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1.
The unusually low pK(a) value of the general base catalyst Pro-1 (pK(a) = 6.4) in 4-oxalocrotonate tautomerase (4-OT) has been ascribed to both a low dielectric constant at the active site and the proximity of the cationic residues Arg-11 and Arg-39 [Stivers, J. T., Abeygunawardana, C., Mildvan, A. S., Hajipour, G., and Whitman, C. P. (1996) Biochemistry 35, 814-823]. In addition, the pH-rate profiles in that study showed an unidentified protonated group essential for catalysis with a pK(a) of 9.0. To address these issues, the pK(a) values of the active site Pro-1 and lower limit pK(a) values of arginine residues were determined by direct (15)N NMR pH titrations. The pK(a) values of Pro-1 and of the essential acid group were determined independently from pH-rate profiles of the kinetic parameters of 4-OT in arginine mutants of 4-OT and compared with those of wild type. The chemical shifts of all of the Arg Nepsilon resonances in wild-type 4-OT and in the R11A and R39Q mutants were found to be independent of pH over the range 4.9-9.7, indicating that no arginine is responsible for the kinetically determined pK(a) of 9.0 for an acidic group in free 4-OT. With the R11A mutant, where k(cat)/K(m) was reduced by a factor of 10(2.9), the pK(a) of Pro-1 was not significantly altered from that of the wild-type enzyme (pK(a) = 6.4 +/- 0.2) as revealed by both direct (15)N NMR titration (pK(a) = 6.3 +/- 0.1) and the pH dependence of k(cat)/K(m) (pK(a) = 6.4 +/- 0.2). The pH-rate profiles of both k(cat)/K(m) and k(cat) for the reaction of the R11A mutant with the dicarboxylate substrate, 2-hydroxymuconate, showed humps, i.e., sharply defined maxima followed by nonzero plateaus. The humps disappeared in the reaction with the monocarboxylate substrate, 2-hydroxy-2,4-pentadienoate, indicating that, unlike the wild-type enzyme which reacts only with the dianionic form of the dicarboxylic substrate, the R11A mutant reacts with both the 6-COOH and 6-COO(-) forms, with the 6-COOH form being 12-fold more active. This reversal in the preferred ionization state of the 6-carboxyl group of the substrate that occurs upon mutation of Arg-11 to Ala provides strong evidence that Arg-11 interacts with the 6-carboxylate of the substrate. In the R39Q mutant, where k(cat)/K(m) was reduced by a factor of 10(3), the kinetically determined pK(a) value for Pro-1 was 4.6 +/- 0.2, while the ionization of Pro-1 showed negative cooperativity with an apparent pK(a) of 7.1 +/- 0.1 determined by 1D (15)N NMR. From the Hill coefficient of 0.54, it can be shown that the apparent pK(a) value of 7.1 could result most simply from the averaging of two limiting pK(a) values of 4.6 and 8.2. Mutation of Arg-39, by altering the structure of the beta-hairpin which covers the active site, could result in an increase in the solvent exposure of Pro-1, raising its upper limit pK(a) value to 8.2. In the R39A mutant, the kinetically determined pK(a) of Pro-1 was also low, 5.0 +/- 0.2, indicating that in both the R39Q and R39A mutants, only the sites with low pK(a) values were kinetically operative. With the fully active R61A mutant, the kinetically determined pK(a) of Pro-1 (pK(a) = 6.5 +/- 0.2) agreed with that of wild-type 4-OT. It is concluded that the unusually low pK(a) of Pro-1 shows little contribution from electrostatic effects of the nearby cationic Arg-11, Arg-39, and Arg-61 residues but results primarily from a site of low local dielectric constant.  相似文献   

2.
4-Oxalocrotonate tautomerase (4-OT), a homohexameric enzyme, converts the unconjugated enone, 2-oxo-4-hexenedioate (1), to the conjugated enone, 2-oxo-3-hexenedioate (3), via a dienolic intermediate, 2-hydroxymuconate (2). Pro-1 serves as the general base, and both Arg-11 and Arg-39 function in substrate binding and catalysis in an otherwise hydrophobic active site. Although 4-OT exhibits hyperbolic kinetics and no structural asymmetry either by X-ray or by NMR, inactivation by two affinity labels showed half-site stoichiometry [Stivers, J. T., et al. (1996) Biochemistry 35, 803-813; Johnson, W. H., Jr., et al. (1997) Biochemistry 36, 15724-15732], and titration of the R39Q mutant with cis,cis-muconate showed negative cooperativity [Harris, T. K., et al. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 12343-12357]. To test for anticooperativity during catalysis, 4-OT was titrated with equilibrium mixtures (> or = 81% product) of the reactive dicarboxylate or monocarboxylate intermediates, 2 or 2-hydroxy-2,4-pentadienoate (4), respectively, in three types of NMR experiments: two-dimensional 1H-15N HSQC titrations of backbone NH and of Arg N epsilonH resonances and one-dimensional 15N NMR titrations of Arg N epsilon resonances. All titrations showed substoichiometric binding of the equilibrium mixtures to 3 +/- 1 sites per hexamer with apparent dissociation constants comparable to the Km values of the intermediates. Compound 4 also bound 1 order of magnitude less tightly at another site, suggesting negative cooperativity. Consistent with negative cooperativity, asymmetry of the resulting complexes at saturating levels of 2 and 4 is indicated by splitting of the backbone NH resonances of 11 residues and 10 residues of 4-OT, respectively. The dicarboxylate competitive inhibitor, (2E)-fluoromuconate (5), with a KI of 45 +/- 7 microM, also exhibited substoichiometric binding to 3 +/- 1 sites per hexamer, with a KD of 25 +/- 18 microM, and splitting of the backbone NH resonance of L8. The monocarboxylate inhibitors (2E)- (6) and (2Z)-2-fluoro-2,4-pentadienoate (7) showed much weaker binding (KD = 3.1 +/- 1.3 mM), as well as splitting of two and five backbone NH resonances, respectively, indicating asymmetry of the complexes. The N epsilon resonances of both Arg-11 and Arg-39 were shifted downfield, and that of Pro-1N was broadened by all ligands, consistent with the major catalytic roles of these residues. Structural pathways for the site-site interactions which result in negative cooperativity are proposed on the basis of the X-ray structures of free and affinity-labeled 4-OT. Selective resonance broadenings induced by the binding of inactive analogues and active intermediates indicate residues which may be mobilized during reversible ligand binding and during catalysis, respectively.  相似文献   

