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1.
C F Hawkins  A S Bagnara 《Biochemistry》1987,26(7):1982-1987
The reaction catalyzed by adenosine kinase purified from human erythrocytes proceeds via a classical ordered sequential mechanism in which adenosine is the first substrate to bind to and AMP is the last product to dissociate from the enzyme. However, the interpretation of the steady-state kinetic data is complicated by the finding that while AMP acts as a classical product inhibitor at concentrations greater than 5 mM, at lower concentrations AMP can act as an apparent activator of the enzyme under certain conditions. This apparent activation by AMP is proposed to be due to AMP allowing the enzyme mechanism to proceed via an alternative reaction pathway that avoids substrate inhibition by adenosine. Quantitative studies of the protection of the enzyme afforded by adenosine against both spontaneous and 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid)-mediated oxidation of thiol groups yielded "protection" constants (equivalent to enzyme-adenosine dissociation constant) of 12.8 microM and 12.6 microM, respectively, values that are more than an order of magnitude greater than the dissociation constant (Kia = 0.53 microM) for the "catalytic" enzyme-adenosine complex. These results suggest that adenosine kinase has at least two adenosine binding sites, one at the catalytic center and another quite distinct site at which binding of adenosine protects the reactive thiol group(s). This "protection" site appears to be separate from the nucleoside triphosphate binding site, and it also appears to be the site that is responsible for the substrate inhibition caused by adenosine.  相似文献   

2.
1. A theoretical appraisal of the alternative pathway mechanism for a two-substrate enzyme shows that this mechanism is capable of giving rise to apparent substrate inhibition or substrate activation (Dalziel, 1958). It has now been shown that these phenomena may occur simultaneously in the following ways. With certain relationships between the kinetic parameters and the constant concentration of one substrate, A, the plot of initial rate, v, against the concentration of the other substrate, B, may show substrate ;activation' at low concentrations of B and substrate ;inhibition' at high concentrations of B. In other circumstances the plot of v against [B], with [A] constant, may be sigmoid (substrate activation), whereas the plot of v against [A], with [B] constant, may pass through a maximum (substrate inhibition). 2. Kinetic data for phosphofructokinase are of the latter type and it is suggested that the mechanism of this enzyme may involve a kinetically preferred pathway. It is emphasized that the phenomena of substrate inhibition and activation need not necessarily involve more than one binding site for each substrate on the enzyme molecule, nor more than one monomer per molecule.  相似文献   

3.
Photolysis and deacylation of inhibited chymotrypsin   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Inhibited chymotrypsin was reactivated through the photolysis of the covalently bound light-reversible cinnamates described in our previous paper [Stoddard, B.L., Bruhnke, J., Porter, N.A., Ringe, D., & Petsko, G. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 4871-4879]. The light-induced deacylation was accomplished both in solution and in protein crystals, with the release of inhibitor from the crystal monitored and confirmed by X-ray diffraction. The product of photolysis has been characterized as a 3-methylcoumarin, leading to a mechanism for light-driven deacylation of an internal lactonization that is dependent on the presence of an internal hydroxyl nucleophile. The acyl enzyme formed from cinnamate A is not suitable for photochemical studies, as the complex has a short half-life in solution and does not have a chromophore that is well separated from protein absorbance. Cinnamate B, with a p-diethylamino substituent, shows an enzyme deacylation rate enhancement of 10(9) for the cis photoisomer relative to the trans starting material. The half-life and deacylation rate of this compound in the E-I complex after photon absorption have been directly measured by subsecond UV absorption studies. X-ray diffraction studies of photoactivation using a flow cell show that the cinnamate B acyl enzyme complex is fully capable of light-induced isomerization and regeneration of native enzyme in the crystalline state. The E-I complex formed upon binding of cinnamate A, however, shows little if any effect from irradiation due to competitive absorbance by the highly concentrated protein at the shorter UV wavelengths. Photolysis of cinnamate B appears to occur on a time scale fast enough for applications in crystallographic studies of enzymatic intermediate-state structures.  相似文献   

