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 31 毫秒
1.
The replacement of Arg-54 by Ala in the active site of Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamoylase causes a 17,000-fold loss of activity but does not significantly influence the binding of substrates or substrate analogs (Stebbins, J.W., Xu, W., & Kantrowitz, E.R., 1989, Biochemistry 28, 2592-2600). In the X-ray structure of the wild-type enzyme, Arg-54 interacts with both the anhydride oxygen and a phosphate oxygen of carbamoyl phosphate (CP) (Gouaux, J.E. & Lipscomb, W.N., 1988, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 85, 4205-4208). The Arg-54-->Ala enzyme was crystallized in the presence of the transition state analog N-phosphonacetyl-L-aspartate (PALA), data were collected to a resolution limit of 2.8 A, and the structure was solved by molecular replacement. The analysis of the refined structure (R factor = 0.18) indicates that the substitution did not cause any significant alterations to the active site, except that the side chain of the arginine was replaced by two water molecules. 31P-NMR studies indicate that the binding of CP to the wild-type catalytic subunit produces an upfield chemical shift that cannot reflect a significant change in the ionization state of the CP but rather indicates that there are perturbations in the electronic environment around the phosphate moiety when CP binds to the enzyme. The pH dependence of this upfield shift for bound CP indicates that the catalytic subunit undergoes a conformational change with a pKa approximately 7.7 upon CP binding. Furthermore, the linewidth of the 31P signal of CP bound to the Arg-54-->Ala enzyme is significantly narrower than that of CP bound to the wild-type catalytic subunit at any pH, although the change in chemical shift for the CP bound to the mutant enzyme is unaltered. 31P-NMR studies of PALA complexed to the wild-type catalytic subunit indicate that the phosphonate group of the bound PALA exists as the dianion at pH 7.0 and 8.8, whereas in the Arg-54-->Ala catalytic subunit the phosphonate group of the bound PALA exists as the monoanion at pH 7.0 and 8.8. Thus, the side chain of Arg-54 is essential for the proper ionization of the phosphonate group of PALA and by analogy the phosphate group in the transition state. These data support the previously proposed proton transfer mechanism, in which a fully ionized phosphate group in the transition state accepts a proton during catalysis.  相似文献   

2.
J M Pesando 《Biochemistry》1975,14(4):675-681
Nuclear magnetic resonance (nmr) spectra of human carbonic anhydrase B recorded in deuterium oxide reveal seven discrete single proton resonances between 7 and 9 ppm downfield from sodium 2,2-dimethyl-i-silapentane-5-sulfonate. Simplification of spectra by use of Fremy's salt, comparison of peak widths at intersections, and evaluation of the results of inhibition and modification experiments permit determination of the pH dependencies of these resonances. Five of these peaks change position with increasing pH; three move upfield by approximately 95 Hz and two move downfield by 10 and 23 Hz. The first three reflect residues with pK values of 7.23, 6.98, and 6 and can be assigned to the C-2 protons of histidines. The two remaining pH dependent resonances reflect groups with pK values of 8.2 and 8.24. Their line widths and T1 values are comparable to those of the first group, and they also appear to reflect C-H protons of histidines. Despite the structural and functional similarities of the B and C isozymes of human carbonic anhydrase, few of the low field resonances appear to be common to both. Six histidine C-2 protons are observed in the C enzyme and reflect groups with pK values of approximately 7.3, 6.5, 5.7, 6.6, 6.6, and 6.4. A seventh peak contains two protons and moves upfield with increasing pH without titrating. A final resonance to low field moves downfield with increasing pH and reflects a group with a pK between 6 and 7. Its behavior resembles that of peak 1 of the human B enzyme, and it also appears to be a histidine C-H proton. This peak may reflect a conserved residue in the two isozymes that plays an important role in enzymatic function, as discussed in the following paper.  相似文献   

