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1.
Chalcone isomerase form soybean is inactivated by treatment with diethyl pyrocarbonate (DEP). The competitive inhibitor 4',4-dihydroxychalcone provides kinetic protection against inactivation by DEP with a binding constant at the site of protection in agreement with its binding constant at the active site. Very high concentrations of the competitive inhibitors 4',4-dihydroxychalcone or morin hydrate offer a 10- to 40-fold maximal protection, suggesting a second slower mechanism for inactivation which cannot be prevented by blockage of the active site. Blockage of the only cysteine residue in chalcone isomerase with p-mercuribenzoate does not affect the rate constant for DEP-dependent inactivation and indicates that the modification of the cysteine residue is not responsible for the activity loss observed in the presence of DEP. Treatment of inactivated enzyme with hydroxylamine does not restore catalytic activity, indicating that the modification of histidine or tyrosine residues is not responsible for the activity loss. All five histidines of chalcone isomerase are modified by DEP at pH 5.7 and ionic strength 1.0 M. The rate constant for the modification of the histidine residues of chalcone isomerase is close to that for the reaction of N-acetyl histidine with DEP, indicating that the histidine residues are quite accessible to the modifying reagent. The rate of histidine modification is the same in native enzyme, in urea-denatured enzyme, and in the presence of a competitive inhibitor. In the presence of the competitive inhibitor morin hydrate, all of the histidine residues of chalcone isomerase can be modified without significant loss in catalytic activity. These results demonstrate that the histidine residues of chalcone isomerase are not essential for catalysis and therefore cannot function as nucleophilic catalysts as previously proposed.  相似文献   

2.
The phosphorylation-specific peptidyl prolyl cis/trans isomerase (PPIase) Pin1 in humans and its homologues in yeast and animal species play an important role in cell cycle regulation. These PPIases consist of an NH(2)-terminal WW domain that binds to specific phosphoserine- or phosphothreonine-proline motifs present in a subset of phosphoproteins and a COOH-terminal PPIase domain that specifically isomerizes the phosphorylated serine/threonine-proline peptide bonds. Here, we describe the isolation of MdPin1, a Pin1 homologue from the plant species apple (Malus domestica) and show that it has the same phosphorylation-specific substrate specificity and can be inhibited by juglone in vitro, as is the case for Pin1. A search in the plant expressed sequence tag data bases reveals that the Pin1-type PPIases are present in various plants, and there are multiple genes in one organism, such as soybean (Glycine max) and tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum). Furthermore, all these plant Pin1-type PPIases, including AtPin1 in Arabidopsis thaliana, do not have a WW domain, but all contain a four-amino acid insertion next to the phospho-specific recognition site of the active site. Interestingly, like Pin1, both MdPin1 and AtPin1 are able to rescue the lethal mitotic phenotype of a temperature-sensitive mutation in the Pin1 homologue ESS1/PTF1 gene in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. However, deleting the extra four amino acid residues abolished the ability of AtPin1 to rescue the yeast mutation under non-overexpression conditions, indicating that these extra amino acids may be important for mediating the substrate interaction of plant enzymes. Finally, expression of MdPin1 is tightly associated with cell division both during apple fruit development in vivo and during cell cultures in vitro. These results have demonstrated that phosphorylation-specific PPIases are highly conserved functionally in yeast, animal, and plant species. Furthermore, the experiments suggest that although plant Pin1-type enzymes do not have a WW domain, they may fulfill the same functions as Pin1 and its homologues do in other organisms.  相似文献   

