首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Benzyloxycarbonyl-L-alanine p-guanidinophenyl ester behaves as a trypsin "inverse substrate," i.e., a cationic center is included in the leaving group instead of being in the acyl moiety. Using this substrate as an acyl donor, trypsin catalyzes the synthesis of peptide bonds that cannot be split by this enzyme. An optimal acyl transfer efficiency was achieved between pH 8 and 9 at 30 degrees C.The addition of as much as 50% cosolvent was shown to be of minor influence on the acyl transfer efficiency, whereas the reaction velocity decreases by more than one order of magnitude. The efficiency of H-Leu-NH(2) and H-Val-NH(2) in deacylation is almost the same for "inverse" and normal type substrates.  相似文献   

2.
The course of stereospecific selection of nucleophilic compounds was studied in the reaction of acyl-enzymes interaction with razemic substrate-like nucleophiles, e.g. amino acid esters, by measuring optical rotation or incorporation of labelled D-compounds. It was shown that the acyl-enzymes are not responsible for the stereospecific selection of substrate-like nucleophiles. Since stereospecific selection of nucleophiles occurs in some chymotrypsin-catalyzed reactions, such selection may be produced by chymotrypsin till the formation of an acyl-enzyme compound with the substrate at the enzyme-inhibitor stage (or the Michaelis complex) with nucleophilic compounds. Even under the optimal conditions no absolute stereospecific selection of nucleophiles occurred, as was observed in case of a substrate (a donor of the acyl amino acid residue), undergoing degradation. An essential role of a specific site of nucleophile binding in the reactions of chymotrypsin-catalyzed peptide bond formation, is emphasized.  相似文献   

3.
Cathepsin B has been shown to catalyze the transfer of the N alpha-benzyloxycarbonyl-L-lysyl residue from the corresponding p-nitrophenyl ester substrate to water and dipeptide nucleophiles. These reactions occurred through the formation of an acyl-enzyme intermediate. The pH dependency of the acylation and deacylation steps were determined from the increases in the maximum rate of appearance of p-nitrophenol on addition of glycylglycine or L-leucylglycine to the reaction. The second order acylation rate constant, kcat/Km was found to depend on the state of ionization of three groups in the enzyme having pKa values of 4.2, 5.5, and 8.6. Protonation of the group with pKa = 5.5 decreased but did not abolish enzymatic activity, resulting in the appearance of a second, active protonic form of the enzyme between pH 4.2 and pH 5.5. The first order rate constant for the hydrolysis of the acyl-enzyme intermediate was independent of pH between 4.0 and 7.5. In contrast, acyl group transfer from cathepsin B to glycylglycine and L-leucylglycine depended on a group with a pKa of about 4.5. These results are discussed in terms of possible structural and functional homologies between the active sites of cathepsin B and papain.  相似文献   

4.
Chymotrypsin modified with polyethylene glycol was successfully used for peptide synthesis in organic solvents. The benzene-soluble modified enzyme readily catalyzed both aminolysis of N-benzoyl-L-tyrosine p-nitroanilide and synthesis of N-benzoyl-L-tyrosine butylamide in the presence of trace amounts of water. A quantitative reaction was obtained when either hydrophobic or bulky amides of L- as well as D-amino acids were used as acceptor nucleophiles, while almost no reaction occurred with free amino acids or ester derivatives. The acceptor nucleophile specificity of modified chymotrypsin as a catalyst in the formation of both amide and peptide bonds in organic solvents was quite comparable to that in aqueous solution as well as to that of the leaving group in hydrolysis reactions. By contrast, the substrate specificity of modified chymotrypsin in organic solvents was different from that in water since arginine and lysine esters were found to be as effective as aromatic amino acids to form the acyl-enzyme with subsequent synthesis of a peptide bond.  相似文献   

5.
The partitioning of the acyl-enzyme between aminolysis by an added nucleophile and hydrolysis plays a key-role in protease-catalyzed acyl transfer reactions. It can be characterized by the partition constant, which is equal to the nucleophile concentration for which aminolysis and hydrolysis proceed at the same velocity. We describe a method for calculation of the partition constant from the product ratio which is based on the integrated rate equation. Therefore, it can be applied to reactions performed under synthesis-like conditions, i.e. a high degree of nucleophile consumption during the reaction. In principle, the dependence of the partition constant on nucleophile concentration can be determined from a single reaction. V8-protease-catalyzed acyl transfer reactions using Z-Glu-OMe as acyl donor and amino acid amides as nucleophiles were investigated as an application of the method. The central role of the partition constant in optimization of preparative protease-catalyzed acyl transfer reactions is discussed.  相似文献   

