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 140 毫秒
1.
Ketopantoate reductase (KPR, EC 1.1.1.169) catalyzes the NADPH-dependent reduction of ketopantoate to pantoate, an essential step for the biosynthesis of pantothenate (vitamin B5). Inhibitors of the enzymes of this pathway have been proposed as potential antibiotics or herbicides. Here we present the crystal structure of Escherichia coli KPR in a precatalytic ternary complex with NADP+ and pantoate bound, solved to 2.3 A of resolution. The asymmetric unit contains two protein molecules, each in a ternary complex; however, one is in a more closed conformation than the other. A hinge bending between the N- and C-terminal domains is observed, which triggers the switch of the essential Lys176 to form a key hydrogen bond with the C2 hydroxyl of pantoate. Pantoate forms additional interactions with conserved residues Ser244, Asn98, and Asn180 and with two conservatively varied residues, Asn194 and Asn241. The steady-state kinetics of active site mutants R31A, K72A, N98A, K176A, S244A, and E256A implicate Asn98 as well as Lys176 and Glu256 in the catalytic mechanism. Isothermal titration calorimetry studies with these mutants further demonstrate the importance of Ser244 for substrate binding and of Arg31 and Lys72 for cofactor binding. Further calorimetric studies show that KPR discriminates binding of ketopantoate against pantoate only with NADPH bound. This work provides insights into the roles of active site residues and conformational changes in substrate recognition and catalysis, leading to the proposal of a detailed molecular mechanism for KPR activity.  相似文献   

2.
Ser10 and Lys13 found near the active site tyrosine of Escherichia coli DNA topoisomerase I are conserved among the type IA topoisomerases. Site-directed mutagenesis of these two residues to Ala reduced the relaxation and DNA cleavage activity, with a more severe effect from the Lys13 mutation. Changing Ser10 to Thr or Lys13 to Arg also resulted in loss of DNA cleavage and relaxation activity of the enzyme. In simulations of the open form of the topoisomerase–DNA complex, Lys13 interacts directly with Glu9 (proposed to be important in the catalytic mechanism). This interaction is removed in the K13A mutant, suggesting the importance of lysine as either a proton donor or a stabilizing cation during strand cleavage, while the Lys to Arg mutation significantly distorts catalytic residues. Ser10 forms a direct hydrogen bond with a phosphate group near the active site and is involved in direct binding of the DNA substrate; this interaction is disturbed in the S10A and S10T mutants. This combination of a lysine and a serine residue conserved in the active site of type IA topoisomerases may be required for correct positioning of the scissile phosphate and coordination of catalytic residues relative to each other so that DNA cleavage and subsequent strand passage can take place.  相似文献   

3.
We are probing the determinants of catalytic function and substrate specificity in serine proteases by kinetic and crystallographic characterization of genetically engineered site-directed mutants of rat trypsin. The role of the aspartyl residue at position 102, common to all members of the serine protease family, has been tested by substitution with asparagine. In the native enzyme, Asp102 accepts a hydrogen bond from the catalytic base His57, which facilitates the transfer of a proton from the enzyme nucleophile Ser195 to the substrate leaving group. At neutral pH, the mutant is four orders of magnitude less active than the naturally occurring enzyme, but its binding affinity for model substrates is virtually undiminished. Crystallographic analysis reveals that Asn102 donates a hydrogen bond to His57, forcing it to act as donor to Ser195. Below pH 6, His57 becomes statistically disordered. Presumably, the di-protonated population of histidyl side chains are unable to hydrogen bond to Asn102. Steric conflict may cause His57 to rotate away from the catalytic site. These results suggest that Asp102 not only provides inductive and orientation effects, but also stabilizes the productive tautomer of His57. Three experiments were carried out to alter the substrate specificity of trypsin. Glycine residues at positions 216 and 226 in the substrate-binding cavity were replaced by alanine residues in order to differentially affect lysine and arginine substrate binding. While the rate of catalysis by the mutant enzymes was reduced in the mutant enzymes, their substrate specificity was enhanced relative to trypsin. The increased specificity was caused by differential effects on the catalytic activity towards arginine and lysine substrates. The Gly----Ala substitution at 226 resulted in an altered conformation of the enzyme which is converted to an active trypsin-like conformation upon binding of a substrate analog. In a third experiment, Lys189, at the bottom of the specificity pocket, was replaced with an aspartate with the expectation that specificity of the enzyme might shift to aspartate. The mutant enzyme is not capable of cleaving at Arg and Lys or Asp, but shows an enhanced chymotrypsin-like specificity. Structural investigations of these mutants are in progress.  相似文献   

