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1.
Phosphomevalonate kinase catalyzes an essential step in the so-called mevalonate pathway, which appears to be the sole pathway for the biosynthesis of sterols and other isoprenoids in mammals and archea. Despite the well documented importance of this pathway in the cause and prevention of human disease and that it is the biosynthetic root of an enormous diverse class of metabolites, the mechanism of phosphomevalonate kinase from any organism is not yet well characterized. The first structure of a phosphomevalonate kinase from Streptococcus pneumoniae was solved recently. The enzyme exhibits an atypical P-loop that is a conserved defining feature of the GHMP kinase superfamily. In this study, the kinetic mechanism of the S. pneumoniae enzyme is characterized in the forward and reverse directions using a combination of classical initial-rate methods including alternate substrate inhibition using ADPbetaS. The inhibition patterns strongly support that in either direction the substrates bind randomly to the enzyme prior to chemistry, a random sequential bi-bi mechanism. The kinetic constants are as follows: k(cat(forward)) = 3.4 s(-1), K(i(ATP)) = 137 microm, K(m(ATP)) = 74 microm, K(i(pmev)) = 7.7 microm, K(m(pmev)) = 4.2 microm; k(cat(reverse)) = 3.9 s(-1), K(i(ADP)) = 410 microm, K(m(ADP)) = 350 microm, K(i(ppmev)) = 14 microm, K(m(ppmev)) = 12 microm, where pmev and ppmev represent phosphomevalonate and diphosphomevalonate, respectively.  相似文献   

2.
A combination of sequence homology analyses of mevalonate diphosphate decarboxylase (MDD) proteins and structural information for MDD leads to the hypothesis that Asp 302 and Lys 18 are active site residues in MDD. These residues were mutated to replace acidic/basic side chains and the mutant proteins were isolated and characterized. Binding and competitive displacement studies using trinitrophenyl-ATP, a fluorescent analog of substrate ATP, indicate that these mutant enzymes (D302A, D302N, K18M) retain the ability to stoichiometrically bind nucleotide triphosphates at the active site. These observations suggest the structural integrity of the mutant MDD proteins. The functional importance of mutated residues was evaluated by kinetic analysis. The 10(3) and 10(5)-fold decreases in k(cat) observed for the Asp 302 mutants (D302N and D302A, respectively) support assignment of a crucial catalytic role to Asp 302. A 30-fold decrease in activity and a 16-fold inflation of the K(m) for ATP is documented for the K18M mutant, indicating that Lys 18 influences the active site but is not crucial for reaction chemistry. Demonstration of the influence of conserved aspartate 302 appears to represent the first documentation of the functional importance of a residue in the MDD catalytic site and affords insight into phosphotransferase reactions catalyzed by a variety of enzymes in the galactokinase, homoserine kinase, mevalonate kinase, phosphom-evalonate kinase (GHMP kinase) family.  相似文献   

3.
4.
BACKGROUND: Homoserine kinase (HSK) catalyzes an important step in the threonine biosynthesis pathway. It belongs to a large yet unique class of small metabolite kinases, the GHMP kinase superfamily. Members in the GHMP superfamily participate in several essential metabolic pathways, such as amino acid biosynthesis, galactose metabolism, and the mevalonate pathway. RESULTS: The crystal structure of HSK and its complex with ADP reveal a novel nucleotide binding fold. The N-terminal domain contains an unusual left-handed betaalphabeta unit, while the C-terminal domain has a central alpha-beta plait fold with an insertion of four helices. The phosphate binding loop in HSK is distinct from the classical P loops found in many ATP/GTP binding proteins. The bound ADP molecule adopts a rare syn conformation and is in the opposite orientation from those bound to the P loop-containing proteins. Inspection of the substrate binding cavity indicates several amino acid residues that are likely to be involved in substrate binding and catalysis. CONCLUSIONS: The crystal structure of HSK is the first representative in the GHMP superfamily to have determined structure. It provides insight into the structure and nucleotide binding mechanism of not only the HSK family but also a variety of enzymes in the GHMP superfamily. Such enzymes include galactokinases, mevalonate kinases, phosphomevalonate kinases, mevalonate pyrophosphate decarboxylases, and several proteins of yet unknown functions.  相似文献   

