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 31 毫秒
1.
Substrate activation of yeast pyruvate decarboxylase has been studied extensively in the authors' laboratories providing strong evidence that interaction of substrate with residue C221 provides the trigger, and the information is then transmitted along the C221 to H92 to E91 to W412 to G413 pathway to the 4'-amino nitrogen of the thiamin diphosphate cofactor. Earlier, it was found that the C221S substitution reduced the Hill coefficient from 2.0 to 0.8-0.9, the C221A substitution to 1.0, even though C221 is located on the beta domain some 20 A from the active center thiamin diphosphate cofactor, which is at the interface of the alpha and gamma domains. Here are reported experiments on the C221D/C222A and C221E/C222A variants, in which a negative charge is built onto the C221 side chain, to better mimic the effect of a pyruvate molecule covalently bonded to C221 as a thiohemiketal. Both variants were purified to an optimal activity of 70% of the wild-type enzyme, higher activity than that with the earlier uncharged substitutions at this position. The Hill coefficient for both variants is exactly 1.0. The deuterium solvent kinetic isotope effects (SKIE) on k(cat) for these variants were similar to that for the wild-type enzyme and the C221A/C222A variant, suggesting that starting with the first irreversible step (decarboxylation) the rate-limiting transition states are very similar for all of these enzyme forms. In contrast, such SKIE on k(cat)/K(m) are quite different for the C221A/C222A variant (0.62) than for the C221E/C222A or C221D/C222A variants (0.80-0.82), clearly indicating the effect of the C221 substitutions on transition states starting with the binding of the first substrate to the enzyme and terminating with the decarboxylation step. The results provide strong additional evidence for the involvement of residue C221 in the substrate activation process and suggest that the C221D (C221E) substitution shifts the enzyme into a conformation that resembles the activated conformation. A comparison with SKIE for the wild-type enzyme provides insight to changes in hydrogen bonding at the active center as a result of substrate activation.  相似文献   

2.
Joseph E  Wei W  Tittmann K  Jordan F 《Biochemistry》2006,45(45):13517-13527
The X-ray crystal structure of pyruvamide-activated yeast pyruvate decarboxylase (YPDC) revealed a flexible loop spanning residues 290 to 304 on the beta-domain of the enzyme, not seen in the absence of pyruvamide, a substrate activator surrogate. Site-directed mutagenesis studies revealed that residues on the loop affect the activity, with some residues reducing k(cat)/K(m) by at least 1000-fold. In the pyruvamide-activated form, the loop located on the beta domain can transfer information to the active center thiamin diphosphate (ThDP) located at the interface of the alpha and gamma domains. The sigmoidal v(0)-[S] curve with wild-type YPDC attributed to substrate activation is modulated for most variants, but is not abolished. Pre-steady-state stopped-flow studies for product formation on these loop variants provided evidence for three enzyme conformations connected by two transitions, as already noted for the wild-type YPDC at pH 5.0 [Sergienko, E. A., and Jordan, F. (2002) Biochemistry 41, 3952-3967]. (1)H NMR analysis of the intermediate distribution resulting from acid quench [Tittmann et al. (2003) Biochemistry 42, 7885-7891] with all YPDC variants indicated that product release is rate limiting in the steady state. Apparently, the loop is not solely responsible for the substrate activation behavior, rather it may affect the behavior of residue C221 identified as the trigger for substrate activation. The most important function of the loop is to control the conformational equilibrium between the "open" and "closed" conformations of the enzyme identified in the pyruvamide-activated structure [Lu et al. (2000) Eur. J. Biochem. 267, 861-868].  相似文献   

3.
Earlier, it had been proposed in the laboratories at Halle that a cysteine residue is responsible for the hysteretic substrate activation behavior of yeast pyruvate decarboxylase. More recently, this idea has received support in a series of studies from Rutgers with the identification of residue C221 as the site where substrate is bound to transmit the information to H92, to E91, to W412, and finally to the active center thiamin diphosphate. According to steady-state kinetic assays, the C221A/C222A variant is no longer subject to substrate activation yet is still a well-functioning enzyme. Several further experiments are reported on this variant: (1) The variant exhibits lag phases in the product formation progress curves, which can be attributed to a unimolecular step in the pre-steady-state stage of catalysis. (2) The rate of exchange with solvent deuterium of the thiamin diphosphate C2H atom is slowed by a factor of 2 compared to the wild-type enzyme, suggesting that the reduced activity that results from the substitutions some 20 A from the active center is also seen in the first key step of the reaction. (3) The solvent (deuterium oxide) kinetic isotope effect was found to be inverse on V(max)/K(m) (0.62), and small but normal on V(max) (1.26), virtually ruling out residue C221 as being responsible for the inverse effects reported for the wild-type enzyme at low substrate concentrations. The solvent kinetic isotope effects are compared to those on two related enzymes not subject to substrate activation, Zymomonas mobilis pyruvate decarboxylase and benzoylformate decarboxylase.  相似文献   