6.
The partitioning of the acyl-enzyme between aminolysis by an added nucleophile and hydrolysis plays a key-role in protease-catalyzed acyl transfer reactions. It can be characterized by the partition constant, which is equal to the nucleophile concentration for which aminolysis and hydrolysis proceed at the same velocity. We describe a method for calculation of the partition constant from the product ratio which is based on the integrated rate equation. Therefore, it can be applied to reactions performed under synthesis-like conditions, i.e. a high degree of nucleophile consumption during the reaction. In principle, the dependence of the partition constant on nucleophile concentration can be determined from a single reaction. V8-protease-catalyzed acyl transfer reactions using Z-Glu-OMe as acyl donor and amino acid amides as nucleophiles were investigated as an application of the method. The central role of the partition constant in optimization of preparative protease-catalyzed acyl transfer reactions is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
The kinetics of peptide synthesis via transfer of the acyl moiety from activated derivatives of amino acids or peptides (S) to nucleophiles (N) catalyzed by proteases forming an acyl-enzyme intermediate, was analysed. A kinetic model assumes enzymatic hydrolysis of the formed peptide (P), so the kinetic curve for P has a maximum (denoted as pmax). Particular attention was given to the analysis of the effects of the initial concentrations and kinetic constants on pmax. Computer analysis demonstrated that at a given ratio of initial S and N concentrations pmax is affected only by the ratio of the second order rate constants for enzymatic hydrolysis of S and P (alpha) and the ratio of rate constants for an attack of the acyl-enzyme intermediate by nucleophile and water (beta). These conclusions apply regardless of the existence of enzyme forms other than a free enzyme and an acyl-enzyme intermediate. Thus, the kinetically controlled maximum yield of peptide (pmax) can be calculated a priori from the values of alpha and beta which can be readily evaluated from the reference data. Simple explicit expressions were obtained, allowing fairly accurate prediction of pmax for a broad spectrum of S and N initial concentrations.  相似文献   

8.
Production of cefazolin by acyl transfer enzymatic synthesis with immobilised cefazolin synthetase from Escherichia coli as a biocatalyst acting in accordance with the mechanism including formation of the acyl-enzyme complex was shown possible. The process kinetic parameters and the ratio of the maximum conversion of the key amino acid and the initial concentrations of the substrate and nucleophile were determined. Correlation of the calculated and experimental data on the cefazolin yield in the enzymatic synthesis was good. The main physico-chemical properties of the substrates and the reaction products i.e. dissociation constants and solubility were investigated. The complex of the physico-chemical studies makes it possible to design a highly efficient technological process for production of cefazolin including not only the stage of the enzymatic synthesis but also the stage of separation of the reaction mixture components.  相似文献   

9.
The kinetically controlled synthesis of N-benzyloxycarbonyl (Z)-dipeptides was investigated by the use of free amino acids as nucleophiles and a cysteine protease papain as catalyst. The coupling efficiency was significantly improved by the combined use of the carbamoylmethyl (Cam) ester of a Z-amino acid as acyl donor and frozen aqueous solution (ice, −16 or −24 °C) as reaction medium. The yield of peptide synthesis became high when both P1- and P1-positions were occupied by small non-polar amino acids (Z-Gly-Gly-OH, 76%; Z-Gly-Ala-OH, 75%; Z-Ala-Ala-OH, 72%). Similar results were observed by the use of ficin as catalyst instead of papain. Furthermore, this strategy was applied to the papain-catalyzed incorporation of a d-configured amino acid such as d-alanine into the resulting peptides. Although the coupling in aqueous solution (30 °C) afforded the desired Z-dipeptides in low yields, the freezing of reaction medium reduced significantly unfavorable hydrolysis of the acyl donors, resulting in improvement of the coupling efficiency (Z-Gly-d-Ala-OH, 80%; Z-Ala-d-Ala-OH, 45%; Z-d-Ala-Ala-OH, 22%).  相似文献   

