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1.
The structure and function of the xylose (glucose) isomerase from Actinoplanes missouriensis have been analyzed by X-ray crystallography and site-directed mutagenesis after cloning and overexpression in Escherichia coli. The crystal structure of wild-type enzyme has been refined to an R factor of 15.2% against diffraction data to 2.2-A resolution. The structures of a number of binary and ternary complexes involving wild-type and mutant enzymes, the divalent cations Mg2+, Co2+, or Mn2+, and either the substrate xylose or substrate analogs have also been determined and refined to comparable R factors. Two metal sites are identified. Metal site 1 is four-coordinated and tetrahedral in the absence of substrate and is six-coordinated and octahedral in its presence; the O2 and O4 atoms of linear inhibitors and substrate bind to metal 1. Metal site 2 is octahedral in all cases; its position changes by 0.7 A when it binds O1 of the substrate and by more than 1 A when it also binds O2; these bonds replace bonds to carboxylate ligands from the protein. Side chains involved in metal binding have been substituted by site-directed mutagenesis. The biochemical properties of the mutant enzymes are presented. Together with structural data, they demonstrate that the two metal ions play an essential part in binding substrates, in stabilizing their open form, and in catalyzing hydride transfer between the C1 and C2 positions.  相似文献   

2.
C Klein  J Hollender  H Bender  G E Schulz 《Biochemistry》1992,31(37):8740-8746
An X-ray structure analysis of a crystal of mutant Asp229----Ala of cyclodextrin glycosyltransferase from Bacillus circulans (Ec 2.4.1.19) that had been shortly exposed to beta-cyclodextrin showed density corresponding to a maltose bound at the catalytic center. The crystal structure was refined to an R-factor of 18.7% at 2.5-A resolution. The catalytic center is defined by homology with the structurally known alpha-amylases and by the observation that mutants Asp229----Ala and Asp328----Ala are almost inactive. By model building, the density-defined maltose was extended to a full beta-cyclodextrin, which then indicated the general locations of seven subsites for glucosyl units. The catalytically competent residues Asp229, Glu257, and Asp328 are at the reducing end of the density-defined maltose. In the unligated wild-type structure, Glu257 and Asp328 form a 2.6-A hydrogen bond between their carboxylates in an arrangement that resembles those of the catalytically competent carboxylates in acid proteases. Presumably, the first catalytic step is an attack of the proton between Glu257 and Asp328 on the oxygen of the glycosidic bond.  相似文献   

3.
The crystal structure of the IIA domain of the glucose permease of the phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system (PTS) from Bacillus subtilis has been determined at 2.2-A resolution. Refinement of the structure is in progress, and the current R-factor is 0.201 (R = sigma h parallel Fo magnitude of - Fc parallel/sigma h magnitude of Fo, where magnitude of Fo and magnitude of Fc are the observed and calculated structure factor amplitudes, respectively) for data between 6.0- and 2.2-A resolution for which F greater than or equal to 2 sigma (F). This is an antiparallel beta-barrel structure that incorporates "Greek key" and "jellyroll" topological motifs. A shallow depression is formed at the active site by part of the beta-sheet and an omega-loop flanking one side of the sheet. His83, the histidyl residue which is the phosphorylation target of HPr and which transfers the phosphoryl group to the IIB domain of the permease, is located at the C-terminus of a beta-strand. The N epsilon atom is partially solvated and also interacts with the N epsilon atom of a second histidyl residue, His68, located at the N-terminus of an adjacent beta-strand, suggesting they share a proton. The geometry of the hydrogen bond is imperfect, though. Electrostatic interactions with other polar groups and van der Waals contacts with the side chains of two flanking phenylalanine residues assure the precise orientation of the imidazole rings. The hydrophobic nature of the surface around the His83-His68 pair may be required for protein-protein recognition by HPr or/and by the IIB domain of the permease. The side chains of two aspartyl residues, Asp31 and Asp87, are oriented toward each other across a narrow groove, about 7 A from the active-site His83, suggesting they may play a role in protein-protein interaction. A model of the phosphorylated form of the molecule is proposed, in which oxygen atoms of the phosphoryl group interact with the side chain of His68 and with the main-chain nitrogen atom of a neighboring residue, Val89. The model, in conjunction with previously reported site-directed mutagenesis experiments, suggests that the phosphorylation of His83 may be accompanied by the protonation of His68. This may be important for the interaction with the IIB domain of the permease and/or play a catalytic role in the phosphoryl transfer from IIA to IIB.  相似文献   

