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1.
A Kuliopulos  P Talalay  A S Mildvan 《Biochemistry》1990,29(44):10271-10280
delta 5-3-Ketosteroid isomerase (EC 5.3.3.1) catalyzes the isomerization of delta 5-3-ketosteroids to delta 4-3-ketosteroids by a conservative tautomeric transfer of the 4 beta-proton to the 6 beta-position with Tyr-14 as a general acid and Asp-38 as a general base [Kuliopulos, A., Mildvan, A. S., Shortle, D., & Talalay, P. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 149-159]. Primary, secondary, and combined deuterium kinetic isotope effects establish concerted substrate enolization to be the rate-limiting step with the wild-type enzyme [Xue, L., Talalay, P., & Mildvan, A. S. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 7491-7500]. The product of the fractional kcat values resulting from the Y14F mutation (10(-4.7)) and the D38N mutation (10(-5.6)) is comparable (10(-10.3)) to that of the double mutant Y14F + D38N (less than or equal to 10(-10.4)) which is completely inactive. Hence, the combined effects are either additive or synergistic. Quantitatively, similar effects of the two mutations on kcat/KM are found in the double mutant. Despite its inactivity, the Y14F + D38N double mutant forms crystals indistinguishable in form from those of the wild-type enzyme, tightly binds steroid substrates and substrate analogues, and immobilizes a spin-labeled steroid in an orientation indistinguishable from that found in the wild-type enzyme, indicating that the double mutant is otherwise largely intact. It is concluded that the total enzymatic activity of ketosteroid isomerase probably results from the independent and concerted functioning of Tyr-14 and Asp-38 in the rate-limiting enolization step, in accord with the perpendicular or antarafacial orientation of these two residues with respect to the enzyme-bound substrate. Synergistic effects of mutating two residues on kcat and on kcat/KM of enzyme-catalyzed multistep reactions are shown, theoretically, to occur when both residues act independently in the same step, and simple additivity occurs when this step is rate-limiting. Other conditions for additivity of the effects of mutations of kcat and kcat/KM are theoretically explored.  相似文献   

2.
L A Xue  P Talalay  A S Mildvan 《Biochemistry》1990,29(32):7491-7500
delta 5-3-Ketosteroid isomerase (EC 5.3.3.1) catalyzes the isomerization of delta 5-3-ketosteroids to delta 4-3-ketosteroids by a conservative tautomeric transfer of the 4 beta-proton to the 6 beta-position using Tyr-14 as a general acid and Asp-38 as a general base [Kuliopulos, A., Mildvan, A. S., Shortle, D., & Talalay, P. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 149]. On deuteration of the 4 beta-position (97.0%) of the substrate, kcat(H)/kcat(4 beta-D) is 6.1 in H2O and 6.3 in D2O. The solvent isotope effect, kcat(H2O)/kcat(D2O), is 1.6 for both the 4 beta-H and 4 beta-D substrates. Mutation of Tyr-55 to Phe lowers kcat 4.3-fold; kcat(H)/kcat/4 beta-D) is 5.3 in H2O and 5.9 in D2O, and kcat(H2O)/kcat(D2O) with the 4 beta-H and 4 beta-D substrates is 1.5 and 1.7, respectively, indicating concerted general acid-base catalysis in either the enolization or the ketonization step of both the wild-type and the Tyr-55----Phe (Y55F) mutant enzymes. An additional slow step occurs with the Y55F mutant. Smaller isotope effects on Km are used to estimate individual rate constants in the kinetic schemes of both enzymes. On deuteration of the 4 alpha-position (88.6%) of the substrate, the secondary isotope effect on kcat/Km corrected for composition is 1.11 +/- 0.02 with the wild-type enzyme and 1.12 +/- 0.02 with the Y55F mutant. These effects decrease to 1.06 +/- 0.01 and 1.07 +/- 0.01, respectively, when the 4 beta-position is also deuterated, thereby establishing these to be kinetic (rather than equilibrium) secondary isotope effects and to involve a proton-tunneling contribution. Deuteration of the 6-position of the substrate (92.0%) produces no kinetic isotope effects on kcat/Km with either the wild-type (1.00 +/- 0.01) or the Y55F mutant (1.01 +/- 0.01) enzyme. Since a change in hybridization from sp3 to sp2 occurs at C-4 only during enolization of the substrate and a change in hybridization at C-6 from sp2 to sp3 occurs only during reketonization of the dienol intermediate, enolization of the substrate constitutes the concerted rate-limiting step. Concerted enolization is consistent with the right angle or antarafacial orientations of Tyr-14 and Asp-38 with respect to the enzyme-bound substrate and with the additive effects on kcat of mutation of these catalytic residues [Kuliopulos, A., Talalay, P., & Mildvan, A. S. (1990) Biophys. J. 57, 39a].  相似文献   