10.
The substrate specificities of alpha-chymotrypsin and subtilisins for peptide synthesis in hydrophilic organic solvents were investigated. Chymotrypsin exhibited high specificity to aromatic amino acids as acyl donors, while subtilisin Carlsberg and subtilisin BPN' were specific to aromatic and neutral aliphatic amino acids, in accordance with the S1 specificities of the enzymes for peptide hydrolysis in aqueous solutions. On the contrary, chymotrypsin exhibited higher specificities to hydrophilic amino acid amides as acyl acceptors (nucleophiles) for peptide synthesis with N-acetyl-L-tyrosine ethyl ester, in contrast to the S1' specificity for peptide hydrolysis and peptide synthesis in aqueous solutions. Furthermore, nucleophile specificity changed with the change in water-organic solvent composition; the increase in water content led to increase in relative reactivity of leucinamide to that of alaninamide. It was also found that protection of the carboxyl group of alanine by amidation is much preferable to protection by esterification in terms of reactivity as nucleophiles.  相似文献   

11.
The kinetics of hydrolysis and transpeptidation of the synthetic substrate diacetyl-L-lysyl-D-alanyl-D-alanine and of the natural substrate UDP-acetylmuramyl pentapeptide and related compounds catalyzed by the D-alanine carboxypeptidases of Bacillus subtilis and Bacillus stearothermophilus in the presence of the nucleophiles hydroxylamine or glycine have been examined. These kinetic data suggest that an acyl-enzyme intermediate is formed in the first step of the reaction and that the transpeptidation is the consequence of the partitioning of this intermediate between water and the nucleophile in the second step.  相似文献   

12.
The enzyme apolipoprotein N-acyltransferase (Lnt) is an integral membrane protein that catalyzes the last step in the post-translational modification of bacterial lipoproteins. Lnt undergoes covalent modification in the presence of phospholipids resulting in a thioester acyl-enzyme intermediate. It then transfers the acyl chain to the α-amino group of the N-terminal diacylglyceryl-modified cysteine of apolipoprotein, leading to the formation of mature triacylated lipoprotein. To gain insight into the catalytic mechanism of this two-step reaction, we overproduced and purified the enzyme of Escherichia coli and studied its N-acyltransferase activity using a novel in vitro assay. The purified enzyme was fully active, as judged by its ability to form a stable thioester acyl-enzyme intermediate and N-acylate the apo-form of the murein lipoprotein Lpp in vitro. Incorporation of [(3)H]palmitate and mass spectrometry analysis demonstrated that Lnt recognized the synthetic diacylglyceryl-modified lipopeptide FSL-1 as a substrate in a mixed micelle assay. Kinetics of Lnt using phosphatidylethanolamine as an acyl donor and FSL-1 as a substrate were consistent with a ping-pong type mechanism, demonstrating slow acyl-enzyme intermediate formation and rapid N-acyl transfer to the apolipopeptide in vitro. In contrast to earlier in vitro observations, the N-acyltransferase activity was strongly affected by the phospholipid headgroup and acyl chain composition.  相似文献   

13.
Kinetics of the acyl transfer catalyzed by Xanthomonas α-amino acid ester hydrolase was studied. The enzyme hydrolyzed d-α-phenylglycine methyl ester (d-PG-OMe) to give equimolar amounts of d-α-phenylglycine and methanol. With d-PG-OMe as an acyl donor and 7-amino-3-deacetoxy-cephalosporanic acid (7-ADCA) as an acyl acceptor, the enzyme transferred the acyl group from d-PG-OMe to 7-ADCA in competition with water. The addition of amine nucleophiles (7-ADCA and 6-aminopenicillanic acid) decreased the molecular activity (ko) of the enzyme-catalyzed hydrolysis of d-PG-OMe, whereas it did not alter the Michaelis constant (KM), and plots of l/ko against the initial concentration of a nucleophile (no) gave a straight line. These results support the assumptions that the overall process for hydrolysis and acyl transfer proceeds through a common acyl-enzyme intermediate, that the acylation step of the enzyme is rate-limiting, and that the transfer competes with the hydrolysis of the acyl donor.  相似文献   

14.
Trypsin-catalyzed, kinetically controlled synthesis of a precursor, dipeptide of thymopentin (TP-5), Bz-Arg-Lys-OH (or-OEt) in organic solvents was studied. Bz-Arg-OEt was used as the acyl donor and Lys-OH and Lys-OEt were used as the nucleophiles. Ethanol was selected as the organic solvent from ethanol, methanol, acetonitrile, and ethyl acetate tested under the experimental conditions. As expected, Lys-OEt is not a suitable nucleophile in trypsin-catalyzed reaction, due to its competition with the protective Arg-OEt as acyl donor for the active site of trypsin, while Lys-OH does not have this problem. The optimal reaction condition for the synthesis of Bz-Arg-Lys-OH was set up as 20% Tris-HCl buffer, pH 8.0, 35 degrees C for 6 h with the yield of 52.5%, or for 18-24 h with the yield of about 60%.  相似文献   

