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1.
Ung MU  Lu B  McCammon JA 《Biopolymers》2006,81(6):428-439
The active site of the mammalian cAMP-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit (C-subunit) has a cluster of nonconserved acidic residues-Glu127, Glu170, Glu203, Glu230, and Asp241-that are crucial for substrate recognition and binding. Studies have shown that the Glu230 to Gln mutant (E230Q) of the enzyme has physical properties similar to the wild-type enzyme and has decreased affinity for a short peptide substrate, Kemptide. However, recent experiments intended to crystallize ternary complex of the E230Q mutant with MgATP and protein kinase inhibitor (PKI) could only obtain crystals of the apo-enzyme of E230Q mutant. To deduce the possible mechanism that prevented ternary complex formation, we used the relaxed-complex method (Lin, J.-H., et al. J Am Chem Soc 2002, 24, 5632-5633) to study PKI binding to the E230Q mutant C-subunit. In the E230Q mutant, we observed local structural changes of the peptide binding site that correlated closely to the reduced PKI affinity. The structural changes occurred in the F-to-G helix loop and appeared to hinder PKI binding. Reduced electrostatic potential repulsion among Asp241 from the helix loop section and the other acidic residues in the peptide binding site appear to be responsible for the structural change.  相似文献   

2.
Glu230, one of the acidic residues that cluster around the active site of the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase, plays an important role in substrate recognition. Specifically, its side chain forms a direct salt-bridge interaction with the substrate's P-2 Arg. Previous studies showed that mutation of Glu230 to Gln (E230Q) caused significant decreases not only in substrate binding but also in the rate of phosphoryl transfer. To better understand the importance of Glu230 for structure and function, we solved the crystal structure of the E230Q mutant at 2.8 A resolution. Surprisingly, the mutant preferred an open conformation with no bound ligands observed, even though the crystals were grown in the presence of MgATP and the inhibitor peptide, IP20. This is in contrast to the wild-type protein that, under the same conditions, prefers the closed conformation of a ternary complex. The structure highlights the importance of the electrostatic surface not only for substrate binding and catalysis, but also for the mechanism for closing the active site cleft. This surface mutation clearly disrupts the recognition and binding of substrate peptide so that the enzyme prefers an open conformation that cannot trap ATP. This is consistent with the reinforcing concepts of conformational dynamics and the synergistic binding of ATP and substrate peptide. Another unusual feature of the structure is the observation of the entire N terminus (Gly1-Thr32) assumes an extended alpha-helix conformation. Finally, based on temperature factors, this mutant structure is more stable than the wild-type C-subunit in the apo state.  相似文献   

3.
Previous studies on the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) identified a conserved interaction pair comprised of Tyr204 from the P+1 loop and Glu230 at the end of the alphaF-helix. Single-point mutations of Tyr204 to Ala (Y204A) and Glu230 to Gln (E230Q) both resulted in alterations in enzymatic kinetics. To understand further the molecular basis for the altered kinetics and the structural role of each residue, we analyzed the Y204A and the E230Q mutants using hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange coupled with mass spectrometry and other biophysical techniques. The fact that the mutants exhibit distinct molecular properties, supports previous hypotheses that these two residues, although in the same interaction node, contribute to the same enzymatic functions through different molecular pathways. The Tyr204 mutation appears to affect the dynamic properties, while the Glu230 mutation affects the surface electrostatic profile of the enzyme. Furthermore, H/D exchange analysis defines the dynamic allosteric range of Tyr204 to include the catalytic loop and three additional distant surface regions, which exhibit increased deuterium exchange in the Y204A but not the E230Q mutant. Interestingly, these are the exact regions that previously showed decreased deuterium exchange upon binding of the RIalpha regulatory subunit of PKA. We propose that these sites, coupled with the P+1 loop through Tyr204, represent one of the major allosteric networks in the kinase. This coupling provides a coordinated response for substrate binding and enzyme catalysis. H/D exchange analysis also further defines the stable core of the catalytic subunit to include the alphaE, alphaF and alphaH-helix. All these observations lead to an interesting new way to view the structural architecture and allosteric conformational regulation of the protein kinase molecule.  相似文献   

