首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 109 毫秒
1.
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   

2.
The binding of substrates and inhibitors to wild-type Proteus vulgaris tryptophan indole-lyase and to wild type and Y71F Citrobacter freundii tyrosine phenol-lyase was investigated in the crystalline state by polarized absorption microspectrophotometry. Oxindolyl-lalanine binds to tryptophan indole-lyase crystals to accumulate predominantly a stable quinonoid intermediate absorbing at 502 nm with a dissociation constant of 35 microm, approximately 10-fold higher than that in solution. l-Trp or l-Ser react with tryptophan indole-lyase crystals to give, as in solution, a mixture of external aldimine and quinonoid intermediates and gem-diamine and external aldimine intermediates, respectively. Different from previous solution studies (Phillips, R. S., Sundararju, B., & Faleev, N. G. (2000) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 122, 1008-1114), the reaction of benzimidazole and l-Trp or l-Ser with tryptophan indole-lyase crystals does not result in the formation of an alpha-aminoacrylate intermediate, suggesting that the crystal lattice might prevent a ligand-induced conformational change associated with this catalytic step. Wild-type tyrosine phenol-lyase crystals bind l-Met and l-Phe to form mixtures of external aldimine and quinonoid intermediates as in solution. A stable quinonoid intermediate with lambda(max) at 502 nm is accumulated in the reaction of crystals of Y71F tyrosine phenol-lyase, an inactive mutant, with 3-F-l-Tyr with a dissociation constant of 1 mm, approximately 10-fold higher than that in solution. The stability exhibited by the quinonoid intermediates formed both by wild-type tryptophan indole-lyase and by wild type and Y71F tyrosine phenol-lyase crystals demonstrates that they are suitable for structural determination by x-ray crystallography, thus allowing the elucidation of a key species of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate-dependent enzyme catalysis.  相似文献   

3.
Tryptophan indole-lyase (Trpase), PBPRA2532, from Photobacterium profundum SS9, a piezophilic marine bacterium, has been cloned, expressed in Escherichia coli, and purified. The P. profundum Trpase (PpTrpase) exhibits similar substrate specificity as the enzyme from E. coli (EcTrpase). PpTrpase has an optimum temperature for activity at about 30 °C, compared with 53 °C for EcTrpase, and loses activity rapidly (t1/2 ∼ 30 min) when incubated at 50 °C, while EcTrpase is stable up to 65 °C. PpTrpase retains complete activity when incubated more than 3 h at 0 °C, while EcTrpase has only about 20% remaining activity. Under hydrostatic pressure, PpTrpase remains fully active up to 100 MPa (986 atm), while EcTrpase exhibits only about 10% activity at 100 MPa. PpTrpase forms external aldimine and quinonoid intermediates in stopped-flow experiments with l-Trp, S-Et-l-Cys, S-benzyl-l-Cys, oxindolyl-l-Ala, l-Ala and l-Met, similar to EcTrpase. However, with l-Trp a gem-diamine is observed that decays to a quinonoid complex. An aminoacrylate is observed with l-Trp in the presence of benzimidazole, as was seen previously with EcTrpase [28] but not with S-Et-l-Cys. The results show that PpTrpase is adapted for optimal activity in the low temperature, high pressure marine environment.  相似文献   