3.
Pin1 catalyses the intrinsically slow process of cis-trans isomerisation and has been identified as a possible drug target in many diseases. Recently, the wild type (WT) and the Cys113Asp mutant of the Pin1 peptidyl-prolyl isomerase (PPIase) domain were determined by nuclear magnetic resonance. In this article, the WT and Cys113Asp mutant of PPIase domain are studied by molecular dynamics simulations. The structural stability analysis shows that the Cys113Asp mutation leads to the higher fluctuation of hydrophobic core in PPIase domain. The intrinsic correlated motions are important for the catalytic function of Pin1, whereas the Cys113Asp mutant system loses pivotal dynamical properties and develops wider conformational states than those in WT system. The intramolecular hydrogen bonds play crucial roles in the structural stability of PPIase domain. The mutated residue Asp113 attracts the side chain of His59 in the Cys113Asp system, which unbalances the internal interactions inside the catalytic tetrad. Meanwhile, the conformational changes of PPIase domain affect the side chain orientations of Lys63 and Arg69, which limit their binding with substrates. The Cys113Asp mutation destabilises the whole binding region of Pin1 PPIase domain, so the catalysis activity is severely reduced. These results are consistent with experimental studies and may help to understand the isomerisation mechanisms of Pin1.  相似文献   

4.
We have characterized by NMR spectroscopy the three active site (His80, His85, and His205) and two non-active site (His107 and His114) histidines in the 34 kDa catalytic domain of Cellulomonas fimi xylanase Cex in its apo, noncovalently aza-sugar-inhibited, and trapped glycosyl-enzyme intermediate states. Due to protection from hydrogen exchange, the level of which increased upon inhibition, the labile 1Hdelta1 and 1H epsilon1 atoms of four histidines (t1/2 approximately 0.1-300 s at 30 degrees C and pH approximately 7), as well as the nitrogen-bonded protons in the xylobio-imidazole and -isofagomine inhibitors, could be observed with chemical shifts between 10.2 and 17.6 ppm. The histidine pKa values and neutral tautomeric forms were determined from their pH-dependent 13C epsilon1-1H epsilon1 chemical shifts, combined with multiple-bond 1H delta2/epsilon1-15N delta1/epsilon2 scalar coupling patterns. Remarkably, these pKa values span more than 8 log units such that at the pH optimum of approximately 6 for Cex activity, His107 and His205 are positively charged (pKa > 10.4), His85 is neutral (pKa < 2.8), and both His80 (pKa = 7.9) and His114 (pKa = 8.1) are titrating between charged and neutral states. Furthermore, upon formation of the glycosyl-enzyme intermediate, the pKa value of His80 drops from 7.9 to <2.8, becoming neutral and accepting a hydrogen bond from an exocyclic oxygen of the bound sugar moiety. Changes in the pH-dependent activity of Cex due to mutation of His80 to an alanine confirm the importance of this interaction. The diverse ionization behaviors of the histidine residues are discussed in terms of their structural and functional roles in this model glycoside hydrolase.  相似文献   

5.
Effect of active site residues in barnase on activity and stability.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We have mutated residues in the active site of the ribonuclease, barnase, in order to determine their effects on both enzyme activity and protein stability. Mutation of several of the positively charged residues that interact with the negatively charged RNA substrate (Lys27----Ala, Arg59----Ala and His102----Ala) causes large decreases in activity. This is accompanied, however, by an increase in stability. There is presumably electrostatic strain in the active site where positively charged side-chains are clustered. Mutation of several residues that make hydrogen bonds (Ser57----Ala, Asn58----Asp and Tyr103----Phe) causes smaller decreases in activity, but increases or has no effect on stability. Deletion of hydrogen bonding groups elsewhere in proteins has been found previously to decrease stability by 0.5 to 1.5 kcal mol-1. Conversely, we find that two mutations (Asp54----Asn and Gln104----Ala) decrease stability and increase activity. Another mutation (Glu73----Ala) decreases both activity and stability. It is clear that many residues in the active site do not contribute to stability and that for some, but not all, of the residues there is a compromise between activity and stability. This suggests that certain types of local instability may be necessary for substrate binding and catalysis by barnase. This has implications for the understanding of enzyme activity and the design of enzymes.  相似文献   