4.
Asn112 is located at the active site of thermolysin, 5-8 A from the catalytic Zn2+ and catalytic residues Glu143 and His231. When Asn112 was replaced with Ala, Asp, Glu, Lys, His, and Arg by site-directed mutagenesis, the mutant enzymes N112D and N112E, in which Asn112 is replaced with Asp and Glu, respectively, were secreted as an active form into Escherichia coli culture medium, while the other four were not. In the hydrolysis of a neutral substrate N-[3-(2-furyl)acryloyl]-Gly-L-Leu amide, the kcat/Km values of N112D and N112E exhibited bell-shaped pH-dependence, as did the wild-type thermolysin (WT). The acidic pKa of N112D was 5.7 +/- 0.1, higher by 0.4 +/- 0.2 units than that of WT, suggesting that the introduced negative charge suppressed the protonation of Glu143 or Zn2+-OH. In the hydrolysis of a negatively charged substrate, N-carbobenzoxy-l-Asp-l-Phe methyl ester (ZDFM), the pH-dependence of kcat/Km of the mutants decreased with increase in pH from 5.5 to 8.5, while that of WT was bell-shaped. This difference might be explained by the electrostatic repulsion between the introduced Asp/Glu and ZDFM, suggesting that introducing ionizing residues into the active site of thermolysin might be an effective means of modifying its pH-activity profile.  相似文献   

5.
Brosius JL  Colman RF 《Biochemistry》2002,41(7):2217-2226
Tetrameric adenylosuccinate lyase (ASL) of Bacillus subtilis catalyzes the cleavage of adenylosuccinate to form AMP and fumarate. We previously reported that two distinct subunits contribute residues to each active site, including the His68 and His89 from one and His141 from a second subunit [Brosius, J. L., and Colman, R. F. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 13336-13343]. Glu(275) is 2.8 A from His141 in the ASL crystal structure, and Lys268 is also in the active site region; Glu275 and Lys268 come from a third, distinct subunit. Using site-directed mutagenesis, we have replaced Lys268 by Arg, Gln, Glu, and Ala, with specific activities of the purified mutant enzymes being 0.055, 0.00069, 0.00028, and 0.0, respectively, compared to 1.56 units/mg for wild-type (WT) enzyme. Glu275 was substituted by Gln, Asp, Ala, and Arg; none of these homogeneous mutant enzymes has detectable activity. Circular dichroism and light scattering reveal that neither the secondary structure nor the oligomeric state of the Lys268 mutant enzymes has been perturbed. Native gel electrophoresis and circular dichroism indicate that the Glu275 mutant enzymes are tetramers, but their conformation is altered slightly. For K268R, the K(m)s for all substrates are similar to WT enzyme. Binding studies using [2-3H]-adenylosuccinate reveal that none of the Glu275 mutant enzymes, nor inactive K268A, can bind substrate. We propose that Lys268 participates in binding substrate and that Glu275 is essential for catalysis because of its interaction with His141. Incubation of H89Q with K268Q or E275Q leads to restoration of up to 16% WT activity, while incubation of H141Q with K268Q or E275Q results in 6% WT activity. These complementation studies provide the first functional evidence that a third subunit contributes residues to each intersubunit active site of ASL. Thus, adenylosuccinate lyase has four active sites per enzyme tetramer, each of which is formed from regions of three subunits.  相似文献   

