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1.
A detailed kinetic analysis of the catalytic trimer of aspartate transcarbamoylase containing the active site substitution H134A was performed to investigate the role of His 134 in the catalytic mechanism. Replacement of histidine by alanine resulted in decreases in the affinities for the two substrates, carbamoyl phosphate and aspartate, and the inhibitor succinate, by factors of 50, 10, and 6, respectively, and yielded a maximum velocity that was 5% that of the wild-type enzyme. However, the pK values determined from the pH dependence of the kinetic parameters, log V and log (V/K) for aspartate, the pK(i) for succinate, and the pK(ia) for carbamoyl phosphate, were similar for both the mutant and the wild-type enzymes, indicating that the protonated form of His 134 does not participate in binding and catalysis between pH 6.2 and 9.2. 13C and 15N isotope effects were studied to determine which steps in the catalytic mechanism were altered by the amino acid substitutions. The 13(V/K) for carbamoyl phosphate exhibited by the catalytic trimer containing alanine at position 134 revealed an isotope effect of 4.1%, probably equal to the intrinsic value and, together with quantitative analysis of the 15N isotope effects, showed that formation of the tetrahedral intermediate is rate-determining for the mutant enzyme. Thus, His 134 plays a role in the chemistry of the reaction in addition to substrate binding. The initial velocity pattern for the reaction catalyzed by the H134A mutant intersected to the left of the vertical axis, negating an equilibrium ordered kinetic mechanism.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
The pKa values of enzyme groups of Escherichia coli glutamine synthetase which affect catalysis and/or substrate binding were determined by measuring the pH dependence of Vmax and V/K. Analysis of these data revealed that two enzyme groups are required for catalysis with apparent pKa values of approximately 7.1 and 8.2. The binding of ATP is essentially independent of pH in the range studied while the substrate ammonia must be deprotonated for the catalytic reaction. Using methylamine and hydroxylamine in place of ammonia, the pKa value of the deprotonated amine substrate as expressed in the V/K profiles was shifted to a lower pKa value for hydroxylamine and a higher pKa value for methylamine. These data indicate that the amine substrate must be deprotonated for binding. Hydroxylamine is at least as good a substrate as ammonia judged by the kinetic parameters whereas methylamine is a poor substrate as expressed in both the V and V/K values. Glutamate binding was determined by monitoring fluorescence changes of the enzyme and the data indicate that a protonated residue (pKa = 8.3 +/- 0.2) is required for glutamate binding. Chemical modification by reductive methylation with HCHO indicated that the group involved in glutamate binding most likely is a lysine residue. In addition, the Ki value for the transition state analog, L-3-amino-3-carboxy-propanesulfonamide was measured as a function of pH and the results indicate that an enzyme residue must be protonated (pKa = 8.2 +/- 0.1) to assist in binding. A mechanism for the reaction catalyzed by glutamine synthetase is proposed from the kinetic data acquired herein. A salt bridge is formed between the gamma-phosphate group of ATP and an enzyme group prior to attack by the gamma-carboxyl of glutamate on ATP to form gamma-glutamyl phosphate. The amine substrate subsequently attacks gamma-glutamyl phosphate resulting in formation of the tetrahedral adduct before phosphate release. A base on the enzyme assists in the deprotonation of ammonia during its attack on gamma-glutamyl phosphate or after the protonated carbinol amine is formed. Based on the kinetic data with the three amine substrates, catalysis is not rate-limiting through the pH range 6-9.  相似文献   