15.
Kinetic specificity in papain-catalysed hydrolyses   总被引:1,自引:12,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
The specificity of the proteolytic enzyme, papain, for the peptide bond of the substrate adjacent to that about to be cleaved and for the acyl residue of some N-acylglycine derivatives is manifest almost exclusively in the formation of the acyl-enzyme from the enzyme-substrate complex. Models for the enzyme-substrate complex and acyl-enzyme intermediate are suggested that account for these observations. In particular it is suggested that the peptide bond of the substrate adjacent to that about to be cleaved, is bound in the cleft of the enzyme between the NH group of glycine-66 and the backbone C=O group of aspartic acid-158, and provides a sensitive amplification mechanism through which the specificity of the enzyme for hydrophobic amino acids such as l-phenylalanine is relayed. It is also suggested that the distortion in the enzyme-substrate complex and the binding of the peptide bond adjacent to that about to be cleaved are also linked and behave co-operatively, the distortion of the protein facilitating binding and the stronger binding facilitating distortion. The results imply that between the enzyme-substrate complex and the acyl-enzyme a relaxation of the protein conformation must occur.  相似文献   

16.
A kinetic model of peptide synthesis via transfer of the acyl moiety from activated derivatives of amino acids (S) to nucleophiles (N) catalyzed by proteases forming an acyl-enzyme intermediate has been analyzed. The kinetic model takes into account the subsequent enzymatic hydrolysis of synthesized peptide (P), and so the kinetic curve for this compound shows a maximum (denoted as p(max)). Particular stress is placed on analyzing the effects of initial concentrations and of kinetic constants on the value of p(max).The analysis has demonstrated that at a given ratio of initial S and N concentrations, p(max) is affected only by (i) the ratio of the second-order rate constants for enzymatic hydrolysis of S and P(alpha) and (ii) the ratio of rate constants for an attack of the acyl-enzyme intermediate by the nucleophile and water (beta). These conclusions apply regardless of the existence of linear inhibition by the components of the reaction mixture. Thus, the kinetically controlled maximum yield of peptide (p(max)) can be calculated a priori from values of alpha and beta that can be estimated experimentally or from reference data. Simple analytical expressions were obtained, allowing a fairly accurate prediction of p(max) for a broad spectrum of S and N initial concentrations.  相似文献   

17.
Penicillin acylase (PA) from Escherichia coli can catalyze the coupling of an acyl group to penicillin- and cephalosporin-derived beta-lactam nuclei, a conversion that can be used for the industrial synthesis of beta-lactam antibiotics. The modest synthetic properties of the wild-type enzyme make it desirable to engineer improved mutants. Analysis of the crystal structure of PA has shown that residues alphaR145 and alphaF146 undergo extensive repositioning upon binding of large ligands to the active site, suggesting that these residues may be good targets for mutagenesis aimed at improving the catalytic performance of PA. Therefore, site-saturation mutagenesis was performed on both positions and a complete set of all 38 variants was subjected to rapid HPLC screening for improved ampicillin synthesis. Not less than 33 mutants showed improved synthesis, indicating the importance of the mutated residues in PA-catalyzed acyl transfer kinetics. In several mutants at low substrate concentrations, the maximum level of ampicillin production was increased up to 1.5-fold, and the ratio of the synthetic rate over the hydrolytic rate was increased 5-15-fold. Moreover, due to increased tendency of the acyl-enzyme intermediate to react with beta-lactam nucleophile instead of water, mutants alphaR145G, alphaR145S and alphaR145L demonstrated an enhanced synthetic yield over wild-type PA at high substrate concentrations. This was accompanied by an increased conversion of 6-APA to ampicillin as well as a decreased undesirable hydrolysis of the acyl donor. Therefore, these mutants are interesting candidates for the enzymatic production of semi-synthetic beta-lactam antibiotics.  相似文献   

