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1.
Activation of angiotensin converting enzyme by monovalent anions   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The angiotensin converting enzyme catalyzed hydrolysis of furanacryloyl-Phe-Gly-Gly is activated by monovalent anions in the order C1- greater than Br- greater than F- greater than NO3- greater than CH3COO-. In the alkaline pH region, increasing anion concentrations decrease the KM but do not change the kcat. This behavior is characteristic of an ordered bireactant mechanism in which the anion binds to the enzyme prior to the substrate. At acidic pH values, however, the anion activation is a result of both a decrease in KM and an increase in kcat, implying a bireactant mechanism in which anion and substrate bind randomly. For both the ordered and the bireactant mechanisms the anion serves as an essential activator. The effect of chloride on enzyme activity was studied over the pH range 5-10 under kcat/KM conditions and demonstrates that the apparent chloride binding constant increases from 3.3 mM at pH 6.0 to 190 mM at pH 9.0. The kcat vs. pH profile exhibits two pK values of 5.6 and 9.6, while the variation of KM with pH is characterized by a pK of 8.9 and a 2-fold increase between pH 6.5 and 7.5. The chloride activation of the hydrolysis of furanacryloyl-Phe-Gly-Gly is compared with that of the physiological substrates angiotensin I and bradykinin.  相似文献   

2.
C N Cronin  J F Kirsch 《Biochemistry》1988,27(12):4572-4579
X-ray crystallographic data have implicated Arg-292 as the residue responsible for the preferred side-chain substrate specificity of aspartate aminotransferase. It forms a salt bridge with the beta or gamma carboxylate group of the substrate [Kirsch, J. F., Eichele, G., Ford, G. C., Vincent, M. G., Jansonius, J. N., Gehring, H., & Christen, P. (1984) J. Mol. Biol. 174, 497-525]. In order to test this proposal and, in addition, to attempt to reverse the substrate charge specificity of this enzyme, Arg-292 has been converted to Asp-292 by site-directed mutagenesis. The activity (kcat/KM) of the mutant enzyme, R292D, toward the natural anionic substrates L-aspartate, L-glutamate, and alpha-ketoglutarate is depressed by over 5 orders of magnitude, whereas the activity toward the keto acid pyruvate and a number of aromatic and other neutral amino acids is reduced by only 2-9 fold. These results confirm the proposal that Arg-292 is critical for the rapid turnover of substrates bearing anionic side chains and show further that, apart from the desired alteration, no major perturbations of the remainder of the molecule have been made. The activity of R292D toward the cationic amino acids L-arginine, L-lysine, and L-ornithine is increased by 9-16-fold over that of wild type and the ratio (kcat/KM)cationic/(kcat/KM)anionic is in the range 2-40-fold for R292D, whereas this ratio has a range of [(0.3-6) x 10(-6)]-fold for wild type. Thus, the mutation has produced an inversion of the substrate charge specificity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
Stopped-flow radiationless energy-transfer kinetics have been used to examine the effects of chloride on the hydrolysis of Dns-Lys-Phe-Ala-Arg by angiotensin converting enzyme. The kinetic constants for hydrolysis at pH 7.5 and 22 degrees C in the presence of 300 mM sodium chloride were KM = 28 microM and kcat = 110 s-1, and in its absence, KM = 240 microM and kcat = 68 s-1. The apparent binding constant for chloride was 4 mM, and the extent of chloride activation in terms of kcat/KM was 14-fold. The effects of chloride on the pre-steady-state were examined at 2 degrees C. In the presence of chloride, two distinct enzyme-substrate complexes were observed, suggesting multiple steps in substrate binding. The initial complex was formed during the mixing period (kobsd greater than 200 s-1) while the second complex was formed much more slowly (kobsd = 40 s-1 when [S] = 5 microM and [NaCl] = 150 mM). Strikingly, in the absence of chloride, only a single, rapidly formed enzyme-substrate complex was observed. These results are consistent with a nonessential activator kinetic mechanism in which the slow step reflects conversion of an initially formed complex, (E X Cl- X S)1, to a more tightly bound complex, (E X Cl- X S)2.  相似文献   

