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1.
Phosphofructokinase from Escherichia coli (EcPFK) is a homotetramer with four active sites and four allosteric sites. Understanding the allosteric activation of EcPFK by MgADP has been complicated by the complex web of possible interactions, including active site homotropic interactions, allosteric site homotropic interactions, and heterotropic interactions between active and allosteric sites. The current work has simplified this web of possible interactions to a series of single heterotropic interactions by forming and isolating hybrid tetramers. Each of the four unique heterotropic interactions have independently been isolated and compared to a control that has all four of the unique heterotropic interactions. If the interactions are labeled with the distances between interacting ligands, the 45-A interaction contributes 20% +/- 1%, the 33-A interaction contributes 34% +/- 1%, the 30-A interaction contributes 21% +/- 1%, and the 23-A interaction contributes 25% +/- 1% with respect to the total free energy of MgADP/fructose 6-phosphate (Fru-6-P) activation in the control. The free energies of the isolated interactions sum to 100% +/- 2% of the total. Therefore, the four unique interactions are all contributors to activation, are nonequivalent, and are additive.  相似文献   

2.
A strategy for isolating each of the four potentially unique heterotropic pairwise allosteric interactions that exist in the homotetramer phosphofructokinase from Bacillus stearothermophilus is described. The strategy involves the construction of hybrid tetramers containing one wild-type subunit and three mutant subunits that have been modified to block binding of both the substrate, fructose 6-phosphate (Fru-6-P), and the allosteric inhibitor, phospho(enol)pyruvate (PEP). Each type of binding site occurs at a subunit interface, and mutations on either side of the interface have been identified that will greatly diminish binding at the respective site. Consequently, four different types of mutant subunits have been created, each containing a different active site and allosteric site modification. The corresponding 1:3 hybrids isolate a different pair of unmodified substrate and allosteric sites with a unique structural disposition located 22, 30, 32, and 45 A apart, respectively. The allosteric inhibition exhibited by the unmodified sites in each of these four hybrids has been quantitatively evaluated in terms of a coupling free energy. Each of the coupling free energies is unique in magnitude, and their relative magnitudes vary with pH. Importantly, the sum of these coupling free energies at each pH is equal to the total heterotropic coupling free energy associated with the tetrameric enzyme. The latter quantity was assessed from the overall inhibition of a control hybrid that removed the homotropic interactions in PEP binding. The results do not agree with either the concerted or sequential models that are often invoked to explain allosteric behavior in oligomeric enzymes.  相似文献   

3.
Fenton AW  Reinhart GD 《Biochemistry》2003,42(43):12676-12681
Phosphofructokinase from Escherichia coli (EcPFK) is a homotetramer with four active sites, which bind the substrates fructose-6-phosphate (Fru-6-P) and MgATP. In the presence of low concentrations of Fru-6-P, MgATP displays substrate inhibition. Previous proposals to explain this substrate inhibition have included both kinetic and allosteric mechanisms. We have isolated hybrid tetramers containing one wild type subunit and three mutated subunits (1:3). The mutated subunits contain mutations that decrease affinity for Fru-6-P (R243E) or MgATP (F76A/R77D/R82A) allowing us to systematically simplify the possible allosteric interactions between the two substrates. In the absence of a rate equation to explain the allosteric effects in a tetramer, the data have been compared to simulated data for an allosteric dimer. Since the apparent substrate inhibition caused by MgATP binding is not seen in hybrid tetramers with only a single native MgATP binding site, the proposed kinetic mechanism is not able to explain this phenomenon. The data presented are consistent with an allosteric antagonism between MgATP in one active site and Fru-6-P in a second active site.  相似文献   

