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1.
Human plasma lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) transacylates the sn-2 fatty acid of lecithin to cholesterol forming cholesteryl ester and lysolecithin. Measurement of the phospholipase A2 and transacylase activities of the enzyme using proteoliposome substrates and following selective chemical modification of serine, histidine, and cysteine residues of pure homogeneous LCAT indicated the following catalytic mechanism: HS-Cys-E-Ser-OH + lecithin in equilibrium HS-Cys-E-Ser-O-FA + lysolecithin, HS-Cys-E-Ser-O-FA in equilibrium FA-S-Cys-E-Ser-OH, FA-S-Cys-E-Ser-OH + cholesterol-OH in equilibrium HS-Cys-E-Ser-OH + cholesterol-O-FA, where FA denotes fatty acid. Modification of 2 LCAT cysteine residues with 5,5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) or treatment with ferricyanide inactivated the transacylase but not the phospholipase A2 activity. Modification of 1 serine residue with phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride or 1 histidine residue with diethyl pyrocarbonate inhibited cholesteryl ester formation and phospholipase A2 activity. Proteoliposome substrates protected both activities against chemical inactivation. Lecithin alone protected the phospholipase A2 activity against phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride inactivation but not the transacylase against 5,5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) inactivation. Incubation of native LCAT with arachidonyl-CoA or the lecithin-apo-A-I proteoliposome resulted in acylation of three enzyme sites, only one of which was stable to neutral hydroxylamine after denaturation. Fatty acylenzyme oxy- and thioesters were demonstrable in both cases. No transfer of arachidonic acid from iodoacetamide-modified LCAT to cholesterol occurred, indicating that the fatty-acylated serine residue cannot directly esterify cholesterol. Cholesterol arachidonate was formed upon incubation of phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride-modified LCAT with arachidonyl-CoA.  相似文献   

2.
Lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) is a plasma enzyme which catalyzes the transacylation of the fatty acid at the sn-2 position of lecithin to cholesterol forming lysolecithin and cholesteryl ester. The substrates for and products of this reaction are present within the plasma lipoproteins upon which the enzyme acts to form the majority of cholesteryl ester in human plasma. We proposed a covalent catalytic mechanism of action for LCAT (Jauhiainen, M., and Dolphin, P. J. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 7032-7034) in which serine and histidine residues mediate lecithin cleavage and two cysteine residues cholesterol esterification. With the aid of sulfhydryl reactive trivalent organoarsenical compounds which are specific for vicinal thiols we have probed the geometry of the catalytic site. p-Aminophenylarsendichloride noncompetitively inactivates cholesterol esterification (Ki = 0.23 mM) by LCAT via alkylation of both catalytic cysteine residues. This reagent does not significantly inactivate lecithin cleavage by LCAT. Full enzyme activity is restored by treatment with 2,3-dimercapto-1-propanesulfonic acid. Treatment of LCAT with p-bromoacetylaminophenylarsenoxide blocks the subsequent incorporation of diisopropyl fluorophosphate and iodoacetamide and inactivates both cholesterol esterification and lecithin cleavage. These activities are not restored following 2,3-dimercapto-1-propanesulfonic acid treatment. However, the reduced cysteine thiols are regenerated and can catalyze cholesteryl arachidonate formation from arachidonyl-CoA. The control reagent, bromoacetylaniline, which lacks the sulfhydryl-reactive arsenical moiety, does not inactivate LCAT nor is this reagent incorporated into the LCAT protein. We conclude that the two catalytic cysteine residues of LCAT (Cys31 and Cys184) are vicinal with a calculated distance between their sulfur atoms of 3.50-3.62 A. The additional residue alkylated by the bifunctional reagent is within the catalytic site and may represent a previously identified catalytic serine or histidine residue.  相似文献   