4.
The zinc metalloenzyme protein farnesyltransferase (FTase) catalyzes the transfer of a 15-carbon farnesyl moiety from farnesyl diphosphate (FPP) to a cysteine residue near the C-terminus of a protein substrate. Several crystal structures of inactive FTase.FPP.peptide complexes indicate that K164alpha interacts with the alpha-phosphate and that H248beta and Y300beta form hydrogen bonds with the beta-phosphate of FPP [Strickland, C. L., et al. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 16601-16611]. Mutations K164Aalpha, H248Abeta, and Y300Fbeta were prepared and analyzed by single turnover kinetics and ligand binding studies. These mutations do not significantly affect the enzyme affinity for FPP but do decrease the farnesylation rate constant by 30-, 10-, and 500-fold, respectively. These mutations have little effect on the pH and magnesium dependence of the farnesylation rate constant, demonstrating that the side chains of K164alpha, Y300beta, and H248beta do not function either as general acid-base catalysts or as magnesium ligands. Mutation of H248beta and Y300beta, but not K164alpha, decreases the farnesylation rate constant using farnesyl monophosphate (FMP). These data suggest that, contrary to the conclusions derived from analysis of the static crystal structures, the transition state for farnesylation is stabilized by interactions between the alpha-phosphate of the isoprenoid substrate and the side chains of Y300beta and H248beta. These results suggest an active substrate conformation for FTase wherein the C1 carbon of the FPP substrate moves toward the zinc-bound thiolate of the protein substrate to react, resulting in a rearrangement of the diphosphate group relative to its ground state position in the binding pocket.  相似文献   

5.
The cleavage of the donor substrate d-xylulose 5-phosphate by wild-type and H263A mutant yeast transketolase was studied using enzyme kinetics and circular dichroism spectroscopy. The enzymes are able to catalyze the cleavage of donor substrates, the first half-reaction, even in the absence of any acceptor substrate yielding d-glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate as measured in the coupled optical test according to Kochetov (Kochetov, G. A. (1982) Methods Enzymol. 90, 209-223) and compared with the H263A variant. Overall, the H263A mutant enzyme is less active than the wild-type. However, an increase in the rate constant of the release of the enzyme-bound glycolyl moiety was observed and related to a stabilization of the "active glycolaldehyde" (alpha-carbanion) by histidine 263. Chemically synthesized dl-(alpha,beta-dihydroxyethyl)thiamin diphosphate is bound to wild-type transketolase with an apparent K(D) of 4.3 +/- 0.8 microm (racemate) calculated from titration experiments using circular dichroism spectroscopy. Both enantiomers are cleaved by the enzyme at different rates. In contrast to the enzyme-generated alpha-carbanion of (alpha,beta-dihydroxyethyl)thiamin diphosphate formed by decarboxylation of hydroxylactylthiamin diphosphate after incubation of transketolase with beta-hydroxypyruvate, the synthesized dl-(alpha,beta-dihydroxyethyl)thiamin diphosphate did not work as donor substrate when erythrose 4-phosphate is used as acceptor substrate in the coupled enzymatic test according to Sprenger (Sprenger, G. A., Sch?rken, U., Sprenger, G., and Sahm, H. (1995) Eur. J. Biochem. 230, 525-532).  相似文献   

