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1.
The coordination sphere of both the structural and catalytic zinc ions of Bacillus cereus phospholipase C has been probed by substitution of cobalt(II) for zinc and investigation of the resultant derivatives by a variety of spectroscopic techniques. The electronic absorption, circular dichroic, magnetic circular dichroic, and electron paramagnetic resonance spectra were found to be strikingly similar when cobalt(II) was substituted into either site and are consistent with a distorted octahedral environment for the metal ion in both sites. Octahedral coordination appears comparatively rare in zinc metalloenzymes but has been suggested for glyoxalase I [Sellin, S., Eriksson, L. E. G., Aronsson, A.-C., & Mannervik, B. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 2091-2093; Garcia-Iniguez, L., Powers, L., Chance, B., Sellin, S., Mannervik, B., & Mildvan, A. S. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 685-689], transcarboxylase [Fung, C.-H., Mildvan, A. S., & Leigh, J. S. (1974) Biochemistry 13, 1160-1169], and the regulatory binding site of Aeromonas aminopeptidase [Prescott, J. M., Wagner, F. W., Holmquist, B., & Vallee, B. L. (1985) Biochemistry 24, 5350-5356]. Phospholipase C is so far unique in having two such sites.  相似文献   

2.
The binding of L- and D-phenylalanine and carboxylate inhibitors to cobalt(II)-substituted carboxypeptidase A, Co(II)CPD (E), in the presence and absence of pseudohalogens (X = N3-, NCO-, and NCS-) has been studied by 1H NMR spectroscopy. This technique monitors the proton signals of histidine residues bound to cobalt(II) and is therefore sensitive to the interactions of inhibitors that perturb the coordination sphere of the metal. Enzyme-inhibitor complexes, E.I, E.I2, and E.I.X, each with characteristic NMR features, have been identified. Thus, for example, L-Phe binds close to the metal ion to form a 1:1 complex, whereas D-Phe binds stepwise, first to a nonmetal site and then to the metal ion to form a 2:1 complex. Both acetate and phenylacetate also form 2:1 adducts stepwise with the enzyme, but beta-phenylpropionate gives a 2:1 complex without any detectable 1:1 intermediate. N3-, NCO-, and NCS- generate E.I.X ternary complexes directly with Co(II)CPD.L-Phe and indirectly with the D-Phe and carboxylate inhibitor 2:1 complexes by displacing the second moiety from its metal binding site. The NMR data suggest that when the carboxylate group of a substrate or inhibitor binds at the active site, a conformational change occurs that allows a second ligand molecule to bind to the metal ion, altering its coordination sphere and thereby attenuating the bidentate behavior of Glu-72. The 1H NMR signals also reflect alterations in the histidine interactions with the metal upon inhibitor binding. Isotropic shifts in the signals for the C-4 (c) and N protons (a) of one of the histidine ligands are readily observed in all of these complexes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
1H NMR spectroscopy of the isotropically shifted signals in cobalt carboxypeptidase, CoCPD, permits a direct and selective detection of protons belonging to the residues liganded to the metal. The chemical shift of these protons in the free enzyme and enzyme-inhibitor complexes with changing pH monitors the state of ionization of the ligands directly and of other residues in the active center indirectly. The 1H NMR spectrum of CoCPD at pH 6 shows three well-resolved isotropically shifted signals in the downfield region at 62 (a), 52 (c), and 45 (d) ppm which have been assigned to the NH proton of His-69 and to the C-4 H's of His-69 and His-196, respectively. Titration of signal a with pH is characterized by a pKa of 8.8 which is identical to that seen in prior electronic absorption and kinetic studies. The fact that the signal reflecting the NH of His-69 is still observed at pH 10 and no major shifts occur for the signals reflecting the C-4 H's indicates the alkaline pKa in carboxypeptidase A catalysis, pKEH, cannot be ascribed to ionization of the histidyl NH of either His-69 or His-196. Binding of L-Phe shifts this pKa to 7.7 while not greatly perturbing the downfield 1H NMR signals that reflect the ligation shell of the cobalt coordination sphere. These results indicate the pKa of 8.8 in CoCPD and the pKa of 7.7 in the CoCPD.L-Phe adduct reflect ionization of the same group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
Both 13C NMR and electronic absorption spectral studies on cobalt(II) carboxypeptidase A in the presence of acetate and phenylacetate provide evidence for two binding sites for each of these agents. The transverse relaxation rate T2-1 for the 13C-enriched carboxyl groups of the inhibitors is significantly increased when bound to the paramagnetic cobalt carboxypeptidase as compared to the diamagnetic zinc enzyme. The acetate concentration dependence of T2p-1 shows two inflections indicative of sequential binding of two inhibitor molecules. The cobalt-13C distances, calculated by means of the Solomon equation, indicate that the second acetate molecule binds directly to the metal ion while the first acetate molecule binds to a protein group at a distance 0.5-0.8 nm for the metal ion, consistent with it binding to one or more of the arginyl residues (Arg-145, Arg-127, or Arg-71). In the case of phenylacetate, perturbation of the cobalt electronic absorption spectrum shows that binding occurs stepwise. 13C NMR distance measurements indicate that one of the two phenylacetates is bound to the metal in the EI2 complex. These binding sites may correspond to those identified previously by kinetic means (one of which is competitive, the other noncompetitive) with peptide binding. The studies further indicate that it should be possible to map the protein interactions of the carbonyl groups of both substrate and noncompetitive inhibitors during catalysis by means of 13C NMR studies with suitably labeled substrates and inhibitors.  相似文献   

