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1.
To investigate the functional role of an invariant histidine residue in Trigonopsis variabilis D-amino acid oxidase (DAAO), a set of mutant enzymes with replacement of the histidine residue at position 324 was constructed and their enzymatic properties were examined. Wild-type and mutant enzymes have been purified to homogeneity using the His-bound column and the molecular masses were determined to be 39.2 kDa. Western blot analysis revealed that the in vivo synthesized mutant enzymes are immuno-identical with that of the wild-type DAAO. The His324Asn and His324Gln mutants displayed comparable enzymatic activity to that of the wild-type enzyme, while the other mutant DAAOs showed markedly decreased or no detectable activity. The mutants, His324/Asn/Gln/Ala/Tyr/Glu, exhibited 38-181% increase in Km and a 2-10-fold reduction in kcat/Km. Based on the crystal structure of a homologous protein, pig kidney DAAO, it is suggested that His324 might play a structural role for proper catalytic function of T. variabilis DAAO.  相似文献   

2.
5-Aminolevulinate synthase is the first enzyme of the heme biosynthetic pathway in animals and some bacteria. Lysine-313 of the mouse erythroid aminolevulinate synthase was recently identified to be linked covalently to the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate cofactor (Ferreira GC, Neame PJ, Dailey HA, 1993, Protein Sci 2:1959-1965). Here we report on the effect of replacement of aminolevulinate synthase lysine-313 by alanine, histidine, and glycine, using site-directed mutagenesis. Mutant enzymes were purified to homogeneity, and the purification yields were similar to those of the wild-type enzyme. Although their absorption spectra indicate that the mutant enzymes bind pyridoxal 5'-phosphate, they bind noncovalently. However, addition of glycine to the mutant enzymes led to the formation of external aldimines. The formation of an external aldimine between the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate cofactor and the glycine substrate is the first step in the mechanism of the aminolevulinate synthase-catalyzed reaction. In contrast, lysine-313 is an essential catalytic residue, because the K313-directed mutant enzymes have no measurable activity. In summary, site-directed mutagenesis of the aminolevulinate synthase active-site lysine-313, to alanine (K313A), histidine (K313H), or glycine (K313G) yields enzymes that bind the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate cofactor and the glycine substrate to produce external aldimines, but which are inactive. This suggests that lysine-313 has a functional role in catalysis.  相似文献   

3.
The gene coding for thermophilic xylose (glucose) isomerase of Clostridium thermosulfurogenes was isolated and its complete nucleotide sequence was determined. The structural gene (xylA) for xylose isomerase encodes a polypeptide of 439 amino acids with an estimated molecular weight of 50,474. The deduced amino acid sequence of thermophilic C. thermosulfurogenes xylose isomerase displayed higher homology with those of thermolabile xylose isomerases from Bacillus subtilis (70%) and Escherichia coli (50%) than with those of thermostable xylose isomerases from Ampullariella (22%), Arthrobacter (23%), and Streptomyces violaceoniger (24%). Several discrete regions were highly conserved throughout the amino acid sequences of all these enzymes. To identify the histidine residue of the active site and to elucidate its function during enzymatic xylose or glucose isomerization, histidine residues at four different positions in the C. thermosulfurogenes enzyme were individually modified by site-directed mutagenesis. Substitution of His101 by phenylalanine completely abolished enzyme activity whereas substitution of other histidine residues by phenylalanine had no effect on enzyme activity. When His101 was changed to glutamine, glutamic acid, asparagine, or aspartic acid, approximately 10-16% of wild-type enzyme activity was retained by the mutant enzymes. The Gln101 mutant enzyme was resistant to diethylpyrocarbonate inhibition which completely inactivated the wild-type enzyme, indicating that His101 is the only essential histidine residue involved directly in enzyme catalysis. The constant Vmax values of the Gln101, Glu101, Asn101, and Asp101 mutant enzymes over the pH range of 5.0-8.5 indicate that protonation of His101 is responsible for the reduced Vmax values of the wild-type enzyme at pH below 6.5. Deuterium isotope effects by D-[2-2H]glucose on the rate of glucose isomerization indicated that hydrogen transfer and not substrate ring opening is the rate-determining step for both the wild-type and Gln101 mutant enzymes. These results suggest that the enzymatic sugar isomerization does not involve a histidine-catalyzed proton transfer mechanism. Rather, essential histidine functions to stabilize the transition state by hydrogen bonding to the C5 hydroxyl group of the substrate and this enables a metal-catalyzed hydride shift from C2 to C1.  相似文献   