4.
The hydroxynitrile lyases (HNLs) from Hevea brasiliensis (HbHNL) and from Manihot esculenta (MeHNL) are both members of the alpha/beta-hydrolase superfamily. Mechanistic proposals have been put forward in the past for both enzymes; they differed with respect to the role of the active-site lysine residue for which a catalytic function was claimed for the Hevea enzyme but denied for the Manihot enzyme. We applied a freeze-quench method to prepare crystals of the complex of HbHNL with the biological substrate acetone cyanohydrin and determined its three-dimensional structure. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to prepare the mutant K236L, which is inactive although its three-dimensional structure is similar to the wild-type enzyme. However, the structure of the K236L-acetone cyanohydrin complex shows the substrate in a different orientation from the wild-type complex. Finite difference Poisson-Boltzmann calculations show that in the absence of Lys(236) the catalytic base His(235) would be protonated at neutral pH. All of this suggests that Lys(236) is instrumental for catalysis in several ways, i.e. by correctly positioning the substrate, by stabilizing the negatively charged reaction product CN(-), and by modulating the basicity of the catalytic base. These data complete the elucidation of the reaction mechanism of alpha/beta-hydrolase HNLs, in which the catalytic triad acts as a general base rather than as a nucleophile; proton abstraction from the substrate is performed by the serine, and reprotonation of the product cyanide is performed by the histidine residues. Together with a threonine side chain, the active-site serine and lysine are also involved in substrate binding.  相似文献   

5.
L Lebioda  B Stec 《Biochemistry》1991,30(11):2817-2822
Enolase in the presence of Mg2+ catalyzes the elimination of H2O from 2-phosphoglyceric acid (PGA) to form phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) and the reverse reaction, the hydration of PEP to PGA. The structure of the ternary complex yeast enolase-Mg2(+)-PGA/PEP has been determined by X-ray diffraction and refined by crystallographic restrained least-squares to an R = 16.9% for those data with I/sigma (I) greater than or equal to 2 to 2.2-A resolution with a good geometry of the model. The structure indicates the substrate molecule in the active site has its hydroxyl group coordinated to the Mg2+ ion. The carboxylic group interacts with the side chains of His373 and Lys396. The phosphate group is H-bonded to the guanidinium group of Arg374. A water molecule H-bonded to the carboxylic groups of Glu168 and Glu211 is located at a 2.6-A distance from carbon-2 of the substrate in the direction of its proton. We propose that this cluster functions as the base abstracting the proton in the catalytic process. The proton is probably transferred, first to the water molecule, then to Glu168, and further to the substrate hydroxyl to form a water molecule. Some analogy is apparent between the initial stages of the enolase reverse reaction, the hydration of PEP, and the proteolytic mechanism of the metallohydrolases carboxypeptidase A and thermolysin. The substrate/product binding is accompanied by large movements of loops Ser36-His43 and Ser158-Gly162. The role of these conformational changes is not clear at this time.  相似文献   