4.
Affinity labelling of acetylcholinesterase (EC 3.1.1.7, acetylcholine acetylhydrolase) anionic centre with N,N-dimethyl-2-phenylaziridinium ion accelerates the hydrolysis of non-ionic acetic esters by increasing the rate of the enzyme acylation step at least 500-times while the rate of the deacylation step remains unchanged. Simultaneously, at least a 10-fold decrease of the substrate binding affinity takes place. The acceleration phenomenon can be explained by the "induced fit" mechanism as the binding of the cationic label to the enzyme anionic site brings the esteratic centre into conformation which provides extra stabilization for the transition state of the enzyme acylation reaction, probably by a more close structural fit between the substrate molecule and the enzyme active centre.  相似文献   

5.
The addition of saturating concentrations of NAD-+ and alcohol to liver alcohol dehydrogenase in a stopped flow fluorimeter results in a triphasic quenching of enzyme fluorescence. A rapid quenching occurs with a rate constant of 300 to 500 s-minus 1, followed by a slower reaction at 50 to 100 s-minus 1, and ultimately followed by a very slow reaction. The addition of NAD-+ to enzyme in the absence of substrate causes a rapid quenching of enzyme fluorescence at 300 to 500 s-minus 1, with the same amplitude as the rapid phase in the presence of substrate. These studies demonstrate that NAD-+ binding to liver alcohol dehydrogenase causes a conformational change at a rate compatible with the previously reported rate constant for proton release, indicating that proton release is probably coupled to the conformational change.  相似文献   

6.
Esters of tetrapeptides of the general formula ethoxycarbonyl-prolyl-alanyl-X-Y where either X or Y was an alanine residue were synthesised and their cleavage by elastase studied. It was found that variation of the alcohol moiety between methyl, cyclohexyl and nitrophenyl residues had no effect on the catalytic rate constant for cleavage of ethoxycarbonyl-prolyl-dialanyl-alanine esters demonstrating that acylation is much faster than deacylation for this system and also that non-productive binding is not kinetically significant. The effect of changing the amino acid residue in position X was small compared with that of change in position Y. The presence of valine and serine residues in position Y produced the highest specificity constant but the highest catalytic rate constant was found for a leucine residue in this position. The results are discussed in terms of the binding of the substrate to the enzyme.  相似文献   

7.
Four enol lactones, bearing phenyl or 1-naphthyl substituents on the alpha or beta positions [3-phenyl-6-methylenetetrahydro-2-pyranone (alpha Ph6H, IIc), 3-(1-naphthyl)-6-methylenetetrahydro-2-pyranone (alpha Np6H, IId), 4-phenyl-6-methylenetetrahydro-2-pyranone (beta Ph6H, IIIc), and 4-(1-naphthyl)-6-methylenetetrahydro-2-pyranone (beta Np6H, IIId)], available as pure R and S enantiomers, have been studied as alternate substrate inhibitors of chymotrypsin. Kinetic constants for substrate binding (Ks) and acylation (ka) were determined by a competitive substrate assay, using succinyl-L-Ala-L-Ala-L-Pro-L-Phe p-nitroanilide; the deacylation rate constant (kd) was determined by the proflavin displacement assay. All lactones undergo rapid acylation (ka varies from 17 to 170 min-1) that shows little enantioselectivity; there is, however, pronounced enantioselectivity in substrate binding for three of the lactones [Ks(R/S) = 40-110]. In each case it is the enantiomer with the S configuration that has the higher affinity. In all cases, deacylation rates are slow, and in two cases, acyl enzymes with half-lives of 4.0 and 12.5 h at pH 7.2, 25 degrees C, are obtained (for beta Ph6H and alpha Np6H, respectively). In these cases, high deacylation enantioselectivity is observed [kd(S/R) = 60-70], and the lactone more weakly bound as a substrate (R enantiomer) gives the more stable acyl enzyme. Two hypotheses, involving hindrance of the attack of water or an exchange of the ester and ketone carbonyl groups in the acyl enzyme, are advanced as possible explanations for the high stability of these acyl enzymes.  相似文献   