6.
We present molecular dynamics (MD) simulations on two enzymes: a human hypoxanthine-guanine-phosphoribosyltransferase (HGPRTase) and its analogue in the protozoan parasite Tritrichomonas foetus. The parasite enzyme has an additional ability to process xanthine as a substrate, making it a hypoxanthine-guanine-xanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (HGXPRTase) [Chin, M. S., and Wang, C. C. (1994) Mol. Biochem. Parasitol. 63 (2), 221-229 (1)]. X-ray crystal structures of both enzymes complexed to guanine monoribosyl phosphate (GMP) have been solved, and show only subtle differences in the two active sites [Eads et al. (1994) Cell 78 (2), 325-334 (2); Somoza et al. (1996) Biochemistry 35 (22), 7032-7040 (3)]. Most of the direct contacts with the base region of the substrate are made by the protein backbone, complicating the identification of residues significantly associated with xanthine recognition. Our calculations suggest that the broader specificity of the parasite enzyme is due to a significantly more flexible base-binding region, and rationalize the effect of two mutations, R155E and D163N, that alter substrate specificity [Munagala, N. R., and Wang, C. C. (1998) Biochemistry 37 (47), 16612-16619 (4)]. In addition, our simulations suggested a double mutant (D106E/D163N) that might rescue the D163N mutant. This double mutant was expressed and assayed, and its catalytic activity was confirmed. Our molecular dynamics trajectories were also used with a structure-based design program, Pictorial Representation Of Free Energy Changes (PROFEC), to suggest parasite-selective derivatives of GMP. Our calculations here successfully rationalize the parasite-selectivity of two novel inhibitors derived from the computer-aided design of Somoza et al. (5) and demonstrate the utility of PROFEC in the design of species-selective inhibitors.  相似文献   

7.
In addition to the decarboxylation of 2-oxo acids, thiamin diphosphate (ThDP)-dependent decarboxylases/dehydrogenases can also carry out so-called carboligation reactions, where the central ThDP-bound enamine intermediate reacts with electrophilic substrates. For example, the enzyme yeast pyruvate decarboxylase (YPDC, from Saccharomyces cerevisiae) or the E1 subunit of the Escherichia coli pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDHc-E1) can produce acetoin and acetolactate, resulting from the reaction of the central thiamin diphosphate-bound enamine with acetaldehyde and pyruvate, respectively. Earlier, we had shown that some active center variants indeed prefer such a carboligase pathway to the usual one [Sergienko, Jordan, Biochemistry 40 (2001) 7369-7381; Nemeria et al., J. Biol. Chem. 280 (2005) 21,473-21,482]. Herein is reported detailed analysis of the stereoselectivity for forming the carboligase products acetoin, acetolactate, and phenylacetylcarbinol by the E477Q and D28A YPDC, and the E636A and E636Q PDHc-E1 active-center variants. Both pyruvate and beta-hydroxypyruvate were used as substrates and the enantiomeric excess was analyzed by a combination of NMR, circular dichroism and chiral-column gas chromatographic methods. Remarkably, the two enzymes produced a high enantiomeric excess of the opposite enantiomer of both acetoin-derived and acetolactate-derived products, strongly suggesting that the facial selectivity for the electrophile in the carboligation is different in the two enzymes. The different stereoselectivities exhibited by the two enzymes could be utilized in the chiral synthesis of important intermediates.  相似文献   

8.
Transketolase from baker's yeast is a thiamin diphosphate-dependent enzyme in sugar metabolism that reconstitutes with various analogues of the coenzyme. The methylated analogues (4'-methylamino-thiamin diphosphate and N1'-methylated thiamin diphosphate) of the native cofactor were used to investigate the function of the aminopyrimidine moiety of the coenzyme in transketolase catalysis. For the wild-type transketolase complex with the 4'-methylamino analogue, no electron density was found for the methyl group in the X-ray structure, whereas in the complex with the N1'-methylated coenzyme the entire aminopyrimidine ring was disordered. This indicates a high flexibility of the respective parts of the enzyme-bound thiamin diphosphate analogues. In the E418A variant of transketolase reconstituted with N1'-methylated thiamin diphosphate, the electron density of the analogue was well defined and showed the typical V-conformation found in the wild-type holoenzyme [Lindqvist Y, Schneider G, Ermler U, Sundstrom M (1992) EMBO J11, 2373-2379]. The near-UV CD spectrum of the variant E418A reconstituted with N1'-methylated thiamin diphosphate was identical to that of the wild-type holoenzyme, while the CD spectrum of the variant combined with the unmodified cofactor did not overlap with that of the native protein. The activation of the analogues was measured by the H/D-exchange at C2. Methylation at the N1' position of the cofactor activated the enzyme-bound cofactor analogue (as shown by a fast H/D-exchange rate constant). The absorbance changes in the course of substrate turnover of the different complexes investigated (transient kinetics) revealed the stability of the alpha-carbanion/enamine as the key intermediate in cofactor action to be dependent on the functionality of the 4-aminopyrimidine moiety of thiamin diphosphate.  相似文献   