6.
Hydroxynitrile lyases (HNLs) catalyze the conversion of chiral cyanohydrins to hydrocyanic acid (HCN) and aldehyde or ketone. Hydroxynitrile lyase from Arabidopsis thaliana (AtHNL) is the first R‐selective HNL enzyme containing an α/β‐hydrolases fold. In this article, the catalytic mechanism of AtHNL was theoretically studied by using QM/MM approach based on the recently obtained crystal structure in 2012. Two computational models were constructed, and two possible reaction pathways were considered. In Path A, the calculation results indicate that the proton transfer from the hydroxyl group of cyanohydrin occurs firstly, and then the cleavage of C1‐C2 bond and the rotation of the generated cyanide ion (CN?) follow, afterwards, CN? abstracts a proton from His236 via Ser81. The C1‐C2 bond cleavage and the protonation of CN? correspond to comparable free energy barriers (12.1 vs. 12.2 kcal mol?1), suggesting that both of the two processes contribute a lot to rate‐limiting. In Path B, the deprotonation of the hydroxyl group of cyanohydrin and the cleavage of C1‐C2 bond take place in a concerted manner, which corresponds to the highest free energy barrier of 13.2 kcal mol?1. The free energy barriers of Path A and B are very similar and basically agree well with the experimental value of HbHNL, a similar enzyme of AtHNL. Therefore, both of the two pathways are possible. In the reaction, the catalytic triad (His236, Ser81, and Asp208) acts as the general acid/base, and the generated CN? is stabilized by the hydroxyl group of Ser81 and the main‐chain NH‐groups of Ala13 and Phe82. Proteins 2015; 83:66–77. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

7.
Using site-directed mutagenesis, a double mutant in yeast cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP) has been constructed where the proximal ligand, His175, has been converted to glutamine and the neighboring Trp191 has been converted to phenylalanine. The refined 2.4-A crystal structure of the double mutant shows that the Gln175 side chain is within coordination distance of the heme iron atom and that Phe191 occupies the same position as Trp191 in the native enzyme with very little rearrangement outside the immediate vicinity of the mutations. Consistent with earlier work, we find that the single mutant, His175-->Gln, is fully active under steady state assay conditions and that as reported earlier (Mauro et al., 1988), the Trp191-->Phe mutant exhibits only < 0.05% activity. However, the double mutant, His175-->Gln/Phe191-->Phe, exhibits 20% wild type activity. Since it is known that the Trp191-->Phe mutant is inactive because it can no longer transfer electrons from ferrocytochrome c, changing the nature of the proximal ligand is able to restore this activity. These results raise interesting questions regarding the mechanism of interprotein electron transfer reactions.  相似文献   

8.
The crystal structure of RNase Rh, a new class of microbial ribonuclease from Rhizopus niveus, has been determined at 2.5 A resolution by the multiple isomorphous replacement method. The crystal structure was refined by simulated annealing with molecular dynamics. The current crystallographic R-factor is 0.200 in the 10-2.5 A resolution range. The molecular structure which is completely different from the known structures of RNase A and RNase T1 consists of six alpha-helices and seven beta-strands, belonging to the alpha+beta type structure. Two histidine and one glutamic acid residues which were predicted as the most probably functional residues by chemical modification studies are found to be clustered. The steric nature of the active site taken together with the relevant site-directed mutagenesis experiments (Irie et al.) indicates that: (i) the two histidine residues are the general acid and base; and (ii) an aspartic acid residue plays a role of recognizing adenine moiety of the substrate.  相似文献   

9.
A putative proton wire in potato soluble epoxide hydrolase 1, StEH1, was identified and investigated by means of site-directed mutagenesis, steady-state kinetic measurements, temperature inactivation studies, and X-ray crystallography. The chain of hydrogen bonds includes five water molecules coordinated through backbone carbonyl oxygens of Pro(186), Leu(266), His(269), and the His(153) imidazole. The hydroxyl of Tyr(149) is also an integrated component of the chain, which leads to the hydroxyl of Tyr(154). Available data suggest that Tyr(154) functions as a final proton donor to the anionic alkylenzyme intermediate formed during catalysis. To investigate the role of the putative proton wire, mutants Y149F, H153F, and Y149F/H153F were constructed and purified. The structure of the Y149F mutant was solved by molecular replacement and refined to 2.0 A resolution. Comparison with the structure of wild-type StEH1 revealed only subtle structural differences. The hydroxyl group lost as a result of the mutation was replaced by a water molecule, thus maintaining a functioning hydrogen bond network in the proton wire. All mutants showed decreased catalytic efficiencies with the R,R-enantiomer of trans-stilbene oxide, whereas with the S,S-enantiomer, k (cat)/K (M) was similar or slightly increased compared with the wild-type reactions. k (cat) for the Y149F mutant with either TSO enantiomer was increased; thus the lowered enzyme efficiencies were due to increases in K (M). Thermal inactivation studies revealed that the mutated enzymes were more sensitive to elevated temperatures than the wild-type enzyme. Hence, structural alterations affecting the hydrogen bond chain caused increases in k (cat) but lowered thermostability.  相似文献   

