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1.
The Proton Inventory (PI) method has been applied in the hydrolysis of synthetic substrates by papain, chymopapain and stem bromelain, comparing also their corresponding pH-(k(cat)/K(m)) profiles, and it was found: (a) k(cat)/K(m)=k(1), and thus K(S)=k(2)/k(1) is a dynamic equilibrium constant, (b) bowed-downward PI for k(cat)/K(m) exhibiting large inverse SIE, and (c) linear PI exhibiting large normal SIE for K(S), k(2) and k(3). A novel finding of this work is that the association of substrates onto all three studied cysteine proteinases proceeds via a stepwise pathway, in contrast to purely concerted pathways found previously for both acylation and deacylation. A hydrogen bond, which seems more likely to be developed across a pK(a)-value close to 4.00, connecting [see text] (papain/chymopapain or bromelain numbering), constitutes another novelty of this work.  相似文献   

2.
Polgár L 《Biochemistry》1999,38(47):15548-15555
Oligopeptidase B, a member of the novel prolyl oligopeptidase family of serine peptidases, is involved in cell invasion by trypanosomes. The kinetic analysis of the reactions of oligopeptidase B, which preferentially cleaves peptides at two adjacent basic residues, has revealed significant differences from the trypsin-like serine peptidases. (i) The pH dependence of k(cat)/K(m) deviates from normal bell-shaped curves due to ionization of an enzymatic group characterized by a macroscopic pK(a) of approximately 8.3. The effect of this group is abolished at high ionic strength. (ii) The second-order acylation rate constants, k(cat)/K(m), are similar with the ester and the corresponding amide substrates, suggesting that their chemical reactivity does not prevail in the rate-limiting step. The kinetic deuterium isotope effects indicate that the rate-limiting step for k(cat)/K(m) is principally governed by conformational changes. (iii) The pH-k(cat)/K(m) profile and the very low rate constant for benzoyl-citrulline ethyl ester reveal a new kinetically influential group ionizing below the pK(a) of the active site histidine and indicate that the positive charge of arginine is essential for effective catalysis. (iv) The enzyme is inhibited by high concentrations of substrate. The mechanism of inhibition markedly varies with the reaction conditions. (v) The optimum temperature for the reactions of amide substrates is unusually low, slightly below 25 degrees C, whereas with benzoyl-arginine ethyl ester a linear Eyring plot is obtained up to 39 degrees C. The positive entropies of activation point to substantial reorganization of water molecules upon substrate binding.  相似文献   

3.
Histamine dehydrogenase (NSHADH) can be isolated from cultures of Nocardioides simplex grown with histamine as the sole nitrogen source. A previous report suggested that NSHADH might contain the quinone cofactor tryptophan tryptophyl quinone (TTQ). Here, the hdh gene encoding NSHADH is cloned from the genomic DNA of N. simplex, and the isolated enzyme is subjected to a full spectroscopic characterization. Protein sequence alignment shows NSHADH to be related to trimethylamine dehydrogenase (TMADH: EC 1.5.99.7), where the latter contains a bacterial ferredoxin-type [4Fe-4S] cluster and 6-S-cysteinyl FMN cofactor. NSHADH has no sequence similarity to any TTQ containing amine dehydrogenases. NSHADH contains 3.6+/-0.3 mol Fe and 3.7+/-0.2 mol acid labile S per subunit. A comparison of the UV/vis spectra of NSHADH and TMADH shows significant similarity. The EPR spectrum of histamine reduced NSHADH also supports the presence of the flavin and [4Fe-4S] cofactors. Importantly, we show that NSHADH has a narrow substrate specificity, oxidizing only histamine (K(m)=31+/-11 microM, k(cat)/K(m)=2.1 (+/-0.4)x10(5)M(-1)s(-1)), agmatine (K(m)=37+/-6 microM, k(cat)/K(m)=6.0 (+/-0.6)x10(4)M(-1)s(-1)), and putrescine (K(m)=1280+/-240 microM, k(cat)/K(m)=1500+/-200 M(-1)s(-1)). A kinetic characterization of the oxidative deamination of histamine by NSHADH is presented that includes the pH dependence of k(cat)/K(m) (histamine) and the measurement of a substrate deuterium isotope effect, (D)(k(cat)/K(m) (histamine))=7.0+/-1.8 at pH 8.5. k(cat) is also pH dependent and has a reduced substrate deuterium isotope of (D)(k(cat))=1.3+/-0.2.  相似文献   