9.
The kringle-2 domain of tissue plasminogen activator, cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli (Wilhelm, O.G., Jaskunas, S.R., Vlahos, C.J., and Bang, N.U. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 14606-14611), was internally radiolabeled using [35S]methionine-cysteine. Following refolding and isolation, the labeled polypeptide was further purified by reverse-phase high performance liquid chromatography. The purified kringle-2 domain was digested with thermolysin, and the resulting peptides were purified by high performance liquid chromatography. Five major peptides containing 35S were obtained. Amino acid sequence analysis showed that these peptides represented various cleavage products containing one or more of the following disulfides: Cys180-Cys261, Cys201-Cys243, Cys232-Cys256 (sequence numbering based on Pennica et al. (Pennica, D., Holmes, W.E., Kohr, W.J., Hakins, R.N., Vehar, G. A., Ward, C.A., Bennett, W.F., Yelverton E., Seeburg, P.H., Heynecker, H.L., Goeddel, E.V., and Collen, D. (1983) Nature 301, 214-221)). These results confirm that the refolding methodology used produced kringle-2 with the predicted disulfide linkage and, thus, yielded material suitable for structural and functional studies.  相似文献   

10.
C Largman 《Biochemistry》1983,22(16):3763-3770
Proelastase has been purified to homogeneity from rat pancreatic tissue by a combination of CM-Sephadex and immobilized protease inhibitor affinity resins. Trypsin activation yields an elastolytic enzyme that possesses a specificity toward small hydrophobic residues in synthetic amide substrates, similar to those of porcine elastase 1 and canine elastase. However, the rat enzyme also rapidly hydrolyzes a substrate containing tyrosine in the P1 position. N-Terminal sequence analysis reveals that rat proelastase has an identical activation peptide with that of porcine proelastase 1 and has two conservative amino acid sequence differences from the activation peptide of canine proelastase. The sequence data established that rat proelastase corresponds to the elastase 1 mRNA clone isolated by MacDonald et al. [MacDonald, R. J., Swift, G. H., Quinto, C., Swain, W., Pictet, R. L., Nikovits, W., & Rutter, W. J. (1982) Biochemistry 21, 1453]. The sequence and substrate data obtained for rat and canine elastases suggest that there is a family of pancreatic elastases with properties similar to those of the classically described porcine elastase 1.  相似文献   

11.
Mammalian glutathione (GSH) transferases are dimeric proteins, many of which share a common hydrophobic interaction motif that is important for dimer stability. In the rGSTM1-1 enzyme this motif involves the side chain of F56, located on the 56 loop of the N-terminal domain, which is intercalated between the alpha4- and alpha5-helices of the C-terminal domain of the opposing subnuit. Disruption of the complementary interactions in this motif by mutation of F56 to serine, arginine, or glutamate is known to have deleterious effects on catalytic efficiency but remarkably different effects on the stability of the dimer [Hornby et al. (2002) Biochemistry 41, 14238-14247]. The structural basis for the behavior of the mutants by amide H/D exchange mass spectrometry is described. A substantial decrease in H/D exchange is observed in the GSH binding domain and in parts of the dimer interface upon substrate binding. The F56S and F56R mutants exhibit enhanced H/D exchange kinetics in the GSH binding domain and at the dimer interface. In contrast, the F56E mutant shows a decrease in the rate and extent of amide H/D exchange at the dimer interface and enhanced exchange kinetics in the GSH binding domain. The results suggest that the F56E mutant has a restructured dimer interface with decreased solvent accessibility and dynamics. Although all of the F56 mutations disrupt the GSH binding site, the effects of the mutations on the structure of the subunit interface and dimer stability are quite distinct.  相似文献   