3.
The reaction catalyzed by delta 5-3-ketosteroid isomerase has been shown to occur via the concerted enolization of the delta 5-3-ketosteroid substrate to form a dienolic intermediate, brought about by Tyr-14, which hydrogen bonds to and protonates the 3-keto group, and Asp-38, which removes and axial (beta) proton from C-4 of the substrate, in the same rate-limiting step [Xue, L., Talalay, P., & Mildvan, A.S. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 7491-7500; Kuliopulos, A., Mildvan, A.S., Shortle, D., & Talalay, P. (1989) Biochemistry 26, 3927-3937]. Since the axial C-4 proton is removed by Asp-38 from above the substrate, a determination of the complete stereochemistry of this rapid, concerted enolization requires information on the direction of approach of Tyr-14 to the enzyme-bound steroid. The double mutant enzyme, Y55F + Y88F, which retains Tyr-14 as the sole Tyr residue, was prepared and showed only a 4.5-fold decrease in kcat (12,000 s-1) and a 3.6-fold decrease in KM (94 microM) for delta 5-androstene-3, 17,dione, in comparison with the wild-type enzyme. Deuteration of the aromatic rings of the 10 Phe residues further facilitated the assignment of the aromatic proton resonances of Tyr-14 in the 600-MHz TOCSY spectrum at 6.66 +/- 0.01 ppm (3,5H) and at 6.82 +/- 0.01 ppm (2,6H). Variation of the pH from 4.9 to 10.9 did not alter these shifts, indicating that the pKa of Tyr-14 exceeds 10.9. Resonances assigned to the three His residues titrated with pKa values very similar to those found with the wild-type enzyme. The binding of 19-nortestosterone, a product analogue and substrate of the reverse isomerase reaction, induced downfield shifts of -0.12 and -0.06 ppm of the 3,5-and 2,6-proton resonances of Tyr-14, respectively, possibly due to deshielding by the 3-keto group of the steroid, but also induced +0.29 to -0.41 ppm changes in the chemical shifts of 8 of the 10 Phe residues and smaller changes in 10 of the 12 ring-shifted methyl resonances, indicating a steroid-induced conformation change in the enzyme. NOESY spectra in H2O revealed strong negative Overhauser effects from the 3,5-proton resonance of Tyr-14 to the overlapping 2 alpha-, 2 beta-, or 6 beta-proton resonances of the bound steroid but no NOE's to the 4- or 6 alpha-protons of the steroid.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
delta 5-3-Ketosteroid isomerase (KSI: EC 5.3.3.1) of Pseudomonas testosteroni catalyzes the isomerization of delta 5-3-ketosteroids to delta 4-3-ketosteroids by the stereospecific transfer of the steroid 4 beta-proton to the 6 beta-position, using Tyr-14 as a general acid and Asp-38 as a base. Ultraviolet resonance Raman (UVRR) spectra have been obtained for the catalytically active double mutant Y55F + Y88F, which retains Tyr-14 as the only tyrosine residue (referred to as the Y14(0) mutant), and the Y14F mutant, which has 50,000-fold lower activity. The UVRR results establish that binding of the product analog and competitive inhibitors 19-nortestosterone or 4-fluoro-19-nortestosterone to the Y14(0) mutant does not result in the formation of deprotonated Tyr-14. The UVRR spectra of the steroid inhibitors show large decreases in the vinyl and carbonyl stretching frequencies on binding to the Y14(0) enzyme but not on binding to the Y14F enzyme. These changes cannot be mimicked by protonation of the steroids. For 19-nortestosterone, the vinyl and carbonyl stretching frequencies shift down (with respect to the values in aqueous solution) by 18 and 27 cm-1, respectively, on binding to Y14(0) KSI. It is proposed that the changes in the steroid resonance Raman spectrum arise from polarization of the enone moiety via the close proximity of the charged Asp-38 side chain to the vinyl group and the directional hydrogen bond between Tyr-14 and the 3-carbonyl oxygen of the steroid enone. The 230-nm-excited UVRR spectra do not, however, show changes that are characteristic of strong hydrogen bonding from the tyrosine hydrogen. It is proposed that this hydrogen bonding is compensated by a second hydrogen bond to the Tyr-14 oxygen from another protein residue. UVRR spectra of the Y14(0) enzyme obtained using 200 nm excitation show enhancement of the amide II and S Raman bands. The secondary structure of KSI was estimated from the amide II and S intensities and was found to be low in alpha-helical structure. The alpha-helix content was estimated to be in the range of 0-25% (i.e., 10 +/- 15%).  相似文献   

