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1.
The first crystal structure of an inorganic pyrophosphatase (S-PPase) from an archaebacterium, the thermophile Sulfolobus acidocaldarius, has been solved by molecular replacement and refined to an R-factor of 19.7% at 2.7 A. S-PPase is a D3 homohexameric protein with one Mg2+ per active site in a position similar to, but not identical with, the first activating metal in mesophilic pyrophosphatases (PPase). In mesophilic PPases, Asp65, Asp70, and Asp102 coordinate the Mg2+, while only Asp65 and Asp102 do in S-PPase, and the Mg2+ moves by 0.7 A. S-PPase may therefore be deactivated at low temperature by mispositioning a key metal ion. The monomer S-PPase structure is very similar to that of Thermus thermophilus (T-PPase) and Escherichia coli (E-PPase), root-mean-square deviations around 1 A/Calpha. But the hexamer structures of S- and T-PPase are more tightly packed and more similar to each other than they are to that of E-PPase, as shown by the increase in surface area buried upon oligomerization. In T-PPase, Arg116 creates an interlocking ionic network to both twofold and threefold related monomers; S-PPase has hydrophilic interactions to threefold related monomers absent in both E- and T-PPase. In addition, the thermostable PPases have about 7% more hydrogen bonds per monomer than E-PPase, and, especially in S-PPase, additional ionic interactions anchor the C-terminus to the rest of the protein. Thermostability in PPases is thus due to subtle improvements in both monomer and oligomer interactions.  相似文献   

2.
The structures of Escherichia coli soluble inorganic pyrophosphatase (E-PPase) and Thermus thermophilus soluble inorganic pyrophosphatase (T-PPase) have been compared to find the basis for the superior thermostability of T-PPase. Both enzymes are D3 hexamers and crystallize in the same space group with very similar cell dimensions. Two rather small changes occur in the T-PPase monomer: a systematic removal of Ser residues and insertion of Arg residues, but only in the C-terminal part of the protein, and more long-range ion pairs from the C-terminal helix to the rest of the molecule. Apart from the first five residues, the three-dimensional structures of E-PPase and T-PPase monomers are very similar. The one striking difference, however, is in the oligomeric interactions. In comparison with an E-PPase monomer, each T-PPase monomer is skewed by about 1 A in the xy plane, is 0.3 A closer to the center of the hexamer in the z direction, and is rotated by approximately 7 degrees about its center of gravity. Consequently, there are a number of additional hydrogen bond and ionic interactions, many of which form an interlocking network that covers all of the oligomeric surfaces. The change can also be seen in local distortions of three small loops involved in the oligomeric interfaces. The complex rigid-body motion has the effect that the hexamer is more tightly packed in T-PPase: the amount of surface area buried upon oligomerization increases by 16%. The change is sufficiently large to account for all of the increased thermostability of T-PPase over E-PPase and further supports the idea that bacterial PPases, most active as hexamers or tetramers, achieve a large measure of their stabilization through oligomerization. Rigid-body motions of entire monomers to produce tighter oligomers may be yet another way in which proteins can be made thermophilic.  相似文献   

3.
Type I soluble inorganic pyrophosphatases (PPases) are well characterized both structurally and mechanistically. Earlier we measured the effects of active site substitutions on pH--rate profiles for the type I PPases from both Escherichia coli (E-PPase) and Saccharomyces cerevisae (Y-PPase). Here we extend these studies by measuring the effects of such substitutions on the more discrete steps of ligand binding to E-PPase, including (a) Mg(2+) and Mn(2+) binding in the absence of added ligand; (b) Mg(2+) binding in the presence of either P(i) or hydroxymethylbisphosphonate (HMBP), a competitive inhibitor of E-PPase; and (c) P(i) binding in the presence of Mn(2+). The active site of a type I PPase has well-defined subsites for the binding of four divalent metal ions (M1--M4) and two phosphates (P1, P2). Our results, considered in light of pertinent results from crystallographic studies on both E-PPase and Y-PPase and parallel functional studies on Y-PPase, allow us to conclude the following: (a) residues E20, D65, D70, and K142 play key roles in the functional organization of the active site; (b) the major structural differences between the product and substrate complexes of E-PPase are concentrated in the lower half of the active site; (c) the M1 subsite is functionally isolated from the rest of the active site; and (d) the M4 subsite is an especially unconstrained part of the active site.  相似文献   