4.
Of the major amino acid side chains that anchor pyridoxal 5'-phosphate at the coenzyme binding site of bacterial D-amino acid transaminase, two have been substituted using site-directed mutagenesis. Thus, Ser-180 was changed to an Ala (S180A) with little effect on enzyme activity, but replacement of Tyr-31 by Gln (Y31Q) led to 99% loss of activity. Titration of SH groups of the native Y31Q enzyme with DTNB proceeded much faster and to a greater extent than the corresponding titration for the native wild-type and S180A mutant enzymes. The stability of each mutant to denaturing agents such as urea or guanidine was similar, i.e., in their PLP forms, S180A and Y31Q lost 50% of their activities at a 5-15% lower concentration of urea or guanidine than did the wild-type enzyme. Upon removal of denaturing agent, significant activity was restored in the absence of added pyridoxal 5'-phosphate, but addition of thiols was required. In spite of its low activity, Y31Q was able to form the PMP form of the enzyme just as readily as the wild-type and the S180A enzymes in the presence of normal D-amino acid substrates. However, beta-chloro-D-alanine was a much better substrate and inactivator of the Y31Q enzyme than it was for the wild-type or S180A enzymes, most likely because the Y31Q mutant formed the pyridoxamine 5-phosphate form more rapidly than the other two enzymes. The stereochemical fidelity of the Y31Q recombinant mutant enzyme was much less than that of the S180A and wild-type enzymes because racemase activity, i.e., conversion of L-alanine to D-alanine, was higher than for the wild-type or S180A mutant enzymes, perhaps because the coenzyme has more flexibility in this mutant enzyme.  相似文献   

5.
Serine hydroxymethyltransferase (SHMT), a pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP)-dependent enzyme catalyzes the reversible conversion of l-Ser and tetrahydropteroylglutamate (H(4)PteGlu) to Gly and 5,10-methylene tetrahydropteroylglutamate (CH(2)-H(4)PteGlu). Biochemical and structural studies on this enzyme have implicated several residues in the catalytic mechanism, one of them being the active site lysine, which anchors PLP. It has been proposed that this residue is crucial for product expulsion. However, in other PLP-dependent enzymes, the corresponding residue has been implicated in the proton abstraction step of catalysis. In the present investigation, Lys-226 of Bacillus stearothermophilus SHMT (bsSHMT) was mutated to Met and Gln to evaluate the role of this residue in catalysis. The mutant enzymes contained 1 mol of PLP per mol of subunit suggesting that Schiff base formation with lysine is not essential for PLP binding. The 3D structure of the mutant enzymes revealed that PLP was bound at the active site in an orientation different from that of the wild-type enzyme. In the presence of substrate, the PLP ring was in an orientation superimposable with that of the external aldimine complex of wild-type enzyme. However, the mutant enzymes were inactive, and the kinetic analysis of the different steps of catalysis revealed that there was a drastic reduction in the rate of formation of the quinonoid intermediate. Analysis of these results along with the crystal structures suggested that K-226 is responsible for flipping of PLP from one orientation to another which is crucial for H(4)PteGlu-dependent Calpha-Cbeta bond cleavage of l-Ser.  相似文献   

6.
Serine hydroxymethyltransferase has a conserved histidine residue (His-228) next to the lysine residue (Lys-229) which forms the internal aldimine with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. This histidine residue is also conserved at the equivalent position in all amino acid decarboxylases and tryptophan synthase. Two mutant forms of Escherichia coli serine hydroxymethyltransferase, H228N and H228D, were constructed, expressed, and purified. The properties of the wild type and mutant enzymes were studied with substrates and substrate analogs by differential scanning calorimetry, circular dichroism, steady state kinetics, and rapid reaction kinetics. The conclusions of these studies were that His-228 plays an important role in the binding and reactivity of the hydroxymethyl group of serine in the one-carbon-binding site. The mutant enzymes utilize substrates and substrate analogs more effectively for a variety of alternate non-physiological reactions compared to the wild type enzyme. As one example, the mutant enzymes cleave L-serine to glycine and formaldehyde when tetrahydropyteroylglutamate is replaced by 5-formyltetrahydropteroylglutamate. The released formaldehyde inactivates these mutant enzymes. The loss of integrity of the one-carbon-binding site with L-serine in the two mutant forms of the enzyme may be the result of these enzymes not undergoing a conformational change to a closed form of the active site when serine forms the external aldimine complex.  相似文献   