4.
PBPA from Mycobacterium tuberculosis is a class B-like penicillin-binding protein (PBP) that is not essential for cell growth in M. tuberculosis, but is important for proper cell division in Mycobacterium smegmatis. We have determined the crystal structure of PBPA at 2.05 Å resolution, the first published structure of a PBP from this important pathogen. Compared to other PBPs, PBPA has a relatively small N-terminal domain, and conservation of a cluster of charged residues within this domain suggests that PBPA is more related to class B PBPs than previously inferred from sequence analysis. The C-terminal domain is a typical transpeptidase fold and contains the three conserved active-site motifs characterisitic of penicillin-interacting enzymes. Whilst the arrangement of the SxxK and KTG motifs is similar to that observed in other PBPs, the SxN motif is markedly displaced away from the active site, such that its serine (Ser281) is not involved in hydrogen bonding with residues of the other two motifs. A disulfide bridge between Cys282 (the “x” of the SxN motif) and Cys266, which resides on an adjacent loop, may be responsible for this unusual conformation. Another interesting feature of the structure is a relatively long connection between β5 and α11, which restricts the space available in the active site of PBPA and suggests that conformational changes would be required to accommodate peptide substrate or β-lactam antibiotics during acylation. Finally, the structure shows that one of the two threonines postulated to be targets for phosphorylation is inaccessible (Thr362), whereas the other (Thr437) is well placed on a surface loop near the active site.  相似文献   

5.
The serine and cysteine proteinases represent two important classes of enzymes that use a catalytic triad to hydrolyze peptides and esters. The active site of the serine proteinases consists of three key residues, Asp...His...Ser. The hydroxyl group of serine functions as a nucleophile and the imidazole ring of histidine functions as a general acid/general base during catalysis. Similarly, the active site of the cysteine proteinases also involves three key residues: Asn, His, and Cys. The active site of the cysteine proteinases is generally believed to exist as a zwitterion (Asn...His+...Cys-) with the thiolate anion of the cysteine functioning as a nucleophile during the initial stages of catalysis. Curiously, the mutant serine proteinases, thiol subtilisin and thiol trypsin, which have the hybrid Asp...His...Cys triad, are almost catalytically inert. In this study, ab initio Hartree-Fock calculations have been performed on the active sites of papain and the mutant serine proteinase S195C rat trypsin. These calculations predict that the active site of papain exists predominately as a zwitterion (Cys-...His+...Asn). However, similar calculations on S195C rat trypsin demonstrate that the thiol mutant is unable to form a reactive thiolate anion prior to catalysis. Furthermore, structural comparisons between native papain and S195C rat trypsin have demonstrated that the spatial juxtapositions of the triad residues have been inverted in the serine and cysteine proteinases and, on this basis, I argue that it is impossible to convert a serine proteinase to a cysteine proteinase by site-directed mutagenesis.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Based on three-dimensional model of the bifunctional enzyme Destabilase-Lysozyme (mlDL-Ds2) in complex with trimer of N-acetylglucosoamine (NAG)3 the functional role of the stereochemically based group of amino acids (Glu14, Asp26, Ser 29, Ser31, Lys38, His92), in manifestation of glycosidase and isopeptidase activities has been elucidated. By method of site-directed mutagenesis it has been shown that mlDL glycosidase active site includes catalytic Glu14 and Asp26, and isopeptidase site functions as Ser/Lys dyad presented by catalytic residues Lys38 and Ser29. Thus, among the invertebrate lysozymes mlDL presents first example of the bifunctional enzyme with identified position of the isopeptidase active site and localization of the corresponding catalytic residues.  相似文献   

