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1.
Nelson SW  Iancu CV  Choe JY  Honzatko RB  Fromm HJ 《Biochemistry》2000,39(36):11100-11106
Wild-type porcine fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (FBPase) has no tryptophan residues. Hence, the mutation of Try57 to tryptophan places a unique fluorescent probe in the structural element (loop 52-72) putatively responsible for allosteric regulation of catalysis. On the basis of steady-state kinetics, circular dichroism spectroscopy, and X-ray crystallography, the mutation has little effect on the functional and structural properties of the enzyme. Fluorescence intensity from the Trp57 mutant is maximal in the presence of divalent cations, fructose 6-phosphate and orthophosphate, which together stabilize an R-state conformation in which loop 52-72 is engaged with the active site. The level of fluorescence emission decreases monotonically with increasing levels of AMP, an allosteric inhibitor, which promotes the T-state, disengaged-loop conformation. The titration of various metal-product complexes of the Trp57 mutant with fructose 2,6-bisphosphate (F26P(2)) causes similar decreases in fluorescence, suggesting that F26P(2) and AMP individually induce similar conformational states in FBPase. Fluorescence spectra, however, are sensitive to the type of divalent cation (Zn(2+), Mn(2+), or Mg(2+)) and suggest conformations in addition to the R-state, loop-engaged and T-state, loop-disengaged forms of FBPase. The work presented here demonstrates the utility of fluorescence spectroscopy in probing the conformational dynamics of FBPase.  相似文献   

2.
The generation and propagation of conformational changes associated with ligand binding in the allosteric enzyme glucosamine-6-phosphate deaminase (GlcN6P deaminase, EC 3.5.99.6) from Escherichia coli were analyzed by fluorescence measurements. Single-tryptophan mutant forms of the enzyme were constructed on the basis of previous structural and functional evidence and used as structural-change probes. The reporter residues were placed in the active-site lid (position 174) and in the allosteric site (254 and 234); in addition, signals from the natural Trp residues (15 and 224) were also studied as structural probes. The structural changes produced by the occupation of either the allosteric or the active site by site-specific ligands were monitored through changes in the spectral center of mass (SCM) of their steady-state emission fluorescence spectra. Binding of the allosteric activator produces only minimal signals in titration experiments. In contrast, measurable spectral signals were found when the active site was occupied by a dead-end inhibitor. The results reveal that the two binary complexes, enzyme-activator (R(A)) and enzyme-inhibitor (R(S)) complexes, have structural differences and that they also differ from the ternary complex (R(AS)). The mobility of the active-site lid motif is shown to be independent of the allosteric transition. The active-site ligand induces cooperative SCM changes even in the enzyme-activator complex, indicating that the propagation pathway of the conformational relaxation triggered from the active site is different from that involved in the heterotropic activation. Analysis of the complete set of mutants shows that the occupation of the active site generates structural perturbations, which are propagated to the whole of the monomer and extend to the other subunits. The accumulative effect of these propagated changes should be responsible for the change in the sign of the DeltaG degrees ' of the T to R transition associated with the progression of the active-site occupation, resulting in the predominance of the R over the T forms in the population of deaminase hexamers.  相似文献   

3.
Jin L  Stec B  Kantrowitz ER 《Biochemistry》2000,39(27):8058-8066
The only cis-proline residue in Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamoylase has been replaced by alanine using site-specific mutagenesis. The Pro268-->Ala enzyme exhibits a 40-fold reduction in enzyme activity and decreased substrate affinity toward carbamoyl phosphate and aspartate compared to the corresponding values for the wild-type enzyme. The concentration of the bisubstrate analogue N-phosphonacetyl-L-aspartate (PALA) required to activate the mutant enzyme to the same extent as the wild-type enzyme is significantly increased. The heterotropic effects of ATP and CTP upon the Pro268-->Ala enzyme are also altered. Crystal structures of the Pro268-->Ala enzyme in both T- and R-states show that the cis-peptidyl linkage between Leu267 and Ala268 is maintained. However, the tertiary structure of both the catalytic and regulatory chains has been altered by the amino acid substitution, and the mobility of the active-site residues is increased for the R-state structure of Pro268-->Ala enzyme as comparison with the wild-type R-state structure. These structural changes are responsible for the loss of enzyme activity. Thus, Pro268 is required for the proper positioning of catalytically critical residues in the active site and is important for the formation of the high-activity high-affinity R-state of E. coli aspartate transcarbamoylase.  相似文献   