6.
The A domain of the mannitol-specific EII, IIAmtl, was subcloned and proven to be functional in the isolated form (Van Weeghel et al., 1991). It contains a histidine phosphorylation site, the first of two phosphorylation sites in the parent protein. In this paper, we describe the characterization of the three histidine residues in IIAmtl with respect to their protonation and hydrogen bonding state, using 1H[15N] heteronuclear NMR techniques and protein selectively enriched with [delta 1,epsilon 2-15N]histidine. The active site residue has a low pKa (less than 5.8) and shows no hydrogen bond interactions. The proton in the neutral ring is located at the N epsilon 2 position, which also proved to be the site of phosphorylation. The phosphorylation raises the pKa of the active site histidine considerably but does not change the hydrogen bond situation. The other two histidine residues, one of which is probably located on the surface of the protein, were also characterized. Both show hydrogen bond interactions in the unphosphorylated protein, but these are disturbed by the phosphorylation process. These observations, combined with small changes in pKa and titration behavior, indicate that the IIAmtl changes its conformation upon phosphorylation.  相似文献   

7.
Bateman RC  Temple JS  Misquitta SA  Booth RE 《Biochemistry》2001,40(37):11246-11250
Glutaminyl cyclase (QC, EC 2.3.2.5) catalyzes the formation of the pyroglutamyl residue present at the amino terminus of numerous secretory peptides and proteins. Treatment with diethyl pyrocarbonate inactivated recombinant human QC with the apparent modification of three essential histidine residues. Comparisons of the protein sequences of QC from a variety of eukaryotic species show four completely conserved histidine residues. Mutation of each of these residues to glutamine resulted in two mutant enzymes that were inactive (H140Q and H330Q), suggesting a role in catalysis, and two that exhibited increased Km values (H307Q and H319Q), suggesting a role in substrate binding. Consistent with these results is the prediction that QC possesses a zinc aminopeptidase domain in which the four histidines identified here are present in the active site. Mammalian glutaminyl cyclases may, therefore, have structural and catalytic similarities to a family of bacterial zinc aminopeptidases.  相似文献   

8.
To examine the role of histidine residues in ribonuclease H from Escherichia coli, kinetic parameters for the enzymatic activity and conformational stabilities against guanidine hydrochloride denaturation of mutant enzymes, in which each of the five histidine residues was replaced with alanine, were determined and compared with the wild-type enzyme. The mutation of His83 resulted in a marked increase in Km along with an increase in kcat. The mutation of His114 caused a large reduction in both the free energy of unfolding in water, delta GH2O, and the mid-point of the unfolding curve, [D]1/2. These results indicate that His83, which is one of the four well-exposed histidine residues in the crystal structure, is located close to a substrate-binding site, and His114, which is buried inside the protein molecule, contributes to the conformational stability, probably through the formation of a hydrogen bond with a main-chain carbonyl group. None of the histidine residues is required for activity.  相似文献   