4.
MgADP binding to the allosteric site enhances the affinity of Escherichia coli phosphofructokinase (PFK) for fructose 6-phosphate (Fru-6-P). X-ray crystallographic data indicate that MgADP interacts with the conserved glutamate at position 187 within the allosteric site through an octahedrally coordinated Mg(2+) ion [Shirakihara, Y., and Evans, P. R. (1988) J. Mol. Biol. 204, 973-994]. Lau and Fersht reported that substituting an alanine for this glutamate within the allosteric site of PFK (i.e., mutant E187A) causes MgADP to lose its allosteric effect upon Fru-6-P binding [Lau, F. T.-K., and Fersht, A. R. (1987) Nature 326, 811-812]. However, these authors later reported that MgADP inhibits Fru-6-P binding in the E187A mutant. The inhibition presumably occurs by preferential binding to the inactive (T) state complex of the Monod-Wyman-Changeux two-state model [Lau, F. T.-K., and Fersht, A. R. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 6841-6847]. The present study provides an alternative explanation of the role of MgADP in the E187A mutant. Using enzyme kinetics, steady-state fluorescence emission, and anisotropy, we performed a systematic linkage analysis of the three-ligand interaction between MgADP, Fru-6-P, and MgATP. We found that MgADP at low concentrations did not enhance or inhibit substrate binding. Anisotropy shows that MgADP binding at the allosteric site occurred even when MgADP produced no allosteric effect. However, as in the wild-type enzyme, the binding of MgADP to the active site in the mutant competitively inhibited MgATP binding and noncompetitively inhibited Fru-6-P binding. These results clarified the mechanism of a three-ligand interaction and offered a nontraditional perspective on allosteric mechanism.  相似文献   

5.
The side chains of Escherichia coli phosphofructokinase (EcPFK) that interact with bound substrate, fructose 6-phosphate (Fru-6-P), are examined for their potential roles in allosteric regulation. Mutations that severely decrease Fru-6-P affinity and/or k(cat)/K(m) were created at each contact residue, with the exception of the catalytic base, D127. Even though Fru-6-P affinity was greatly decreased for R162E, M169A, E222A/H223A, and R243E, the mutated proteins retained the ability to be activated by MgADP and inhibited by phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP). R252E did not show an allosteric response to either MgADP or PEP. The H249E mutation retained MgADP activation but did not respond to PEP. R72E, T125A, and R171E maintained allosteric inhibition by PEP. Both R72E and T125A displayed a MgADP-dependent decrease in k(cat) but no MgADP-dependent K-type effects. R171E maintained MgADP-dependent K-type activation but also displayed a MgADP-dependent decrease in k(cat). Localization of mutations that alter MgADP activation near the transferred phosphate group indicates the importance of the 1-methoxy region of Fru-6-P in allosteric regulation by MgADP. A region near the 6'-phosphate may be similarly important for PEP inhibition. R252 is uniquely positioned between the 1'- and 6'-phosphates of bound Fru-1,6-BP, and the mutation at this position may alter both allosterically responsive regions. The differential functions of specific regions in the Fru-6-P contact residues support different mechanisms for allosteric activation and inhibition. In addition, the lack of correlation between mutations that decrease Fru-6-P affinity and those that abolish allosteric communications supports the independence of affinity and allosteric coupling.  相似文献   

6.
Kimmel JL  Reinhart GD 《Biochemistry》2001,40(38):11623-11629
Phosphofructokinase from Bacillus stearothermophilus (BsPFK) is a model allosteric enzyme system in which the interactions between substrates and allosteric effectors have been extensively studied. However, the oligomeric nature of BsPFK has made it difficult to determine the molecular basis of the allosteric regulation because of the multitude of different types of heterotropic and homotropic interactions that are possible between the four active sites and four allosteric sites in the native tetramer. In an attempt to alleviate the complexity of the system and thereby allow the quantitation of a single interaction between one active site and one allosteric site, site-directed mutagenesis has been coupled with a hybrid-forming scheme to create and isolate a tetramer of BsPFK in which only a single active site and a single allosteric site are capable of binding their respective ligands with high (i.e., near wild type) affinity. Characterization of this single allosteric interaction indicates that the free energy involved in the inhibition by the allosteric effector phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) is 1.48 +/- 0.15 kcal/mol compared to the 3.58 +/- 0.02 kcal/mol measured for the enzyme.  相似文献   