4.
An autolysis site of functional and structural significance has been mapped within the dimer interface of Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus protease. Cleavage 27 residues from the C terminus of the 230 amino acid residue, 25 kDa protein was observed to cause a loss of dimerization and proteolytic activity, even though no active site moieties were lost. Gel-filtration chromatography and analytical ultracentrifugation were used to analyze the changes in oligomerization upon autolysis. The selective auto-disruption of this essential protein-protein interface by proteolytic cleavage resulted in a 60 % loss in mean residue ellipticity by circular dichroism as well as a 20 % weaker, 10 nm red-shifted intrinsic protein fluorescence emission spectrum. These apparent conformational changes induced a strict inhibition of enzymatic activity. An engineered substitution at the P1' position of this cleavage site attenuated autolysis by the enzyme and restored wild-type dimerization. In addition to retaining full proteolytic activity in a continuous fluorescence-based enzyme assay, this protease variant allowed the determination of the enzyme's dimerization dissociation constant of 1.7 (+/-0.9) microM. The structural perturbations observed in this enzyme may play a role in viral maturation, and offer general insight into the allosteric relationship between the dimer interface and active site of herpesviral proteases. The functional coupling between oligomerization and activity presented here may allow for a better understanding of such phenomena, and the design of an enzyme variant stabilized to autolysis should further the structural and mechanistic characterization of this viral protease.  相似文献   

5.
K M Duda  C L Brooks 《FEBS letters》1999,449(2-3):120-124
Comparison of crystallographic structures of human growth hormone, either bound to the prolactin receptor or free of receptors, reveals that human growth hormone binding to the prolactin receptor at site 1 is associated with a structural change in human growth hormone that influences the organization of residues which constitute site 2. We have identified Tyr164 as a residue that is critical for the propagation of this structural rearrangement. Tyr164 is a structural epitope for site 1 and is distal to site 2. Mutation of Tyr164 to glutamic acid (Y164E) does not affect the somatotrophic activity, absorption or fluorescence spectra or binding to the human prolactin receptor when compared to wild-type human growth hormone, indicating the subtle effects of the mutation. Lactogenic assays using extended concentrations of Y164E human growth hormone produce dose-response curves that are characterized by a right-shifted agonist phase and an unchanged antagonist phase when compared to wild-type human growth hormone. These results indicate that Tyr164 is required for the lactogenic activity of human growth hormone and that mutation to glutamic acid disrupts the lactogenic function of site 2.  相似文献   

6.
We have used site-specific amino acid substitutions to investigate the linkage between the allosteric properties of arpartate transcarbamoylase and the global conformational transition exhibited by the enzyme upon binding active-site ligands. Two mutationally altered enzymes in which an amino acid substitution had been introduced at a single position in the catalytic polypeptide chain (Lys-164----Glu and Glu-239----Lys) and a third species harboring both of these substitutions (Lys-164:Glu-239----Glu:Lys) were constructed. Sedimentation velocity difference studies were performed in order to assess the effects of the amino acid substitutions on the quaternary structure of the holoenzyme in the absence and presence of various active-site ligands, including the bisubstrate analog, N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate (PALA), which has been shown previously to promote the allosteric transition. In the absence of ligand, two of the mutationally altered enzymes, Lys-164----Glu and Lys-164:Glu-239----Glu:Lys, existed in the R conformation, isomorphous with that of the PALA-liganded wild-type holoenzyme. These enzymes exhibited no conformational change upon binding PALA. The unliganded Glu-239----Lys enzyme had an average sedimentation coefficient intermediate between that of the unliganded and PALA-liganded states of the wild-type enzyme which could be accounted for in terms of a mixture of T- and R-state molecules. This mutant enzyme was converted to the fully swollen conformation upon binding PALA, phosphate or carbamoyl phosphate. The allosteric properties of the mutationally altered species were investigated by PALA-binding studies and by steady-state enzyme kinetics. In each case, the mutationally altered enzymes were devoid of both homotropic and heterotropic effects, supporting the premise that the allosteric properties of the wild-type enzyme are linked to a ligand-promoted change in quaternary structure.  相似文献   