4.
The alpha-carbonic anhydrase gene from Helicobacter pylori strain 26695 has been cloned and sequenced. The full-length protein appears to be toxic to Escherichia coli, so we prepared a modified form of the gene lacking a part that presumably encodes a cleavable signal peptide. This truncated gene could be expressed in E. coli yielding an active enzyme comprising 229 amino acid residues. The amino acid sequence shows 36% identity with that of the enzyme from Neisseria gonorrhoeae and 28% with that of human carbonic anhydrase II. The H. pylori enzyme was purified by sulfonamide affinity chromatography and its circular dichroism spectrum and denaturation profile in guanidine hydrochloride have been measured. Kinetic parameters for CO2 hydration catalyzed by the H. pylori enzyme at pH 8.9 and 25 degrees C are kcat=2.4x10(5) s(-1), KM=17 mM and kcat/KM=1.4x10(7) M(-1) x s(-1). The pH dependence of kcat/KM fits with a simple titration curve with pK(a)=7.5. Thiocyanate yields an uncompetitive inhibition pattern at pH 9 indicating that the maximal rate of CO2 hydration is limited by proton transfer between a zinc-bound water molecule and the reaction medium in analogy to other forms of the enzyme. The 4-nitrophenyl acetate hydrolase activity of the H. pylori enzyme is quite low with an apparent catalytic second-order rate constant, k(enz), of 24 M(-1) x s(-1) at pH 8.8 and 25 degrees C. However, with 2-nitrophenyl acetate as substrate a k(enz) value of 665 M(-1) x s(-1) was obtained under similar conditions.  相似文献   

5.
P Bünning  J F Riordan 《Biochemistry》1987,26(12):3374-3377
The angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE)-catalyzed hydrolysis of furanacryloyl-Phe-Gly-Gly is activated by monovalent anions, notably chloride. This activation is enhanced by sulfate; at pH 7.5, the effect is maximal at 0.8 M sulfate and is mediated through a specific interaction of the divalent anion with the enzyme, not through an increase in ionic strength. Sulfate decreases the apparent binding constant for chloride which manifests as a decrease of the apparent KM value, but it does not change kcat. Thus, at pH 7.5, sulfate solely affects substrate binding in accord with the ordered bireactant mechanism of chloride activation that pertains with this substrate [Bünning, P., & Riordan, J.F. (1983) Biochemistry 22, 100-116]. Increasing the pH from 6 to 9 in the absence of sulfate increases the apparent binding constant for chloride almost 60-fold from 3.3 to 190 mM. In the presence of 0.8 M sulfate, however, the change is only about 6-fold, from 0.7 to 4.2 mM. Over the same pH range, the apparent KM for furanacryloyl-Phe-Gly-Gly obtained with saturating chloride concentrations shifts from 0.14 to 0.48 mM, while in the presence of 0.8 M sulfate about 3-fold lower apparent KM values are obtained. Sulfate does not appear to affect the pK of a group on the enzyme that controls the mechanism of chloride activation but rather decreases the apparent KM by reducing the apparent binding constant for chloride.  相似文献   

6.
Haloalkane dehalogenases: steady-state kinetics and halide inhibition   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The substrate specificities and product inhibition patterns of haloalkane dehalogenases from Xanthobacter autotrophicus GJ10 (XaDHL) and Rhodococcus rhodochrous (RrDHL) have been compared using a pH-indicator dye assay. In contrast to XaDHL, RrDHL is efficient toward secondary alkyl halides. Using steady-state kinetics, we have shown that halides are uncompetitive inhibitors of XaDHL with 1, 2-dichloroethane as the varied substrate at pH 8.2 (Cl-, Kii = 19 +/- 0.91; Br-, Kii = 2.5 +/- 0.19 mM; I-, Kii = 4.1 +/- 0.43 mM). Because they are uncompetitive with the substrate, halide ions do not bind to the free form of the enzyme; therefore, halide ions cannot be the last product released from the enzyme. The Kii for chloride was pH dependent and decreased more than 20-fold from 61 mM at pH 8.9 to 2.9 mM at pH 6.5. The pH dependence of 1/Kii showed simple titration behavior that fit to a pKa of approximately 7.5. The kcat was maximal at pH 8.2 and decreased at lower pH. A titration of kcat versus pH also fits to a pKa of approximately 7.5. Taken together, these data suggest that chloride binding and kcat are affected by the same ionizable group, likely the imidazole of a histidyl residue. In contrast, halides do not inhibit RrDHL. The Rhodococcus enzyme does not contain a tryptophan corresponding to W175 of XaDHL, which has been implicated in halide ion binding. The site-directed mutants W175F and W175Y of XaDHL were prepared and tested for halide ion inhibition. Halides do not inhibit either W175F or W175Y XaDHL.  相似文献   