8.
1. The binding of all four substrates to yeast phosphoglycerate kinase has been studied using a gel filtration technique. The binding of phosphate and sulphate anions has also been investigated. 2. Two sites for each adenine nucleotide were found, one site being weaker than the other by between 30 and 50-fold. Only one binding site for the phosphoglycerate substrates was found. 3. 1,3-Bisphosphoglycerate (1,3-P2-glycerate) bound to the enzyme approximately 1000 times tighter than the other three substrates, its dissociation constant being 0.06 micrometer at ionic strength 0.15 M. 4. Sulphate and phosphate were mutually competitive and sulphate competed with the binding of all substrates except MgADP. MgADP bound to the enzyme more weakly in the presence of sulphate. The dissociation constant for sulphate binding was 1.6 mM at ionic strength of 0.15 M, and 0.05 mM at ionic strength 0.015 M. 5. These results are consistent with sulphate acting as a competitive inhibitor, as found by kinetic studies at high sulphate concentrations. The activatory effect of sulphate at lower concentrations and the substrate activation phenomea displayed by this enzyme, are interpreted in terms of a two-step dissociation of 1, 3-P2-glycerate. The presence of moderate concentrations of MgATP, 3-phosphoglycerate or sulphate causes acceleration of the rate of dissociation of the product, 1, 3-P2-glycerate, this being the rate-limiting step in the overall enzyme reaction.  相似文献   

9.
Insect acetylcholinesterase (AChE), an enzyme whose catalytic site is located at the bottom of a gorge-like structure, hydrolyzes its substrate over a wide range of concentrations (from 2 microm to 300 mm). AChE is activated at low substrate concentrations and inhibited at high substrate concentrations. Several rival kinetic models have been developed to try to describe and explain this behavior. One of these models assumes that activation at low substrate concentrations partly results from an acceleration of deacetylation of the acetylated enzyme. To test this hypothesis, we used a monomethylcarbamoylated enzyme, which is considered equivalent to the acylated form of the enzyme and a non-hydrolyzable substrate analog, 4-oxo-N,N,N-trimethylpentanaminium iodide. It appears that this substrate analog increases the decarbamoylation rate by a factor of 2.2, suggesting that the substrate molecule bound at the activation site (K(d) = 130 +/- 47 microm) accelerates deacetylation. These two kinetic parameters are consistent with our analysis of the hydrolysis of the substrate. The location of the active site was investigated by in vitro mutagenesis. We found that this site is located at the rim of the active site gorge. Thus, substrate positioning at the rim of the gorge slows down the entrance of another substrate molecule into the active site gorge (Marcel, V., Estrada-Mondaca, S., Magné, F., Stojan, J., Klaébé, A., and Fournier, D. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 11603-11609) and also increases the deacylation step. This results in an acceleration of enzyme turnover.  相似文献   

10.
A pre-steady state kinetic analysis of the stimulation by monovalent cations of the activity of bovine activated protein C (APC) and a proteolytic fragment of APC, des-1-41-light chain activated protein C (GDAPC), toward the substrate, 4-methylumbelliferyl p-guanidinobenzoate, has been undertaken. With the cations Na+ and Cs+, at least two cation sites, or classes of sites, on APC were found to be important to the kinetic effects observed. For GDAPC, with both monovalent cations investigated, a single cation-binding site, or class of sites, of kinetic importance was discovered. The most general mechanism that fits all kinetic data was a rapid equilibrium type, with the cation(s) (A) and substrate (S) binding to the enzyme in a random fashion. Cations were found to be essential activators, and only formation of the EAS or EA2S complex led to product generation. For each enzyme, stimulation of the reaction rates was found to be chiefly due to a dramatic enhancement by monovalent cations of the rate constant (k2) for acylation of the enzyme since the dissociation constant (Ks) for enzyme-substrate interactions was increased in the presence of cations, and the deacylation rate constant (k3) was not affected by these activators.  相似文献   

11.
Serpin family protein proteinase inhibitors trap proteinases at the acyl-intermediate stage of cleavage of the serpin as a proteinase substrate by undergoing a dramatic conformational change, which is thought to distort the proteinase active site and slow deacylation. To investigate the extent to which proteinase catalytic function is defective in the serpin-proteinase complex, we compared the pH dependence of dissociation of several serpin-proteinase acyl-complexes with that of normal guanidinobenzoyl-proteinase acyl-intermediate complexes. Whereas the apparent rate constant for dissociation of guanidinobenzoyl-proteinase complexes (k(diss, app)) showed a pH dependence characteristic of His-57 catalysis of complex deacylation, the pH dependence of k(diss, app) for the serpin-proteinase complexes showed no evidence for His-57 involvement in complex deacylation and was instead characteristic of a hydroxide-mediated deacylation similar to that observed for the hydrolysis of tosylarginine methyl ester. Hydroxylamine enhanced the rate of serpin-proteinase complex dissociation but with a rate constant for nucleophilic attack on the acyl bond several orders of magnitude slower than that of hydroxide, implying limited accessibility of the acyl bond in the complex. The addition of 10-100 mm Ca(2+) ions stimulated up to 80-fold the dissociation rate constant of several serpin-trypsin complexes in a saturable manner at neutral pH and altered the pH dependence to a pattern characteristic of His-57-catalyzed complex deacylation. These results support a mechanism of kinetic stabilization of serpin-proteinase complexes wherein the complex is trapped as an acyl-intermediate by a serpin conformational change-induced inactivation of the proteinase catalytic function, but suggest that the inactive proteinase conformation in the complex is in equilibrium with an active proteinase conformation that can be stabilized by the preferential binding of an allosteric ligand such as Ca(2+).  相似文献   