7.
Asp222 is an invariant residue in all known sequences of aspartate aminotransferases from a variety of sources and is located within a distance of strong ionic interaction with N(1) of the coenzyme, pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP), or pyridoxamine 5'-phosphate (PMP). This residue of Escherichia coli aspartate aminotransferase was replaced by Ala, Asn, or Glu by site-directed mutagenesis. The PLP form of the mutant enzyme D222E showed pH-dependent spectral changes with a pKa value of 6.44 for the protonation of the internal aldimine bond, slightly lower than that (6.7) for the wild-type enzyme. In contrast, the internal aldimine bond in the D222A or D222N enzyme did not titrate over the pH range 5.3-9.5, and a 430-nm band attributed to the protonated aldimine persisted even at high pH. The binding affinity of the D222A and D222N enzymes for PMP decreased by 3 orders of magnitude as compared to that of the wild-type enzyme. Pre-steady-state half-transamination reactions of all the mutant enzymes with substrates exhibited anomalous progress curves comprising multiphasic exponential processes, which were accounted for by postulating several kinetically different enzyme species for both the PLP and PMP forms of each mutant enzyme. While the replacement of Asp222 by Glu yielded fairly active enzyme species, the replacement by Ala and Asn resulted in 8600- and 20,000-fold decreases, respectively, in the catalytic efficiency (kmax/Kd value for the most active species of each mutant enzyme) in the reactions of the PLP form with aspartate. In contrast, the catalytic efficiency of the PMP form of the D222A or D222N enzyme with 2-oxoglutarate was still retained at a level as high as 2-10% of that of the wild-type enzyme. The presteady-state reactions of these two mutant enzymes with [2-2H]aspartate revealed a deuterium isotope effect (kH/kD = 6.0) greater than that [kH/kD = 2.2; Kuramitsu, S., Hiromi, K., Hayashi, H., Morino, Y., & Kagamiyama, H. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 5469-5476] for the wild-type enzyme. These findings indicate that the presence of a negatively charged residue at position 222 is particularly critical for the withdrawal of the alpha-proton of the amino acid substrate and accelerates this rate-determining step by about 5 kcal.mol-1. Thus it is concluded that Asp222 serves as a protein ligand tethering the coenzyme in a productive mode within the active site and stabilizes the protonated N(1) of the coenzyme to strengthen the electron-withdrawing capacity of the coenzyme.  相似文献   

8.
Glu 58 is one of the amino acids which participates in its catalytic action of ribonuclease T1. We mutated this residue to Gln 58 or Asp 58 by genetic engineering using chemically synthesized genes. The mutant enzymes were expressed in E. coli as fused proteins and purified to homogeniety on SDS-PAGE after cleavage with cyanogen bromide. Their activities in hydrolyzing pGpC were reduced to 10% in the Asp 58 mutant and about 1% in the Gln 58 mutant compared to that of the wild-type enzyme. These results suggest that Glu 58 is important but not essential for catalysis of ribonuclease T1.  相似文献   