4.
High-resolution crystallographic analysis of a complex of the serine-carboxyl proteinase sedolisin with pseudo-iodotyrostatin revealed two molecules of this inhibitor bound in the active site of the enzyme, marking subsites from S3 to S3('). The mode of binding represents two products of the proteolytic reaction. Substrate specificity of sedolisin was investigated using peptide libraries and a new peptide substrate for sedolisin, MCA-Lys-Pro-Pro-Leu-Glu#Tyr-Arg-Leu-Gly-Lys(DNP)-Gly, was synthesized based on the results of the enzymatic and crystallographic studies and was shown to be efficiently cleaved by the enzyme. The kinetic parameters for the substrate, measured by the increase in fluorescence upon relief of quenching, were: k(cat)=73+/-5 s(-1), K(m)=0.12+/-0.011 microM, and k(cat)/K(m)=608+/-85 s(-1)microM(-1).  相似文献   

5.
We developed sensitive substrates for cysteine proteases and specific substrates for serine proteases based on short internally quenched fluorescent peptides, Abz-F-R-X-EDDnp, where Abz (ortho-aminobenzoic acid) is the fluorescent donor, EDDnp [N-(ethylenediamine)-2,4-dinitrophenyl amide] is the fluorescent quencher, and X are natural amino acids. This series of peptides is compared to the commercially available Z-F-R-MCA, where Abz and X replace carbobenzoxy (Z) and methyl-7-aminocoumarin amide (MCA), respectively; and EDDnp can be considered a P(2)' residue. Whereas MCA is the fluorescent probe and cannot be modified, in the series Abz-F-R-X-EDDnp the amino acids X give the choice of matching the specificity of the S(1)' enzyme subsite, increasing the substrate specificity for a particular protease. All Abz-F-R-X-EDDnp synthesized peptides (for X = Phe, Leu, Ile, Ala, Pro, Gln, Ser, Lys, and Arg) were assayed with papain, human cathepsin L and B, trypsin, human plasma, and tissue kallikrein. Abz-F-R-L-EDDnp was the best substrate for papain and Abz-F-R-R-EDDnp or Abz-F-R-A-EDDnp was the more susceptible to cathepsin L. Abz-F-R-L-EDDnp was able to detect papain in the range of 1 to 15 pM. Human plasma kallikrein hydrolyzed Abz-F-R-R-EDDnp with significant efficiency (k(cat)/K(m) = 1833 mM(-1) s(-1)) and tissue kallikrein was very selective, hydrolyzing only the peptides Abz-F-R-A-EDDnp (k(cat)/K(m) = 2852 mM(-1) s(-1)) and Abz-F-R-S-EDDnp (k(cat)/K(m) = 4643 mM(-1) s(-1)). All Abz-F-R-X-EDDnp peptides were resistant to hydrolysis by thrombin and activated factor X.  相似文献   