3.
Pyridoxal-P reacts specifically with a single lysine residue at the active site of Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamylase (Greenwell, P., Jewett, S. L., and Stark, G. R. (1973) J. Biol. Chem. 248, 5994-6001). Reduction of the Schiff base with sodium borohydride, succinylation of the remaining lysine residues, and digestion with trypsin result in formation of a single pyridoxyl peptide, which was purified to homogeneity after chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, treatment with alkaline phosphatase, and rechromatography. Amino acid composition and the results of limited sequential degradation showed that this peptide corresponds to residues 62 to 98 in the sequence of Konigsberg and co-workers, and contains 2 residues of lysine (Henderson, L., Roy, D., Martin, D., and Konigsberg, W., personal communication). By similar isolation, a second peptide was obtained from unsuccinylated catalytic subunit, containing only the pyridoxylated lysine, which corresponds to Lys-80. Derivatives of catalytic subunit containing an average of either one, two, or three pyridoxamine-P moieties per trimer have been prepared by reduction. These species, which retain catalytic activity in proportion to their unmodified active sites, were recombined with regulatory subunit to prepare partially modified derivatives of native aspartate transcarbamylase. At pH 8, fluorescence emission bands were observed at 340 nm, due to aromatic amino acids in the protein, and at 395 nm, due to the pyridoxamine-P moiety. Upon excitation at 280 nm energy transfer from protein to pyridoxamine-P was approximately 15%. The properties of the probe were used to study changes accompanying the binding of substrates and inhibitors. The effects of CTP and ATP were small. With the transition state analog N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate (PALA) or the substrate carbamyl-P, two types of response were observed. Derivatives of catalytic subunit and native enzyme which contain some unmodified sites and hence retain partial catalytic activity gave large increases in fluorescence at 395 nm. However, fully modified inactive derivatives gave much smaller increases. A derivative of native enzyme containing one triply modified and one unmodified catalytic subunit behaved like the other partially modified species. These results indicate that there is communication among the active sites of different catalytic trimers in modified native enzyme, as well as among active sites within the same modified catalytic trimer. The increases in fluorescence result from a red shift of the absorption maximum of the pyridoxamine-P moiety from 315 to 325 nm, which increases the absorbance at the excitation wavelength for fluorescence. At pH 7, the absorption spectrum is already shifted and, consequently, the binding of PALA and carbamyl-P has little effect on the fluorescence. Therefore, the binding of these compounds at pH 8.0 must cause a structural change in the protein, which in turn causes protonation of a group in the modified active sites, altering the spectral properties.  相似文献   

4.
Summary In the presence of thymidylate synthase, the 19F signal of 5-fluoro-2-deoxyuridylate is shifted upfield 0.6 ppm or 4.5 ppm depending on the enzyme preparation used. The bands at these positions represent different species of binary complex. When either binary complex is reacted with methylenetetrahydrofolate a ternary complex is formed with a 19F signal shifted 12.5 ppm upfield and broadened to 120 Hz.Substitution of the hydrogen atoms of the methylene group of methylenetetrahydrofolate with deuterium atoms results in line-narrowing of the spectrum of the ternary complex from 120 to 80 Hz indicating the close proximity of the methylene group to the fluorine atom in the ternary complex. A model compound, 5-fluoro-6-hydroxy-5-methyl-5, 6-dihydrouracil, gives a chemical shift in the same direction and of similar magnitude to that seen with the ternary complex.  相似文献   

5.
M R Eftink  K Bystr?m 《Biochemistry》1986,25(21):6624-6630
The association of the coenzyme NAD+ to liver alcohol dehydrogenase (LADH) is known to be pH dependent, with the binding being linked to the shift in the pK of some group on the protein from a value of 9-10, in the free enzyme, to 7.5-8 in the LADH-NAD+ binary complex. We have further characterized the nature of this linkage between NAD+ binding and proton dissociation by studying the pH dependence (pH range 6-10) of the proton release, delta n, and enthalpy change, delta Ho(app), for formation of both binary (LADH-NAD+) and ternary (LADH-NAD+-I, where I is pyrazole or trifluoroethanol) complexes. The pH dependence of both delta n and delta Ho(app) is found to be consistent with linkage to a single acid dissociating group, whose pK is perturbed from 9.5 to 8.0 upon NAD+ binding and is further perturbed to approximately 6.0 upon ternary complex formation. The apparent enthalpy change for NAD+ binding is endothermic between pH 7 and pH 10, with a maximum at pH 8.5-9.0. The pH dependence of the delta Ho(app) for both binary and ternary complex formation is consistent with a heat of protonation of -7.5 kcal/mol for the coupled acid dissociating group. The intrinsic enthalpy changes for NAD+ binding and NAD+ plus pyrazole binding to LADH are determined to be approximately 0 and -11.0 kcal/mol, respectively. Enthalpy change data are also presented for the binding of the NAD+ analogues adenosine 5'-diphosphoribose and 3-acetylpyridine adenine dinucleotide.  相似文献   

