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1.
Previous studies of the low molecular mass family 11 xylanase from Bacillus circulans show that the ionization state of the nucleophile (Glu78, pK(a) 4.6) and the acid/base catalyst (Glu172, pK(a) 6.7) gives rise to its pH-dependent activity profile. Inspection of the crystal structure of BCX reveals that Glu78 and Glu172 are in very similar environments and are surrounded by several chemically equivalent and highly conserved active site residues. Hence, there are no obvious reasons why their apparent pK(a) values are different. To address this question, a mutagenic approach was implemented to determine what features establish the pK(a) values (measured directly by (13)C NMR and indirectly by pH-dependent activity profiles) of these two catalytic carboxylic acids. Analysis of several BCX variants indicates that the ionized form of Glu78 is preferentially stabilized over that of Glu172 in part by stronger hydrogen bonds contributed by two well-ordered residues, namely, Tyr69 and Gln127. In addition, theoretical pK(a) calculations show that Glu78 has a lower pK(a) value than Glu172 due to a smaller desolvation energy and more favorable background interactions with permanent partial charges and ionizable groups within the protein. The pK(a) value of Glu172 is in turn elevated due to electrostatic repulsion from the negatively charged glutamate at position 78. The results also indicate that all of the conserved active site residues act concertedly in establishing the pK(a) values of Glu78 and Glu172, with no particular residue being singly more important than any of the others. In general, residues that contribute positive charges and hydrogen bonds serve to lower the pK(a) values of Glu78 and Glu172. The degree to which a hydrogen bond lowers a pK(a) value is largely dependent on the length of the hydrogen bond (shorter bonds lower pK(a) values more) and the chemical nature of the donor (COOH > OH > CONH(2)). In contrast, neighboring carboxyl groups can either lower or raise the pK(a) values of the catalytic glutamic acids depending upon the electrostatic linkage of the ionization constants of the residues involved in the interaction. While the pH optimum of BCX can be shifted from -1.1 to +0.6 pH units by mutating neighboring residues within the active site, activity is usually compromised due to the loss of important ground and/or transition state interactions. These results suggest that the pH optima of an enzyme might be best engineered by making strategic amino acid substitutions, at positions outside of the "core" active site, that electrostatically influence catalytic residues without perturbing their immediate structural environment.  相似文献   

2.
Using site-directed mutagenesis we have investigated the catalytic residues in a xylanase from Bacillus circulans. Analysis of the mutants E78D and E172D indicated that mutations in these conserved residues do not grossly alter the structure of the enzyme and that these residues participate in the catalytic mechanism. We have now determined the crystal structure of an enzyme-substrate complex to 108 A resolution using a catalytically incompetent mutant (E172C). In addition to the catalytic residues, Glu 78 and Glu 172, we have identified 2 tyrosine residues, Tyr 69 and Tyr 80, which likely function in substrate binding, and an arginine residue, Arg 112, which plays an important role in the active site of this enzyme. On the basis of our work we would propose that Glu 78 is the nucleophile and that Glu 172 is the acid-base catalyst in the reaction.  相似文献   

3.
Asn112 is located at the active site of thermolysin, 5-8 A from the catalytic Zn2+ and catalytic residues Glu143 and His231. When Asn112 was replaced with Ala, Asp, Glu, Lys, His, and Arg by site-directed mutagenesis, the mutant enzymes N112D and N112E, in which Asn112 is replaced with Asp and Glu, respectively, were secreted as an active form into Escherichia coli culture medium, while the other four were not. In the hydrolysis of a neutral substrate N-[3-(2-furyl)acryloyl]-Gly-L-Leu amide, the kcat/Km values of N112D and N112E exhibited bell-shaped pH-dependence, as did the wild-type thermolysin (WT). The acidic pKa of N112D was 5.7 +/- 0.1, higher by 0.4 +/- 0.2 units than that of WT, suggesting that the introduced negative charge suppressed the protonation of Glu143 or Zn2+-OH. In the hydrolysis of a negatively charged substrate, N-carbobenzoxy-l-Asp-l-Phe methyl ester (ZDFM), the pH-dependence of kcat/Km of the mutants decreased with increase in pH from 5.5 to 8.5, while that of WT was bell-shaped. This difference might be explained by the electrostatic repulsion between the introduced Asp/Glu and ZDFM, suggesting that introducing ionizing residues into the active site of thermolysin might be an effective means of modifying its pH-activity profile.  相似文献   

