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1.
ATP sulfurylase catalyzes the first step in the activation of sulfate by transferring the adenylyl-moiety (AMP approximately ) of ATP to sulfate to form adenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (APS) and pyrophosphate (PP(i)). Subsequently, APS kinase mediates transfer of the gamma-phosphoryl group of ATP to APS to form 3'-phosphoadenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS) and ADP. The recently determined crystal structure of yeast ATP sulfurylase suggests that its C-terminal domain is structurally quite independent from the other domains, and not essential for catalytic activity. It seems, however, to dictate the oligomerization state of the protein. Here we show that truncation of this domain results in a monomeric enzyme with slightly enhanced catalytic efficiency. Structural alignment of the C-terminal domain indicated that it is extremely similar in its fold to APS kinase although not catalytically competent. While carrying out these structural and functional studies a surface groove was noted. Careful inspection and modeling revealed that the groove is sufficiently deep and wide, as well as properly positioned, to act as a substrate channel between the ATP sulfurylase and APS kinase-like domains of the enzyme.  相似文献   

2.
3′-phosphoadenosine 5′-phosphosulfate (PAPS) is synthesized in two steps by PAPS synthase (PAPSS). PAPSS is comprised of ATP sulfurylase (ATPS) and APS kinase (APSK) domain activities. ATPS combines inorganic sulfate with α-phosphoryl of ATP to form adenosine 5′-phosphosulfate (APS) and PPi. In the second step APS is phosphorylated at 3′-OH using another mole of ATP to form PAPS and ADP catalyzed by APSK. The transfer of gamma-phosphoryl from ATP onto 3′-OH requires Mg2+ and purported to involve residues D87GD89N. We report that mutation of either aspartic residue to alanine completely abolishes APSK activity in PAPS formation. PAPSS is an, unique enzyme that binds to four different nucleotides: ATP and APS on both ATPS and APSK domains and ADP and PAPS exclusively on the APSK domain. The thermodynamic binding and the catalytic interplay must be very tightly controlled to form the end-product PAPS in the forward direction. Though APS binds to ATPS and APSK, in ATPS domain, the APS is a product and for APSK it is a substrate. DGDN motif is absent in ATPS and present in APSK. Mutation of D87 and D89 did not hamper ATPS activity however abolished APSK activity severely. Thus, D87GD89N region is required for stabilization of Mg2+-ATP, in the process of splitting the γ-phosphoryl from ATP and transfer of γ-phosphoryl onto 3′-OH of APS to form PAPS a process that cannot be achieved by ATPS domain. In addition, gamma32P-ATP, trapped phosphoryl enzyme intermediate more with PAPSS2 than with PAPSS1. This suggests inherent active site residues could control novel catalytic differences. Molecular docking studies of hPAPSS1with ATP + Mg2+ and APS of wild type and mutants supports the experimental results.  相似文献   

3.
The thermophilic chemolithotroph, Aquifex aeolicus, expresses a gene product that exhibits both ATP sulfurylase and adenosine-5'-phosphosulfate (APS) kinase activities. These enzymes are usually segregated on two separate proteins in most bacteria, fungi, and plants. The domain arrangement in the Aquifex enzyme is reminiscent of the fungal ATP sulfurylase, which contains a C-terminal domain that is homologous to APS kinase yet displays no kinase activity. Rather, in the fungal enzyme, the motif serves as a sulfurylase regulatory domain that binds the allosteric effector 3'-phosphoadenosine-5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS), the product of true APS kinase. Therefore, the Aquifex enzyme may represent an ancestral homolog of a primitive bifunctional enzyme, from which the fungal ATP sulfurylase may have evolved. In heterotrophic sulfur-assimilating organisms such as fungi, ATP sulfurylase catalyzes the first committed step in sulfate assimilation to produce APS, which is subsequently metabolized to generate all sulfur-containing biomolecules. In contrast, ATP sulfurylase in sulfur chemolithotrophs catalyzes the reverse reaction to produce ATP and sulfate from APS and pyrophosphate. Here, the 2.3 A resolution X-ray crystal structure of Aquifex ATP sulfurylase-APS kinase bifunctional enzyme is presented. The protein dimerizes through its APS kinase domain and contains ADP bound in all four active sites. Comparison of the Aquifex ATP sulfurylase active site with those from sulfate assimilators reveals similar dispositions of the bound nucleotide and nearby residues. This suggests that minor perturbations are responsible for optimizing the kinetic properties for the physiologically relevant direction. The APS kinase active-site lid adopts two distinct conformations, where one conformation is distorted by crystal contacts. Additionally, a disulfide bond is observed in one ATP-binding P-loop of the APS kinase active site. This linkage accounts for the low kinase activity of the enzyme under oxidizing conditions. The thermal stability of the Aquifex enzyme can be explained by the 43% decreased cavity volume found within the protein core.  相似文献   