12.
Alcohol inhibition of the lipase B from Candida antarctica has been studied through two different approaches: using the same inhibitor (1-butanol) in different organic solvents and using different inhibitors (differing in chain length) in the same solvent. The competitive inhibition constant values obtained in each case correlate with the calculated activity coefficients of the substrate, suggesting that desolvation of the alcohol is the major force changed. Data dispersion observed using the second approach has been interpreted to come from contributions of enzyme-inhibitor interactions to the binding energy. On the other hand, deacylation has been found to be much less influenced by the solvent variation than the acylation step, despite of the fact that solvation of the substrate involved in this step (the alcohol) is expected to change more than for the ester. Concerning the specificity behavior of the enzyme, a bimodal pattern was observed for the deacylation rate dependence on the alcohol chain length, with the highest values for hexanol (C6) and decanol (C10). With regard to the ester specificity, ethyl caproate (C6) is the preferred one. These results have been confronted with those reported for the lipase from Candida rugosa. Copyright 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

13.
A detailed examination of the mechanism of the hydrolysis of phenyl acetates by alpha-chymotrypsin [EC 3.4.21.1] was carried out. The effective deacylation rate constants of some phenyl acetates obtained by titration of the acetyl-enzyme decreased at low substrate concentrations and showed anomalous pH dependences and solvent isotope effects. The transient kinetics of deacylation of the acetyl-enzyme were biphasic. A spectrum and a breakdown rate similar to those of acetylimidazole were observed when the acetyl-enzyme was denaturated with sodium dodecyl sulfate. These results indicate the participation of histidine-acylated enzyme, which woud account for the anomalous phenomena previously found in this system, including a large value of Hammett's rho. The relation between the substrate activation and the two intermediates is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Acetylcholinesterase (AChE) contains a narrow and deep active site gorge with two sites of ligand binding, an acylation site (or A-site) at the base of the gorge, and a peripheral site (or P-site) near the gorge entrance. The P-site contributes to catalytic efficiency by transiently binding substrates on their way to the acylation site, where a short-lived acyl enzyme intermediate is produced. A conformational interaction between the A- and P-sites has recently been found to modulate ligand affinities. We now demonstrate that this interaction is of functional importance by showing that the acetylation rate constant of a substrate bound to the A-site is increased by a factor a when a second molecule of substrate binds to the P-site. This demonstration became feasible through the introduction of a new acetanilide substrate analogue of acetylcholine, 3-(acetamido)-N,N,N-trimethylanilinium (ATMA), for which a = 4. This substrate has a low acetylation rate constant and equilibrates with the catalytic site, allowing a tractable algebraic solution to the rate equation for substrate hydrolysis. ATMA affinities for the A- and P-sites deduced from the kinetic analysis were confirmed by fluorescence titration with thioflavin T as a reporter ligand. Values of a >1 give rise to a hydrolysis profile called substrate activation, and the AChE site-specific mutant W86F, and to a lesser extent wild-type human AChE itself, showed substrate activation with acetylthiocholine as the substrate. Substrate activation was incorporated into a previous catalytic scheme for AChE in which a bound P-site ligand can also block product dissociation from the A-site, and two additional features of the AChE catalytic pathway were revealed. First, the ability of a bound P-site ligand to increase the substrate acetylation rate constant varied with the structure of the ligand: thioflavin T accelerated ATMA acetylation by a factor a(2) of 1.3, while propidium failed to accelerate. Second, catalytic rate constants in the initial intermediate formed during acylation (EAP, where EA is the acyl enzyme and P is the alcohol leaving group cleaved from the ester substrate) may be constrained such that the leaving group P must dissociate before hydrolytic deacylation can occur.  相似文献   