4.
Family II pyrophosphatases (PPases), recently found in bacteria and archaebacteria, are Mn(2+)-containing metalloenzymes with two metal-binding subsites (M1 and M2) in the active site. These PPases can use a number of other divalent metal ions as the cofactor but are inactive with Zn(2+), which is known to be a good cofactor for family I PPases. We report here that the Mg(2+)-bound form of the family II PPase from Streptococcus gordonii is nearly instantly activated by incubation with equimolar Zn(2+), but the activity thereafter decays on a time scale of minutes. The activation of the Mn(2+)-form by Zn(2+) was slower but persisted for hours, whereas activation was not observed with the Ca(2+)- and apo-forms. The bound Zn(2+) could be removed from PPase by prolonged EDTA treatment, with a complete recovery of activity. On the basis of the effect of Zn(2+) on PPase dimerization, the Zn(2+) binding constant appeared to be as low as 10(-12) M for S. gordonii PPase. Similar effects of Zn(2+) and EDTA were observed with the Mg(2+)- and apo-forms of Streptococcus mutans and Bacillus subtilis PPases. The effects of Zn(2+) on the apo- and Mg(2+)-forms of HQ97 and DE15 B. subtilis PPase variants (modified M2 subsite) but not of HQ9 variant (modified M1 subsite) were similar to that for the Mn(2+)-form of wild-type PPase. These findings can be explained by assuming that (a) the PPase tightly binds Mg(2+) and Mn(2+) at the M2 subsite; (b) the activation of the corresponding holoenzymes by Zn(2+) results from its binding to the M1 subsite; and (c) the subsequent inactivation of Mg(2+)-PPase results from Zn(2+) migration to the M2 subsite. The inability of Zn(2+) to activate apo-PPase suggests that Zn(2+) binds more tightly to M2 than to M1, allowing direct binding to M2. Zn(2+) is thus an efficient cofactor at subsite M1 but not at subsite M2.  相似文献   

5.
Pyrophosphatase (PPase) from Bacillus subtilis has recently been found to be the first example of a family II soluble PPase with a unique requirement for Mn2+. In the present work, we cloned and overexpressed in Escherichia coli putative genes for two more family II PPases (from Streptococcus mutans and Streptococcus gordonii), isolated the recombinant proteins, and showed them to be highly specific and active PPases (catalytic constants of 1700-3300 s(-)1 at 25 degrees C in comparison with 200-400 s(-)1 for family I). All three family II PPases were found to be dimeric manganese metalloenzymes, dissociating into much less active monomers upon removal of Mn2+. The dimers were found to have one high affinity manganese-specific site (K(d) of 0.2-3 nm for Mn2+ and 10-80 microm for Mg2+) and two or three moderate affinity sites (K(d) approximately 1 mm for both cations) per subunit. Mn2+ binding to the high affinity site, which occurs with a half-time of less than 10 s at 1.5 mm Mn2+, dramatically shifts the monomer <--> dimer equilibrium in the direction of the dimer, further activates the dimer, and allows substantial activity (60-180 s(-)1) against calcium pyrophosphate, a potent inhibitor of family I PPases.  相似文献   