8.
Díaz N  Sordo TL  Suárez D 《Biochemistry》2005,44(9):3225-3240
Herein, we present results from molecular dynamics simulations of the DD-transpeptidase/penicillin-binding protein from Streptomyces K15 and its Michaelis complex with benzylpenicillin. For the apo-enzyme, six different configurations of the active site were modeled in aqueous solution and their relative stabilities were estimated by means of quantum mechanical energy calculations. The energetically most stable configuration has a neutral Lys(213) residue. In this configuration, the nucleophilic Ser(35) hydroxyl group interchanges with a water molecule in the "oxy-anion hole" and the Lys(38)/Lys(213) ammonium/amino groups are connected through the Ser(96) hydroxyl group. Subsequently, the enzyme-penicillin complexes corresponding to the four most stable configurations of the apo-enzyme were modeled. In the presence of the beta-lactam antibiotic, the configuration with a neutral Lys(38) residue is favored energetically and shows the best orientation for nucleophilic attack. In addition, a very stable contact between the Ser(35) hydroxyl group and the neutral amino group of Lys(38) supports the assignation of Lys(38) as the base catalyst for the acylation step. Finally, some mechanistic implications of enzyme-inhibitor contacts involving the benzylpenicillin carboxylate group are also discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Based on the three-dimensional model of the bifunctional enzyme destabilase-lysozyme of the medicinal leech (mlDL) in complex with trimer of N-acetylglucosamine (NAG)3 by site-directed mutagenesis method, the functional role of the group of amino acids (Glu14, Asp26, Ser29, Ser31, Lys38, His92) in manifestation of lysozyme (glycosidase, muramidase) and isopeptidase activities has been investigated by site-directed mutagenesis. The results obtained go well with hypothesis, that lysozyme active site of mlDL includes catalytic Glu14 and Asp26 residues, and isopeptidase site functions as Ser/Lys catalytic dyad presented by catalytic residues Ser29 and Lys38. Thus, among the invertebrate lysozymes, mlDL presents the first example of a bifunctional enzyme with identified position of the isopeptidase active site and localization of the corresponding catalytic residues.  相似文献   

10.
Arylsulfatase A belongs to the sulfatase family whose members carry a Calpha-formylglycine that is post-translationally generated by oxidation of a conserved cysteine or serine residue. The formylglycine acts as an aldehyde hydrate with two geminal hydroxyls being involved in catalysis of sulfate ester cleavage. In arylsulfatase A and N-acetylgalactosamine 4-sulfatase this formylglycine was found to form the active site together with a divalent cation and a number of polar residues, tightly interconnected by a net of hydrogen bonds. Most of these putative active site residues are highly conserved among the eukaryotic and prokaryotic members of the sulfatase family. To analyze their function in binding and cleaving sulfate esters, we substituted a total of nine putative active site residues of human ASA by alanine (Asp29, Asp30, Asp281, Asn282, His125, His229, Lys123, Lys302, and Ser150). In addition the Mg2+-complexing residues (Asp29, Asp30, Asp281, and Asn282) were substituted conservatively by either asparagine or aspartate. In all mutants Vmax was decreased to 1-26% of wild type activity. The Km was more than 10-fold increased in K123A and K302A and up to 5-fold in the other mutants. In all mutants the pH optimum was increased from 4.5 by 0.2-0.8 units. These results indicate that each of the nine residues examined is critical for catalytic activity, Lys123 and Lys302 by binding the substrate and the others by direct (His125 and Asp281) or indirect participation in catalysis. The shift in the pH optimum is explained by two deprotonation steps that have been proposed for sulfate ester cleavage.  相似文献   