15.
Hydrophobic protein chromatography was used to prepare homogeneous fractions of penicillin amidase (EC 3.5.1.11) from E. coli. The apparent ratios of the rate constants for the deacylation of the acyl-penicillin amidase formed in the hydrolysis of phenylacetylglycine or D-phenylglycine methyl ester, by H2O and 6-aminopenicillanic acid (6-APA), were determined at different concentrations of the latter compound. The ratios were obtained from direct measurements of the initial rates of formation of phenylacetic acid and benzylpenicillin or D-phenylglycine and ampicillin. For the semisynthesis of ampicillin as well as of benzylpenicillin the ratio was found to depend on the concentration of 6-APA. This was observed for heterogeneous and homogeneous enzyme preparations. These results show that 6-APA must be bound to the acyl-enzyme before the deacylation, yielding ampicillin and benzylpenicillin, occurs. The dissociation constant KN for the formation of the complex was estimated to be approximately 10mM. This mechanism in which acyl-enzyme with and without bound nucleophile is involved, is in agreement with the principle of microscopic reversibility. Both acyl-enzymes can be deacylated by H2O. The finding that there is a specific binding site for 6-APA adjacent to the binding site for the phenylacetyl-(D-phenylglycyl-) group in the active site of the enzyme is supported by the observation that 6-APA acts as a mixed inhibitor in the hydrolysis of D-phenylglycine methyl ester. The ionic strength dependence indicates that the binding site for 6-APA of the acyl-enzyme is positively charged.  相似文献   

16.
1. The hydrolytic and transfer reactions catalysed by rat kidney-gamma-glutamyltransferase (EC 2.3.2.2) were studied in vitro with substrates [U-14C]glutamic acid-labelled glutathione and methionine. Initial-velocity patterns, isotope-exchange and binding studies were consistent with a branched non-sequential mechanism in which a gamma-glutamyl-enzyme intermediate may react either with water (hydrolysis) or with methionine (gamma-glutamyl transfer). 2. The Michaelis constant for glutathione in hydrolysis was 13.9 +/- 1.4 mum, for glutathione in transfer it was 113 +/- 15 muM and for methionine as substrate it was 4.7 +/- 0.7 mM. At substrate concentrations in the ranges of their respective Michaelis constants, the rate of transfer was about ten times higher than that of hydrolysis, but at concentrations of methionine approximating to the physiological (64 muM in rat plasma) the transfer is negligible. 3. The enzyme is reported to lie on the luminal surface of the proximal straight kidney tubule. In this situation, if the kinetic results obtained with the detergent-solubilized enzyme are relevant to the behavior of the enzyme in vivo, it appears likely that the main function of renal gamma-glutamyltransferase is not in amino acid transport, but rather to hydrolyse glutathione in the renal filtrate.  相似文献   

17.
M Fujioka  Y Takata 《Biochemistry》1981,20(3):468-472
The baker's yeast saccharopine dehydrogenase (EC 1.5.1.7) was inactivated by 2,3-butanedione following pseudo-first-order reaction kinetics. The pseudo-first-order rate constant for inactivation was linearly related to the butanedione concentration, and a value of 7.5 M-1 min-1 was obtained for the second-order rate constant at pH 8.0 and 25 degrees C. Amino acid analysis of the inactivated enzyme revealed that arginine was the only amino acid residue affected. Although as many as eight arginine residues were lost on prolonged incubation with butanedione, only one residue appears to be essential for activity. The modification resulted in the change in Vmax, but not in Km, values for substrates. The inactivation by butanedione was substantially protected by L-leucine, a competitive analogue of substrate lysine, in the presence of reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) and alpha-ketoglutarate. Since leucine binds only to the enzyme-NADH-alpha-ketoglutarate complex, the result suggests that an arginine residue located near the binding site for the amino acid substrate is modified. Titration with leucine showed that the reaction of butanedione also took place with the enzyme-NADH-alpha-ketoglutarate-leucine complex more slowly than with the free enzyme. The binding study indicated that the inactivated enzyme still retained the capacity to bind leucine, although the affinity appeared to be somewhat decreased. From these results it is concluded that an arginine residue essential for activity is involved in the catalytic reaction rather than in the binding of the coenzyme and substrates.  相似文献   