3.
M K Jain  W J Tao  J Rogers  C Arenson  H Eibl  B Z Yu 《Biochemistry》1991,30(42):10256-10268
More than 100 amphiphilic phosphoesters, possible tetrahedral transition-state analogues capable of coordinating to the calcium ion at the active site of phospholipase A2, were designed, synthesized, and tested as inhibitors for the hydrolysis of 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphomethanol vesicles in the scooting mode. This assay system permits the study of structurally diverse inhibitors with phospholipase A2S from different sources, and it is not perturbed by factors that change the quality of the interface. As a prototype, 1-hexadecyl-3-trifluoroethylglycero-2-phosphomethanol (MJ33) was investigated in detail. Only the (S)-(+) analogue of MJ33 is inhibitory, and it is as effective as the sn-2 phosphonate or the sn-2 amide analogues of sn-3 phospholipids. The inhibitory potencies of the various phosphoesters depended strongly on the stereochemical and structural features, and the mole fractions of inhibitors required for 50% inhibition, X1(50), ranged from more than 1 to less than 0.001 mole fraction. The affinity of certain inhibitors for enzymes from different sources differed by more than 200-fold. The inhibitors protected the catalytic site residue His-48 from alkylation in the presence of calcium but not barium as expected if the formation of the EI complex is supported only by calcium. The equilibrium dissociation constant for the inhibitor bound to the enzyme at the interface was correlated with the XI(50) values, which were different if the inhibition was monitored in the pseudo-zero-order or the first-order region of the progress curve. These results show that the inhibitors described here interfered only with the catalytic turnover by phospholipase A2's bound to the interface, their binding to the enzyme occurred through calcium, and the inhibitors did not have any effect on the dissociation of the enzyme bound to the interface.  相似文献   

4.
Recently, a novel enzyme, 1-O-acylceramide synthase (ACS), was purified and characterized from bovine brain. This enzyme has both calcium-independent phospholipase A(2) and transacylase activities. The discovery of this enzyme led us to propose a new pathway for ceramide metabolism in which the sn-2-acyl group of either phosphatidylethanolamine or phosphatidylcholine is transferred to the 1-hydroxyl group of ceramide. In this study, the partial amino acid sequences from the purified enzyme revealed that the enzyme contains amino acid sequences identical to those of human lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase-like lysophospholipase (LLPL). The coding sequences of the mouse, bovine, and human genes were obtained from the respective kidney cDNAs by PCR. The open reading frames of LLPL were cloned into pcDNA3 to generate carboxyl-terminally tagged proteins. The expression of mouse LLPL in COS-7 cells demonstrated that transfected cells had higher transacylase and phospholipase A(2) activities than did non-transfected cells. Immunoprecipitation confirmed that LLPL had ACS activity. There were no significant lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase and lysophospholipase activities in the mouse LLPL-transfected cells under either acidic or neutral conditions. Amino acid sequences from cDNAs of mouse, human, and bovine LLPLs demonstrated a signal peptide cleavage site, one lipase motif (AXSXG), and several N-linked glycosylation sites in each LLPL molecule. The replacement of serine with alanine in the lipase motif of mouse LLPL resulted in elimination of enzyme activity, indicating that the serine residue is part of the catalytic site. Deglycosylation of mouse, human, and bovine LLPLs yielded core proteins with a molecular mass of 42 kDa without change in enzyme activities. LLPL was post-translationally modified by signal peptide cleavage and N-linked glycosylation, and each mature LLPL had the same size core protein. Subcellular fractionation demonstrated that ACS activity co-localized with N-acetylglucosaminidase. Therefore, LLPL encodes a novel lysosomal enzyme, ACS.  相似文献   