12.
Distinct regulatory effects of the Na,K-ATPase gamma subunit   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The two variants of the gamma subunit of the rat renal sodium pump, gamma(a) and gamma(b), have similar effects on the Na,K-ATPase. Both increase the affinity for ATP due to a shift in the enzyme's E(1) <--> E(2) conformational equilibrium toward E(1). In addition, both increase K(+) antagonism of cytoplasmic Na(+) activation. To gain insight into the structural basis for these distinct effects, extramembranous N-terminal and C-terminal mutants of gamma were expressed in rat alpha1-transfected HeLa cells. At the N terminus, the variant-distinct region was deleted (gammaNDelta7) or replaced by alanine residues (gammaN7A). At the C terminus, four (gamma(a)CDelta4) or ten (gamma(a)CDelta10) residues were deleted. None of these mutations abrogates the K(+)/Na(+) antagonism as evidenced in a similar increase in K'(Na) seen at high (100 mm) K(+) concentration. In contrast, the C-terminal as well as N-terminal deletions (gammaNDelta7, gamma(a)CDelta4, and gamma(a)CDelta10) abolished the decrease in K'(ATP) seen with wild-type gamma(a) or gamma(b). It is concluded that different regions of the gamma chain mediate the distinct functional effects of gamma, and the effects can be long-range. In the transmembrane region, the impact of G41R replacement was analyzed since this mutation is associated with autosomal dominant renal Mg(2+)-wasting in man (Meij, I. C., Koenderink, J. B., van Bokhoven, H., Assink, K. F. H., Groenestege, W. T., de Pont, J. J. H. H. M., Bindels, R. J. M., Monnens, L. A. H., Van den Heuvel, L. P. W. J., and Knoers, N. V. A. M. (2000) Nat. Genet. 26, 265-266). The results show that Gly-41 --> Arg prevents trafficking of gamma but not alphabeta pumps to the cell surface and abrogates functional effects of gamma on alphabeta pumps. These findings underscore a potentially important role of gamma in affecting solute transport, in this instance Mg(2+) reabsorption, consequent to its primary effect on the sodium pump.  相似文献   

13.
Both solution and crystallographic studies suggest that the 4'-aminopyrimidine ring of the thiamin diphosphate coenzyme participates in catalysis, likely as an intramolecular general acid-base catalyst via the unusual 1',4'-iminopyrimidine tautomer. It is indeed uncommon for a coenzyme to be identified in its rare tautomeric form on its reaction pathways, yet this has been possible with thiamin diphosphate, in some cases even in the absence of substrate [Nemeria, N., Chakraborty, S., Baykal, A., Korotchkina, L., Patel, M. S., and Jordan, F. (2007) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 104, 78-82.]. The ability to detect both the aminopyrimidine and iminopyrimidine tautomeric forms of thiamin diphosphate on enzymes has enabled us to assign the predominant tautomeric form present in individual intermediates on the pathway. Herein, we report the pH dependence of these tautomeric forms providing the first data for the internal thermodynamic equilibria on thiamin diphosphate enzymes for the various ionization and tautomeric forms of this coenzyme on four enzymes: benzaldehyde lyase, benzoylformate decarboxylase, pyruvate oxidase, and the E1 component of the human pyruvate dehydrogenase multienzyme complex. Evidence is provided for an important function of the enzyme environment in altering both the ionization and tautomeric equilibria on the coenzyme even prior to addition of substrate. The pKa for the 4'-aminopyrimidinium moiety coincides with the pH for optimum activity thereby ensuring that all ionization states and tautomeric states are accessible during the catalytic cycle. The dramatic influence of the protein on the internal equilibria also points to conditions under which the long-elusive ylide intermediate could be stabilized.  相似文献   