4.
Detailed catalytic roles of the conserved Glu323, Asp460, and Glu519 of Arthrobacter sp. S37 inulinase (EnIA), a member of the glycoside hydrolase family 32, were investigated by site-directed mutagenesis and pH-dependence studies of the enzyme efficiency and homology modeling were carried out for EnIA and for D460E mutant. The enzyme efficiency (kcat/Km) of the E323A and E519A mutants was significantly lower than that of the wild-type due to a substantial decrease in kcat, but not due to variations in Km, consistent with their putative roles as nucleophile and acid/base catalyst, respectively. The D460A mutant was totally inactive, whereas the D460E and D460N mutants were active to some extent, revealing Asp460 as a catalytic residue and demonstrating that the presence of a carboxylate group in this position is a prerequisite for catalysis. The pH-dependence studies indicated that the pKa of the acid/base catalyst decreased from 9.2 for the wild-type enzyme to 7.0 for the D460E mutant, implicating Asp460 as the residue that interacts with the acid/base catalyst Glu519 and elevates its pKa. Homology modeling and molecular dynamics simulation of the wild-type enzyme and the D460E mutant shed light on the structural roles of Glu323, Asp460, and Glu519 in the catalytic activity of the enzyme.  相似文献   

5.
Electrostatic interactions in proteins can be dissected experimentally by determining the pKa values of their constituent ionizable amino acids. To complement previous studies of the glutamic acid and histidine residues in Bacillus circulans xylanase (BCX), we have used NMR methods to measure the pKa s of the seven aspartic acids and the C-terminus of this protein. The pKa s of these carboxyls are all less than the corresponding values observed with random coil polypeptides, indicating that their ionization contributes favorably to the stability of the folded enzyme. In general, the aspartic acids with the most reduced pKa s are those with limited exposure to the solvent and a high degree of conservation among homologous xylanases. Most dramatically, Asp 83 and Asp 101 have pKa s < 2 and thus remain deprotonated in native BCX under all conditions examined. Asp 83 is completely buried, forming a strong salt bridge with Arg 136. In contrast, Asp 101 is located on the surface of the protein, stabilized in the deprotonated form by an extensive network of hydrogen bonds involving an internal water molecule and the neutral side-chain and main-chain atoms of Ser 100 and Thr 145. These data provide a complete experimental database for theoretical studies of the ionization behavior of BCX under acidic conditions.  相似文献   

6.
The crystal structures of the four product-complexed single mutants of the catalytic residues of Pseudomonas stutzeri maltotetraose-forming alpha-amylase, E219G, D193N, D193G and D294N, have been determined. Possible roles of the catalytic residues Glu219, Asp193 and Asp294 have been discussed by comparing the structures among the previously determined complexed mutant E219Q and the present mutant enzymes. The results suggested that Asp193 predominantly works as the base catalyst (nucleophile), whose side chain atom lies in close proximity to the C1-atom of Glc4, being involved in the intermediate formation in the hydrolysis reaction. While Asp294 works for tightly binding the substrate to give a twisted and a deformed conformation of the glucose ring at position -1 (Glc4). The hydrogen bond between the side chain atom of Glu219 and the O1-atom of Glc4, that implies the possibility of interaction via hydrogen, consistently present throughout these analyses, supports the generally accepted role of this residue as the acid catalyst (proton donor).  相似文献   

7.
Using site-specific mutagenesis, we have constructed two mutants of Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase (ecDHFR) to investigate further the function of a weakly acidic side chain at position 27 in substrate protonation: Asp27-->Glu (D27E) and Asp27-->Cys (D27C). The crystal structure of D27E ecDHFR in a binary complex with methotrexate shows that the side-chain oxygen atoms of Glu27 are in almost precisely the same location as those of Asp27 in the wild-type enzyme. Kinetic evidence indicates that Glu27 can indeed function efficiently in the proton relay to dihydrofolate. Even though vertebrate DHFRs all have a glutamic acid at the structurally equivalent position, the kinetic properties of Glu27 ecDHFR more closely resemble those of wild-type bacterial DHFRs than of vertebrate DHFRs. The D27C mutation produced an enzyme still capable of relaying a proton to dihydrofolate, but with the intrinsic pKa in its pH-activity profiles shifted upward to values characteristic of the more basic thiolate group. The crystal structure of the binary complex with methotrexate reveals two unexpected features: (1) the Cys27 sulfhydryl group does not point toward the pteridine-binding site, but the side chain of this residue is instead rotated 120 degrees to interact with a tyrosine side chain projecting from a neighboring beta-strand; (2) a bound ethanol molecule occupies a cavity adjacent to methotrexate. Ethanol is a component of the crystallization medium.  相似文献   