6.
An intramolecularly quenched fluorogenic peptide containing o-aminobenzoyl (Abz) and ethylenediamine 2,4-dinitrophenyl (Eddnp) groups at amino- and carboxyl-terminal amino acid residues, Abz-Lys-Pro-Ile-Glu-Phe-Phe-Arg-Leu-Eddnp, was hydrolyzed by purified human pepsin, gastricsin, and gastric juice uniquely at the Phe-Phe bond. Kinetic parameters determined for purified pepsin were K(m)=0.68+/-0.11 microM; k(cat)=6.3+/-0.16s(-1); k(cat)/K(m)=9.26s(-1) microM(-1); Gastricsin showed K(m)=2.69+/-0.18 microM; k(cat)=0.03+/-0.005s(-1); k(cat)/K(m)=0.011s(-1) microM(-1). Gastric juice (21 samples) from subjects without gastric disorders at endoscopy examination showed activities varying from 0.0008 to 9.72 micromolml(-1)min(-1). Pepstatin A inhibition of gastric juice enzymatic activity was complete at 3.4x10(-5)M (final concentration) inhibitor. In the proposed method the presence of a unique scissile bond in the synthetic substrate provides a direct ratio between enzymatic activity and amount of substrate hydrolyzed, and a unique step reaction facilitates the use of this assay for the determination of the activity of aspartic proteinases in biological fluids and during enzyme purification procedures.  相似文献   

7.
Ruzzini AC  Horsman GP  Eltis LD 《Biochemistry》2012,51(29):5831-5840
meta-Cleavage product (MCP) hydrolases catalyze C-C bond fission in the aerobic catabolism of aromatic compounds by bacteria. These enzymes utilize a Ser-His-Asp triad to catalyze hydrolysis via an acyl-enzyme intermediate. BphD, which catalyzes the hydrolysis of 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoic acid (HOPDA) in biphenyl degradation, catalyzed the hydrolysis of an ester analogue, p-nitrophenyl benzoate (pNPB), with a k(cat) value (6.3 ± 0.5 s(-1)) similar to that of HOPDA (6.5 ± 0.5 s(-1)). Consistent with the breakdown of a shared intermediate, product analyses revealed that BphD catalyzed the methanolysis of both HOPDA and pNPB, partitioning the products to benzoic acid and methyl benzoate in similar ratios. Turnover of HOPDA was accelerated up to 4-fold in the presence of short, primary alcohols (methanol > ethanol > n-propanol), suggesting that deacylation is rate-limiting during catalysis. In the steady-state hydrolysis of HOPDA, k(cat)/K(m) values were independent of methanol concentration, while both k(cat) and K(m) values increased with methanol concentration. This result was consistent with a simple model of nucleophilic catalysis. Although the enzyme could not be saturated with pNPB at methanol concentrations of >250 mM, k(obs) values from the steady-state turnover of pNPB at low methanol concentrations were also consistent with a nucleophilic mechanism of catalysis. Finally, transient-state kinetic analysis of pNPB hydrolysis by BphD variants established that substitution of the catalytic His reduced the rate of acylation by more than 3 orders of magnitude. This suggests that for pNPB hydrolysis, the serine nucleophile is activated by the His-Asp dyad. In contrast, rapid acylation of the H265Q variant during C-C bond cleavage suggests that the serinate forms via a substrate-assisted mechanism. Overall, the data indicate that ester hydrolysis proceeds via the same acyl-enzyme intermediate as that of the physiological substrate but that the serine nucleophile is activated via a different mechanism.  相似文献   

8.
To obtain a clearer understanding of the forces involved in transition state stabilization by Escherichia coli cytidine deaminase, we investigated the thermodynamic changes that accompany substrate binding in the ground state and transition state for substrate hydrolysis. Viscosity studies indicate that the action of cytidine deaminase is not diffusion-limited. Thus, K(m) appears to be a true dissociation constant, and k(cat) describes the chemical reaction of the ES complex, not product release. Enzyme-substrate association is accompanied by a loss of entropy and a somewhat greater release of enthalpy. As the ES complex proceeds to the transition state (ES), there is little further change in entropy, but heat is taken up that almost matches the heat that was released with ES formation. As a result, k(cat)/K(m) (describing the overall conversion of the free substrate to ES is almost invariant with changing temperature. The free energy barrier for the enzyme-catalyzed reaction (k(cat)/K(m)) is much lower than that for the spontaneous reaction (k(non)) (DeltaDeltaG = -21.8 kcal/mol at 25 degrees C). This difference, which also describes the virtual binding affinity of the enzyme for the activated substrate in the transition state (S), is almost entirely enthalpic in origin (DeltaDeltaH = -20.2 kcal/mol), compatible with the formation of hydrogen bonds that stabilize the ES complex. Thus, the transition state affinity of cytidine deaminase increases rapidly with decreasing temperature. When a hydrogen bond between Glu-91 and the 3'-hydroxyl moiety of cytidine is disrupted by truncation of either group, k(cat)/K(m) and transition state affinity are each reduced by a factor of 10(4). This effect of mutation is entirely enthalpic in origin (DeltaDeltaH approximately 7.9 kcal/mol), somewhat offset by a favorable change in the entropy of transition state binding. This increase in entropy is attributed to a loss of constraints on the relative motions of the activated substrate within the ES complex. In an Appendix, some objections to the conventional scheme for transition state binding are discussed.  相似文献   