18.
The kinetics of the hydrolysis of butyrylthiocholine by horse serum butyrylcholinesterase (acylcholine acylhydrolase; BuChE; EC 3.1.1.8) exhibit an activation phenomenon at high substrate concentrations. At least two mechanistic models can account for the enzyme kinetics: one assumes the binding of an additional substrate molecule on the acyl-enzyme intermediate, and the other hypothesizes the existence of a peripheral regulatory site for the substrate. (1-Dimethylaminonaphthalene-5-sulfonamidoethyl)-trimethylammonium perchlorate, a potent reversible inhibitor, appears to affect BuChE activity by binding to a peripheral site. The inhibition is of the mixed type at low substrate concentrations and of the competitive type at high substrate concentrations. This is consistent with a peripheral site for the binding of the substrate responsible for the activation phenomenon.  相似文献   

19.
Fatty acid synthetase complex (Mr = 500,000) purified from pigeon liver homogenates is inactivated by phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride. A well characterized inhibitor of serine esterases. Pseudounimolecular kinetics are followed at all inhibitor concentrations studied (0.05 to 1.0 mM). The second order rate constant obtained at pH 7.0, 30 degrees in 0.05 M potassium phosphate, 1 mM EDTA is 250 plus or minus 10 M-1 min-1 and appears to be independent of pH between 6 and 7.9. The inactivation of the enzyme complex appears to be selective since only one of the several component enzymes of fatty acid synthesis, palmityl-CoA deacylase, is inhibited. Acetyl- and malonyl-CoA-pantetheine transacylase activities as well as the kinetics of the reduction and dehydration steps are nearly identical for the native and the modified enzymes. The rate of approach of the condensation-CO2 exchange reaction (substrates: hexanoyl-CoA, malonyl-CoA, CoA, and H14CO3-) is slightly slower in the modified enzyme, though this change is not large enough to account for total loss of activity for fatty acid synthesis. The rate of loss of palmityl-CoA deacylase activity at a constant inhibitor concentration follows biphasic kinetics. Complete inactivation is achieved only after 2 mol of the inhibitor are bound per mol of the enzyme complex. Acetyl-, butyryl-, and hexanoyl-CoA thioesters (at 1.0 mM concentrations) protect the enzyme complex against inactivation by phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride whereas CoA has no effect. Malonyl-CoA on the other hand, promotes inhibitor-mediated inactivation. Of the N-acetyl cysteamine derivatives tested, S-acetyl-N-acetyl cysteamine (at 10 mM) gives almost complete protection against inactivation whereas S-acetoacetyl-, S-beta-hydroxybutyryl-, and S-crotonyl-N-acetyl cysteamine thioesters exhibit either slight or no protection. These data demonstrate that phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride is a selective reagent for the inactivation of functional fatty acyl deacylase component(s) of the pigeon liver fatty acid synthetase complex, and that it has no effect on malonyl or acetyl transacylases. The data are also in accord with the postulation that the inhibitor interacts at two catalytic centers of the enzyme complex. Furthermore, the patterns of protective effects shown by saturated acyl-CoA asters and malonyl-CoA point to different mechanisms of deacylation for these esters.  相似文献   

20.
The activation of yeast enolase by cobaltous ion in 0.1 M KCl is characterized by an activation constant of 1 microM and an inhibition constant of 18 microM. Measurements of binding of Co2+ to the apoenzyme show that a maximum of four Co2+ ions are bound per dimer in the presence or absence of substrate although binding is far tighter in the presence of substrate. Ultraviolet spectral titrations show evidence for a conformational change due exclusively to the binding of the first two ions of Co2+. Both visible and EPR spectra confirm that the environment of the first pair of cobalt ions ("conformational sites") is markedly different from that of the second pair in the "catalytic" sites. Cobalt at the conformational site appears to be a tetragonally distorted octahedral complex while the second pair of metal ions appears to be in a more regular tetrahedral symmetry. Addition of either Mg2+ or substrate to the enzyme with only one pair of cobalt ions per dimer causes striking changes in the metal ion environment. The conformational metal sites appear sufficiently shielded from solvent to be inaccessible to oxidation by H2O2, in contrast to the second pair of cobaltous ions whose ready oxidation by H2O2 inactivates the enzyme. Comparison of kinetic and binding data suggests that only one site of the dimeric enzyme can be active, since activity requires more than two metals bound per dimer and inactivation results from the binding of the fourth ion per dimer.  相似文献   

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