7.
A tryptophan-shifted mutant of phosphofructokinase (PFK) from Bacillus stearothermophilus has been constructed. This mutant, which is functionally similar to wild-type, provides the opportunity to examine the allosteric properties of PFK under equilibrium conditions. The unique fluorescence properties of the tryptophan-shifted mutant enzyme, W179F/F230W, have been utilized to deduce the thermodynamics of ligand binding and the allosteric perturbations in the absence of catalytic turnover. Specifically, phospho(enol)pyruvate (PEP) and MgADP binding to the mutant PFK can be directly observed using tryptophan fluorescence, and dissociation constants for these ligands have been measured to be equal to 2.71 +/- 0.04 and 90.4 +/- 3.5 microM, respectively. In addition, the homotropic couplings for the allosteric ligands have been assessed for the first time. PEP binds cooperatively with a Hill number of 2.9 +/- 0.3, while MgADP binding is not cooperative. The equilibrium couplings between these ligands and the substrate fructose 6-phosphate (Fru-6-P) have also been determined and follow the same trends with temperature observed under steady-state kinetic assay conditions using wild-type PFK, indicating that the presence of bound MgATP has little influence on the allosteric interactions. Like wild-type PFK, the coupling free energies for the mutant result from largely compensating enthalpy and entropy components at 25 degrees C. Furthermore, the sign of each coupling free energy, which signifies the nature of the allosteric effect, is opposite that of the enthalpy contribution and is therefore due to the larger absolute value of the associated entropy change. This characteristic stands in direct contrast to the thermodynamic basis of the allosteric response in the homologous PFK from E. coli in which the sign of the coupling free energy is established by the sign of the coupling enthalpy.  相似文献   

8.
S A Berger  P R Evans 《Biochemistry》1992,31(38):9237-9242
Six active site mutants of Escherichia coli phosphofructokinase have been constructed and characterized using steady-state kinetics. All but one of the mutants (ES222) have significantly lower maximal activity, implicating these residues in the catalytic process. Replacement of Asp127, the key catalytic residue in the forward reaction with Glu, results in an enzyme with wild-type cooperative and allosteric behavior but severely decreased Fru6P binding. Replacement of the same residue with Tyr abolishes cooperativity while retaining sensitivity to allosteric inhibition and activation. Thus, this mutant has uncoupled homotropic from heterotropic allostery. Mutation of Asp103 to Ala results in an enzyme which retains wild-type Fru6P-binding characteristics with reduced activity. GDP, which allosterically activates the wild-type enzyme, acts as a mixed inhibitor for this mutant. Mutation of Thr125 to Ala and Asp129 to Ser produces mutants with impaired Fru6P binding and decreased cooperativity. In the presence of the activator GDP, both these mutants display apparent negative cooperativity. In addition, ATP binding is now allosterically altered by GDP. These results extend the number of active site residues known to participate in the catalytic process and help to define the mechanisms behind catalysis and homotropic and heterotropic allostery.  相似文献   

9.
The leucine residue at position 178 in the allosteric phosphofructokinase from Escherichia coli has been changed into a tryptophan residue by oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis. The modified enzyme has been purified to homogeneity, and its enzymatic properties show that this single mutation suppresses the heterotropic interactions without affecting the homotropic ones. The mutant has the same saturation curve by fructose 6-phosphate as the wild type, showing that its active site binds this substrate with the same affinity and cooperativity. The regulatory site of the mutant enzyme can bind the effectors, the activator GDP, or the inhibitor phosphoenolpyruvate, as measured by protection against irreversible thermal denaturation. However, the binding of either effector does no longer influence the activity. This specific suppression of the coupling between the regulatory and active sites is not predicted by the concerted model which postulates that the same structural transition between two states R and T is responsible for both homotropic and heterotropic interactions. Leu-178 belongs to neither the active nor the regulatory site but appears as an important residue in the conformational change(s) involved in the regulation by allosteric effectors.  相似文献   