6.
Comparative analysis of genome sequence data from mesophilic and hyperthermophilic micro-organisms has revealed a strong bias against specific thermolabile amino-acid residues (i.e. N and Q) in hyperthermophilic proteins. The N + Q content of class II xylose isomerases (XIs) from mesophiles, moderate thermophiles, and hyperthermophiles was examined. It was found to correlate inversely with the growth temperature of the source organism in all cases examined, except for the previously uncharacterized XI from Bacillus licheniformis DSM13 (BLXI), which had an N + Q content comparable to that of homologs from much more thermophilic sources. To determine whether BLXI behaves as a thermostable enzyme, it was expressed in Escherichia coli, and the thermostability and activity properties of the recombinant enzyme were studied. Indeed, it was optimally active at 70-72 degrees C, which is significantly higher than the optimal growth temperature (37 degrees C) of B. licheniformis. The kinetic properties of BLXI, determined at 60 degrees C with glucose and xylose as substrates, were comparable to those of other class II XIs. The stability of BLXI was dependent on the metallic cation present in its two metal-binding sites. The enzyme thermostability increased in the order apoenzyme < Mg2+-enzyme < Co2+-enzyme approximately Mn2+-enzyme, with melting temperatures of 50.3 degrees C, 53.3 degrees C, 73.4 degrees C, and 73.6 degrees C. BLXI inactivation was first-order in all conditions examined. The energy of activation for irreversible inactivation was also strongly influenced by the metal present, ranging from 342 kJ x mol(-1) (apoenzyme) to 604 kJ x mol(-1) (Mg2+-enzyme) to 1166 kJ x mol(-1) (Co2+-enzyme). These results suggest that the first irreversible event in BLXI unfolding is the release of one or both of its metals from the active site. Although N + Q content was an indicator of thermostability for class II XIs, this pattern may not hold for other sets of homologous enzymes. In fact, the extremely thermostable alpha-amylase from B. licheniformis was found to have an average N + Q content compared with homologous enzymes from a variety of mesophilic and thermophilic sources. Thus, it would appear that protein thermostability is a function of more complex molecular determinants than amino-acid content alone.  相似文献   

7.
Soluble inorganic pyrophosphatases (PPases) form two nonhomologous families, denoted I and II, that have similar active-site structures but different catalytic activities and metal cofactor specificities. Family II PPases, which are often found in pathogenic bacteria, are more active than family I PPases, and their best cofactor is Mn(2+) rather than Mg(2+), the preferred cofactor of family I PPases. Here, we present results of a detailed kinetic analysis of a family II PPase from Streptococcus gordonii (sgPPase), which was undertaken to elucidate the factors underlying the different properties of family I and II PPases. We measured rates of PP(i) hydrolysis, PP(i) synthesis, and P(i)/water oxygen exchange catalyzed by sgPPase with Mn(2+), Mg(2+), or Co(2+) in the high-affinity metal-binding site and Mg(2+) in the other sites, as well as the binding affinities for several active-site ligands (metal cofactors, fluoride, and P(i)). On the basis of these data, we deduced a minimal four-step kinetic scheme and evaluated microscopic rate constants for all eight relevant reaction steps. Comparison of these results with those obtained previously for the well-known family I PPase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Y-PPase) led to the following conclusions: (a) catalysis by sgPPase does not involve the enzyme-PP(i) complex isomerization known to occur in family I PPases; (b) the values of k(cat) for the magnesium forms of sgPPase and Y-PPase are similar because of similar rates of bound PP(i) hydrolysis and product release; (c) the marked acceleration of sgPPase catalysis in the presence of Mn(2+) and Co(2+) results from a combined effect of these ions on bound PP(i) hydrolysis and P(i) release; (d) sgPPase exhibits lower affinity for both PP(i) and P(i); and (e) sgPPase and Y-PPase exhibit similar values of k(cat)/K(m), which characterizes the PPase efficiency in vivo (i.e., at nonsaturating PP(i) concentrations).  相似文献   