14.
Recent sequencing experiments have identified alpha-His246 as the phosphorylation site of Escherichia coli succinyl-CoA synthetase [Buck, D., Spencer, M. E., & Guest, J. R. (1985) Biochemistry 24, 6245-6252]. We have replaced alpha-His246 with an asparagine residue using site-directed mutagenesis techniques. The resulting mutant enzyme (designated H246N) exhibited no enzyme activity, as expected, but was found as a structurally intact, stable tetramer. Small differences in the net charge of H246N and wild-type enzymes were first detected on native polyacrylamide gels. These charge differences were resolved by using native isoelectric focusing gels to further separate the wild-type enzyme into diphosphorylated, monophosphorylated, and unphosphorylated species. The enzyme species were found to be interconvertible upon incubation with the appropriate enzyme substrate(s). Sample mixtures containing increasing molar ratios of H246N (alpha H246N beta)2 to wild-type enzyme (alpha beta)2 were unfolded and then refolded. The refolded enzyme mixtures were analyzed for enzymatic activity and separated on native isoelectric focusing gels. The hybrid enzyme (alpha beta alpha H246N beta) retained a significant amount of enzyme activity and also exhibited substrate synergism (stimulation of succinate in equilibrium succinyl-CoA exchange in the presence of ATP). Substrate synergism with this enzyme has been interpreted as evidence for interaction between active sites in such a way that only a single phosphoryl group is covalently attached to the enzyme at a given time [Wolodko, W. T., Brownie, E.R., O'Connor, M. D., & Bridger, W. A. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 14116-14119]. On the contrary, we conclude that tetrameric succinyl-CoA synthetase from E. coli is comprised of two independently active dimer molecules associated together to form a "dimer of dimers" that displays substrate synergism within each dimer and not necessarily between dimers.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
Nearly complete assignment of the aliphatic 1H and 13C resonances of the IIAglc domain of Bacillus subtilis has been achieved using a combination of double- and triple-resonance three-dimensional (3D) NMR experiments. A constant-time 3D triple-resonance HCA(CO)N experiment, which correlates the 1H alpha and 13C alpha chemical shifts of one residue with the amide 15N chemical shift of the following residue, was used to obtain sequence-specific assignments of the 13C alpha resonances. The 1H alpha and amide 15N chemical shifts had been sequentially assigned previously using principally 3D 1H-15N NOESY-HMQC and TOCSY-HMQC experiments [Fairbrother, W. J., Cavanagh, J., Dyson, H. J., Palmer, A. G., III, Sutrina, S. L., Reizer, J., Saier, M. H., Jr., & Wright, P. E. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 6896-6907]. The side-chain spin systems were identified using 3D HCCH-COSY and HCCH-TOCSY spectra and were assigned sequentially on the basis of their 1H alpha and 13C alpha chemical shifts. The 3D HCCH and HCA(CO)N experiments rely on large heteronuclear one-bond J couplings for coherence transfers and therefore offer a considerable advantage over conventional 1H-1H correlation experiments that rely on 1H-1H 3J couplings, which, for proteins the size of IIAglc (17.4 kDa), may be significantly smaller than the 1H line widths. The assignments reported herein are essential for the determination of the high-resolution solution structure of the IIAglc domain of B. subtilis using 3D and 4D heteronuclear edited NOESY experiments; these assignments have been used to analyze 3D 1H-15N NOESY-HMQC and 1H-13C NOESY-HSQC spectra and calculate a low-resolution structure [Fairbrother, W. J., Gippert, G. P., Reizer, J., Saier, M. H., Jr., & Wright, P. E. (1992) FEBS Lett. 296, 148-152].  相似文献   

16.
The influence of substrates on the interaction of apotransketolase with thiamin diphosphate was investigated in the presence of magnesium ions. It was shown that the donor substrates, but not the acceptor substrates, enhance the affinity of the coenzyme either to only one active center of transketolase or to both active centers, but to different degrees in each, resulting in a negative cooperativity for coenzyme binding. In the absence of donor substrate, negative cooperativity is not observed. The donor substrate did not affect the interaction of the apoenzyme with the inactive coenzyme analogue, N3'-pyridyl-thiamin diphosphate. The influence of the donor substrate on the coenzyme-apotransketolase interaction was predicted as a result of formation of the transketolase reaction intermediate 2-(alpha,beta-dihydroxyethyl)-thiamin diphosphate, which exhibited a higher affinity to the enzyme than thiamin diphosphate. The enhancement of thiamin diphosphate's affinity to apotransketolase in the presence of donor substrate is probably one of the mechanisms underlying the substrate-affected transketolase regulation at low coenzyme concentrations.  相似文献   

17.
Zhang S  Zhou L  Nemeria N  Yan Y  Zhang Z  Zou Y  Jordan F 《Biochemistry》2005,44(7):2237-2243
The hypothesis that thiamin diphosphate-dependent enzymes achieve a significant fraction of their catalytic rate acceleration by providing a protein environment that helps to stabilize unstable zwitterionic/dipolar intermediates (including the enamine/C2alpha-carbanion present on all such enzymes) was tested experimentally using the intermediate C2alpha-hydroxyethylthiamin diphosphate (HEThDP) with the Escherichia coli pyruvate dehydrogenase complex and its E1 subunit (PDHc-E1). Using pre-steady-state and steady-state methods, it was shown that HEThDP is a substrate for this enzyme after ionization of the C2alpha-H bond. An experiment was then carried out to measure the PDHc-E1 catalyzed pre-steady-state rate constant for the D --> H exchange from the C2alpha position of HEThDP-d(4), as an indicator of the formation of the enamine. Importantly, the enzyme accelerates the rate of ionization of this bond by a factor of 10(7), corresponding to a 10 kcal/mol stabilization of the enamine intermediate by the enzyme. This finding is likely a general feature of thiamin diphosphate enzymes.  相似文献   