10.
T J Bollenbach  T Nowak 《Biochemistry》2001,40(43):13097-13106
The multiligand interactions governing the allosteric response of Mg(2+)-activated yeast pyruvate kinase (YPK) during steady-state turnover were quantitated by kinetic linked-function analysis. The substrate, PEP, the enzyme-bound divalent metal, Mg(2+), and the allosteric effector, FBP, positively influence each other's interaction with the enzyme in the presence of saturating concentrations of the second substrate, MgADP. The presence of Mg(2+) enhances the interaction of PEP and of FBP with YPK by -2.0 and -1.0 kcal/mol, respectively. The simultaneous interaction of PEP, Mg(2+), and FBP with YPK is favored by -4.1 kcal/mol over the sum of their independent binding free energies. The coupling free energies measured for Mg(2+)-activated YPK are weaker than the corresponding coupling free energies measured for Mn(2+)-activated YPK [Mesecar, A., and Nowak, T. (1997) Biochemistry 36, 6792, 6803], but are consistent with results of thermodynamic measurements with the Mg(2+)-YPK complex [Bollenbach, T. J., and Nowak, T. (2001) Biochemistry 36, 13088-13096]. A comparison of ligand binding data measured by kinetic and thermodynamic linked-function analyses reveals that the MgADP complex modulates both the binding of the other three ligands and the two- and three-ligand coupling interactions between the other three ligands. Enzyme-bound Mg(2+) does not influence the homotropic cooperativity in PEP binding to YPK. It is the MgADP complex that induces homotropic cooperativity in PEP binding. It is the enzyme-bound Mn(2+) that induces homotropic binding of PEP with Mn(2+)-activated YPK. These results lend support to the hypothesis that divalent metals modulate the interactions of ligands on YPK and that divalent metals play a role in regulation of the glycolytic pathway.  相似文献   

11.
J L Johnson  G D Reinhart 《Biochemistry》1992,31(46):11510-11518
A thermodynamic linked-function analysis is presented of the interactions of MgATP and fructose 6-phosphate (Fru-6-P) with phosphofructokinase (PFK) from Escherichia coli in the absence of allosteric effectors. MgATP and Fru-6-P are shown to bind in random fashion by product inhibition of the back-reaction as well as by the kinetically competent binding of each ligand individually as monitored by the consequent changes in the intrinsic fluorescence of E. coli PFK. When Fru-6-P is saturating, the dissociation of MgATP is sufficiently slow that it cannot achieve a binding equilibrium in the steady state, causing the observed Km (49 microM) to significantly exceed the Kd (1.7 microM) deduced from a thermodynamic linkage analysis. The following features distinguish the interactions of MgATP and Fru-6-P with E. coli PFK: MgATP and Fru-6-P antagonize each other's binding to the enzyme in a saturable manner with an overall apparent coupling free energy equal to +2.5 kcal/mol at 25 degrees C; MgATP induces positive cooperativity in the Fru-6-P binding profile, with the Hill coefficient calculated from the Fru-6-P binding curves reaching a maximum of 3.6 when MgATP is saturating; and MgATP exhibits substrate inhibition at low concentrations of Fru-6-P. Simulations based upon the rate equation pertaining to a two-active-site, two-substrate dimer indicate that these features can all result from two independent couplings: an antagonistic MgATP-Fru-6-P coupling extending at least in part between active sites and a MgATP-induced Fru-6-P-Fru-6-P coupling.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Pham AS  Reinhart GD 《Biochemistry》2001,40(13):4150-4158
Using enzymatic assays and steady-state fluorescence emission, we performed a linkage analysis of the three-ligand interaction of fructose 6-phosphate (Fru-6-P), phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP), and MgATP on E187A mutant Escherichia coli phosphofructokinase (PFK). PEP allosterically inhibits Fru-6-P binding to E. coli PFK. The magnitude of antagonism is 90-fold in the absence and 60-fold in the presence of a saturating concentration of MgATP [Johnson, J. J., and Reinhart, G. D. (1997) Biochemistry 36, 12814-12822]. Substituting an alanine for the glutamate at position 187, located in the allosteric site (i.e., mutant E187A), activates Fru-6-P binding and inhibits the maximal rate of enzyme turnover [Lau, F. T.-K., and Fersht, A. R. (1987) Nature 326, 811-812]. The allosteric action of PEP appears to depend on the presence of the cosubstrate MgATP. In the presence of a saturating concentration of MgATP, PEP enhances the binding of Fru-6-P to the enzyme by a modest 2-fold. Decreasing the concentration of MgATP mitigates the extent of activation. At MgATP concentrations approaching 25 microM, PEP becomes insensitive to the binding of Fru-6-P. At MgATP concentrations < 25 microM, PEP "crosses over" and becomes antagonistic toward substrate binding. The present study examines the role of Glu 187 at the allosteric site in the binding of Fru-6-P and offers a more complex explanation of the mechanism than that described by traditional allosteric mechanistic models.  相似文献   

