250 are inconsequential. The position 16 mutants retain 45-90% of the wild-type activity and display normal Km values for both ATP and ribulose 5-phosphate. In contrast, substitution at position 55 results in 85-95% loss of wild-type activity, with less than a 2-fold increase in the Km for ATP and a 4-8-fold increase in the Km for ribulose 5-phosphate. These results are consistent with moderate facilitation of catalysis by Cys55 and demonstrate that the other three cysteinyl residues do not contribute significantly either to structure or catalysis. The enhanced stability, relative to wild-type enzyme, of the Ser16 mutant protein to a sulfhydryl reagent supports earlier suggestions that Cys16 is the initial target of the oxidative deactivation process.  相似文献   

5.
The Stichopus japonicus arginine kinase (AK) is a significant dimeric enzyme. Its modification and inactivation course with 5,5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB) and the reactivation course of DTNB-modified AK by dithiothreitol were investigated on the basis of the kinetic theory of the substrate reaction during the modification of enzyme activity. The results show that the modification is a biphasic course while the inactivation is monophasic, with one essential reactive cysteine per subunit. The Cys274 (numbering from the Stichopus sequence) is exposed to DTNB and is near the ATP binding site. The modified AK can be reactivated by an excess concentration of dithiothreitol in a monophasic kinetic course. The presence of ATP or the transition-state analog markedly slows the apparent reactivation rate constant. The analog components, arginine-ADP-Mg2+ can induce conformational changes of the modified enzyme, but adding NO3- cannot induce further changes that occur with the native enzyme. The reactive cysteines' location and its role in the catalysis of AK are discussed. The results suggest that the cysteine may be located in the hinge area of the two domains of AK. The reactive cysteine of AK, which was proposed to be Cys274, may play an important role not in the binding of the transition-state analog but in the conformational changes caused by the transition-state analog.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
8.
A new reactive fluorescent ADP analog has been synthesized: 2-[(4-bromo-2,3-dioxobutyl)thio]-1,N6-ethenoadenosine 5'-diphosphate (2-BDB-T epsilon A-5'-DP). Rabbit muscle pyruvate kinase is inactivated by 200 microM 2-BDB-T epsilon A-5'-DP in a biphasic manner, with an initial loss of 75% activity followed by a slow total inactivation. The rate constants for both phases exhibit nonlinear dependence on reagent concentration, consistent with reversible formation of an enzyme-reagent complex (KI = 133 microM) prior to irreversible reaction. Loss of activity is prevented by substrates. The best protection against inactivation is provided by phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP), KCl, and MnSO4, suggesting that the reaction occurs in the region of the PEP binding site. Incorporation of 1.7 mol/mol enzyme subunit accompanies 90% inactivation by 200 microM 2-BDB-T epsilon A-5'-DP in 80 min. However, in the presence of PEP, KCl, and MnSO4, 1.0 mol of reagent is incorporated when the enzyme is only 14% inactivated. These results indicate that 2-BDB-T epsilon A-5'-DP reacts with two groups on the enzyme, one of which is at or near the PEP binding site. Incubation of pyruvate kinase with related nucleotide analogs lacking a 5'-diphosphate or a diketo group suggests that the diketo group, but not the diphosphate, is essential for inactivation. The enolized form of the bromodioxobutyl group resembles phosphoenolpyruvate and probably directs the reagent to the PEP binding site. Modified enzyme, prepared by incubating pyruvate kinase with 200 microM 2-BDB-T epsilon A-5'-DP in the absence and presence of phosphoenolpyruvate, KCl, and MnSO4, was reduced with [3H]NaBH4, carboxymethylated, and digested with trypsin. Nucleotidyl peptides were isolated by chromatography on phenylboronateagarose followed by reverse phase high pressure liquid chromatography. Two radioactive peptides were identified: Asn162-Ile-Cys-Lys165 and Ile141-Thr-Leu-Asp-Asn-Ala-Tyr-Met-Glu-Lys150. Only the tetrapeptide was modified in the presence of PEP, KCl, and Mn+ when the enzyme retained most of its activity. Cys164 is thus designated the nonessential modified residue, while modification of Tyr147 near the active site of pyruvate kinase is responsible for loss of enzymatic activity. The observed biphasic kinetics of inactivation are due to the negatively cooperative reaction of 2-BDB-T epsilon A-5'-DP with Tyr147 in the tetramer. The new compound, 2-BDB-T epsilon A-5'-DP, may have general application as an affinity label of ADP and PEP sites in other proteins.  相似文献   