3.
trans-3-Chloroacrylic acid dehalogenase (CaaD) converts trans-3-chloroacrylic acid to malonate semialdehyde by the addition of H(2)O to the C-2, C-3 double bond, followed by the loss of HCl from the C-3 position. Sequence similarity between CaaD, an (alphabeta)(3) heterohexamer (molecular weight 47,547), and 4-oxalocrotonate tautomerase (4-OT), an (alpha)(6) homohexamer, distinguishes CaaD from those hydrolytic dehalogenases that form alkyl-enzyme intermediates. The recently solved X-ray structure of CaaD demonstrates that betaPro-1 (i.e., Pro-1 of the beta subunit), alphaArg-8, alphaArg-11, and alphaGlu-52 are at or near the active site, and the >or=10(3.4)-fold decreases in k(cat) on mutating these residues implicate them as mechanistically important. The effect of pH on k(cat)/K(m) indicates a catalytic base with a pK(a) of 7.6 and an acid with a pK(a) of 9.2. NMR titration of (15)N-labeled wild-type CaaD yielded pK(a) values of 9.3 and 11.1 for the N-terminal prolines, while the fully active but unstable alphaP1A mutant showed a pK(a) of 9.7 (for the betaPro-1), implicating betaPro-1 as the acid catalyst, which may protonate C-2 of the substrate. These results provide the first evidence for an amino-terminal proline, conserved in all known tautomerase superfamily members, functioning as a general acid, rather than as a general base as in 4-OT. Hence, a reasonable candidate for the general base in CaaD is the active site residue alphaGlu-52. CaaD has 10 arginine residues, six in the alpha-subunit (Arg-8, Arg-11, Arg-17, Arg-25, Arg-35, and Arg-43), and four in the beta-subunit (Arg-15, Arg-21, Arg-55, and Arg-65). (1)H-(15)N-heteronuclear single quantum coherence (HSQC) spectra of CaaD showed seven to nine Arg-NepsilonH resonances (denoted R(A) to R(I)) depending on the protein concentration and pH. One of these signals (R(D)) disappeared in the spectrum of the largely inactive alphaR11A mutant (deltaH = 7.11 ppm, deltaN = 89.5 ppm), and another one (R(G)) disappeared in the spectrum of the inactive alphaR8A mutant (deltaH = 7.48 ppm, deltaN = 89.6 ppm), thereby assigning these resonances to alphaArg-11NepsilonH, and alphaArg-8NepsilonH, respectively. (1)H-(15)N-HSQC titration of the enzyme with the substrate analogue 3-chloro-2-butenoic acid (3-CBA), a competitive inhibitor (K(I)(slope) = 0.35 +/- 0.06 mM), resulted in progressive downfield shifts of the alphaArg-8Nepsilon resonance yielding a K(D) = 0.77 +/- 0.44 mM, comparable to the (K(I)(slope), suggestive of active site binding. Increasing the pH of free CaaD to 8.9 at 5 degrees C resulted in the disappearance of all nine Arg-NepsilonH resonances due to base-catalyzed NepsilonH exchange. Saturating the enzyme with 3-CBA (16 mM) induced the reappearance of two NepsilonH signals, those of alphaArg-8 and alphaArg-11, indicating that the binding of the substrate analogue 3-CBA selectively slows the NepsilonH exchange rates of these two arginine residues. The kinetic and NMR data thus indicate that betaPro-1 is the acid catalyst, alphaGlu-52 is a reasonable candidate for the general base, and alphaArg-8 and alphaArg-11 participate in substrate binding and in stabilizing the aci-carboxylate intermediate in a Michael addition mechanism.  相似文献   

