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1.
Human angiotensin-converting enzyme-related carboxypeptidase (ACE2) is a zinc metalloprotease whose closest homolog is angiotensin I-converting enzyme. To begin to elucidate the physiological role of ACE2, ACE2 was purified, and its catalytic activity was characterized. ACE2 proteolytic activity has a pH optimum of 6.5 and is enhanced by monovalent anions, which is consistent with the activity of ACE. ACE2 activity is increased approximately 10-fold by Cl(-) and F(-) but is unaffected by Br(-). ACE2 was screened for hydrolytic activity against a panel of 126 biological peptides, using liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry detection. Eleven of the peptides were hydrolyzed by ACE2, and in each case, the proteolytic activity resulted in removal of the C-terminal residue only. ACE2 hydrolyzes three of the peptides with high catalytic efficiency: angiotensin II () (k(cat)/K(m) = 1.9 x 10(6) m(-1) s(-1)), apelin-13 (k(cat)/K(m) = 2.1 x 10(6) m(-1) s(-1)), and dynorphin A 1-13 (k(cat)/K(m) = 3.1 x 10(6) m(-1) s(-1)). The ACE2 catalytic efficiency is 400-fold higher with angiotensin II () as a substrate than with angiotensin I (). ACE2 also efficiently hydrolyzes des-Arg(9)-bradykinin (k(cat)/K(m) = 1.3 x 10(5) m(-1) s(-1)), but it does not hydrolyze bradykinin. An alignment of the ACE2 peptide substrates reveals a consensus sequence of: Pro-X((1-3 residues))-Pro-Hydrophobic, where hydrolysis occurs between proline and the hydrophobic amino acid.  相似文献   

2.
Adenosine phosphorylase, a purine nucleoside phosphorylase endowed with high specificity for adenine nucleosides, was purified 117-fold from vegetative forms of Bacillus cereus. The purification procedure included ammonium sulphate fractionation, pH 4 treatment, ion exchange chromatography on DEAE-Sephacel, gel filtration on Sephacryl S-300 HR and affinity chromatography on N(6)-adenosyl agarose. The enzyme shows a good stability to both temperature and pH. It appears to be a homohexamer of 164+/-5 kDa. Kinetic characterization confirmed the specificity of this phosphorylase for 6-aminopurine nucleosides. Adenosine was the preferred substrate for nucleoside phosphorolysis (k(cat)/K(m) 2.1x10(6) s(-1) M(-1)), followed by 2'-deoxyadenosine (k(cat)/K(m) 4.2x10(5) s(-1) M(-1)). Apparently, the low specificity of adenosine phosphorylase towards 6-oxopurine nucleosides is due to a slow catalytic rate rather than to poor substrate binding.  相似文献   

3.
Neurolysin (EP24.16) and thimet oligopeptidase (EP24.15) are closely related metalloendopeptidases. Site-directed mutagenesis of Tyr(613) (EP24.16) or Tyr(612) (EP24.15) to either Phe or Ala promoted a strong reduction of k(cat)/K(M) for both enzymes. These data suggest the importance of both hydroxyl group and aromatic ring at this specific position during substrate hydrolysis by these peptidases. Furthermore, the EP24.15 A607G mutant showed a k(cat)/K(M) of 2x10(5) M(-1) s(-1) for the Abz-GFSIFRQ-EDDnp substrate, similar to that of EP24.16 (k(cat)/K(M)=3x10(5) M(-1) s(-1)) which contains Gly at the corresponding position; the wild type EP24.15 has a k(cat)/K(M) of 2.5x10(4) M(-1) s(-1) for this substrate.  相似文献   