6.
l-3-Hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase (HAD), the penultimate enzyme in the beta-oxidation spiral, reversibly catalyzes the conversion of l-3-hydroxyacyl-CoA to the corresponding 3-ketoacyl-CoA. Similar to other dehydrogenases, HAD contains a general acid/base, His(158), which is within hydrogen bond distance of a carboxylate, Glu(170). To investigate its function in this catalytic dyad, Glu(170) was replaced with glutamine (E170Q), and the mutant enzyme was characterized. Whereas substrate and cofactor binding were unaffected by the mutation, E170Q exhibited diminished catalytic activity. Protonation of the catalytic histidine did not restore wild-type activity, indicating that modulation of the pK(a) of His(158) is not the sole function of Glu(170). The pH profile of charge transfer complex formation, an independent indicator of active site integrity, was unaltered by the amino acid substitution, but the intensity of the charge transfer band was diminished. This observation, coupled with significantly reduced enzymatic stability of the E170Q mutant, implicates Glu(170) in maintenance of active site architecture. Examination of the crystal structure of E170Q in complex with NAD(+) and acetoacetyl-CoA (R = 21.9%, R(free) = 27.6%, 2.2 A) reveals that Gln(170) no longer hydrogen bonds to the side chain of His(158). Instead, the imidazole ring is nearly perpendicular to its placement in the comparable native complex and no longer positioned for efficient catalysis.  相似文献   

7.
The petF gene from the cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus was isolated using the same gene from Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 as a heterologous probe. The deduced primary sequence of the isolated single copy petF gene is identical to the primary sequence determined from the protein. Wild-type ferredoxin and a E93-95/Q93-95 mutant were overexpressed in E. coli and purified. Both types of ferredoxins are photoreduced by Photosystem I and can be cross-linked to the PsaD subunit of PS I, although with reduced affinity in case of the E93-95/Q93-95 mutant. These data indicate that the acidic patch of amino acids Glu94-95 of ferredoxin is most likely neither essential for the interaction of ferredoxin with PS I nor the only site of electrostatic contact with the PS I-D subunit. In contrast, NADP+photoreduction assays show drastically reduced rates in the presence of the E93-95/Q93-95 mutant ferredoxin, indicating that these residues play a crucial role in the interaction of ferredoxin with ferredoxin-NADP+reductase.  相似文献   

8.
Succinyl-CoA synthetase has an (alpha beta)2 subunit structure and shows half-of-the-sites reactivity with respect to the formation of the phosphohistidyl residues that acts as a catalytic intermediate. Adenosine 5'-O-(3-thio)triphosphate has been found to be a substrate, but the overall maximum velocity is 3 orders of magnitude lower than that seen with ATP. Moreover, steps of the reaction involving thiophosphoryl transfer are much slower than the corresponding phosphoryl transfers. These properties of adenosine 5'-O-(3-thio)triphosphate as a substrate have been exploited to test the concept of alternating sites catalytic cooperativity proposed earlier as a rationale for the subunit structure of succinyl-CoA synthetase. As predicted by this model for catalysis, the rate of discharge of thiophosphate from the enzyme in the presence of succinate and CoA is stimulated by ATP. Neither of two nonhydrolyzable analogs of ATP has an equivalent effect. The results indicate that the transfer of the thiophosphoryl group from the enzyme to succinate at one active site is not favored until the neighboring active site is phosphorylated by ATP, with accompanying reciprocal changes in the conformations of the two halves of the enzyme molecule.  相似文献   