4.
RS Phillips  U Kalu  S Hay 《Biochemistry》2012,51(33):6527-6533
The effects of pH and hydrostatic pressure on the reaction of H463F tryptophan indole-lyase (TIL) have been evaluated. The mutant TIL shows very low activity for elimination of indole but is still competent to form a quinonoid intermediate from l-tryptophan [Phillips, R. S., Johnson, N., and Kamath, A. V. (2002) Biochemistry 41, 4012-4019]. Stopped-flow measurements show that the formation of the quinonoid intermediate at 505 nm is affected by pH, with a bell-shaped dependence for the forward rate constant, k(f), and dependence on a single basic group for the reverse rate constant, k(r), with the following values: pK(a1) = 8.14 ± 0.15, pK(a2) = 7.54 ± 0.15, k(f,min) = 18.1 ± 1.3 s(-1), k(f,max) = 179 ± 46.3 s(-1), k(r,min) = 11.4 ± 1.2 s(-1), and k(r,max) = 33 ± 1.6 s(-1). The pH effects may be due to ionization of Tyr74 as the base and Cys298 as the acid influencing the rate constant for deprotonation. High-pressure stopped-flow measurements were performed at pH 8, which is the optimum for the forward reaction. The rate constants show an increase with pressure up to 100 MPa and a subsequent decrease above 100 MPa. Fitting the pressure data gives the following values: k(f,0) = 15.4 ± 0.8 s(-1), ΔV(?) = -29.4 ± 2.9 cm(3) mol(-1), and Δβ(?) = -0.23 ± 0.03 cm(3) mol(-1) MPa(-1) for the forward reaction, and k(r,0) = 20.7 ± 0.8 s(-1), ΔV(?) = -9.6 ± 2.3 cm(3) mol(-1), and Δβ(?) = -0.05 ± 0.02 cm(3) mol(-1) MPa(-1) for the reverse reaction. The primary kinetic isotope effect on quinonoid intermediate formation at pH 8 is small (~2) and is not significantly pressure-dependent, suggesting that the effect of pressure on k(f) may be due to perturbation of an active site preorganization step. The negative activation volume is also consistent with preorganization of the ES complex prior to quinonoid intermediate formation, and the negative compressibility may be due to the effect of pressure on the enzyme conformation. These results support the conclusion that the preorganization of the H463F TIL Trp complex, which is probably dominated by motion of the l-Trp indole moiety of the aldimine complex, contributes to quinonoid intermediate formation.  相似文献   

5.
Tryptophan indole-lyase (Trpase) from Proteus vulgaris is a pyridoxal 5'-phosphate dependent enzyme that catalyzes the reversible hydrolytic cleavage of L-Trp to yield indole and ammonium pyruvate. Asp-133 and His-458 are strictly conserved in all sequences of Trpase, and they are located in the proposed substrate-binding region of Trpase. These residues were mutated to alanine to probe their role in substrate binding and catalysis. D133A mutant Trpase has no measurable activity with L-Trp as substrate, but still retains activity with S-(o-nitrophenyl)-L-cysteine, S-alkyl-L-cysteines, and beta-chloro-L-alanine. H458A mutant Trpase has 1.6% of wild-type Trpase activity with L-Trp, and high activity with S-(o-nitrophenyl)-L-cysteine, S-alkyl-L-cysteines, and beta-chloro-L-alanine. H458A mutant Trpase does not exhibit the pK(a) of 5.3 seen in the pH dependence of k(cat)/K(m) of L-Trp for wild-type Trpase. Both mutant enzymes are inhibited by L-Ala, L-Met, and L-Phe, with K(i) values similar to those of wild-type Trpase, but oxindolyl-L-alanine and beta-phenyl-DL-serine show much weaker binding to the mutant enzymes, suggesting that Asp-133 and His-458 are involved in the binding of these ligands. D133A and H458A mutant Trpase exhibit absorption and CD spectra in the presence of substrates and inhibitors that are similar to wild-type Trpase, with peaks at about 420 and 500 nm. The rate constants for formation of the 500 nm bands for the mutant enzymes are equal to or greater than those of wild-type Trpase, indicating that Asp-133 and His-458 do not play a role in the formation of quinonoid intermediates. In constrast to wild-type and H458A mutant Trpase, D133A mutant Trpase forms an intermediate from S-ethyl-L-Cys that absorbs at 345 nm, and is likely to be an alpha-aminoacrylate. Crystals of D133A and H458A mutant Trpase bind amino acids with similar affinity as the proteins in solution, except for L-Ala, which binds to D133A mutant Trpase crystals about 20-fold stronger than in solution. These results suggest that Asp-133 and His-458 play an important role in the elimination reaction of L-Trp. Asp-133 likely forms a hydrogen bond directly to the indole NH of the substrate, while His-458 probably is hydrogen bonded to Asp-133.  相似文献   