4.
Sulfation is a major modification of many molecules in eukaryotes that is dependent on the enzymatic synthesis of an activated sulfate donor, 3'-phosphoadenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS). While sulfate activation has long been assumed to occur in the cytosol, we show in this study that human PAPS synthetase 1 (PAPSS1), a bifunctional ATP sulfurylase/adenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (APS) kinase enzyme sufficient for PAPS synthesis, accumulates in the nucleus of mammalian cells. Nuclear targeting of the enzyme is mediated by its APS kinase domain and requires a catalytically dispensable 21 amino acid sequence at the amino terminus. Human PAPSS1 and Drosophila melanogaster PAPSS localize to the nucleus in yeast and relieve the methionine auxotrophy of ATP sulfurylase- or APS kinase-deficient strains, suggesting that PAPSS1 is fully functional in vivo when targeted to the nucleus. A second PAPS synthetase gene, designated PAPSS2, has recently been described, mutations of which are responsible for abnormal skeletal development in human spondyloepimetaphyseal dysplasia and murine brachymorphism. We found that PAPSS2, which localizes to the cytoplasm when ectopically expressed in mammalian cells, is relocated to the nucleus when coexpressed with PAPSS1. Taken together, these results indicate that a sulfation pathway might exist in the nucleus of eukaryotic cells. -Besset, S., Vincourt, J.-B., Amalric, F., Girard, J.-P. Nuclear localization of PAPS synthetase 1: a sulfate activation pathway in the nucleus of eukaryotic cells.  相似文献   

5.
Adenosine 5'-phosphosulfate kinase (APSK) catalyzes the ATP-dependent synthesis of adenosine 3'-phosphate 5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS), which is an essential metabolite for sulfur assimilation in prokaryotes and eukaryotes. Using APSK from Arabidopsis thaliana, we examine the energetics of nucleotide binary and ternary complex formation and probe active site features that coordinate the order of ligand addition. Calorimetric analysis shows that binding can occur first at either nucleotide site, but that initial interaction at the ATP/ADP site was favored and enhanced affinity for APS in the second site by 50-fold. The thermodynamics of the two possible binding models (i.e. ATP first versus APS first) differs and implies that active site structural changes guide the order of nucleotide addition. The ligand binding analysis also supports an earlier suggestion of intermolecular interactions in the dimeric APSK structure. Crystallographic, site-directed mutagenesis, and energetic analyses of oxyanion recognition by the P-loop in the ATP/ADP binding site and the role of Asp(136), which bridges the ATP/ADP and APS/PAPS binding sites, suggest how the ordered nucleotide binding sequence and structural changes are dynamically coordinated for catalysis.  相似文献   