6.
From the behavior of the 13C nmr resonances of the carbonyl carbons of phosphatidylcholine vesicles upon the addition of Yb3+, Ho3+, or Gd3+ lanthanide ions it is concluded that of the two peaks the larger downfield one should be assigned to the outside and the smaller upfield one to the inside of the vesicles. The downfield chemical shifts of the α and β carbonyl carbon peaks in vesicles as compared to CCl4 suggest that the carbonyl oxygens are hydrogen bonded to water in the vesicles. The β-carbonyl oxygen appears more exposed to water in vesicles. Addition of cholesterol to the vesicles produces little chemical shift change suggesting substitution of cholesterol for water in hydrogen bonding to a carbonyl oxygen; the α-carbonyl oxygen is suggested as the more likely acceptor.  相似文献   

7.
The carbon-13 NMR spectrum of oxaloacetate bound in the active site of citrate synthase has been obtained at 90.56 MHz. In the binary complex with enzyme, the positions of the resonances of oxaloacetate are shifted relative to those of the free ligand as follows: C-1 (carboxylate), -2.5 ppm; C-2 (carbonyl), +4.3 ppm; C-3 (methylene), -0.6 ppm; C-4 (carboxylate), +1.3 ppm. The change observed in the carbonyl chemical shift is successively increased in ternary complexes with the product [coenzyme A (CoA)], a substrate analogue (S-acetonyl-CoA), and an acetyl-CoA enolate analogue (carboxymethyl-CoA), reaching a value of +6.8 ppm from the free carbonyl resonance. Binary complexes are in intermediate to fast exchange on the NMR time scale with free oxaloacetate; ternary complexes are in slow exchange. Line widths of the methylene resonance in the ternary complexes suggest complete immobilization of oxaloacetate in the active site. Analysis of line widths in the binary complex suggests the existence of a dynamic equilibrium between two or more forms of bound oxaloacetate, primarily involving C-4. The changes in chemical shifts of the carbonyl carbon indicate strong polarization of the carbonyl bond or protonation of the carbonyl oxygen. Some of this carbonyl polarization occurs even in the binary complex. Development of positive charge on the carbonyl carbon enhances reactivity toward condensation with the carbanion/enolate of acetyl-CoA in the mechanism which has been postulated for this enzyme. The very large change in the chemical shift of the reacting carbonyl in the presence of an analogue of the enolate of acetyl-CoA supports this interpretation.  相似文献   

