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1.
Site-directed mutagenesis has been used to change three amino acid residues involved in the binding of inhibitors (Asn67Ile; Gln92Val and Leu204Ser) within the active site of human carbonic anhydrase (CA, EC 4.2.1.1) II (hCA II). Residues 67, 92 and 204 were changed from hydrophobic to hydrophilic ones, and vice versa. The Asn67Ile and Leu204Ser mutants showed similar k(cat)/K(M) values compared to the wild type (wt) enzyme, whereas the Gln92Val mutant was around 30% less active as a catalyst for CO(2) hydration to bicarbonate compared to the wt protein. Affinity for sulfonamides/sulfamates was decreased in all three mutants compared to wt hCA II. The effect was stronger for the Asn67Ile mutant (the closest residue to the zinc ion), followed by the Gln92Val mutant (residue situated in the middle of the active site) and weakest for the Leu204Ser mutant, an amino acid situated far away from the catalytic metal ion, at the entrance of the cavity. This study shows that small perturbations within the active site architecture have influences on the catalytic efficiency but dramatically change affinity for inhibitors among the CA enzymes, especially when the mutated amino acid residues are nearby the catalytic metal ion.  相似文献   

2.
3.
Acipimox, a nicotinic acid derivative in clinical use for the treatment of hyperlipidaemia, incorporates a free carboxylic acid and an N-oxide moiety, functionalities known to interact with the metalloenzyme carbonic anhydrase (CA, EC 4.2.1.1) and inhibit its activity. Herein we report that acipimox acts as a low micromolar CA inhibitor (CAI) against most human (h) isoforms possessing catalytic activity, hCA I – XIV. By using computational techniques (docking and molecular dynamics simulations), we propose that acipimox coordinates through its carboxylate group to the zinc ion from the enzyme active site cavity, whereas the N-oxide group is hydrogen-bonded to the proton shuttle His residue in some isoforms (hCA I) or to active site Thr or Gln residues in other isoforms (hCA II, III, IV, VII, etc). As some CA isoforms are involved in lipogenesis, these data may be useful for the design of more effective CAIs with antiobesity activity.  相似文献   

4.
Carnitine palmitoyltransferase (CPT) I catalyzes the conversion of long-chain fatty acyl-CoAs to acyl carnitines in the presence of l-carnitine, a rate-limiting step in the transport of long-chain fatty acids from the cytoplasm to the mitochondrial matrix. To determine the role of the 15 cysteine residues in the heart/skeletal muscle isoform of CPTI (M-CPTI) on catalytic activity and malonyl-CoA sensitivity, we constructed a 6-residue N-terminal, a 9-residue C-terminal, and a 15-residue cysteineless M-CPTI by cysteine-scanning mutagenesis. Both the 9-residue C-terminal mutant enzyme and the complete 15-residue cysteineless mutant enzyme are inactive but that the 6-residue N-terminal cysteineless mutant enzyme had activity and malonyl-CoA sensitivity similar to those of wild-type M-CPTI. Mutation of each of the 9 C-terminal cysteines to alanine or serine identified a single residue, Cys-305, to be important for catalysis. Substitution of Cys-305 with Ala in the wild-type enzyme inactivated M-CPTI, and a single change of Ala-305 to Cys in the 9-residue C-terminal cysteineless mutant resulted in an 8-residue C-terminal cysteineless mutant enzyme that had activity and malonyl-CoA sensitivity similar to those of the wild type, suggesting that Cys-305 is the residue involved in catalysis. Sequence alignments of CPTI with the acyltransferase family of enzymes in the GenBank led to the identification of a putative catalytic triad in CPTI consisting of residues Cys-305, Asp-454, and His-473. Based on the mutagenesis and substrate labeling studies, we propose a mechanism for the acyltransferase activity of CPTI that uses a catalytic triad composed of Cys-305, His-473, and Asp-454 with Cys-305 serving as a probable nucleophile, thus acting as a site for covalent attachment of the acyl molecule and formation of a stable acyl-enzyme intermediate. This would in turn allow carnitine to act as a second nucleophile and complete the acyl transfer reaction.  相似文献   