5.
6.
13C NMR T1 and T2 measurements have been performed on cobalt(II) substituted carboxypeptidase A in the presence of carboxylate-13C-enriched L- and D-phenylalanine. Upon binding to the cobalt enzyme, the longitudinal and transverse relaxation rates T1p-1 and T2p-1 of these inhibitors are enhanced significantly compared to the zinc enzyme, allowing both determination of an affinity constant for inhibitor binding, K, and calculation of the metal-13C carboxylate distances. The L-and D- Phe concentration dependence of T2p-1 yields affinity constants of 290 +/- 60M-1 and 670 +/- 90M-1. The distance measurements calculated for Co-13C from T1p-1 are 0.39 +/- 0.04 and 0.42 +/- 0.04 nm for L-Phe and D-Phe. Both values are too great for direct coordination of their carboxylate groups to the metal atom. Upon formation of their respective ternary enzyme.Phe.N3- complexes, the distances are essentially unaltered. In conjunction with electronic absorption studies on these complexes it can be concluded that N3-, but not the amino acid carboxylate, is bound to the metal.  相似文献   

7.
At pH greater than 7 the absorption and magnetic circular dichroic spectra of cobalt carboxypeptidase A are insensitive to anions [Latt, S. A., & Vallee, B. L. (1971) Biochemistry 10, 4263-4270], but at pH less than 6 chloride and other anions perturb them in a manner specific for each anion. Lowering of the pH apparently facilitates the entry of an anion into the metal coordination sphere, suggesting that an acidic group normally stabilizes a metal-coordinated water molecule against displacement. The lack of sensitivity to anions at pHs between 7 and 9--when the enzyme is maximally active--and its evident abolition upon protonation of an active-site group are consistent with this interpretation. Selective modification of cobalt carboxypeptidase at Glu-270 using a carbodiimide affinity reagent generates sensitivity to anions at pH 7 very similar to that of the unmodified enzyme at pH approximately 5. This suggests that the group stabilizing the metal-coordinated water is the catalytically essential carboxylate of Glu-270. These and related results provide evidence for a mechanistically important interaction of Glu-270 with a metal-bound water molecule.  相似文献   

8.
Cobalt(II)-substituted carboxypeptidase A has been found to reversibly bind N3? and NCO?, but not NCS?, in the pH range 5–10, thus including the pH range of activity of the enzyme. The pH dependence of the anion binding constant is affected by two ionizations, which are assigned as those regulating kcat and KM. The electronic and 1H NMR spectra are consistent with a substantially pseudotetrahedral geometry of the anion derivatives.  相似文献   

9.
Cobalt(II) arsanilazotyrosine-248 carboxypeptidase A has been characterized through 1H NMR spectroscopy. The ability of the azoenzyme to form binary and ternary complexes with L- and D-phenylalanine and azide has been investigated. Comparison with the 1H NMR results obtained on unmodified cobalt(II) carboxypeptidase provides direct information on the specific effect of the presence of the azo group on the reactivity of the system. Marked differences in the interaction with D-phenylalanine have been observed, and structural inferences are drawn.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Saturation kinetics are observed in the inhibition of cobalt carboxypeptidase A by the chelating agent 1,10-phenanthroline. The association constant K1 for the formation of the enzyme-metal-ligand ternary complex and k2, the rate of breakup of the ternary complex, have been obtained. A mechanism is proposed to account for the pH profile of the reaction which, in conjunction with K1, permits the calculation of the individual rate constants k1, K?1, k2, k3. The magnitude of the rate constant k1 suggests that cobalt(II) in CoCPA is five-coordinate. Similar but less extensive studies on inhibition by 2,2′-bipyridyl and 8-hydroquinoline-5-sulfonic acid have also been carried out  相似文献   