3.
The pH dependence of steady-state parameters for aldehyde reduction and alcohol oxidation were determined in the human liver aldehyde reductase reaction. The maximum velocity of aldehyde reduction with NADPH or 3-acetyl pyridine adenine dinucleotide phosphate (3-APADPH) was pH independent at low pH but decreased at high pH with a pK of 8.9-9.6. The V/K for both nucleotides decreased below a pK of 5.7-6.2, as did the pKi of competitive inhibitors NADP and ATP-ribose, suggesting that the 2'-phosphate of the nucleotide has to be deprotonated for binding to the enzyme. The pK of the 2'-phosphate of NADPH appears to be perturbed in the ternary complexes to 5.2-5.4. The V/K for NADPH, the V/K for 3-APADPH, and the pKi of ATP-ribose also decreased above a pK of 9-10, suggesting interaction of the 2'-phosphate of the nucleotide with a protonated base, perhaps lysine. Since protonation of a residue with a pK of 8 (evident in V/K for DL-glyceraldehyde and V/K for L-gulonate versus pH profiles) appears to be essential for aldehyde reduction, and deprotonation for alcohol oxidation, this residue appears to act as a general acid-base catalyst. An additional anion binding site with a pK of 9.94 facilitates the binding of carboxylic substrates such as D-glucuronate. With NADPH as the coenzyme the primary deuterium isotope effects on V and V/K for NADPH were close to unity and pH independent, suggesting that the hydride transfer step is not rate determining over the experimental pH range. With 3-APADPH as the coenzyme, the maximum velocity, relative to NADPH was three- to four-fold lower. Isotope effects on V, V/K for 3-APADPH, and V/K for D-glucuronate were pH independent and equal to 2.2-2.8, indicating that the chemical step of the reaction is relatively insensitive to pH. These data suggest that substrates bind to both the protonated and the deprotonated forms of the enzyme, though only the protonated enzyme catalyzes aldehyde reduction and the deprotonated enzyme catalyzes alcohol oxidation. On the basis of these results a scheme for the chemical mechanism of aldehyde reductase is postulated.  相似文献   