7.
The activity and cooperativity of Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamoylase (ATCase) vary as a function of pH, with a maximum of both parameters at approximately pH 8.3. Here we report the first X-ray structure of unliganded ATCase at pH 8.5, to establish a structural basis for the observed Bohr effect. The overall conformation of the active site at pH 8.5 more closely resembles the active site of the enzyme in the R-state structure than other T-state structures. In the structure of the enzyme at pH 8.5 the 80's loop is closer to its position in R-state structures. A unique electropositive channel, comprised of residues from the 50's region, is observed in this structure, with Arg54 positioned in the center of the channel. The planar angle between the carbamoyl phosphate and aspartate domains of the catalytic chain is more open at pH 8.5 than in ATCase structures determined at lower pH values. The structure of the enzyme at pH 8.5 also exhibits lengthening of a number of interactions in the interface between the catalytic and regulatory chains, whereas a number of interactions between the two catalytic trimers are shortened. These alterations in the interface between the upper and lower trimers may directly shift the allosteric equilibrium and thus the cooperativity of the enzyme. Alterations in the electropositive environment of the active site and alterations in the position of the catalytic chain domains may be responsible for the enhanced activity of the enzyme at pH 8.5.  相似文献   

8.
Bell JK  Grant GA  Banaszak LJ 《Biochemistry》2004,43(12):3450-3458
Phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase (PGDH) catalyzes the first step in the serine biosynthetic pathway. In lower plants and bacteria, the PGDH reaction is regulated by the end-product of the pathway, serine. The regulation occurs through a V(max) mechanism with serine binding and inhibition occurring in a cooperative manner. The three-dimensional structure of the serine inhibited enzyme, determined by previous work, showed a tetrameric enzyme with 222 symmetry and an unusual overall toroidal appearance. To characterize the allosteric, cooperative effects of serine, we identified W139G PGDH as an enzymatically active mutant responsive to serine but not in a cooperative manner. The position of W139 near a subunit interface and the active site cleft suggested that this residue is a key player in relaying allosteric effects. The 2.09 A crystal structure of W139G-PGDH, determined in the absence of serine, revealed major quaternary and tertiary structural changes. Contrary to the wildtype enzyme where residues encompassing residue 139 formed extensive intersubunit contacts, the corresponding residues in the mutant were conformationally flexible. Within each of the three-domain subunits, one domain has rotated approximately 42 degrees relative to the other two. The resulting quaternary structure is now in a novel conformation creating new subunit-to-subunit contacts and illustrates the unusual flexibility in this V(max) regulated enzyme. Although changes at the regulatory domain interface have implications in other enzymes containing a similar regulatory or ACT domain, the serine binding site in W139G PGDH is essentially unchanged from the wildtype enzyme. The structural and previous biochemical characterization of W139G PGDH suggests that the allosteric regulation of PGDH is mediated not only by changes occurring at the ACT domain interface but also by conformational changes at the interface encompassing residue W139.  相似文献   

9.
In vitro mutagenesis techniques have been used to investigate two structure-function questions relating to the allosteric citrate synthase of Escherichia coli. The first question concerns the binding site of alpha-keto-glutarate, which is a structural analogue of the substrate oxaloacetate and yet has been suggested to be an allosteric inhibitor of the enzyme. Using oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis of the cloned E. coli citrate synthase gene, we prepared missense mutants, designated CS226H----Q and CS229H----Q, in which histidine residues at positions 226 and 229, respectively, were replaced by glutamine. In the homologous pig heart citrate synthase it is known (Wiegand, G., and Remington, S. J. (1986) Annu. Rev. Biophys. Biophys. Chem. 15, 97-117) that the equivalent of His-229 helps to bind oxaloacetate, while the equivalent of His-226 is nearby. Kinetic and ligand binding measurements showed that CS226H----Q had a reduced affinity for oxaloacetate and alpha-ketoglutarate, while CS229H----Q bound oxaloacetate even less effectively, and was not inhibited by alpha-ketoglutarate at all under our conditions. This parallel loss of binding affinities for oxaloacetate and alpha-ketoglutarate, in two mutants altered in residues at the active site of E. coli citrate synthase, strongly suggests that inhibition of this enzyme by alpha-ketoglutarate is not allosteric but occurs by competitive inhibition at the active site. The second question investigated was whether the known inhibition by acetyl-CoA of binding of NADH, an allosteric inhibitor of E. coli citrate synthase, occurs heterotropically, as an indirect result of acetyl-CoA binding at the active site, or directly, by competition at the allosteric NADH binding site. Using existing restriction sites in the cloned E. coli citrate synthase gene, we prepared a deletion mutant which lacked 24 amino acids near what is predicted to the acetyl-CoA-binding portion of the active site. The mutant protein was inactive, and acetyl-CoA did not bind to the active site but still inhibited NADH binding. Thus acetyl-CoA can interact with both the allosteric and the active sites of this enzyme.  相似文献   