4.
Hardy LW  Nishida CH  Kirsch JF 《Biochemistry》1984,23(6):1288-1294
The pH dependence of k(cat) for the Bacillus cereus beta-lactamase I catalyzed hydrolysis of carbenicillin(VI), which differs from benzylpenicillin (I) in having a carboxylic moiety alpha to the phenyl ring, exhibits a profile consistent with a model in which the alpha-COOH and alpha-COO forms of the ES complex turn over with respective rate constants of 2152 s(-1) and 384 s(-1). The pK(a)(app) for the alpha-COOH is shifted from 3.2 in solution to 6.1 in the ES complex. The normalized k(cat)/K(m) vs. pH profile for VI is not superimposable on that of I, indicating that both the neutral and anionic forms of the carboxyl moiety of VI combine with the enzyme to give the first irreversibly formed complex, presumably the acyl-enzyme. Quantitative accord with the kinetic data is achieved only through fitting to a model where kinetically significant proton transfer in the ES complex is permitted. The second-order rate constants for the reaction of the enzyme with the alpha-COOH and alpha-COO forms of VI are 2.2 x 10(8) M(-1) s(-1) and 3.8 x 10(6) M(-1) s(-1), respectively. The high value for the alpha-COOH form suggests that this reaction may be in part diffusion controlled. This conjecture is borne out by the observation that the sensitivity of k(cat)/K(m) to eta(rel) decreases with increasing pH for VI, whereas this sensitivity is pH independent for I. These conclusions are further supported by the results of a kinetic investigation of the pH dependence of sulbenicillin (VII) where an alpha-SO3H replaces the alpha-COOH of VI. The strongly acidic sulfonic acid moiety of VII is fully ionized throughout nearly the entire pH range of interest, and its kinetics, as a function of pH, are very similar to those observed and calculated for the alpha-COO form of VI. Solvent deuterium kinetic isotope effects are reported for k(cat) and k(cat)/K(m) for both VI and VII.  相似文献   

5.
Hardy LW  Kirsch JF 《Biochemistry》1984,23(6):1275-1282
The Bacillus cereus beta-lactamase I catalyzes the hydrolysis of a wide variety of penicillins and cephalosporins with values of k(cat)/K(m) varying over several orders of magnitude. The values of this parameter for the most reactive of these compounds, benzylpenicillin, I, and furylacryloyl-penicillin, II (k(cat)/K(m) = 2.43 x 10(7) M(-1) s(-1) and 2.35 x 10(7) M(-1) s(-1), respectively, at pH 7.0 in potassium phosphate buffer containing 0.17 M KCl, I(c) = 0.63, 25 degrees C) are decreased markedly by increasing viscosity in sucrose- or glycerol-containing buffers. The relative sensitivities to viscosity of k(cat)/K(m) values for I and for cephaloridine, III, were found to be virtually unchanged at pH 3.8 from those observed at pH 7.0. The differential effects of viscosity on the reactive vs. the sluggish [e.g., cephalothin (IV), k(cat)/K(m) = 1 x 10(4) M(-1) s(-1)] substrates support the contention that the rates of reaction of the former with the enzyme are in part diffusion controlled. Quantitative analysis gives values for the association rate constants, k(1), of 7.6 x 10(7) M(-1) s(-1), 4 x 10(7) M(-1) s(-1), and 1.1 x 10(7) M(-1) s(-1) for I, II, and III, respectively. As both reactive and sluggish substrates associate with the active site of the enzyme with relatively similar rate constants, the variation in k(cat)/K(m) values is primarily due to the variation in the partition ratios k(-1)/k(2), for the ES complex, which are 2.3, 0.77, and 30 for I, II, and III, respectively. The preceding analysis is based on direct application of the Stokes-Einstein diffusion law to enzyme kinetics. The range of applicability of this law to the diffusion of substrate size molecules and the mechanics of diffusion of ionic species through viscous solutions of sucrose vs. polymers are explored.  相似文献   