13.
A hybrid version of Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamoylase was investigated in which one catalytic subunit has the wild-type sequence, and the other catalytic subunit has Glu-239 replaced by Gln. Since Glu-239 is involved in intersubunit interactions, this hybrid could be used to evaluate the extent to which T state stabilization is required for homotropic cooperativity and for heterotropic effects. Reconstitution of the hybrid holoenzyme (two different catalytic subunits with three wild-type regulatory subunits) was followed by separation of the mixture by anion-exchange chromatography. To make possible the resolution of the three holoenzyme species formed by the reconstitution, the charge of one of the catalytic subunits was altered by the addition of six aspartic acid residues to the C terminus of each of the catalytic chains (AT-C catalytic subunit). Control experiments indicated that the AT-C catalytic subunit as well as the holoenzyme formed with AT-C and wild-type regulatory subunits had essentially the same homotropic and heterotropic properties as the native catalytic subunit and holoenzyme, indicating that the addition of the aspartate tail did not influence the function of either enzyme. The control reconstituted holoenzyme, in which both catalytic subunits have Glu-239 replaced by Gln, exhibited no cooperativity, an enhanced affinity for aspartate, and essentially no heterotropic response identical to the enzyme isolated without reconstitution. The hybrid containing one normal and one mutant catalytic subunit exhibited homotropic cooperativity with a Hill coefficient of 1.4 and responded to the nucleotide effectors at about 50% of the level of the wild-type enzyme. Small angle x-ray scattering experiments with the hybrid enzyme indicated that in the absence of ligands it was structurally similar, but not identical, to the T state of the wild-type enzyme. In contrast to the wild-type enzyme, addition of carbamoyl phosphate induced a significant alteration in the scattering pattern, whereas the bisubstrate analog N-phosphonoacetyl-L-aspartate induced a significant change in the scattering pattern indicating the transition to the R-structural state. These data indicate that in the hybrid enzyme only three of the usual six interchain interactions involving Glu-239 are sufficient to stabilize the enzyme in a low affinity, low activity state and allow an allosteric transition to occur.  相似文献   

14.
We have engineered a variant of the lactate dehydrogenase enzyme from Bacillus stearothermophilus in which arginine-173 at the proposed regulatory site has been replaced by glutamine. Like the wild-type enzyme, this mutant undergoes a reversible, protein-concentration-dependent subunit assembly, from dimer to tetramer. However, the mutant tetramer is much more stable (by a factor of 400) than the wild type and is destabilized rather than stabilized by binding the allosteric regulator, fructose 1,6-biphosphate (Fru-1,6-P2). The mutation has not significantly changed the catalytic properties of the dimer (Kd NADH, Km pyruvate, Ki oxamate and kcat), but has weakened the binding of Fru-1,6-P2 to both the dimeric and tetrameric forms of the enzyme and has almost abolished any stimulatory effect. We conclude that the Arg-173 residue in the wild-type enzyme is directly involved in the binding of Fru-1,6-P2, is important for allosteric communication with the active site, and, in part, regulates the state of quaternary structure through a charge-repulsion mechanism.  相似文献   

15.
Two hybrid versions of Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamoylase were studied to determine the influence of domain closure on the homotropic and heterotropic properties of the enzyme. Each hybrid holoenzyme had one wild-type and one inactive catalytic subunit. In the first case the inactive catalytic subunit had Arg-54 replaced by alanine. The holoenzyme with this mutation in all six catalytic chains exhibits a 17,000-fold reduction in activity, no loss in substrate affinity, and an R state structurally identical to that of the wild-type enzyme. In the second case, the inactive catalytic subunit had Arg-105 replaced by alanine. The holoenzyme with this mutation in all six catalytic chains exhibits a 1,100-fold reduction in activity, substantial loss in substrate affinity, and loss of the ability to be converted to the R state. Thus, the R54A substitution results in a holoenzyme that can undergo closure of the catalytic chain domains to form the high activity, high affinity active site and to undergo the allosteric transition, whereas the R105A substitution results in a holoenzyme that can neither undergo domain closure nor the allosteric transition. The hybrid holoenzyme with one wild-type and one R54A catalytic subunit exhibited the same maximal velocity per active site as the wild-type holoenzyme, reduced cooperativity, and normal heterotropic interactions. The hybrid with one wild-type and one R105A catalytic subunit exhibited significantly reduced maximal velocity per active site as compared with the wild-type holoenzyme, reduced cooperativity, and substantially reduced heterotropic interactions. Small angle x-ray scattered was used to verify that the R105A-containing hybrid could attain an R state structure. These results indicate the global nature of the conformational changes associated with the allosteric transition in the enzyme. If one catalytic subunit cannot undergo domain closure to create the active sites, then the entire molecule cannot attain the high activity, high activity R state.  相似文献   