4.
Heavy-atom isotope effects and steady-state kinetic parameters were measured for the catalytic trimer of an active site mutant of aspartate transcarbamoylase, T55A, to assess the role of Thr 55 in catalysis. The binding of carbamoyl phosphate to the T55A mutant was decreased by 2 orders of magnitude relative to the wild-type enzyme whereas the affinities for aspartate and succinate were not markedly altered. This indicates that Thr 55 plays a significant role in the binding of CbmP. If, as had been suggested previously, Thr 55 assists in the polarization of the carbonyl group of CbmP, the carbon isotope effect for the T55A mutant should increase relative to that observed for the wild-type enzyme. However, the opposite is seen, indicating that Thr 55 is not involved in stabilizing the oxyanion in the transition state. Quantitative analysis of a series of 13C and 15N isotope effects suggested that the rate-determining step in the reaction catalyzed by T55A trimer may be a conformational change in the protein subsequent to formation of the Michaelis complex. Thus, Thr 55 may facilitate a conformational change in the enzyme that is a prerequisite for catalysis. An altered active site environment in the binary and Michaelis complexes with T55A trimer is reflected in the pH profiles for log V, log (V/K)asp, and pK(i) succinate, show a displacement in the pK values of ionizing residues involved in aspartate binding and catalysis relative to the wild-type enzyme.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
The variation with pH of the kinetic parameters associated with the mutase and dehydrogenase reactions catalyzed by chorismate mutase-prephenate dehydrogenase has been determined with the aim of elucidating the role that ionizing amino acid residues play in binding and catalysis. The pH dependency of log V for the dehydrogenase reaction shows that the enzyme possesses a single ionizing group with a pK value of 6.5 that must be unprotonated for catalysis. This same group is observed in the V/Kprephenate, as well as in the V/KNAD, profile. The V/Kprephenate profile exhibits a second ionizing residue with a pK value of 8.4 that must be protonated for the binding of prephenate to the enzyme. For the mutase reaction, the V/Kchorismate profile indicates the presence of three ionizing residues at the active site. Two of these residues, with similar pK values of about 7, must be protonated, while the third, with a pK value of 6.3, must be unprotonated. It can be concluded that all three groups are concerned with the binding of chorismate to the enzyme since the maximum velocity of the mutase reaction is essentially independent of pH. This conclusion is confirmed by the finding that the Ki profile for the competitive inhibitor, (3-endo,8-exo)-8-hydroxy-2-oxabicyclo[3.3]non-6-ene-3,5-dicarboxylic acid, shows the same three ionizing groups as observed in the V/Kchorismate profile. By contrast, the Ki profile for carboxyethyldihydrobenzoate shows only one residue, with a pK value of 7.3, that must be protonated for binding of the inhibitor.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
Badarau A  Page MI 《Biochemistry》2006,45(35):10654-10666
The kinetics and mechanism of hydrolysis of the native zinc and metal substituted Bacillus cereus (BcII) metallo-beta-lactamase have been investigated. The pH and metal ion dependence of k(cat) and k(cat)/K(m), determined under steady-state conditions, for the cobalt substituted BcII catalyzed hydrolysis of cefoxitin, cephaloridine, and cephalexin indicate that an enzyme residue of apparent pK(a) 6.3 +/- 0.1 is required in its deprotonated form for metal ion binding and catalysis. The k(cat)/K(m) for cefoxitin and cephalexin with cadmium substituted BcII is dependent on two ionizing groups on the enzyme: one of pK(a1) = 8.7 +/- 0.1 required in its deprotonated form and the other of pK(a2) = 9.3 +/- 0.1 required in its protonated form for activity. The pH dependence of the competitive inhibition constant, K(i), for CdBcII with l-captopril indicates that pK(a1) = 8.7 +/- 0.1 corresponds to the cadmium-bound water. For the manganese substituted BcII, the pH dependence of k(cat)/K(m) for benzylpenicillin, cephalexin, and cefoxitin similarly indicated the importance of two catalytic groups: one of pK(a1) = 8.5 +/- 0.1 which needs to be deprotonated and the other of pK(a2) = 9.4 +/- 0.1 which needs to be protonated for catalysis; the pK(a1) was assigned to the manganese-bound water. The rate was metal ion concentration dependent at the highest manganese concentrations used (10(-)(3) M). The metal substituted species have similar or higher catalytic activities compared with the zinc enzyme, albeit at pHs above 7. Interestingly, with cefoxitin, a very poor substrate for ZnBcII, both k(cat) and k(cat)/K(m) increase with increasing pK(a) of the metal-bound water, in the order Zn < Co < Mn < Cd. A higher pK(a) for the metal-bound water for cadmium and manganese BCII leads to more reactive enzymes than the native zinc BcII, suggesting that the role of the metal ion is predominantly to provide the nucleophilic hydroxide, rather than to act as a Lewis acid to polarize the carbonyl group and stabilize the oxyanion tetrahedral intermediate.  相似文献   

7.
The mechanism of the tryptophan synthase alpha(2)beta(2) complex from Salmonella typhimurium is explored by determining the effects of pH, of temperature, and of isotopic substitution on the pyridoxal phosphate-dependent reaction of L-serine with indole to form L-tryptophan. The pH dependence of the kinetic parameters indicates that three ionizing groups are involved in substrate binding and catalysis with pK(a)1 = 6.5, pK(a)2 = 7.3, and pK(a)3 = 8.2-9. A significant primary isotope effect (approximately 3.5) on V and V/K is observed at low pH (pH 7), but not at high pH (pH 9), indicating that the base that accepts the alpha-proton (betaLys-87) is protonated at low pH, slowing the abstraction of the alpha-proton and making this step at least partially rate-limiting. pK(a)2 is assigned to betaLys-87 on the basis of the kinetic isotope effect results and of the observation that the competitive inhibitors glycine and oxindolyl-L-alanine display single pK(i) values of 7.3. The residue with this pK(a) (betaLys-87) must be unprotonated for binding glycine or oxindolyl-L-alanine, and, by inference, L-serine. Investigations of the temperature dependence of the pK(a) values support the assignment of pK(a)2 to betaLys-87 and suggest that the ionizing residue with pK(a)1 could be a carboxylate, possibly betaAsp-305, and that the residue associated with a conformational change at pK(a)3 may be betaLys-167. The occurrence of a closed to open conformational conversion at high pH is supported by investigations of the effects of pH on reaction specificity and on the equilibrium distribution of enzyme-substrate intermediates.  相似文献   

