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1.
Yeast NAD(+)-specific isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH) is an octameric enzyme composed of four each of regulatory IDH1 and catalytic IDH2 subunits that share 42% sequence identity. IDH2 contains catalytic isocitrate/Mg2+ and NAD+ binding sites whereas IDH1 contains homologous binding sites, respectively, for cooperative binding of isocitrate and for allosteric binding of AMP. Ligand binding is highly ordered in vitro, and IDH exhibits the unusual property of half-site binding for all ligands. The structures of IDH solved in the absence or presence of ligands have shown: (a) a heterodimer to be the basic structural/functional unit of the enzyme, (b) the organization of heterodimers to form tetramer and octamer structures, (c) structural differences that may underlie cooperative and allosteric regulatory mechanisms, and (d) the possibility for formation of a disulfide bond that could reduce catalytic activity. In vivo analyses of mutant enzymes have elucidated the physiological importance of catalytic activity and allosteric regulation of this tricarboxylic acid cycle enzyme. Other studies have established the importance of a disulfide bond in regulation of IDH activity in vivo, as well as contributions of this bond to the property of half-site ligand binding exhibited by the wild-type enzyme.  相似文献   

2.
The activity of alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase complex from pigeon breast muscle is controlled by ADP and the reaction products, i. e. succinyl-CoA and NADH. ADP activates the alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase component of the complex, whereas NADH inhibits alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase and lipoyl dehydrogenase. In the presence of NADH the kinetic curve of the complex with respect to alpha-ketoglutarate and NAD and the dependence of upsilon versus [NAD] and upsilon versus [Lip (SH)2] in the lipoyl dehydrogenase reaction are S-shaped. In the absence of inhibitor ADP had no activating effect on lipoyl dehydrogenase; however, in the presence of NADH ADP decreases the cooperativity for NAD. The cooperative kinetics of the constituent enzymes of the complex are indicative of its allosteric properties. Isolation of the alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase complex and its lipoyl dehydrogenase and alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase components in a desensitized state confirms their allosteric nature. It is assumed that NADH effects of isolated alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase is due to a shift in the equilibrium between different oligomeric forms of the enzyme.  相似文献   

3.
The pathogenic bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa synthesizes alginate as one of a group of virulence factors that are produced during infections. The enzyme GDP-mannose dehydrogenase catalyzes the committed step in alginate biosynthesis. We show here that penicillic acid is an irreversible inactivator of GDP-mannose dehydrogenase. Inactivation occurs with a rate constant of 0.39+/-0.01 mM(-1) min(-1) at pH 8.0, and does not exhibit saturation behavior. Partial protection from inactivation is afforded by GDP-mannose, but not by the other substrate, NAD+. GMP and NAD+ together provide complete protection against inactivation. Analysis by mass spectrometry confirmed that the enzyme is alkylated at multiple cysteine residues by penicillic acid, including Cys 213, Cys 246, and the active site cysteine, Cys 268. However, the pH dependence of the inactivation rate suggested that alkylation of a single cysteine residue is sufficient to inactivate the enzyme. The C268A mutant protein was also susceptible to inactivation by penicillic acid. The presence of NAD+ and GMP provided partial protection of Cys 246 and Cys 268, and almost complete protection of Cys 213. Cys 213 is located on a helix that forms part of the binding pocket for GDP-mannose, and forms a hydrogen bond with Asn 252. Asn 252 is located on a loop that surrounds GDP-mannose. The C213A mutant enzyme exhibits a Vmax that is 1.8-fold greater than the wild-type enzyme, suggesting that the interaction between Cys 213 and Asn 252 helps to hold the loop in place during catalysis, and that opening the loop to release product is partially rate-limiting. Cys 246 is adjacent to the GDP-mannose binding loop, and its alkylation may also interfere with loop movement.  相似文献   