5.
BackgroundLaccase is one member of the blue multicopper oxidase family. It can catalyze the oxidation of various substrates. The Thermus thermophilus SG0.5JP17-16 laccase (lacTT) is thermostable, pH-stable, and high tolerance to halides, and can decolorize the synthetic dyes. In lacTT, the function of the loop 6 constructing the substrate-binding pocket wasn't clear.MethodsThe residues Asp394 and Asp396 located in loop 6, and were used to probe how the loop 6 influenced catalytic properties of the laccase. Site-directed mutagenesis was performed for two amino acids. Kinetic assay was utilized to characterize the catalytic efficiency of mutants. Mutants with different catalytic activities were used to decolorize the synthetic dyes to clarify the relationship between the catalytic efficiency and dye decolorization. Redox potential, structural and spectral analyses were performed to explain the differences in laccase activity between wild type and mutant enzymes.ResultsD394M, D394E and D394R mutants with the lower laccase activity displayed a decreased decolorization efficiency, while D396A, D396M and D396E mutant enzymes with higher catalytic efficiency decolorized the synthetic dye more efficiently than the wild type enzyme.ConclusionsThe pocket loop 6 might experience a conformational dynamics. The D394 residue controlled this conformation change by amino acid interaction networks containing the D396 residue at the entrance of substrate channel.General significancesThese studies may provide clues to improve the activity of the laccase for the better use in industrial applications, and/or contribute to further understanding the mechanism of laccase oxidation on the substrate.  相似文献   

6.
Mutation of amino acid residues 94, 96 and 119 to histidine(s) in the human carbonic anhydrase (CA, EC 4.2.1.1) related proteins CARP VIII, X and XI restored the zinc binding and catalytic activity for the hydration of CO2 to bicarbonate. CA VIII, X and XI thus obtained showed high catalytic activity (67.3–92.0% of the activity of hCA II and much higher compared to hCA I) and were inhibited in the milli-micromolar range by inorganic anions, sulfamide, sulfamic acid, phenylboronic acid and phenylarsonic acid. Among the three new isoforms, hCA X was the most efficient enzyme and also showed the highest affinity for anion inhibitors (KIs of 3.6–68 μM for phenylboronic acid, sufamic acid, sulfamide, cyanide and azide). hCA VIII was poorly inhibited by halides, cyanate, nitrate and sulfate (KIs of 38.4–65.4 mM), whereas CA XI had a behavior intermediate between that of hCA VIII and X, both regarding the catalytic activity and sensitivity to anion inhibitors.  相似文献   

7.
Thirteen novel sulfonamide derivatives incorporating the quinazoline scaffold were synthesized by simple, eco-friendly procedures. These compounds were tested for their ability to inhibit the α-carbonic anhydrases (CA, EC 4.2.1.1) from Vibrio cholerae (VchCA) as well as the human α-CA isoforms, hCA I and hCA II. Nine compounds were highly effective, nanomolar inhibitors of the pathogenic enzyme VchCA. Three of them were also highly effective sub-nanomolar inhibitors of the cytosolic isoform II. The best VchCA inhibitor had a KI of 2.7 nM. Many of these developed compounds showed high selectivity for inhibition of the bacterial over the mammalian CA isoforms, with one compound possessing selectivity ratios as high as 97.9 against hCA I and 9.7 against hCA II. Compound 9d was another highly effective VchCA inhibitor presenting a selectivity ratio of 99.1 and 8.1 against hCA I and hCA II, respectively. These results suggest that sulfonamides with quinazoline backbone could be considered suitable tools to better understand the role of bacterial CAs in pathogenesis.  相似文献   