9.
To elucidate the functions of the surface loops of VIIa, we prepared two mutants, VII-30 and VII-39. The VII-30 mutant had all of the residues in the 99 loop replaced with those of trypsin. In the VII-39 mutant, both the 99 and 170 loops were replaced with those of trypsin. The k(cat)/K(m) value for hydrolysis of the chromogenic peptidyl substrate S-2288 by VIIa-30 (103 mm(-)1s(-)1) was 3-fold higher than that of wild-type VIIa (30.3 mm(-)1 s(-)1) in the presence of soluble tissue factor (sTF). This enhancement was due to a decrease in the K(m) value but not to an increase in the k(cat) value. On the other hand, the k(cat)/K(m) value for S-2288 hydrolysis by VIIa-39 (17.9 mm(-)1 s(-)1) was 18-fold higher than that of wild-type (1.0 mm(-)1 s(-)1) in the absence of sTF, and the value was almost the same as that of wild-type measured in the presence of sTF. This enhancement was due to not only a decrease in the K(m) value but also to an increase in the k(cat) value. These results were in good agreement with their susceptibilities to a subsite 1-directed serine protease inhibitor. In our previous paper (Soejima, K., Mizuguchi, J., Yuguchi, M., Nakagaki, T., Higashi, S., and Iwanaga, S. (2001) J. Biol. Chem. 276, 17229-17235), the replacement of the 170 loop of VIIa with that of trypsin induced a 10-fold enhancement of the k(cat) value for S-2288 hydrolysis as compared with that of wild-type VIIa in the absence of sTF. These results suggested that the 99 and the 170 loop structures of VIIa independently affect the K(m) and k(cat) values, respectively. Furthermore, we studied the effect of mutations on proteolytic activity toward S-alkylated lysozyme as a macromolecular substrate and the activation of natural macromolecular substrate factor X.  相似文献   

10.
Bile salt-dependent lipase was purified to homogeneity from lyophilized human milk and used to screen the influence of the acyl chain length (2-16 carbon atoms) on the kinetic constants k(cat) and K(m) of the hydrolysis of para-nitrophenyl (pnp) ester substrates in the presence or absence of sodium taurocholate (NaTC: 0.02-20 mM). The highest k(cat) value (~3,500 s(-1)) was obtained with pnpC(8) as substrate, whereas the lowest K(m) (<10 μM) was that recorded with pnpC(10). In the absence of NaTC, the maximal catalytic efficiency (k(cat)/K(m)) was obtained with pnpC(8), while in the presence of NaTC k(cat)/K(m) was maximal with pnpC(8), pnpC(10) or pnpC(12). The bile salt activated the enzyme in two successive saturation phases occurring at a micromolar and a millimolar concentration range, respectively. The present data emphasize the suitability of this enzyme for the hydrolysis of medium-chain acyl-containing substrates and throw additional light on how BSDL is activated by NaTC.  相似文献   