11.
Introduction of a cysteine protease active site into trypsin   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
J N Higaki  L B Evnin  C S Craik 《Biochemistry》1989,28(24):9256-9263
Active site serine 195 of rat anionic trypsin was replaced with a cysteine by site-specific mutagenesis in order to determine if a thiol group could function as the catalytic nucleophile in serine protease active site environment. Two genetically modified rat thiol trypsins were generated; the first variant contained a single substitution of Ser195 with Cys (trypsin S195C) while the second variant contained the Ser195 to Cys as well as an Asp102 to Asn substitution (trypsin D102N,S195C) that more fully mimics the putative catalytic triad of papain. Both variants were expressed as his J signal peptide-trypsin fusion proteins to high levels under the control of the tac promoter. The mature forms of both variants were secreted into the periplasmic space of Escherichia coli. Trypsin S195C shows a low level of activity toward the activated ester substrate Z-Lys-pNP, while both trypsin S195C and trypsin D102N,S195C were active toward the fluorogenic tripeptide substrate Z-GPR-AMC. Esterase and peptidase activities of both thiol trypsin variants were inhibited by known Cys protease inhibitors as well as by specific trypsin inhibitors. The kcat of trypsin S195C was reduced by a factor of 6.4 x 10(5) relative to that of trypsin while the kcat of trypsin D102N,S195C was lowered by a factor of 3.4 x 10(7) with Z-GPR-AMC as substrate. Km values were unaffected. The loss of activity of trypsin D102N,S195C was partially attributed to an inappropriate Asn102-His57 interaction that precludes the formation of the catalytically competent His57-Cys195 ion pair although loss of the negative charge of D102 at the active site probably contributes to diminished activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Highly conserved amino acids that form crucial structural elements of the catalytic apparatus can be used to account for the evolutionary history of serine proteases and the cascades into which they are organized. One such evolutionary marker in chymotrypsin-like proteases is Ser(214), located adjacent to the active site and forming part of the primary specificity pocket. Here we report the mutation of Ser(214) in thrombin to Ala, Thr, Cys, Asp, Glu, and Lys. None of the mutants seriously compromises active site catalytic function as measured by the kinetic parameter k(cat). However, the least conservative mutations result in large increases in K(m) because of lower rates of substrate diffusion into the active site. Therefore, the role of Ser(214) is to promote the productive formation of the enzyme-substrate complex. The S214C mutant is catalytically inactive, which suggests that during evolution the TCN-->AGY codon transitions for Ser(214) occurred through Thr intermediates.  相似文献   

13.
L-Xylulose reductase (XR), an enzyme in the uronate cycle of glucose metabolism, belongs to the short-chain dehydrogenase/reductase (SDR) superfamily. Among the SDR enzymes, XR shows the highest sequence identity (67%) with mouse lung carbonyl reductase (MLCR), but the two enzymes show different substrate specificities. The crystal structure of human XR in complex with reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) was determined at 1.96 A resolution by using the molecular replacement method and the structure of MLCR as the search model. Features unique to human XR include electrostatic interactions between the N-terminal residues of subunits related by the P-axis, termed according to SDR convention, and an interaction between the hydroxy group of Ser185 and the pyrophosphate of NADPH. Furthermore, identification of the residues lining the active site of XR (Cys138, Val143, His146, Trp191, and Met200) together with a model structure of XR in complex with L-xylulose, revealed structural differences with other members of the SDR family, which may account for the distinct substrate specificity of XR. The residues comprising a recently proposed catalytic tetrad in the SDR enzymes are conserved in human XR (Asn107, Ser136, Tyr149, and Lys153). To examine the role of Asn107 in the catalytic mechanism of human XR, mutant forms (N107D and N107L) were prepared. The two mutations increased K(m) for the substrate (>26-fold) and K(d) for NADPH (95-fold), but only the N107L mutation significantly decreased k(cat) value. These results suggest that Asn107 plays a critical role in coenzyme binding rather than in the catalytic mechanism.  相似文献   

14.
We examined the effect of a novel disulfide bond engineered in subtilisin E from Bacillus subtilis based on the structure of a thermophilic subtilisin-type serine protease aqualysin I. Four sites (Ser163/Ser194, Lys170/Ser194, Lys170/Glu195, and Pro172/Glu195) in subtilisin E were chosen as candidates for Cys substitutions by site-directed mutagenesis. The Cys170/Cys195 mutant subtilisin formed a disulfide bond in B. subtilis, and showed a 5-10-fold increase in specific activity for an authentic peptide substrate for subtilisin, N-succinyl-L-Ala-L-Ala-L-Pro-L-Phe-p-nitroanilide, compared with the single-Cys mutants. However, the disulfide mutant had a 50% decrease in catalytic efficiency due to a smaller k(cat) and was thermolabile relative to the wild-type enzyme, whereas it was greatly stabilized relative to its reduced form. These results suggest that an electrostatic interaction between Lys170 and Glu195 is important for catalysis and stability in subtilisin E. Interestingly, the disulfide mutant was found to be more stable in polar organic solvents, such as dimethylformamide and ethanol, than the wild-type enzyme, even under reducing conditions; this is probably due to the substitution of uncharged Cys by charged surface residues (Lys170 and Glu195). Further, the amino-terminal engineered disulfide bond (Gly61Cys/Ser98Cys) and the mutation Ile31Leu were introduced to enhance the stability and catalytic activity. A prominent 3-4-fold increase in the catalytic efficiency occurred in the quintet mutant enzyme over the range of dimethylformamide concentration (up to 40%).  相似文献   