4.
The biosynthesis of the C ring of the antitumor antibiotic agent, tomaymycin, is proposed to proceed through five enzyme-catalyzed steps from l-tyrosine. The genes encoding these enzymes have recently been cloned and their functions tentatively assigned, but there is limited biochemical evidence supporting the assignments of the last three steps. One enzyme, TomN, shows 58% pairwise sequence similarity with 4-oxalocrotonate tautomerase (4-OT), an enzyme found in a catabolic pathway for aromatic hydrocarbons. The TomN sequence includes three amino acids (Pro-1, Arg-11, and Arg-39) that have been identified as critical catalytic residues in 4-OT. However, the proposed substrate for TomN is very different from that processed by 4-OT. To establish the function and mechanism of TomN and its relationship with 4-OT, we conducted kinetic, mutagenic, and structural studies. The kinetic parameters for TomN, and four alanine mutants, P1A, R11A, R39A, and R61A, were determined using 2-hydroxymuconate, the substrate for 4-OT. The TomN-catalyzed reaction using this substrate compares favorably to that of 4-OT. In addition, the kinetic parameters for the P1A, R11A, and R39A mutants of TomN parallel the trends observed for the corresponding 4-OT mutants, implicating an analogous mechanism. A high-resolution crystal structure (1.4 ?) of TomN shows that the overall structure and the active site region are highly similar to those of 4-OT with a root-mean-square deviation of 0.81 ?. Moreover, key active site residues are positionally conserved. The combined results suggest that the tentative assignment for TomN and the proposed sequence of events in the biosynthetic pathway leading to the formation of the C ring of tomaymycin might not be correct. An alternative pathway that awaits biochemical confirmation is proposed.  相似文献   

5.
Glutathione is essential for maintaining the intracellular redox environment and is synthesized from gamma-glutamylcysteine, glycine, and ATP by glutathione synthetase (GS). To examine the reaction mechanism of a eukaryotic GS, 24 Arabidopsis thaliana GS (AtGS) mutants were kinetically characterized. Within the gamma-glutamylcysteine/glutathione-binding site, the S153A and S155A mutants displayed less than 4-fold changes in kinetic parameters with mutations of Glu-220 (E220A/E220Q), Gln-226 (Q226A/Q226N), and Arg-274 (R274A/R274K) at the distal end of the binding site resulting in 24-180-fold increases in the K(m) values for gamma-glutamylcysteine. Substitution of multiple residues interacting with ATP (K313M, K367M, and E429A/E429Q) or coordinating magnesium ions to ATP (E148A/E148Q, N150A/N150D, and E371A) yielded inactive protein because of compromised nucleotide binding, as determined by fluorescence titration. Other mutations in the ATP-binding site (E371Q, N376A, and K456M) resulted in greater than 30-fold decreases in affinity for ATP and up to 80-fold reductions in turnover rate. Mutation of Arg-132 and Arg-454, which are positioned at the interface of the two substrate-binding sites, affected the enzymatic activity differently. The R132A mutant was inactive, and the R132K mutant decreased k(cat) by 200-fold; however, both mutants bound ATP with K(d) values similar to wild-type enzyme. Minimal changes in kinetic parameters were observed with the R454K mutant, but the R454A mutant displayed a 160-fold decrease in k(cat). In addition, the R132K, R454A, and R454K mutations elevated the K(m) value for glycine up to 11-fold. Comparison of the pH profiles and the solvent deuterium isotope effects of A. thaliana GS and the Arg-132 and Arg-454 mutants also suggest distinct mechanistic roles for these residues. Based on these results, a catalytic mechanism for the eukaryotic GS is proposed.  相似文献   

6.
4-Oxalocrotonate tautomerase (4-OT) and trans-3-chloroacrylic acid dehalogenase (CaaD) are members of the tautomerase superfamily, a group of structurally homologous proteins that share a beta-alpha-beta fold and a catalytic amino-terminal proline. 4-OT, from Pseudomonas putida mt-2, catalyzes the conversion of 2-oxo-4-hexenedioate to 2-oxo-3-hexenedioate through the dienol intermediate 2-hydroxymuconate in a catabolic pathway for aromatic hydrocarbons. CaaD, from Pseudomonas pavonaceae 170, catalyzes the hydrolytic dehalogenation of trans-3-chloroacrylate in the trans-1,3-dichloropropene degradation pathway. Both reactions may involve an arginine-stabilized enediolate intermediate, a capability that may partially account for the low-level CaaD activity of 4-OT. Two active-site residues in 4-OT, Leu-8 and Ile-52, have now been mutated to the positionally conserved and catalytic ones in CaaD, alphaArg-8, and alphaGlu-52. The L8R and L8R/I52E mutants show improved CaaD activity (50- and 32-fold increases in k(cat)/K(m), respectively) and diminished 4-OT activity (5- and 1700-fold decreases in k(cat)/K(m), respectively). The increased efficiency of L8R-4-OT for the CaaD reaction stems primarily from an 8.8-fold increase in k(cat), whereas that of the L8R/I52E mutant is due largely to a 23-fold decrease in K(m). The presence of the additional arginine residue in the active site of L8R-4-OT does not alter the pK(a) of the Pro-1 amino group from that measured for the wild type (6.5 +/- 0.1 versus 6.4 +/- 0.2). Moreover, the crystal structure of L8R-4-OT is comparable to that of the wild type. Hence, the enhanced CaaD activity of L8R-4-OT is likely due to the additional arginine residue that can participate in substrate binding and/or stabilization of the putative enediolate intermediate. The results also suggest that the evolution of new functions within the tautomerase superfamily could be quite facile, requiring only a few strategically placed active-site mutations.  相似文献   