9.
J A Buechler  S S Taylor 《Biochemistry》1990,29(7):1937-1943
The catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase typically phosphorylates protein substrates containing basic amino acids preceding the phosphorylation site. To identify amino acids in the catalytic subunit that might interact with these basic residues in the protein substrate, the enzyme was treated with a water-soluble carbodiimide, 1-ethyl-3-[3-(dimethylamino)propyl]carbodiimide (EDC), in the presence of [14C]glycine ethyl ester. Modification of the catalytic subunit in the absence of substrates led to the irreversible, first-order inhibition of activity. Neither MgATP nor a 6-residue inhibitor peptide alone was sufficient to protect the catalytic subunit against inactivation by the carbodiimide. However, the inhibitor peptide and MgATP together completely blocked the inhibitory effects of EDC. Several carboxyl groups in the free catalytic subunit were radiolabeled after the catalytic subunit was modified with EDC and [14C]glycine ethyl ester. After purification and sequencing, these carboxyl groups were identified as Glu 107, Glu 170, Asp 241, Asp 328, Asp 329, Glu 331, Glu 332, and Glu 333. Three of these amino acids, Glu 331, Glu 107, and Asp 241, were labeled regardless of the presence of substrates, while Glu 333 and Asp 329 were modified to a slight extent only in the free catalytic subunit. Glu 170, Asp 328, and Glu 332 were all very reactive in the apoenzyme but fully protected from modification by EDC in the presence of MgATP and an inhibitor peptide.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
PchB from Pseudomonas aeruginosa possesses isochorismate pyruvate lyase (IPL) and weak chorismate mutase (CM) activity. Homology modeling based on a structurally characterized CM, coupled with randomization of presumed key active site residues (Arg54, Glu90, Gln91) and in vivo selection for CM activity, was used to derive mechanistic insights into the IPL activity of PchB. Mutation of Arg54 was incompatible with viability, and the CM and IPL activities of an engineered R54K variant were reduced 1,000-fold each. The observation that position 90 was tolerant to substitution but position 91 was essentially confined to Gln or Glu in functional variants rules out involvement of Glu90 in general base catalysis. Counter to the generally accepted mechanistic hypothesis for pyruvate lyases, we propose for PchB a rare [1,5]-sigmatropic reaction mechanism that invokes electrostatic catalysis in analogy to the [3,3]-pericyclic rearrangement of chorismate in CMs. A common catalytic principle for both PchB functions is also supported by the covariance of the catalytic parameters for the CM and IPL activities and the shared functional requirement for a protonated Glu91 in Q91E variants. The experiments demonstrate that focusing directed evolution strategies on the readily accessible surrogate activity of an enzyme can provide valuable insights into the mechanism of the primary reaction.  相似文献   

11.
The contributions to catalysis of the conserved catalytic aspartate (Asp149) in the phosphorylase kinase catalytic subunit (PhK; residues 1-298) have been studied by kinetic and crystallographic methods. Kinetic studies in solvents of different viscosity show that PhK, like cyclic AMP dependent protein kinase, exhibits a mechanism in which the chemical step of phosphoryl transfer is fast and the rate-limiting step is release of the products, ADP and phosphoprotein, and possibly viscosity-dependent conformational changes. Site-directed mutagenesis of Asp149 to Ala and Asn resulted in enzymes with a small increase in K(m) for glycogen phosphorylase b (GPb) and ATP substrates and dramatic decreases in k(cat) (1.3 x 10(4) for Asp149Ala and 4.7 x 10(3) for Asp149Asn mutants, respectively). Viscosometric kinetic measurements with the Asp149Asn mutant showed a reduction in the rate-limiting step for release of products by 4.5 x 10(3) and a significant decrease (possibly as great as 2.2 x 10(3)) in the rate constant characterizing the chemical step. The date combined with the crystallographic evidence for the ternary PhK-AMPPNP-peptide complex [Lowe et al. (1997) EMBO J. 6, 6646-6658] provide powerful support for the role of the carboxyl of Asp149 in binding and orientation of the substrate and in catalysis of phosphoryl transfer. The constitutively active subunit PhK has a glutamate (Glu182) residue in the activation segment, in place of a phosphorylatable serine, threonine, or tyrosine residue in other protein kinases that are activated by phosphorylation. Site-directed mutagenesis of Glu182 and other residues involved in a hydrogen bond network resulted in mutant proteins (Glu182Ser, Arg148Ala, and Tyr206Phe) with decreased catalytic efficiency (approximate average decrease in k(cat)/K(m) by 20-fold). The crystal structure of the mutant Glu182Ser at 2.6 A resolution showed a phosphate dianion about 2.6 A from the position previously occupied by the carboxylate of Glu182. There was no change in tertiary structure from the native protein, but the activation segment in the region C-terminal to residue 182 showed increased disorder, indicating that correct localization of the activation segment is necessary in order to recognize and present the protein substrate for catalysis.  相似文献   