5.
Choi G  Ha NC  Kim MS  Hong BH  Oh BH  Choi KY 《Biochemistry》2001,40(23):6828-6835
Delta5-3-ketosteroid isomerase (KSI) from Pseudomonas putida Biotype B catalyzes the allylic isomerization of Delta5-3-ketosteroids to their conjugated Delta4-isomers via a dienolate intermediate. Two electrophilic catalysts, Tyr-14 and Asp-99, are involved in a hydrogen bond network that comprises Asp-99 Odelta2...O of Wat504...Tyr-14 Oeta...Tyr-55 Oeta.Tyr-30 Oeta in the active site of P. putida KSI. Even though neither Tyr-30 nor Tyr-55 plays an essential role in catalysis by the KSI, the catalytic activity of Y14F could be increased ca. 26-51-fold by the additional Y30F and/or Y55F mutation in the hydrogen bond network. To identify the structural basis for the pseudoreversion in the KSI, crystal structures of Y14F and Y14F/Y30F/Y55F have been determined at 1.8 and 2.0 A resolution, respectively. Comparisons of the two structures near the catalytic center indicate that the hydrogen bond between Asp-99 Odelta2 and C3-O of the steroid, which is perturbed by the Y14F mutation, can be partially restored to that in the wild-type enzyme by the additional Y30F/Y55F mutations. The kinetic parameters of the tyrosine mutants with the additional D99N or D99L mutation also support the idea that Asp-99 contributes to catalysis more efficiently in Y14F/Y30F/Y55F than in Y14F. In contrast to the catalytic mechanism of Y14F, the C4 proton of the steroid substrate was found to be transferred to the C6 position in Y14F/Y30F/Y55F with little exchange of the substrate 4beta-proton with a solvent deuterium based on the reaction rate in D2O. Taken together, our findings strongly suggest that the improvement in the catalytic activity of Y14F by the additional Y30F/Y55F mutations is due to the changes in the structural integrity at the catalytic site and the resulting restoration of the proton-transfer mechanism in Y14F/Y30F/Y55F.  相似文献   

6.
Choi G  Ha NC  Kim SW  Kim DH  Park S  Oh BH  Choi KY 《Biochemistry》2000,39(5):903-909
Delta 5-3-ketosteroid isomerase (KSI) catalyzes the allylic isomerization of Delta 5-3-ketosteroids at a rate approaching the diffusion limit by an intramolecular transfer of a proton. Despite the extensive studies on the catalytic mechanism, it still remains controversial whether the catalytic residue Asp-99 donates a hydrogen bond to the steroid or to Tyr-14. To clarify the role of Asp-99 in the catalysis, two single mutants of D99E and D99L and three double mutants of Y14F/D99E, Y14F/D99N, and Y14F/D99L have been prepared by site-directed mutagenesis. The D99E mutant whose side chain at position 99 is longer by an additional methylene group exhibits nearly the same kcat as the wild-type while the D99L mutant exhibits ca. 125-fold lower kcat than that of the wild-type. The mutations made at positions 14 and 99 exert synergistic or partially additive effect on kcat in the double mutants, which is inconsistent with the mechanism based on the hydrogen-bonded catalytic dyad, Asp-99 COOH...Tyr-14 OH...C3-O of the steroid. The crystal structure of D99E/D38N complexed with equilenin, an intermediate analogue, at 1.9 A resolution reveals that the distance between Tyr-14 O eta and Glu-99 O epsilon is ca. 4.2 A, which is beyond the range for a hydrogen bond, and that the distance between Glu-99 O epsilon and C3-O of the steroid is maintained to be ca. 2.4 A, short enough for a hydrogen bond to be formed. Taken together, these results strongly support the idea that Asp-99 contributes to the catalysis by donating a hydrogen bond directly to the intermediate.  相似文献   