7.
Malonamidase E2 (MAE2) from Bradyrhizobium japonicum is an enzyme that hydrolyzes malonamate to malonate and has a Ser-cis-Ser-Lys catalytic triad at the active site. The crystal structures of wild type and mutant MAE2 exhibited that the guanido group of Arg-158 could be involved in the binding of malonamate in which the negative charge of the carboxyl group could destabilize a negatively charged transition-state oxyanion in the enzymatic reaction. In an attempt to elucidate the specific roles of Arg-158, site-directed mutants, R158Q, R158E, and R158K, were prepared (see Table 1). The crystal structure of R158Q determined at 2.2 Angstrom resolution showed that the guanido group of Arg-158 was important for the substrate binding with the marginal structural change upon the mutation. The k(cat) value of R158Q significantly decreased by over 1500-fold and the catalytic activity of R158E could not be detected. The k(cat) value of R158K was similar to that of the wild type with the K(m) value drastically increased by 100-fold, suggesting that Lys-158 of R158K can stabilize the negative charge of the carboxylate in the substrate to some extent and contribute to the stabilization of the transition-state oxyanion, but a single amine group of Lys-158 in R158K could not precisely anchor the carboxyl group of malonamate compared with the guanido group of Arg-158. Our kinetic and structural evidences demonstrate that Arg-158 in MAE2 should be critical to both binding the substrate and stabilizing the transition-state oxyanion for the catalytic reaction of MAE2.  相似文献   

8.
Li C  Li JJ  Montgomery MG  Wood SP  Bugg TD 《Biochemistry》2006,45(41):12470-12479
The alpha/beta-hydrolase superfamily, comprised mainly of esterase and lipase enzymes, contains a family of bacterial C-C hydrolases, including MhpC and BphD which catalyze the hydrolytic C-C cleavage of meta-ring fission intermediates on the Escherichia coli phenylpropionic acid pathway and Burkholderia xenovorans LB400 biphenyl degradation pathway, respectively. Five active site amino acid residues (Arg-188, Asn-109, Phe-173, Cys-261, and Trp-264) were identified from sequence alignments that are conserved in C-C hydrolases, but not in enzymes of different function. Replacement of Arg-188 in MhpC with Gln and Lys led to 200- and 40-fold decreases, respectively, in k(cat); the same replacements for Arg-190 of BphD led to 400- and 700-fold decreases, respectively, in k(cat). Pre-steady-state kinetic analysis of the R188Q MhpC mutant revealed that the first step of the reaction, keto-enol tautomerization, had become rate-limiting, indicating that Arg-188 has a catalytic role in ketonization of the dienol substrate, which we propose is via substrate destabilization. Mutation of nearby residues Phe-173 and Trp-264 to Gly gave 4-10-fold reductions in k(cat) but 10-20-fold increases in K(m), indicating that these residues are primarily involved in substrate binding. The X-ray structure of a succinate-H263A MhpC complex shows concerted movements in the positions of both Phe-173 and Trp-264 that line the approach to Arg-188. Mutation of Asn-109 to Ala and His yielded 200- and 350-fold reductions, respectively, in k(cat) and pre-steady-state kinetic behavior similar to that of a previous S110A mutant, indicating a role for Asn-109 is positioning the active site loop containing Ser-110. The catalytic role of Arg-188 is rationalized by a hydrogen bond network close to the C-1 carboxylate of the substrate, which positions the substrate and promotes substrate ketonization, probably via destabilization of the bound substrate.  相似文献   

9.
The roles of particular amino acids in substrate and coenzyme binding and catalysis of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase of Leuconostoc mesenteroides have been investigated by site-directed mutagenesis, kinetic analysis, and determination of binding constants. The enzyme from this species has functional dual NADP(+)/NAD(+) specificity. Previous investigations in our laboratories determined the three-dimensional structure. Kinetic studies showed an ordered mechanism for the NADP-linked reaction while the NAD-linked reaction is random. His-240 was identified as the catalytic base, and Arg-46 was identified as important for NADP(+) but not NAD(+) binding. Mutations have been selected on the basis of the three-dimensional structure. Kinetic studies of 14 mutant enzymes are reported and kinetic mechanisms are reported for 5 mutant enzymes. Fourteen substrate or coenzyme dissociation constants have been measured for 11 mutant enzymes. Roles of particular residues are inferred from k(cat), K(m), k(cat)/K(m), K(d), and changes in kinetic mechanism. Results for enzymes K182R, K182Q, K343R, and K343Q establish Lys-182 and Lys-343 as important in binding substrate both to free enzyme and during catalysis. Studies of mutant enzymes Y415F and Y179F showed no significant contribution for Tyr-415 to substrate binding and only a small contribution for Tyr-179. Changes in kinetics for T14A, Q47E, and R46A enzymes implicate these residues, to differing extents, in coenzyme binding and discrimination between NADP(+) and NAD(+). By the same measure, Lys-343 is also involved in defining coenzyme specificity. Decrease in k(cat) and k(cat)/K(m) for the D374Q mutant enzyme defines the way Asp-374, unique to L. mesenteroides G6PD, modulates stabilization of the enzyme during catalysis by its interaction with Lys-182. The greatly reduced k(cat) values of enzymes P149V and P149G indicate the importance of the cis conformation of Pro-149 in accessing the correct transition state.  相似文献   