8.
The pH dependence of basal and calmodulin- (CaM-) stimulated neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) reduction of 2,6-dichloroindophenol (DCIP) and cytochrome c(3+) was investigated. The wave-shaped log V versus pH profile revealed that optimal DCIP reduction occurred when a group, pK(a) of 7.6-7.8, was ionized. The (V/K)(NADPH) and (V/K)(DCIP) versus pH profiles increased with the protonation of a group with a pK(a) of 6.5 or 5.9 and the ionization of two groups with the same pK(a) of 7.5 or 7.0, respectively. (V/K)(DCIP) decreased with the ionization of a group, pK(a) of 9.0. Similar V, (V/K)(NADPH), and (V/K)(DCIP) versus pH profiles for DCIP reduction were obtained with and without CaM, indicating that CaM does not influence ionizable groups involved in catalysis or substrate binding. In contrast, CaM affected the pH dependence of cytochrome c(3+) reduction. The wave-shaped log V versus pH profile for basal cytochrome c(3+) reduction revealed that ionization of a group, pK(a) of 8.6, increased catalysis. Log V for CaM-stimulated cytochrome c(3+) reduction displayed a bell-shaped pH dependence with the protonation of a group with a pK(a) of 6.4 and the ionization of a group with a pK(a) of 9.3, resulting in a loss of activity. The log(V/K)(cytc) versus pH profiles with and without CaM were bell-shaped with the ionization of a group at pK(a) of 7.1 or 7.6 (CaM) or pK(a) of 9.4 or 9.6 (CaM), increasing and decreasing (V/K)(cytc). These results suggest that CaM may change the nature of the rate-limiting catalytic steps or ionizable groups involved in cytochrome c(3+) reduction.  相似文献   

9.
Aminopeptidases are major enzymes in the midgut microvillar membranes of most insects and are targets of insecticidal Bacillus thuringiensis crystal delta-endotoxins. Sequence analysis and substrate specificity studies showed that these enzymes resemble mammalian aminopeptidase N, although information on the organization of their active site is lacking. The effect of pH at different temperatures on the kinetic parameters of Tenebrio molitor (Coleoptera) larval aminopeptidase showed that enzyme catalysis depend on a deprotonated (pK 7.6; DeltaH degrees (ion), 7.6 kJ/mol) and a protonated (pK 8.2; DeltaH degrees (ion), 16.8 kJ/mol) group. 1-Ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl) carbodiimide and diethylpyrocarbonate inactivate the enzyme by modifying a pK 5.8 carboxylate and a imidazole group, respectively, with a reaction order around 1. Tetranitromethane changes the K(m) of the enzyme without affecting its V(max) by modifying a phenol group. The presence of a competitive inhibitor decrease the inactivation reaction rates in all these cases. EDTA inactivation of the aminopeptidase is affected by pH and temperature suggesting the involvement in metal binding of at least one deprotonated imidazole group (pK 5.8, DeltaH degrees (ion), 20 kJ/mol). The data support the hypothesis that T. molitor aminopeptidase catalysis depends on a catalytic metal and on a carboxylate and a protonated imidazole group, whereas substrate binding relies in one phenol and one carboxylate groups. The insect aminopeptidase shares common features with mammalian aminopeptidase N, although differing in details of substrate binding and in residues directly involved in catalysis.  相似文献   