6.
The zinc and cobalt forms of the prototypic gamma-carbonic anhydrase from Methanosarcina thermophila were characterized by extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) and the kinetics were investigated using steady-state spectrophotometric and (18)O exchange equilibrium assays. EXAFS results indicate that cobalt isomorphously replaces zinc and that the metals coordinate three histidines and two or three water molecules. The efficiency of either Zn-Cam or Co-Cam for CO(2) hydration (k(cat)/K(m)) was severalfold greater than HCO(3-) dehydration at physiological pH values, a result consistent with the proposed physiological function for Cam during growth on acetate. For both Zn- and Co-Cam, the steady-state parameter k(cat) for CO(2) hydration was pH-dependent with a pK(a) of 6.5-6.8, whereas k(cat)/K(m) was dependent on two ionizations with pK(a) values of 6.7-6.9 and 8.2-8.4. The (18)O exchange assay also identified two ionizable groups in the pH profile of k(cat)/K(m) with apparent pK(a) values of 6.0 and 8.1. The steady-state parameter k(cat) (CO(2) hydration) is buffer-dependent in a saturable manner at pH 8. 2, and the kinetic analysis suggested a ping-pong mechanism in which buffer is the second substrate. The calculated rate constant for intermolecular proton transfer is 3 x 10(7) M(-1) s(-1). At saturating buffer concentrations and pH 8.5, k(cat) is 2.6-fold higher in H(2)O than in D(2)O, suggesting that an intramolecular proton transfer step is at least partially rate-determining. At high pH (pH > 8), k(cat)/K(m) is not dependent on buffer and no solvent hydrogen isotope effect was observed, consistent with a zinc hydroxide mechanism. Therefore, at high pH the catalytic mechanism of Cam appears to resemble that of human CAII, despite significant structural differences in the active sites of these two unrelated enzymes.  相似文献   

7.
Catalytic reaction pathway for the mitogen-activated protein kinase ERK2   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Prowse CN  Hagopian JC  Cobb MH  Ahn NG  Lew J 《Biochemistry》2000,39(20):6258-6266
The structural, functional, and regulatory properties of the mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAP kinases) have long attracted considerable attention owing to the critical role that these enzymes play in signal transduction. While several MAP kinase X-ray crystal structures currently exist, there is by comparison little mechanistic information available to correlate the structural data with the known biochemical properties of these molecules. We have employed steady-state kinetic and solvent viscosometric techniques to characterize the catalytic reaction pathway of the MAP kinase ERK2 with respect to the phosphorylation of a protein substrate, myelin basic protein (MBP), and a synthetic peptide substrate, ERKtide. A minor viscosity effect on k(cat) with respect to the phosphorylation of MBP was observed (k(cat) = 10 +/- 2 s(-1), k(cat)(eta) = 0.18 +/- 0.05), indicating that substrate processing occurs via slow phosphoryl group transfer (12 +/- 4 s(-1)) followed by the faster release of products (56 +/- 4 s(-1)). At an MBP concentration extrapolated to infinity, no significant viscosity effect on k(cat)/K(m(ATP)) was observed (k(cat)/K(m(ATP)) = 0.2 +/- 0.1 microM(-1) s(-1), k(cat)/K(m(ATP))(eta) = -0.08 +/- 0.04), consistent with rapid-equilibrium binding of the nucleotide. In contrast, at saturating ATP, a full viscosity effect on k(cat)/K(m) for MBP was apparent (k(cat)/K(m(MBP)) = 2.4 +/- 1 microM(-1) s(-1), k(cat)/K(m(MBP))(eta) = 1.0 +/- 0.1), while no viscosity effect was observed on k(cat)/K(m) for the phosphorylation of ERKtide (k(cat)/K(m(ERKtide)) = (4 +/- 2) x 10(-3) microM(-1) s(-1), k(cat)/K(m(ERKtide))(eta) = -0.02 +/- 0.02). This is consistent with the diffusion-limited binding of MBP, in contrast to the rapid-equilibrium binding of ERKtide, to form the ternary Michaelis complex. Calculated values for binding constants show that the estimated value for K(d(MBP)) (/= 1.5 mM). The dramatically higher catalytic efficiency of MBP in comparison to that of ERKtide ( approximately 600-fold difference) is largely attributable to the slow dissociation rate of MBP (/=56 s(-1)), from the ERK2 active site.  相似文献   

8.
The Y370G inverting mutant sialidase from Micromonospora viridifaciens possesses beta-sialidase activity with phenyl beta-sialoside (Ph-betaNeuAc) to give alpha-sialic acid as the first formed product. The derived catalytic rate constants for k(cat) and k(cat)/K(m) are 13.3 +/- 0.3 and (2.9 +/- 0.3) x 10(5) M(-)(1) s(-)(1), respectively. This enzyme is highly specific for the phenyl substrate, with substituted phenyl and thiophenyl leaving groups having k(cat) values that are at least 1000-fold lower. In addition, the Y370G mutant can transfer the sialic acid moiety from Ph-betaNeuAc to lactose in yields of up to 13%. Greater than 90% of the sialyl-lactose product formed in the coupling reactions is the alpha-2,6-isomer. A library encoding 6 x 10(5) different sialidases was constructed by mutating Y370, E260, T309, N310, and N311, residues that include and are proximal the catalytic tyrosine residue. A total of 2628 individuals were screened for hydrolytic activity against 4-nitrophenyl 2-thio-beta-sialoside and 4-methylumbelliferyl beta-sialoside. However, none of the mutants screened possessed a significant activity against either of the beta-sialosides.  相似文献   