10.
Several residues lining the ATP-binding site of Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum nicotinamide mononucleotide adenylyltransferase (NMNATase) were mutated in an effort to better characterize their roles in substrate binding and catalysis. Residues selected were Arg-11 and Arg-136, both of which had previously been implicated as substrate binding residues, as well as His-16 and His-19, part of the HXGH active site motif and postulated to be of importance in catalysis. Kinetic studies revealed that both Arg-11 and Arg-136 contributed to the binding of the substrate, ATP. When these amino acids were replaced by lysines, the apparent Km values of the respective mutants for ATP decreased by factors of 1.3 and 2.9 and by factors of 1.9 and 8.8 when the same residues were changed to alanines. All four Arg mutants displayed unaltered Km values for NMN. The apparent kcat values of the R11K and R136K mutants were the same as those of WT NMNATase but the apparent kcat values of the alanine mutants had decreased. Crystal structures of the Arg mutants revealed NAD+ and SO42- molecules trapped at their active sites. The binding interactions of NAD+ were unchanged but the binding of SO42- was altered in these mutants compared with wild type. The alanine mutants at positions His-16 and His-19 retained approximately 6 and 1.3%, respectively, of WT NMNATase activity indicating that His-19 is a key catalytic group. Surprisingly, this H19A mutant displayed a novel and distinct mode of NAD+ binding when co-crystallized in the presence of NAD+ and SO42-.  相似文献   

11.
The catalytic reaction mechanism and binding of substrates was investigated for the multisubstrate Drosophila melanogaster deoxyribonucleoside kinase. Mutation of E52 to D, Q and H plus mutations of R105 to K and H were performed to investigate the proposed catalytic reaction mechanism, in which E52 acts as an initiating base and R105 is thought to stabilize the transition state of the reaction. Mutant enzymes (E52D, E52H and R105H) showed a markedly decreased k(cat), while the catalytic activity of E52Q and R105K was abolished. The E52D mutant was crystallized with its feedback inhibitor dTTP. The backbone conformation remained unchanged, and coordination between D52 and the dTTP-Mg complex was observed. The observed decrease in k(cat) for E52D was most likely due to an increased distance between the catalytic carboxyl group and 5'-OH of deoxythymidine (dThd) or deoxycytidine (dCyd). Mutation of Q81 to N and Y70 to W was carried out to investigate substrate binding. The mutations primarily affected the K(m) values, whereas the k(cat) values were of the same magnitude as for the wild-type. The Y70W mutation made the enzyme lose activity towards purines and negative cooperativity towards dThd and dCyd was observed. The Q81N mutation showed a 200- and 100-fold increase in K(m), whereas k(cat) was decreased five- and twofold for dThd and dCyd, respectively, supporting a role in substrate binding. These observations give insight into the mechanisms of substrate binding and catalysis, which is important for developing novel suicide genes and drugs for use in gene therapy.  相似文献   

12.
The genomically encoded fosfomycin resistance protein from Pseudomonas aeruginosa (FosA(PA)) utilizes Mn(II) and K(+) to catalyze the addition of glutathione (GSH) to C1 of the antibiotic rendering it inactive. Although this protein has been structurally and kinetically characterized with respect to the substrate, fosfomycin, questions remain regarding how the enzyme binds the thiol substrate, GSH. Computational studies have revealed a potential GSH binding site in FosA(PA) that involves six electrostatic or hydrogen-bonding interactions with protein side-chains as well as six additional residues that contribute van der Waals interactions. A strategically placed tyrosine residue, Y39, appears to be involved in the ionization of GSH during catalysis. The Y39F mutant exhibits a 13-fold reduction of catalytic activity (k(cat)=14+/-2s(-1)), suggesting a role in the ionization of GSH. Mutation of five other residues (W34, Q36, S50, K90, and R93) implicated in ionic of hydrogen-bonding interactions resulted in enzymes with reduced catalytic efficiency, affinity for GSH, or both. The mutant enzymes were also found to be less effective resistant proteins in the biological context of Escherichia coli. The more conservative W34H mutant has native-like catalytic efficiency suggesting that the imidazole NH group can replace the indole group of W34 that is important for GSH binding. In the absence of co-crystal structural data with the thiol substrate, these results provide important insights into the role of GSH in catalysis.  相似文献   