8.
NMR spectroscopy was used to search for mechanistically significant differences in the local mobility of the main-chain amides of Bacillus circulans xylanase (BCX) in its native and catalytically competent covalent glycosyl-enzyme intermediate states. 15N T1, T2, and 15N[1H] NOE values were measured for approximately 120 out of 178 peptide groups in both the apo form of the protein and in BCX covalently modified at position Glu78 with a mechanism-based 2-deoxy-2-fluoro-beta-xylobioside inactivator. Employing the model-free formalism of Lipari and Szabo, the measured relaxation parameters were used to calculate a global correlation time (tau(m)) for the protein in each form (9.2 +/- 0.2 ns for apo-BCX; 9.8 +/- 0.3 ns for the modified protein), as well as individual order parameters for the main-chain NH bond vectors. Average values of the order parameters for the protein in the apo and complexed forms were S2 = 0.86 +/- 0.04 and S2 = 0.91 +/- 0.04, respectively. No correlation is observed between these order parameters and the secondary structure, solvent accessibility, or hydrogen bonding patterns of amides in either form of the protein. These results demonstrate that the backbone of BCX is well ordered in both states and that formation of the glycosyl-enzyme intermediate leads to little change, in any, in the dynamic properties of BCX on the time scales sampled by 15N-NMR relaxation measurements.  相似文献   

9.
Kongsted J  Ryde U  Wydra J  Jensen JH 《Biochemistry》2007,46(47):13581-13592
This paper presents a study of the pH dependence of the activity and stability of a set of family 11 xylanases for which X-ray structures are available, using the PROPKA approach. The xylanases are traditionally divided into basic and acidic xylanases, depending on whether the catalytic acid is hydrogen bonded to an Asn or Asp residue. Using X-ray structures, the predicted pH values of optimal activity of the basic xylanases are in the range of 5.2-6.9, which is in reasonable agreement with the available experimental values of 5-6.5. In the case of acidic xylanases, there are only four X-ray structures available, and using these structures, the predicted pHs of optimal activity are in the range of 4.2-5.0, compared to an observed range of 2-4.6. The influence of dynamical fluctuations of the protein structure is investigated for Bacillus agaradhaerens and Aspergillus kawachii xylanase using molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to provide snapshots from which average values can be computed. This decreases the respective predicted pH optima from 6.2-6.7 and 4.8 to 5.3 +/- 0.3 and 4.0 +/- 0.2, respectively, which are in better agreement with the observed values of 5.6 and 2, respectively. The change is primarily due to structural fluctuations of an Arg residue near the catalytic nucleophile, which lowers its pKa value compared to using the X-ray structure. The MD simulations and some X-ray structures indicate that this Arg residue can form a hydrogen bond to the catalytic base, and it is hypothesized that this hydrogen bond is stabilized by an additional hydrogen bond to another Glu residue present only in acidic xylanases. Formation of such a hydrogen bond is predicted to lower the pH optimum of A. kawachii xylanase to 2.9 +/- 0.3, which is in reasonable agreement with the observed value of 2. The predicted pH of optimal stability is in excellent agreement with the pH value at which the melting temperature (Tm) is greatest. Some correlation is observed between the pH-dependent free energy of unfolding and Tm, suggesting that the thermostability of the xylanases is partly due to a difference in residues with shifted pKa values. Thus, the thermostability of xylanases (and proteins in general) can perhaps be increased by mutations that introduce ionizable residues with pKa values significantly lower than standard values.  相似文献   

10.
Guo H  Wlodawer A  Nakayama T  Xu Q  Guo H 《Biochemistry》2006,45(30):9129-9137
Quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical molecular dynamics and 2D free energy simulations are performed to study the formation of a tetrahedral adduct by an inhibitor N-acetyl-isoleucyl-prolyl-phenylalaninal (AcIPF) in a serine-carboxyl peptidase (kumamolisin-As) and elucidate the role of proton transfers during the nucleophilic attack by the Ser278 catalytic residue. It is shown that although the serine-carboxyl peptidases have a fold resembling that of subtilisin, the proton transfer processes during the nucleophilic attack by the Ser residue are likely to be more complex for these enzymes compared to the case in classical serine proteases. The computer simulations demonstrate that both general base and acid catalysts are required for the formation and stabilization of the tetrahedral adduct. The 2D free energy maps further demonstrate that the proton transfer from Ser278 to Glu78 (the general base catalyst) is synchronous with the nucleophilic attack, whereas the proton transfer from Asp164 (the general acid catalyst) to the inhibitor is not. The dynamics of the protons at the active site in different stages of the nucleophilic attack as well as the motions of the corresponding functional groups are also studied. It is found that the side chain of Glu78 is generally rather flexible, consistent with its possible multifunctional role during catalysis. The effects of proton shuffling from Asp82 to Glu78 and from Glu32 to Asp82 are examined, and the results indicate that such proton shuffling may not play an important role in the stabilization of the tetrahedral intermediate analogue.  相似文献   