5.
Mevalonate kinase serine/threonine residues have been implicated in substrate binding and inherited metabolic disease. Alignment of >20 mevalonate kinase sequences indicates that Ser-145, Ser-146, Ser-201, and Thr-243 are the only invariant residues with alcohol side chains. These residues have been individually mutated to alanine. Structural integrity of the mutants has been demonstrated by binding studies using fluorescent and spin-labeled ATP analogs. Kinetic characterization of the mutants indicates only modest changes in K(m)((ATP)). K(m) for mevalonate increases by approximately 20-fold for S146A, approximately 40-fold for T243A, and 100-fold for S201A. V(max) changes for S145A, S201A, and T243A are < or =3-fold. Thus, the 65-fold activity decrease associated with the inherited human T243I mutation seems attributable to the nonconservative substitution rather than any critical catalytic function. V(max) for S146A is diminished by 4000-fold. In terms of V/K(MVA), this substitution produces a 10(5)-fold effect, suggesting an active site location and catalytic role for Ser-146. The large k(cat) effect suggests that Ser-146 productively orients ATP during catalysis. K(D(Mg-ATP)) increases by almost 40-fold for S146A, indicating a specific role for Ser-146 in liganding Mg(2+)-ATP. Instead of mapping within a proposed C-terminal ATP binding motif, Ser-146 is situated in a centrally located motif, which characterizes the galactokinase/homoserine kinase/ mevalonate kinase/phosphomevalonate kinase protein family. These observations represent the first functional demonstration that this region is part of the active site in these related phosphotransferases.  相似文献   

6.
Choline kinase catalyzes the phosphorylation of choline by ATP, the first committed step in the CDP-choline pathway for phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis. To begin to elucidate the mechanism of catalysis by this enzyme, choline kinase A-2 from Caenorhabditis elegans was analyzed by systematic mutagenesis of highly conserved residues followed by analysis of kinetic and structural parameters. Specifically, mutants were analyzed with respect to K(m) and k(cat) values for each substrate and Mg(2+), inhibitory constants for Mg(2+) and Ca(2+), secondary structure as monitored by circular dichroism, and sensitivity to unfolding in guanidinium hydrochloride. The most severe impairment of catalysis occurred with the modification of Asp-255 and Asn-260, which are located in the conserved Brenner's phosphotransferase motif, and Asp-301 and Glu-303, in the signature choline kinase motif. For example, mutation of Asp-255 or Asp-301 to Ala eliminated detectable catalytic activity, and mutation of Asn-260 and Glu-303 to Ala decreased k(cat) by 300- and 10-fold, respectively. Additionally, the K(m) for Mg(2+) for mutants N260A and E303A was approximately 30-fold higher than that of wild type. Several other residues (Ser-86, Arg-111, Glu-125, and Trp-387) were identified as being important: Catalytic efficiencies (k(cat)/K(m)) for the enzymes in which these residues were mutated to Ala were reduced to 2-25% of wild type. The high degree of structural similarity among choline kinase A-2, aminoglycoside phosphotransferases, and protein kinases, together with the results from this mutational analysis, indicates it is likely that these conserved residues are located at the catalytic core of choline kinase.  相似文献   