12.
Hazra S  Szewczak A  Ort S  Konrad M  Lavie A 《Biochemistry》2011,50(14):2870-2880
Deoxycytidine kinase (dCK) uses either ATP or UTP as a phosphoryl donor to catalyze the phosphorylation of nucleoside acceptors. The kinetic properties of human dCK are modulated in vivo by phosphorylation of serine 74. This residue is a part of the insert region and is distant from the active site. Replacing the serine with a glutamic acid (S74E variant) can mimic phosphorylation of Ser74. To understand how phosphorylation affects the catalytic properties of dCK, we examined the S74E variant of dCK both structurally and kinetically. We observe that the presence of a glutamic acid at position 74 favors the adoption by the enzyme of the open conformation. Glu74 stabilizes the open conformation by directly interacting with the indole side chain of Trp58, a residue that is in the proximity of the base of the nucleoside substrate. The open dCK conformation is competent for the binding of nucleoside but not for phosphoryl transfer. In contrast, the closed conformation is competent for phosphoryl transfer but not for product release. Thus, dCK must make the transition between the open and closed states during the catalytic cycle. We propose a reaction scheme for dCK that incorporates the transition between the open and closed states, and this serves to rationalize the observed kinetic differences between wild-type dCK and the S74E variant.  相似文献   

13.
Naught LE  Regni C  Beamer LJ  Tipton PA 《Biochemistry》2003,42(33):9946-9951
In Pseudomonas aeruginosa, the dual-specificity enzyme phosphomannomutase/phosphoglucomutase catalyzes the transfer of a phosphoryl group from serine 108 to the hydroxyl group at the 1-position of the substrate, either mannose 6-P or glucose 6-P. The enzyme must then catalyze transfer of the phosphoryl group on the 6-position of the substrate back to the enzyme. Each phosphoryl transfer is expected to require general acid-base catalysis, provided by amino acid residues at the enzyme active site. An extensive survey of the active site residues by site-directed mutagenesis failed to identify a single key residue that mediates the proton transfers. Mutagenesis of active site residues Arg20, Lys118, Arg247, His308, and His329 to residues that do not contain ionizable groups produced proteins for which V(max) was reduced to 4-12% of that of the wild type. The fact that no single residue decreased catalytic activity more significantly, and that several residues had similar effects on V(max), suggested that the ensemble of active site amino acids act by creating positive electrostatic potential, which serves to depress the pK of the substrate hydroxyl group so that it binds in ionized form at the active site. In this way, the necessity of positioning the reactive hydroxyl group near a specific amino acid residue is avoided, which may explain how the enzyme is able to promote catalysis of both phosphoryl transfers, even though the 1- and 6-positions do not occupy precisely the same position when the substrate binds in the two different orientations in the active site. When Ser108 is mutated, the enzyme retains a surprising amount of activity, which has led to the suggestion that an alternative residue becomes phosphorylated in the absence of Ser108. (31)P NMR spectra of the S108A protein confirm that it is phosphorylated. Although the S108A/H329N protein had no detectable catalytic activity, the (31)P NMR spectra were not consistent with a phosphohistidine residue.  相似文献   

14.
A specific amperometric assay was developed for the membrane-bound NOR [NO (nitric oxide) reductase] from the model denitrifying bacterium Paracoccus denitrificans using its natural electron donor, pseudoazurin, as a co-substrate. The method allows the rapid and specific assay of NO reduction catalysed by recombinant NOR expressed in the cytoplasmic membranes of Escherichia coli. The effect on enzyme activity of substituting alanine, aspartate or glutamine for two highly conserved glutamate residues, which lie in a periplasmic facing loop between transmembrane helices III and IV in the catalytic subunit of NOR, was determined using this method. Three of the substitutions (E122A, E125A and E125D) lead to an almost complete loss of NOR activity. Some activity is retained when either Glu122 or Glu125 is substituted with a glutamine residue, but only replacement of Glu122 with an aspartate residue retains a high level of activity. These results are interpreted in terms of these residues forming the mouth of a channel that conducts substrate protons to the active site of NOR during turnover. This channel is also likely to be that responsible in the coupling of proton movement to electron transfer during the oxidation of fully reduced NOR with oxygen [U. Flock, N. J. Watmough and P. Adelroth (2005) Biochemistry 44, 10711-10719].  相似文献   