9.
A soluble form of penicillin-binding protein 3 (PBP 3) from Neisseria gonorrhoeae was expressed and purified from Escherichia coli and characterized for its interaction with beta-lactam antibiotics, its catalytic properties with peptide and peptidoglycan substrates, and its role in cell viability and morphology. PBP 3 had an unusually high k(2)/K' value relative to other PBPs for acylation with penicillin (7.7 x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1)) at pH 8.5 at 25 degrees C and hydrolyzed bound antibiotic very slowly (k(3) < 4.6 x 10(-5) s(-1), t(1/2) > 230 min). PBP 3 also demonstrated exceptionally high carboxypeptidase activity with a k(cat) of 580 s(-1) and a k(cat)/K(m) of 1.8 x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1) with the substrate N(alpha)-Boc-N(epsilon)-Cbz-L-Lys-D-Ala-D-Ala. This is the highest k(cat) value yet reported for a PBP or other serine peptidases. Activity against a approximately D-Ala-D-Lac peptide substrate was approximately 2-fold lower than against the analogous approximately D-Ala-D-Ala peptide substrate, indicating that deacylation is rate determining for both amide and ester hydrolysis. The pH dependence profiles of both carboxypeptidase activity and beta-lactam acylation were bell-shaped with maximal activity at pH 8.0-8.5. PBP 3 displayed weak transpeptidase activity in a model transpeptidase reaction but was active as an endopeptidase, cleaving dimeric peptide cross-links. Deletion of PBP 3 alone had little effect on viability, growth rate, and morphology of N. gonorrhoeae, although deletion of both PBP 3 and PBP 4, the other low-molecular-mass PBP in N. gonorrhoeae, resulted in a decreased growth rate and marked morphological abnormalities.  相似文献   

10.
In this study, we have shown that recombinant BH1999 from Bacillus halodurans catalyzes the hydrolysis of gentisyl coenzyme A (CoA) (2,5-dihydroxybenzoyl-coenzyme A) at physiological pH with a k(cat)/K(m) of 1.6 x 10(6) M(-1) s(-1) and the hydrolysis of 3-hydroxybenzoyl-CoA with a k(cat)/K(m) of 3.0 x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1). All other acyl-CoA thioesters tested had low or no substrate activity. The BH1999 gene is juxtaposed with a gene cluster that contains genes believed to function in gentisate oxidative degradation. It is hypothesized that BH1999 functions as a gentisyl-CoA thioesterase. Gentisyl-CoA thioesterase shares the backbone fold and the use of an active site aspartate residue to mediate catalysis with the 4-hydroxybenzoyl-CoA thioesterase of the hotdog fold enzyme superfamily. A comparative study of these two enzymes showed that they differ greatly in the rate contribution made by the catalytic aspartate, in the pH dependence of catalysis, and in substrate specificity.  相似文献   