7.
Barnase, the ribonuclease from Bacillus amyloliquefaciens, has been cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli [Hartley, R. W. (1988) J. Mol. Biol. 202, 913-915], thus enabling the overproduction and site-directed mutagenesis of one of the smallest enzymes (Mr equals 12,382). As barnase is also composed of just a single polypeptide chain with no disulfide bridges and has a reversible folding transition, it affords a fine system for studying protein folding and design. We show here that the recombinant enzyme has properties identical with those of the authentic enzyme, characterize the basic kinetics and specificity of the enzyme, and, using site-directed mutagenesis, identify key residues involved in catalysis to provide evidence that supports the classic ribonuclease mechanism. The wild-type enzyme catalyzes the hydrolysis of dinucleotides of structure GpN. There is a prime requirement for G and a preference for A greater than G greater than C greater than U for N. The pH-activity curve for the transesterification step of dinucleotides is bell shaped with an optimum for kcat/KM and kcat at about pH 5. The enzyme is far more active toward long RNA molecules, and the pH optimum for kcat is at 8.5. The activity of barnase toward dinucleotide substrates is about 0.5% of that of the highly homologous T1 nuclease at pH 5.9, but barnase is twice as active as T1 toward RNA at pH 8.5. There must be important subsite interactions that contribute to catalysis in barnase in addition to those immediately on either side of the scissile bond.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
M R Sierks  K Bock  S Refn  B Svensson 《Biochemistry》1992,31(37):8972-8977
The specificity constants, kcat/KM, were determined for glucose oxidase and glucose dehydrogenase using deoxy-D-glucose derivatives and for glucoamylase using deoxy-D-maltose derivatives as substrates. Transition-state interactions between the substrate intermediates and the enzymes were characterized by the observed kcat/Km values and found to be very similar. The binding energy contributions of individual sugar hydroxyl groups in the enzyme/substrate complexes were calculated using the relationship delta(delta G) = -RT ln [(kcat/KM)deoxy/(kcat/KM)hydroxyl] for the series of analogues. The activity of all three enzymes was found to depend heavily on the 4- and 6-OH groups (4'- and 6'-OH in maltose), where changes in binding energies from 10 to 18 kJ/mol suggested strong hydrogen bonds between the enzymes and these substrate OH groups. The 3-OH (3'-OH in maltose) was involved in weaker interactions, while the 2-OH (2'-OH in maltose) had a very small if any role in transition-state binding. The three enzyme-substrate transition-state interactions were compared using linear free energy relationships (Withers, S. G., & Rupitz, K. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 6405-6409) in which the set of kcat/KM values obtained with substrate analogues for one enzyme is plotted against the corresponding values for a second enzyme. The high linear correlation coefficients (rho) obtained, 0.916, 0.958, and 0.981, indicate significant similarity in transition-state interactions, although the three enzymes lack overall sequence homology.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
S W King  V R Lum  T H Fife 《Biochemistry》1987,26(8):2294-2300
The carbamate ester N-(phenoxycarbonyl)-L-phenylalanine binds well to carboxypeptidase A in the manner of peptide substrates. The ester exhibits linear competitive inhibition toward carboxypeptidase A catalyzed hydrolysis of the amide hippuryl-L-phenylalanine (Ki = 1.0 X 10(-3) M at pH 7.5) and linear noncompetitive inhibition toward hydrolysis of the specific ester substrate O-hippuryl-L-beta-phenyllactate (Ki = 1.4 X 10(-3) M at pH 7.5). Linear inhibition shows that only one molecule of inhibitor is bound per active site at pH 7.5. The hydrolysis of the carbamate ester is not affected by the presence of 10(-8)-10(-9) M enzyme (the concentrations employed in inhibition experiments), but at an enzyme concentration of 3 X 10(-6) M catalysis can be detected. The value of kcat at 30 degrees C, mu = 0.5 M, and pH 7.45 is 0.25 s-1, and Km is 1.5 X 10(-3) M. The near identity of Km and Ki shows that Km is a dissociation constant. Substrate inhibition can be detected at pH less than 7 but not at pH values above 7, which suggests that a conformational change is occurring near that pH. The analogous carbonate ester O-(phenoxycarbonyl)-L-beta-phenyllactic acid is also a substrate for the enzyme. The Km is pH independent from pH 6.5 to 9 and has the value of 7.6 X 10(-5) M in that pH region. The rate constant kcat is pH independent from pH 8 to 10 at 30 degrees C (mu = 0.5 M) with a limiting value of 1.60 s-1. Modification of the carboxyl group of glutamic acid-270 to the methoxyamide strongly inhibits the hydrolysis of O-(phenoxycarbonyl)-L-beta-phenyllactic acid. Binding of beta-phenyllactate esters and phenylalanine amides must occur in different subsites, but the ratios of kcat and kcat/Km for the structural change from hippuryl to phenoxy in each series are closely similar, which suggests that the rate-determining steps are mechanistically similar.  相似文献   