5.
We have recently proposed a catalytic mechanism for human plasma lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.43) (J. Biol. Chem. (1986) 261, 7032-7043), implicating single serine and histidine residues in phosphatidylcholine cleavage and two cysteine residues in cholesterol esterification. We now confirm the involvement of serine and histidine in catalysing the phospholipase A2 action of lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase by demonstrating the inhibition of this activity by phenylboronic acid (Ki = 1.23 mM) and m-aminophenylboronic acid (Ki = 2.32 mM), inhibitors of known serine/histidine hydrolases. The specificity of the interaction of aromatic boronic acids with catalytic serine and histidine residues and the putative formation of a tetrahedral adduct between boron and the lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase serine hydroxyl group which is similar to the transition-state intermediate formed between phosphatidylcholine and the catalytic serine residue was suggested by: substrate protection against inhibition by phenylboronic acids; a much reduced incorporation of phenylmethane[35S]sulphonyl fluoride into the enzyme in the presence of phenylboronic acid; the lack of interaction of histidine- or serine-modified enzyme with immobilized phenylboronic acid in the presence of glycerol (Ve/Vo = 2.7 and 2.3 respectively) when compared to the native enzyme (Ve/Vo = 5.25). Fatty acyl-lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase, produced by incubation of the enzyme with a lecithin-apolipoprotein A-I proteoliposome substrate, was not retarded upon the sorbent column (Ve/Vo = 1.5). Modification of the enzyme's two free cysteine residues with 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) or potassium ferricyanide reduced (Ve/Vo = 3.5) but did not abolish retardation on the sorbent column, indicating that these modifications resulted in steric hinderance of the interaction of the boron atom with the lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase serine hydroxyl group. These data suggest that the serine and histidine residues are proximal within the enzyme catalytic site and that both cysteine thiol groups are close to the serine hydroxyl group. The presence of significant amino-acid sequence homologies between lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase, triacylglycerol lipases and the transacylases of fatty acid synthase is also reported.  相似文献   

6.
The substrate specificity of a calcium-independent, 97-kDa phospholipase B purified from guinea pig intestine was further investigated using various natural and synthetic lipids. The enzyme was equally active toward enantiomeric phosphatidylcholines under conditions allowing a strict phospholipase A activity. The lysophospholipase activity declined with the following substrates: 1-acyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine greater than 1-palmitoyl-propanediol-3-phosphocholine greater than 1-palmitoyl-glycol-2-phosphocholine, suggesting some influence of the polar residue vicinal to the cleavage site. The enzyme also acted on various neutral lipids including triacylglycerol, diacylglycerol, and monoacylglycerol, whereas cholesteryl oleate remained refractory to enzymatic hydrolysis. The lipase hydrolyzed sequentially the sn-2 and sn-1 acyl ester bonds of diacylglycerol, although some direct cleavage of the external acyl ester bond could also occur, as shown with diacylglycerol analogues bearing a nonhydrolyzable alkyl ether or amide bond in the sn-1 or sn-2 position. The three main activities of the enzyme (phospholipase A2, lysophospholipase, and diacylglycerol lipase) were resistant to 4-bromophenacyl bromide, but they were inhibited by N-ethylmaleimide, 5,5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid), and diisopropyl fluorophosphate, suggesting the possible involvement of both cysteine and serine residues in a single active site. It is concluded that guinea pig intestinal phospholipase B, which was also detected in rat and rabbit, is actually a glycerol ester lipase with broad substrate specificity and some unique enzymatic properties.  相似文献   

7.
Recent investigations suggest that high-density lipoprotein (HDL) may play an anti-atherogenic role as an antioxidant and inhibit the oxidative modification of low-density lipoprotein (LDL). The antioxidant activity of HDL has been proposed to be associated with several HDL-bound proteins. We have purified one HDL-associated protein, lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT), to apparent homogeneity and have found that LCAT is not only capable of esterifying cholesterol in the plasma, but can also prevent the accumulation of oxidized lipids in LDL. Addition of pure human LCAT to LDL or palmitoyl-linoleoyl phosphatidylcholine/sodium cholate (PLPC) micelles inhibits the oxidation-dependent accumulation of both conjugated dienes and lipid hydroperoxides. LCAT also inhibits the increase of net negative charge that occurs during oxidation of LDL. LCAT has the ability to prevent spontaneous oxidation and Cu2+ and soybean lipoxygenase-catalyzed oxidation of lipids. The antioxidant activity of LCAT appears to be enzymatic, since the enzyme is active for up to 10 h in the presence of mild free-radical generators. The catalytic serine, residue 181, may mediate this activity and act as a reusable proton donor. Chemical modification of the active serine residue with diisopropylfluorophosphate completely inhibits the ability of LCAT to prevent lipid oxidation. Thus, in addition to its well-characterized phospholipase and acyltransferase activities, LCAT can also act as an antioxidant and prevent the accumulation of oxidized lipid in plasma lipoproteins.  相似文献   