10.
Site-directed mutagenesis was employed to examine the role played by specific surface residues in the activity of cytochrome c peroxidase. The double charge, aspartic acid to lysine, point mutations were constructed at positions 37, 79, and 217 on the surface of cytochrome c peroxidase, sites purported to be within or proximal to the recognition site for cytochrome c in an electron-transfer productive complex formed by the two proteins. The resulting mutant peroxidases were examined for catalytic activity by steady-state measurements and binding affinity by two methods, fluorescence binding titration and cytochrome c affinity chromatography. The cloned peroxidases exhibit similar UV-visible spectra to the wild-type yeast protein, indicating that there are no major structural differences between the cloned peroxidases and the wild-type enzyme. The aspartic acid to lysine mutations at positions 79 and 217 exhibited similar turnover numbers and binding affinities to that seen for the "wild type-like" cloned peroxidase. The same change at position 37 caused more than a 10-fold decrease in both turnover of and binding affinity for cytochrome c. This empirical finding localizes a primary recognition region critical to the dynamic complex. Models from the literature proposing structures for the complex between peroxidase and cytochrome c are discussed in light of these findings.  相似文献   

11.
S-Adenosylmethionine decarboxylase (AdoMetDC) is a pyruvoyl-dependent enzyme that catalyzes an essential step in polyamine biosynthesis. The polyamines are required for cell growth, and the biosynthetic enzymes are targets for antiproliferative drugs. The function of AdoMetDC is regulated by the polyamine-precursor putrescine in a species-specific manner. AdoMetDC from the protozoal parasite Trypanosoma cruzi requires putrescine for maximal enzyme activity, but not for processing to generate the pyruvoyl cofactor. The putrescine-binding site is distant from the active site, suggesting a mechanism of allosteric regulation. To probe the structural basis by which putrescine stimulates T. cruzi AdoMetDC we generated mutations in both the putrescine-binding site and the enzyme active site. The catalytic efficiency of the mutant enzymes, and the binding of the diamidine inhibitors, CGP 48664A and CGP 40215, were analyzed. Putrescine stimulates the k(cat)/K(m) for wild-type T. cruzi AdoMetDC by 27-fold, and it stimulates the binding of both inhibitors (IC(50)s decrease 10-20-fold with putrescine). Unexpectedly CGP 48664A activated the T. cruzi enzyme at low concentrations (0.1-10 microM), while at higher concentrations (>100 microM), or in the presence of putrescine, inhibition was observed. Analysis of the mutant data suggests that this inhibitor binds both the putrescine-binding site and the active site, providing evidence that the putrescine-binding site of the T. cruzi enzyme has broad ligand specificity. Mutagenesis of the active site identified residues that are important for putrescine stimulation of activity (F7 and T245), while none of the active site mutations altered the apparent putrescine-binding constant. Mutations of residues in the putrescine-binding site that resulted in reduced (S111R) and enhanced (F285H) catalytic efficiency were both identified. These data provide evidence for coupling between residues in the putrescine-binding site and the active site, consistent with a mechanism of allosteric regulation.  相似文献   