11.
There are several known routes for the metabolic detoxication of alpha,beta-unsaturated aldehydes and ketones, including conjugation to glutathione and reduction and oxidation of the aldehyde to an alcohol and a carboxylic acid, respectively. In this study, we describe a fourth class of detoxication that involves the reduction of the alpha,beta-carbon=carbon double bond to a single bond. This reaction is catalyzed by NAD(P)H-dependent alkenal/one oxidoreductase (AO), an enzyme heretofore known as leukotriene B4 12-hydroxydehydrogenase, 15-oxoprostaglandin 13-reductase, and dithiolethione-inducible gene-1. AO is shown to effectively reduce cytotoxic lipid peroxidation products such as 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal (HNE) (k(cat) = 4.0 x 10(3) min(-1); k(cat)/K(m) = 3.3 x 10(7) min(-1) M(-1)) and acrolein (k(cat) = 2.2 x 10(2) min(-1); k(cat)/K(m) = 1.5 x 10(6) min(-1) M(-1)) and common industrial compounds such as ethyl vinyl ketone (k(cat) = 9.6 x 10(3) min(-1); k(cat)/K(m) = 8.8 x 10(7) min(-1) M(-1)) and 15-oxoprostaglandin E1 (k(cat) = 2.4 x 10(3) min(-1); k(cat)/K(m) = 2.4 x 10(9) min(-1) M(-1)). Furthermore, transfection of human embryonic kidney cells with a rat liver AO expression vector protected these cells from challenge with HNE. The concentration of HNE at which 50% of the cells were killed after 24 h increased from approximately 15 microM in control cells to approximately 70 microM in AO-transfected cells. Overexpression of AO also completely abolished protein alkylation by HNE at all concentrations tested (up to 30 microM). Thus, we describe a novel antioxidative activity of a previously characterized bioactive lipid-metabolizing enzyme that could prove to be therapeutically or prophylactically useful due to its high catalytic rate and inducibility.  相似文献   

12.
Klimacek M  Nidetzky B 《Biochemistry》2002,41(31):10158-10165
Mannitol dehydrogenases (MDH) are a family of Zn(2+)-independent long-chain alcohol dehydrogenases that catalyze the regiospecific NAD(+)-dependent oxidation of a secondary alcohol group in polyol substrates. pH and primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects on kinetic parameters for reaction of recombinant MDH from Pseudomonas fluorescens with D-mannitol have been measured in H(2)O and D(2)O at 25 degrees C and used to determine the relative timing of C-H and O-H bond cleavage steps during alcohol conversion. The enzymatic rates decreased at low pH; apparent pK values for log(k(cat)/K(mannitol)) and log k(cat) were 9.2 and 7.7 in H(2)O, respectively, and both were shifted by +0.4 pH units in D(2)O. Proton inventory plots for k(cat) and k(cat)/K(mannitol) were determined at pL 10.0 using protio or deuterio alcohol and were linear at the 95% confidence level. They revealed the independence of primary deuterium isotope effects on the atom fraction of deuterium in a mixed H(2)O-D(2)O solvent and yielded single-site transition-state fractionation factors of 0.43 +/- 0.05 and 0.47 +/- 0.01 for k(cat)/K(mannitol) and k(cat), respectively. (D)(k(cat)/K(mannitol)) was constant (1.80 +/- 0.20) in the pH range 6.0-9.5 and decreased at high pH to a limiting value of approximately 1. Measurement of (D)(k(cat)/K(fructose)) at pH 10.0 and 10.5 using NADH deuterium-labeled in the 4-pro-S position gave a value of 0.83, the equilibrium isotope effect on carbonyl group reduction. A mechanism of D-mannitol oxidation by MDH is supported by the data in which the partly rate-limiting transition state of hydride transfer is stabilized by a single solvation catalytic proton bridge. The chemical reaction involves a pH-dependent internal equilibrium which takes place prior to C-H bond cleavage and in which proton transfer from the reactive OH to the enzyme catalytic base may occur. Loss of a proton from the enzyme at high pH irreversibly locks the ternary complex with either alcohol or alkoxide bound in a conformation committed of undergoing NAD(+) reduction at a rate about 2.3-fold slower than the corresponding reaction rate of the protonated complex. Transient kinetic studies for D-mannitol oxidation at pH(D) 10.0 showed that the solvent isotope effect on steady-state turnover originates from a net rate constant of NADH release that is approximately 85% rate-limiting for k(cat) and 2-fold smaller in D(2)O than in H(2)O.  相似文献   