9.
Chemical modification of Escherichia coli 5-enolpyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate synthase, a target for the nonselective herbicide glyphosate (N-phosphonomethylglycine), with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate suggested that Lys-22 (equivalent to Lys-23 of the Petunia hybrida enzyme) is a potential active site residue (Huynh, Q. K., Kishore, G. M., and Bild, G. S. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 735-739). To investigate the possible role of this residue in the reaction mechanism, we have used site-directed mutagenesis to replace Lys-23 of the P. hybrida enzyme with 3 other amino acid residues: Ala, Glu, and Arg. Analysis of these mutant enzymes indicates that of these only the Lys-23 to Arg mutant enzyme is active; the other two replacements (Ala and Glu) result in inactivation of the enzyme. Two of the mutant enzymes (Lys-23 to Arg and Ala) were purified to homogeneity and characterized. The purified Lys-23 to Arg mutant enzyme is less sensitive than the wild type enzyme to pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. It showed identical Km values for substrates and a 5-fold higher I50 value for glyphosate in comparison with those from the wild type enzyme. Binding studies using fluorescence measurements revealed that the substrate shikimate 3-phosphate and glyphosate were able to bind the purified Lys-23 to Arg mutant enzyme but not to the purified catalytically inactive Lys-23 to Ala mutant enzyme. The above results suggest that the cationic group at position 23 of the enzyme may play an important role in substrate binding.  相似文献   

10.
Segall ML  Colman RF 《Biochemistry》2004,43(23):7391-7402
In adenylosuccinate lyase from Bacillus subtilis, Gln(212), Asn(270), and Arg(301) are conserved and located close to the succinyl moiety of docked adenylosuccinate. We constructed mutant enzymes with Gln(212) replaced by Glu and Met, Asn(270) by Asp and Leu, and Arg(301) by Gln or Lys. The wild-type and mutant enzymes were expressed in Escherichia coli and purified to homogeneity. The specific activities of the Q212M and the 270 and 301 mutant enzymes were decreased more than 3000-fold as compared to the wild type. Only Q212E retained sufficient activity for determination of its kinetic parameters: V(max) was decreased approximately 1000-fold, and K(m) was increased 6-fold, as compared to the wild-type enzyme. Adenylosuccinate binding studies of the other mutants revealed greatly weakened affinities that contributed to, but did not account entirely for, the loss of activity. These mutant enzymes did not differ greatly from the wild-type enzyme in secondary structure or subunit association state, as shown by circular dichroism spectroscopy and light-scattering photometry. Incubation of pairs of inactive mutant enzymes led to reconstitution of some functional sites by subunit complementation, with recovery of up to 25% of the specific activity of the wild-type enzyme. Subunit complementation occurs only if the two mutations are contributed to the active site by different subunits. Thus, mixing Q212E with N270L enzyme yielded a specific activity of approximately 20% of the wild-type enzyme, while mixing Q212M with R301K enzyme did not restore activity. As supported by computer modeling, the studies presented here indicate that Gln(212), Asn(270), and Arg(301) are indispensable to catalysis by adenylosuccinate lyase and probably interact noncovalently with the carboxylate anions of the substrates 5-aminoimidazole-4(N-succinylocarboxamide)ribonucleotide and adenylosuccinate, optimizing their bound orientations.  相似文献   

11.
Aspartate aminotransferase has been known to undergo a significant conformational change, in which the small domain approaches the large domain, and the residues at the entrance of the active site pack together, on binding of substrates. Accompanying this conformational change is a two-unit increase in the pK(a) of the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate-Lys(258) aldimine, which has been proposed to enhance catalysis. To elucidate how the conformational change is coupled to the shift in the aldimine pK(a) and how these changes are involved in catalysis, we analyzed structurally and kinetically an enzyme in which Val(39) located at both the domain interface and the entrance of the active site was replaced with a bulkier residue, Phe. The V39F mutant enzyme showed a more open conformation, and the aldimine pK(a) was lowered by 0.7 unit compared with the wild-type enzyme. When Asn(194) had been replaced by Ala in advance, the V39F mutation did not decrease the aldimine pK(a), showing that the domain rotation controls the aldimine pK(a) via the Arg(386)-Asn(194)-pyridoxal 5'-phosphate linkage system. The maleate-bound V39F enzyme showed the aldimine pK(a) 0.9 unit lower than that of the maleate-bound wild-type enzyme. However, the positions of maleate, Asn(194), and Arg(386) were superimposable between the mutant and the wild-type enzymes; therefore, the domain rotation was not the cause of the lowered aldimine pK(a) value. The maleate-bound V39F enzyme showed an altered side-chain packing pattern in the 37-39 region, and the lack of repulsion between Gly(38) carbonyl O and Tyr(225) Oeta seemed to be the cause of the reduced pK(a) value. Kinetic analysis suggested that the repulsion increases the free energy level of the Michaelis complex and promotes the catalytic reaction.  相似文献   