10.
M Y Yoon  P F Cook 《Biochemistry》1987,26(13):4118-4125
The pH dependence of kinetic parameters and inhibitor dissociation constants for the adenosine cyclic 3',5'-monophosphate dependent protein kinase reaction has been determined. Data are consistent with a mechanism in which reactants selectively bind to enzyme with the catalytic base unprotonated and an enzyme group required protonated for peptide (Leu-Arg-Arg-Ala-Ser-Leu-Gly) binding. Binding of the peptide apparently locks both of the above enzyme residues in their correct protonation state. MgATP preferentially binds fully ionized and requires an enzyme residue (probably lysine) to be protonated. The maximum velocity and V/KMgATP are pH independent. The V/K for Ser-peptide is bell-shaped with pK values of 6.2 and 8.5 estimated. The pH dependence of 1/Ki for Leu-Arg-Arg-Ala-Ala-Leu-Gly is also bell-shaped, giving pK values identical with those obtained for V/KSer-peptide, while the Ki for MgAMP-PCP increases from a constant value of 650 microM above pH 8 to a constant value of 4 mM below pH 5.5. The Ki for uncomplexed Mg2+ obtained from the Mg2+ dependence of V and V/KMgATP is apparently pH independent.  相似文献   

11.
The catalytic amino acid residues of the extracellular beta-D-xylosidase (beta-D-xyloside xylohydrolase, EC 3.2.1.37) from Aspergillus carbonarius was investigated by the pH dependence of reaction kinetic parameters and chemical modifications of the enzyme. The pH dependence curves gave apparent pK values of 2.7 and 6.4 for the free enzyme, while pK value of 4.0 was obtained for the enzyme-substrate complex using p-nitrophenyl beta-D-xyloside as a substrate. These results suggested that a carboxylate group and a protonated group--presumably a histidine residue--took part in the binding of the substrate but only a carboxylate group was essential in the substrate cleavage. Carbodiimide- and Woodward's reagent K-mediated chemical modifications of the enzyme also supported that a carboxylate residue, located in the active center, was fundamental in the catalysis. The pH dependence of inactivation revealed the involvement of a group with pK value of 4.4, proving that a carboxylate residue relevant for hydrolysis was modified. During modification V(max) decreased to 10% of that of the unmodified enzyme and K(m) remained unchanged, supporting that the modified carboxylate group participated in the cleavage and not in the binding of the substrate. We synthesized and tested a new, potential affinity label, N-bromoacetyl-beta-d-xylopyranosylamine for beta-D-xylosidase. The A. carbonarius beta-D-xylosidase was irreversible inactivated by N-bromoacetyl-beta-D-xylopyranosylamine. The competitive inhibitor beta-D-xylopyranosyl azide protected the enzyme from inactivation proving that the inactivation took place in the active center. Kinetic analysis indicated that one molecule of reagent was necessary for inactivation of one molecule of the enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
L J Hyland  T A Tomaszek  T D Meek 《Biochemistry》1991,30(34):8454-8463
The pH dependence of the peptidolytic reaction of recombinant human immunodeficiency virus type 1 protease has been examined over a pH range of 3-7 for four oligopeptide substrates and two competitive inhibitors. The pK values obtained from the pKis vs pH profiles for the unprotonated and protonated active-site aspartyl groups, Asp-25 and Asp-25', in the monoprotonated enzyme form were 3.1 and 5.2, respectively. Profiles of log V/K vs pH for all four substrates were "bell-shaped" in which the pK values for the unprotonated and protonated aspartyl residues were 3.4-3.7 and 5.5-6.5, respectively. Profiles of log V vs pH for these substrates were "wave-shaped" in which V was shifted to a constant lower value upon protonation of a residue of pK = 4.2-5.2. These results indicate that substrates bind only to a form of HIV-1 protease in which one of the two catalytic aspartyl residues is protonated. Solvent kinetic isotope effects were measured over a pH (D) range of 3-7 for two oligopeptide substrates, Ac-Arg-Ala-Ser-Gln-Asn-Tyr-Pro-Val-Val-NH2 and Ac-Ser-Gln-Asn-Tyr-Pro-Val-Val-NH2. The pH-independent value for DV/K was 1.0 for both substrates, and DV = 1.5-1.7 and 2.2-3.2 at low and high pH (D), respectively. The attentuation of both V and DV at low pH (D) is consistent with a change in rate-limiting step from a chemical one at high pH (D) to one in which a product release step or an enzyme isomerization step becomes partly rate-limiting at low pH (D). Proton inventory data is in accord with the concerted transfer of two protons in the transition state of a rate-limiting chemical step in which the enzyme-bound amide hydrate adduct collapses to form the carboxylic acid and amine products.  相似文献   