7.
L A Xue  P Talalay  A S Mildvan 《Biochemistry》1991,30(45):10858-10865
delta 5-3-Ketosteroid isomerase (EC 5.3.3.1) from Pseudomonas testosteroni catalyzes the conversion of androst-5-ene-3,17-dione to androst-4-ene-3,17-dione by a stereoselective transfer of the 4 beta-proton to the 6 beta-position. The rate-limiting step has been shown to be the concerted enolization of the enzyme-bound substrate comprising protonation of the 3-carbonyl oxygen by Tyr-14 and abstraction of the 4 beta-proton by Asp-38 [Xue, L., Talalay, P., & Mildvan, A. S. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 7491-7500]. Primary, secondary, solvent, and combined kinetic deuterium isotope effects have been used to investigate the mechanism of the Y14F mutant, which lacks the proton donor and is 10(4.7)-fold less active catalytically than the wild-type enzyme. With [4 beta-D]androst-5-ene-3,17-dione as a substrate in H2O, a lag in product formation is observed which approaches, by a first-order process, the rate observed with protonated substrate. With the protonated substrate in D2O, a burst in product formation is detected by derivative analysis of the kinetic data which approaches the rate observed with the 4 beta-deuterated substrate in D2O. The absence of such lags or bursts with the protonated substrate in H2O or with the 4 beta-deuterated substrate in D2O, as well as the detection of buffer catalysis by phosphate at pH 6.8, indicates that one or more intermediates dissociate from the enzyme and partition to substrate 31.6 times faster than to product.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Hénot F  Pollack RM 《Biochemistry》2000,39(12):3351-3359
3-oxo-Delta(5)-steroid isomerase (KSI) from Comamonas (Pseudomonas) testosteroni catalyzes the isomerization of beta,gamma-unsaturated 3-oxosteroids to their conjugated isomers through an intermediate dienolate. Residue Asp-38 (pK(a) 4.57) acts as a base to abstract a proton from C-4 of the substrate to form an intermediate dienolate, which is then reprotonated on C-6. Both Tyr-14 (pK(a) 11.6) and Asp-99 (pK(a) >/= 9.5) function as hydrogen-bond donors to O-3 of the steroid, helping to stabilize the transition states. Mutation of the active-site base Asp-38 to the weakly basic Asn (D38N) has previously been shown to result in a >10(8)-fold decrease of catalytic activity. In this work, we describe the preparation and kinetic analysis of the Ala-38 (D38A) mutant. Unexpectedly, D38A has a catalytic turnover number (k(cat)) that is ca. 10(6)-fold greater than the value for D38N and only about 140-fold less than that for wild type. Kinetic studies as a function of pH show that D38A-catalyzed isomerization involves two groups, with pK(a) values of 4.2 and 10.4, respectively, in the free enzyme, which are assigned to Asp-99 and either Tyr-14 or Tyr-55. A mechanism for D38A is proposed in which Asp-99 is recruited as the catalytic base, with stabilization of the intermediate dienolate ion and the flanking transition states provided by hydrogen bonding from both Tyr-14 and Tyr-55. This mechanism is supported by the lack of detectable activity of the D38A/D99N, D38A/Y14F, and D38A/Y55F double mutants.  相似文献   

9.
The delta 5-3-ketosteroid isomerase (EC 5.3.3.1) of Pseudomonas testosteroni catalyzes the conversion of androst-5-ene-3,17-dione to androst-4-ene-3,17-dione by a stereospecific transfer of the 4 beta-proton to the 6 beta-position. The reaction involves two steps: (a) a rate-limiting concerted enolization, comprising protonation of the 3-carbonyl oxygen by the phenolic hydroxyl group of Tyr-14 and abstraction of the 4 beta-proton by the carboxylate group of Asp-38, and (b) rapid reketonization of the dienol, which may or may not be concerted. The active-site mutant D38N, which lacks the base responsible for proton transfer, is about 10(6.0)-fold less active catalytically than the wild-type enzyme. With the D38N mutant it was demonstrated spectroscopically that the enzymatic reaction involves the conversion of the substrate to both the dienol and its anion as tightly enzyme-bound intermediates, which are then converted much more slowly to the alpha,beta-unsaturated product. In contrast to the mechanism of the wild-type enzyme, the enolization reaction promoted by the D38N mutant is not stereospecific with respect to removal of the 4 beta-proton and shows primary kinetic isotope effects on enolization when either 4 alpha or 4 beta or both of these protons are replaced by deuterium. Kinetic isotope effects obtained with deuterated substrates, solvent, or combinations of the two indicate that, unlike in the wild-type enzyme, protonation of the carbonyl oxygen and removal of the C-4 proton are not concerted in the D38N mutant.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
3-Oxo-Delta(5)-steroid isomerase (KSI) catalyzes the isomerization of a variety of 3-oxo-Delta(5)-steroids to their conjugated Delta(4) isomers. The mechanism involves sequential enolization and ketonization, with Asp-38 acting to transfer a proton from C-4 to C-6 through a dienol(ate) intermediate. We have previously proposed that this intermediate is anionic, with stabilization provided from direct hydrogen bonding from Tyr-14 and Asp-99 to the oxygen of the steroid. In this work, we analyze the binding of substituted 2-naphthols, which are analogues of the intermediate dienol, to the D38E KSI mutant and the corresponding double mutants lacking one of the two electrophilic groups (D38E/Y14F and D38E/D99A). The binding of these naphthols to the mutant KSIs at pH 7 is described by the modified Bronsted equation: log K(D) = alpha(pK(a)) + constant, where K(D) is the dissociation constant of the complex. The high value of alpha for D38E (alpha = 0.87 +/- 0.06) indicates that the negative charge in these D38E-naphthol complexes is localized almost exclusively on the bound ligand. In contrast, values of alpha for the double mutants (alpha = 0.28 +/- 0.02 for D38E/Y14F and alpha = 0.25 +/- 0.02 for D38E/D99A) are consistent with very little negative charge on the oxygen of the bound naphthol. Ultraviolet spectra of 5-nitro-2-naphthol and the fluorescence spectra of equilenin bound to these mutants support this interpretation. Extrapolation of these results to the intermediate in the catalytic reaction suggests that for the reaction with D38E, the intermediate is a negatively charged dienolate with hydrogen bonding from both Tyr-14 and Asp-99. Removal of either one of these H-bond donors (Tyr-14 or Asp-99) causes destabilization of the anion and results in a dienol enzyme-intermediate complex rather than a dienolate.  相似文献   