12.
Tight contact of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate to the substrate phosphate is considered to be a crucial requirement of the phosphorolytic cleavage of polysaccharides by glycogen phosphorylases. This study demonstrates an essential role of lysine 533, the only charged residue in hydrogen bond distance to the phosphate of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate in Escherichia coli maltodextrin phosphorylase. Substitution of Lys533 by Ser reduced the turnover number 600-fold. Addition of monovalent cations significantly increased activity of the Lys533-Ser mutant up to a factor of 10, whereas the apparent affinity for Pi was decreased up to 80-fold. Although substitution of Lys533 by Gln caused a similar reduction of kcat, the Km values remained unchanged, and no response to small cations was observed. These results suggest a key role of the positive charge contributed by Lys533 in catalysis, most probably in maintaining the electrostatic neutrality of the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate and aligning the close phosphate-phosphate contacts indispensable for the proton transfer mechanism.  相似文献   

13.
The reported crystal structures of plant and animal lipoxygenases (LOX) show that the nonheme iron in the catalytic domain is ligated by three histidines, the C-terminal isoleucine, and in certain structures also by a fifth iron ligand, an asparagine or histidine residue. Mouse 8-LOX and its homologues (e.g., human 15-LOX-2) are unique in having a serine in place of the usual Asn or His in this fifth position. To investigate the importance of the residue in mouse 8-LOX structure-function, the serine-558 was replaced by asparagine, histidine, or alanine using oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis. Wild-type mouse 8-LOX and the mutant cDNAs were expressed in HeLa cells infected with vaccinia virus encoding T7 RNA polymerase and their relative lipoxygenase activities assessed by incubation with [14C]arachidonic acid or [14C]linoleic acid followed by HPLC analysis of the products. The Ser558Asn and Ser558His mutants had equivalent or greater activity than wild-type 8-LOX. They also exhibited some 15-LOX activity, indicating that small structural perturbations (in this case to a residue identical in mouse 8-LOX and its 15-LOX-2 homologues) can interchange the positional specificity of these closely related enzymes. Remarkably, the Ser558Ala mutant exhibited significant 8-LOX activity, indicating that this position is not an essential iron ligand in the enzyme. We conclude that mouse 8-LOX is catalytically competent with only four amino acid iron ligands, and that Ser-558 of the wild-type enzyme does not play an essential role in catalysis.  相似文献   

14.
Cysteine 111 in Dopa decarboxylase (DDC) has been replaced by alanine or serine by site-directed mutagenesis. Compared to the wild-type enzyme, the resultant C111A and C111S mutant enzymes exhibit Kcat values of about 50% and 15%, respectively, at pH 6.8, while the K(m) values remain relatively unaltered for L-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (L-Dopa) and L-5-hydroxytryptophan (L-5-HTP). While a significant decrease of the 280 nm optically active band present in the wild type is observed in mutant DDCs, their visible co-enzyme absorption and CD spectra are similar to those of the wild type. With respect to the wild type, the Cys-111-->Ala mutant displays a reduced affinity for pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP), slower kinetics of reconstitution to holoenzyme, a decreased ability to anchor the external aldimine formed between D-Dopa and the bound co-enzyme, and a decreased efficiency of energy transfer between tryptophan residue(s) and reduced PLP. Values of pKa and pKb for the groups involved in catalysis were determined for the wild-type and the C111A mutant enzymes. The mutant showed a decrease in both pK values by about 1 pH unit, resulting in a shift of the pH of the maximum velocity from 7.2 (wild-type) to 6.2 (mutant). This change in maximum velocity is mirrored by a similar shift in the spectrophotometrically determined pK value of the 420-->390 nm transition of the external aldimine. These results demonstrate that the sulfhydryl group of Cys-111 is catalytically nonessential and provide strong support for previous suggestion that this residue is located at or near the PLP binding site (Dominici P, Maras B, Mei G, Borri Voltattorni C. 1991. Eur J Biochem 201:393-397). Moreover, our findings provide evidence that Cys-111 has a structural role in PLP binding and suggest that this residue is required for maintenance of proper active-site conformation.  相似文献   