13.
The pK(a) values have been determined for eight of the nine histidine residues and the amino terminus of the N-lobe of human apo-transferrin (hTF/2N), and for seven of the nine histidine residues and the amino terminus of the protein Asp63Ser hTF/2N containing a mutation of the Fe(3+)-ligand Asp63 to Ser63. Calculations suggested that substitution of aspartate by serine would result in decreases of the pK(a) values of most of the histidine residues in the protein. This was found to be the case experimentally, and allowed assignment of the varepsilonCH resonance of His249. For the wild-type protein, the His residue with a pK(a) of 7.40 was assigned as His249, whereas for the mutant, no observable His residue had a pK(a) value higher than 6.9. The protonated form of His249 appears to be stabilised by interactions with Asp63, and the high pK(a) value may be critical for ensuring the release of iron at endosomal pH (5.5). The mutation lowered the apparent binding constant of hTF/2N for the synergistic anion oxalate from log K 4.0 to log K 3.3. (1)H NMR spectral changes induced by Ga(3+) binding to the mutant are compared to those observed for the wild-type protein.  相似文献   

14.
M Gómez  P Isorna  M Rojo  P Estrada 《Biochimie》2001,83(10):961-967
The variation of kinetic parameters of beta-xylosidase from Trichoderma reesei QM 9414 with pH was used to elucidate the chemical mechanism of the p-nitrophenyl beta-D-xylopyranoside hydrolysis. The pH-dependence of V and V/K(m) showed that a group on the enzyme with a pK value of 3.20 must be unprotonated and a group with a pK value of 5.20 must be protonated for activity and both are involved in catalysis. Solvent-perturbation studies indicated that these groups are neutral acid type. Temperature dependence of kinetic parameters suggested the stickiness of the substrate at lower temperatures than the optimum and the calculated ionization enthalpies pointed to carboxyl groups as responsible for both pKs. Chemical modification with triethyloxonium tetrafluoroborate and protection with the substrate studies demonstrated essential carboxyl groups on the enzyme. Profiles of pK(i) for D-gluconic acid lactone indicated that a group with a pK value of 3.45 must be protonated for binding and it has been assigned to the carboxyl group of D-gluconic acid formed by lactone ring breakdown in solution.  相似文献   

15.
Kinetic studies with myo-inositol monophosphatase from bovine brain   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
A J Ganzhorn  M C Chanal 《Biochemistry》1990,29(25):6065-6071
The kinetic properties of myo-inositol monophosphatase with different substrates were examined with respect to inhibition by fluoride, activation or inhibition by metal ions, pH profiles, and solvent isotope effects. F- is a competitive inhibitor versus 2'-AMP and glycerol 2-phosphate, but noncompetitive (Kis = Kii) versus DL-inositol 1-phosphate, all with Ki values of approximately 45 microM. Activation by Mg2+ follows sigmoid kinetics with Hill constants around 1.9, and random binding of substrate and metal ion. At high concentrations, Mg2+ acts as an uncompetitive inhibitor (Ki = 4.0 mM with DL-inositol 1-phosphate at pH 8.0 and 37 degrees C). Activation and inhibition constants, and consequently the optimal concentration of Mg2+, vary considerably with substrate structure and pH. Uncompetitive inhibition by Li+ and Mg2+ is mutually exclusive, suggesting a common binding site. Lithium binding decreases at low pH with a pK value of 6.4, and at high pH with a pK of 8.9, whereas magnesium inhibition depends on deprotonation with a pK of 8.3. The pH dependence of V suggests that two groups with pK values around 6.5 have to be deprotonated for catalysis. Solvent isotope effects on V and V/Km are greater than 2 and 1, respectively, regardless of the substrate, and proton inventories are linear. These results are consistent with a model where low concentrations of Mg2+ activate the enzyme by stabilizing the pentacoordinate phosphate intermediate. Li+ as well as Mg2+ at inhibiting concentrations bind to an additional site in the enzyme-substrate complex. Hydrolysis of the phosphate ester is rate limiting and facilitated by acid-base catalysis.  相似文献   