18.
A resting cell of Escherichia coli lacking thiamin kinase incorporated external thiamin with an energy-dependent counterflow efflux (C-efflux). This C-efflux could be separated from an energy-dependent exit by a selective inhibition of exit by 2 · 10?2M NaN3. The extracellular thiamin could be replaced by thiamin diphosphate, resulting in the same rate of C-efflux, but the rate of C-efflux of intracellular thiamin diphosphate against the external thiamin was markedly low. This low rate of C-efflux of thiamin diphosphate could explain the higher accumulation of the compound than that of free thiamin in the thiamin-kinase-defective mutant as well as in its wild-type parent. Basic characteristics of free thiamin uptake and exit in E. coli W mutant were compared with those reported in K 12 mutant: a marked difference existed in the rate of exit. The low rate of exit in E. coli W 70-23-102 was inferred as the reason for the absence of an overshoot phenomenon of thiamin uptake in this strain.  相似文献   

19.
Polyglutamylation, a new posttranslational modification of tubulin identified originally on the acidic alpha variants by Eddé et al. (Eddé, B., Rossier, J., Le Caer, J. P., Desbruyeres, E., Gros, F., and Denoulet, P. (1990) Science 247, 83-85), consists of the successive addition of glutamyl units to the Glu445. To characterize their linkage mode mouse tubulin was posttranslationally labeled with [3H]glutamate. After digestion of [3H]tubulin with thermolysin, up to eight radioactive peaks were separated on an anion exchange column (DEAE). Combined use of Edman degradation sequencing and mass spectrometry analysis of the first 6 one indicated that they all correspond to the same COOH-terminal sequence 440VEGEGEEEGEE450 bearing one to six glutamyl units on the Glu445. The first glutamyl residue is amide-linked to the gamma-carboxyl group of Glu445, but the additional residues can be linked to the gamma- or alpha-carboxyl groups of the preceding one. All possible linkages for the biglutamylated tubulin peptides (gamma 1 alpha 2, gamma 1 gamma 2) and triglutamylated (gamma 1 alpha 2 alpha 3, gamma 1 alpha 2 gamma 3, gamma 1 alpha 2 gamma 2, gamma 1 gamma 2 alpha 3, gamma 1 gamma 2 gamma 3) were synthesized. These different peptides were successfully separated on a C18 5-micron reverse phase column. We found that the bi- and triglutamylated tubulin peptides behave as the gamma 1 alpha 2 and gamma 1 alpha 2 alpha 3 synthetic peptides, respectively. These results indicate that the second and third glutamyl residues of the polyglutamyl side chain are amide-linked to the alpha-carboxyl group of the preceding unit.  相似文献   

20.
Limited proteolysis of the pyruvate decarboxylase (E1, alpha2beta2) component of the pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) multienzyme complex of Bacillus stearothermophilus has indicated the importance for catalysis of a site (Tyr281-Arg282) in the E1alpha subunit (Chauhan, H.J., Domingo, G.J., Jung, H.-I. & Perham, R.N. (2000) Eur. J. Biochem. 267, 7158-7169). This site appears to be conserved in the alpha-subunit of heterotetrameric E1s and multiple sequence alignments suggest that there are additional conserved amino-acid residues in this region, part of a common pattern with the consensus sequence -YR-H-D-YR-DE-. This region lies about 50 amino acids on the C-terminal side of a 30-residue motif previously recognized as involved in binding thiamin diphosphate (ThDP) in all ThDP-dependent enzymes. The role of individual residues in this set of conserved amino acids in the E1alpha chain was investigated by means of site-directed mutagenesis. We propose that particular residues are involved in: (a) binding the 2-oxo acid substrate, (b) decarboxylation of the 2-oxo acid and reductive acetylation of the tethered lipoyl domain in the PDH complex, (c) an "open-close" mechanism of the active site, and (d) phosphorylation by the E1-specific kinase (in eukaryotic PDH and branched chain 2-oxo acid dehydrogenase complexes).  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