15.
It was recently demonstrated that mutations in the human SPTLC1 gene, encoding the Lcb1p subunit of serine palmitoyltransferase (SPT), cause hereditary sensory neuropathy type I . As a member of the subfamily of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate enzymes known as the alpha-oxoamine synthases, serine palmitoyltransferase catalyzes the committed step of sphingolipid synthesis. The residues that are mutated to cause hereditary sensory neuropathy type I reside in a highly conserved region of Lcb1p that is predicted to be a catalytic domain of Lcb1p on the basis of alignments with other members of the alpha-oxoamine synthase family. We found that the corresponding mutations in the LCB1 gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae reduce serine palmitoyltransferase activity. These mutations are dominant and decrease serine palmitoyltransferase activity by 50% when the wild-type and mutant LCB1 alleles are coexpressed. We also show that serine palmitoyltransferase is an Lcb1p small middle dotLcb2p heterodimer and that the mutated Lcb1p proteins retain their ability to interact with Lcb2p. Modeling studies suggest that serine palmitoyltransferase is likely to have a single active site that lies at the Lcb1p small middle dotLcb2p interface and that the mutations in Lcb1p reside near the lysine in Lcb2p that is expected to form the Schiff's base with the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate cofactor. Furthermore, mutations in this lysine and in a histidine residue that is also predicted to be important for pyridoxal 5'-phosphate binding to Lcb2p also dominantly inactivate SPT similar to the hereditary sensory neuropathy type 1-like mutations in Lcb1p.  相似文献   

16.
Tyrosyl-DNA phosphodiesterase I (Tdp1) is a member of the phospholipase D superfamily that hydrolyzes 3'-phospho-DNA adducts via two conserved catalytic histidines-one acting as the lead nucleophile and the second acting as a general acid/base. Substitution of the second histidine specifically to arginine contributes to the neurodegenerative disease spinocerebellar ataxia with axonal neuropathy (SCAN1). We investigated the catalytic role of this histidine in the yeast protein (His432) using a combination of X-ray crystallography, biochemistry, yeast genetics, and theoretical chemistry. The structures of wild-type Tdp1 and His432Arg both show a phosphorylated form of the nucleophilic histidine that is not observed in the structure of His432Asn. The phosphohistidine is stabilized in the His432Arg structure by the guanidinium group that also restricts the access of nucleophilic water molecule to the Tdp1-DNA intermediate. Biochemical analyses confirm that His432Arg forms an observable and unique Tdp1-DNA adduct during catalysis. Substitution of His432 by Lys does not affect catalytic activity or yeast phenotype, but substitutions with Asn, Gln, Leu, Ala, Ser, and Thr all result in severely compromised enzymes and DNA topoisomerase I-camptothecin dependent lethality. Surprisingly, His432Asn did not show a stable covalent Tdp1-DNA intermediate that suggests another catalytic defect. Theoretical calculations revealed that the defect resides in the nucleophilic histidine and that the pK(a) of this histidine is crucially dependent on the second histidine and on the incoming phosphate of the substrate. This represents a unique example of substrate-activated catalysis that applies to the entire phospholipase D superfamily.  相似文献   

17.
Using 0.4 m imidazole citrate buffer (pH 7.5) containing 0.1 mm l-cysteine, homodimeric starch phosphorylase from Corynebacterium calluane (CcStP) was dissociated into native-like folded subunits concomitant with release of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate and loss of activity. The inactivation rate of CcStP under resolution conditions at 30 degrees C was, respectively, four- and threefold reduced in two mutants, Arg234-->Ala and Arg242-->Ala, previously shown to cause thermostabilization of CcStP [Griessler, R., Schwarz, A., Mucha, J. & Nidetzky, B. (2003) Eur. J. Biochem.270, 2126-2136]. The proportion of original enzyme activity restored upon the reconstitution of wild-type and mutant apo-phosphorylases with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate was increased up to 4.5-fold by added phosphate. The effect on recovery of activity displayed a saturatable dependence on the phosphate concentration and results from interactions with the oxyanion that are specific to the quarternary state. Arg234-->Ala and Arg242-->Ala mutants showed, respectively, eight- and > 20-fold decreased apparent affinities for phosphate (K(app)), compared to the wild-type (K(app) approximately 6 mm). When reconstituted next to each other in solution, apo-protomers of CcStP and Escherichia coli maltodextrin phosphorylase did not detectably associate to hybrid dimers, indicating that structural complementarity among the different subunits was lacking. Pyridoxal-reconstituted CcStP was inactive but approximately 60% and 5% of wild-type activity could be rescued at pH 7.5 by phosphate (3 mm) and phosphite (5 mm), respectively. pH effects on catalytic rates were different for the native enzyme and pyridoxal-phosphorylase bound to phosphate and could reflect the differences in pK(a) values for the cofactor 5'-phosphate and the exogenous oxyanion.  相似文献   