10.
The mechanism by which cyclooxygenase-1 (COX-1), a heme- and tyrosyl radical-containing enzyme, catalyzes the regio- and stereospecific oxygenation of polyunsaturated fatty acids to prostaglandin or hydroperoxide products has not been understood. Steady-state kinetic studies conducted with the native substrate arachidonic acid and the slower substrate linoleic acid are described here. Second-order rate constants, kcat/KM for fatty acid and O2, are found to depend upon the concentration of the other cosubstrate. Competitive oxygen kinetic isotope effects (18O KIEs) kcat/KM(16,16O2)/kcat/KM(18,16O2) reveal that a peroxyl radical is formed in or before the first kinetically irreversible step. Together, the results indicate that the oxygenase reaction occurs by a sequential mechanism which most likely involves reversible abstraction of a hydrogen atom from the fatty acid prior to the trapping of the delocalized substrate radical by O2. The identity of the first kinetically irreversible step, subsequent to forming the peroxyl radical, is also discussed in the context of the magnitude of the oxygen kinetic isotope effects as well as the behavior of kcat/KM(O2) in response to changing solvent pH, pD, and viscosity.  相似文献   

11.
The S2 subsite specificity of the plant protease papain has been altered to resemble that of mammalian cathepsin B by site-directed mutagenesis. On the basis of amino acid sequence alignments for papain and cathepsin B, a double mutant (Val133Ala/Ser205Glu) was produced where Val133 and Ser205 are replaced by Ala and Glu, respectively, as well as a triple mutant (Val133Ala/Val157Gly/Ser205Glu), where Val157 is also replaced by Gly. Three synthetic substrates were used for the kinetic characterization of the mutants, as well as wild-type papain and cathepsin B: CBZ-Phe-Arg-MCA, CBZ-Arg-Arg-MCA, and CBZ-Cit-Arg-MCA. The ratio of kcat/KM obtained by using CBZ-Phe-Arg-MCA as substrate over that obtained with CBZ-Arg-Arg-MCA is 8.0 for the Val133Ala/Ser205Glu variant, while the equivalent values for wild-type papain and cathepsin B are 904 and 3.6, respectively. This change in specificity has been achieved by replacing only two amino acids out of a total of 212 in papain and with little loss in overall enzyme activity. However, further replacement of Val157 by Gly as in Val133Ala/Val157Gly/Ser205Glu causes an important decrease in activity, although the enzyme still displays a cathepsin B like substrate specificity. In addition, the pH dependence of activity for the Val133Ala/Ser205Glu variant compares well with that of cathepsin B. In particular, the activity toward CBZ-Arg-Arg-MCA is modulated by a group with a pKa of 5.51, a behavior that is also encountered in the case of cathepsin B but is absent with papain.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Native 5-aminolevulinic acid dehydratase contains zinc ions, which are essential for the enzymatic activity. Replacement of zinc by cadmium yielded an active enzyme whose kinetic parameters (kkat and Km) are similar to those of the zinc enzyme in the neutral pH range. However, the pH profiles of kcat and Km were different due to different pKa values. Two groups both with pKa values of 6.5 in the free zinc enzyme, but with pKa values of 7.0 in the cadmium enzyme were calculated from plots of log (kcat/Km) versus pH. On the other hand, the enzyme-substrate complex is controlled by one acidic group (zinc pKa = 6.0, cadmium pKa = 6.4) and one basis group (zinc pKa = 8.2, cadmium pKa = 7.7) as calculated from plots of log kcat versus pH. The Arrhenius plots for kcat of the two enzymes show no significant difference, the free energies of activation are 77.1 kJ/mol for the zinc and 76.8 kJ/mol for the cadmium enzyme. From this and from previous work it is concluded that the metal ions are located near the active site and influence the ionisations of essential amino acid residues. From the pH profiles of the modifying reaction and inhibition by diethylpyrocarbonate a histidinyl residue is inferred as one of the ionisable groups of the active site.  相似文献   