7.
Although bacteria and eukaryotes share a pathway for coenzyme A (CoA) biosynthesis, we previously clarified that most archaea utilize a distinct pathway for the conversion of pantoate to 4'-phosphopantothenate. Whereas bacteria/eukaryotes use pantothenate synthetase and pantothenate kinase (PanK), the hyperthermophilic archaeon Thermococcus kodakarensis utilizes two novel enzymes: pantoate kinase (PoK) and phosphopantothenate synthetase (PPS). Here, we report a detailed biochemical examination of PoK from T. kodakarensis. Kinetic analyses revealed that the PoK reaction displayed Michaelis-Menten kinetics toward ATP, whereas substrate inhibition was observed with pantoate. PoK activity was not affected by the addition of CoA/acetyl-CoA. Interestingly, PoK displayed broad nucleotide specificity and utilized ATP, GTP, UTP, and CTP with comparable k(cat)/K(m) values. Sequence alignment of 27 PoK homologs revealed seven conserved residues with reactive side chains, and variant proteins were constructed for each residue. Activity was not detected when mutations were introduced to Ser104, Glu134, and Asp143, suggesting that these residues play vital roles in PoK catalysis. Kinetic analysis of the other variant proteins, with mutations S28A, H131A, R155A, and T186A, indicated that all four residues are involved in pantoate recognition and that Arg155 and Thr186 play important roles in PoK catalysis. Gel filtration analyses of the variant proteins indicated that Thr186 is also involved in dimer assembly. A sequence comparison between PoK and other members of the GHMP kinase family suggests that Ser104 and Glu134 are involved in binding with phosphate and Mg(2+), respectively, while Asp143 is the base responsible for proton abstraction from the pantoate hydroxy group.  相似文献   

8.
Fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) is a membrane-bound enzyme responsible for the catabolism of neuromodulatory fatty acid amides, including anandamide and oleamide. FAAH's primary structure identifies this enzyme as a member of a diverse group of alkyl amidases, known collectively as the "amidase signature family". At present, this enzyme family's catalytic mechanism remains poorly understood. In this study, we investigated the catalytic features of FAAH through mutagenesis, affinity labeling, and steady-state kinetic methods. In particular, we focused on the respective roles of three serine residues that are conserved in all amidase signature enzymes (S217, S218, and S241 in FAAH). Mutation of each of these serines to alanine resulted in a FAAH enzyme bearing significant catalytic defects, with the S217A and S218A mutants showing 2300- and 95-fold reductions in k(cat), respectively, and the S241A mutant exhibiting no detectable catalytic activity. The double S217A:S218A FAAH mutant displayed a 230 000-fold decrease in k(cat), supporting independent catalytic functions for these serine residues. Affinity labeling of FAAH with a specific nucleophile reactive inhibitor, ethoxy oleoyl fluorophosphonate, identified S241 as the enzyme's catalytic nucleophile. The pH dependence of FAAH's k(cat) and k(cat)/K(m) implicated a base involved in catalysis with a pK(a) of 7.9. Interestingly, mutation of each of FAAH's conserved histidines (H184, H358, and H449) generated active enzymes, indicating that FAAH does not contain a Ser-His-Asp catalytic triad commonly found in other mammalian serine hydrolytic enzymes. The unusual properties of FAAH identified here suggest that this enzyme, and possibly the amidase signature family as a whole, may hydrolyze amides by a novel catalytic mechanism.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Mevalonate diphosphate decarboxylase (MDD) catalyzes the final step of the mevalonate pathway, the Mg(2+)-ATP dependent decarboxylation of mevalonate 5-diphosphate (MVAPP), producing isopentenyl diphosphate (IPP). Synthesis of IPP, an isoprenoid precursor molecule that is a critical intermediate in peptidoglycan and polyisoprenoid biosynthesis, is essential in Gram-positive bacteria (e.g., Staphylococcus, Streptococcus, and Enterococcus spp.), and thus the enzymes of the mevalonate pathway are ideal antimicrobial targets. MDD belongs to the GHMP superfamily of metabolite kinases that have been extensively studied for the past 50 years, yet the crystallization of GHMP kinase ternary complexes has proven to be difficult. To further our understanding of the catalytic mechanism of GHMP kinases with the purpose of developing broad spectrum antimicrobial agents that target the substrate and nucleotide binding sites, we report the crystal structures of wild-type and mutant (S192A and D283A) ternary complexes of Staphylococcus epidermidis MDD. Comparison of apo, MVAPP-bound, and ternary complex wild-type MDD provides structural information about the mode of substrate binding and the catalytic mechanism. Structural characterization of ternary complexes of catalytically deficient MDD S192A and D283A (k(cat) decreased 10(3)- and 10(5)-fold, respectively) provides insight into MDD function. The carboxylate side chain of invariant Asp(283) functions as a catalytic base and is essential for the proper orientation of the MVAPP C3-hydroxyl group within the active site funnel. Several MDD amino acids within the conserved phosphate binding loop ("P-loop") provide key interactions, stabilizing the nucleotide triphosphoryl moiety. The crystal structures presented here provide a useful foundation for structure-based drug design.  相似文献   