10.
The crystal structure of a deletion mutant of tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase from Bacillus stearothermophilus has been determined at 2.5 A resolution using molecular replacement techniques. The genetically engineered molecule catalyses the activation of tyrosine with kinetic properties similar to those of the wild-type enzyme but no longer binds tRNATyr. It contains 319 residues corresponding to the region of the polypeptide chain for which interpretable electron density is present in crystals of the wild-type enzyme. The partly refined model of the wild-type enzyme was used as a starting point in determining the structure of the truncated mutant. The new crystals are of space group P2(1) and contain the molecular dimer within the asymmetric unit. The refined model has a crystallographic R-factor of 18.7% for all reflections between 8 and 2.5 A. Each subunit contains two structural domains: the alpha/beta domain (residues 1 to 220) containing a six-stranded beta-sheet and the alpha-helical domain (residues 248 to 319) containing five helices. The alpha/beta domains are related by a non-crystallographic dyad while the alpha-helical domains are in slightly different orientations in the two subunits. The tyrosine substrate binds in a slot at the bottom of a deep active site cleft in the middle of the alpha/beta domain. It is surrounded by polar side-chains and water molecules that are involved in an intricate hydrogen bonding network. Both the alpha-amino and hydroxyl groups of the substrate make good hydrogen bonds with the protein. The amino group forms hydrogen bonds with Tyr169-OH, Asp78-OD1 and Gln173-OE1. The phenolic hydroxyl group forms hydrogen bonds with Asp76-OD1 and Tyr34-OH. In contrast, the substrate carboxyl group makes no direct interactions with the enzyme. The results of both substrate inhibition studies and site-directed mutagenesis experiments have been examined in the light of the refined structure.  相似文献   

11.
The molecular structure of interleukin-1 beta, a hormone-like cytokine with roles in several disease processes, has been determined at 2.0 A resolution and refined to a crystallographic R-factor of 0.19. The framework of this molecule consists of 12 antiparallel beta-strands exhibiting pseudo-3-fold symmetry. Six of the strands make up a beta-barrel with polar residues concentrated at either end. Analysis of the three-dimensional structure, together with results from site-directed mutagenesis and biochemical and immunological studies, suggest that the core of the beta-barrel plays an important functional role. A large patch of charged residues on one end of the barrel is proposed as the binding surface with which IL-1 interacts with its receptor.  相似文献   

12.
13.
The 3D structures of complexes between the hydroxynitrile lyase from Hevea brasiliensis (Hb-HNL) and several substrate and/or inhibitor molecules, including trichloracetaldehyde, hexafluoracetone, acetone, and rhodanide, were determined by X-ray crystallography. The complex with trichloracetaldehyde showed a covalent linkage between the protein and the inhibitor, which had apparently resulted from nucleophilic attack of the catalytic Ser80-Ogamma. All other complexes showed the substrate or inhibitor molecule merely hydrogen bonded to the protein. In addition, the native crystal structure of Hb-HNL was redetermined at cryo-temperature and at room temperature, eliminating previous uncertainties concerning residual electron density within the active site, and leading to the observation of two conserved water molecules. One of them was found to be conserved in all complex structures and appears to have mainly structural significance. The other water molecule is conserved in all structures except for the complex with rhodanide; it is hydrogen bonded to the imidazole of the catalytic His235 and appears to affect the Hb-HNL catalyzed reaction. The observed 3D structural data suggest implications for the enzyme mechanism. It appears that the enzyme-catalyzed cyanohydrin formation is unlikely to proceed via a hemiacetal or hemiketal intermediate covalently attached to the enzyme, despite the observation of such an intermediate for the complex with trichloracetaldehyde. Instead, the data are consistent with a mechanism where the incoming substrate is activated by hydrogen bonding with its carbonyl oxygen to the Ser80 and Thr11 hydroxy groups. A hydrogen cyanide molecule subsequently replaces a water molecule and is deprotonated presumably by the His235 base. Deprotonation is facilitated by the proximity of the positive charge of the Lys236 side chain.  相似文献   