15.
The amino acid sequences of both the alpha and beta subunits of human chorionic gonadotropin have been determined. The amino acid sequence of the alpha subunit is: Ala - Asp - Val - Gln - Asp - Cys - Pro - Glu - Cys-10 - Thr - Leu - Gln - Asp - Pro - Phe - Ser - Gln-20 - Pro - Gly - Ala - Pro - Ile - Leu - Gln - Cys - Met - Gly-30 - Cys - Cys - Phe - Ser - Arg - Ala - Tyr - Pro - Thr - Pro-40 - Leu - Arg - Ser - Lys - Lys - Thr - Met - Leu - Val - Gln-50 - Lys - Asn - Val - Thr - Ser - Glu - Ser - Thr - Cys - Cys-60 - Val - Ala - Lys - Ser - Thr - Asn - Arg - Val - Thr - Val-70 - Met - Gly - Gly - Phe - Lys - Val - Glu - Asn - His - Thr-80 - Ala - Cys - His - Cys - Ser - Thr - Cys - Tyr - Tyr - His-90 - Lys - Ser. Oligosaccharide side chains are attached at residues 52 and 78. In the preparations studied approximately 10 and 30% of the chains lack the initial 2 and 3 NH2-terminal residues, respectively. This sequence is almost identical with that of human luteinizing hormone (Sairam, M. R., Papkoff, H., and Li, C. H. (1972) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 48, 530-537). The amino acid sequence of the beta subunit is: Ser - Lys - Glu - Pro - Leu - Arg - Pro - Arg - Cys - Arg-10 - Pro - Ile - Asn - Ala - Thr - Leu - Ala - Val - Glu - Lys-20 - Glu - Gly - Cys - Pro - Val - Cys - Ile - Thr - Val - Asn-30 - Thr - Thr - Ile - Cys - Ala - Gly - Tyr - Cys - Pro - Thr-40 - Met - Thr - Arg - Val - Leu - Gln - Gly - Val - Leu - Pro-50 - Ala - Leu - Pro - Gin - Val - Val - Cys - Asn - Tyr - Arg-60 - Asp - Val - Arg - Phe - Glu - Ser - Ile - Arg - Leu - Pro-70 - Gly - Cys - Pro - Arg - Gly - Val - Asn - Pro - Val - Val-80 - Ser - Tyr - Ala - Val - Ala - Leu - Ser - Cys - Gln - Cys-90 - Ala - Leu - Cys - Arg - Arg - Ser - Thr - Thr - Asp - Cys-100 - Gly - Gly - Pro - Lys - Asp - His - Pro - Leu - Thr - Cys-110 - Asp - Asp - Pro - Arg - Phe - Gln - Asp - Ser - Ser - Ser - Ser - Lys - Ala - Pro - Pro - Pro - Ser - Leu - Pro - Ser-130 - Pro - Ser - Arg - Leu - Pro - Gly - Pro - Ser - Asp - Thr-140 - Pro - Ile - Leu - Pro - Gln. Oligosaccharide side chains are found at residues 13, 30, 121, 127, 132, and 138. The proteolytic enzyme, thrombin, which appears to cleave a limited number of arginyl bonds, proved helpful in the determination of the beta sequence.  相似文献   