8.
A mutant form of Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamoylase (ATCase) which lacks catalytic activity has been purified and characterized (Wall, K.A., Flatgaard, J.E., Gibbons, I., and Schachman, H.K. (1979) J. Biol. Chem 254, 11910-11916). Peptide mapping of the mutant and wild type catalytic chains followed by the determination of the amino acid sequence of the one altered peptide in the mutant indicated that a glycyl residue was replaced by aspartic acid. This substitution is located at position 125 in the tentative sequence kindly provided by W. Konigsberg (personal communication). The mutant protein has an overall secondary structure similar to that of the wild type as indicated by circular dichroism spectroscopy. However, marked changes in the reactivity of several amino acid residues were demonstrated. Lysyl residue 84 which in the wild type subunits reacts specifically with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate is only slightly reactive in the mutant even though the peptide containing that residue was not altered in amino acid composition. Another residue, cysteinyl 46, which is thought to be in the active site, is much more reactive toward p-hydroxymercuribenzoate in the mutant subunit than in the wild type protein. Finally, tyrosyl residue 213, which according to recent crystallographic studies is not near the active site and which exhibits an unusually low pK (9.1) in the wild type catalytic subunits, appears to have its pK shifted to 10.5 or higher as a result of the mutation. The evidence indicates that the substitution of an aspartyl for a glycyl residue at a region of the amino acid sequence remote from those residues in the active site causes sufficient modification of the tertiary structure to cause the loss of enzyme activity and to affect the reactivity of other residues in the protein. Moreover, the quaternary structure of the intact enzyme is altered as well since the subunit interactions are greatly weakened.  相似文献   

9.
An invariant histidine residue, His-365 in Escherichia coli DNA topoisomerase I, is located at the active site of type IA DNA topoisomerases and near the active site tyrosine. Its ability to participate in the multistep catalytic process of DNA relaxation was investigated. His-365 was mutated to alanine, arginine, asparagine, aspartate, glutamate, and glutamine to study its ability to participate in general acid/base catalysis and bind DNA. The mutants were examined for pH-dependent DNA relaxation and cleavage, salt-dependent DNA relaxation, and salt-dependent DNA binding affinity. The mutants relax DNA in a pH-dependent manner and at low salt concentrations. The pH dependence of all mutants is different from the wild type, suggesting that His-365 is responsible for the pH dependence of the enzyme. Additionally, whereas the wild type enzyme shows pH-dependent oligonucleotide cleavage, cleavage by both H365Q and H365A is pH-independent. H365Q cleaves DNA with rates similar to the wild type enzyme, whereas H365A has a slower rate of DNA cleavage than the wild type but can cleave more substrate overall. H365A also has a lower DNA binding affinity than the wild type enzyme. The binding affinity was determined at different salt concentrations, showing that the alanine mutant displaces half a charge less upon binding DNA than an inactive form of topoisomerase I. These observations indicate that His-365 participates in DNA binding and is responsible for optimal catalysis at physiological pH.  相似文献   

10.
Among highly conserved residues in eucaryotic mitochondrial malate dehydrogenases are those with roles in maintaining the interactions between identical monomeric subunits that form the dimeric enzymes. The contributions of two of these residues, Asp-43 and His-46, to structural stability and catalytic function were investigated by construction of mutant enzymes containing Asn-43 and Leu-46 substitutions using in vitro mutagenesis of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae gene (MDH1) encoding mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase. The mutant enzymes were expressed in and purified from a yeast strain containing a disruption of the chromosomal MDH1 locus. The enzyme containing the H46L substitution, as compared to the wild type enzyme, exhibits a dramatic shift in the pH profile for catalysis toward an optimum at low pH values. This shift corresponds with an increased stability of the dimeric form of the mutant enzyme, suggesting that His-46 may be the residue responsible for the previously described pH-dependent dissociation of mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase. The D43N substitution results in a mutant enzyme that is essentially inactive in in vitro assays and that tends to aggregate at pH 7.5, the optimal pH for catalysis for the dimeric wild type enzyme.  相似文献   