6.
The interaction of the mutant tryptophan indole-lyase (TIL) from Proteus vulgaris Y72F with the transition state analogue, oxindolyl-l-alanine (OIA), with the natural substrate, l-tryptophan, and with a substrate S-ethyl-l-cysteine was examined. In the case of wild-type enzyme these reactions are described by the same kinetic scheme where binding of holoenzyme with an amino acid, leading to reversible formation of an external aldimine, proceeds very fast, while following transformations, leading finally to reversible formation of a quinonoid intermediate proceed with measureable rates. Principally the same scheme (“induced fit”) is realized in the case of mutant Y72F enzyme reaction with OIA. For the reaction of mutant enzyme with l-Trp at lower concentrations of the latter a principally different kinetic scheme is observed. This scheme suggests that binding of the substrate and formation of the quinonoid intermediate are at fast equilibrium, while preceding conformational changes of the holoenzyme proceed with measureable rates (“selected fit”). For the reaction with S-ethyl-l-cysteine the observed concentration dependence of kobs agrees with the realization of both kinetic schemes, the “selected fit” becoming predominant at lower concentrations of substrate, the “induced fit”— at higher ones. In the reaction with S-ethyl-l-cysteine the formation of the quinonoid intermediate proceeds slower than does catalytic α,β-elimination of ethylthiol from S-ethyl-l-cysteine, and consequently does not play a considerable role in the catalysis, which may be effected by a concerted E2 mechanism.  相似文献   

7.
5-Aminolevulinate (ALA), an essential metabolite in all heme-synthesizing organisms, results from the pyridoxal 5′-phosphate (PLP)-dependent enzymatic condensation of glycine with succinyl-CoA in non-plant eukaryotes and α-proteobacteria. The predicted chemical mechanism of this ALA synthase (ALAS)-catalyzed reaction includes a short-lived glycine quinonoid intermediate and an unstable 2-amino-3-ketoadipate intermediate. Using liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry to analyze the products from the reaction of murine erythroid ALAS (mALAS2) with O-methylglycine and succinyl-CoA, we directly identified the chemical nature of the inherently unstable 2-amino-3-ketoadipate intermediate, which predicates the glycine quinonoid species as its precursor. With stopped-flow absorption spectroscopy, we detected and confirmed the formation of the quinonoid intermediate upon reacting glycine with ALAS. Significantly, in the absence of the succinyl-CoA substrate, the external aldimine predominates over the glycine quinonoid intermediate. When instead of glycine, l-serine was reacted with ALAS, a lag phase was observed in the progress curve for the l-serine external aldimine formation, indicating a hysteretic behavior in ALAS. Hysteresis was not detected in the T148A-catalyzed l-serine external aldimine formation. These results with T148A, a mALAS2 variant, which, in contrast to wild-type mALAS2, is active with l-serine, suggest that active site Thr-148 modulates ALAS strict amino acid substrate specificity. The rate of ALA release is also controlled by a hysteretic kinetic mechanism (observed as a lag in the ALA external aldimine formation progress curve), consistent with conformational changes governing the dissociation of ALA from ALAS.  相似文献   

8.
R S Phillips 《Biochemistry》1991,30(24):5927-5934
The effects of indole and analogues on the reaction of Escherichia coli tryptophan indole-lyase (tryptophanase) with amino acid substrates and quasisubstrates have been studied by rapid-scanning and single-wavelength stopped-flow spectrophotometry. Indole binds rapidly (within the dead time of the stopped-flow instrument) to both the external aldimine and quinonoid complexes with L-alanine, and the absorbance of the quinonoid intermediate decreases in a subsequent slow relaxation. Indoline binds preferentially to the external aldimine complex with L-alanine, while benzimidazole binds selectively to the quinonoid complex of L-alanine. Indole and indoline do not significantly affect the spectrum of the quinonoid intermediates formed in the reaction of the enzyme with S-alkyl-L-cysteines, but benzimidazole causes a rapid decrease in the quinonoid peak at 512 nm and the appearance of a new peak at 345 nm. Benzimidazole also causes a rapid decrease in the quinonoid peak at 505 nm formed in the reaction with L-tryptophan and the appearance of a new absorbance peak at 345 nm. Furthermore, addition of benzimidazole to solutions of enzyme, potassium pyruvate, and ammonium chloride results in the formation of a similar absorption peak at 340 nm. This complex reacts rapidly with indole to form a quinonoid intermediate very similar to that formed from L-tryptophan. This new intermediate is formed faster than catalytic turnover (kcat = 6.8 s-1) and may be an alpha-aminoacrylate intermediate bound as a gem-diamine.  相似文献   