11.
O-GlcNAcase is a family 84 beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase catalyzing the hydrolytic cleavage of beta-O-linked 2-acetamido-2-deoxy-d-glycopyranose (O-GlcNAc) from serine and threonine residues of posttranslationally modified proteins. O-GlcNAcases use a double-displacement mechanism involving formation and breakdown of a transient bicyclic oxazoline intermediate. The key catalytic residues of any family 84 enzyme facilitating this reaction, however, are unknown. Two mutants of human O-GlcNAcase, D174A and D175A, were generated since these residues are highly conserved among family 84 glycoside hydrolases. Structure-reactivity studies of the D174A mutant enzyme reveals severely impaired catalytic activity across a broad range of substrates alongside a pH-activity profile consistent with deletion of a key catalytic residue. The D175A mutant enzyme shows a significant decrease in catalytic efficiency with substrates bearing poor leaving groups (up to 3000-fold), while for substates bearing good leading groups the difference is much smaller (7-fold). This mutant enzyme also cleaves thioglycosides with essentially the same catalytic efficiency as the wild-type enzyme. As well, addition of azide as an exogenous nucleophile increases the activity of this enzyme toward a substrate bearing an excellent leaving group. Together, these results allow unambiguous assignment of Asp(174) as the residue that polarizes the 2-acetamido group for attack on the anomeric center and Asp(175) as the residue that functions as the general acid/base catalyst. Therefore, the family 84 glycoside hydrolases use a DD catalytic pair to effect catalysis.  相似文献   

12.
The 1.8 A resolution structure of the glycosyl-enzyme intermediate formed on the retaining beta-1,4-xylanase from Bacillus circulans has been determined using X-ray crystallographic techniques. The 2-fluoro-xylose residue bound in the -1 subsite adopts a 2,5B (boat) conformation, allowing atoms C5, O5, C1, and C2 of the sugar to achieve coplanarity as required at the oxocarbenium ion-like transition states of the double-displacement catalytic mechanism. Comparison of this structure to that of a mutant of this same enzyme noncovalently complexed with xylotetraose [Wakarchuk et al. (1994) Protein Sci. 3, 467-475] reveals a number of differences beyond the distortion of the sugar moiety. Most notably, a bifurcated hydrogen bond interaction is formed in the glycosyl-enzyme intermediate involving Heta of Tyr69, the endocyclic oxygen (O5) of the xylose residue in the -1 subsite, and Oepsilon2 of the catalytic nucleophile, Glu78. To gain additional understanding of the role of Tyr69 at the active site of this enzyme, we also determined the 1.5 A resolution structure of the catalytically inactive Tyr69Phe mutant. Interestingly, no significant structural perturbation due to the loss of the phenolic group is observed. These results suggest that the interactions involving the phenolic group of Tyr69, O5 of the proximal saccharide, and Glu78 Oepsilon2 are important for the catalytic mechanism of this enzyme, and it is proposed that, through charge redistribution, these interactions serve to stabilize the oxocarbenium-like ion of the transition state. Studies of the covalent glycosyl-enzyme intermediate of this xylanase also provide insight into specificity, as contacts with C5 of the xylose moiety exclude sugars with hydroxymethyl substituents, and the mechanism of catalysis, including aspects of stereoelectronic theory as applied to glycoside hydrolysis.  相似文献   

13.
cDNA encoding Schizosaccharomyces pombe alpha-glucosidase was cloned from a library constructed from mRNA of the fission yeast, and expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The cDNA, 4176 bp in length, included a single ORF composed of 2910 bp encoding a polypeptide of 969 amino-acid residues with M(r) 106 138. The deduced amino-acid sequence showed a high homology to those of alpha-glucosidases from molds, plants and mammals. Therefore, the enzyme was categorized into the alpha-glucosidase family II. By site-directed mutagenesis, Asp481, Glu484 and Asp647 residues were confirmed to be essential in the catalytic reaction. The carboxyl group (-COOH) of the Asp647 residue was for the first time shown to be the most likely proton donor acting as the acid catalyst in the alpha-glucosidase of family II. Studies with the chemical modifier conduritol B epoxide suggested that the carboxylate group (-COO-) of the Asp481 residue was the catalytic nucleophile, although the role of the Glu484 residue remains obscure.  相似文献   