9.
Rat liver glutathione S-transferase, isozyme 1-1, catalyzes the glutathione-dependent isomerization of Delta(5)-androstene-3,17-dione and also binds steroid sulfates at a nonsubstrate inhibitory steroid site. 17beta-Iodoacetoxy-estradiol-3-sulfate, a reactive steroid analogue, produces a time-dependent inactivation of this glutathione S-transferase to a limit of 60% residual activity. The rate constant for inactivation (k(obs)) exhibits a nonlinear dependence on reagent concentration with K(I) = 71 microm and k(max) = 0.0133 min(-1). Complete protection against inactivation is provided by 17beta-estradiol-3,17-disulfate, whereas Delta5-androstene-3,17-dione and S-methylglutathione have little effect on k(obs). These results indicate that 17beta-iodoacetoxy-estradiol-3-sulfate reacts as an affinity label of the nonsubstrate steroid site rather than of the substrate sites occupied by Delta5-androstene-3,17-dione or glutathione. Loss of activity occurs concomitant with incorporation of about 1 mol 14C-labeled reagent/mol enzyme dimer when the enzyme is maximally inactivated. Isolation of the labeled peptide from the chymotryptic digest shows that Cys(17) is the only enzymic amino acid modified. Covalent modification of Cys(17) by 17beta-iodoacetoxy-estradiol-3-sulfate on subunit A prevents reaction of the steroid analogue with subunit B. These results and examination of the crystal structure of the enzyme suggest that the interaction between the two subunits of glutathione S-transferase 1-1, and the electrostatic attraction between the 3-sulfate of the reagent and Arg(14) of subunit B, are important in binding steroid sulfates at the nonsubstrate steroid binding site and in determining the specificity of this affinity label.  相似文献   

10.
The bifunctional reagent 1,4-dibromobutanedione (DBBD) reacts covalently with pyruvate kinase from rabbit muscle to cause inactivation of the enzyme at a rate that is linearly dependent on the reagent concentration, giving a second order rate constant of 444 min-1 M-1. The individual substrates phosphoenolpyruvate (with KCl), ADP, or ATP in the presence of divalent metal cation provide marked protection against inactivation suggesting that reaction occurs in the region of the active site. The limited incorporation of DBBD into pyruvate kinase was measured by reduction of the carbonyl groups of the enzyme-bound reagent using [3H]NaBH4. When pyruvate kinase was reacted with 120 microM DBBD at pH 7.0 for 50 min in the absence of protectants, 1.8 mol of tritium/mol of subunit was incorporated, whereas in the presence of phosphoenolpyruvate with KCl, only 1.0 mol of tritium was incorporated per mole of subunit. Modified peptides were isolated from tryptic digests of pyruvate kinase. Reaction of enzyme in the presence of substrate (showing no activity loss) yielded a single peptide, Asn-Ile-X1-Lys, where X1 corresponds to Cys164 of the known amino acid sequence of muscle pyruvate kinase. In the absence of protectants, reaction for 10 min (when the enzyme retained substantial activity) yielded Asn-Ile-X1-Lys as the major labeled peptide, whereas reaction for 50 min (when the enzyme was 88% inactivated) yielded predominantly Asn-Ile-X1-Lys cross-linked to X2-Asp-Glu-Asn-Ile-Leu-Trp-Leu-Asp-Tyr-Lys, where X2 corresponds to Cys151. Because activity loss correlates with the appearance of the cross-linked peptides but not with formation of Asn-Ile-X1-Lys, inactivation is likely caused by the reaction leading to the cross-link between Cys151 and Cys164. The distance between the alpha-carbons of these residues in the crystal structure is 15.5 A, whereas only 12.0 A can be spanned by the two side chains linked by a dioxobutyl group, suggesting either that pyruvate kinase undergoes a conformational change in forming the cross-link or that local rapid fluctuations in structure occur in solution to the extent of 3.5 A in this region of pyruvate kinase.  相似文献   