8.
The 13C chemical shifts of several 85% 13C-enriched amino acids and small peptides were studied as a function of pH. The results show that the chemical shifts of carbon atoms of ionizable groups vary significantly within the zone of their pK. Generally with the pH GOING FROM 7 to 1 all the deltaC are shifted more or less upfield with the exception of the carbonyl group carbon of the second last residue which is shifted slightly downfield. This suggests the formation of an hydrogen bond at acid pH involving in a seven-membered ring the C=O in question and the COOH terminal. The percentage of cis and trans conformers of glycyl-L-proline and glycyl-L-prolylglycine were studied as a function of pH. The trans form is always preponderant whatever the pH. The accessibility of the carbonyl group to protonation of the proline residue strongly influences the cis-trans equilibrium. Thus, with the pH varying from 7 to 1, the trans isomer changes from 61 to 85% for glycyl-L-proline and only from 77 to 80% for glycyl-L-prolylglycine. The proton NMR studies underline the important differences existing between the two molecular forms of glycyl-L-proline. The cis conformation is characterized with regard to the trans form by the non-equivalence of the alpha-protons of the glycine residue, by a lower pK(1) and by a larger deltadeltaHalpha of the proline residue as a function of pH. These results could suggest an end-to-end interaction in the cis form of the glycyl-L-proline molecule. The 13C-13C coupling constants were also studied as a function of pH. The results show that J(Co-Calpha) of a C-terminal residue, varying from 5 to 6 Hz and reflecting thhe pK of the carboxylate group, is a linear function of delta(Co) and delta(Calpha) as in the case of the amino acids. The total variation of the electron density of those two carbons in an amino acid is approximately 40% weaker than in a C-terminal residue. The charge distribution along the Calpha-C(o) bond, however, is practically the same in both cases. Finally the ratios of the conversion rate constants of the two isomers cis-trans of glycyl-proline were calculated at different pH values; the relations between the isomer percentages and delta(Co), delta(Calpha) on the one hand and the J(Co-Calpha) on the other were established.  相似文献   

9.
Some preparations of both native aspartate transcarbamylase from Escherichia coli and catalytic subunit have fewer tight binding sites per oligomer for carbamyl-P than the number of catalytic peptide chains. In contrast, the number of sites for the tight-binding inhibitor N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate does equal the number of catalytic chains in each case. Binding of the labile carbamyl-P was determined using rapid gel filtration, with conversion to stable carbamyl-L-aspartate during collection. Native enzyme (six catalytic chains) obtained from cells grown under the conditions of J.C. Gerhart and H. Holoubek (J. Biol. Chem. (1967) 242, 2886-2892) has 5.4 tight sites for carbamyl-P at pH 8.0 (KD = 9.9 muM), whereas native enzyme from cells grown with higher concentrations of glucose, uracil, and histidine (to yield more enzyme per unit volume of culture) has only 1.9 tight sites at pH 8.0 (KD = 4.6 muM) and only 2.3 tight sites at pH 7.0 (KD = 2.6 muM). At pH 8.0, catalytic subunit (three catalytic chains) obtained from the former native enzyme has 2.2 tight sites for carbamyl-P (KD = 2.4 muM) and the number of sites is 2.3 in the presence of 35 mM succinate, whereas catalytic subunit obtained from the latter native enzyme has 1.8 tight sites (KD = 3.6 muM) in the absence of succinate and 2.3 tight sites in its presence. The number of tight binding sites is also less than the number of subunit peptide chains in 19F nuclear magnetic resonance experiments performed with catalytic subunit and two fluorinated analogs of carbamyl-P at comparable concentrations of analogs and active sites. A model is proposed in which incomplete removal of formylmethionine from the NH2 termini of the enzyme under conditions of extreme depression affects affinity for ligands.  相似文献   

10.
Two mechanisms have been postulated for the formation of bound alpha-iminoglutarate intermediate during the glutamate dehydrogenase-catalyzed reductive amination of alpha-ketoglutarate; one involves the nucleophilic attack of ammonia on a covalently bound Schiff base in the enzyme-NADPH-alpha-ketoglutarate complex, and the other involves the reaction of ammonia with the carbonyl group of alpha-ketoglutarate in the ternary complex. We have measured the rates of carbonyl oxygen exchange in the complex to unambiguously distinguish between these two mechanisms. We find that the loss of label in the carbonyl oxygen-labeled ternary complex is at least 10(5) times slower than the rate of the reductive amination reaction. Therefore, the former mechanism cannot be operative. We also find that (i) the carbonyl oxygen exchange in free alpha-ketoglutarate proceeds without any significant catalysis by its gamma-carboxylate group; (ii) this exchange reaction has energy parameters which are comparable to those observed for the hydration of simple aliphatic ketones; and (iii) the carbonyl oxygen exchange in bound alpha-ketoglutarate is slower than that in the free keto acid over a wide pH range. We conclude that the oxygen exchange in the free and bound alpha-ketoglutarate must occur via a gem-diol intermediate. The observation that the enzyme inhibits the reaction of water with alpha-ketoglutarate while it catalyzes the reaction of ammonia with the same keto acid points to an extraordinary recognition of ammonia by the enzyme. We interpret this observation by assuming that the enzyme-NADPH-alpha-ketoglutarate complex exists in two forms, a predominant form which is produced rapidly upon mixing the components together and an unstable form which is produced in trace amounts from the predominant form via a gem-diol intermediate. These two forms are presumed to differ in the spatial relationship of the carbonyl group to the enzyme functional groups. The carbonyl group in the unstable form is assumed to be surrounded by the same enzyme groups as the iminium ion is in the bound iminoglutarate complex. We ascribe the remarkable catalysis of the ammonia reaction and the inhibition of the water reaction by the enzyme to the opposing interactions of the iminium and carbonyl groups with these surrounding enzyme groups.  相似文献   