14.
Bovine pancreatic ribonuclease A (RNase A) has a conserved His ... Asp catalytic dyad in its active site. Structural analyses had indicated that Asp121 forms a hydrogen bond with His119, which serves as an acid during catalysis of RNA cleavage. The enzyme contains three other histidine residues including His12, which is also in the active site. Here, 1H-NMR spectra of wild-type RNase A and the D121N and D121A variants were analyzed thoroughly as a function of pH. The effect of replacing Asp121 on the microscopic pKa values of the histidine residues is modest: none change by more than 0.2 units. There is no evidence for the formation of a low-barrier hydrogen bond between His119 and either an aspartate or an asparagine residue at position 121. In the presence of the reaction product, uridine 3'-phosphate (3'-UMP), protonation of one active-site histidine residue favors protonation of the other. This finding is consistent with the phosphoryl group of 3'-UMP interacting more strongly with the two active-site histidine residues when both are protonated. Comparison of the titration curves of the unliganded enzyme with that obtained in the presence of different concentrations of 3'-UMP shows that a second molecule of 3'-UMP can bind to the enzyme. Together, the data indicate that the aspartate residue in the His ... Asp catalytic dyad of RNase A has a measurable but modest effect on the ionization of the adjacent histidine residue.  相似文献   

15.
CAZy glycoside hydrolase family GH3 consists primarily of stereochemistry-retaining β-glucosidases but also contains a subfamily of β-N-acetylglucosaminidases. Enzymes from this subfamily were recently shown to use a histidine residue within a His-Asp dyad contained in a signature sequence as their catalytic acid/base residue. Reasons for their use of His rather than the Glu or Asp found in other glycosidases were not apparent. Through studies on a representative member, the Nag3 β-N-acetylglucosaminidase from Cellulomonas fimi, we now show that these enzymes act preferentially as glycoside phosphorylases. Their need to accommodate an anionic nucleophile within the enzyme active site explains why histidine is used as an acid/base catalyst in place of the anionic glutamate seen in other GH3 family members. Kinetic and mechanistic studies reveal that these enzymes also employ a double-displacement mechanism involving a covalent glycosyl-enzyme intermediate, which was directly detected by mass spectrometry. Phosphate has no effect on the rates of formation of the glycosyl-enzyme intermediate, but it accelerates turnover of the N-acetylglucosaminyl-enzyme intermediate ∼3-fold, while accelerating turnover of the glucosyl-enzyme intermediate several hundredfold. These represent the first reported examples of retaining β-glycoside phosphorylases, and the first instance of free β-GlcNAc-1-phosphate in a biological context.  相似文献   

16.
Molecular dynamics simulations of the tetradecasaccharide XXXGXXXG in complex with the hybrid aspen xyloglucan endo-transglycosylase PttXET16-34 have been performed and analysed with respect to structure, dynamics, flexibility and ligand interactions. Notably, the charge state of the so-called ‘helper residue’ aspartate 87 (Asp87), which lies between the catalytic nucleophile [glutamate 85 (Glu85)] and general acid/base (Glu89) residues on the same beta strand, had a significant effect on PttXET16-34 active site structure. When Asp87 was deprotonated, electrostatic repulsion forced the nucleophile away from C1 of the sugar ring in subsite ? 1 and the proton–donating ability of Glu89 was also weakened due to the formation of a hydrogen bond with Asp87, whereas the protonation of Asp87 resulted in the formation of a hydrogen bond with the catalytic nucleophile and correct positioning of the catalytic machinery. The results suggest that catalysis in glycoside hydrolase family 16, and by extension clan GH-B enzymes, is optimal when the catalytic nucleophile is deprotonated for nucleophilic attack on the substrate, whereas the ‘helper residue’ and general acid/base residue are both in their conjugate acid forms to align the nucleophile and deliver a proton to the departing sugar, respectively.  相似文献   

17.
L W Hardy  A R Poteete 《Biochemistry》1991,30(39):9457-9463
Replacement of Asp20 in T4 lysozyme by Cys produces a variant with (1) nearly wild-type specific activity, (2) a newly acquired sensitivity to thiol-modifying reagents, and (3) a pH-activity profile that is very similar to that of the wild-type enzyme. These results indicate that the residue at position 20 has a significant nucleophilic function rather than merely an electrostatic role. The intermediate in catalysis by lysozyme is probably a covalent glycosyl-enzyme instead of the ion pair originally proposed.  相似文献   