11.
Dispersin B (DspB), a family 20 beta-hexosaminidase from the oral pathogen Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans, cleaves beta(1,6)-linked N-acetylglucosamine polymer. In order to understand the substrate specificity of DspB, we have undertaken to characterize several conserved and nonconserved residues in the vicinity of the active site. The active sites of DspB and other family 20 hexosaminidases possess three highly conserved acidic residues, several aromatic residues and an arginine at subsite -1. These residues were mutated using site-directed mutagenesis and characterized for their enzyme activity. Our results show that a highly conserved acid pair in beta-hexosaminidases D183 and E184, and E332 play a critical role in the hydrolysis of the substrates. pH activity profile analysis showed a shift to a higher pH (6.8) in the optimal activity for the E184Q mutant, suggesting that this residue might act as the acid/base catalyst. The reduction in k(cat) observed for Y187A and Y278A mutants suggests that the Y187 residue (unique to DspB) located on a loop might play a role in substrate specificity and be a part of subsite +1, whereas the hydrogen-bond interaction between Y278A and the N-acetyl group might help to stabilize the transition state. Mutation of W237 and W330 residues abolished hydrolytic activity completely suggesting that alteration at these positions might collapse the binding pocket for the N-acetyl group. Mutation of the conserved R27 residue (to R27A or R27K) also caused significant reduction in k(cat) suggesting that R27 might be involved in stabilization of the transition state. From these results, we conclude that in DspB, and possibly in other structurally similar family 20 hydrolases, some residues at the active site assist in orienting the N-acetyl group to participate in the substrate-assisted mechanism, whereas other residues such as R27 and E332 assist in holding the terminal N-acetylglucosamine during the hydrolysis.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Site-directed mutagenesis and a comparative characterisation of the kinetic parameters, pH dependency of activity and thermal stability of mutant and wild-type enzymes have been used in association with crystallographic analysis to delineate the functions of several active site residues in a novel glycoside hydrolase family 8 xylanase. Each of the residues investigated plays an essential role in this enzyme: E78 as the general acid, D281 as the general base and in orientating the nucleophilic water molecule, Y203 in maintaining the position of the nucleophilic water molecule and in structural integrity and D144 in sugar ring distortion and transition state stabilization. Interestingly, although crystal structure analyses and the pH-activity profiles clearly identify the functions of E78 and D281, substitution of these residues with their amide derivatives results in only a 250-fold and 700-fold reduction in their apparent k(cat) values, respectively. This, in addition to the observation that the proposed general base is not conserved in all glycoside hydrolase family 8 enzymes, indicates that the mechanistic architecture in this family of inverting enzymes is more complex than is conventionally believed and points to a diversity in the identity of the mechanistically important residues as well as in the arrangement of the intricate microenvironment of the active site among members of this family.  相似文献   

14.
The amino acid binding domains of the tryptophanyl (TrpRS)- and tyrosyl-tRNA synthetases (TyrRS) of Bacillus stearothermophilus are highly homologous. These similarities suggest that conserved residues in TrpRS may be responsible for both determining tryptophan recognition and discrimination against tyrosine. This was investigated by the systematic mutation of TrpRS residues based upon the identity of homologous positions in TyrRS. Of the four residues which interact directly with the aromatic side chain of tryptophan (Phe5, Met129, Asp132, and Val141) replacements of Asp132 led to significant changes in the catalytic efficiency of Trp aminoacylation (200-1250-fold reduction in k(cat)/K(M)) and substitution of Val141 by the larger Glu side chain reduced k(cat)/K(M) by 300-fold. Mutation of Pro127, which determines the position of active-site residues, did not significantly effect Trp binding. Of the mutants tested, D132N TrpRS also showed a significant reduction in discrimination against Tyr, with Tyr acting as a competitive inhibitor but not a substrate. The analogous residue in B. stearothermophilusTyrRS (Asp176) has also been implicated as a determinant of amino acid specificity in earlier studies [de Prat Gay, G., Duckworth, H. W., and Fersht, A. R. (1993) FEBS Lett. 318, 167-171]. This striking similarity in the function of a highly conserved residue found in both TrpRS and TyrRS provides mechanistic support for a common origin of the two enzymes.  相似文献   