12.
The biophysical properties of a tryptophan-shifted mutant of phosphofructokinase from Bacillus stearothermophilus (BsPFK) have been examined. The mutant, designated W179Y/Y164W, has kinetic and thermodynamic properties similar to the wild-type enzyme. A 2-fold decrease in kcat is observed, and the mutant displays a 3-fold smaller K(0.5) for the substrate, fructose-6-phosphate (Fru-6-P), as compared to the wild-type enzyme. The dissociation constant for the inhibitor, phospho(enol)pyruvate (PEP), increases 2-fold, and the coupling parameter, Q(ay), decreases 2-fold. This suggests that while the mutant displays a slightly decreased affinity for PEP, PEP is still an effective inhibitor once bound. The new position of the tryptophan in W179Y/Y164W is approximately 6 A from the Fru-6-P portion of the active site. A 25% decrease in fluorescence intensity is observed upon Fru-6-P binding, and an 80% decrease in fluorescence intensity is observed with PEP binding. In addition, the intrinsic fluorescence polarization increases from 0.327 +/- 0.001 to 0.353 +/- 0.001 upon Fru-6-P binding, but decreases to 0.290 +/- 0.001 when PEP binds. Most notably, the presence of PEP induces dissociation of the tetramer. Dissociation of the tetramer into dimers occurs along the active site interface and can be monitored by the loss in activity or the loss in tryptophan fluorescence that is observed when the enzyme is titrated with PEP. Activity can be protected or recovered by incubating the enzyme with Fru-6-P. Recovery of activity is enzyme concentration dependent, and the rate constant for association is 6.2 +/- 0.3 M(-1) x s(-1). Ultracentrifugation experiments revealed that in the absence of PEP the mutant enzyme exists in an equilibrium between the dimer and tetramer forms with a dissociation constant of 11.8 +/- 0.5 microM, while in the presence of PEP the enzyme exists in equilibrium between the dimer and monomer forms with a dissociation constant of 7.5 +/- 0.02 microM. A 3.1 A crystal structure of the mutant enzyme suggests that the amino acid substitutions have not dramatically altered the tertiary structure of the enzyme. While it is clear that wild-type BsPFK exists as a tetramer under these same conditions, these results suggest that quaternary structural changes probably play an important role in allosteric communication.  相似文献   

13.
Acetylcholinesterase engineering for detection of insecticide residues   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
To detect traces of insecticides in the environment using biosensors, we engineered Drosophila acetylcholinesterase (AChE) to increase its sensitivity and its rate of phosphorylation or carbamoylation by organophosphates or carbamates. The mutants made by site-directed mutagenesis were expressed in baculovirus. Different strategies were used to obtain these mutants: (i) substitution of amino acids at positions found mutated in AChE from insects resistant to insecticide, (ii) mutations of amino acids at positions suggested by 3-D structural analysis of the active site, (iii) Ala-scan analysis of amino acids lining the active site gorge, (iv) mutagenesis at positions detected as important for sensitivity in the Ala-scan analysis and (v) combination of mutations which independently enhance sensitivity. The results highlighted the difficulty of predicting the effect of mutations; this may be due to the structure of the site, a deep gorge with the active serine at the bottom and to allosteric effects between the top and the bottom of the gorge. Nevertheless, the use of these different strategies allowed us to obtain sensitive enzymes. The greatest improvement was for the sensitivity to dichlorvos for which a mutant was 300-fold more sensitive than the Drosophila wild-type enzyme and 288 000-fold more sensitive than the electric eel enzyme, the enzyme commonly used to detect organophosphate and carbamate.  相似文献   

14.
A structural feature shared by the metallo-beta-lactamases is a flexible loop of amino acids that extends over their active sites and that has been proposed to move during the catalytic cycle of the enzymes, clamping down on substrate. To probe the movement of this loop (residues 152-164), a site-directed mutant of metallo-beta-lactamase L1 was engineered that contained a Trp residue on the loop to serve as a fluorescent probe. It was necessary first, however, to evaluate the contribution of each native Trp residue to the fluorescence changes observed during the catalytic cycle of wild-type L1. Five site-directed mutants of L1 (W39F, W53F, W204F, W206F, and W269F) were prepared and characterized using metal analyses, CD spectroscopy, steady-state kinetics, stopped-flow fluorescence, and fluorescence titrations. All mutants retained the wild-type tertiary structure and bound Zn(II) at levels comparable with wild type and exhibited only slight (<10-fold) decreases in k(cat) values as compared with wild-type L1 for all substrates tested. Fluorescence studies revealed a single mutant, W39F, to be void of the fluorescence changes observed with wild-type L1 during substrate binding and catalysis. Using W39F as a template, a Trp residue was added to the flexile loop over the active site of L1, to generate the double mutant, W39F/D160W. This double mutant retained all the structural and kinetic characteristics of wild-type L1. Stopped-flow fluorescence and rapid-scanning UV-visible studies revealed the motion of the loop (k(obs) = 27 +/- 2 s(-1)) to be similar to the formation rate of a reaction intermediate (k(obs) = 25 +/- 2 s(-1)).  相似文献   