13.
A novel protease designated protease-A-17N-1, was purified from the halo-alkalophilic Bacillus sp. 17N-1, and found active in media containing dithiothreitol and EDTAK(2). This enzyme maintained significant activity from pH 6.00 to 9.00, showed optimum k(cat)/K(m) value at pH 7.50 and 33 degrees C. It was observed that only specific inhibitors of cysteine proteinases inhibited its activity. The pH-(k(cat)/K(m)) profile of protease-A-17N-1 was described by three pK(a)s in the acid limb, and one in the alkaline limb. Both are more likely due t3o the protonic dissociation of an acidic residue, and the development and subsequent deprotonation of an ion-pair, respectively, in its catalytic site, characteristic for cysteine proteinases. Moreover, both the obtained estimates of rate constant k(1) and the ratio k(2)/k(-1) at 25 degrees C, from the temperature-(k(cat)/K(m)) profile of protease-A-17N-1, were found similar to those estimated from the proton inventories of the same parameter, verifying the reliability of the latter methodology. Besides, the bowed-downward proton inventories of k(cat)/K(m), as well as the large inverse SIE observed for this parameter, in combination with its dependence versus temperature, were showed unambiguously that k(cat)/K(m) = k(1). Such results suggest that the novel enzyme is more likely to be a cysteine proteinase functioning via a general acid-base mechanism.  相似文献   

14.
Cdc25A is a dual-specific protein phosphatase involved in the regulation of the kinase activity of Cdk-cyclin complexes in the eukaryotic cell cycle. To understand the mechanism of this important regulator, we have generated highly purified biochemical reagents to determine the kinetic constants for human Cdc25A with respect to a set of peptidic, artificial, and natural substrates. Cdc25A and its catalytic domain (dN25A) demonstrate very similar kinetics toward the artificial substrates p-nitrophenyl phosphate (k(cat)/K(m) = 15-25 M(-1) s(-1)) and 3-O-methylfluorescein phosphate (k(cat)/K(m) = 1.1-1.3 x 10(4) M(-1) s(-1)). Phospho-peptide substrates exhibit extremely low second-order rate constants and a flat specificity profile toward Cdc25A and dN25A (k(cat)/K(m) = 1 to 10 M(-1) s(-1)). In contrast to peptidic substrates, Cdc25A and dN25A are highly active phosphatases toward the natural substrate, T14- and Y15-bis-phosphorylated Cdk2/CycA complex (Cdk2-pTpY/CycA) with k(cat)/K(m) values of 1.0-1.1 x 10(6) M(-1) s(-1). In the context of the Cdk2-pTpY/CycA complex, phospho-threonine is preferred over phospho-tyrosine by more than 10-fold. The highly homologous catalytic domain of Cdc25c is essentially inactive toward Cdk2-pTpY/CycA. Taken together these data indicate that a significant degree of the specificity of Cdc25 toward its Cdk substrate resides within the catalytic domain itself and yet is in a region(s) that is outside the phosphate binding site of the enzyme.  相似文献   

15.
The effects of calcium ions on hydrolysis of low molecular weight substrates catalyzed by different forms of enteropeptidase were studied. A method for determining activity of truncated enteropeptidase preparations lacking a secondary trypsinogen binding site and displaying low activity towards trypsinogen was developed using N-alpha-benzyloxycarbonyl-L-lysine thiobenzyl ester (Z-Lys-S-Bzl). The kinetic constants for hydrolysis of this substrate at pH 8.0 and 25 degrees C were determined for natural enteropeptidase (K(m) 59.6 microM, k(cat) 6660 min(-1), k(cat)/K(m) 111 microM(-1) x min(-1)), as well as for enteropeptidase preparation with deleted 118-783 fragment of the heavy chain (K(m) 176.9 microM, k(cat) 6694 min(-1), k(cat)/K(m) 37.84 microM(-1) x min(-1)) and trypsin (K(m) 56.0 microM, k(cat) 8280 min(-1), k(cat)/K(m) 147.86 microM(-1) x min(-1)). It was shown that the enzymes with trypsin-like primary active site display similar hydrolysis efficiency towards Z-Lys-S-Bzl. Calcium ions cause 3-fold activation of hydrolysis of the substrates of general type GD(4)K-X by the natural full-length enteropeptidase. In contrast, the hydrolysis of substrates with one or two Asp/Glu residues at P2-P3 positions is slightly inhibited by Ca2+. In the case of enteropeptidase light chain as well as the enzyme containing the truncated heavy chain (466-800 fragment), the activating effect of calcium ions was not detected for all the studied substrates. The results of hydrolysis experiments with synthetic enteropeptidase substrates GD(4)K-F(NO(2))G, G(5)DK-F(NO(2))G (where F(NO(2)) is p-nitrophenyl-L-phenylalanine residue), and GD(4)K-Nfa (where Nfa is beta-naphthylamide) demonstrate the possibility of regulation of undesired side hydrolysis using natural full-length enteropeptidase for processing chimeric proteins by means of calcium ions.  相似文献   