14.
The crystal structure of the 252-residue lumen-side domain of reduced cytochrome f, a subunit of the proton-pumping integral cytochrome b6f complex of oxygenic photosynthetic membranes, was determined to a resolution of 1.96 A from crystals cooled to -35 degrees. The model was refined to an R-factor of 15.8% with a 0.013-A RMS deviation of bond lengths from ideality. Compared to the structure of cytochrome f at 20 degrees, the structure at -35 degrees has a small change in relative orientation of the two folding domains and significantly lower isotropic temperature factors for protein atoms. The structure revealed an L-shaped array of five buried water molecules that extend in two directions from the N delta 1 of the heme ligand His 25. The longer branch extends 11 A within the large domain, toward Lys 66 in the prominent basic patch at the top of the large domain, which has been implicated in the interaction with the electron acceptor, plastocyanin. The water sites are highly occupied, and their temperature factors are comparable to those of protein atoms. Virtually all residues that form hydrogen bonds with the water chain are invariant among 13 known cytochrome f sequences. The water chain has many features that optimize it as a proton wire, including insulation from the protein medium. It is suggested that this chain may function as the lumen-side exit port for proton translocation by the cytochrome b6f complex.  相似文献   

15.
The animal fatty acid synthase is a multifunctional protein with a subunit molecular weight of 260,000. We recently reported the expression and characterization of the acyl carrier protein and thioesterase domains of the chicken liver fatty acid synthase in Escherichia coli. In order to gain insight into the mechanism of action of the thioesterase domain, we have replaced the putative active site serine 101 with alanine and cysteine and the conserved histidine 274 with alanine by site-directed mutagenesis. While both the Ser101----Ala and His274----Ala mutant proteins were inactive, the Ser101----Cys mutant enzyme (thiol-thioesterase) retained considerable activity, but the properties of the enzyme were changed from an active serine esterase to an active cysteine esterase, providing strong evidence for the role of Ser101 as the active site nucleophile. In order to further probe into the role of His274, a double mutant was constructed containing both the Ser101----Cys and the His274----Ala mutations. The double-mutant protein was inactive and exhibited diminished reactivity of the Cys-SH to iodoacetamide as compared to that of the Ser101----Cys-thioesterase, suggesting a role of His274 as a general base in withdrawing the proton from the Cys-SH in the thiol-thioesterase or Ser101 in the wild-type enzyme. Incubation of the recombinant thioesterases with [1-14C] palmitoyl-CoA resulted in the incorporation of [1-14C] palmitoyl into the enzyme only in the double mutant, suggesting that Cys-SH of the double mutant is reactive enough to form the palmitoyl-S-enzyme intermediate. This intermediate is not hydrolyzed because of the lack of His274, which is required for the attack of H2O on the acyl enzyme. These results suggest that the catalytic mechanism of the thioesterases may be similar to that of the serine proteases and lipases, which employ a serine-histidine-aspartic acid catalytic triad as part of their catalytic mechanism.  相似文献   