6.
Lansdon EB  Segel IH  Fisher AJ 《Biochemistry》2002,41(46):13672-13680
Adenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (APS) kinase catalyzes the second reaction in the two-step, ATP-dependent conversion of inorganic sulfate to 3'-phosphoadenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS). PAPS serves as the sulfuryl donor for the biosynthesis of all sulfate esters and also as a precursor of reduced sulfur biomolecules in many organisms. Previously, we determined the crystal structure of ligand-free APS kinase from the filamentous fungus, Penicillium chrysogenum [MacRae et al. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 1613-1621]. That structure contained a protease-susceptible disordered region ("mobile lid"; residues 145-170). Addition of MgADP and APS, which together promote the formation of a nonproductive "dead-end" ternary complex, protected the lid from trypsin. This report presents the 1.43 A resolution crystal structure of APS kinase with both ADP and APS bound at the active site and the 2.0 A resolution structure of the enzyme with ADP alone bound. The mobile lid is ordered in both complexes and is shown to provide part of the binding site for APS. That site is formed primarily by the highly conserved Arg 66, Arg 80, and Phe 75 from the protein core and Phe 165 from the mobile lid. The two Phe residues straddle the adenine ring of bound APS. Arg 148, a completely conserved residue, is the only residue in the mobile lid that interacts directly with bound ADP. Ser 34, located in the apex of the P-loop, hydrogen-bonds to the 3'-OH of APS, the phosphoryl transfer target. The structure of the binary E.ADP complex revealed further changes in the active site and N-terminal helix that occur upon the binding/release of (P)APS.  相似文献   

7.
8.
In mammals, the universal sulfuryl group donor molecule 3'-phosphoadenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS) is synthesized in two steps by a bifunctional enzyme called PAPS synthetase. The APS kinase domain of PAPS synthetase catalyzes the second step in which APS, the product of the ATP-sulfurylase domain, is phosphorylated on its 3'-hydroxyl group to yield PAPS. The substrate APS acts as a strong uncompetitive inhibitor of the APS kinase reaction. We generated truncated and point mutants of the APS kinase domain that are active but devoid of substrate inhibition. Structural analysis of these mutant enzymes reveals the intrasubunit rearrangements that occur upon substrate binding. We also observe intersubunit rearrangements in this dimeric enzyme that result in asymmetry between the two monomers. Our work elucidates the structural elements required for the ability of the substrate APS to inhibit the reaction at micromolar concentrations. Because the ATP-sulfurylase domain of PAPS synthetase influences these elements in the APS kinase domain, we propose that this could be a communication mechanism between the two domains of the bifunctional enzyme.  相似文献   

9.
Bifunctional human PAPS synthetase (PAPSS) catalyzes, in a two-step process, the formation of the activated sulfate carrier 3'-phosphoadenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS). The first reaction involves the formation of the 5'-adenosine phosphosulfate (APS) intermediate from ATP and inorganic sulfate. APS is then further phosphorylated on its 3'-hydroxyl group by an additional ATP molecule to generate PAPS. The former reaction is catalyzed by the ATP-sulfurylase domain and the latter by the APS-kinase domain. Here, we report the structure of the APS-kinase domain of PAPSS isoform 1 (PAPSS1) representing the Michaelis complex with the products ADP-Mg and PAPS. This structure provides a rare glimpse of the active conformation of an enzyme catalyzing phosphoryl transfer without resorting to substrate analogs, inactivating mutations, or catalytically non-competent conditions. Our structure shows the interactions involved in the binding of the magnesium ion and PAPS, thereby revealing residues critical for catalysis. The essential magnesium ion is observed bridging the phosphate groups of the products. This function of the metal ion is made possible by the DGDN-loop changing its conformation from that previously reported, and identifies these loop residues unambiguously as a Walker B motif. Furthermore, the second aspartate residue of this motif is the likely candidate for initiating nucleophilic attack on the ATP gamma-phosphate group by abstracting the proton from the 3'-hydroxyl group of the substrate APS. We report the structure of the APS-kinase domain of human PAPSS1 in complex with two APS molecules, demonstrating the ability of the ATP/ADP-binding site to bind APS. Both structures reveal extended N termini that approach the active site of the neighboring monomer. Together, these results significantly increase our understandings of how catalysis is achieved by APS-kinase.  相似文献   