11.
The crucial step in enzymatic transamination is the tautomerization of aldimine/ketimine intermediates, formed between the pyridoxyl coenzyme and the amino/keto acid substrate, which is catalyzed primarily by the active site residue Lys-258 (Malcolm, B. A., and Kirsch, J. F. (1985) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 132, 915-921; W. L. Finlayson and J. F. Kirsch, in preparation). Tyr-70 is localized in close proximity to Lys-258 and, in addition, forms a hydrogen bond with the coenzyme phosphate. Tyr-70 has been postulated to have an important role in the tautomerization (Kirsch, J. F., Eichele, G., Ford, G. C., Vincent, M. G., Jansonius, J. N., Gehring, H., and Christen, P. (1984) J. Mol. Biol. 174, 497-525). This hypothesis has now been tested by the construction and analysis of a mutant Escherichia coli aspartate aminotransferase in which Tyr-70 has been changed to Phe (Y70F). Y70F retains at least 15% of the maximal activity of the wild type enzyme (WT) (kcat = 170 +/- 15 s-1 for WT versus greater than or equal to 26 +/- 3 s-1 for Y70F and shows increased Michaelis constants for both substrates (KmAsp = 2.5 +/- 0.4 mM; Km alpha Kg = 0.59 +/- 0.08 mM for WT versus KmAsp = 3.9 +/- 0.3 mM; Km alpha Kg = 2.70 +/- 0.02 mM for Y70F (where alpha Kg is alpha-ketoglutarate) ). The spectrophotometrically determined pK a values of the internal aldimines formed between pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP) and Lys-258 are identical for WT and Y70F. In assays where excess L-aspartate and excess PLP are incubated with either WT or Y70F, the mutant enzyme converts the free PLP to free pyridoxamine 5'-phosphate 80-fold faster than WT (k = (3.75 +/- 0.23) X 10(-2)s-1 for Y70F versus (4.90 +/- 0.02) X 10(-4)s-1 for WT). Y70F also converts free pyridoxamine 5'-phosphate to free PLP faster than WT. Thus, Y70F dissociates coenzyme more readily than does WT. It therefore appears that the role of Tyr-70 is mainly in preventing the dissociation of the coenzyme from the enzyme. Tyr-70 does not function in an essential chemical step.  相似文献   

12.
Site-directed mutagenesis was used to probe the structural and functional roles of two highly conserved residues, Tyr-52 and Tyr-73, in interfacial catalysis by bovine pancreatic phospholipase A2 (PLA2, overproduced in Escherichia coli). According to crystal structures, the side chains of these two active site residues form H-bonds with the carboxylate of the catalytic residue Asp-99. Replacement of either or both Tyr residues by Phe resulted in only very small changes in catalytic rates, which suggests that the hydrogen bonds are not essential for catalysis by PLA2. Substitution of either Tyr residue by nonaromatic amino acids resulted in substantial decreases in the apparent kcat toward 1,2-dioctanoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DC8PC) micelles and the v(o) (turnover number at maximal substrate concentration, i.e., mole fraction = 1) toward 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphomethanol (DC14PM) vesicles in scooting mode kinetics [Berg, O. G., Yu, B.-Z., Rogers, J., & Jain, M. K. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 7283-7297]. The Y52V mutant was further analyzed in detail by scooting mode kinetics: the E to E* equilibrium was examined by fluorescence; the dissociation constants of E*S, E*P, and E*I (KS*, KP*, and KI*, respectively) in the presence of Ca2+ were measured by protection of histidine-48 modification and by difference UV spectroscopy; the Michaelis constant KM* was calculated from initial rates of hydrolysis in the absence and presence of competitive inhibitors; and the turnover number under saturating conditions (kcat, which is a theoretical value since the enzyme may not be saturated at the interface) was calculated from the vo and KM* values. The results indicated little perturbation in the interfacial binding step (E to E*) but ca. 10-fold increases in KS*, KP*, KI*, and KM* and a less than 10-fold decrease in kcat. Such changes in the function of Y52V are not due to global conformational changes since the proton NMR properties of Y52V closely resemble those of wild-type PLA2; instead, it is likely to be caused by perturbed enzyme-substrate interactions at the active site. Tyr-73 appears to play an important structural role. The conformational stability of all Tyr-73 mutants decreased by 4-5 kcal/mol relative to that of the wild-type PLA2. The proton NMR properties of Y73A suggested significant conformational changes and substantially increased conformational flexibility. These detailed structural and functional analyses represent a major advancement in the structure-function study of an enzyme involved in interfacial catalysis.  相似文献   