9.
X Lu  H F Gilbert  J W Harper 《Biochemistry》1992,31(17):4205-4210
Protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) catalyzes the oxidative folding of proteins containing disulfide bonds by increasing the rate of disulfide bond rearrangements which normally occur during the folding process. The amino acid sequences of the N- and C-terminal redox active sites (PWCGHCK) in PDI are completely conserved from yeast to man and display considerable identity with the redox-active center of thioredoxin (EWCGPCK). Available data indicate that the two thiol/disulfide centers of PDI can function independently in the isomerase reaction and that the cysteine residues in each active site are essential for catalysis. To evaluate the role of residues flanking the active-site cysteines of PDI in function, a variety of mutations were introduced into the N-terminal active site of PDI within the context of both a functional C-terminal active site and an inactive C-terminal active site in which serine residues replaced C379 and C382. Replacement of non-cysteine residues (W34 to Ser, G36 to Ala, and K39 to Arg) resulted in only a modest reduction in catalytic activity in both the oxidative refolding of RNase A and the reduction of insulin (10-27%), independent of the status of the C-terminal active site. A somewhat larger effect was observed with the H37P mutation where approximately 80% of the activity attributable to the N-terminal domain (approximately 40%) was lost. However, the H37P mutant N-terminal site expressed within the context of an inactive C-terminal domain exhibits 30% activity, approximately 70% of the activity of the N-terminal site alone.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
The gene coding for thermophilic xylose (glucose) isomerase of Clostridium thermosulfurogenes was isolated and its complete nucleotide sequence was determined. The structural gene (xylA) for xylose isomerase encodes a polypeptide of 439 amino acids with an estimated molecular weight of 50,474. The deduced amino acid sequence of thermophilic C. thermosulfurogenes xylose isomerase displayed higher homology with those of thermolabile xylose isomerases from Bacillus subtilis (70%) and Escherichia coli (50%) than with those of thermostable xylose isomerases from Ampullariella (22%), Arthrobacter (23%), and Streptomyces violaceoniger (24%). Several discrete regions were highly conserved throughout the amino acid sequences of all these enzymes. To identify the histidine residue of the active site and to elucidate its function during enzymatic xylose or glucose isomerization, histidine residues at four different positions in the C. thermosulfurogenes enzyme were individually modified by site-directed mutagenesis. Substitution of His101 by phenylalanine completely abolished enzyme activity whereas substitution of other histidine residues by phenylalanine had no effect on enzyme activity. When His101 was changed to glutamine, glutamic acid, asparagine, or aspartic acid, approximately 10-16% of wild-type enzyme activity was retained by the mutant enzymes. The Gln101 mutant enzyme was resistant to diethylpyrocarbonate inhibition which completely inactivated the wild-type enzyme, indicating that His101 is the only essential histidine residue involved directly in enzyme catalysis. The constant Vmax values of the Gln101, Glu101, Asn101, and Asp101 mutant enzymes over the pH range of 5.0-8.5 indicate that protonation of His101 is responsible for the reduced Vmax values of the wild-type enzyme at pH below 6.5. Deuterium isotope effects by D-[2-2H]glucose on the rate of glucose isomerization indicated that hydrogen transfer and not substrate ring opening is the rate-determining step for both the wild-type and Gln101 mutant enzymes. These results suggest that the enzymatic sugar isomerization does not involve a histidine-catalyzed proton transfer mechanism. Rather, essential histidine functions to stabilize the transition state by hydrogen bonding to the C5 hydroxyl group of the substrate and this enables a metal-catalyzed hydride shift from C2 to C1.  相似文献   

11.
Trehalase found to be associated with the brush border membrane vesicles and the Ca2+ aggregated basolateral membrane vesicles were purified to homogeneity. They were found to differ in their molecular weight, subunit structure, heal stability, N-terminal residues, amino acid composition and also the active site residues. Chemical modification showed the presence of a histidine and tyrosine at the active site of brush border membrane vesicle trehalase and two histidines at the active site of basolateral membrane vesicle.  相似文献   

12.
A competitive labelling method (Kaplan et al., 1971), using tritiated 1-fluoro-2,4-dinitrobenzene as the labelling reagent, is described for determining the ionization constants and reactivities of individual histidine residues in proteins. When this method was applied to the two histidines of alpha-chymotrypsin, histidine-57 was found to have pK(a) 6.8 and a reactivity ten times that of alpha-N-acetyl-l-histidine. Histidine-40 had pK(a) 6.7 and a reactivity approximately six times that of alpha-N-acetyl-l-histidine. Between pH7.5 and 8 the reactivities of both histidines decrease simultaneously to approximately that of alpha-N-acetyl-l-histidine. The high reactivities of the histidines are attributed to hydrogen bonding, which increases the nucleophilicity of the imidazole ring. The sharp decrease in reactivity between pH7.5 and 8 is attributed to a conformational change that disrupts the hydrogen bonding by these residues. The reactivity data support the proposal of a charge-relay mechanism involving histidine-57 (Blow et al., 1969), which makes serine-195 more nucleophilic but indicates that this system is fully operative only in the enzyme-substate complex.  相似文献   