9.
Tyrosine phenol-lyase (TPL) and tryptophan indole-lyase (Trpase) catalyse the reversible hydrolytic cleavage of L-tyrosine or L-tryptophan to phenol or indole, respectively, and ammonium pyruvate. These enzymes are very similar in sequence and structure, but show strict specificity for their respective physiological substrates. We have mutated the active site residues of TPL (Thr(124), Arg(381), and Phe(448)) to those of Trpase and evaluated the effects of the mutations. Tyr(71) in Citrobacter freundii TPL, and Tyr(74) in E. coli Trpase, are essential for activity with both substrates. Mutation of Arg(381) of TPL to Ala, Ile, or Val (the corresponding residues in the active site of Trpase) results in a dramatic decrease in L-Tyr beta-elimination activity, with little effect on the activity of other substrates. Arg(381) may be the catalytic base with pK(a) of 8 seen in pH-dependent kinetic studies. T124D TPL has no measureable activity with L-Tyr or 3-F-L-Tyr as substrate, despite having high activity with SOPC. T124A TPL has very low but detectable activity, which is about 500-fold less than wild-type TPL, with L-Tyr and 3-F-L-Tyr. F448H TPL also has very low activity with L-Tyr. None of the mutant TPLs has any detectable activity with L-Trp as substrate. H463F Trpase also exhibits low activity with L-Trp, but retains high activity with other substrates. Thus, additional residues remote from the active site may be needed for substrate specificity. Both Trpase and TPL may react by a rare S(E)2-type mechanism.  相似文献   

10.
Asn185 is an invariant residue in all known sequences of TPL and of closely related tryptophanase and it may be aligned with the Asn194 in aspartate aminotransferase. According to X-ray data, in the holoenzyme and in the Michaelis complex Asn185 does not interact with the cofactor pyridoxal 5'-phosphate, but in the external aldimine a conformational change occurs which is accompanied by formation of a hydrogen bond between Asn185 and the oxygen atom in position 3 of the cofactor. The substitution of Asn185 in TPL by alanine results in a mutant N185A TPL of moderate residual activity (2%) with respect to adequate substrates, L-tyrosine and 3-fluoro-L-tyrosine. The affinities of the mutant enzyme for various amino acid substrates and inhibitors, studied by both steady-state and rapid kinetic techniques, were lower than for the wild-type TPL. This effect mainly results from destabilization of the quinonoid intermediate, and it is therefore concluded that the hydrogen bond between Asn185 and the oxygen at the C-3 position of the cofactor is maintained in the quinonoid intermediate. The relative destabilization of the quinonoid intermediate and external aldimine leads to the formation of large amounts of gem-diamine in reactions of N185A TPL with 3-fluoro-L-tyrosine and L-phenylalanine. For the reaction with 3-fluoro-L-tyrosine it was first possible to determine kinetic parameters of gem-diamine formation by the stopped-flow method. For the reactions of N185A TPL with substrates bearing good leaving groups the observed values of k(cat) could be accounted for by taking into consideration two effects: the decrease in the quinonoid content under steady-state conditions and the increase in the quinonoid reactivity in a beta-elimination reaction. Both effects are due to destabilization of the quinonoid and they counterbalance each other. Multiple kinetic isotope effect studies on the reactions of N185A TPL with suitable substrates, L-tyrosine and 3-fluoro-L-tyrosine, show that the principal mechanism of catalysis, suggested previously for the wild-type enzyme, does not change. In the framework of this mechanism the observed considerable decrease in k(cat) values for reactions of N185A TPL with L-tyrosine and 3-fluoro-L-tyrosine may be ascribed to participation of Asn185 in additional stabilization of the keto quinonoid intermediate.  相似文献   