16.
Gadda G  Fitzpatrick PF 《Biochemistry》2000,39(6):1406-1410
Nitroalkane oxidase catalyzes the oxidation of nitroalkanes to aldehydes or ketones with production of nitrite and hydrogen peroxide. pH and kinetic isotope effects with [1, 1-(2)H(2)]nitroethane have been used to study the mechanism of this enzyme. The V/K(ne) pH profile is bell-shaped. A group with a pK(a) value of about 7 must be unprotonated and one with a pK(a) value of 9.5 must be protonated for catalysis. The lower pK(a) value is seen also in the pK(is) profile for the competitive inhibitor valerate, indicating that nitroethane has no significant external commitments to catalysis. The (D)(V/K)(ne) value is pH-independent with a value of 7.5, whereas the (D)V(max) value increases from 1.4 at pH 8.2 to a limiting value of 7.4 below pH 5. The V(max) pH profile decreases at low and high pH, with pK(a) values of 6.6 and 9.5, respectively. Imidazole, which activates the enzyme, affects the V(max) but not the V/K(ne) pH profile. In the presence of imidazole at pH 7 the (D)V(max) value increases to a value close to the intrinsic value, consistent with cleavage of the carbon-hydrogen bond of the substrate being fully rate-limiting for catalysis in the presence of imidazole.  相似文献   

17.
The pH variation of the kinetic parameters for the oxidative decarboxylation of L-malate and decarboxylation of oxalacetate catalyzed by malic enzyme has been used to gain information on the catalytic mechanism of this enzyme. With Mn2+ as the activator, an active-site residue with a pK of 5.4 must be protonated for oxalacetate decarboxylation and ionized for the oxidative decarboxylation of L-malate. With Mg2+ as the metal, this pK is 6, and, at high pH, V/K for L-malate decreases when groups with pKs of 7.8 and 9 are deprotonated. The group at 7.8 is a neutral acid (thought to be water coordinated to Mg2+), while the group at 9 is a cationic acid such as lysine. The V profile for reaction of malate shows these pKs displaced outward by 1.4 pH units, since the rate-limiting step is normally TPNH release, and the chemical reaction, which is pH sensitive, is 25 times faster. TPN binding is decreased by ionization of a group with pK 9.3 or protonation of a group with pK 5.3. The pH variation of the Km for Mg shows that protonation of a group with pK 8.7 (possibly SH) decreases metal binding in the presence of malate by a factor of 1400, and in the absence of malate by a factor of 20. A catalytic mechanism is proposed in which hydride transfer is accompanied by transfer of a proton to the group with pK 5.4-6, and enolpyruvate is protonated by water coordinated to the Mg2+ (pK 7.8) after decarboxylation and release of CO2.  相似文献   

18.
N Ahn  J P Klinman 《Biochemistry》1983,22(13):3096-3106
Dopamine beta-monooxygenase catalyzes a reaction in which 2 mol of protons are consumed for each turnover of substrate. Studies of the pH dependence of initial rate parameters (Vmax and Vmax/Km) and their primary hydrogen isotope effects show that at least two ionizable residues are involved in catalysis. One residue (B1, pK = 5.6-5.8) must be protonated prior to the carbon-hydrogen bond cleavage step, implying a role for general-acid catalysis in substrate activation. A second protonated residue (B2, pK = 5.2-5.4) facilitates, but is not required for, product release. Recent measurement of the intrinsic isotope effect for dopamine beta-monoxygenase [Miller, S. M., & Klinman, J. P. (1983) Biochemistry (preceding paper in this issue)] allows an analysis of the pH dependence of rate constant ratios and in selected instances individual rate constants. We demonstrate large changes in the rate-determining step as well as an unprecedented inversion in the kinetic order of substrate release from ternary complex over an interval of 2 pH units. Previously, fumarate has been used in dopamine beta-monooxygenase assays because of its property of enzyme activation. Studies of the pH behavior in the presence of saturating concentrations of fumarate have shown two causes of the activation: (i) fumarate perturbs the pK of B1 to pK = 6.6-6.8 such that the residue remains protonated and the enzyme optimally active over a wider pH range; (ii) fumarate decreases the rate of dopamine release from the ternary enzyme-substrate complex, increasing the equilibrium association constant for dopamine binding. Both effects are consistent with a simple electrostatic stabilization of bound cationic charges by the dianionic form of fumarate.  相似文献   