13.
We have investigated the mechanism by which the complement protease, Factor D, achieves its high specificity for the cleavage of Factor B in complex with C3(H2O). Kinetic experiments showed that Factor B and C3(H2O) associate with a KD of >/=2.5 microM and that Factor D acts on this complex with a second-order rate constant of kcat/KM >/= 2 x 10(6) M-1 s-1, close to the rate of a diffusion-controlled reaction for proteins of this size. In contrast, Factor D, which is a member of the trypsin family of serine proteases, was 10(3)-10(4)-fold less active than trypsin toward both thioester and p-nitroanilide substrates containing an arginine at P1. Furthermore, peptides spanning the Factor B cleavage site were not detectably cleaved by Factor D (kcat/KM /=9 kcal/mol of binding energy to stabilize the transition state for reaction. In support of this, we demonstrate that chemical modification of Factor D at a single lysine residue that is distant from the active site abolishes the activity of the enzyme toward Factor B while not affecting activity toward small synthetic substrates. We propose that Factor D may exemplify a special case of the induced fit mechanism in which the requirement for conformational activation of the enzyme results in a substantial increase in substrate specificity.  相似文献   

14.
A sensitive two-stage enzymatic reaction for mammalian and bacterial metalloendopeptidases has been developed using the substrate 3-carboxypropanoyl-alanyl-alanyl-leucine-4-nitroanilide supplemented with Streptomyces griseus amino-peptidase. Neutral endopeptidase EC 3.4.24.11 from bovine kidney hydrolyzes the substrate (pH 7.5, 25 degrees C) with a catalytic efficiency (kcat = 1.2 x 10(2) s-1, Km = 0.15 mM) of the highest ever reported for the enzyme acting on synthetic chromophoric and fluorogenic substrates. Thermolysin hydrolyzes the substrate at a faster rate (kcat = 1.2 x 10(3) s-1) but the overall efficiency is diminished by a higher Km (4.2 mM). Suspensions of human neutrophil cells and culture filtrates of Bacillus cereus have been assayed sensitively for their neutral endopeptidases and neutral proteinase activities, respectively. The assay provides a convenient tool for the kinetic investigation of neutral endopeptidases and neutral proteinases and for assessing their function in biological systems.  相似文献   

15.
The controversy concerning the various suggested roles for the side chain of Asp158 in the active site of papain has been clarified by using site-directed mutagenesis. Both wild-type papain and an Asp158 Asn variant were produced in a baculovirus-insect cell expression system, purified to homogeneity from the culture, and characterized kinetically. With CBZ-Phe-Arg-MCA as substrate, the kcat/KM and kcat values obtained for the Asp158Asn papain are 20,000 M-1.s-1 and 34 s-1, respectively, as compared with values of 120,000 M-1.s-1 and 51 s-1 obtained for the wild-type papain. In addition, the pH-(kcat/KM) profile for the Asp158Asn enzyme is shifted relative to that for the wild-type enzyme to lower values by approximately 0.3 pH unit. This shows clearly that Asp158 is not, as previously postulated, an essential catalytic residue. In addition, the pH dependency data are interpreted to indicate that, contrary to earlier suggestions, the negatively charged side chain of Asp158 does not significantly stabilize the active-site thiolate-imidazolium ion pair. However, its presence does influence the pKa's associated with ion-pair formation in a manner compatible with electrostatic considerations.  相似文献   