11.
The quenching of liver alcohol dehydrogenase protein fluorescence at alkaline pH indicates two conformational states of the enzyme with a pKa of 9.8+/-0.2, shifted to 10.6+/-0.2 in D2O. NAD+ and 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulfonate, a fluorescent probe competitive with coenzyme, bind to the acid conformation of the enzyme. The pKa of the protein-fluorescence quenching curve is shifted toward 7.6 in the presence of NAD+, and the ternary complex formation with NAD+ and trifluoroethanol results in a pH-independent maximal quench. At pH (pD) 10.5, the rate constant for NAD+ binding was 2.6 times faster in D2O2 than in H2O due to the shift of the pKa. Based on these results, a scheme has been proposed in which the state of protonation of an enzyme functional group with a pKa of 9.8 controls the conformational state of the enzyme. NAD+ binds to the acid conformation and subsequently causes another conformational change resulting in the perturbation of the pKa to 7.6. Alcohol then binds to the unprotonated form of the functional group with a pKa of 7.6 in the binary enzyme-NAD+ complex and converts the enzyme to the alkaline conformation. Thus, at neutral pH liver alcohol dehydrogenase undergoes two conformational changes en route to the ternary complex in which hydride transfer occurs.  相似文献   

12.
Ligand-induced ultraviolet difference spectra have been determined for Escherichia coli ornithine transcarbamoylase. The most prominent feature of the spectra is an absorbance difference which resembles a single period of a sine wave spanning the 245-320 nm region with a maximum at approximately 270 nm and a minimum at around 295-300 nm. This broad absorbance difference is typical of a blue-shift 1La band of tryptophan. Superimposed on the broad band in the 275-310 nm region is a series of smaller, narrow peaks resulted from red-shifted 1Lb bands of tryptophan and tyrosine residues. At pH 8.5, only carbamoyl phosphate and its analog phosphonacetamide yield a large ultraviolet difference absorbance (approximately 1800 M-1 cm-1) when bound to the enzyme. The spectra obtained are essentially the same in lineshape to and 80% in intensity of that produced by the bisubstrate analogy, N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-ornithine. In contrast, inorganic phosphate, a product of the reaction, induces small protein absorbance changes (approximately 300 M-1 cm-1) mainly in the 275-310 nm range. When complexed to the free enzyme, L-ornithine yields a marginally discernible ultraviolet difference spectrum in the 275-310 nm region, and its analogs L-norvaline and L-citrulline provide no absorbance change. However, inorganic phosphate in combination with any of the L-amino acids produces a difference spectrum similar to that given by carbamoyl phosphate alone. Collectively, these spectra suggest that carbamoyl phosphate elicits an isomerization required for the formation of the ternary complex and are consistent with the compulsory ordered mechanism of the enzyme at pH 8.5 with carbamoyl phosphate being the first substrate bound. Below pH 8, there is a kinetically discernible amount of random binding, but ordered addition is still the preferred pathway (Wargnies B., Legrain, C., and Stalon, V. (1978) Eur J. Biochem. 89, 203-212). Reflecting this change, the difference absorbance of the enzyme bound with carbamoyl phosphate is also pH dependent. The 1La band in the carbamoyl phosphate difference spectrum diminishes by approximately 20% at low pH. The PALO-induced changes, however, are pH invariant suggesting that full extent of the induced-fit isomerization is always reached in the ternary complex.  相似文献   