8.
We have shown previously that electrophoretically and immunologically homogeneous polyclonal IgGs from the sera of autoimmune-prone MRL mice possess DNase activity. Here we have analyzed for the first time activation of DNase antibodies (Abs) by different metal ions. Polyclonal DNase IgGs were not active in the presence of EDTA or after Abs dialysis against EDTA, but could be activated by several externally added metal (Me(2+)) ions, with the level of activity decreasing in the order Mn(2+)> or =Mg(2+)>Ca(2+)> or =Cu(2+)>Co(2+)> or =Ni(2+)> or =Zn(2+), whereas Fe(2+) did not stimulate hydrolysis of supercoiled plasmid DNA (scDNA) by the Abs. The dependencies of the initial rate on the concentration of different Me(2+) ions were generally bell-shaped, demonstrating one to four maxima at different concentrations of Me(2+) ions in the 0.1-12 mM range, depending on the particular metal ion. In the presence of all Me(2+) ions, IgGs pre-dialyzed against EDTA produced only the relaxed form of scDNA and then sequence-independent hydrolysis of relaxed DNA followed. Addition of Cu(2+), Zn(2+), or Ca(2+) inhibited the Mg(2+)-dependent hydrolysis of scDNA, while Ni(2+), Co(2+), and Mn(2+) activated this reaction. The Mn(2+)-dependent hydrolysis of scDNA was activated by Ca(2+), Ni(2+), Co(2+), and Mg(2+) ions but was inhibited by Cu(2+) and Zn(2+). After addition of the second metal ion, only in the case of Mg(2+) and Ca(2+) or Mn(2+) ions an accumulation of linear DNA (single strand breaks closely spaced in the opposite strands of DNA) was observed. Affinity chromatography on DNA-cellulose separated DNase IgGs into many subfractions with various affinities to DNA and very different levels of the relative activity (0-100%) in the presence of Mn(2+), Ca(2+), and Mg(2+) ions. In contrast to all human DNases having a single pH optimum, mouse DNase IgGs demonstrated several pronounced pH optima between 4.5 and 9.5 and these dependencies were different in the presence of Mn(2+), Ca(2+), and Mg(2+) ions. These findings demonstrate a diversity of the ability of IgG to function at different pH and to be activated by different optimal metal cofactors. Possible reasons for the diversity of polyclonal mouse abzymes are discussed.  相似文献   

9.
1. Isolated outer membranes from rat spleen mitochondria can be stored in liquid N(2) for several weeks without significant loss of ATPase (adenosine triphosphatase) activity. 2. The ATPase reaction has a broad pH optimum centering on neutral pH, with little significant activity above pH9.0 or below pH5.5. 3. A sigmoidal response of the ATPase activity to temperature is observed between 0 and 55 degrees C, with complete inactivation at 60 degrees C. The Arrhenius plot shows that the activation energy above the transition temperature (22 degrees C) (E(a)=144kJ/mol) is one-third of that calculated for below the transition temperature (E'(a)=408kJ/mol). 4. The outer-membrane ATPase (K(m) for MgATP=50mum) is inactive unless Mg(2+) is added, whereas the inner-membrane ATPase (K(m) for ATP=11mum) is active without added Mg(2+) unless the mitochondria have been depleted of all endogenous Mg(2+) (by using ionophore A23187). 5. The substrate for the outer-membrane ATPase is a bivalent metal ion-nucleoside triphosphate complex in which Mg(2+) (K(m)=50mum) can be replaced effectively by Ca(2+) (K(m)=6.7mum) or Mn(2+), and ATP by ITP. Cu(2+), Co(2+), Sr(2+), Ba(2+), Ni(2+), Cd(2+) and Zn(2+) support very little ATP hydrolysis. 6. Univalent metal ions (Na(+), K(+), Rb(+), Cs(+) and NH(4) (+), but not Li(+)) stimulate the MgATPase activity (<10%) at low concentrations (50mm), but, except for K(+), are slightly inhibitory (20-30%) at higher concentrations (500mm). 7. The Mg(2+)-stimulated ATPase activity is significantly inhibited by Cu(2+) (K(i)=90mum), Ni(2+) (K(i)=510mum), Zn(2+) (K(i)=680mum) and Co(2+) (K(i)=1020mum), but not by Mg(2+), Ca(2+), Ba(2+) or Sr(2+). 8. The outer-membrane ATPase is insensitive to the inhibitors oligomycin, NN'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide, NaN(3), ouabain and thiol-specific reagents. A significant inhibition is observed at high concentrations of AgNO(3) (0.5mm) and NaF (10mm). 9. The activity towards MgATP is competitively inhibited by the product MgADP (K(i)=0.7mm) but not by the second product P(i) or by 5'-AMP.  相似文献   