16.
4-Chlorobenzoate:CoA ligase, the first enzyme in the pathway for 4-chlorobenzoate dissimilation, has been partially purified from Arthrobacter sp. strain TM-1, by sequential ammonium sulphate precipitation and chromatography on DEAE-Sepharose and Sephacryl S-200. The enzyme, a homodimer of subunit molecular mass approximately 56 kD, is dependent on Mg2+-ATP and coenzyme A, and produces 4-chlorobenzoyl CoA and AMP. Besides Mg2+, Mn2+, Co2+, Fe2+ and Zn2+ are also stimulatory, but not Ca2+. Maximal activity is exhibited at pH 7.0 and 25 degrees C. The ligase demonstrates broad specificity towards other halobenzoates, with 4-chlorobenzoate as best substrate. The apparent Michaelis constants (Km) of the enzyme for 4-chlorobenzoate, CoA and ATP were determined as 3.5, 30 and 238 microM respectively. 4-Chlorobenzoyl CoA dehalogenase, the second enzyme, has been purified to homogeneity by sequential column chromatography on hydroxyapatite, DEAE-Sepharose and Sephacryl S-200. It is a homotetramer of 33 kD subunits with an isoelectric point of 6.4. At pH 7.5 and 30 degrees C, Km and kcat for 4-CBCoA are 9 microM and 1 s(-1) respectively. The optimum pH is 7.5, and maximal enzymic activity occurs at 45 degrees C. The properties of this enzyme are compared with those of the 4-chlorobenzoyl CoA dehalogenases from Arthrobacter sp. strain 4-CB1 and Pseudomonas sp. strain CBS-3, which differ variously in their N-terminal amino acid sequences, optimal pH values, pI values and/or temperatures of maximal activity.  相似文献   

17.
The mini-chain of human cathepsin H has been identified as the major structural element determining the protease's substrate specificity. A genetically engineered mutant of human cathepsin H lacking the mini-chain, des[Glu(-18)-Thr(-11)]-cathepsin H, exhibits endopeptidase activity towards the synthetic substrate Z-Phe-Arg-NH-Mec (kcat = 0.4 s(-1), Km = 92 microM, kcat/Km = 4348 M(-1) s(-1)) which is not cleaved by r-wt cathepsin H. However, the mutant enzyme shows only minimal aminopeptidase activity for H-Arg-NH-Mec (kcat = 0.8 s(-1), Km = 3.6 mM, kcat/Km = 222 M(-1) s(-1)) which is one of the best known substrates for native human cathepsin H (kcat = 2.5 s(-1), Km = 150 microM, kcat/Km = 16666 M(-1) s(-1)). Inhibition studies with chicken egg white cystatin and E-64 suggest that the mini-chain normally restricts access of inhibitors to the active site. The kinetic data on substrates hydrolysis and enzyme inhibition point out the role of the mini-chain as a structural framework for transition state stabilization of free alpha-amino groups of substrates and as a structural barrier for endopeptidase-like substrate cleavage.  相似文献   