18.
P-glycoprotein confers multidrug resistance in mammalian cells and basic structure-function studies of it are germane to anti-cancer and anti-AIDS therapy. Pure, detergent-soluble mouse MDR3 and human MDR1 P-glycoproteins have recently been obtained in sufficient quantity for high-resolution structure analysis after expression in Pichia pastoris (N. Lerner-Marmarosh et al. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 34711-34718). The degree of glycosylation of these preparations was unknown, and was of relevance for crystallization studies. Therefore mutant proteins in which the N-glycosylation sites were eliminated (Asn --> Gln in mouse MDR3 Pgp, Asn --> Gln or Ala in human MDR1 Pgp) were expressed in P. pastoris and purified to homogeneity. Yields of mutant Pgp were the same as for parent wild-type proteins. Nucleotide-binding and catalytic (ATPase) characteristics were completely normal in the mutant proteins. Mass spectrometry indicated that mutant and wild-type proteins did not differ significantly in mass, demonstrating that the wild-type proteins contain no N-glycosylation.  相似文献   

19.
The active site lysyl residue (Lys258) of E. coli aspartate amino transferase was substituted for an arginyl residue by oligonucleotide-directed, site-specific mutagenesis. The mutant enzyme was obviously unable to form an aldimine bond with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate but firmly bound the coenzyme. The finding that the mutation did not lead to entire loss in the enzymic activity suggests that Lys258 may not be essential but auxiliary for enzymic catalysis. It is also conceived that the positive charge provided by Arg258 may contribute to the enzymic catalysis.  相似文献   

20.
5-Aminolevulinate synthase (EC 2.3.1.37) is the first enzyme in the heme biosynthesis in nonplant eukaryotes and some prokaryotes. It functions as a homodimer and requires pyridoxal 5'-phosphate as an essential cofactor. Tyr-121 is a conserved residue in all known sequences of 5-aminolevulinate synthases. Further, it corresponds to Tyr-70 of Escherichia coli aspartate aminotransferase, which has been shown to interact with the cofactor and prevent the dissociation of the cofactor from the enzyme. To test whether Tyr-121 is involved in cofactor binding in murine erythroid 5-aminolevulinate synthase, Tyr-121 of murine erythroid 5-aminolevulinate synthase was substituted by Phe and His using site-directed mutagenesis. The Y121F mutant retained 36% of the wild-type activity and the Km value for substrate glycine increased 34-fold, while the activity of the Y121H mutant decreased to 5% of the wild-type activity and the Km value for glycine increased fivefold. The pKa1 values in the pH-activity profiles of the wild-type and mutant enzymes were 6.41, 6.54, and 6.65 for wild-type, Y121F, and Y121H, respectively. The UV-visible and CD spectra of Y121F and Y121H mutants were similar to those of the wild-type with the exception of an absorption maximum shift (420 --> 395 nm) for the Y121F mutant in the visible spectrum region, suggesting that the cofactor binds the Y121F mutant enzyme in a more unrestrained manner. Y121F and Y121H mutant enzymes also exhibited lower affinity than the wild-type for the cofactor, reflected in the Kd values for pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (26.5, 6.75, and 1.78 microM for Y121F, Y121H, and the wild-type, respectively). Further, Y121F and Y121H proved less thermostable than the wild type. Taken together, these findings indicate that Tyr-121 plays a critical role in cofactor binding of murine erythroid 5-aminolevulinate synthase.  相似文献   

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