15.
Proteins exist as a dynamic ensemble of interconverting substates, which defines their conformational energy landscapes. Recent work has indicated that mutations that shift the balance between conformational substates (CSs) are one of the main mechanisms by which proteins evolve new functions. In the present study, we probe this assertion by examining phenotypic protein adaptation to extreme conditions, using the allosteric tetrameric lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) from the hyperthermophilic bacterium Thermus thermophilus (Tt) as a model enzyme. In the presence of fructose 1, 6 bis-phosphate (FBP), allosteric LDHs catalyze the conversion of pyruvate to lactate with concomitant oxidation of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, reduced form (NADH). The catalysis involves a structural transition between a low-affinity inactive "T-state" and a high-affinity active "R-state" with bound FBP. During this structural transition, two important residues undergo changes in their side chain conformations. These are R171 and H188, which are involved in substrate and FBP binding, respectively. We designed two mutants of Tt-LDH with one ("1-Mut") and five ("5-Mut") mutations distant from the active site and characterized their catalytic, dynamical, and structural properties. In 1-Mut Tt-LDH, without FBP, the K(m)(Pyr) is reduced compared with that of the wild type, which is consistent with a complete shifting of the CS equilibrium of H188 to that observed in the R-state. By contrast, the CS populations of R171, k(cat) and protein stability are little changed. In 5-Mut Tt-LDH, without FBP, K(m)(Pyr) approaches the values it has with FBP and becomes almost temperature independent, k(cat) increases substantially, and the CS populations of R171 shift toward those of the R-state. These changes are accompanied by a decrease in protein stability at higher temperature, which is consistent with an increased flexibility at lower temperature. Together, these results show that the thermal properties of an enzyme can be strongly modified by only a few or even a single mutation, which serve to alter the equilibrium and, hence, the relative populations of functionally important native-state CSs, without changing the nature of the CSs themselves. They also provide insights into the types of mutational pathways by which protein adaptation to temperature is achieved.  相似文献   

16.
Glycolysis occupies a central role in cellular metabolism, and is of particular importance for the catabolic production of ATP in protozoan parasites such as Leishmania and Trypanosoma. In these organisms pyruvate kinase plays a key regulatory role, and is unique in responding to fructose 2,6-bisphosphate as allosteric activator. The determination of the first eukaryotic pyruvate kinase crystal structure in the T-state is reported. A comparison of the leishmania and yeast R-state enzymes reveals fewer differences than the previous comparison of Escherichia coli T-state and rabbit muscle non-allosteric enzymes. Structural changes related to the allosteric transition can therefore be distinguished from those that are a consequence of the inherent wide structural divergence between bacterial and mammalian proteins. The allosteric transition involves significant changes in a tightly packed array of eight alpha helices at the interface near the catalytic site. At the other interface the allosteric transition appears to be accompanied by the bending of a ten-stranded intersubunit beta sheet adjacent to the effector site. Helix Calpha1 makes contacts to the N-terminal helical domain and bridges both interfaces. A comparison of the effector sites of the leishmania and yeast enzymes reveals the structural basis for the different effector specificity. Two loops comprising residues 443-453 and 480-489 adopt very different conformations in the two enzymes, and Lys453 and His480 that are a feature of trypanosomatid enzymes provide probable ligands for the 2-phospho group of the effector molecule. These differences offer an opportunity for the design of drugs that would bind to the trypanosomatid enzymes but not to those of the mammalian host.  相似文献   