10.
Family II inorganic pyrophosphatases (PPases) constitute a new evolutionary group of PPases, with a different fold and mechanism than the common family I enzyme; they are related to the "DHH" family of phosphoesterases. Biochemical studies have shown that Mn(2+) and Co(2+) preferentially activate family II PPases; Mg(2+) partially activates; and Zn(2+) can either activate or inhibit (Zyryanov et al., Biochemistry, 43, 14395-14402, accompanying paper in this issue). The three solved family II PPase structures did not explain the differences between the PPase families nor the metal ion differences described above. We therefore solved three new family II PPase structures: Bacillus subtilis PPase (Bs-PPase) dimer core bound to Mn(2+) at 1.3 A resolution, and, at 2.05 A resolution, metal-free Bs-PPase and Streptococcus gordonii (Sg-PPase) containing sulfate and Zn(2+). Comparison of the new and old structures of various family II PPases demonstrates why the family II enzyme prefers Mn(2+) or Co(2+), as an activator rather than Mg(2+). Both M1 and M2 undergo significant changes upon substrate binding, changing from five-coordinate to octahedral geometry. Mn(2+) and Co(2+), which readily adopt different coordination states and geometries, are thus favored. Combining our structures with biochemical data, we identified M2 as the high-affinity metal site. Zn(2+) activates in the M1 site, where octahedral geometry is not essential for catalysis, but inhibits in the M2 site, because it is unable to assume octahedral geometry but remains trigonal bipyramidal. Finally, we propose that Lys205-Gln81-Gln80 form a hydrophilic channel to speed product release from the active site.  相似文献   

11.
Family II inorganic pyrophosphatases (PPases) have been recently found in a variety of bacteria. Their primary and tertiary structures differ from those of the well-known family I PPases, although both have a binuclear metal center directly involved in catalysis. Here, we examined the effects of mutating one Glu, four His, and five Asp residues forming or close to the metal center on Mn(2+) binding affinity, catalysis, oligomeric structure, and thermostability of the family II PPase from Bacillus subtilis (bsPPase). Mutations H9Q, D13E, D15E, and D75E in two metal-binding subsites caused profound (10(4)- to 10(6)-fold) reductions in the binding affinity for Mn(2+). Most of the mutations decreased k(cat) for MgPP(i) by 2-3 orders of magnitude when measured with Mn(2+) or Mg(2+) bound to the high-affinity subsite and Mg(2+) bound to both the low-affinity subsite and pyrophosphate. In the E78D variant, the k(cat) for the Mn-bound enzyme was decreased 120-fold, converting bsPPase from an Mn-specific to an Mg-specific enzyme. K(m) values were less affected by the mutations, and, interestingly, were decreased in most cases. Mutations of His(97) and His(98) residues, which lie near the subunit interface, greatly destabilized the bsPPase dimer, whereas most other mutations stabilized it. Mn(2+), in sharp contrast to Mg(2+), conferred high thermostability to wild-type bsPPase, although this effect was reduced by all of the mutations except D203E. These results indicate that family II PPases have a more integrated active site structure than family I PPases and are consequently more sensitive to conservative mutations.  相似文献   