16.
The biophysical properties of a tryptophan-shifted mutant of phosphofructokinase from Bacillus stearothermophilus (BsPFK) have been examined. The mutant, designated W179Y/Y164W, has kinetic and thermodynamic properties similar to the wild-type enzyme. A 2-fold decrease in kcat is observed, and the mutant displays a 3-fold smaller K(0.5) for the substrate, fructose-6-phosphate (Fru-6-P), as compared to the wild-type enzyme. The dissociation constant for the inhibitor, phospho(enol)pyruvate (PEP), increases 2-fold, and the coupling parameter, Q(ay), decreases 2-fold. This suggests that while the mutant displays a slightly decreased affinity for PEP, PEP is still an effective inhibitor once bound. The new position of the tryptophan in W179Y/Y164W is approximately 6 A from the Fru-6-P portion of the active site. A 25% decrease in fluorescence intensity is observed upon Fru-6-P binding, and an 80% decrease in fluorescence intensity is observed with PEP binding. In addition, the intrinsic fluorescence polarization increases from 0.327 +/- 0.001 to 0.353 +/- 0.001 upon Fru-6-P binding, but decreases to 0.290 +/- 0.001 when PEP binds. Most notably, the presence of PEP induces dissociation of the tetramer. Dissociation of the tetramer into dimers occurs along the active site interface and can be monitored by the loss in activity or the loss in tryptophan fluorescence that is observed when the enzyme is titrated with PEP. Activity can be protected or recovered by incubating the enzyme with Fru-6-P. Recovery of activity is enzyme concentration dependent, and the rate constant for association is 6.2 +/- 0.3 M(-1) x s(-1). Ultracentrifugation experiments revealed that in the absence of PEP the mutant enzyme exists in an equilibrium between the dimer and tetramer forms with a dissociation constant of 11.8 +/- 0.5 microM, while in the presence of PEP the enzyme exists in equilibrium between the dimer and monomer forms with a dissociation constant of 7.5 +/- 0.02 microM. A 3.1 A crystal structure of the mutant enzyme suggests that the amino acid substitutions have not dramatically altered the tertiary structure of the enzyme. While it is clear that wild-type BsPFK exists as a tetramer under these same conditions, these results suggest that quaternary structural changes probably play an important role in allosteric communication.  相似文献   

17.
Fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (FBPase) operates at a control point in mammalian gluconeogenesis, being inhibited synergistically by fructose 2,6-bisphosphate (Fru-2,6-P(2)) and AMP. AMP and Fru-2,6-P(2) bind to allosteric and active sites, respectively, but the mechanism responsible for AMP/Fru-2,6-P(2) synergy is unclear. Demonstrated here for the first time is a global conformational change in porcine FBPase induced by Fru-2,6-P(2) in the absence of AMP. The Fru-2,6-P(2) complex exhibits a subunit pair rotation of 13 degrees from the R-state (compared with the 15 degrees rotation of the T-state AMP complex) with active site loops in the disengaged conformation. A three-state thermodynamic model in which Fru-2,6-P(2) drives a conformational change to a T-like intermediate state can account for AMP/Fru-2,6-P(2) synergism in mammalian FBPases. AMP and Fru-2,6-P(2) are not synergistic inhibitors of the Type I FBPase from Escherichia coli, and consistent with that model, the complex of E. coli FBPase with Fru-2,6-P(2) remains in the R-state with dynamic loops in the engaged conformation. Evidently in porcine FBPase, the actions of AMP at the allosteric site and Fru-2,6-P(2) at the active site displace engaged dynamic loops by distinct mechanisms, resulting in similar quaternary end-states. Conceivably, Type I FBPases from all eukaryotes may undergo similar global conformational changes in response to Fru-2,6-P(2) ligation.  相似文献   