11.
Eleven amino acid substitutions at Val-121 of human carbonic anhydrase II including Gly, Ala, Ser, Leu, Ile, Lys, and Arg, were constructed by site-directed mutagenesis. This residue is at the mouth of the hydrophobic pocket in the enzyme active site. The CO2 hydrase activity and the p-nitrophenyl esterase activity of these CAII variants correlate with the hydrophobicity of the residue, suggesting that the hydrophobic character of this residue is important for catalysis. The effects of these mutations on the steady-state kinetics for CO2 hydration occur mainly in kcat/Km and Km, consistent with involvement of this residue in CO2 association. The Val-121----Ala mutant, which exhibits about one-third normal CO2 hydrase activity, has been studied by x-ray crystallographic methods. No significant changes in the mutant enzyme conformation are evident relative to the wild-type enzyme. Since Val-121 is at the mouth of the hydrophobic pocket, its substitution by the methyl side chain of alanine makes the pocket mouth significantly wider than that of the wild-type enzyme. Hence, although a moderately wide (and deep) pocket is important for substrate association, a wider mouth to this pocket does not seriously compromise the catalytic approach of CO2 toward nucleophilic zinc-bound hydroxide.  相似文献   

12.
Carbonic anhydrases (CA) catalyze activated ester hydrolysis in addition to the hydration of CO2 to bicarbonate. They also show phosphatase activity with 4-nitrophenyl phosphate as substrate but not sulfatase with the corresponding sulfate. Here we prove that the enzyme is catalyzing the synthesis of cyclic diols from sulfate esters. 5-, 6- and 8-membered ring cyclic sulfates incorporating a neighboring secondary alcohol moiety were treated with CA II and yielded the corresponding cyclic diols. Inhibitory properties of obtained cyclic and original sulfate esters were then investigated on human carbonic anhydrase I (hCA I), hCA II, hCA IV and hCA VI (h?=?human isoform). KI-s of these compounds ranged between 32.7–423 μM against hCA I, 2.13–32.4 μM against hCA II, 13.7–234 μM against hCA IV and 76–278 μM against CA VI, respectively. The sulfatase activity of CA with such esters is amazing considering the fact that 4-nitrophenyl-sulfate is not a substrate of these enzymes.  相似文献   

13.
Carnitine palmitoyltransferase I (CPTI) catalyzes the conversion of long chain fatty acyl-CoAs to acylcarnitines in the presence of l-carnitine. To determine the role of the conserved glutamate residue, Glu-603, on catalysis and malonyl-CoA sensitivity, we separately changed the residue to alanine, histidine, glutamine, and aspartate. Substitution of Glu-603 with alanine or histidine resulted in complete loss of L-CPTI activity. A change of Glu-603 to glutamine caused a significant decrease in catalytic activity and malonyl-CoA sensitivity. Substitution of Glu-603 with aspartate, a negatively charged amino acid with only one methyl group less than the glutamate residue in the wild type enzyme, resulted in partial loss in CPTI activity and a 15-fold decrease in malonyl-CoA sensitivity. The mutant L-CPTI with a replacement of the conserved Arg-601 or Arg-606 with alanine also showed over 40-fold decrease in malonyl-CoA sensitivity, suggesting that these two conserved residues may be important for substrate and inhibitor binding. Since a conservative substitution of Glu-603 to aspartate or glutamine resulted in partial loss of activity and malonyl-CoA sensitivity, it further suggests that the negative charge and the longer side chain of glutamate are essential for catalysis and malonyl-CoA sensitivity. We predict that this region of L-CPTI spanning these conserved C-terminal residues may be the region of the protein involved in binding the CoA moiety of palmitoyl-CoA and malonyl-CoA and/or the putative low affinity acyl-CoA/malonyl-CoA binding site.  相似文献   