11.
Serine palmitoyltransferase (SPT) is a key enzyme of sphingolipid biosynthesis and catalyzes the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP)-dependent decarboxylative condensation reaction of l-serine with palmitoyl-CoA to generate 3-ketodihydrosphingosine. The binding of l-serine alone to SPT leads to the formation of the external aldimine but does not produce a detectable amount of the quinonoid intermediate. However, the further addition of S-(2-oxoheptadecyl)-CoA, a nonreactive analogue of palmitoyl-CoA, caused the apparent accumulation of the quinonoid. NMR studies showed that the hydrogen-deuterium exchange at Calpha of l-serine is very slow in the SPT-l-serine external aldimine complex, but the rate is 100-fold increased by the addition of S-(2-oxoheptadecyl)-CoA, showing a remarkable substrate synergism in SPT. In addition, the observation that the nonreactive palmitoyl-CoA facilitated alpha-deprotonation indicates that the alpha-deprotonation takes place before the Claisen-type C-C bond formation, which is consistent with the accepted mechanism of the alpha-oxamine synthase subfamily enzymes. Structural modeling of both the SPT-l-serine external aldimine complex and SPT-l-serine-palmitoyl-CoA ternary complex suggests a mechanism in which the binding of palmitoyl-CoA to SPT induced a conformation change in the PLP-l-serine external aldimine so that the Calpha-H bond of l-serine becomes perpendicular to the plane of the PLP-pyridine ring and is favorable for the alpha-deprotonation. The model also proposed that the two alternative hydrogen bonding interactions of His(159) with l-serine and palmitoyl-CoA play an important role in the conformational change of the external aldimine. This is the unique mechanism of SPT that prevents the formation of the reactive intermediate before the binding of the second substrate.  相似文献   

12.
The three-dimensional structures of rabbit and human liver cytosolic serine hydroxymethyltransferase revealed that H231 interacts with the O3' of pyridoxal-5'-phosphate and other residues at the active site such as S203, K257, H357 and R402 (numbering as per the human enzyme). This and the conserved nature of H231 in all serine hydroxymethyltransferases highlights its importance in catalysis and/or maintenance of oligomeric structure of the enzyme. In an attempt to decipher the role of H230 (H231 of the human enzyme) in the catalytic mechanism and/or maintenance of oligomeric structure of sheep liver serine hydroxymethyltransferase, the residue was mutated to arginine, phenylalanine, alanine, asparagine or tyrosine. Our results suggest that the nature of the amino acid substitution has a marked effect on the catalytic activity of the enzyme. H230R and H230F mutant proteins were completely inactive, dimeric and did not bind pyridoxal-5'-phosphate. On the other hand, mutation to alanine and asparagine retained the oligomeric structure and ability to bind pyridoxal-5'-phosphate. These mutants had only 2-3% catalytic activity. The side reactions like transamination and 5,6,7, 8-tetrahydrofolate independent aldol cleavage were much more severely affected. They were able to form the external aldimine with glycine and serine but the quinonoid intermediate was not observed upon the addition of 5,6,7,8-tetrahydrofolate. Mutation to tyrosine did not affect the oligomeric structure and pyridoxal-5'-phosphate binding. The H230Y enzyme was 10% active and showed a correspondingly lower amount of quinonoid intermediate. The kcat / Km values for L-serine and Lallothreonine were 10-fold and 174-fold less for this mutant enzyme compared to the wild-type protein. These results suggest that H230 is involved in the step prior to the formation of the quinonoid intermediate, possibly in orienting the pyridine ring of the cofactor, in order to facilitate effective proton abstraction.  相似文献   