13.
The role of conserved Asp-199 in chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) has been investigated by site-directed mutagenesis. Substitution of Asp-199 by alanine results in a thermolabile mutant enzyme (Ala-199 CAT) with reduced kcat(13-fold) but similar Km values to wild type CAT. Replacement by asparagine gives rise to a thermostable mutant enzyme (Asn-199 CAT) with much reduced kcat(1500-fold). Furthermore, Asn-199 CAT shows anomalous inactivation kinetics with the affinity reagent 3-(bromo-acetyl)chloramphenicol. These results favor a structural role for Asp-199 rather than a catalytic one, in keeping with crystallographic evidence for involvement of Asp-199 in a tight salt bridge with Arg-18. Replacement of Arg-18 by valine results in a mutant enzyme (Val-18 CAT) with similar properties to Ala-199 CAT. The catalytic imidazole of His-19 appears to be conformationally constrained by hydrogen bonding between N1-H and the carbonyl oxygen of the same residue and by ring stacking with Tyr-25.  相似文献   

14.
Low-barrier hydrogen bonds (LBHBs) have been proposed to have important influences on the enormous reaction rate increases achieved by many enzymes. Δ5-3-ketosteroid isomerase (KSI) catalyzes the allylic isomerization of Δ5-3-ketosteroid to its conjugated Δ4-isomers at a rate that approaches the diffusion limit. Tyr14, a catalytic residue of KSI, has been hypothesized to form an LBHB with the oxyanion of a dienolate steroid intermediate generated during the catalysis. The unusual chemical shift of a proton at 16.8 ppm in the nuclear magnetic resonance spectrum has been attributed to an LBHB between Tyr14 Oη and C3-O of equilenin, an intermediate analogue, in the active site of D38N KSI. This shift in the spectrum was not observed in Y30F/Y55F/D38N and Y30F/Y55F/Y115F/D38N mutant KSIs when each mutant was complexed with equilenin, suggesting that Tyr14 could not form LBHB with the intermediate analogue in these mutant KSIs. The crystal structure of Y30F/Y55F/Y115F/D38N-equilenin complex revealed that the distance between Tyr14 Oη and C3-O of the bound steroid was within a direct hydrogen bond. The conversion of LBHB to an ordinary hydrogen bond in the mutant KSI reduced the binding affinity for the steroid inhibitors by a factor of 8.1–11. In addition, the absence of LBHB reduced the catalytic activity by only a factor of 1.7–2. These results suggest that the amount of stabilization energy of the reaction intermediate provided by LBHB is small compared with that provided by an ordinary hydrogen bond in KSI.  相似文献   

15.
G H Nam  D S Jang  S S Cha  T H Lee  D H Kim  B H Hong  Y S Yun  B H Oh  K Y Choi 《Biochemistry》2001,40(45):13529-13537
Ketosteroid isomerase (KSI) from Pseudomonas putida biotype B is a homodimeric enzyme catalyzing an allylic rearrangement of Delta5-3-ketosteroids at rates comparable with the diffusion-controlled limit. The tyrosine triad (Tyr14.Tyr55.Tyr30) forming a hydrogen-bond network in the apolar active site of KSI has been characterized in an effort to identify the roles of the phenyl rings in catalysis, stability, and unfolding of the enzyme. The replacement of Tyr14, a catalytic residue, with serine resulted in a 33-fold decrease of kcat, while the replacements of Tyr30 and Tyr55 with serine decreased kcat by 4- and 51-fold, respectively. The large decrease of kcat for Y55S could be due to the structural perturbation of alpha-helix A3, which results in the reorientation of the active-site residues as judged by the crystal structure of Y55S determined at 2.2 A resolution. Consistent with the analysis of the Y55S crystal structure, the far-UV circular dichroism spectra of Y14S, Y30S, and Y55S indicated that the elimination of the phenyl ring of the tyrosine reduced significantly the content of alpha-helices. Urea-induced equilibrium unfolding experiments revealed that the DeltaG(U)H2O values of Y14S, Y30S, and Y55S were significantly decreased by 11.9, 13.7, and 9.5 kcal/mol, respectively, as compared with that of the wild type. A characterization of the unfolding kinetics based on PhiU-value analysis indicates that the interactions mediated by the tyrosine triad in the native state are very resistant to unfolding. Taken together, our results demonstrate that the internal packing by the phenyl rings in the active-site tyrosine triad contributes to the conformational stability and catalytic activity of KSI by maintaining the structural integrity of the alpha-helices.  相似文献   