11.
A soluble form of penicillin-binding protein 3 (PBP 3) from Neisseria gonorrhoeae was expressed and purified from Escherichia coli and characterized for its interaction with beta-lactam antibiotics, its catalytic properties with peptide and peptidoglycan substrates, and its role in cell viability and morphology. PBP 3 had an unusually high k(2)/K' value relative to other PBPs for acylation with penicillin (7.7 x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1)) at pH 8.5 at 25 degrees C and hydrolyzed bound antibiotic very slowly (k(3) < 4.6 x 10(-5) s(-1), t(1/2) > 230 min). PBP 3 also demonstrated exceptionally high carboxypeptidase activity with a k(cat) of 580 s(-1) and a k(cat)/K(m) of 1.8 x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1) with the substrate N(alpha)-Boc-N(epsilon)-Cbz-L-Lys-D-Ala-D-Ala. This is the highest k(cat) value yet reported for a PBP or other serine peptidases. Activity against a approximately D-Ala-D-Lac peptide substrate was approximately 2-fold lower than against the analogous approximately D-Ala-D-Ala peptide substrate, indicating that deacylation is rate determining for both amide and ester hydrolysis. The pH dependence profiles of both carboxypeptidase activity and beta-lactam acylation were bell-shaped with maximal activity at pH 8.0-8.5. PBP 3 displayed weak transpeptidase activity in a model transpeptidase reaction but was active as an endopeptidase, cleaving dimeric peptide cross-links. Deletion of PBP 3 alone had little effect on viability, growth rate, and morphology of N. gonorrhoeae, although deletion of both PBP 3 and PBP 4, the other low-molecular-mass PBP in N. gonorrhoeae, resulted in a decreased growth rate and marked morphological abnormalities.  相似文献   

12.
The solvent kinetic isotope effects (SKIE) on the yeast alpha-glucosidase-catalyzed hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyl and methyl-d-glucopyranoside were measured at 25 degrees C. With p-nitrophenyl-D-glucopyranoside (pNPG), the dependence of k(cat)/K(m) on pH (pD) revealed an unusually large (for glycohydrolases) solvent isotope effect on the pL-independent second-order rate constant, (DOD)(k(cat)/K(m)), of 1.9 (+/-0.3). The two pK(a)s characterizing the pH profile were increased in D(2)O. The shift in pK(a2) of 0.6 units is typical of acids of comparable acidity (pK(a)=6.5), but the increase in pK(a1) (=5.7) of 0.1 unit in going from H(2)O to D(2)O is unusually small. The initial velocities show substrate inhibition (K(is)/K(m) approximately 200) with a small solvent isotope effect on the inhibition constant [(DOD)K(is)=1.1 (+/-0.2)]. The solvent equilibrium isotope effects on the K(is) for the competitive inhibitors D-glucose and alpha-methyl D-glucoside are somewhat higher [(DOD)K(i)=1.5 (+/-0.1)]. Methyl glucoside is much less reactive than pNPG, with k(cat) 230 times lower and k(cat)/K(m) 5 x 10(4) times lower. The solvent isotope effect on k(cat) for this substrate [=1.11 (+/-0. 02)] is lower than that for pNPG [=1.67 (+/-0.07)], consistent with more extensive proton transfer in the transition state for the deglucosylation step than for the glucosylation step.  相似文献   