13.
Phillips RS  Chen HY  Faleev NG 《Biochemistry》2006,45(31):9575-9583
Tyrosine phenol-lyase (TPL) from Citrobacter freundii is a pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP)-dependent enzyme that catalyzes the reversible hydrolytic cleavage of l-Tyr to give phenol and ammonium pyruvate. The proposed reaction mechanism for TPL involves formation of an external aldimine of the substrate, followed by deprotonation of the alpha-carbon to give a quinonoid intermediate. Elimination of phenol then has been proposed to give an alpha-aminoacrylate Schiff base, which releases iminopyruvate that ultimately undergoes hydrolysis to yield ammonium pyruvate. Previous stopped-flow kinetic experiments have provided direct spectroscopic evidence for the formation of the external aldimine and quinonoid intermediates in the reactions of substrates and inhibitors; however, the predicted alpha-aminoacrylate intermediate has not been previously observed. We have found that 4-hydroxypyridine, a non-nucleophilic analogue of phenol, selectively binds and stabilizes aminoacrylate intermediates in reactions of TPL with S-alkyl-l-cysteines, l-tyrosine, and 3-fluoro-l-tyrosine. In the presence of 4-hydroxypyridine, a new absorption band at 338 nm, assigned to the alpha-aminoacrylate, is observed with these substrates. Formation of the 338 nm peaks is concomitant with the decay of the quinonoid intermediates, with good isosbestic points at approximately 365 nm. The value of the rate constant for aminoacrylate formation is similar to k(cat), suggesting that leaving group elimination is at least partially rate limiting in TPL reactions. In the reaction of S-ethyl-l-cysteine in the presence of 4-hydroxypyridine, a subsequent slow reaction of the alpha-aminoacrylate is observed, which may be due to iminopyruvate formation. Both l-tyrosine and 3-fluoro-l-tyrosine exhibit kinetic isotope effects of approximately 2-3 on alpha-aminoacrylate formation when the alpha-(2)H-labeled substrates are used, consistent with the previously reported internal return of the alpha-proton to the phenol product. These results are the first direct spectroscopic observation of alpha-aminoacrylate intermediates in the reactions of TPL.  相似文献   

14.
Tryptophanase from Escherichia coli was oriented in a compressed slab of polyacrylamide gel and its linear dichroism (LD) and absorption spectra have been measured. The free enzyme displays four LD bands at 305, 340, 425 and 490 nm. Two bands at 340 and 425 nm belong to the internal coenzyme-lysine aldimine. The 305-nm band apparently belongs to an aromatic amino acid residue. The 490-nm band disappears after treatment with NaBH4 or after incubation with L-alanine and subsequent dialysis. It is suggested that the 490-nm band belongs to a quinonoid enzyme subform. The reaction of tryptophanase with threo-3-phenyl-DL-serine, L-threonine and D-alanine leads to formation of an external aldimine with an intense absorption band at 420-425 nm. The values of reduced LD (delta A/A) in this band strongly differ from that in the 420-nm band of the free enzyme. The LD value of the complex with D-alanine is intermediate between those of the free enzyme and the complex with 3-phenylserine. In the presence of indole the complex with D-alanine displays the same LD as that observed with 3-phenylserine. The reaction of tryptophanase with L-alanine or oxindolyl-L-alanine leads to formation of a quinonoid intermediate with an absorption band near 500 nm. The LD value in this band is close to that of an external aldimine with L-threonine. It is concluded that reorientations of the coenzyme occur in the course of the tryptophanase reaction.  相似文献   

15.
Biotin is an essential enzyme cofactor required for carboxylation and transcarboxylation reactions. The absence of the biotin biosynthesis pathway in humans suggests that it can be an attractive target for the development of novel drugs against a number of pathogens. 7-Keto-8-aminopelargonic acid (KAPA) synthase (EC 2.3.1.47), the enzyme catalyzing the first committed step in the biotin biosynthesis pathway, is believed to exhibit high substrate stereospecificity. A comparative kinetic characterization of the interaction of the mycobacterium tuberculosis KAPA synthase with both L- AND D-alanine was carried out to investigate the basis of the substrate stereospecificity exhibited by the enzyme. The formation of the external aldimine with D-alanine (k = 82.63 m(-1) s(-1)) is approximately 5 times slower than that with L-alanine (k = 399.4 m(-1) s(-1)). In addition to formation of the external aldimine, formation of substrate quinonoid was also observed upon addition of pimeloyl-CoA to the preformed d-alanine external aldimine complex. However, the formation of this intermediate was extremely slow compared with the substrate quinonoid with L-alanine and pimeloyl-CoA (k = 16.9 x 10(4) m(-1) s(-1)). Contrary to earlier reports, these results clearly show that D-alanine is not a competitive inhibitor but a substrate for the enzyme and thereby demonstrate the broad substrate stereospecificity of the M. tuberculosis KAPA synthase. Further, d-KAPA, the product of the reaction utilizing D-alanine inhibits both KAPA synthase (Ki = 114.83 microm) as well as 7,8-diaminopelargonic acid synthase (IC50 = 43.9 microm), the next enzyme of the pathway.  相似文献   