13.
EPR characteristics of cytochrome c1, cytochromes b-565 and b-562, the iron-sulfur cluster, and an antimycin-sensitive ubisemiquinone radical of purified cytochrome b-c1 complex of Rhodobacter sphaeroides have been studied. The EPR specra of cytochrome c1 shows a signal at g = 3.36 flanked with shoulders. The oxidized form of cytochrome b-562 shows a broad EPR signal at g = 3.49, while oxidized cytochrome b-565 shows a signal at g = 3.76, similar to those of two b cytochromes in the mitochondrial complex. The distribution of cytochromes b-565 and b-562 in the isolated complex is 44 and 56%, respectively. Antimycin and 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-1,4-benzoquinone (DBMIB) have little effect on the g = 3.76 signal, but they cause a slight downfield and upfield shifts of the g = 3.49 signal, respectively. 5-Undecyl-6-hydroxyl-4,7-dioxobenzothiazole (UHDBT) shifts the g = 3.49 signal downfield to g = 3.56 and sharpens the g = 3.76 signal slightly. Myxothiazol causes an upfield shift of both g = 3.49 and g = 3.76 signals. EPR characteristics of the reduced iron-sulfur cluster in bacterial cytochrome b-c1 complex are: gx = 1.8 with a small shoulder at g = 1.76, gy = 1.89 and gz = 2.02, similar to those observed with the mitochondrial enzyme. The gx = 1.8 signal decreased and the shoulder increased concurrently as the redox potential decreased, indicating that the environment of the iron-sulfur cluster is sensitive to the redox state of the complex. UHDBT sharpens the gz and and shifts it downfield from g = 2.02 to 2.03, and shifts gx upfield from g = 1.80 to 1.78. UHDBT also causes an upfield shift of gy but to a much lesser extent compared to the other two signals. Addition of DBMIB causes a downfield shift of the gy from 1.89 to 1.94 and broadens the gx signal with an upfield to g = 1.75. Myxothiazol and antimycin show little effect on the gy and gz signals, but they broaden and shift the gx signal upfield to g = 1.74. However, the myxothiazol effect is partially reversed by UHDBT. An antimycin-sensitive ubisemiquinone radical was detected in the cytochrome b-c1 complex. At pH 8.4, the antimycin-sensitive ubisemiquinone radical has a maximal concentration of 0.66 mol per mol complex at 100 mV.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
Heng S  Stieglitz KA  Eldo J  Xia J  Cardia JP  Kantrowitz ER 《Biochemistry》2006,45(33):10062-10071
Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamoylase (ATCase) catalyzes the committed step in pyrimidine nucleotide biosynthesis, the reaction between carbamoyl phosphate (CP) and l-aspartate to form N-carbamoyl-l-aspartate and inorganic phosphate. The enzyme exhibits homotropic cooperativity and is allosterically regulated. Upon binding l-aspartate in the presence of a saturating concentration of CP, the enzyme is converted from the low-activity low-affinity T state to the high-activity high-affinity R state. The potent inhibitor N-phosphonacetyl-l-aspartate (PALA), which combines the binding features of Asp and CP into one molecule, has been shown to induce the allosteric transition to the R state. In the presence of only CP, the enzyme is the T structure with the active site primed for the binding of aspartate. In a structure of the enzyme-CP complex (T(CP)), two CP molecules were observed in the active site approximately 7A apart, one with high occupancy and one with low occupancy. The high occupancy site corresponds to the position for CP observed in the structure of the enzyme with CP and the aspartate analogue succinate bound. The position of the second CP is in a unique site and does not overlap with the aspartate binding site. As a means to generate a new class of inhibitors for ATCase, the domain-open T state of the enzyme was targeted. We designed, synthesized, and characterized three inhibitors that were composed of two phosphonacetamide groups linked together. These two phosphonacetamide groups mimic the positions of the two CP molecules in the T(CP) structure. X-ray crystal structures of ATCase-inhibitor complexes revealed that each of these inhibitors bind to the T state of the enzyme and occupy the active site area. As opposed to the binding of Asp in the presence of CP or PALA, these inhibitors are unable to initiate the global T to R conformational change. Although the best of these T-state inhibitors only has a K(i) value in the micromolar range, the structural information with respect to their mode of binding provides important information for the design of second generation inhibitors that will have even higher affinity for the active site of the T state of the enzyme.  相似文献   