15.
Möbitz H  Bruice TC 《Biochemistry》2004,43(30):9685-9694
Glutamate racemase (MurI) catalyzes the racemization of glutamate; two cysteine residues serve as catalytic acid and base. On the basis of the crystal structure of MurI from the hyperthermophilic bacterium Aquifex pyrophilus, we performed molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of six different systems to investigate stereochemistry, substrate ligation, and active site protonation state. The catalytic competence of individual systems was assessed by the abundance of reactive conformers. Only systems in which Cys70 is poised to deprotonate d-Glu were found to be catalytically competent (idem Cys178/l-Glu), in agreement with the experimentally observed stereochemistry of Lactobacillus fermentii MurI [Tanner, M. E. et al. (1993) Biochemistry 32, 3998-4006]. Only systems in which the alpha-amino group of l/d-Glu and the imidazole moiety of His are deprotonated are catalytically competent. The active site of MurI displays an unusual flexibility in substrate ligation, and several transitions between stable binding patterns were observed. In catalytically competent binding states, the conserved threonine residues 72, 114, and 117 ligate the alpha-carboxylate of Glu and the Asn71 amides ligate the alpha-amino group of Glu, whereas the delta-carboxylate of Glu is steered by electrostatic repulsion from the Asp7 and Glu147 side chain carboxylates. A network of hydrogen bonds controls the positioning of each thiol/thiolate. In what we term substrate flipping, Glu suddenly rotates into a binding pattern that resembles the post-racemization state of the other enantiomer, i.e., each enantiomer can be bound in two distinct states. Substrate flipping and unfavorable substrate binding successively trigger dissociation of the substrate, accompanied by an opening of the active site channel. We explain how the weak binding of Glu contributes to catalysis and suggest a mechanism by which binding mismatches are propagated into an opening of the active site.  相似文献   

16.
Two classes of molecules inhibit the catalytic subunit (C) of the cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase (cAPK), the heat-stable protein kinase inhibitors (PKIs) and the regulatory (R) subunits. Basic sites on C, previously identified as important for R/C interaction in yeast TPKI and corresponding to Lys213, Lys217, and Lys189 in murine Cα, were replaced with either Ala or Thr and characterized for their kinetic properties and ability to interact with RI and PKI. rC(K213A) and rC(K217A) were both defective in forming holoenzyme with RI but were inhibited readily with PKI. This contrasts with rC(R133A), which is defective in binding PKI but not RI (Wen & Taylor, 1994). Thus, the C-subunit employs two distinct electrostatic surfaces to achieve high-affinity binding with these two types of inhibitory molecules even though all inhibitors share a common consensus site that occupies the active site cleft. Unlike TPK1, mutation of Lys189 had no effect. The mutant C subunits that were defective in binding RI, rC(K213A) and rC(K217A), were then paired with three RI mutants, rRI(D140A), rRI(E143A), and rRI(D258A), shown previously to be defective in recognition of C. Although the mutations at Asp140 and Asp258 in RI were additive with respect to the C mutations, rC(K213A) and rRI(E143A) were compensatory, thus identifying a specific electrostatic interaction site between RI and C. The results are discussed in terms of the RI and C crystal structures and the sequence homology between the yeast and mammalian enzymes.  相似文献   

17.
Divalent metal ions play a crucial role in catalysis by many RNA and protein enzymes that carry out phosphoryl transfer reactions, and defining their interactions with substrates is critical for understanding the mechanism of biological phosphoryl transfer. Although a vast amount of structural work has identified metal ions bound at the active site of many phosphoryl transfer enzymes, the number of functional metal ions and the full complement of their catalytic interactions remain to be defined for any RNA or protein enzyme. Previously, thiophilic metal ion rescue and quantitative functional analyses identified the interactions of three active site metal ions with the 3'- and 2'-substrate atoms of the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme. We have now extended these approaches to probe the metal ion interactions with the nonbridging pro-S(P) oxygen of the reactive phosphoryl group. The results of this study combined with previous mechanistic work provide evidence for a novel assembly of catalytic interactions involving three active site metal ions. One metal ion coordinates the 3'-departing oxygen of the oligonucleotide substrate and the pro-S(P) oxygen of the reactive phosphoryl group; another metal ion coordinates the attacking 3'-oxygen of the guanosine nucleophile; a third metal ion bridges the 2'-hydroxyl of guanosine and the pro-S(P) oxygen of the reactive phosphoryl group. These results for the first time define a complete set of catalytic metal ion/substrate interactions for an RNA or protein enzyme catalyzing phosphoryl transfer.  相似文献   