16.
5-Aminolevulinate synthase (ALAS), a pyridoxal 5'-phosphate-dependent enzyme, catalyzes the first, and regulatory, step of the heme biosynthetic pathway in nonplant eukaryotes and some bacteria. 5-Aminolevulinate synthase is a dimeric protein having an ordered kinetic mechanism with glycine binding before succinyl-CoA and with aminolevulinate release after CoA and carbon dioxide. Rapid scanning stopped-flow absorption spectrophotometry in conjunction with multiple turnover chemical quenched-flow kinetic analyses and a newly developed CoA detection method were used to examine the ALAS catalytic reaction and identify the rate-determining step. The reaction of glycine with ALAS follows a three-step kinetic process, ascribed to the formation of the Michaelis complex and the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate-glycine aldimine, followed by the abstraction of the glycine pro-R proton from the external aldimine. Significantly, the rate associated with this third step (k(3) = 0.002 s(-1)) is consistent with the rate determined for the ALAS-catalyzed removal of tritium from [2-(3)H(2)]glycine. Succinyl-CoA and acetoacetyl-CoA increased the rate of glycine proton removal approximately 250,000- and 10-fold, respectively, supporting our previous proposal that the physiological substrate, succinyl-CoA, promotes a protein conformational change, which accelerates the conversion of the external aldimine into the initial quinonoid intermediate (Hunter, G. A., and Ferreira, G. C. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 12222-12228). Rapid scanning stopped-flow and quenched-flow kinetic analyses of the ALAS reaction under single turnover conditions lend evidence for two quinonoid reaction intermediates and a model of the ALAS kinetic mechanism in which product release is at least the partially rate-limiting step. Finally, the carbonyl and carboxylate groups of 5-aminolevulinate play a major protein-interacting role by inducing a conformational change in ALAS and, thus, possibly modulating product release.  相似文献   

17.
The bacterial tryptophan synthase alpha(2)beta(2) complex catalyzes the final reactions in the biosynthesis of L-tryptophan. Indole is produced at the active site of the alpha-subunit and is transferred through a 25-30 A tunnel to the beta-active site, where it reacts with an aminoacrylate intermediate. Lane and Kirschner proposed a two-step nucleophilic addition-tautomerization mechanism for the reaction of indole with the aminoacrylate intermediate, based on the absence of an observed kinetic isotope effect (KIE) when 3-[(2)H]indole reacts with the aminoacrylate intermediate. We have now observed a KIE of 1.4-2.0 in the reaction of 3-[(2)H]indole with the aminoacrylate intermediate in the presence of monovalent cations, but not when an alpha-subunit ligand, disodium alpha-glycerophosphate (Na(2)GP), is present. Rapid-scanning stopped flow kinetic studies were performed of the reaction of indole and 3-[(2)H]indole with tryptophan synthase preincubated with L-serine, following the decay of the aminoacrylate intermediate at 350 nm, the formation of the quinonoid intermediate at 476 nm, and the formation of the L-Trp external aldimine at 423 nm. The addition of Na(2)GP dramatically slows the rate of reaction of indole with the alpha-aminoacrylate intermediate. A primary KIE is not observed in the reaction of 3-[(2)H]indole with the aminoacrylate complex of tryptophan synthase in the presence of Na(2)GP, suggesting binding of indole with tryptophan synthase is rate limiting under these conditions. The reaction of 2-methylindole does not show a KIE, either in the presence of Na(+) or Na(2)GP. These results support the previously proposed mechanism for the beta-reaction of tryptophan synthase, but suggest that the rate limiting step in quinonoid intermediate formation from indole and the aminoacrylate intermediate is deprotonation.  相似文献   