8.
O L Francone  C J Fielding 《Biochemistry》1991,30(42):10074-10077
The functions of serine residues at positions 181 and 216 of human plasma lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase have been studied by site-directed mutagenesis. The serine residue at either site was replaced by alanine, glycine, or threonine in LCAT secreted from stably transfected CHO cells. All substitutions at position 181 gave rise to an enzyme product that was normally secreted but had no detectable catalytic activity. On the other hand, all substitutions at position 216 gave active products, whose activity was fully inhibitable by the serine esterase inhibitor diisopropyl fluorophosphate (DFP). A secondary (although not direct) role for serine-216 was indicated by a 14-fold increase in catalytic rate when this residue was substituted by alanine. Sequence comparison with other lipases suggests that serine-216 may be at or near the hinge of a helical flap displaced following substrate binding. These data strengthen the structural-functional relationship between LCAT and other lipases.  相似文献   

9.
Lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) catalyzes the intravascular synthesis of lipoprotein cholesteryl esters by converting cholesterol and lecithin to cholesteryl ester and lysolecithin. LCAT is unique in that it catalyzes sequential reactions within a single polypeptide sequence, a phospholipase A2 reaction followed by a transacylation reaction. In this report we find that LCAT mediates a partial reverse reaction, the transacylation of lipoprotein cholesteryl oleate, in whole plasma and in a purified, reconstituted system. As a result of the reverse transacylation reaction, a linear accumulation of [3H]cholesterol occurred during incubations of plasma containing high density lipoprotein labeled with [3H]cholesteryl oleate. When high density lipoprotein labeled with cholesteryl [14C]oleate was also included in the incubation the labeled fatty acyl moiety remained in the cholesteryl [14C]oleate pool showing that the formation of labeled cholesterol did not result from hydrolysis of the doubly labeled cholesteryl esters. The rate of release of [3H]cholesterol was only about 10% of the forward rate of esterification of cholesterol using partially purified human LCAT and was approximately 7% in whole monkey plasma. Therefore, net production of cholesterol via the reverse LCAT reaction would not occur. [3H]Cholesterol production from [3H]cholesteryl oleate was almost completely inhibited by a final concentration of 1.4 mM 5,5'-dithiobis(nitrobenzoic acid) during incubation with either purified LCAT or whole plasma. Addition of excess lysolecithin to the incubation system did not result in the formation of [14C]oleate-labeled lecithin, showing that the reverse reaction found here for LCAT was limited to the last step of the reaction. To explain these results we hypothesize that LCAT forms a [14C]oleate enzyme thioester intermediate after its attack on the cholesteryl oleate molecule. Formation of this intermediate allows [3H]cholesterol to be liberated from the enzyme by exchange with unlabeled cholesterol of plasma lipoproteins. The liberated [3H]cholesterol thereby becomes available for reesterification by LCAT as indicated by its appearance as newly synthesized cholesteryl linoleate.  相似文献   