14.
We have recently shown by deletion mutation analysis that the conserved first 18 N-terminal amino acid residues of rat liver carnitine palmitoyltransferase I (L-CPTI) are essential for malonyl-CoA inhibition and binding (Shi, J., Zhu, H., Arvidson, D. N. , Cregg, J. M., and Woldegiorgis, G. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 11033-11038). To identify specific residue(s) involved in malonyl-CoA binding and inhibition of L-CPTI, we constructed two more deletion mutants, Delta12 and Delta6, and three substitution mutations within the conserved first six amino acid residues. Mutant L-CPTI, lacking either the first six N-terminal amino acid residues or with a change of glutamic acid 3 to alanine, was expressed at steady-state levels similar to wild type and had near wild type catalytic activity. However, malonyl-CoA inhibition of these mutant enzymes was reduced 100-fold, and high affinity malonyl-CoA binding was lost. A mutant L-CPTI with a change of histidine 5 to alanine caused only partial loss of malonyl-CoA inhibition, whereas a mutant L-CPTI with a change of glutamine 6 to alanine had wild type properties. These results demonstrate that glutamic acid 3 and histidine 5 are necessary for malonyl-CoA binding and inhibition of L-CPTI by malonyl-CoA but are not required for catalysis.  相似文献   

15.
Pyroglutamyl-peptidase is able to specifically remove the amino-terminal pyroglutamyl residue protecting proteins or peptides from aminopeptidases. To clarify the mechanism of substrate recognition for the unique structure of the pyrrolidone ring, x-ray crystallography and site-directed mutagenesis were applied. The crystal structure of pyroglutamyl-peptidase bound to a transition state analog inhibitor (Inh), pyroglutaminal, was determined. Two hydrogen bonds were located between the main chain of the enzyme and the inhibitor (71:O.H-N:Inh and Gln71:N-H.OE:Inh), and the pyrrolidone ring of the inhibitor was inserted into the hydrophobic pocket composed of Phe-10, Phe-13, Thr-45, Ile-92, Phe-142, and Val-143. To study in detail the hydrophobic pocket, Phe-10, Phe-13, and Phe-142 were selected for mutation experiments. The k(cat) value of the F10Y mutant decreased, but the two phenylalanine mutants F13Y and F142Y did not exhibit significant changes in kinetic parameters compared with the wild-type enzyme. The catalytic efficiencies (k(cat)/K(m)) for the F13A and F142A mutants were less than 1000-fold that of the wild-type enzyme. The x-ray crystallographic study of the F142A mutant showed no significant change except for a minor one in the hydrophobic pocket compared with the wild type. These findings indicate that the molecular recognition of pyroglutamic acid is achieved through two hydrogen bonds and an insertion in the hydrophobic pocket. In the pocket, Phe-10 is more important to the hydrophobic interaction than is Phe-142, and furthermore Phe-13 serves as an "induced fit" mechanism.  相似文献   

16.
Previous studies indicate that the O-helix of Thermus aquaticus (Taq) DNA polymerase I (pol I) plays an important role in the replication fidelity of the enzyme. This study examines the role of Thr-664, which lies in the middle of the O-helix of Taq pol I. A mutant of Taq Pol I with a proline substitution of Thr-664 (T664P) exhibits much lower replication fidelity than the wild type enzyme in a forward mutation assay. T664P produces base substitution, single-base deletion, and single-base insertion errors at 20-, 5, and 50-fold higher rates than wild type, respectively. In specific activity and steady-state kinetic experiments, T664P was catalytically robust for insertion of correct nucleotides. In contrast, it incorporated incorrect nucleotides 6.1- to 10-fold more efficiently than wild type at a template dC. Mismatched primer termini were extended by T664P 4.2- to 9.5-fold more efficiently than wild type. These data imply that the O-helix with a proline at position 664 functions like wild type Taq pol I for correct nucleotide incorporations, but bends and enlarges the catalytic pocket of the enzyme and increases the rate of nucleotide misincorporation.  相似文献   