15.
Jackman JE  Phizicky EM 《Biochemistry》2008,47(16):4817-4825
The yeast tRNA(His) guanylyltransferase (Thg1) is an essential enzyme in yeast. Thg1 adds a single G residue to the 5' end of tRNA(His) (G(-1)), which serves as a crucial determinant for aminoacylation of tRNA(His). Thg1 is the only known gene product that catalyzes the 3'-5' addition of a single nucleotide via a normal phosphodiester bond, and since there is no identifiable sequence similarity between Thg1 and any other known enzyme family, the mechanism by which Thg1 catalyzes this unique reaction remains unclear. We have altered 29 highly conserved Thg1 residues to alanine, and using three assays to assess Thg1 catalytic activity and substrate specificity, we have demonstrated that the vast majority of these highly conserved residues (24/29) affect Thg1 function in some measurable way. We have identified 12 Thg1 residues that are critical for G(-1) addition, based on significantly decreased ability to add G(-1) to tRNA(His) in vitro and significant defects in complementation of a thg1Delta yeast strain. We have also identified a single Thg1 alteration (D68A) that causes a dramatic decrease in the rigorous specificity of Thg1 for tRNA(His). This single alteration enhances the k(cat)/K(M) for ppp-tRNA(Phe) by nearly 100-fold relative to that of wild-type Thg1. These results suggest that Thg1 substrate recognition is at least in part mediated by preventing recognition of incorrect substrates for nucleotide addition.  相似文献   

16.
Krepkiy DV  Miziorko HM 《Biochemistry》2005,44(7):2671-2677
Alignment of more than 20 deduced sequences for mevalonate diphosphate decarboxylase (MDD) indicates that serines 34, 36, 120,121, 153, and 155 are invariant residues that map within a proposed interdomain active site cleft. To test possible active site roles for these invariant serines, each has been mutated to alanine. S34A exhibits limited solubility and impaired binding of the fluorescent ATP analogue, trinitrophenyl-ATP (TNP-ATP), suggesting that Ser-34 substitution destabilizes proper enzyme folding. All other serine mutants retain structural integrity, as indicated by their ability to bind TNP-ATP at levels comparable to wild-type enzyme. S153A exhibits a 18-fold inflation in K(d) for Mg-ATP, as indicated by competitive displacement of TNP-ATP; the enzyme also is characterized by a 35-fold inflation in K(m) for Mg-ATP. S155A exhibits a 26-fold inflation in K(m) for Mg-ATP, but competitive displacement of TNP-ATP indicates only a 2-fold inflation in K(d) for this substrate. S155A exhibits both a 16-fold inflation in K(m) for mevalonate diphosphate and a 14-fold inflation in K(i(slope)) for the substrate analogue, diphosphoglycolylproline. These observations suggest roles for Ser-153 and Ser-155 in substrate binding. Catalytic consequences of mutating invariant serines 36, 120, 153, and 155 are modest (<8-fold diminution in k(cat)). In contrast, S121A, which exhibits only modest changes in K(d) for Mg-ATP and K(m) for mevalonate diphosphate, is characterized by a >42,000-fold diminution in k(cat), indicating the critical involvement of Ser-121 in reaction catalysis. The selective involvement of the latter of two tandem serine residues (Ser-120, Ser-121) in a conserved sequence motif suggests mechanistic similarities within the GHMP kinase superfamily of proteins.  相似文献   