15.
In the presence of dihydrofolate reductase the carbon magnetic resonance spectrum of folate labeled at the benzoylcarbonyl carbon with 13C contains two broadened peaks arising from free and enzyme-bound folate, the latter appearing over 2 ppm upfield from free folate. Addition of TPN+ causes sharpening of both peaks indicating formation of a single folate-TPN+-enzyme ternary complex. Methotrexate specifically displaces folate from the ternary complex regenerating a single sharp resonance at 170.4 ppm characteristic of free folate. Line width changes show that folate is bound more tightly in the ternary than in the binary complex. Increased shielding of this carbonyl upon binding is inconsistent with its participation in a H-bond.  相似文献   

16.
The allosteric enzyme aspartate transcarbamoylase (ATCase) exists in two conformational states. The enzyme, in the absence of substrates is primarily in the low-activity T state, is converted to the high-activity R state upon substrate binding, and remains in the R state until substrates are exhausted. These conformational changes have made it difficult to obtain structural data on R-state active-site complexes. Here we report the R-state structure of ATCase with the substrate Asp and the substrate analog phosphonoactamide (PAM) bound. This R-state structure represents the stage in the catalytic mechanism immediately before the formation of the covalent bond between the nitrogen of the amino group of Asp and the carbonyl carbon of carbamoyl phosphate. The binding mode of the PAM is similar to the binding mode of the phosphonate moiety of N-(phosphonoacetyl)-l-aspartate (PALA), the carboxylates of Asp interact with the same residues that interact with the carboxylates of PALA, although the position and orientations are shifted. The amino group of Asp is 2.9 A away from the carbonyl oxygen of PAM, positioned correctly for the nucleophilic attack. Arg105 and Leu267 in the catalytic chain interact with PAM and Asp and help to position the substrates correctly for catalysis. This structure fills a key gap in the structural determination of each of the steps in the catalytic cycle. By combining these data with previously determined structures we can now visualize the allosteric transition through detailed atomic motions that underlie the molecular mechanism.  相似文献   

17.
13C and 15N isotope effects have been measured for the aspartate transcarbamylase (ATCase) reaction in an effort to elucidate the chemical mechanism of this highly regulated enzyme. The observed 15(V/K(asp))H2O value for the ATCase holoenzyme at saturing carbamyl phosphate and 12 mM L-aspartate is 1.0045 at pH 7.5, and this value remains unchanged in the presence of 5 mM ATP (activator) or 5 mM CTP (inhibitor). The fact that the isotope effect is not changed by the allosteric modifiers supports the conclusion that the kinetic properties of the active form of ATCase are not influenced by ATP or CTP. The observed 15(V/K(asp)) values for the catalytic subunit of ATCase are also the same as those determined for the holoenzyme, suggesting that the chemical mechanisms of both enzyme species are the same. Quantitative analysis of 13C and 15N isotope effects in both H2O and D2O has led to the proposal of a chemical model for the ATCase reaction which involves a precatalytic conformational change to form an activated complex that facilitates deprotonation of L-aspartate by an enzyme functional group. Nucleophilic attack on the carbonyl carbon of carbamyl phosphate by the alpha-amino group of L-aspartate results in the formation of a tetrahedral intermediate. An intramolecular proton transfer leads to formation of products N-carbamyl-L-aspartate and inorganic phosphate.  相似文献   