18.
The Actinomadura R39 DD-peptidase catalyzes the hydrolysis and aminolysis of a number of small peptides and depsipeptides. Details of its substrate specificity and the nature of its in vivo substrate are not, however, well understood. This paper describes the interactions of the R39 enzyme with two peptidoglycan-mimetic substrates 3-(D-cysteinyl)propanoyl-D-alanyl-D-alanine and 3-(D-cysteinyl)propanoyl-D-alanyl-D-thiolactate. A detailed study of the reactions of the former substrate, catalyzed by the enzyme, showed DD-carboxypeptidase, DD-transpeptidase, and DD-endopeptidase activities. These results confirm the specificity of the enzyme for a free D-amino acid at the N-terminus of good substrates and indicated a preference for extended D-amino acid leaving groups. The latter was supported by determination of the structural specificity of amine nucleophiles for the acyl-enzyme generated by reaction of the enzyme with the thiolactate substrate. It was concluded that a specific substrate for this enzyme, and possibly the in vivo substrate, may consist of a partly cross-linked peptidoglycan polymer where a free side chain N-terminal un-cross-linked amino acid serves as the specific acyl group in an endopeptidase reaction. The enzyme is most likely a DD-endopeptidase in vivo. pH-rate profiles for reactions of the enzyme with peptides, the thiolactate named above, and β-lactams indicated the presence of complex proton dissociation pathways with sticky substrates and/or protons. The local structure of the active site may differ significantly for reactions of peptides and β-lactams. Solvent kinetic deuterium isotope effects indicate the presence of classical general acid/base catalysis in both acylation and deacylation; there is no evidence of the low fractionation factor active site hydrogen found previously in class A and C β-lactamases.  相似文献   

19.
Synthesis of fatty acid retinyl esters determines systemic vitamin A levels and provides substrate for production of visual chromophore (11-cis-retinal) in vertebrates. Lecithin:retinol acyltransferase (LRAT), the main enzyme responsible for retinyl ester formation, catalyzes the transfer of an acyl group from the sn-1 position of phosphatidylcholine to retinol. To delineate the catalytic mechanism of this reaction, we expressed and purified a fully active, soluble form of this enzyme and used it to examine the possible formation of a transient acyl-enzyme intermediate. Detailed mass spectrometry analyses revealed that LRAT undergoes spontaneous, covalent modification upon incubation with a variety of phosphatidylcholine substrates. The addition of an acyl chain occurs at the Cys161 residue, indicating formation of a thioester intermediate. This observation provides the first direct experimental evidence of thioester intermediate formation that constitutes the initial step in the proposed LRAT catalytic reaction. Additionally, we examined the effect of increasing fatty acyl side chain length in phosphatidylcholine on substrate accessibility in this reaction, which provided insights into the function of the single membrane-spanning domain of LRAT. These observations are critical to understanding the catalytic mechanism of LRAT protein family members as well as other lecithin:acyltransferases wherein Cys residues are required for catalysis.  相似文献   

20.
Resonance Raman spectra were obtained for the acylenzyme 4-dimethylamino-3-nitro(alpha-benzamido)cinnamoyl-papain prepared using the chromophoric substrate methyl 4-dimethylamino-3-nitro(alpha-benzamido)cinnamate. These spectra contained vibrational spectral data of the acyl residue while covalently attached to the active site and could be used to follow directly acylation and deacylation kinetics. Spectra were obtained at pH values ranging from those where the acyl-enzyme is relatively stable (pH 3.0, tau 1/2 congruent to 800 s) to those where it is relatively unstable (pH 9.2, tau 1/2 congruent to 223 s). Throughout this range acyl-enzyme spectra differed completely from that of the free substrate or the product (4-dimethylamino-3-nitro(alpha-benzamido)cinnamic acid) indicating that a structural change occurred on combination with the active site. The spectra are consistent with rearrangement of the alpha-benzamido group in the bound substrate, -NH--C(==O)Ph becoming --N==C(--OX)Ph, where the bonding to oxygen is unknown. Superimposed on these large differences, small changes in acyl-enzyme spectra also occurred as pH was raised to decrease the half-life. All of the above spectral perturbations are consistent with a structural change in the acyl-enzyme which precedes the rate-determining step in deacylation. Thus, deacylation proceeds from an acyl residue structure differing from that of the substrate in solution. Upon acid denaturation the spectrum characteristic of the intermediate reverts to one closely resembling the substrate, demonstrating that a functioning active site is necessary to produce the observed differences. Spectra in D2O of native acyl-enzyme were identical with those in H2O, indicating that the observed differences in rate constant were not due to solvent-induced structural changes. Activated papain purified by crystallization or by affinity chromatography formed the acyl-enzyme. However, the kinetics of formation and deacylation differed between these materials, as did the spectral properties. Small differences in active-site structure are considered to be responsible for this effect, and it is suggested that such spectral perturbations may be useful in directly relating small differences in structure of the substrate in the active site with corresponding differences in kinetics.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号