19.
Aspartate carbamoyltransferase from rat liver   总被引:3,自引:1,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
1. Aspartate-carbamoyltransferase activity was concentrated from rat-liver preparations. Only l-aspartate, beta-benzyl-l-aspartate and beta-erythro-hydroxy-dl-aspartate were carbamoylated enzymically. The K(m) for l-aspartate and carbamoyl phosphate have been determined by three methods: colorimetric procedure, radioactive assay with [(14)C]aspartate and an assay with [(14)C]carbamoyl phosphate. 2. The K(m) for aspartate has been determined as a function of the pH; the pK of the functional group at the active site of the enzyme, pK(e), was at pH9.0. Enzymic activity was diminished in the presence of N-ethylmaleimide, p-hydroxymercuribenzoate and the heavy metals Ag(+), Hg(2+), or Zn(2+). The inhibitions could be prevented by mercaptoethanol. These findings suggested the association of a thiol group with the enzymic activity. 3. Enzymic activity was also decreased by sodium lauryl sulphate, urea and dioxan. Competitive inhibition (with l-aspartate) was manifested by maleate, succinate, oxaloacetate, beta-erythro-hydroxy-dl-aspartate and beta-benzyl-l-aspartate. The K(i) for most of these inhibitions has been determined. 4. The properties of the liver enzyme are compared with those of Escherichia coli aspartate carbamoyltransferase and the implications of the findings are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
The pH dependence of the kinetic parameters and the primary deuterium isotope effects with nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) and also thionicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (thio-NAD) as the nucleotide substrates were determined in order to obtain information about the chemical mechanism and location of rate-determining steps for the Ascaris suum NAD-malic enzyme reaction. The maximum velocity with thio-NAD as the nucleotide is pH-independent from pH 4.2 to 9.6, while with NAD, V decreases below a pK of 4.8. V/K for both nucleotides decreases below a pK of 5.6 and above a pK of 8.9. Both the tartronate pKi and V/Kmalate decrease below a pK of 4.8 and above a pK of 8.9. Oxalate is competitive vs. malate above pH 7 and noncompetitive below pH 7 with NAD as the nucleotide. The oxalate Kis increases from a constant value above a pK of 4.9 to another constant value above a pK of 6.7. The oxalate Kii also increases above a pK of 4.9, and this inhibition is enhanced by NADH. In the presence of thio-NAD the inhibition by oxalate is competitive vs. malate below pH 7. For thio-NAD, both DV and D(V/K) are pH-independent and equal to 1.7. With NAD as the nucleotide, DV decreases to 1.0 below a pK of 4.9, while D(V/KNAD) and D(V/Kmalate) are pH-independent. Above pH 7 the isotope effects on V and the V/K values for NAD and malate are equal to 1.45, the pH-independent value of DV above pH 7. From the above data, the following conclusions can be made concerning the mechanism for this enzyme. Substrates bind to only the correctly protonated form of the enzyme. Two enzyme groups are necessary for binding of substrates and catalysis. Both NAD and malate are released from the Michaelis complex at equal rates which are equal to the rate of NADH release from E-NADH above pH 7. Below pH 7 NADH release becomes more rate-determining as the pH decreases until at pH 4.0 it completely limits the overall rate of the reaction.  相似文献   

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