18.
Citrate synthase complexes with the transition-state analog inhibitor, carboxymethyl-CoA (CM-CoA), are believed to mimic those with the activated form of acetyl-CoA. The X-ray structure [Karpusas, M., Branchaud, B., & Remington, S.J. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 2213] of the ternary complex of the enzyme, oxaloacetate, and CMCoA has been used as the basis for a proposal that a neutral enol of acetyl-CoA is that activated form. Since the inhibitor carboxyl has a pKa of 3.90, analogy with an enolic acetyl-CoA intermediate leads to the prediction that a proton should be taken up from solution upon formation of the analog complex so that the transition-state analog carboxyl is protonated when bound. We have obtained evidence in solution for this proposal by comparing the isoelectric points and the pH dependence of the dissociation constants of the ternary complexes of the pig heart enzyme with the neutral ground-state analog inhibitor, acetonyl-CoA (KCoA), and the anionic transition-state analog inhibitor (CMCoA) and by studying the NMR spectra of the transition-state analog complexes of allosteric (Escherichia coli) and nonallosteric (pig heart) enzymes. The pH dependence of the dissociation constant of the ground-state analog indicates no proton uptake, while that for the transition-state analog indicates that 0.55 +/- 0.04 proton is taken up when the analog binds to the citrate synthase-oxaloacetate binary complex. The overall charges of ternary complexes of the pig heart enzyme with the transition-state and ground-state analog inhibitors are the same, as monitored by their isoelectric points.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
13C isotope effects have been measured for the aspartate transcarbamylase holoenzyme (ATCase) and catalytic subunit catalyzed reactions in the presence of the bisubstrate analog N-(phosphonoacetyl)-L-aspartate (PALA). For holoenzyme-catalyzed reactions in the physiological direction with very low levels of L-aspartate as substrate, or with L-cysteine sulfinate as substrate, or in the reverse direction with carbamyl-L-aspartate and phosphate as substrates, the isotope effect data show a slight dependence on PALA concentration. Under these conditions, PALA first stimulates the rate and then inhibits it at higher concentrations. The observed isotope effect at maximum stimulation by PALA is slightly smaller than in the absence of the analog, but as the PALA concentration is increased to reduce the rate to its original value, the observed isotope effect also increases and approaches the value of the isotope effect determined in the absence of PALA. These data suggest that the kinetic properties of the active enzyme are affected by the number of active sites occupied by PALA, indicating communication between subunits, and a mathematical model is proposed which explains our experimental observations. In contrast to these results with the holoenzyme, isotope effects measured for the reaction catalyzed by the isolated catalytic subunits are not altered in the presence of PALA. Taken together, these data are consistent with the two-state model for the homotropic regulation of ATCase.  相似文献   

20.
Imino proton and 31P NMR studies were conducted on the binding of actinomycin D (ActD) to self-complementary oligodeoxyribonucleotides with one GC binding site [d(ATATGCATAT) (1), d-(ATACGCGTAT) (2), and d(ATATACGCGTATAT) (3)] and with two GC sites [d(ATGCATGCAT) (4)]. At R = 1 (molar ratio of ActD to oligomer duplex) ActD caused a doubling of the number of imino proton signals at, and adjacent to, the GC binding site of 1. One of the G.C base pair signals shifted upfield while the other shifted downfield. Both of the signals for the A.T base pairs adjacent to the binding site shifted downfield. All imino proton signals of 2 and the longer sequence, 3, shifted upfield on binding of ActD to the GC site, indicating a sequence-dependent change in base stacking on complex formation. For both 1 and 2 addition of ActD resulted in a similar pattern of three downfield 31P NMR signals. The two most downfield signals have chemical shift and temperature dependence which are characteristic of phosphate groups at isolated intercalation sites. At R = 1 the ActD complex with 4 has very complex spectra with both upfield and downfield A.T and G.C imino signals. All these data were consistent with two 1:1 complexes with the unsymmetrical phenoxazone ring adopting both of the two possible orientations.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  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