11.
Nonactivated phosphorylase kinase from rabbit skeletal muscle is inactivated by treatment with phenylglyoxal. Under mild reaction conditions, a derivative that retains 10-15% of the pH 8.2 catalytic activity is obtained. The kinetics of inactivation profile, differential effects of modification on pH 6.8 and 8.2 catalytic activities, and the insensitiveness of the modified enzyme to activation by ADP reveal that the 10-15% of catalytic activity remaining is very likely due to intrinsic catalytic activity of the derivative rather than to the presence of unmodified enzyme molecules. The kinetic results also suggest that the inactivation is correlatable with the reaction of one molecule of the reagent with the enzyme without any prior binding of phenylglyoxal. The phenylglyoxal modification reduces the autophosphorylation rate of the kinase. Autophosphorylated phosphorylase kinase is inactivated by phenylglyoxal at a much slower rate than the inactivation of nonactivated kinase. Thus, phenylglyoxal modification influences the phosphorylation and vice versa. The modified enzyme can be reactivated by treatment with trypsin or by dissociation using chatropic salts. The activity of the phenylglyoxal-modified enzyme after trypsin digestion or dissociation with LiBr reaches the same level as that of the native enzyme digested with trypsin or treated with LiBr under identical conditions. The results suggest that the effect of modification is overcome by dissociation of the subunits of phosphorylase kinase and that the catalytic site is not modified under conditions when 85% of the pH 8.2 catalytic activity is lost. Among various nucleotides and metal ions tested, only ADP, with or without Mg2+, afforded effective protection against inactivation with phenylglyoxal. At pH 6.8, 1 mM ADP afforded complete protection against inactivation. Experiments with 14C-labeled phenylglyoxal revealed that ADP seemingly protects one residue from modification. This result is in agreement with the kinetic result that the inactivation seemingly is due to reaction of one molecule of the reagent with the enzyme. The results confirm the existence of a high-affinity ADP binding site on nonactivated phosphorylase kinase and suggest the involvement of a functional arginyl residue at or near the ADP binding site in the regulation of of pH 8.2 catalytic activity of the enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
Reaction of 5-enolpyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate synthase of Escherichia coli with the thiol reagent 5,5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB) leads to a modification of only 2 of the 6 cysteines of the enzyme, with a significant loss of its enzymatic activity. Under denaturing conditions, however, all 6 cysteines of 5-enolpyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate synthase react with DTNB, indicating the absence of disulfide bridges in the native protein. In the presence of shikimate 3-phosphate and glyphosate, only 1 of the 2 cysteines reacts with the reagent, with no loss of activity, suggesting that only 1 of these cysteines is at or near the active site of the enzyme. Cyanolysis of the DTNB-inactivated enzyme with KCN leads to elimination of 5-thio-2-nitrobenzoate, with formation of the thiocyano-enzyme. The thiocyano-enzyme is fully active; it exhibits a small increase in its I50 for glyphosate (6-fold) and apparent Km for phosphoenolpyruvate (4-fold) compared to the unmodified enzyme. Its apparent Km for shikimate 3-phosphate is, however, unaltered. These results clearly establish the nonessentiality of the active site-reactive cysteine of E. coli 5-enolpyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate synthase for either catalysis or substrate binding. Perturbations in the kinetic constants for phosphoenolpyruvate and glyphosate suggest that the cysteine thiol is proximal to the binding site for these ligands. By N-[14C]ethylmaleimide labeling, tryptic mapping, and N-terminal sequencing, the 2 reactive cysteines have been identified as Cys408 and Cys288. The cysteine residue protected by glyphosate and shikimate 3-phosphate from its reaction with DTNB was found to be Cys408.  相似文献   

13.
Oxidation of the cysteines from ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RubisCO) leads to inactivation and promotes structural changes that increase the proteolytic sensitivity and membrane association propensity related to its catabolism. To uncover the individual role of the different cysteines, the sequential order of modification under increasing oxidative conditions was determined using chemical labeling and mass spectrometry. Besides, site-directed RubisCO mutants were obtained in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii replacing single conserved cysteines (Cys84, Cys172, Cys192, Cys247, Cys284, Cys427, Cys459 from the large and sCys41, sCys83 from the small subunit) and the redox properties of the mutant enzymes were determined. All mutants retained significant carboxylase activity and grew photoautotrophically, indicating that these conserved cysteines are not essential for catalysis. Cys84 played a noticeable structural role, its replacement producing a structurally altered enzyme. While Cys247, Cys284, and sCys83 were not affected by the redox environment, all other residues were oxidized using a disulfide/thiol ratio of around two, except for Cys172 whose oxidation was distinctly delayed. Remarkably, Cys192 and Cys427 were apparently protective, their absence leading to a premature oxidation of critical residues (Cys172 and Cys459). These cysteines integrate a regulatory network that modulates RubisCO activity and conformation in response to oxidative conditions.  相似文献   