12.
Cell-associated oligo-1,6-alpha-glucosidase (EC 3.2.1.10) was isolated from Thermoanaerobium Tok6-B1 grown on starch-containing medium. Activity was purified 11.4-fold by salt precipitation, gel filtration, hydroxyapatite and anion-exchange chromatography. Molecular mass was determined as 30,000 by SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis and 33,000 by analytical gel filtration. The probable order of specificity was p-nitrophenyl-alpha D-glucose greater than-isomaltose greater than-isomaltotriose greater than-panose greater than-nigerose and no activity was shown against malto-oligosaccharides, melezitose, melibiose, raffinose, cellobiose, sophorose, gentiobiose, lactose, pullulan, dextran or amylose. The optima for activity and stability were between pH 5.6 and 7.0 and the half-life at pH 6.5 was 1000 min at 70 degrees C and 20 min at 76 degrees C. Activity was stabilized by substrate, Mg2+, Mn2+ and Ca2+, but was destabilized by Zn2+ and EDTA. N-Ethylmaleimide, glucose and 1-O-methyl-alpha D-glucose were inhibitory but 1-O-methyl-beta D-glucose stimulated activity. The activation energy (Ea) was 109 kJ/mol.  相似文献   

13.
Catalysis by Escherichia coli inorganic pyrophosphatase (E-PPase) was found to be strongly modulated by Tris and similar aminoalcoholic buffers used in previous studies of this enzyme. By measuring ligand-binding and catalytic properties of E-PPase in zwitterionic buffers, we found that the previous data markedly underestimate Mg(2+)-binding affinity for two of the three sites present in E-PPase (3.5- to 16-fold) and the rate constant for substrate (dimagnesium pyrophosphate) binding to monomagnesium enzyme (20- to 40-fold). By contrast, Mg(2+)-binding and substrate conversion in the enzyme-substrate complex are unaffected by buffer. These data indicate that E-PPase requires in total only three Mg2+ ions per active site for best performance, rather than four, as previously believed. As measured by equilibrium dialysis, Mg2+ binds to 2.5 sites per monomer, supporting the notion that one of the tightly binding sites is located at the trimer-trimer interface. Mg2+ binding to the subunit interface site results in increased hexamer stability with only minor consequences for catalytic activity measured in the zwitterionic buffers, whereas Mg2+ binding to this site accelerates substrate binding up to 16-fold in the presence of Tris. Structural considerations favor the notion that the aminoalcohols bind to the E-PPase active site.  相似文献   

14.
Thermal inactivation and unfolding of the dimeric arginine kinase (AK) from sea cucumber Stichopus japonicus was investigated. The activation energy was calculated to be 388 kJ/mol. Based on the analysis of the denaturation course at 58 degrees C, a model is suggested for the thermal unfolding of this dimeric AK. In addition, the effect of free Mg(2+) and the potential biological significance on the thermal unfolding of dimeric AK is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
The effect of temperature, pH, free [Mg(2+)], and ionic strength on the apparent equilibrium constant of arginine kinase (EC 2.7.3.3) was determined. At equilibrium, the apparent K' was defined as [see text] where each reactant represents the sum of all the ionic and metal complex species. The K' at pH 7.0, 1.0 mM free [Mg(2+)], and 0. 25 M ionic strength was 29.91 +/- 0.59, 33.44 +/- 0.46, 35.44 +/- 0. 71, 39.64 +/- 0.74, and 45.19 +/- 0.65 (n = 8) at 40, 33, 25, 15, and 5 degrees C, respectively. The standard apparent enthalpy (DeltaH degrees') is -8.19 kJ mol(-1), and the corresponding standard apparent entropy of the reaction (DeltaS degrees') is + 2. 2 J K(-1)mol(-1) in the direction of ATP formation at pH 7.0, free [Mg(2+)] =1.0 mM, ionic strength (I) =0.25 M at 25 degrees C. We further show that the magnitude of transformed Gibbs energy (DeltaG degrees ') of -8.89 kJ mol(-1) is mostly comprised of the enthalpy of the reaction, with 7.4% coming from the entropy TDeltaS degrees' term (+0.66 kJ mol(-1)). Our results are discussed in relation to the thermodynamic properties of its evolutionary successor, creatine kinase.  相似文献   