4.
Yeast NAD(+)-specific isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH) is an allosterically regulated octameric enzyme composed of two types of homologous subunits designated IDH1 and IDH2. Based on sequence comparisons and structural models, both subunits are predicted to have adenine nucleotide binding sites. This was tested by alanine replacement of residues in putative sites in each subunit. Targets included adjacent aspartate/isoleucine residues implicated as important for determining cofactor specificity in related dehydrogenases and a residue in each IDH subunit in a position occupied by histidine in other cofactor binding sites. The primary kinetic effects of D286A/I287A and of H281A replacements in IDH2 were found to be a dramatic reduction in apparent affinity of the holoenzyme for NAD(+) and a concomitant reduction in V(max). Ligand binding assays also showed that the H281A mutant enzyme fails to bind NAD(+) under conditions that are saturating for the wild-type enzyme. In contrast, the primary effect of corresponding D279A/D280A and of R274A replacements in IDH1 is a reduction in holoenzyme binding of AMP, with concomitant alterations in kinetic and isocitrate binding properties normally associated with activation by this allosteric effector. These results suggest that the nucleotide cofactor binding site is primarily contributed by the IDH2 subunit, whereas the homologous nucleotide binding site in IDH1 has evolved for regulatory binding of AMP. These results are consistent with previous studies demonstrating that the catalytic isocitrate binding sites are comprised of residues primarily contributed by IDH2, whereas sites for regulatory binding of isocitrate are contributed by analogous residues of IDH1. In this study, we also demonstrate that a prerequisite for holoenzyme binding of NAD(+) is binding of isocitrate/Mg(2+) at the IDH2 catalytic site. This is comparable to the dependence of AMP binding upon binding of isocitrate at the IDH1 regulatory site.  相似文献   

5.
1. The binding of NAD(+) and NADP(+) to glutamate dehydrogenase has been studied in sodium phosphate buffer, pH7.0, by equilibrium dialysis. Approximate values for the dissociation constants are 0.47 and 2.5mm respectively. For NAD(+) the value agrees with that estimated from initial-rate results. 2. In the presence of the substrate analogue glutarate both coenzymes are bound more firmly, and there is one active centre per enzyme subunit. The binding results cannot be described in terms of independent and identical active centres, and binding is stronger at low coenzyme concentrations than at high concentrations. Either the six subunits of the oligomer are not identical or there are negative interactions between them in the binding of coenzymes in ternary complexes with glutarate. The latter explanation is favoured. 3. The binding studies support the conclusions drawn from earlier kinetic studies of the glutamate reaction. 4. ADP and GTP respectively decrease and increase the affinity of the enzyme for NAD(+) and NADP(+), in both the presence and absence of glutarate. The negative binding interactions in the presence of glutarate are abolished by ADP, which decreases the affinity for the coenzymes at low concentrations of the latter. 5. In the presence of glutarate, GTP and NAD(+) or NADP(+), the association of enzyme oligomers is prevented, and the solubility of the enzyme is decreased; the complex of enzyme and ligands readily crystallizes. 6. The results are discussed in relation to earlier kinetic studies.  相似文献   