13.
Pin1 is a peptidyl-prolyl isomerase consisting of a WW domain and a catalytic isomerase (PPIase) domain connected by a flexible linker. Pin1 recognizes phospho-Ser/Thr-Pro motifs in cell-signaling proteins, and is both a cancer and an Alzheimer's disease target. Here, we provide novel insight into the functional motions underlying Pin1 substrate interaction using nuclear magnetic resonance deuterium ((2)D) and carbon ((13)C) spin relaxation. Specifically, we compare Pin1 side-chain motions in the presence and absence of a known phosphopeptide substrate derived from the mitotic phosphatase Cdc25. Substrate interaction alters Pin1 side-chain motions on both the microsecond-millisecond (mus-ms) and picosecond-nanosecond (ps-ns) timescales. Alterations include loss of ps-ns flexibility along an internal conduit of hydrophobic residues connecting the catalytic site with the interdomain interface. These residues are conserved among Pin1 homologs; hence, their dynamics are likely important for the Pin1 mechanism.  相似文献   

14.
J Sancho  L Serrano  A R Fersht 《Biochemistry》1992,31(8):2253-2258
A single histidine residue has been placed at either the N-terminus or the C-terminus of each of the two alpha-helices of barnase. The pKa of that histidine residue in each of the four mutants has been determined by 1H NMR. The pKas of the two residues at the C-terminus are, on average, 0.5 unit higher, and those of the residues at the N-terminus are 0.8 unit lower, than the pKa of histidines in unfolded barnase at low ionic strength. The conformational stability of the mutant proteins at different values of pH has been measured by urea denaturation. C-Terminal histidine mutants are approximately 0.6 kcal mol-1 more stable when the introduced histidine is protonated, both at low and high ionic strength. N-Terminal mutants with a protonated histidine residue are approximately 1.1 kcal mol-1 less stable at low ionic strength and 0.5 kcal mol-1 less stable at high ionic strength (1 M NaCl). The low-field 1H NMR spectra of the mutant proteins at low pH suggest that the C-terminal histidines form hydrogen bonds with the protein while the N-terminal histidines do not form the same. The perturbations of pKa and stability result from a combination of different electrostatic environments and hydrogen-bonding patterns at either ends of helices. The value of 0.6 kcal mol-1 represents a lower limit to the favorable electrostatic interaction between the alpha-helix dipole and a protonated histidine residue at the C-terminal end of the helix.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
16.
Stafford SJ  Lund PA 《FEBS letters》2000,466(2-3):317-322
Protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) exhibits both an oxido-reductase and an isomerase activity on proteins containing cysteine residues. These activities arise from two active sites, both of which contain pairs of redox active cysteines. We have developed two simple in vivo assays for these activities of PDI, based on the demonstration that PDI can complement both a dsbA mutation and a dsbC mutation when expressed to the periplasm of Escherichia coli. We constructed a variety of mutants in and around the active sites of PDI and analysed them using these complementation assays. Our analysis showed that the active site amino acid residues have a major role in determining the activities exhibited by PDI, particularly the N-terminal cysteine of the N-terminal active site. The roles of the histidine residue at position 38 and the glutamic acid residue at position 30 were also studied using these assays. The results show that these two in vivo assays should be useful for rapid screening of mutants in PDI prior to purification and detailed biochemical analysis.  相似文献   