10.
Lansdon EB  Fisher AJ  Segel IH 《Biochemistry》2004,43(14):4356-4365
Recombinant human 3'-phosphoadenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS) synthetase, isoform 1 (brain), was purified to near-homogeneity from an Escherichia coli expression system and kinetically characterized. The native enzyme, a dimer with each 71 kDa subunit containing an adenosine triphosphate (ATP) sulfurylase and an adenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (APS) kinase domain, catalyzes the overall formation of PAPS from ATP and inorganic sulfate. The protein is active as isolated, but activity is enhanced by treatment with dithiothreitol. APS kinase activity displayed the characteristic substrate inhibition by APS (K(I) of 47.9 microM at saturating MgATP). The maximum attainable activity of 0.12 micromol min(-1) (mg of protein)(-1) was observed at an APS concentration ([APS](opt)) of 15 microM. The theoretical K(m) for APS (at saturating MgATP) and the K(m) for MgATP (at [APS](opt)) were 4.2 microM and 0.14 mM, respectively. At likely cellular levels of MgATP (2.5 mM) and sulfate (0.4 mM), the overall endogenous rate of PAPS formation under optimum assay conditions was 0.09 micromol min(-1) (mg of protein)(-1). Upon addition of pure Penicillium chrysogenum APS kinase in excess, the overall rate increased to 0.47 micromol min(-1) (mg of protein)(-1). The kinetic constants of the ATP sulfurylase domain were as follows: V(max,f) = 0.77 micromol min(-1) (mg of protein)(-1), K(mA(MgATP)) = 0.15 mM, K(ia(MgATP)) = 1 mM, K(mB(sulfate)) = 0.16 mM, V(max,r) = 18.7 micromol min(-1) (mg of protein)(-1), K(mQ(APS)) = 4.8 microM, K(iq(APS)) = 18 nM, and K(mP(PPi)) = 34.6 microM. The (a) imbalance between ATP sulfurylase and APS kinase activities, (b) accumulation of APS in solution during the overall reaction, (c) rate acceleration provided by exogenous APS kinase, and (d) availability of both active sites to exogenous APS all argue against APS channeling. Molybdate, selenate, chromate ("chromium VI"), arsenate, tungstate, chlorate, and perchlorate bind to the ATP sulfurylase domain, with the first five serving as alternative substrates that promote the decomposition of ATP to AMP and PP(i). Selenate, chromate, and arsenate produce transient APX intermediates that are sufficiently long-lived to be captured and 3'-phosphorylated by APS kinase. (The putative PAPX products decompose to adenosine 3',5'-diphosphate and the original oxyanion.) Chlorate and perchlorate form dead-end E.MgATP.oxyanion complexes. Phenylalanine, reported to be an inhibitor of brain ATP sulfurylase, was without effect on PAPS synthetase isoform 1.  相似文献   

11.
The nodulation genes nodP and nodQ are required for production of Rhizobium meliloti nodulation (Nod) factors. These sulfated oligosaccharides act as morphogenic signals to alfalfa, the symbiotic host of R. meliloti. In previous work, we have shown that nodP and nodQ encode ATP sulfurylase, which catalyzes the formation of APS (adenosine 5'-phosphosulfate) and PPi. In the subsequent metabolic reaction, APS is converted to PAPS (3'-phosphoadenosine 5'-phosphosulfate) by APS kinase. In Escherichia coli, cysD and cysN encode ATP sulfurylase; cysC encodes APS kinase. Here, we present genetic, enzymatic, and sequence similarity data demonstrating that nodP and nodQ encode both ATP sulfurylase and APS kinase activities and that these enzymes associate into a multifunctional protein complex which we designate the sulfate activation complex. We have previously described the presence of a putative GTP-binding site in the nodQ sequence. The present report also demonstrates that GTP enhances the rate of PAPS synthesis from ATP and sulfate (SO4(2-)) by NodP and NodQ expressed in E. coli. Thus, GTP is implicated as a metabolic requirement for synthesis of the R. meliloti Nod factors.  相似文献   