18.
The PheA domain of gramicidin synthetase A, a non-ribosomal peptide synthetase, selectively binds phenylalanine along with ATP and Mg2+ and catalyzes the formation of an aminoacyl adenylate. In this study, we have used a novel protein redesign algorithm, K*, to predict mutations in PheA that should exhibit improved binding for tyrosine. Interestingly, the introduction of two predicted mutations to PheA did not significantly improve KD, as measured by equilibrium fluorescence quenching. However, the mutations improved the specificity of the enzyme for tyrosine (as measured by kcat/KM), primarily driven by a 56-fold improvement in KM, although the improvement did not make tyrosine the preferred substrate over phenylalanine. Using stopped-flow fluorometry, we examined binding of different amino acid substrates to the wild-type and mutant enzymes in the pre-steady state in order to understand the improvement in KM. Through these investigations, it became evident that substrate binding to the wild-type enzyme is more complex than previously described. These experiments show that the wild-type enzyme binds phenylalanine in a kinetically selective manner; no other amino acids tested appeared to bind the enzyme in the early time frame examined (500 ms). Furthermore, experiments with PheA, phenylalanine, and ATP reveal a two-step binding process, suggesting that the PheA-ATP-phenylalanine complex may undergo a conformational change toward a catalytically relevant intermediate on the pathway to adenylation; experiments with PheA, phenylalanine, and other nucleotides exhibit only a one-step binding process. The improvement in KM for the mutant enzyme toward tyrosine, as predicted by K*, may indicate that redesigning the side-chain binding pocket allows the substrate backbone to adopt productive conformations for catalysis but that further improvements may be afforded by modeling an enzyme:ATP:substrate complex, which is capable of undergoing conformational change.  相似文献   

19.
The existence of an oxyanion hole in cysteine proteases able to stabilize a transition-state complex in a manner analogous to that found with serine proteases has been the object of controversy for many years. In papain, the side chain of Gln19 forms one of the hydrogen-bond donors in the putative oxyanion hole, and its contribution to transition-state stabilization has been evaluated by site-directed mutagenesis. Mutation of Gln19 to Ala caused a decrease in kcat/KM for hydrolysis of CBZ-Phe-Arg-MCA, which is 7700 M-1 s-1 in the mutant enzyme as compared to 464,000 M-1 s-1 in wild-type papain. With a Gln19Ser variant, the activity is even lower, with a kcat/KM value of 760 M-1 s-1. The 60- and 600-fold decreases in kcat/KM correspond to changes in free energy of catalysis of 2.4 and 3.8 kcal/mol for Gln19Ala and Gln19Ser, respectively. In both cases, the decrease in activity is in large part attributable to a decrease in kcat, while KM values are only slightly affected. These results indicate that the oxyanion hole is operational in the papain-catalyzed hydrolysis of CBZ-Phe-Arg-MCA and constitute the first direct evidence of a mechanistic requirement for oxyanion stabilization in the transition state of reactions catalyzed by cysteine proteases. The equilibrium constants Ki for inhibition of the papain mutants by the aldehyde Ac-Phe-Gly-CHO have also been determined. Contrary to the results with the substrate, mutation at position 19 of papain has a very small effect on binding of the inhibitor.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
J Pohl  B M Dunn 《Biochemistry》1988,27(13):4827-4834
The possibility that pig pepsin has a cation binding specificity in its secondary binding subsites has been examined by the pepsin-catalyzed hydrolysis of a series of synthetic octa- to undecapeptide substrates. These chromophoric substrates are cleaved by pepsin in the phenylalanyl-p-nitrophenylalanyl (Phe-Nph) bond. Lys and Arg residues were placed into seven different positions in the substrates, and their effect on kcat and Km was examined between pH 2.8 and pH 5.8 (I = 0.1 M, 37 degrees C). Kinetic evidence indicates the existence in the enzyme binding subsites S4, S3, S2, S3', S4', and S5' of a group(s) which become(s) negatively charged at higher pH. For most substrates, the magnitude as well as the pH dependence of kcat was unaffected by the presence of Lys or Arg in these peptides. In contrast, changes up to 5 orders of magnitude were observed for Km, depending on the number of basic residues and on their positions in the sequence. Km for a group of substrates at pH greater than 5.5 was lower than 50 nM. Values for kcat/Km for some substrates exceed the level of 10(8) M-1 s-1. Therefore, the free energy derived from ionic interactions in secondary binding sites influences mostly the binding step on the reaction pathway. This result is in contrast to the previous observations that the length and the hydrophobic character of the substrate residues in some positions influence kcat with little effect on Km toward shorter substrates of pepsin [Fruton, J. (1976) Adv. Enzymol. Relat. Areas Mol. Biol. 44, 1-36].  相似文献   

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