12.
13.
113Cd and 31P NMR have been used to investigate the interactions of inhibitors with the metal ion of bovine carboxypeptidase A, using 113Cd as a replacement for the native zinc atom. In the absence of inhibitor and over the pH range 6-9, no 113Cd resonance is visible at room temperature. Upon lowering the temperature to 270 K, however, a broad resonance can be seen at 120 ppm. These results are discussed in terms of possible sources for this resonance modulation. Binding of low molecular weight inhibitors containing potential metal-coordinating moieties results in the appearance of a sharp 113Cd resonance. These inhibitors all bind to the metal ion, a fact which is reflected in the chemical shift of the cadmium resonance and, for L-phenylalanine phosphoramidate phenyl ester, by two-bond 113Cd-31P spin-spin coupling of 30 Hz in the 31P resonance of the bound inhibitor. For inhibitors that coordinate to the metal ion via oxygen, the 113Cd chemical shift is in the range 127-137 ppm, whereas for sulfur coordination there is a downfield shift of approximately 210 ppm. The complexes of 113Cd-substituted carboxypeptidase A with the D and L isomers of thiolactic acid are distinguished by a difference of 11 ppm in the chemical shift of their cadmium resonances. The enzyme complex formed with the macromolecular inhibitor from potatoes, which fills the S1 and S2 subsites, shows one or possibly two closely spaced broad 113Cd resonances. Both the chemical shift and the line width of the 113Cd resonances of the [113Cd]carboxypeptidase-inhibitor complexes give valuable structural and dynamic information about the enzyme active site.  相似文献   

14.
《Inorganica chimica acta》1986,125(3):151-158
Some picket fence porphyrinatocobalt(II) complexes which contain a replaced polar or non-polar group in their fences were newly prepared and characterized, and their oxygen affinities were measured spectrophotometrically. The O2 affinities of the complexes containing a replaced polar group other than amido linkages are appreciably reduced as compared with those of the complexes with a similar non-polar group, regardless of the charge sign of the polarity in the cavity. On the other hand, solvent polarity affects the O2 affinity of the complex with a polar group which is accessible to the coordinated dioxygen molecule, while solvation effects of the corresponding complex without such a group are little. On the basis of these results the relationships between O2 affinity and pocket polarity or solvent polarity are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
The crystal structures of acid metmyoglobin and deoxy cobalt(II)mesoporphyrin IX myoglobin were compared by a difference Fourier analysis at 2.5 A resolution. No large differences in protein conformation were observed. The greatest density of structural differences was found in the heme region. There was a loss of the histidine-bound sulfate ion and of the metal-bound water molecule, as well as a shift in the position of the prosthetic group with associated changes in the adjacent globin. The structural changes resulting from the substitution of ethyl for the vinyl side chains of the porphyrin were clearly observed. There was also a suggestion of a conformational change of the porphyrin ring. It was not clear whether there was any change of the metal position relative to the porphyrin plane or proximal histidine.  相似文献   

16.
Complexes of cobalt(II) and zinc(II) which involve monodentate coordination of two alkyl carboxylate and two imidazole ligands in a slightly distorted tetrahedral fashion have visible and magnetic circular dichroism spectra remarkably similar to the cobalt(II)-substituted proteolytic enzymes thermolysin and carboxypeptidase A. Single crystal x-ray structure determinations on [Co(C2H5COO)2Im2], Im = imidazole, and its zinc counterpart reveal only minor structural differences between the cobalt and zinc species. Electron paramagnetic resonance spectra of cobalt(II) doped into zinc(II) complexes with known structures demonstrate the extreme sensitivity of the g-values to minor structural differences.  相似文献   