14.
The enzymatic activity of the vitamin K-dependent proteins requires the post-translational conversion of specific glutamic acids to gamma-carboxy-glutamic acid by the integral membrane enzyme, gamma-glutamyl carboxylase. Whether or not cysteine residues are important for carboxylase activity has been the subject of a number of studies. In the present study we used carboxylase with point mutations at cysteines, chemical modification, and mass spectrometry to examine this question. Mutation of any of the free cysteine residues to alanine or serine had little effect on carboxylase activity, although C343A mutant carboxylase had only 38% activity compared with that of wild type. In contrast, treatment with either thiol-reactive reagent 4-acetamido-4'-maleimidylstilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid, disodium salt, or sodium tetrathionate, caused complete loss of activity. We identified the residues modified, using matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time of flight mass spectrometry, as Cys(323) and Cys(343). According to our results, these residues are on the cytoplasmic side of the microsomal membrane, whereas catalytic residues are expected to be on the lumenal side of the membrane. Carboxylase was partially protected from chemical modification by factor IXs propeptide. Although all mutant carboxylases bound propeptide with normal affinity, chemical modification caused a >100-fold decrease in carboxylase affinity for the consensus propeptide. We conclude that cysteine residues are not directly involved in carboxylase catalysis, but chemical modification of Cys(323) and Cys(343) may disrupt the three-dimensional structure, resulting in inactivation.  相似文献   

15.
5-enol-Pyruvoylshikimate-3-phosphate synthase catalyzes the reversible condensation of phosphoenolpyruvate and shikimate 3-phosphate to yield 5-enol-pyruvoylshikimate 3-phosphate and inorganic phosphate. The enzyme is a target for the nonselective herbicide glyphosate (N-phosphonomethylglycine). Diethyl pyrocarbonate inactivated this enzyme with a second-order rate constant of 220 M-1 min-1 at pH 7.0 and 0 degrees C. The rate of inactivation is pH dependent and the pH inactivation rate data show the involvement of a group with a pKa of 6.8. Almost all of the original activity was recovered by treatment of the inactivated enzyme with hydroxylamine. The difference spectrum of the inactivated and native enzyme reveals a single peak at 242 nm but no trough at around 278 nm is observed. Complete inactivation required the modification of four histidine residues per molecule of the enzyme. However, statistical analysis of the residual activity and the extent of modification shows that among the four modifiable residues, only one is critical for activity. Furthermore, this inactivation is prevented by the substrates of the enzyme. The above results indicated that one histidine is located within or very close to the active site and may play an important role in catalysis.  相似文献   

16.
Previous studies from this laboratory (Brooker, R. J., and Slayman, C. W. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 222-226; Davenport, J. W., and Slayman, C. W. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 16007-16013) have used the sulfhydryl reagent N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) to define two sites on the Neurospora plasma membrane H+-ATPase: a "fast" site which reacts in several minutes with no loss of enzymatic activity and a "slow" site which reacts in tens of minutes to produce complete inactivation of the enzyme. The slow site is protected when MgATP or MgADP is bound to the catalytic site of the ATPase. The present study demonstrates that the fluorescent reagent 5-[2-iodoacetamido)ethyl)-1-aminonaphthalenesulfonic acid (IAEDANS) can be used to label five of the eight cysteine residues of the Neurospora ATPase (Cys376, Cys409, Cys472, Cys532, Cys545). Tryptic peptides bearing those residues have been purified by high performance liquid chromatography and located within the known primary structure of the ATPase by amino acid analysis and/or sequencing. By pretreating the enzyme with NEM in the presence or absence of MgADP before incubation with IAEDANS, it has been possible to identify the fast NEM site as Cys545 and the slow MgADP-protectable NEM site as Cys532. Both residues lie within the central hydrophilic domain of the protein, close to a highly conserved stretch of amino acids that may be involved in nucleotide binding. However, all five IAEDANS-reactive cysteines can be nearly completely modified by the less bulky sulfhydryl reagent methyl methanethiosulfonate with less than 20% inhibition of enzyme activity; thus, none of the five cysteines can be considered to play a direct role in the reaction cycle of the ATPase.  相似文献   