16.
A 2(2) factorial design was performed to find the best conditions of pH and temperature for xylanolytic activity of Bacillus circulans BL53 isolated from the Amazon environment. Solid-state cultivation was carried out on an inexpensive, abundant agro-industrial soybean residue. The central composite design (CCD) used for the analysis of treatment combinations showed that a second-order polynomial regression model was in good agreement with experimental results, with R(2) = 0.9369 (P < 0.05). The maximum activity was obtained at a high temperature (80 degrees C) and over a large pH range (4.0-7.0). Enzymatic activity was maintained in heated extracts up to 50 degrees C, suggesting that the xylanases of B. circulans BL53 are thermo-tolerant biocatalysts, being of interest for industrial processes. The crude enzyme extract hydrolyzed rice straw, sugar cane bagasse and soybean fiber and its activity was stimulated by Co(2+), Fe(3+), and beta-mercaptoethanol but inhibited by Mn(2+), Cu(2+), Ca(2+), Zn(2+), Ba(2+), Mg(2+) and by EDTA.  相似文献   

17.
B C Shenoy  H G Wood 《FASEB journal》1988,2(8):2396-2401
The synthetase that attaches biotin to the aposubunit of transcarboxylase (biotin-[methylmalonyl-CoA-carboxyltransferase]ligase) (EC 6.3.4.9) was purified to homogeneity by ion-exchange chromatography on cellulose DE-52 and CM-cellulose. The synthetase is a monomer of molecular weight 30,000. The pH and temperature optima for the synthetase are 6.0 and 37 degrees C, respectively. The apparent Km for the substrates ATP, biotin, and apo 1.3 S subunit of apotranscarboxylase are 38, 2.0, and 0.9 microM, respectively. Ni2+, Co2+, Zn2+, or Mn2+ could replace Mg2+ in the reaction. The affinity of synthetase toward metals is as follows: Zn2+ greater than Ni2+ greater than Mn2+ greater than Co2+ greater than Mg2+, and the activity with Zn2+ was much greater than that with the other divalent metals. EDTA completely inactivates the enzyme. The metals are necessary not only for the catalytic activity but also for the storage stability of the enzyme. The synthetase shows absolute specificity toward ATP.  相似文献   

18.
M Zolkiewski  A Ginsburg 《Biochemistry》1992,31(48):11991-12000
Dodecameric glutamine synthetase (GS) from Escherichia coli undergoes reversible, thermally induced partial unfolding without subunit dissociation. A single endotherm for Mn.GS (+/- active-site ligands) in the presence of 1 mM free Mn2+ and 100 mM KCl at pH 7 is observed by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). Previous deconvolutions of DSC data for Mn.GS showed only two two-state transitions (with similar tm values; 51.6 +/- 2 degrees C), and indicated that cooperative interactions link partial unfolding reactions of all subunits within the Mn.enzyme dodecamer [Ginsburg, A., & Zolkiewski, M. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 9421]. A net uptake of 8.0 equiv of H+ by Mn.GS occurs during partial unfolding, as determined in the present DSC experiments conducted with four buffers having different heats of protonation at 50 degrees C. These data gave a value of 176 +/- 12 kcal (mol of dodecamer)-1 for delta Hcal corrected for buffer protonation. L-Glutamine and L-Met-(SR)-sulfoximine stabilize the Mn.GS dodecamer through the free energies of ligand binding, and these were shown to be partially and totally released, respectively, from the 12 active sites at high temperature. Ligand effects on Tm values from DSC were similar to those from spectral measurements of Trp and Tyr exposures in two subunit domains. Effects of varying [ADP] on DSC profiles of Mn.GS were complex; Tm is increased by low [ADP] and decreased by > 100 microM free ADP. This is due to the exposure of an additional low-affinity ADP binding site per GS subunit at high temperature with log K1' = 4.3 and log K2' = 3.6 at 60 degrees C relative to log K' = 5.5 for ADP binding at 30 degrees C, as determined by isothermal calorimetric and fluorescence titrations. Moreover, delta Hcal at > 27% saturation with ADP (corrected for ADP binding/dissociation) is approximately 80-100 kcal/mol more than in the absence of ligands. Changes in domain interactions could result from ADP bridging subunit contacts in the dodecamer. Each of the active-site ligands investigated here produces different effects on DSC profiles without uncoupling the extremely cooperative, partial unfolding reactions in the Mn.GS dodecamer.  相似文献   