17.
It has been appreciated for many years that the luciferase from the luminous marine bacterium Vibrio harveyi has a highly reactive cysteinyl residue which is protected from alkylation by binding of flavin. Alkylation of the reactive thiol, which resides in a hydrophobic pocket, leads to inactivation of the enzyme. To determine conclusively whether the reactive thiol is required for the catalytic mechanism, we have constructed a mutant by oligonucleotide directed site-specific mutagenesis in which the reactive cysteinyl residue, which resides at position 106 of the α subunit, has been replaced with a seryl residue. The resulting α106Ser luciferase retains full activity in the bioluminescence reaction, although the mutant enzyme has a ca 100-fold increase in the FMNH2 dissociation constant. The α106Ser luciferase is still inactivated by N-ethylmaleimide, albeit at about 1/10 the rate of the wild-type (α106Cys) enzyme, demonstrating the existence of a second, less reactive, cysteinyl residue that was obscured in the wild-type enzyme by the highly reactive cysteinyl residue at position α106. An α106Ala variant luciferase was also active, but the α106Val mutant enzyme was about 50-fold less active than the wild type. All three variants (Ser, Ala and Val) appeared to have somewhat reduced affinities for the aldehyde substrate, the valine mutant being the most affected. It is interesting to note that the α106 mutant luciferases are much less subject to aldehyde substrate inhibition than is the wild-type V. harveyi luciferase, suggesting that the molecular mechanism of aldehyde substrate inhibition involves the Cys at α106.  相似文献   

18.
Escherichia coli phenylalanine aminotransferase (ecPheAT) catalyzes the biosynthesis of phenylalanine and tyrosine. The crystal structure of ecPheAT was determined in our previous study. The comparison of the 3-D structure of several aminotransferases revealed that the residue at position 297 plays an important role in enzyme function. Analysis of activities and kinetic parameters of wild type and mutant ecPheATs suggested that the residue Ser(297) was structurally selected for better catalytic efficiency. Computational modeling of ecPheAT mutants further suggested that Ser in position 297 could make ecPheAT easy with change of conformation from open form to closed form.  相似文献   

19.
Carbonic anhydrases (CAs) play an important function in various physiological and pathological processes. Therefore, many researchers work in this field in order to design and synthesize new drugs. Both inhibitors and activators of CAs, which are associated with the diagnosis and treatment of many diseases, are very important. The emergence of the use of CA activators in the treatment of Alzheimer has led many scholars to work on this issue. In this study, CA activators and inhibitors are determined. The crown ethers compounds ( 1 , 2 , 3 , 6 , 7 , 8 , and 9 ) were found to cause activation on enzyme activities of hCA I and II. The AC50 values on hCA I and II of the compounds are in the range of 4.6565–374.979 μM. The 4 (IC50; 1.301 and 3.215 μM for hCA I and II) and 5 (IC50; 73.96 and 378.5 μM for hCA I and II) compounds were found to cause inhibition on enzyme activities of hCA I and II.  相似文献   

20.
Ascorbate peroxidase from L. Major (LmAPX) is a functional hybrid between cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP) and ascorbate peroxidase (APX). We utilized point mutagenesis to investigate if a conserved proximal tryptophan residue (Trp208) among Class I peroxidase helps in controlling catalysis. The mutant W208F enzyme had no effect on both apparent dissociation constant of the enzyme-cytochrome c complex and K(m) value for cytochrome c indicating that cytochrome c binding affinity to the enzyme did not alter after mutation. Surprisingly, the mutant was 1000 times less active than the wild type in cytochrome c oxidation without affecting the second order rate constant of compound I formation. Our diode array stopped-flow spectral studies showed that the substrate unbound wild type enzyme reacts with H(2)O(2) to form compound I (compound II type spectrum), which was quite different from that of compound I in W208F mutant as well as horseradish peroxidase (HRP). The spectrum of the compound I in wild type LmAPX showed a red shift from 409 nm to 420 nm with equal intensity, which was broadly similar to those of known Trp radical. In case of compound I for W208F mutant, the peak in the Soret region was decreased in heme intensity at 409 nm and was not shifted to 420 nm suggesting this type of spectrum was similar to that of the known porphyrin pi-cation radical. In case of an enzyme-H(2)O(2)-ascorbate system, the kinetic for formation and decay of compound I and II of a mutant enzyme was almost identical to that of a wild type enzyme. Thus, the results of cytochrome c binding, compound I formation rate and activity assay suggested that Trp208 in LmAPX was essential for electron transfer from cytochrome c to heme ferryl but was not indispensable for ascorbate or guaiacol oxidation.  相似文献   

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