13.
The primary structure of cis-prenyltransferase is totally different from those of trans-prenyltransferases (Shimizu, N., Koyama, T., and Ogura, K. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 272, 19476-19481). To better understand the molecular mechanism of enzymatic cis-prenyl chain elongation, we selected seven charged residues in the conserved Region V and two of Phe-Ser motif in Region III of undecaprenyl diphosphate synthase of Micrococcus luteus B-P 26 for substitutions by site-directed mutagenesis and examined their effects on substrate binding and catalysis. Kinetic studies indicated that replacements of Arg-197 or Arg-203 with Ser, and Glu-216 with Gln resulted in 7-11-fold increases of Km values for isopentenyl diphosphate and 18-1200-fold decreases of kcat values compared with those of the wild-type enzyme. In addition, two mutants with respect to the Phe-Ser motif in Region III, F73A and S74A, showed 16-32-fold larger Km values for isopentenyl diphosphate and 12-16-fold lower kcat values than those of the wild-type. Furthermore, product analysis indicated that three mutants, F73A, S74A, and E216Q, yielded shorter chain prenyl diphosphates as their main products. These facts together with the protein structural analysis recently carried out (Fujihashi, M., Zhang, Y.-W., Higuchi, Y., Li, X.-Y., Koyama, T., and Miki, K. (2001) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 98, 4337-4342) indicated that the diphosphate moiety of homoallylic substrate is electrostatically recognized by the three charged amino acids, Arg-197, Arg-203, and Glu-216, in Region V and the Phe-Ser motif in Region III, also indispensable for homoallylic substrate binding as well as catalytic function. It was suggested that the undecaprenyl diphosphate synthase takes a different mode for the binding of isopentenyl diphosphate from that of trans-prenyl chain elongating enzymes.  相似文献   

14.
Short-chain dehydrogenases/reductases catalyze the oxidoreduction of alcohol and carbonyl compounds using either NAD or NADPH as coenzyme. Structural analysis suggests that specificity for NADPH is conferred by two highly conserved basic residues in the N-terminal part of the peptide chain, whereas specificity for NAD correlates with the presence of an Asp adjacent to the position of the distal basic residue in NADP-dependent enzymes. We carried out site-directed mutagenesis of the two basic residues: Lys-15 and Arg-38, as well as of Ala-37 of human monomeric carbonyl reductase in order to investigate their contribution to coenzyme binding and specificity. Substitution of Lys-15 or Arg-38 by Gln and, even more pronounced Asp decreased the catalytic efficiency (k(cat)/K(m,NADPH)) by more than three orders of magnitude. Similarly, substitution of Asp for Ala-37 decreased k(cat)/K(m,NADPH) 1000-fold but had little effect on k(cat)/K(m,NADH). The results demonstrate the importance of basic residues at positions 15 and 38 and the absence of an acidic residue at position 37 for NADPH binding and catalysis.  相似文献   

15.
Konkol L  Hirai TJ  Adams JA 《Biochemistry》2000,39(1):255-262
Based on the X-ray structure of the insulin receptor kinase [Hubbard, S. R. (1997) EMBO J. 16, 5572-5581], Arg-1130 in the oncoprotein v-Fps, a nonreceptor tyrosine protein kinase, is predicted to interact with the P+1 glutamate in substrate peptides. To determine whether this residue is an important recognition element in v-Fps, Arg-1130 was substituted with leucine (R1130L) and glutamic acid (R1130E). The ability of these mutants to phosphorylate the peptide EAEIYXAIE, where X is glutamic acid, alanine, or lysine, was assessed. A comparison of the rates of peptide phosphorylation under limiting substrate concentrations (i.e., k(cat)/K(m) conditions) indicates that substrate specificity is altered by the electrostatic environment of the P+1 pocket. When the pocket displays a positive charge (Arg-1130; wild type), no charge (R1130L), or a negative charge (R1130E), v-Fps prefers to phosphorylate the glutamate peptide over the lysine peptide by a 200:1, 9:1, or 1:1 margin. While k(cat)/K(m) for the glutamate peptide is 50-fold higher for wild type compared to R1130E, k(cat)/K(m) for the lysine peptide is 3-fold higher for R1130E compared to wild type, a 150-fold change in relative substrate specificity. Analysis of the individual steps in the kinetic mechanism using viscosometric techniques indicates that the wild-type enzyme binds the glutamate peptide 3-fold better than the alanine peptide and, at least, 10-fold better than the lysine peptide. For R1130L, this margin range is reduced substantially, and for R1130E, no binding preference is observed. Nonetheless, the lysine peptide binds, at least, 4-fold better to R1130E than to wild type, and the glutamate peptide binds 3-fold poorer to R1130E than to wild type. The mutants lower the phosphoryl transfer rate by 4-30-fold for the three peptides, suggesting that Arg-1130 helps to position the tyrosine for optimum catalysis. The data indicate that a single mutation in v-Fps can alter significantly the relative substrate specificity by about 2 orders of magnitude with, at least, 50% of this effect occurring through relative changes in peptide binding affinity.  相似文献   