16.
Naught LE  Regni C  Beamer LJ  Tipton PA 《Biochemistry》2003,42(33):9946-9951
In Pseudomonas aeruginosa, the dual-specificity enzyme phosphomannomutase/phosphoglucomutase catalyzes the transfer of a phosphoryl group from serine 108 to the hydroxyl group at the 1-position of the substrate, either mannose 6-P or glucose 6-P. The enzyme must then catalyze transfer of the phosphoryl group on the 6-position of the substrate back to the enzyme. Each phosphoryl transfer is expected to require general acid-base catalysis, provided by amino acid residues at the enzyme active site. An extensive survey of the active site residues by site-directed mutagenesis failed to identify a single key residue that mediates the proton transfers. Mutagenesis of active site residues Arg20, Lys118, Arg247, His308, and His329 to residues that do not contain ionizable groups produced proteins for which V(max) was reduced to 4-12% of that of the wild type. The fact that no single residue decreased catalytic activity more significantly, and that several residues had similar effects on V(max), suggested that the ensemble of active site amino acids act by creating positive electrostatic potential, which serves to depress the pK of the substrate hydroxyl group so that it binds in ionized form at the active site. In this way, the necessity of positioning the reactive hydroxyl group near a specific amino acid residue is avoided, which may explain how the enzyme is able to promote catalysis of both phosphoryl transfers, even though the 1- and 6-positions do not occupy precisely the same position when the substrate binds in the two different orientations in the active site. When Ser108 is mutated, the enzyme retains a surprising amount of activity, which has led to the suggestion that an alternative residue becomes phosphorylated in the absence of Ser108. (31)P NMR spectra of the S108A protein confirm that it is phosphorylated. Although the S108A/H329N protein had no detectable catalytic activity, the (31)P NMR spectra were not consistent with a phosphohistidine residue.  相似文献   

17.
Hegeman AD  Gross JW  Frey PA 《Biochemistry》2001,40(22):6598-6610
A model of the Escherichia coli dTDP-glucose-4,6-dehydratase (4,6-dehydratase) active site has been generated by combining amino acid sequence alignment information with the 3-dimensional structure of UDP-galactose-4-epimerase. The active site configuration is consistent with the partially refined 3-dimensional structure of 4,6-dehydratase, which lacks substrate-nucleotide but contains NAD(+) (PDB file ). From the model, two groups of active site residues were identified. The first group consists of Asp135(DEH), Glu136(DEH), Glu198(DEH), Lys199(DEH), and Tyr301(DEH). These residues are near the substrate-pyranose binding pocket in the model, they are completely conserved in 4,6-dehydratase, and they differ from the corresponding equally well-conserved residues in 4-epimerase. The second group of residues is Cys187(DEH), Asn190(DEH), and His232(DEH), which form a motif on the re face of the cofactor nicotinamide binding pocket that resembles the catalytic triad of cysteine-proteases. The importance of both groups of residues was tested by mutagenesis and steady-state kinetic analysis. In all but one case, a decrease in catalytic efficiency of approximately 2 orders of magnitude below wild-type activity was observed. Mutagenesis of each of these residues, with the exception of Cys187(DEH), which showed near-wild-type activity, clearly has important negative consequences for catalysis. The allocation of specific functions to these residues and the absolute magnitude of these effects are obscured by the complex chemistry in this multistep mechanism. Tools will be needed to characterize each chemical step individually in order to assign loss of catalytic efficiency to specific residue functions. To this end, the effects of each of these variants on the initial dehydrogenation step were evaluated using a the substrate analogue dTDP-xylose. Additional steady-state techniques were employed in an attempt to further limit the assignment of rate limitation. The results are discussed within the context of the 4,6-dehydratase active site model and chemical mechanism.  相似文献   