17.
On the basis of the known interaction of phytic acid to form soluble or insoluble complexes with cations, the effect of this naturally occurring polydentate ligand on carboxypeptidase A, a zinc-containing metalloenzyme, and its Co(II)-substituted derivative, has been studied. Under conditions of rigorous exclusion of adventitious metal ions, phytate showed no inhibitory effect. However, the addition of Cu(II) ions to form soluble phytate-Cu(II) complexes at pH 7.2 and 25 degrees C caused more than a 95% decrease in activity. The Cd(II) ion was nearly as effective but other ions showed only a small or no effect. In the absence of phytate, incubation of the enzyme with Cu(II) or Cd(II) at the same concentration produced only about a 25% reduction in activity. The decrease in activity followed first-order kinetics, and the rate constant was the same (1.2 x 10(-4) sec-1) as seen upon incubation with EDTA. However, in contrast to that observed upon incubation of the enzyme with phytate and Cu(II), exposure to EDTA produced a complete loss in activity which could be regained by addition of Zn(II) to the assay solution. In the former case, not only was there residual activity left after incubation at pH 7.2 for 24 hrs at 25 degrees C, but the initial activity could not be regained under similar assay treatment. An increase in either the Cu(II) or phytate concentration while the other was kept constant, yielded saturation curves with maximal effect at 3 x 10(-5) M for Cu(II) and at 5 x 10(-5) M for phytate (enzyme at ca. 10(-6) M). At these ratios, all of the cupric ions are completely bound to phytate as determined by ion-selective potentiometry. A preparative scale reaction of phytate and Cu(II) with carboxypeptidase A (kcat 8460 min-1; K'M 0.23 mM with CBZ-glycyl-glycyl-L-phenylalanine as substrate at pH 7.5, 25 degrees C) gave a product isolated in 95% yield but with lower activity (kcat 198 min-1; K'M 0.25 mM). A Cu(II)-carboxypeptidase preparation had similar kinetic parameters (kcat 207 min-1; K'M 0.34 mM). This near identity of constants suggested that a metal exchange reaction had occurred, i.e., incubation of Zn(II)-carboxypeptidase with a phytate-Cu(II) complex resulted in not only the removal of the zinc ion from the active site but also the sequential and rapid incorporation of a cupric ion into the apoenzyme so formed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
19.
Peptide deformylase (PDF) catalyzes the hydrolytic removal of the N-terminal formyl group from nascent ribosome-synthesized polypeptides in eubacteria. PDF represents a novel class of mononuclear iron protein, which utilizes an Fe(2+) ion to catalyze the hydrolysis of an amide bond. This Fe(2+) enzyme is, however, extremely labile, undergoing rapid inactivation upon exposure to molecular oxygen, and is spectroscopically silent. In this work, we have replaced the native Fe(2+) ion with the spectroscopically active Co(2+) ion through overexpression in the presence of Co(2+). Co(2+)-substituted PDF (Co-PDF) has an activity 3-10-fold lower than that of the Fe(2+)-PDF but is highly stable. Steady-state kinetic assays using a series of substrates of varying deformylation rates indicate that Co-PDF has the same substrate specificity as the native enzyme. Co-PDF and Fe-PDF also share the same three-dimensional structure, pH sensitivity, and inhibition pattern by various effector molecules. These results demonstrate that Co-PDF can be used as a stable surrogate of Fe-PDF for biochemical characterization and inhibitor screening. The electronic absorption properties of the Co(2+) ion were utilized as a probe to monitor changes in the enzyme active site as a result of site-directed mutations, inhibitor binding, and changes in pH. Mutation of Glu-133 to an alanine completely abolishes the catalytic activity, whereas mutation to an aspartate results in only approximately 10-fold reduction in activity. Analysis of their absorption spectra under various pH conditions reveals pK(a) values of 6.5 and 5.6 for the metal-bound water in E133A and E133D Co-PDF, respectively, suggesting that the metal ion alone is capable of ionizing the water molecule to generate the catalytic nucleophile, a metal-bound hydroxide. On the other hand, substrate binding to the E133A mutant induces little spectral change, indicating that in the E.S complex the formyl carbonyl oxygen is not coordinated with the metal ion. These results demonstrate that the function of the active-site metal is to activate the water molecule, whereas Glu-133 acts primarily as a general acid, donating a proton to the leaving amide ion during the decomposition of the tetrahedral intermediate.  相似文献   

20.
《Inorganica chimica acta》1986,118(2):151-156
A bimetallic isopropoxide of cobalt(II) with the formula Co[Zr2(OPri)9]2, prepared by the reaction of COCl2 with K[Zr2(OPri)9] in 1:2 molar ratio, has been shown to undergo alcoholysis reactions with graded alcohols (primary, secondary and tertiary) to afford products of the types, Co[Zr2(OR)9]2 (where R = Me, Et, Prn, Bun, Bui and Bus) Co[Zr2(OPri)3(OEt)6]2, Co[Zr2(OPri)6(OBus)3]2, CO[Zr2(OPri)3(OBus)6]2, Co[Zr2(OPri)6(OBut)3]2 and Co[Zr2(OPri)3(OR)6]2 (where R = Amt or But). These derivatives have been characterized by elemental analyses and molecular weight determinations. Infrared, electronic (visible) spectral and magnetic susceptibility measurements suggest a distorted octahedral geometry for these derivatives.  相似文献   

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