17.
The structure of the cooperative hexameric enzyme ATP sulfurylase from Penicillium chrysogenum bound to its allosteric inhibitor, 3'-phosphoadenosine-5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS), was determined to 2.6 A resolution. This structure represents the low substrate-affinity T-state conformation of the enzyme. Comparison with the high substrate-affinity R-state structure reveals that a large rotational rearrangement of domains occurs as a result of the R-to-T transition. The rearrangement is accompanied by the 17 A movement of a 10-residue loop out of the active site region, resulting in an open, product release-like structure of the catalytic domain. Binding of PAPS is proposed to induce the allosteric transition by destabilizing an R-state-specific salt linkage between Asp 111 in an N-terminal domain of one subunit and Arg 515 in the allosteric domain of a trans-triad subunit. Disrupting this salt linkage by site-directed mutagenesis induces cooperative inhibition behavior in the absence of an allosteric effector, confirming the role of these two residues.  相似文献   

18.
The enteric bacterium Escherichia coli requires fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (FBPase) for growth on gluconeogenic carbon sources. Constitutive expression of FBPase and fructose-6-phosphate-1-kinase coupled with the absence of futile cycling implies an undetermined mechanism of coordinate regulation involving both enzymes. Tricarboxylic acids and phosphorylated three-carbon carboxylic acids, all intermediates of glycolysis and the tricarboxylic acid cycle, are shown here to activate E. coli FBPase. The two most potent activators, phosphoenolpyruvate and citrate, bind to the sulfate anion site, revealed previously in the first crystal structure of the E. coli enzyme. Tetramers ligated with either phosphoenolpyruvate or citrate, in contrast to the sulfate-bound structure, are in the canonical R-state of porcine FBPase but nevertheless retain sterically blocked AMP pockets. At physiologically relevant concentrations, phosphoenolpyruvate and citrate stabilize an active tetramer over a less active enzyme form of mass comparable with that of a dimer. The above implies the conservation of the R-state through evolution. FBPases of heterotrophic organisms of distantly related phylogenetic groups retain residues of the allosteric activator site and in those instances where data are available exhibit activation by phosphoenolpyruvate. Findings here unify disparate observations regarding bacterial FBPases, implicating a mechanism of feed-forward activation in bacterial central metabolism.  相似文献   

19.
Bezafibrate, an antilipidemic drug, is known as a potent allosteric effector of hemoglobin. The previously proposed mechanism for the allosteric potency of this drug was that it stabilizes and constrains the T-state of hemoglobin by specifically binding to the large central cavity of the T-state. Here we report a new allosteric binding site of fully liganded R-state hemoglobin for this drug. The high resolution crystal structure of horse carbonmonoxyhemoglobin in complex with bezafibrate reveals that the bezafibrate molecule lies near the surface of the E-helix of each alpha subunit and the complex maintains the quaternary structure of the R-state. Binding is caused by the close fit of bezafibrate into the binding pocket, which is composed of some hydrophobic residues and the heme edge, suggesting the importance of hydrophobic interactions. Upon binding of bezafibrate, the distance between Fe and the N epsilon(2) of distal His E7(alpha 58) is shortened by 0.22 A in the alpha subunit, whereas no significant structural changes are transmitted to the beta subunit. Oxygen equilibrium studies of R-state-locked hemoglobin with bezafibrate in a wet porous sol-gel indicate that bezafibrate selectively lowers the oxygen affinity of one type of subunit within the R-state, consistent with the structural data. These results disclose a new allosteric mechanism of bezafibrate and offer the first demonstration of how the allosteric effector interacts with R-state hemoglobin.  相似文献   

20.
The preparation of fluorescence labeled acyl enzymes (Streptomyces griseus trypsin) was successfully carried out using specific trypsin substrates, 'inverse substrates'. The topographical analysis of the structures of the area around the active site was carried out by measuring the fluorescence spectra of the acyl enzyme preparations and these results were compared with those of bovine trypsin. It was found that the polarity of the active site vicinity at pH 5 was similar to that of bovine trypsin, whereas considerable differences were noticed at lower pH as a result of pH-induced transformation. Conformational changes of the active site induced by the interaction with the specific ligand were analyzed from the fluorescence spectra. In these responses the two enzymes were quite distinguishable. The two enzymes active sites were also different in the energy transfer experiments. The spatial arrangements of the catalytic residues relative to the intrinsic tryptophan residues were suggested to be substantially different for the two enzymes.  相似文献   

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