17.
Tyrosinase catalyzes the conversion of phenolic compounds into their quinone derivatives, which are precursors for the formation of melanin, a ubiquitous pigment in living organisms. Because of its importance for browning reactions in the food industry, the tyrosinase from the mushroom Agaricus bisporus has been investigated in depth. In previous studies the tyrosinase enzyme complex was shown to be a H(2)L(2) tetramer, but no clues were obtained of the identities of the subunits, their mode of association, and the 3D structure of the complex. Here we unravel this tetramer at the molecular level. Its 2.3 ? resolution crystal structure is the first structure of the full fungal tyrosinase complex. The complex comprises two H subunits of ~392 residues and two L subunits of ~150 residues. The H subunit originates from the ppo3 gene and has a fold similar to other tyrosinases, but it is ~100 residues larger. The L subunit appeared to be the product of orf239342 and has a lectin-like fold. The H subunit contains a binuclear copper-binding site in the deoxy-state, in which three histidine residues coordinate each copper ion. The side chains of these histidines have their orientation fixed by hydrogen bonds or, in the case of His85, by a thioether bridge with the side chain of Cys83. The specific tyrosinase inhibitor tropolone forms a pre-Michaelis complex with the enzyme. It binds near the binuclear copper site without directly coordinating the copper ions. The function of the ORF239342 subunits is not known. Carbohydrate binding sites identified in other lectins are not conserved in ORF239342, and the subunits are over 25 ? away from the active site, making a role in activity unlikely. The structures explain how calcium ions stabilize the tetrameric state of the enzyme.  相似文献   

18.
The link between internal enzyme motions and catalysis is poorly understood. Correlated motions in the microsecond-to-millisecond timescale may be critical for enzyme function. We have characterized the backbone dynamics of the peptidylprolyl isomerase (Pin1) catalytic domain in the free state and during catalysis. Pin1 is a prolyl isomerase of the parvulin family and specifically catalyzes the isomerization of phosphorylated Ser/Thr-Pro peptide bonds. Pin1 has been shown to be essential for cell-cycle progression and to interact with the neuronal tau protein inhibiting its aggregation into fibrillar tangles as found in Alzheimer's disease. (15)N relaxation dispersion measurements performed on Pin1 during catalysis reveal conformational exchange processes in the microsecond timescale. A subset of active site residues undergo kinetically similar exchange processes even in the absence of a substrate, suggesting that this area is already "primed" for catalysis. Furthermore, structural data of the turning-over enzyme were obtained through inter- and intramolecular nuclear Overhauser enhancements. This analysis together with a characterization of the substrate concentration dependence of the conformational exchange allowed the distinguishing of regions of the enzyme active site that are affected primarily by substrate binding versus substrate isomerization. Together these data suggest a model for the reaction trajectory of Pin1 catalysis.  相似文献   

19.
Myoglobin (Mb) is an ideal scaffold protein for rational protein design mimicking native enzymes. We recently designed a nitrite reductase (NiR) based on sperm whale Mb by introducing an additional distal histidine (Leu29 to His29 mutation) and generating a distal tyrosine (Phe43 to Tyr43 mutation) in the heme pocket, namely L29H/F43Y Mb, to mimic the active site of cytochrome cd (1) NiR from Ps. aeruginosa that contains two distal histidines and one distal tyrosine. The molecular modeling and dynamics simulation study herein revealed that L29H/F43Y Mb has the necessary structural features of native cytochrome cd (1) NiR and can provide comparable interactions with nitrite as in native NiRs, which provides rationality for the protein design and guides the protein engineering. Additionally, the present study provides an insight into the relatively low NiR activity of Mb in biological systems.  相似文献   

20.
The N-terminal region is stabilized in the crystal structure of Thermus thermophilus type 2 isopentenyl diphosphate isomerase in complex with inorganic pyrophosphate, providing new insights about the active site and the catalytic mechanism of the enzyme. The PP i moiety is located near the conserved residues, H10, R97, H152, Q157, E158, and W219, and the flavin cofactor. The putative active site of isopentenyl diphosphate isomerase 2 provides interactions for stabilizing a carbocationic intermediate similar to those that stabilize the intermediate in the well-established protonation-deprotonation mechanism of isopentenyl diphosphate isomerase 1.  相似文献   

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