16.
Previous photolabeling and limited proteolysis studies suggested that one of the four basic residues (Arg-141) of the N-terminal cytoplasmic loop connecting helices IV and V (loop 4-5) of the melibiose permease (MelB) from Escherichia coli has a potential role in its symport function (Ambroise, Y., Leblanc, G., and Rousseau, B. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 1338-1345). A mutagenesis study of Arg-141 and of the other three basic residues of loop 4-5 was undertaken to further examine this hypothesis. Cys replacement analysis indicated that Arg-141 and Arg-149, but not Lys-138 and Arg-139, are essential for MelB transport activity. Replacement of Arg-141 by neutral residues (Cys or Gln) inactivated transport and energy-independent carrier-mediated flows of substrates (counterflow, efflux), whereas it had a limited effect on co-substrate binding. R141C sugar transport was partially rescued on reintroducing a positive charge with a charged and permeant thiol reagent. Whereas R149C was completely inactive, R149K and R149Q remained functional. Strikingly, introduction of an additional mutation in the C-terminal helix X (Gly for Val-343) of R149C restored sugar transport. Impermeant thiol reagents inhibited R149C/V343G transport activity in right-side-out membrane vesicles and prevented sugar binding in a sugar-protected manner. All these data suggest that MelB loop 4-5 is close to the sugar binding site and that the charged residue Arg-141 is involved in the reaction of co-substrate translocation or substrate release in the inner compartment.  相似文献   

17.
A series of 2-fluoro-4-alkene and 2-fluoro-4-alkyne substrate analogues were synthesized and examined as potential inhibitors of three enzymes: 4-oxalocrotonate tautomerase (4-OT) and vinylpyruvate hydratase (VPH) from the catechol meta-fission pathway and a closely related 4-OT homologue found in Bacillus subtilis designated YwhB. All of the compounds were potent competitive inhibitors of 4-OT with the monocarboxylated 2E-fluoro-2,4-pentadienoate and the dicarboxylated 2E-fluoro-2-en-4-ynoate being the most potent. Despite the close mechanistic and structural similarities between 4-OT and YwhB, these compounds were significantly less potent inhibitors of YwhB with K(i) values ranging from 5- to 633-fold lower than those determined for 4-OT. The study of VPH is complicated by the fact that the enzyme is only active as a complex with the metal-dependent 4-oxalocrotonate decarboxylase (4-OD), the enzyme following 4-OT in the catechol meta-fission pathway. A structure-based sequence analysis identified 4-OD as a member of the fumarylacetoacetate hydrolase (FAH) superfamily and implicated Glu-109 and Glu-111 as potential metal-binding ligands. Changing these residues to a glutamine verified their importance for enzymatic activity and enabled the production of soluble E109Q4-OD/VPH or E111Q4-OD/VPH complexes, which retained full hydratase activity but had little decarboxylase activity. Subsequent incubation of the E109Q4-OD/VPH complex with the substrate analogues identified the 2E and 2Z isomers of the monocarboxylated 2-fluoropent-2-en-4-ynoate as competitive inhibitors. The combined results set the stage for crystallographic studies of 4-OT, YwhB, and VPH using these inhibitors as ligands.  相似文献   

18.
4-Oxalocrotonate tautomerase (4-OT) catalyzes the isomerization of beta,gamma-unsaturated enones to their alpha,beta-isomers. The enzyme is part of a plasmid-encoded pathway, which enables bacteria harboring the plasmid to use various aromatic hydrocarbons as their sole sources of carbon and energy. Among isomerases and enzymes in general, 4-OT is unusual for two reasons: it has one of the smallest known monomer sizes (62 amino acids) and the amino-terminal proline functions as the catalytic base. In addition to Pro-1, three other residues (Arg-11, Arg-39, and Phe-50) have been identified as critical catalytic residues by kinetic analysis, site-directed mutagenesis, chemical synthesis, NMR, and crystallographic studies. Arginine-39 functions as the general acid catalyst (assisted by an ordered water molecule) in the reaction while Arg-11 plays a role in substrate binding and facilitates catalysis by acting as an electron sink. Finally, the hydrophobic nature of the active site, which lowers the pK(a) of Pro-1 to approximately 6.4 and provides a favorable environment for catalysis, is largely maintained by Phe-50. 4-OT is also the title enzyme of the 4-OT family of enzymes. The chromosomal homologues in this family are composed of monomers ranging in size from 61 to 79 amino acids, which code a beta-alpha-beta structural motif. The homologues all retain Pro-1 and generally have an aromatic or hydrophobic amino acid at the Phe-50 position. Characterization of representative members has uncovered mechanistic and structural diversity. A new activity, a trans-3-chloroacrylic acid dehalogenase, has been identified in addition to the previously known tautomerase and isomerase activities. Two new structures have also been found, along with the 4-OT hexamer. The dehalogenase functions as a heterohexamer while the Escherichia coli homologue, designated YdcE, functions as a dimer. Moreover, both 4-OT and the Bacillus subtilis homologue, designated YwhB, exhibit low-level dehalogenase activity. Amplification of this activity could have produced the full-fledged dehalogenase. The sum of these observations indicates that Nature uses the beta-alpha-beta structural motif as a building block in a variety of manners to create new enzymes.  相似文献   