12.
Adenosine-5'-phosphosulfate kinase (APS kinase) catalyzes the formation of 3'-phosphoadenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS), the major form of activated sulfate in biological systems. The enzyme from Escherichia coli has complex kinetic behavior, including substrate inhibition by APS and formation of a phosphorylated enzyme (E-P) as a reaction intermediate. The presence of a phosphorylated enzyme potentially enables the steady-state kinetic mechanism to change from sequential to ping-pong as the APS concentration decreases. Kinetic and equilibrium binding measurements have been used to evaluate the proposed mechanism. Equilibrium binding studies show that APS, PAPS, ADP, and the ATP analog AMPPNP each bind at a single site per subunit; thus, substrates can bind in either order. When ATPgammaS replaces ATP as substrate the V(max) is reduced 535-fold, the kinetic mechanism is sequential at each APS concentration, and substrate inhibition is not observed. The results indicate that substrate inhibition arises from a kinetic phenomenon in which product formation from ATP binding to the E. APS complex is much slower than paths in which product formation results from APS binding either to the E. ATP complex or to E-P. APS kinase requires divalent cations such as Mg(2+) or Mn(2+) for activity. APS kinase binds one Mn(2+) ion per subunit in the absence of substrates, consistent with the requirement for a divalent cation in the phosphorylation of APS by E-P. The affinity for Mn(2+) increases 23-fold when the enzyme is phosphorylated. Two Mn(2+) ions bind per subunit when both APS and the ATP analog AMPPNP are present, indicating a potential dual metal ion catalytic mechanism.  相似文献   

13.
ATP sulfurylase from the hyperthermophilic chemolithotroph Aquifex aeolicus is a bacterial ortholog of the enzyme from filamentous fungi. (The subunit contains an adenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (APS) kinase-like, C-terminal domain.) The enzyme is highly heat stable with a half-life >1h at 90 degrees C. Steady-state kinetics are consistent with a random A-B, ordered P-Q mechanism where A=MgATP, B=SO4(2-), P=PP(i), and Q=APS. The kinetic constants suggest that the enzyme is optimized to act in the direction of ATP+sulfate formation. Chlorate is competitive with sulfate and with APS. In sulfur chemolithotrophs, ATP sulfurylase provides an efficient route for recycling PP(i) produced by biosynthetic reactions. However, the protein possesses low APS kinase activity. Consequently, it may also function to produce PAPS for sulfate ester formation or sulfate assimilation when hydrogen serves as the energy source and a reduced inorganic sulfur source is unavailable.  相似文献   

14.
Bacterial sulfate assimilation pathways provide for activation of inorganic sulfur for the biosynthesis of cysteine and methionine, through either adenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (APS) or 3'-phosphoadenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS) as intermediates. PAPS is also the substrate for sulfotransferases that produce sulfolipids, putative virulence factors, in Mycobacterium tuberculosis such as SL-1. In this report, genetic complementation using Escherichia coli mutant strains deficient in APS kinase and PAPS reductase was used to define the M. tuberculosis and Mycobacterium smegmatis CysH enzymes as APS reductases. Consequently, the sulfate assimilation pathway of M. tuberculosis proceeds from sulfate through APS, which is acted on by APS reductase in the first committed step toward cysteine and methionine. Thus, M. tuberculosis most likely produces PAPS for the sole use of this organism's sulfotransferases. Deletion of CysH from M. smegmatis afforded a cysteine and methionine auxotroph consistent with a metabolic branch point centered on APS. In addition, we have redefined the substrate specificity of the B. subtilis CysH, formerly designated a PAPS reductase, as an APS reductase, based on its ability to complement a mutant E. coli strain deficient in APS kinase. Together, these studies show that two conserved sequence motifs, CCXXRKXXPL and SXGCXXCT, found in the C termini of all APS reductases, but not in PAPS reductases, may be used to predict the substrate specificity of these enzymes. A functional domain of the M. tuberculosis CysC protein was cloned and expressed in E. coli, confirming the ability of this organism to make PAPS. The expression of recombinant M. tuberculosis APS kinase provides a means for the discovery of inhibitors of this enzyme and thus of the biosynthesis of SL-1.  相似文献   