16.
Xylose reductase from the yeast Candida tenuis (CtXR) is a family 2 member of the aldo-keto reductase (AKR) superfamily of proteins and enzymes. Active site His-113 is conserved among AKRs, but a unified mechanism of how it affects catalytic activity is outstanding. We have replaced His-113 by alanine using site-directed mutagenesis, determined a 2.2 A structure of H113A mutant bound to NADP(+), and compared catalytic reaction profiles of NADH-dependent reduction of different aldehydes catalyzed by the wild type and the mutant. Deuterium kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) on k(cat) and k(cat)/K(m xylose) show that, relative to the wild type, the hydride transfer rate constant (k(7) approximately 0.16 s(-1)) has decreased about 1000-fold in H113A whereas xylose binding was not strongly affected. No solvent isotope effect was seen on k(cat) and k(cat)/K(m xylose) for H113A, suggesting that proton transfer has not become rate-limiting as a result of the mutation. The pH profiles of log(k(cat)/K(m xylose)) for the wild type and H113A decreased above apparent pK(a) values of 8.85 and 7.63, respectively. The DeltapK(a) of -1.2 pH units likely reflects a proximally disruptive character of the mutation, affecting the position of Asp-50. A steady-state kinetic analysis for H113A-catalyzed reduction of a homologous series of meta-substituted benzaldehyde derivatives was carried out, and quantitative structure-reactivity correlations were used to factor the observed kinetic substituent effect on k(cat) and k(cat)/K(m aldehyde) into an electronic effect and bonding effects (which are lacking in the wild type). Using the Hammett sigma scale, electronic parameter coefficients (rho) of +0.64 (k(cat)) and +0.78 (k(cat)/K(m aldehyde)) were calculated and clearly differ from rho(k(cat)/K(aldehyde)) and rho(k(cat)) values of +1.67 and approximately 0.0, respectively, for the wild-type enzyme. Hydride transfer rate constants of H113A, calculated from kinetic parameters and KIE data, display a substituent dependence not seen in the corresponding wild-type enzyme rate constants. An enzymic mechanism is proposed in which His-113, through a hydrogen bond from Nepsilon2 to aldehyde O1, assists in catalysis by optimizing the C=O bond charge separation and orbital alignment in the ternary complex.  相似文献   

17.
Histamine dehydrogenase (NSHADH) can be isolated from cultures of Nocardioides simplex grown with histamine as the sole nitrogen source. A previous report suggested that NSHADH might contain the quinone cofactor tryptophan tryptophyl quinone (TTQ). Here, the hdh gene encoding NSHADH is cloned from the genomic DNA of N. simplex, and the isolated enzyme is subjected to a full spectroscopic characterization. Protein sequence alignment shows NSHADH to be related to trimethylamine dehydrogenase (TMADH: EC 1.5.99.7), where the latter contains a bacterial ferredoxin-type [4Fe-4S] cluster and 6-S-cysteinyl FMN cofactor. NSHADH has no sequence similarity to any TTQ containing amine dehydrogenases. NSHADH contains 3.6+/-0.3 mol Fe and 3.7+/-0.2 mol acid labile S per subunit. A comparison of the UV/vis spectra of NSHADH and TMADH shows significant similarity. The EPR spectrum of histamine reduced NSHADH also supports the presence of the flavin and [4Fe-4S] cofactors. Importantly, we show that NSHADH has a narrow substrate specificity, oxidizing only histamine (K(m)=31+/-11 microM, k(cat)/K(m)=2.1 (+/-0.4)x10(5)M(-1)s(-1)), agmatine (K(m)=37+/-6 microM, k(cat)/K(m)=6.0 (+/-0.6)x10(4)M(-1)s(-1)), and putrescine (K(m)=1280+/-240 microM, k(cat)/K(m)=1500+/-200 M(-1)s(-1)). A kinetic characterization of the oxidative deamination of histamine by NSHADH is presented that includes the pH dependence of k(cat)/K(m) (histamine) and the measurement of a substrate deuterium isotope effect, (D)(k(cat)/K(m) (histamine))=7.0+/-1.8 at pH 8.5. k(cat) is also pH dependent and has a reduced substrate deuterium isotope of (D)(k(cat))=1.3+/-0.2.  相似文献   