18.
Fructose-2,6-bisphosphate (Fru-2,6-P(2)) is a potent allosteric activator of the ATP-dependent phosphofructokinase (PFK) in eukaryotes. Based on the sequence homology between rabbit muscle PFK and two bacterial PFKs and the crystal structures of the latter, Ser(530), Arg(292) and His(662) of the rabbit enzyme are implicated as binding sites for Fru-2,6-P(2). We report here the effects of three mutations, S530D, R292A, and H662A on the activation of rabbit muscle PFK by Fru-2,6-P(2). At pH 7.0 and the inhibitory concentrations of ATP, the native enzyme gives a classic sigmoidal response to changes in Fru-6-P concentration in the absence of Fru-2,6-P(2) and a nearly hyperbolic response in the presence of the activator. Under the same conditions, no activation was seen for S530D. On the other hand, H662A can be activated but requires a 10-fold or higher concentration of Fru-2,6-P(2). Limited activation was observed for mutant R292A. A model illustrating the sites for recognition of Fru-2,6-P(2) in rabbit muscle PFK as well as the mechanism of allosteric activation is proposed.  相似文献   

19.
The substitution of alanine for lysine at position 56 of the regulatory polypeptide of aspartate transcarbamoylase affected both homotropic and heterotropic characteristics. In the absence of effectors, the ALAr56-substituted holoenzyme lost the homotropic cooperativity observed for aspartate in the wild-type holoenzyme. Under conditions of allosteric inhibition in the presence of 2mM CTP, the cooperative character of ATCase was restored, and the Hill coefficient increased from 1.0 to 1.7. In contrast to the native enzyme, the altered enzyme did not respond to ATP; however, ATP could still bind to the enzyme as demonstrated by its direct competition with CTP. Furthermore, the recently observed CTP-UTP synergism of the wild-type enzyme was not detectable. The site-directed mutant enzyme could not be activated by low levels of the bisubstrate analogue, N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate, and the rate of association of pHMB with the cysteine residues located at the interface of the catalytic and regulatory chains was slightly altered. These characteristics suggested that the mutant holoenzyme assumed a relaxed (or abnormal T state) conformation. Thus, this single substitution differentially affected the heterotropic responses to the various allosteric effectors of ATCase and eliminated the homotropic characteristics in response to aspartate in the absence of CTP.  相似文献   

20.
The reaction of phenylglyoxal with aspartate transcarbamylase and its isolated catalytic subunit results in complete loss of enzymatic activity (Kantrowitz, E. R., and Lipscomb, W. N. (1976) J. Biol. Chem. 251, 2688-2695). If N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate is used to protect the active site, we find that phenylglyoxal causes destruction of the enzyme's susceptibility to activation by ATP and inhibition by CTP. Furthermore, CTP only minimally protects the regulatory site from reaction with this reagent. The modified enzyme still binds CTP although with reduced affinity. After reaction with phenylglyoxal, the native enzyme shows reduced cooperativity. The hybrid with modified regulatory subunits and native catalytic subunits exhibits slight heterotropic or homotropic properties, while the reverse hybrid, with modified catalytic subunits and native regulatory subunits, shows much reduced homotropic properties but practically normal heterotropic interactions. The decrease in the ability of CTP to inhibit the enzyme correlates with the loss of 2 arginine residues/regulatory chain (Mr = 17,000). Under these reaction conditions, 1 arginine residue is also modified on each catalytic chain (Mr = 33,000). Reaction rate studies of p-hydroxymercuribenzoate, with the liganded and unliganded modified enzyme suggest that the reaction with phenylglyoxal locks the enzyme into the liganded conformation. The conformational state of the regulatory subunit is implicated as having a critical role in the expression of the enzyme's heterotropic and homotropic properties.  相似文献   

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