13.
Clark DD  Boyd JM  Ensign SA 《Biochemistry》2004,43(21):6763-6771
2-[(R)-2-Hydroxypropylthio]ethanesulfonate (R-HPC) dehydrogenase (DH) catalyzes the reversible oxidation of R-HPC to 2-(2-ketopropylthio)ethanesulfonate (2-KPC) in a key reaction in the bacterial conversion of chiral epoxides to beta-keto acids. R-HPCDH is highly specific for the R-enantiomer of HPC, while a separate enzyme, S-HPCDH, catalyzes the oxidation of the corresponding S-enantiomer. In the present study, the features of substrate and enzyme imparting stereospecificity have been investigated for R-HPCDH. S-HPC was a substrate for R-HPCDH with a K(m) identical to that for R-HPC but with a k(cat) 600 times lower. Achiral 2-propanol and short-chain (R)- and (S)-2-alkanols were substrates for R-HPCDH. For (R)-alkanols, as the carbon chain length increased, K(m) decreased, with the K(m) for (R)-2-octanol being 1700 times lower than for 2-propanol. At the same time, k(cat) changed very little and was at least 90% lower than k(cat) for R-HPC and at least 22 times higher than k(cat) for S-HPC. (S)-2-Butanol and (S)-2-pentanol were substrates for R-HPCDH. The K(m) for (S)-2-butanol was identical to that for (R)-2-butanol, while the K(m) for (S)-2-pentanol was 7.5 times higher than for (R)-2-pentanol. Longer chain (S)-2-alkanols were sufficiently poor substrates for R-HPCDH that kinetic parameters could not be determined. Mutagenesis of C-terminal arginine residues of R-HPCDH revealed that R152 and R196 are essential for effective catalysis with the natural substrates R-HPC and 2-KPC but not for catalysis with 2-alkanols or ketones as substrates. Short-chain alkylsulfonates and coenzyme M (2-mercaptoethanesulfonate) were found to modify the kinetic parameters for 2-butanone reduction by R-HPCDH in a saturable fashion, with the general effect of increasing k(cat), decreasing K(m), and increasing the enantioselectivity of 2-butanone reduction to a theoretical value of 100% (S)-2-butanol. The modulating effects of ethanesulfonate and propanesulfonate provided thermodynamic binding constants close to K(m) for the natural substrates R-HPC and 2-KPC. The effects of alkylsulfonates on modulating the enantioselectivity and kinetic properties of R-HPCDH were abolished in R152A and R196A mutants but not in mutants of other C-terminal arginine residues. Collectively, the results suggest that interactions between the sulfonate of CoM and specific arginine residues are key to the enantioselectivity and catalytic efficiency of R-HPCDH. A model is proposed wherein sulfonate-arginine interactions within an alkylsulfonate binding pocket control the catalytic properties of R-HPCDH.  相似文献   

14.
Catalytic antibodies 6D9 and 9C10, which were induced by immunization with a haptenic transition-state analog (TSA), catalyze the hydrolysis of a nonbioactive chloramphenicol monoester derivative to generate a bioactive chloramphenicol. These antibodies stabilize the transition state to catalyze the hydrolysis reaction, strictly according to the theoretical relationship: for 6D9, k(cat)/k(uncat)=895 and K(S)/K(TSA)=900, and for 9C10, k(cat)/k(uncat)=56 and K(S)/K(TSA)=60. To elucidate the molecular basis of the antibody-catalyzed reaction, the crystal structure of 6D9 was determined, and the binding thermodynamics of 6D9 and 9C10 with both the substrate and the TSA were analyzed using isothermal titration calorimetry. The crystal structure of the unliganded 6D9 Fab was determined at 2.25 A resolution and compared with that of the TSA-liganded 6D9 Fab reported previously, showing that the TSA is bound into the hydrophobic pocket of the antigen-combining site in an "induced fit" manner, especially at the L1 and H3 CDR loops. Thermodynamic analyses showed that 6D9 binds the substrate of the TSA with a positive DeltaS, differing from general thermodynamic characteristics of antigen-antibody interactions. This positive DeltaS could be due to the hydrophobic interactions between 6D9 and the substrate or the TSA mediated by Trp H100i. The difference in DeltaG between substrate and TSA-binding to 6D9 was larger than that to 9C10, which is in good correlation with the larger k(cat) value of 6D9. Interestingly, the DeltaDeltaG was mainly because of the DeltaDeltaH. The correlation between k(cat) and DeltaDeltaH is suggestive of "enthalpic strain" leading to destabilization of antibody-substrate complexes. Together with X-ray structural analyses, the thermodynamic analyses suggest that upon binding the substrate, the antibody alters the conformation of the ester moiety in the substrate from the planar Z form to a thermodynamically unstable twisted conformation, followed by conversion into the transition state. Enthalpic strain also contributes to the transition-state stabilization by destabilizing the ground state, and its degree is much larger for the more efficient catalytic antibody, 6D9.  相似文献   