18.
D-Lactate dehydrogenase (D-LDH) from Pediococcus pentosaceus ATCC 25745 was found to produce D-3-phenyllactic acid from phenylpyruvate. The optimum pH and temperature for enzyme activity were pH 5.5 and 45 °C. The Michaelis-Menten constant (K(m)), turnover number (k(cat)), and catalytic efficiency (k(cat)/K(m)) values for the substrate phenylpyruvate were estimated to be 1.73 mmol/L, 173 s(-1), and 100 (mmol/L)(-1) s(-1) respectively.  相似文献   

19.
The secretory isozyme of human carbonic anhydrase (hCA, EC 4.2.1.1), hCA VI, has been cloned, expressed, and purified in a bacterial expression system. The kinetic parameters for the CO(2) hydration reaction proved hCA VI to possess a k(cat) of 3.4 x 10(5)s(-1) and k(cat)/K(M) of 4.9 x 10(7)M(-1)s(-1) (at pH 7.5 and 20 degrees C). hCA VI has a significant catalytic activity for the physiological reaction, of the same order of magnitude as the ubiquitous isoform CA I or the transmembrane, tumor-associated isozyme CA IX. A series of amino acids and amines were shown to act as CA VI activators, with variable efficacies. l-His, l-Trp, and dopamine showed weak CA VI activating effects (K(A)s in the range of 21-42 microM), whereas d-His, d-Phe, l-DOPA, l-Trp, serotonin, and some pyridyl-alkylamines were better activators, with K(A)s in the range of 13-19 microM. The best CA VI activators were l-Phe, d-DOPA, l-Tyr, 4-amino-l-Phe, and histamine, with K(A)s in the range of 1.23-9.31 microM. All these activators enhance k(cat), having no effect on K(M), participating thus in the rate determining step in the catalytic cycle, the proton transfer reactions between the enzyme active site and the environment.  相似文献   

20.
Badarau A  Page MI 《Biochemistry》2006,45(35):10654-10666
The kinetics and mechanism of hydrolysis of the native zinc and metal substituted Bacillus cereus (BcII) metallo-beta-lactamase have been investigated. The pH and metal ion dependence of k(cat) and k(cat)/K(m), determined under steady-state conditions, for the cobalt substituted BcII catalyzed hydrolysis of cefoxitin, cephaloridine, and cephalexin indicate that an enzyme residue of apparent pK(a) 6.3 +/- 0.1 is required in its deprotonated form for metal ion binding and catalysis. The k(cat)/K(m) for cefoxitin and cephalexin with cadmium substituted BcII is dependent on two ionizing groups on the enzyme: one of pK(a1) = 8.7 +/- 0.1 required in its deprotonated form and the other of pK(a2) = 9.3 +/- 0.1 required in its protonated form for activity. The pH dependence of the competitive inhibition constant, K(i), for CdBcII with l-captopril indicates that pK(a1) = 8.7 +/- 0.1 corresponds to the cadmium-bound water. For the manganese substituted BcII, the pH dependence of k(cat)/K(m) for benzylpenicillin, cephalexin, and cefoxitin similarly indicated the importance of two catalytic groups: one of pK(a1) = 8.5 +/- 0.1 which needs to be deprotonated and the other of pK(a2) = 9.4 +/- 0.1 which needs to be protonated for catalysis; the pK(a1) was assigned to the manganese-bound water. The rate was metal ion concentration dependent at the highest manganese concentrations used (10(-)(3) M). The metal substituted species have similar or higher catalytic activities compared with the zinc enzyme, albeit at pHs above 7. Interestingly, with cefoxitin, a very poor substrate for ZnBcII, both k(cat) and k(cat)/K(m) increase with increasing pK(a) of the metal-bound water, in the order Zn < Co < Mn < Cd. A higher pK(a) for the metal-bound water for cadmium and manganese BCII leads to more reactive enzymes than the native zinc BcII, suggesting that the role of the metal ion is predominantly to provide the nucleophilic hydroxide, rather than to act as a Lewis acid to polarize the carbonyl group and stabilize the oxyanion tetrahedral intermediate.  相似文献   

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