16.
Phosphoserine aminotransferase (PSAT; EC 2.6.1.52), a member of subgroup IV of the aminotransferases, catalyses the conversion of 3-phosphohydroxypyruvate to l-phosphoserine. The crystal structure of PSAT from Escherichia coli has been solved in space group P212121 using MIRAS phases in combination with density modification and was refined to an R-factor of 17.5% (Rfree=20.1 %) at 2.3 A resolution. In addition, the structure of PSAT in complex with alpha-methyl-l-glutamate (AMG) has been refined to an R-factor of 18.5% (Rfree=25.1%) at 2.8 A resolution. Each subunit (361 residues) of the PSAT homodimer is composed of a large pyridoxal-5'-phosphate binding domain (residues 16-268), consisting of a seven-stranded mainly parallel beta-sheet, two additional beta-strands and seven alpha-helices, and a small C-terminal domain, which incorporates a five-stranded beta-sheet and two alpha-helices. A three-dimensional structural comparison to four other vitamin B6-dependent enzymes reveals that three alpha-helices of the large domain, as well as an N-terminal domain (subgroup II) or subdomain (subgroup I) are absent in PSAT. Its only 15 N-terminal residues form a single beta-strand, which participates in the beta-sheet of the C-terminal domain. The cofactor is bound through an aldimine linkage to Lys198 in the active site. In the PSAT-AMG complex Ser9 and Arg335 bind the AMG alpha-carboxylate group while His41, Arg42 and His328 are involved in binding the AMG side-chain. Arg77 binds the AMG side-chain indirectly through a solvent molecule and is expected to position itself during catalysis between the PLP phosphate group and the substrate side-chain. Comparison of the active sites of PSAT and aspartate aminotransferase suggests a similar catalytic mechanism, except for the transaldimination step, since in PSAT the Schiff base is protonated. Correlation of the PSAT crystal structure to a published profile sequence analysis of all subgroup IV members allows active site modelling of nifs and the proposal of a likely molecular reaction mechanism.  相似文献   

17.
The crystal structure of tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase (EC 6.1.1.1) from Bacillus stearothermophilus has been refined to a crystallographic R-factor of 22.6% at 2.3 A resolution using a restrained least-squares procedure. In the final model the root-mean-square deviation from ideality for bond distances is 0.018 A and for angle distances is 0.044 A. Each monomer consists of three domains: an alpha/beta domain (residues 1 to 220) containing a six-stranded beta-sheet, an alpha-helical domain (248 to 318) containing five helices, and a disordered C-terminal domain (319 to 418) for which the electron density is very weak and where it has not been possible to trace the polypeptide chain. Complexes of the enzyme with the catalytic intermediate tyrosyl adenylate and the inhibitor tyrosinyl adenylate have also been refined to R-factors of 23.9% at 2.8 A resolution and 21.0% at 2.7 A resolution, respectively. Formation of the complexes results in some crystal cracking, but there is no significant difference in the conformation of the polypeptide chain of the three structures described here. The relative orientation of the alpha/beta and alpha-helical domains is similar to that previously observed for the "A" subunit of a deletion mutant lacking the C-terminal domain. Differences between these structures are confined to surface loops that are involved in crystal packing. Tyrosyl adenylate and tyrosinyl adenylate bind in similar conformations within a deep cleft in the alpha/beta domain. The tyrosine moiety is in the equivalent position to that occupied by tyrosine in crystals of the truncated mutant and makes similar strong polar interactions with the enzyme. The alpha-phosphate group interacts with the main-chain nitrogen of Asp38. The two hydroxyl groups of the ribose form strong interactions with the protein. The 2'-hydroxyl group interacts with the carboxylate of Asp194 and the main-chain nitrogen of Gly192 while the 3'-hydroxyl interacts with a tightly bound water molecule (Wat326). The adenine moiety appears to make no significant polar interactions with the protein. The results of site-directed mutagenesis studies are examined in the light of these refined structures.  相似文献   