18.
The reaction of the phosphate residue transfer catalysed by histone kinase dependent on adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate (cyclic AMP) was studied. The phosphotransferase reaction was shown to obey the mechanism of ping-pong bi-bi type. After incubation of the catalytic subunit of histone kinase with [gamma-32P]ATP the incorporation of one mole of [32P]phosphage per mole of protein was observed. The tryptic [32P]phosphohistidine-containing peptide was isolated and its N-terminus and amino acid composition were determined. The 2',3'-dialdehyde derivative of ATP (oATP) was used as the affinity label for the catalytic subunit of cyclic-AMP-dependent histone kinase. The inhibitor formed an alidmine bond with epsilon-amino group of the lysine residue of the active site and was irreversibly bound to the enzyme after reduction by sodium borohydride with concurrent irreversible inactivation of the enzyme. After inactivation, about one mole of 14C-labelled inhibitor was incorporated per mole of the enzyme. ATP effectively protected the catalytic subunit of histone kinase against inactivation by oATP. Tryptic digestion of the enzyme-inhibitor complex led to the isolation of the 14C-labelled peptide of the active site of histone kinase. Basing on these results, the role of histidine and lysine residues in the active site of the catalytic subunit of histone kinase was suggested.  相似文献   

19.
The plastocyanin binding domain of photosystem I.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
The molecular recognition between plastocyanin and photosystem I was studied. Photosystem I and plastocyanin can be cross-linked to an active electron transfer complex. Immunoblots and mass spectrometric analysis of proteolytic peptides indicate that the two negative patches conserved in plant plastocyanins are cross-linked with lysine residues of a domain near the N-terminus of the PsaF subunit of photosystem I. Conversion of these negative to uncharged patches of plastocyanin by site-directed mutation D42N/E43Q/D44N/E45Q and E59Q/E60Q/D61N respectively, reveals the first patch to be essential for the electrostatic interaction in the electron transfer complex with photosystem I and the second one to lower the redox potential. The domain in PsaF, not found in cyanobacteria, is predicted to fold into two amphipathic alpha-helices. The interacting N-terminal helix lines up six lysines on one side which may guide a fast one-dimensional diffusion of plastocyanin and provide the electrostatic attraction at the attachment site, in addition to the hydrophobic interaction in the area where the electron is transferred to P700 in the reaction center of photosystem I. This two-step interaction is likely to increase the electron transfer rate by more than two orders of magnitude in plants as compared with cyanobacteria. Our data resolve the controversy about the function of PsaF.  相似文献   

20.
Site-directed mutagenesis experiments designed to identify the active site of Bacillus licheniformis endo-beta-1,3-1,4-D-glucan 4-glucanohydrolase (beta-glucanase) have been performed. Putative catalytic residues were chosen on the basis of sequence similarity analysis to viral and eukaryotic lysozymes. Four mutant enzymes were expressed and purified from recombinant E. coli and their kinetics analysed with barley beta-glucan. Replacement of Glu134 by Gln produced a mutant (E134Q) that retains less than 0.3% of the wild-type activity. The other mutants, D133N, E160Q and D179N, are active but show different kinetic parameters relative to wild-type indicative of their participation in substrate binding and transition-state complex stabilization. Glu134 is essential for activity; it is comprised in a region of high sequence similarity to the active site of T4 lysozyme and matches the position of the general acid catalyst. These results strongly support a lysozyme-like mechanism for this family of Bacillus beta-glucan hydrolases with Glu134 being the essential acid catalyst.  相似文献   

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