16.
Aspartate transcarbamylase (EC 2.1.3.2) from E. coli is a multimeric enzyme consisting of two catalytic subunits and three regulatory subunits whose activity is regulated by subunit interactions. Differential scanning calorimetric (DSC) scans of the wild-type enzyme consist of two peaks, each comprised of at least two components, corresponding to denaturation of the catalytic and regulatory subunits within the intact holoenzyme (Vickers et al., J. Biol. Chem. 253 (1978) 8493; Edge et al., Biochemistry 27 (1988) 8081). We have examined the effects of nine single-site mutations in the catalytic chains. Three of the mutations (Asp-100-Gly, Glu-86-Gln, and Arg-269-Gly) are at sites at the C1: C2 interface between c chains within the catalytic subunit. These mutations disrupt salt linkages present in both the T and R states of the molecule (Honzatko et al., J. Mol. Biol. 160 (1982) 219; Krause et al., J. Mol. Biol. 193 (1987) 527). The remainder (Lys-164-Ile, Tyr-165-Phe, Glu-239-Gln, Glu-239-Ala, Tyr-240-Phe and Asp-271-Ser) are at the C1: C4 interface between catalytic subunits and are involved in interactions which stabilize either the T or R state. DSC scans of all of the mutants except Asp-100-Gly and Arg-269-Gly consisted of two peaks. At intermediate concentrations, Asp-100-Gly and Arg-269-Gly had only a single peak near the Tm of the regulatory subunit transition in the holoenzyme, although their denaturational profiles were more complex at high and low protein concentrations. The catalytic subunits of Glu-86-Gln, Lys-164-Ile and Asp-271-Ser appear to be significantly destabilized relative to wild-type protein while Tyr-165-Phe and Tyr-240-Phe appear to be stabilized. Values of delta delta G degree cr, the difference between the subunit interaction energy of wild-type and mutant proteins, evaluated as suggested by Brandts et al. (Biochemistry 28 (1989) 8588) range from -3.7 kcal mol-1 for Glu-86-Gln to 2.4 kcal mol-1 for Tyr-165-Phe.  相似文献   

17.
R67 dihydrofolate reductase (R67 DHFR) catalyzes the transfer of a hydride ion from NADPH to dihydrofolate, generating tetrahydrofolate. The homotetrameric enzyme provides a unique environment for catalysis as both ligands bind within a single active site pore possessing 222 symmetry. Mutation of one active site residue results in concurrent mutation of three additional symmetry-related residues, causing large effects on binding of both ligands as well as catalysis. For example, mutation of symmetry-related tyrosine 69 residues to phenylalanine (Y69F), results in large increases in Km values for both ligands and a 2-fold rise in the kcat value for the reaction (Strader, M. B., Smiley, R. D., Stinnett, L. G., VerBerkmoes, N. C., and Howell, E. E. (2001) Biochemistry 40, 11344-11352). To understand the interactions between specific Tyr-69 residues and each ligand, asymmetric Y69F mutants were generated that contain one to four Y69F mutations. A general trend observed from isothermal titration calorimetry and steady-state kinetic studies of these asymmetric mutants is that increasing the number of Y69F mutations results in an increase in the Kd and Km values. In addition, a comparison of steady-state kinetic values suggests that two Tyr-69 residues in one half of the active site pore are necessary for NADPH to exhibit a wild-type Km value. A tyrosine 69 to leucine mutant was also generated to approach the type(s) of interaction(s) occurring between Tyr-69 residues and the ligands. These studies suggest that the hydroxyl group of Tyr-69 is important for interactions with NADPH, whereas both the hydroxyl group and hydrophobic ring atoms of the Tyr-69 residues are necessary for proper interactions with dihydrofolate.  相似文献   

18.
Tyr-169 in trimethylamine dehydrogenase is one component of a triad also comprising residues His-172 and Asp-267. Its role in catalysis and in mediating the magnetic interaction between FMN cofactor and the 4Fe/4S center have been investigated by stopped-flow and EPR spectroscopy of a Tyr-169 to Phe (Y169F) mutant of the enzyme. Tyr-169 is shown to play an important role in catalysis (mutation to phenylalanine reduces the limiting rate constant for bleaching of the active site flavin by about 100-fold) but does not serve as a general base in the course of catalysis. In addition, we are able to resolve two kinetically influential ionizations involved in both the reaction of free enzyme with free substrate (as reflected in klim/Kd), and in the breakdown of the Eox.S complex (as reflected in klim). In EPR studies of the Y169F mutant, it is found that the ability of the Y169F enzyme to form the spin-interacting state between flavin semiquinone and reduced 4Fe/4S center characteristic of wild-type enzyme is significantly compromised. The present results are consistent with Tyr-169 representing the ionizable group of pKa approximately 9.5, previously identified in pH-jump studies of electron transfer, whose deprotonation must occur for the spin-interacting state to be established.  相似文献   