17.
Galactokinase plays a key role in normal galactose metabolism by catalyzing the ATP-dependent phosphorylation of alpha-D-galactose to galactose 1-phosphate. In humans, mutations in the galactokinase gene can lead to the diseased state referred to as Type II galactosemia. Here we describe the three-dimensional structure of galactokinase from Lactococcus lactis determined to 2.1-A resolution. As expected from amino acid sequence alignments, galactokinase adopts a similar topology to that observed for members of the GHMP superfamily. The N-terminal domain is characterized by a five-stranded mixed beta-sheet while the C-terminal motif is dominated by two distinct four-stranded anti-parallel beta-sheets. The structure was solved in the presence of alpha-D-galactose and inorganic phosphate. These ligands are wedged between the N- and C-terminal domains. Amino acid side chains responsible for anchoring the sugar ligand to the protein include Arg36, Glu42, Asp45, Asp183, and Tyr233. Both Arg36 and Asp183 are strictly conserved in the amino acid sequences available in the literature thus far for galactokinases. Interestingly, the carboxylate side chain of Asp183 is positioned within 3.5 A of the C-1 hydroxyl group of galactose, whereas the guanidinium group of Arg36 is situated between both the C-1 hydroxyl group and the inorganic phosphate. Most likely these residues play key roles in catalysis. The structure of galactokinase described here serves as a model for understanding the functional consequences of point mutations known to result in Type II galactosemia in humans.  相似文献   

18.
Phosphite dehydrogenase (PTDH) from Pseudomonas stutzeri catalyzes the nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide-dependent oxidation of phosphite to phosphate. The enzyme belongs to the family of D-hydroxy acid dehydrogenases (DHDHs). A search of the protein databases uncovered many additional putative phosphite dehydrogenases. The genes encoding four diverse candidates were cloned and expressed, and the enzymes were purified and characterized. All oxidized phosphite to phosphate and had similar kinetic parameters despite a low level of pairwise sequence identity (39-72%). A recent crystal structure identified Arg301 as a residue in the active site that has not been investigated previously. Arg301 is fully conserved in the enzymes shown here to be PTDHs, but the residue is not conserved in other DHDHs. Kinetic analysis of site-directed mutants of this residue shows that it is important for efficient catalysis, with an ~100-fold decrease in k(cat) and an almost 700-fold increase in K(m,phosphite) for the R301A mutant. Interestingly, the R301K mutant displayed a slightly higher k(cat) than the parent PTDH, and a more modest increase in K(m) for phosphite (nearly 40-fold). Given these results, Arg301 may be involved in the binding and orientation of the phosphite substrate and/or play a catalytic role via electrostatic interactions. Three other residues in the active site region that are conserved in the PTDH orthologs but not DHDHs were identified (Trp134, Tyr139, and Ser295). The importance of these residues was also investigated by site-directed mutagenesis. All of the mutants had k(cat) values similar to that of the wild-type enzyme, indicating these residues are not important for catalysis.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains that contain the ery8-1 mutation are temperature sensitive for growth due to a defect in phosphomevalonate kinase, an enzyme of isoprene and ergosterol biosynthesis. A plasmid bearing the yeast ERG8 gene was isolated from a YCp50 genomic library by functional complementation of the erg8-1 mutant strain. Genetic analysis demonstrated that integrated copies of an ERG8 plasmid mapped to the erg8 locus, confirming the identity of this clone. Southern analysis showed that ERG8 was a single-copy gene. Subcloning and DNA sequencing defined the functional ERG8 regulon as an 850-bp upstream region and an adjacent 1,272-bp open reading frame. The deduced 424-amino-acid ERG8 protein showed no homology to known proteins except within a putative ATP-binding domain present in many kinases. Disruption of the chromosomal ERG8 coding region by integration of URA3 or HIS3 marker fragments was lethal in haploid cells, indicating that this gene is essential. Expression of the ERG8 gene in S. cerevisiae from the galactose-inducible galactokinase (GAL1) promoter resulted in 1,000-fold-elevated levels of phosphomevalonate kinase enzyme activity. Overproduction of a soluble protein with the predicted 48-kDa size for phosphomevalonate kinase was also observed in the yeast cells.  相似文献   

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