17.
By following peroxiredoxin I (Prx I)-dependent NADPH oxidation spectrophotometrically, we observed that Prx I activity decreased gradually with time. The decay in activity was coincident with the conversion of Prx I to a more acidic species as assessed by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. Mass spectral analysis and studies with Cys mutants determined that this shift in pI was due to selective oxidation of the catalytic site Cys(51)-SH to Cys(51)-SO(2)H. Thus, Cys(51)-SOH generated as an intermediate during catalysis appeared to undergo occasional further oxidation to Cys(51)-SO(2)H, which cannot be reversed by thioredoxin. The presence of H(2)O(2) alone was not sufficient to cause oxidation of Cys(51) to Cys(51)-SO(2)H. Rather, the presence of complete catalytic components (H(2)O(2), thioredoxin, thioredoxin reductase, and NADPH) was necessary, indicating that such hyperoxidation occurs only when Prx I is engaged in the catalytic cycle. Likewise, hyperoxidation of Cys(172)/Ser(172) mutant Prx I required not only H(2)O(2), but also a catalysis-supporting thiol (dithiothreitol). Kinetic analysis of Prx I inactivation in the presence of a low steady-state level (<1 microm) of H(2)O(2) indicated that Prx I was hyperoxidized at a rate of 0.072% per turnover at 30 degrees C. Hyperoxidation of Prx I was also detected in HeLa cells treated with H(2)O(2).  相似文献   

18.
Yeast alcohol dehydrogenase (YADH) plays an important role in the conversion of alcohols to aldehydes or ketones. YADH-1 is a zinc-containing protein, and it accounts for the major part of ADH activity in growing baker's yeast. To gain insight into how oxidative modification of the enzyme affects its function, we exposed YADH-1 to hydrogen peroxide in vitro and assessed the oxidized protein by LC-MS/MS analysis of proteolytic cleavage products of the protein and by measurements of enzymatic activity, zinc release, and thiol/thiolate loss. The results illustrated that Cys43 and Cys153, which reside at the active site of the protein, could be selectively oxidized to cysteine sulfinic acid (Cys-SO2H) and cysteine sulfonic acid (Cys-SO3H). In addition, H2O2 induced the formation of three disulfide bonds: Cys43-Cys153 in the catalytic domain, Cys103-Cys111 in the noncatalytic zinc center, and Cys276-Cys277. Therefore, our results support the notion that the oxidation of cysteine residues in the zinc-binding domain of proteins can go beyond the formation of disulfide bond(s); the formation of Cys-SO2H and Cys-SO3H is also possible. Furthermore, most methionines could be oxidized to methionine sulfoxides. Quantitative measurement results revealed that, among all the cysteine residues, Cys43 was the most susceptible to H2O2 oxidation, and the major oxidation products of this cysteine were Cys-SO2H and Cys-SO3H. The oxidation of Cys43 might be responsible for the inactivation of the enzyme upon H2O2 treatment.  相似文献   

19.
20.
The activity of the Calvin cycle enzyme phosphoribulokinase is coupled to photosynthetic electron transport by reversible oxidation/reduction mediated by thioredoxin-f. Previous studies have shown that one of the regulatory sulfhydryl groups, that of Cys-16, is positioned at the nucleotide-binding domain of the active site. To determine if oxidative deactivation of the kinase reflects catalytic essentiality of Cys-16, the methylation of spinach phosphoribulokinase by methyl-4-nitrobenzenesulfonate has been examined. Methylation of the kinase results in a 50% loss of the initial activity relative to controls. The suppression of kcat is accompanied by a 6-fold increase in the Km for ATP, without change in the Km for ribulose 5-phosphate. The insensitivity of the modified enzyme, in contrast to the native, to iodoacetate and 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoate) indicates that Cys-16 is a site of methylation. This supposition is verified independently by peptide mapping and Edman degradation subsequent to S-carboxymethylation with [14C]iodoacetate of the methylated kinase. Retention of significant enzymatic activity after complete modification of Cys-16 with the small, uncharged methyl moiety demonstrates that this active-site residue is not essential for catalysis.  相似文献   

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