15.
Adenosine-5'-phosphosulfate kinase (ATP:adenylylsulfate 3'-phosphotransferase), the second enzyme in the pathway of sulfate activation, has been purified (approximately 300-fold) to homogeneity from an Escherichia coli K12 strain, which overproduces the enzyme activity (approximately 100-fold). The purified enzyme has a specific activity of 153 mumol of 3'-phosphoadenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS) formed/min/mg of protein at 25 degrees C. The enzyme is remarkably efficient with a Vmax/Km(APS) of greater than 10(8) M-1 s-1, indicating that at physiologically low substrate concentrations the reaction is essentially diffusion limited. Upon incubation with MgATP a phosphorylated enzyme is formed; the isolated phosphorylated enzyme can transfer its phosphoryl group to adenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (APS) to form PAPS or to ADP to form ATP. The phosphorylated enzyme exists as a dimer of identical 21-kilodalton subunits, while the dephosphorylated form primarily exists as a tetramer. Divalent cations are required for activity with Mg(II), Mn(II), Co(II), and Cd(II) activating. Studies of the divalent metal-dependent stereoselectivity for the alpha- and beta-phosphorothioate derivatives of ATP indicate metal coordination to at least the alpha-phosphoryl group of the nucleotide. Steady state kinetic studies of the reverse reaction indicate a sequential mechanism, with a rapid equilibrium ordered binding of MgADP before PAPS. In the forward direction APS is a potent substrate inhibitor, competitive with ATP, complicating kinetic studies. The primary kinetic mechanism in the forward direction is sequential. Product inhibition studies at high concentrations of APS suggest an ordered kinetic mechanism with MgATP binding before APS. At submicromolar concentrations of APS, product inhibition by both MgADP and PAPS is more complex and is not consistent with a solely ordered sequential mechanism. The formation of a phosphorylated enzyme capable of transferring its phosphoryl group to APS or to MgADP suggests that a ping-pong pathway in which the rate of MgADP dissociation is comparable to the rate of APS binding might contribute at very low concentrations of APS. The substrate inhibition by APS is consistent with APS binding to the enzyme, to form a dead-end E.APS complex.  相似文献   

16.
The sulfate activation pathway is essential for the assimilation of sulfate and, in many bacteria, is comprised of three reactions: the synthesis of adenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (APS), the hydrolysis of GTP, and the 3'-phosphorylation of APS to produce 3'-phosphoadenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS), whose sulfuryl group is reduced or transferred to other metabolites. The entire sulfate activation pathway is organized into a single complex in Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Although present in many bacteria, these tripartite complexes have not been studied in detail. Initial rate characterization of the mycobacterial system reveals that it is poised for extremely efficient throughput: at saturating ATP, PAPS synthesis is 5800 times more efficient than APS synthesis. The APS kinase domain of the complex does not appear to form the covalent E.P intermediate observed in the closely related APS kinase from Escherichia coli. The stoichiometry of GTP hydrolysis and APS synthesis is 1:1, and the APS synthesis reaction is driven 1.1 x 10(6)-fold further during GTP hydrolysis; the system harnesses the full chemical potential of the hydrolysis reaction to the synthesis of APS. A key energy-coupling step in the mechanism is a ligand-induced isomerization that enhances the affinity of GTP and commits APS synthesis and GTP hydrolysis to the completion of the catalytic cycle. Ligand-induced increases in guanine nucleotide affinity observed in the mycobacterial system suggest that it too undergoes the energy-coupling isomerization.  相似文献   