18.
Lys-258 of aspartate aminotransferase forms a Schiff base with pyridoxal phosphate and is responsible for catalysis of the 1,3-prototropic shift central to the transamination reaction sequence. Substitution of arginine for Lys-258 stabilizes the otherwise elusive quinonoid intermediate, as assessed by the long wavelength absorption bands observed in the reactions of this mutant with several amino acid substrates. The external aldimine intermediate is not detectable during reactions of this mutant with amino acids, although the inhibitor alpha-methylaspartate does slowly and stably form this species. These results suggest that external aldimine formation is one of the rate-determining steps of the reaction. The pyridoxamine-5'-phosphate-like enzyme form (330-nm absorption maximum) is unreactive toward keto acid substrates, and the coenzyme bound to this species is not dissociable from the protein.  相似文献   

19.
K Shostak  V Schirch 《Biochemistry》1988,27(21):8007-8014
The reaction specificity and stereochemical control of Escherichia coli serine hydroxymethyltransferase were investigated with D- and L-alanine as substrates. An active-site H228N mutant enzyme binds both D- and L-alanine with Kd values of 5 mM as compared to 30 and 10 mM, respectively, for the wild-type enzyme. Both wild-type and H228N enzymes form quinonoid complexes absorbing at 505 nm by catalyzing the loss of the alpha-proton from both D- and L-alanine. Racemization and transamination reactions were observed to occur with both alanine isomers as substrates. The relative rates of these reactions are quinonoid formation greater than alpha-proton solvent exchange greater than racemization greater than transamination. The observation that the rate of quinonoid formation with either alanine isomer is an order of magnitude faster than solvent exchange suggests that the alpha-protons from both D- and L-alanine are transferred to base(s) on the enzyme. The rate of racemization is 2 orders of magnitude slower than the formation of the quinonoid complexes. This latter difference in rate suggests that the quinonoid complexes formed from D- and L-alanine are not identical. The difference in structure of the two quinonoid complexes is proposed to be the active-site location of the alpha-protons lost from the two alanine isomers, rather than two orientations of the pyridoxal phosphate ring. The results are consistent with a two-base mechanism for racemization.  相似文献   

20.
K F Houben  W Kadima  M Roy  M F Dunn 《Biochemistry》1989,28(10):4140-4147
Substrate analogues of L-serine have been found that react with the alpha 2 beta 2 complex of Escherichia coli tryptophan synthase. Upon reaction with alpha 2 beta 2, the analogues glycine, L-histidine, L-alanine, and D-histidine form chemical intermediates derived from reaction with enzyme-bound pyridoxal 5'-phosphate with characteristic UV-visible spectral bands. The spectra of the products of the glycine, L-histidine, and L-alanine reactions with alpha 2 beta 2 contain contributions from the external aldimine, the quinonoid species, and other intermediates along the catalytic pathway. Just as previously reported for the reaction of L-serine with beta 2 [Goldberg, M. E., York, S., & Stryer, L. (1968) Biochemistry 7, 3662-3667], the reactions of glycine, L-histidine, and L-alanine with the beta 2 form of tryptophan synthase yield spectra with no contributions from catalytic intermediates beyond the external aldimine. The kinetics of intermediate formation and comparisons of the time courses for the exchange of alpha-1H for solvent 2H catalyzed by alpha 2 beta 2 or beta 2 were found to be consistent with these assignments. Intermediates further along the tryptophan synthase catalytic pathway are stabilized to a greater degree in the alpha 2 beta 2 complex than in the beta 2 species alone. This observation strongly suggests that the association of alpha and beta subunits to form the native alpha 2 beta 2 species lowers the activation energies for the interconversion of the external aldimine with chemical species further along the catalytic path.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号