15.
The hydrolysis of N-acetyl-L-methionine, N-acetylglycine, N-acetyl-L-phenylalanine, and N-acetyl-L-alanine at 298.35K by porcine kidney acylase I (EC 3.5.1.14) was monitored by the heat released upon mixing of the substrate and enzyme in a differential stopped flow microcalorimeter. Values for the Michaelis constant (K(m)) and the catalytic constant (k(cat)) were determined from the progress of the reaction curve employing the integrated form of the Michaelis-Menten equation for each reaction mixture. When neglecting acetate product inhibition of the acylase, values for k(cat) were up to a factor of 2.3 larger than those values determined from reciprocal initial velocity-initial substrate concentration plots for at least four different reaction mixtures. In addition, values for K(m) were observed to increase linearly with an increase in the initial substrate concentration. When an acetate product inhibition constant of 600+/-31M(-1), determined by isothermal titration calorimetry, was used in the progress curve analysis, values for K(m) and k(cat) were in closer agreement with their values determined from the reciprocal initial velocity versus initial substrate concentration plots. The reaction enthalpies, Delta(r)H(cal), which were determined from the integrated heat pulse per amount of substrate in the reaction mixture, ranged from -4.69+/-0.09kJmol(-1) for N-acetyl-L-phenylalanine to -1.87+/-0.23kJmol(-1) for N-acetyl-L-methionine.  相似文献   

16.
Enteropeptidase (synonym:enterokinase, EC 3.4.21.9) is a heterodimeric serine protease of the intestinal brush border that activates trypsinogen by highly specific cleavage of the trypsinogen activation peptide following the sequence (Asp)(4)-Lys. The DNA sequence encoding the light chain (catalytic subunit) of human enteropeptidase (GenBank Accession No. U09860) was synthesized from 26 oligonucleotides by polymerase chain reaction and cloned into plasmid pET-32a downstream to the gene of fusion partner thioredoxin immediately after the DNA sequence encoding enteropeptidase recognition site. The fusion protein thioredoxin/human enteropeptidase light chain was expressed in Escherichia coli BL21(DE3) strain in both soluble and insoluble forms. The soluble recombinant fusion protein failed to undergo autocatalytic cleavage and activation; however, autocatalytic cleavage and activation of recombinant human enteropeptidase light chain (L-HEP) were achieved by solubilization and renaturation of the fusion protein from inclusion bodies and the active L-HEP was purified on agarose-linked soybean trypsin inhibitor. The purified L-HEP cleaved the synthetic peptide substrate Gly-Asp-Asp-Asp-Asp-Lys-beta-naphthylamide with kinetic parameters K(m)=0.16 mM and k(cat)=115 s(-1) and small ester Z-Lys-SBzl with K(m)=140 microM, k(cat)=133 s(-1). L-HEP associated with soybean trypsin inhibitor slowly and small ester Z-Lys-SBzl cleavage was inhibited with K(i)(*)=2.3 nM. L-HEP digested thioredoxin/human epidermal growth factor fusion protein five times faster than equal activity units of bovine recombinant light chain (EKMax, Invitrogen) at the same conditions.  相似文献   

17.
This report described that a hapten of racemic phosphonate 3 designed as the mimic of the transition state of hydrolysis of naproxen ethyl ester was successfully synthesized from easily available 2-acetyl-6-methoxy-naphthalene 5. Then BALB/C mice were immunized and one of the monoclonal catalytic antibodies, N116-27, which enantioselectively accelerated the hydrolysis of the R-(-)-naproxen ethyl ester was given. The Michaelis-Menton parameter for the catalyzed reaction was K(M)=6.67 mM and k(cat)/k(uncat)=5.8 x 10(4). This enantioselective result was explained by the fact that the R-isomer of rac-hapten was more immunogenic than the S-isomer.  相似文献   