18.
Glutaryl-7-amino cephalosporanic acid acylase is a member of the N-terminal nucleophilic hydrolase family of enzymes. The crystal structure of the acylase reveals there is a Ser-His-Glu motif composed of Ser1beta, His23beta, and Glu455beta near the active site. This mimics the catalytic triad of Ser-His-Asp in serine proteases. Experiments prove that maturation of this enzyme involves autoproteolysis. It has been shown that Ser1beta is the catalytic residue for the autoproteolysis and catalytic reaction. Our works on site-directed mutagenesis followed by the characterization of mutant enzymes demonstrated that His23beta is essential for autoproteolysis whereas Glu455beta is responsible for the efficiency of the process. Neither His23beta nor Glu455beta is essential for the acylase activity, although they affect the catalytic efficiency.  相似文献   

19.
M D Fothergill  A R Fersht 《Biochemistry》1991,30(21):5157-5164
The crystal structures of two mutant tyrosyl-tRNA synthetases (TyrTS) are reported to test predictions from kinetic data about structural perturbations and also to aid in the interpretation of apparent strengths of hydrogen bonds measured by protein engineering. The enzyme-tyrosine and enzyme-tyrosyl adenylate complexes of the mutant, TyrTS(Cys----Gly-35), have been determined at 2.5- and 2.7-A resolution, respectively. Residue Cys-35 is in the ribose binding site. Small rearrangements in structure are seen in the enzyme-tyrosine complex that are localized around the cavity created by the mutation. The side chain of Thr-51 moves to occupy the cavity, and Ile-52 adopts two significantly populated conformations, one as in the native enzyme and a second unique to the mutant. On binding tyrosyl adenylate, Ile-52 in the mutant crystal structure preferentially occupies the conformation observed in the native structure. The side chain at Thr-51 becomes disordered. The double-mutant test, which was designed to detect interactions between residues, had previously shown a discrepancy of some 0.4 kcal/mol on mutating Cys-35 and Thr-51 separately and together. A crystal structure of a second mutant, delta TyrTS(Tyr----Phe-34), complexed with tyrosine has been determined at 2.7-A resolution. Tyr-34 in wild-type enzyme makes a hydrogen bond with the phenolic oxygen of the bound tyrosine substrate. The mutant crystal structure was solved to discover whether or not a water molecule binds to the substrate instead of the hydroxyl of Tyr-34 as the interpretation of apparent binding energies from site-directed mutagenesis experiments hinges crucially on whether there is access of water to the mutated region.  相似文献   

20.
We have applied site-directed mutagenesis methods to change the conserved tryptophan-22 in the substrate binding site of Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase to phenylalanine (W22F) and histidine (W22H). The crystal structure of the W22F mutant in a binary complex with the inhibitor methotrexate has been refined at 1.9-A resolution. The W22F difference Fourier map and least-squares refinement show that structural effects of the mutation are confined to the immediate vicinity of position 22 and include an unanticipated 0.4-A movement of the methionine-20 side chain. A conserved bound water-403, suspected to play a role in the protonation of substrate DHF, has not been displaced by the mutation despite the loss of a hydrogen bond with tryptophan-22. Steady-state kinetics, stopped-flow kinetics, and primary isotope effects indicate that both mutations increase the rate of product tetrahydrofolate release, the rate-limiting step in the case of the wild-type enzyme, while slowing the rate of hydride transfer to the point where it now becomes at least partially rate determining. Steady-state kinetics show that below pH 6.8, kcat is elevated by up to 5-fold in the W22F mutant as compared with the wild-type enzyme, although kcat/Km(dihydrofolate) is lower throughout the observed pH range. For the W22H mutant, both kcat and kcat/Km(dihydrofolate) are substantially lower than the corresponding wild-type values. While both mutations weaken dihydrofolate binding, cofactor NADPH binding is not significantly altered. Fitting of the kinetic pH profiles to a general protonation scheme suggests that the proton affinity of dihydrofolate may be enhanced upon binding to the enzyme. We suggest that the function of tryptophan-22 may be to properly position the side chain of methionine-20 with respect to N5 of the substrate dihydrofolate.  相似文献   

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