19.
Phillips RS  Johnson N  Kamath AV 《Biochemistry》2002,41(12):4012-4019
Y74F and H463F mutant forms of Escherichia coli tryptophan indole-lyase (Trpase) have been prepared. These mutant proteins have very low activity with L-Trp as substrate (kcat and kcat/Km values less than 0.1% of wild-type Trpase). In contrast, these mutant enzymes exhibit much higher activity with S-(o-nitrophenyl)-L-cysteine and S-ethyl-L-cysteine (kcat/Km values about 1-50% of wild-type Trpase). Thus, Tyr-74 and His-463 are important for the substrate specificity of Trpase for L-Trp. H463F Trpase is not inhibited by a potent inhibitor of wild-type Trpase, oxindolyl-L-alanine, and does not exhibit the pK(a) of 6.0 seen in previous pH dependence studies [Kiick, D. M., and Phillips, R. S. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 7333]. These results suggest that His-463 may be the catalytic base with a pK(a) of 6.0 and Tyr-74 may be a general acid catalyst for the elimination step, as we found previously with tyrosine phenol-lyase [Chen, H., Demidkina, T. V., and Phillips, R. S. (1995) Biochemistry 34, 12776]. H463F Trpase reacts with L-Trp and S-ethyl-L-cysteine in rapid-scanning stopped-flow experiments to form equilibrating mixtures of external aldimine and quinonoid intermediates, similar to those observed with wild-type Trpase. In contrast to the results with wild-type Trpase, the addition of benzimidazole to reactions of H463F Trpase with L-Trp does not result in the formation of an aminoacrylate intermediate. However, addition of benzimidazole with S-ethyl-L-cysteine results in the formation of an aminoacrylate intermediate, with lambda(max) at 345 nm, as was seen previously with wild-type Trpase [Phillips, R. S. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 5927]. This suggests that His-463 plays a specific role in the elimination step of the reaction of L-Trp. Refolding of equimolar mixtures of H463F and Y74F Trpase after unfolding in 4 M guanidine hydrochloride results in a dramatic increase in activity with L-Trp, indicating the formation of a hybrid H463F/Y74F dimer with one normal active site.  相似文献   

20.
Basran J  Fullerton S  Leys D  Scrutton NS 《Biochemistry》2006,45(37):11151-11161
Residues His-225 and Tyr-259 are located close to the FAD in the dehydrogenase active site of the bifunctional dimethylglycine oxidase (DMGO) of Arthrobacter globiformis. We have suggested [Leys, D., Basran, J., and Scrutton, N. S. (2003) EMBO J. 22, 4038-4048] that these residues are involved in abstraction of a proton from the substrate amine group of dimethylglycine prior to C-H bond breakage and FAD reduction. To investigate this proposal, we have isolated two mutant forms of DMGO in which (i) His-225 is replaced with Gln-225 (H225Q mutant) and (ii) Tyr-259 is replaced with Phe-259 (Y259F mutant). Both mutant enzymes retain the ability to oxidize substrate, but the steady-state turnover of the Y259F mutant is attenuated more than 200-fold. Only modest changes in kinetic parameters are observed for the H225Q mutant during steady-state turnover. Stopped-flow studies indicate that the rate of FAD reduction in the Y259F enzyme is substantially impaired by a factor of approximately 1500 compared with that of the wild-type enzyme, suggesting a key role for this residue in the reductive half-reaction of the enzyme. The kinetics of FAD reduction in the H225Q enzyme are complex and involve three discrete kinetic phases that are attributed to different conformational states of this mutant, evidence for which is provided by crystallographic analysis. Neither the H225Q enzyme nor the Y259F enzyme stabilizes the FADH(2)-iminium charge-transfer complex observed previously in stopped-flow studies with the wild-type enzyme. Our studies are consistent with a key role for Tyr-259, but not His-225, in deprotonation of the substrate amine group prior to FAD reduction. We infer that residue His-225 is likely to modulate the acid-base properties of Tyr-259 by perturbing the pK(a) of Tyr-259 and thus fine-tunes the reaction chemistry to facilitate proton abstraction under physiological conditions. Our data are discussed in the context of the crystallographic data for DMGO and also in relation to contemporary mechanisms for flavoprotein-catalyzed oxidation of amine substrates.  相似文献   

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