10.
The naturally occurring serine protease inhibitor, chymostatin, forms a hemiacetal adduct with the catalytic Ser195 residue of Streptomyces griseus protease A. Restrained parameter least-squares refinement of this complex to 1.8 A resolution has produced an R index of 0 X 123 for the 11,755 observed reflections. The refined distance of the carbonyl carbon atom of the aldehyde to O gamma of Ser195 is 1 X 62 A. Both the R and S configurations of the hemiacetal occur in equal populations, with the end result resembling the expected configuration for a covalent tetrahedral product intermediate of a true substrate. This study strengthens the concept that serine proteases stabilize a covalent, tetrahedrally co-ordinated species and elaborates those features of the enzyme responsible for this effect. We propose that a major driving force for the hydrolysis of peptide bonds by serine proteases is the non-planar distortion of the scissile bond by the enzyme, which thereby lowers the activation energy barrier to hydrolysis by eliminating the resonance stabilization energy of the peptide bond.  相似文献   

11.
LCAT (lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase) catalyzes the transacylation of a fatty acid of lecithin to cholesterol, generating a cholesteryl ester and lysolecithin. The knowledge of LCAT atomic structure and the identification of the amino acids relevant in controlling its structure and function are expected to be very helpful to understand the enzyme catalytic mechanism, as involved in HDL cholesterol metabolism. However - after an early report in the late ‘90 s - no recent advance has been made about LCAT three-dimensional structure. In this paper, we propose an LCAT atomistic model, built following the most up-to-date molecular modeling approaches, and exploiting newly solved crystallographic structures. LCAT shows the typical folding of the α/β hydrolase superfamily, and its topology is characterized by a combination of α-helices covering a central 7-strand β-sheet. LCAT presents a Ser/Asp/His catalytic triad with a peculiar geometry, which is shared with such other enzyme classes as lipases, proteases and esterases. Our proposed model was validated through different approaches. We evaluated the impact on LCAT structure of some point mutations close to the enzyme active site (Lys218Asn, Thr274Ala, Thr274Ile) and explained, at a molecular level, their phenotypic effects. Furthermore, we devised some LCAT modulators either designed through a de novo strategy or identified through a virtual high-throughput screening pipeline. The tested compounds were proven to be potent inhibitors of the enzyme activity.  相似文献   

12.
From stereochemical considerations and model building the following conclusions were drawn for the stereochemistry of the catalytic steps of chymotrypsin and subtilisin. (1) In contrast to previous stereochemical investigations, rotation of 120° or more of the oxygen atom of the “reactive” serine residue is not possible in the course of the reaction with specific substrates. (2) During catalysis the serine oxygen atom is approximately in the position found in the crystalline enzyme, i.e. at a distance of about 3 Å from the nitrogen atom of the catalytically important histidine residue. (3) The detailed stereochemical mechanism involves the formation of a strained tetrahedral intermediate and a strained acylenzyme. The strain energy is supplied by the formation of a hydrogen bond between the enzyme and a specific substrate. (4) The geometry of proton transfers in the intimate encounter complex of chymotrypsin is slightly but significantly different from that of subtilisin.  相似文献   

13.
Zhao Y  Wang J  Gebre AK  Chisholm JW  Parks JS 《Biochemistry》2003,42(47):13941-13949
We previously described a point mutation in human LCAT (E to A at residue 149; hE149A) that demonstrated greater activity with phosphatidylcholine (PC) substrate containing 20:4 in the sn-2 position compared with the wild-type enzyme [hLCAT; Wang et al. (1997) J. Biol. Chem. 272, 280-286], resulting in a human enzyme with the substrate specificity similar to that of rat LCAT. The purpose of the present study was to explore the molecular basis for the role of amino acid 149 in determining fatty acyl substrate specificity. In the first experiment, the reverse mutation in rat LCAT (rA149E) converted substrate specificity of rat LCAT toward that of the human enzyme, demonstrating that the mutation was context independent and reversible. In the second experiment, we found that hE149A compared with hLCAT demonstrated higher activity with PC species containing 20-carbon, but not 18-carbon, sn-2 fatty acyl chains. The increased activity of hE149A was due to an increase in apparent V(max) but not to apparent K(m) or LCAT binding to the PC surface. Substitution of different amino acids in the 149 position of hLCAT showed that activation of the enzyme with sn-2 20:4 containing PC substrate was only observed when the negative charge at residue 149 was removed. We conclude that the negative charge at amino acid 149 of LCAT is a critical determinant for the specificity of the enzyme for PC containing 18- vs 20-carbon sn-2 fatty acyl chains.  相似文献   