18.
Tammam SD  Rochet JC  Fraser ME 《Biochemistry》2007,46(38):10852-10863
Succinyl-CoA:3-ketoacid CoA transferase (SCOT) transfers CoA from succinyl-CoA to acetoacetate via a thioester intermediate with its active site glutamate residue, Glu 305. When CoA is linked to the enzyme, a cysteine residue can now be rapidly modified by 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid), reflecting a conformational change of SCOT upon formation of the thioester. Since either Cys 28 or Cys 196 could be the target, each was mutated to Ser to distinguish between them. Like wild-type SCOT, the C196S mutant protein was modified rapidly in the presence of acyl-CoA substrates. In contrast, the C28S mutant protein was modified much more slowly under identical conditions, indicating that Cys 28 is the residue exposed on binding CoA. The specific activity of the C28S mutant protein was unexpectedly lower than that of wild-type SCOT. X-ray crystallography revealed that Ser adopts a different conformation than the native Cys. A chloride ion is bound to one of four active sites in the crystal structure of the C28S mutant protein, mimicking substrate, interacting with Lys 329, Asn 51, and Asn 52. On the basis of these results and the studies of the structurally similar CoA transferase from Escherichia coli, YdiF, bound to CoA, the conformational change in SCOT was deduced to be a domain rotation of 17 degrees coupled with movement of two loops: residues 321-329 that bury Cys 28 and interact with succinate or acetoacetate and residues 374-386 that interact with CoA. Modeling this conformational change has led to the proposal of a new mechanism for catalysis by SCOT.  相似文献   

19.
Changing a catalytic cysteine into a serine, and vice versa, generally leads to a dramatic decrease in enzymatic efficiency. Except a study done on thiol subtilisin, no extensive study was carried out for determining whether the decrease in activity is due to a low nucleophilicity of the introduced amino acid. In the present study, Cys149 of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase from Bacillus stearothermophilus was converted into a Ser residue. This leads to a drastic reduction of the kcat value. The rate-limiting step occurs before the hydride transfer step. Selective, but slow, inactivation is observed with specific, structurally different, inhibitors of serine protease. The esterolytic activity of serine mutant towards activated esters is also strongly decreased. The rate-limiting step of the esterase reaction also shifts from deacylation in the wild type to acylation in the mutant. Altogether, these results strongly suggest that the low catalytic efficiency of the Ser mutant is due to a poor nucleophilicity of the hydroxyl serine group within the active site of the enzyme. The fact that (1) the apo --> holo transition does not change esterolytic and inactivating efficiencies, and (2) Ser149 Asn176 double mutant exhibits the same chemical reactivity and esterolytic catalytic efficiency compared to the Ser149 single mutant indicates that the serine residue is not subject to His176 general base catalysis. A linear relationship between the catalytic dehydrogenase rate, the kcat/KM for esterolysis, and the concentration of OH- is observed, thus supporting the alcoholate entity as the attacking reactive species. Collectively this study shows that the active site environment of GAPDH is not adapted to increase the nucleophilicity of a serine residue. This is discussed in relation to what is known about Ser and Cys protease active sites.  相似文献   

20.
Haloalkane dehalogenases catalyze cleavage of the carbon-halogen bond in halogenated aliphatic compounds, resulting in the formation of an alcohol, a halide, and a proton as the reaction products. Three structural features of haloalkane dehalogenases are essential for their catalytic performance: (i) a catalytic triad, (ii) an oxyanion hole, and (iii) the halide-stabilizing residues. Halide-stabilizing residues are not structurally conserved among different haloalkane dehalogenases. The level of stabilization of the transition state structure of S(N)2 reaction and halide ion provided by each of the active site residues in the enzymes DhlA, LinB, and DhaA was quantified by quantum mechanic calculations. The residues that significantly stabilize the halide ion were assigned as the primary (essential) or the secondary (less important) halide-stabilizing residues. Site-directed mutagenesis was conducted with LinB enzyme to confirm location of its primary halide-stabilizing residues. Asn38Asp, Asn38Glu, Asn38Phe, Asn38Gln, Trp109Leu, Phe151Leu, Phe151Trp, Phe151Tyr, and Phe169Leu mutants of LinB were constructed, purified, and kinetically characterized. The following active site residues were classified as the primary halide-stabilizing residues: Trp125 and Trp175 of DhlA; Asn38 and Trp109 of LinB; and Asn41 and Trp107 of DhaA. All these residues make a hydrogen bond with the halide ion released from the substrate molecule, and their substitution results in enzymes with significantly modified catalytic properties. The following active site residues were classified as the secondary halide-stabilizing residues: Phe172, Pro223, and Val226 of DhlA; Trp207, Pro208, and Ile211 of LinB; and Phe205, Pro206, and Ile209 of DhaA. The differences in the halide stabilizing residues of three haloalkane dehalogenases are discussed in the light of molecular adaptation of these enzymes to their substrates.  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