19.
In order to address the molecular basis of the specificity of aldehyde dehydrogenase for aldehyde substrates, enzymatic characterization of the glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate (G3P) binding site of non-phosphorylating glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPN) from Streptococcus mutans has been undertaken. In this work, residues Arg-124, Tyr-170, Arg-301, and Arg-459 were changed by site-directed mutagenesis and the catalytic properties of GAPN mutants investigated. Changing Tyr-170 into phenylalanine induces no major effect on k(cat) and K(m) for d-G3P in both acylation and deacylation steps. Substitutions of Arg-124 and Arg-301 by leucine and Arg-459 by isoleucine led to distinct effects on K(m), on k(cat), or on both. The rate-limiting step of the R124L GAPN remains deacylation. Pre-steady-state analysis and substrate isotope measurements show that hydride transfer remains rate-determining in acylation. Only the apparent affinity for d-G3P is decreased in both acylation and deacylation steps. Substitution of Arg-459 by isoleucine leads to a drastic effect on the catalytic efficiency by a factor of 10(5). With this R459L GAPN, the rate-limiting step is prior to hydride transfer, and the K(m) of d-G3P is increased by at least 2 orders of magnitude. Binding of NADP leads to a time-dependent formation of a charge transfer transition at 333 nm between the pyridinium ring of NADP and the thiolate of Cys-302, which is not observed with the holo-wild type. Accessibility of Cys-302 is shown to be strongly decreased within the holostructure. The substitution of Arg-301 by leucine leads to an even more drastic effect with a change of the rate-limiting step similar to that observed for R459I GAPN. Taking into account the three-dimensional structure of GAPN from S. mutans and the data of the present study, it is proposed that 1) Tyr-170 is not essential for the catalytic event, 2) Arg-124 is only involved in stabilizing d-G3P binding via an interaction with the C-3 phosphate, and 3) Arg-301 and Arg-459 participate not only in d-G3P binding via interaction with C-3 phosphate but also in positioning efficiently d-G3P relative to Cys-302 within the ternary complex GAPN.NADP.d-G3P.  相似文献   

20.
Legler PM  Massiah MA  Mildvan AS 《Biochemistry》2002,41(35):10834-10848
GDP-mannose mannosyl hydrolase (GDPMH) is an unusual Nudix family member, which catalyzes the hydrolysis of GDP-alpha-D-mannose to GDP and the beta-sugar by nucleophilic substitution at carbon rather than at phosphorus (Legler, P. M., Massiah, M. A., Bessman, M. J., and Mildvan, A. S. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 8603-8608). Using the structure and mechanism of MutT, the prototypical Nudix enzyme as a guide, we detected six catalytic residues of GDPMH, three of which were unique to GDPMH, by the kinetic and structural effects of site-specific mutations. Glu-70 (corresponding to Glu-57 in MutT) provides a ligand to the essential divalent cation on the basis of the effects of the E70Q mutation which decreased kcat 10(2.2)-fold, increased the dissociation constant of Mn2+ from the ternary E-Mn2+-GDP complex 3-fold, increased the K(m)Mg2+ 20-fold, and decreased the paramagnetic effect of Mn2+ on 1/T1 of water protons, indicating a change in the coordination sphere of Mn2+. In the E70Q mutant, Gln-70 was shown to be very near the active site metal ion by large paramagnetic effects of Mn2+ on its side chain -NH2 group. With wild-type GDPMH, the effect of pH on log(kcat/K(m)GDPmann) at 37 degrees C showed an ascending limb of unit slope, followed by a plateau yielding a pK(a) of 6.4, which increased to 6.7 +/- 0.1 in the pH dependence of log(kcat). The general base catalyst was identified as a neutral His residue by the DeltaH(ionization) = 7.0 +/- 0.7 kcal/mol, by the increase in pK(a) with ionic strength, and by mutation of each of the four histidine residues of GDPMH to Gln. Only the H124Q mutant showed the loss of the ascending limb in the pH versus log(kcat) rate profile, which was replaced by a weak dependence of rate on hydroxide concentration, as well as an overall 10(3.4)-fold decrease in kcat, indicating His-124 to be the general base, unlike MutT, which uses Glu-53 in this role. The H88Q mutant showed a 10(2.3)-fold decrease in kcat, a 4.4-fold increase in K(m)GDPmann, and no change in the pH versus log(kcat) rate profile, indicating an important but unidentified role of His-88 in catalysis. One and two-dimensional NMR studies permitted the sequence specific assignments of the imidazole HdeltaC, H(epsilon)C, N(delta), and N(epsilon) resonances of the four histidines and defined their protonation states. The pK(a) of His-124 (6.94 +/- 0.04) in the presence of saturating Mg2+ was comparable to the kinetically determined pK(a) at the same temperature (6.40 +/- 0.20). The other three histidines were neutral N(epsilon)H tautomers with pK(a) values below 5.5. Arg-52 and Arg-65 were identified as catalytic residues which interact electrostatically with the GDP leaving group by mutating these residues to Gln and Lys. The R52Q mutant decreased kcat 309-fold and increased K(m)GDPmann 40.6-fold, while the R52K mutant decreased kcat by only 12-fold and increased K(m)GDPmann 81-fold. The partial rescue of kcat, but not of K(m)GDPmann in the R52K mutant, suggests that Arg-52 is a bifunctional hydrogen bond donor to the GDP leaving group in the ground state and a monofunctional hydrogen bond donor in the transition state. Opposite behavior was found with the Arg-65 mutants, suggesting this residue to be a monofunctional hydrogen bond donor to the GDP leaving group in the ground state and a bifunctional hydrogen bond donor in the transition state. From these observations, a mechanism for GDPMH is proposed involving general base catalysis and electrostatic stabilization of the leaving group.  相似文献   

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