14.
The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that lipid fluidity regulates lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) activity. Phosphatidylcholine (PC) species were synthesized that varied in fluidity by changing the number, type (cis vs. trans), or position of the double bonds in 18 or 20 carbon sn-2 fatty acyl chains and recombined with [(3)H]cholesterol and apolipoprotein A-I to form recombinant high density lipoprotein (rHDL) substrate particles. The activity of purified human plasma LCAT decreased with PC sn-2 fatty acyl chains containing trans versus cis double bonds and as double bonds were moved towards the methyl terminus of the sn-2 fatty acyl chain. The decrease in LCAT activity was significantly correlated with a decrease in rHDL fluidity (measured by diphenylhexatriene fluorescence polarization) for PC species containing 18 carbon (r(2) = 0.61, n = 18) and 20 carbon (r(2) = 0.93, n = 5) sn-2 fatty acyl chains. rHDL were also made containing 10% of the 18 carbon sn-2 fatty acyl chain PC species and 90% of an inert PC ether matrix (sn-1 18:1, sn-2 16:0 PC ether) to normalize rHDL fluidity. Even though fluidity was similar among the PC ether-containing rHDL, the order of PC reactivity with LCAT was significantly correlated (r(2) = 0.71) with that of 100% PC rHDL containing the same 18 carbon sn-2 fatty acyl chain species, suggesting that PC structure in the active site of LCAT determines reactivity in the absence of measurable differences in bilayer fluidity. We conclude that PC fluidity and structure are major regulators of LCAT activity when fatty acyl chain length is constant.  相似文献   

15.
16.
To understand the role of the ester moiety of the sn-1 acyl chain in phospholipase A2-glycerophospholipid interactions, we introduced an additional methylene residue between the glycerol C1 and C2 carbon atoms of phosphatidylcholines, and then studied the kinetics of hydrolysis and the binding of such butanetriol-containing phospholipids with Naja naja phospholipase A2. Hydrolysis was monitored by using phospholipids containing a NBD-labelled sn-2 acyl chain and binding was ascertained by measuring the protein tryptophan fluorescence. The hydrolysis of butanetriol-containing phospholipids was invariably slower than that of the glycerol-containing phospholipids. In addition, the enzyme binding with the substrate was markedly decreased upon replacing the glycerol residue with the 1,3,4-butanetriol moiety in phosphatidylcholines. These results have been interpreted to suggest that the sn-1 ester group in glycerophospholipids could play an important role in phospholipase A2-phospholipid interactions.  相似文献   

17.
In this study the relative affinities of natural lecithins and slightly modified lecithin analogues to the active site of porcine pancreatic phospholipase A2 were determined. It was found that the replacement of the phospholipase-fissile fatty acid ester bond in lecithins by an acylamino function results in the formation of potent competitive inhibitors. Substitution of the non-phospholipase-susceptible ester bond by the acylamino linkage does not result in increased affinity of the lecithin analogue to the enzyme. Most probably only the former lecithin analogues partially mimic the structure of the transition state and bind more tightly to the enzyme than the equivalent substrate molecule.  相似文献   

18.
X Collet  C J Fielding 《Biochemistry》1991,30(13):3228-3234
The structure and function of the carbohydrate moiety of human lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) were determined by using several glycosidases in reaction with the isolated plasma protein or by using specific inhibitors of glycoprotein assembly with cultured cells secreting LCAT activity. Analysis of the plasma enzyme indicated that almost all of the large carbohydrate moiety of LCAT (approximately 25% w/w) was N-linked with part of the high-mannose and part of the complex type. This analysis was confirmed with metabolic inhibitors of carbohydrate processing by using CHO cells stably transfected with the human LCAT gene. Inhibitors of the subsequent processing of the N-linked high-mannose chains formed by glucosidase activity were without effect on either the secretion rate or the catalytic activity of LCAT. The inhibition of catalytic activity by glucosidase inhibitors applied to both the phospholipase and the acyltransferase activities of LCAT. The reduction of the LCAT catalytic rate by terminal glycosidase inhibitors was without effect on apparent Km and did not affect enzyme stability. These data indicate an unusual specific role for high-mannose carbohydrates in the catalytic mechanism of LCAT.  相似文献   