19.
This study describes the characterization of 80 kDa protease showing gelationlytic property among three proteases in the excretory/secretory proteins (ESP) from Toxoplasma gondii. The protease activity was detected in the ESP but not in the somatic extract of RH tachyzoites. This protease was active only in the presence of calcium ion but not other divalent cationic ions such as Cu(2+), Zn(2+), Mg(2+), and Mn(2+), implying that Ca(2+) is critical factor for the activation of the protease. The 80 kDa protease was optimally active at pH 7.5. Its gelatinolytic activity was maximal at 37 degrees C, and significant level of enzyme activity of the protease remained after heat treatment at 56 degrees C for 30 min or 100 degrees C for 10 min. This thermostable enzyme was strongly inhibited by metal chelators, i.e., EDTA, EGTA, and 1,10- phenanthroline. Thus, the 80 kDa protease in the ESP secreted by T. gondii was classified as a calcium dependent neutral metalloprotease.  相似文献   

20.
Glutamine synthetase (GS), Mr 622,000, from Escherichia coli contains 12 active sites formed at heterologous interfaces between subunits [Almassy, R. J., Janson, C. A., Hamlin, R., Xuong, N.-H., & Eisenberg, D. (1986) Nature (London) 323, 304-309]. Temperature-induced changes in UV spectra from 3 to 68 degrees C were reversible with the Mn2+- or Mg2+-enzyme at pH 7.0 (50 degrees C) in 100 mM KCl. No dissociation or aggregation of dodecamer occurred at high temperatures. The thermal transition involves the exposure of approximately 0.7 of the 2 Trp residues/subunit (by UV difference spectroscopy) and 2 of the 17 Tyr residues/subunit (change in exposure from 4.7 to 6.7 Tyr/subunit by second-derivative spectral analysis). Monitoring changes in Trp and Tyr exposure independently gives data that conform to a two-state model for partial unfolding with Tm values (where delta G unfolding = 0) differing by 2-3 degrees C at each level of [Mn2+] studied and with average delta HvH values of 80 and 94 kcal/mol, respectively. These observations suggest that two regions of the oligomeric structure unfold separately as independent transitions (random model). However, the data can be fit equally with a sequential model in which the Trp transition occurs first upon heating. By fitting with either model, Tm values increase from approximately 47 to approximately 54 degrees C with increasing free [Mn2+] from 3.6 to 49 microM but decrease from approximately 54 to approximately 43 degrees C by further increasing free [Mn2+] from 0.05 to 10 mM; such behavior indicates that the high-temperature form of the enzyme binds Mn2+ more weakly but has more binding sites than the native enzyme. The high-temperature Mn-enzyme form is somewhat less unfolded than is the catalytically inactive apoenzyme, which undergoes no further Trp or Tyr exposure on heating and therefore is assumed to be the high-temperature form of divalent cation-free GS. Adding substrates [ADP, L-Met-(SR)-sulfoximine, Gln, Gln + NH2OH, or Gln + ADP] to Mn.GS increased Tm to varying extents by preferential binding to the folded form. Indeed, the transition-state analogue complex GS.(Mn2.ADP.L-Met-(S)-sulfoximine phosphate)12 was stable in the folded form to at least 72 degrees C. Moreover, an Arrhenius plot for gamma-glutamyl transfer activity was linear from 4 to 72 degrees C with Ea = 18.3 kcal/mol.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

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