18.
In the hydrolytic reaction catalyzed by an endoglucanase from a Bacillus strain (endoglucanase K), 2 of 12 Trp residues, Trp174 and Trp243, are responsible for binding of the substrate and/or for the catalysis (Kawaminami, S., Ozaki, K., Sumitomo, N., Hayashi, Y., Ito, S., Shimada, I., and Arata, Y. (1994) J. Biol. Chem. 269, 28752-28756). Here we report results of a stable isotope-aided NMR analysis of the active site of endoglucanase K, using Trp174 and Trp243 as structural probes. Hydrogen-deuterium exchange experiments performed for the NH protons of main and side chains of Trp residues revealed that Trp174 and Trp243 are located in the hydrophilic and hydrophobic microenvironments in the active site, respectively. We also carried out pH titration experiments for indole C2 proton resonances of Trp residues and measured the pH dependence of specific activities for wild-type endoglucanase K and its mutants in which Glu or Asp residues are replaced with their respective amide forms. On the basis of the results obtained from the present study, we conclude that (a) Glu130 and Asp191, which are in spatial proximity to Trp174 and Trp243 in the active site, play a crucial role in the enzymatic activity; (b) Glu130 and Asp191 interact with each other in the active site, leading to an increase in the pKa values to 5.5 for both amino acid residues; and (c) the pKa values of Glu130 and Asp191 would lead to an unusually narrow pH-activity profile of the endoglucanase K.  相似文献   

19.
Kim TJ  Park CS  Cho HY  Cha SS  Kim JS  Lee SB  Moon TW  Kim JW  Oh BH  Park KH 《Biochemistry》2000,39(23):6773-6780
A sequence alignment shows that residue 332 is conserved as glutamate in maltogenic amylases (MAases) and in other related enzymes such as cyclodextrinase and neopullulanase, while the corresponding position is conserved as histidine in alpha-amylases. We analyzed the role of Glu332 in the hydrolysis and the transglycosylation activity of Thermus MAase (ThMA) by site-directed mutagenesis. Replacing Glu332 with histidine reduced transglycosylation activity significantly, but enhanced hydrolysis activity on alpha-(1,3)-, alpha-(1,4)-, and alpha-(1,6)-glycosidic bonds relative to the wild-type (WT) enzyme. The mutant Glu332Asp had catalytic properties similar to those of the WT enzyme, but the mutant Glu332Gln resulted in significantly decreased transglycosylation activity. These results suggest that an acidic side chain at position 332 of MAase plays an important role in the formation and accumulation of transfer products by modulating the relative rates of hydrolysis and transglycosylation. From the structure, we propose that an acidic side chain at position 332, which is located in a pocket, is involved in aligning the acceptor molecule to compete with water molecules in the nucleophilic attack of the glycosyl-enzyme intermediate.  相似文献   

20.
Norman DP  Chung SJ  Verdine GL 《Biochemistry》2003,42(6):1564-1572
Members of the HhH-GPD superfamily of DNA glycosylases are responsible for the recognition and removal of damaged nucleobases from DNA. The hallmark of these proteins is a motif comprising a helix-hairpin-helix followed by a Gly/Pro-rich loop and terminating in an invariant, catalytically essential aspartic acid residue. In this study, we have probed the role of this Asp in human 8-oxoguanine DNA glycosylase (hOgg1) by mutating it to Asn (D268N), Glu (D268E), and Gln (D268Q). We show that this aspartate plays a dual role, acting both as an N-terminal alpha-helix cap and as a critical residue for catalysis of both base excision and DNA strand cleavage by hOgg1. Mutation of this residue to asparagine, another helix-capping residue, preserves stability of the protein while drastically reducing enzymatic activity. A crystal structure of this mutant is the first to reveal the active site nucleophile Lys249 in the presence of lesion-containing DNA; this structure offers a tantalizing suggestion that base excision may occur by cleavage of the glycosidic bond and then attachment of Lys249. Mutation of the aspartic acid to glutamine and glutamic acid destabilizes the protein fold to a significant extent but, surprisingly, preserves catalytic activity. Crystal structures of these mutants complexed with an unreactive abasic site in DNA reveal these residues to adopt a sterically disfavored helix-capping conformation.  相似文献   

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