18.
The rates of hydrolysis of the ester, amide and anilide substrates of p-guanidino-L-phenylalanine (GPA) by Streptomyces griseus trypsin (S. griseus trypsin) were compared with those of arginine (Arg) substrates. The specificity constant (kcat/km) for the hydrolysis of GPA substrates by the enzyme was 2-3-times lower than that for arginine substrates. The kcat and Km values for the hydrolysis of N alpha-benzoyl-p-guanidino-L-phenylalanine ethyl ester (Bz-GPA-OEt) by S. griseus trypsin are in the same order of magnitude as those of N alpha-benzoyl-L-arginine ethyl ester (Bz-Arg-OEt), although both values for the former when hydrolyzed by bovine trypsin are higher by one order of magnitude than those for the latter. The specificity constant for the hydrolysis of Bz-GPA-OEt by S. griseus trypsin is much higher than that for N alpha-benzoyl-p-guanidino-L-phenylglycine ethyl ester (Bz-GPG-OEt). As with the kinetic behavior of bovine trypsin, low values in Km and kcat were observed for the hydrolysis of amide and anilide substrates of GPA by S. griseus trypsin compared with those of arginine substrates. The rates of hydrolysis of GPA and arginine substrates by S. griseus trypsin are about 2- to 62-times higher than those obtained by bovine trypsin. Substrate activation was observed with S. griseus trypsin in the hydrolysis of Bz-GPA-OEt as well as Bz-Arg-OEt, whereas substrate inhibition was observed in three kinds of N alpha-protected anilide substrates of GPA and arginine. In contrast, no activation by the amide substrate of GPA could be detected with this enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
Bott RR  Chan G  Domingo B  Ganshaw G  Hsia CY  Knapp M  Murray CJ 《Biochemistry》2003,42(36):10545-10553
The properties of the transition state for serine protease-catalyzed hydrolysis of an amide bond were determined for a series of subtilisin variants from Bacillus lentus. There is no significant change in the structure of the enzyme upon introduction of charged mutations S156E/S166D, suggesting that changes in catalytic activity reflect global properties of the enzyme. The effect of charged mutations on the pK(a) of the active site histidine-64 N(epsilon)(2)-H was correlated with changes in the second-order rate constant k(cat)/K(m) for hydrolysis of tetrapeptide anilides at low ionic strength with a Br?nsted slope alpha = 1.1. The solvent isotope effect (D)2(O)(k(cat)/K(m))(1) = 1.4 +/- 0.2. These results are consistent with a rate-limiting breakdown of the tetrahedral intermediate in the acylation step with hydrogen bond stabilization of the departing amine leaving group. There is an increase in the ratio of hydrolysis of succinyl-Ala-Ala-Pro-Phe-anilides for p-nitroaniline versus aniline leaving groups with variants with more basic active site histidines that can be described by the interaction coefficient p(xy) = delta beta(lg)/delta pK(a) (H64) = 0.15. This is attributed to increased hydrogen bonding of the active site imidazolium N-H to the more basic amine leaving group as well as electrostatic destabilization of the transition state. A qualitative characterization of the transition state is presented in terms of a reaction coordinate diagram that is defined by the structure-reactivity parameters.  相似文献   

20.
Simple synthetic compounds of lauroyl-arginine ethyl ester (LAE) and 9-fluorenylmethoxycarbonyl-L-agrinine methyl ester (Fmoc-Arg-OMe) were studied for their inhibitory effect on the hydrolysis of chromogenic substrate Tos-Gly-Pro-Arg-pNA (Chromozym TH) by thrombin with K(i) for LAE 1.92 microM and 77 microM for Fmoc Arg-OMe. It was shown that LAE inhibits thrombin activity almost 20 times more strongly than trypsin (K(i) = 18.9 microM). At the same time LAE preserves the ability to be hydrolyzed by thrombin at pH 8.5 (k(cat) = 3.6 c(-1)) and trypsin (k(cat) = 56 c(-1)). It is suggested, that LAE ability to suppress growth of some microorganisms is conditioned to some extent by its ability to inhibit the activity of trypsin-like serine proteases, participating in the infection process.  相似文献   

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