19.
4-Nitrophenyl-N-substituted carbamates (1-6) are the pseudo-substrate inhibitors of porcine pancreatic cholesterol esterase. Thus, the first step of the inhibition (Ki step) is the formation of the enzyme inhibitor tetrahedral adduct and the second step of the inhibition (kc) is the formation of the carbamyl enzyme. The formation of the enzyme inhibitor tetrahedral adduct is further divided into two steps, the formation of the enzyme-inhibitor complex with the dissociation constant, KS, at the first step and the formation of the enzyme-inhibitor tetrahedral adduct from the complex at the second step. The two-step mechanism for the formation of the enzyme-inhibitor tetrahedral adduct is confirmed by the pre-steady-state kinetics. The results of quantitative structure-activity relationships for the pre-steady-state inhibitions of cholesterol esterase by carbamates 1-6 indicate that values of -logKs and logk2/k-2 are correlated with the Taft substituent constant, sigma*, and the rho* values from these correlations are -0.33 and 0.1, respectively. The negative rho* value for the -logKS-sigma*-correlation indicates that the first step of the two-step formation of the enzyme-inhibitor tetrahedral adduct (KS step) is the formation of the positive enzyme inhibitor complex. The positive rho* value for the logk2/k-2 -sigma*-correlation indicates that the enzyme inhibitor tetrahedral adduct is more negative than the enzyme inhibitor complex. Finally, the two-step mechanism for the formation of the enzyme inhibitor tetrahedral adduct is proposed according to these results. Thus, the partially positive charge is developed at nitrogen of carbamates 1-6 in the enzyme-inhibitor complex probably due to the hydrogen bonding between the lone pair of nitrogen of carbamates 1-6 and the amide hydrogen of the oxyanion hole of the enzyme. The second step of the two-step formation of the enzyme-inhibitor tetrahedral adduct is the nucleophilic attack of the serine of the enzyme to the carbonyl group of carbamates 1-6 in the enzyme-inhibitor complex and develops the negative-charged oxygen in the adduct.  相似文献   

20.
15N NMR spectroscopy was used to examine the active-site histidyl residue of alpha-lytic protease in peptide boronic acid inhibitor complexes. Two distinct types of complexes were observed: (1) Boronic acids that are analogues of substrates form complexes in which the active-site imidazole ring is protonated and both imidazole N-H protons are strongly hydrogen bonded. With the better inhibitors of the class this arrangement is stable over the pH range 4.0-10.5. The results are consistent with a putative tetrahedral intermediate like complex involving a negatively charged, tetrahedral boron atom covalently bonded to O gamma of the active-site serine. (2) Boronic acids that are not substrate analogues form complexes in which N epsilon 2 of the active-site histidine is covalently bonded to the boron atom of the inhibitor. The proton bound to N delta 1 of the histidine in these histidine-boronate adducts remains strongly hydrogen bonded, presumably to the active-site aspartate. Benzeneboronic acid, which falls in this category, forms an adduct with histidine. In both types of complexes the N-H protons of His-57 exchange unusually slowly as evidenced by the room temperature visibility of the low-field 1H resonances and the 15N-H spin couplings. These results, coupled with the kinetic data of the preceding paper [Kettner, C. A., Bone, R., Agard, D. A., & Bachovchin, W. W. (1988) Biochemistry (preceding paper in this issue)], indicate that occupancy of the specificity subsites may be required to fully form the transition-state binding site. The significance of these findings for understanding inhibitor binding and the catalytic mechanism of serine proteases is discussed.  相似文献   

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