17.
In Mycobacterium tuberculosis the sulfate activating complex provides a key branching point in sulfate assimilation. The complex consists of two polypeptide chains, CysD and CysN. CysD is an ATP sulfurylase that, with the energy provided by the GTPase activity of CysN, forms adenosine-5’-phosphosulfate (APS) which can then enter the reductive branch of sulfate assimilation leading to the biosynthesis of cysteine. The CysN polypeptide chain also contains an APS kinase domain (CysC) that phosphorylates APS leading to 3’-phosphoadenosine-5’-phosphosulfate, the sulfate donor in the synthesis of sulfolipids. We have determined the crystal structures of CysC from M. tuberculosis as a binary complex with ADP, and as ternary complexes with ADP and APS and the ATP mimic AMP-PNP and APS, respectively, to resolutions of 1.5 Å, 2.1 Å and 1.7 Å, respectively. CysC shows the typical APS kinase fold, and the structures provide comprehensive views of the catalytic machinery, conserved in this enzyme family. Comparison to the structure of the human homolog show highly conserved APS and ATP binding sites, questioning the feasibility of the design of specific inhibitors of mycobacterial CysC. Residue Cys556 is part of the flexible lid region that closes off the active site upon substrate binding. Mutational analysis revealed this residue as one of the determinants controlling lid closure and hence binding of the nucleotide substrate.  相似文献   

18.
Adenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (APS) kinase (ATP:APS 3'-phosphotransferase) catalyzes the ultimate step in the biosynthesis of 3'-phosphoadenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS), the primary biological sulfuryl donor. APS kinase from Escherichia coli is phosphorylated upon incubation with ATP, yielding a protein that can complete the overall reaction through phosphorylation of APS. Rapid-quench kinetic experiments show that, in the absence of APS, ATP phosphorylates the enzyme with a rate constant of 46 s-1, which is equivalent to the Vmax for the overall APS kinase reaction. Similar pre-steady-state kinetic measurements show that the rate constant for transfer of the phosphoryl group from E-P to APS is 91 s-1. Thus, the phosphorylated enzyme is kinetically competent to be on the reaction path. In order to elucidate which amino acid residue is phosphorylated, and thus to define the active site region of APS kinase, we have determined the complete sequence of cysC, the structural gene for this enzyme in E. coli. The coding region contains 603 nucleotides and encodes a protein of 22,321 Da. Near the amino terminus is the sequence 35GLSGSGKS, which exemplifies a motif known to interact with the beta-phosphoryl group of purine nucleotides. The residue that is phosphorylated upon incubation with ATP has been identified as serine-109 on the basis of the amino acid composition of a radiolabeled peptide purified from a proteolytic digest of 32P-labeled enzyme. We have identified a sequence beginning at residue 147 which may reflect a PAPS binding site. This sequence was identified in the carboxy terminal region of 10 reported sequences of proteins of PAPS metabolism.  相似文献   

19.
20.
The formation of the sulfate donor [35S]3'-phosphoadenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS) from inorganic [35S]sulfate was studied using a novel assay. The assay was based on the quantitative transfer of radioactivity from [35S]PAPS to beta-naphthol under the action of phenolsulfotransferase activity from rat brain cytosol, with the [35S]beta-naphthyl sulfate formed being isolated by polystyrene bead chromatography. This simple assay was validated by comparison of results with those derived from direct assay of [35S]PAPS isolated by either TLC or ion exchange chromatography. [35S]PAPS formation by a high-speed supernatant of rat cerebral cortex occurred with an optimal pH of approximately 7.6, varied linearly with time and protein concentration, and depended on the presence of Mg2+-ATP. The latter could not be replaced by other nucleotides such as GTP, UTP, or CTP, which at 1-5 mM concentrations inhibited the reaction. Mg2+ could not be replaced by Mn2+, which at micromolar concentrations inhibited the reaction. The apparent Km values of Mg2+-ATP (at 0.1 mM [35S]sulfate) and inorganic sulfate (at 5 mM Mg2+-ATP) were 2.7 and 0.2 mM, respectively. These kinetics parameters corresponded to those reported for purified ATP sulfurylase (EC 2.7.7.4), the enzyme responsible for the first step of PAPS synthesis in liver. The product of its reaction, [35S]adenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (APS), could not be detected after incubations, an observation implying that the action of APS kinase was not rate limiting in cerebral extracts tested under the selected experimental conditions. [35S]PAPS formation was detectable in cytosolic fractions from various brain regions, which displayed only limited differences in synthesizing activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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