6.
R S Ehrlich  R F Colman 《Biochemistry》1990,29(21):5179-5187
NAD(+)-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase from pig heart is an allosteric enzyme that is activated by ADP and is inhibited by NADPH in the presence of NADH. Transferred nuclear Overhauser effect measurements, made at a range of times to ensure that observed effects are due to direct dipole-dipole transfer and not to spin diffusion, were used to determine the conformations of pyridine nucleotide coenzymes and of the allosteric effector ADP. For NAD+, significant effects were observed on the N2 proton (on the nicotinamide ring) when the N1' proton (on the nicotinamide ribose) was saturated and on the N6 proton when the N2' proton was saturated, indicating that the conformation of the nicotinamide-ribose moiety is anti. The anti conformation is expected because of the stereospecificity of NAD(+)-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase and is the same as for NADP(+)-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase. For the adenosine moiety of NAD+, the predominant nuclear Overhauser effect on the A8 proton is found when the A2' proton is saturated. This result implies that the adenine-ribose bond is anti with respect to the ribose. Previous kinetic and binding studies of ADP activation have shown an influence of divalent metal ions. The conformation of bound ADP, in the presence of Mg2+ and/or Ca2+, is found to be anti about the adenine-ribose bond. The 3'H-8H distance increases when Ca2+ is added to the Mg-ADP-enzyme complex. Changes in the 4'H-1'H distance upon addition of isocitrate are indicative of interactions between the ADP activator site and the isocitrate site.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
1. The formation of the non-enzymic adduct of NAD(+) and sulphite was investigated. In agreement with others we conclude that the dianion of sulphite adds to NAD(+). 2. The formation of ternary complexes of either lactate dehydrogenase or malate dehydrogenase with NAD(+) and sulphite was investigated. The u.v. spectrum of the NAD-sulphite adduct was the same whether free or enzyme-bound at either pH6 or pH8. This suggests that the free and enzyme-bound adducts have a similar electronic structure. 3. The effect of pH on the concentration of NAD-sulphite bound to both enzymes was measured in a new titration apparatus. Unlike the non-enzymic adduct (where the stability change with pH simply reflects HSO(3) (-)=SO(3) (2-)+H(+)), the enzyme-bound adduct showed a bell-shaped pH-stability curve, which indicated that an enzyme side chain of pK=6.2 must be protonated for the complex to form. Since the adduct does not bind to the enzyme when histidine-195 of lactate dehydrogenase is ethoxycarbonylated we conclude that the protein group involved is histidine-195. 4. The pH-dependence of the formation of a ternary complex of lactate dehydrogenase, NAD(+) and oxalate suggested that an enzyme group is protonated when this complex forms. 5. The rate at which NAD(+) binds to lactate dehydrogenase and malate dehydrogenase was measured by trapping the enzyme-bound NAD(+) by rapid reaction with sulphite. The rate of NAD(+) dissociation from the enzymes was calculated from the bimolecular association kinetic constant and from the equilibrium binding constant and was in both cases much faster than the forward V(max.). No kinetic evidence was found that suggested that there were interactions between protein subunits on binding NAD(+).  相似文献   

8.
The kinetic mechanism of NADP(+)-dependent 3 alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase and NAD(+)-dependent 3 alpha(17 beta)-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase, purified from hamster liver cytosol, was studied in both directions. For 3 alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase, the initial velocity and product inhibition studies indicated that the enzyme reaction sequence is ordered with NADP+ binding to the free enzyme and NADPH being the last product to be released. Inhibition patterns by Cibacron blue and hexestrol, and binding studies of coenzyme and substrate are also consistent with an ordered bi bi mechanism. For 3 alpha(17 beta)-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase, the steady-state kinetic measurements and substrate binding studies suggest a random binding pattern of the substrates and an ordered release of product; NADH is released last. However, the two enzymes transferred the pro-R-hydrogen atom of NAD(P)H to the carbonyl substrate.  相似文献   

9.
Most investigations of the allosteric properties of the regulatory enzyme aspartate transcarbamoylase (ATCase) from Escherichia coli are based on the sigmoidal dependence of enzyme activity on substrate concentration and the effects of the inhibitor, CTP, and the activator, ATP, on the saturation curves. Interpretations of these effects in terms of molecular models are complicated by the inability to distinguish between changes in substrate binding and catalytic turnover accompanying the allosteric transition. In an effort to eliminate this ambiguity, the binding of the 3H-labeled bisubstrate analog N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate (PALA) to aspartate transcarbamoylase in the absence and presence of the allosteric effectors ATP and CTP has been measured directly by equilibrium dialysis at pH 7 in phosphate buffer. PALA binds with marked cooperativity to the holoenzyme with an average dissociation constant of 110 nM. ATP and CTP alter both the average affinity of ATCase for PALA and the degree of cooperativity in the binding process in a manner analogous to their effects on the kinetic properties of the enzyme; the average dissociation constant of PALA decreases to 65 nM in the presence of ATP and increases to 266 nM in the presence of CTP while the Hill coefficient, which is 1.95 in the absence of effectors, becomes 1.35 and 2.27 in the presence of ATP and CTP, respectively. The isolated catalytic subunit of ATCase, which lacks the cooperative kinetic properties of the holoenzyme, exhibits only a very slight degree of cooperativity in binding PALA. The dissociation constant of PALA from the catalytic subunit is 95 nM. Interpretation of these results in terms of a thermodynamic scheme linking PALA binding to the assembly of ATCase from catalytic and regulatory subunits demonstrates that saturation of the enzyme with PALA shifts the equilibrium between holoenzyme and subunits slightly toward dissociation. Ligation of the regulatory subunits by either of the allosteric effectors leads to a change in the effect of PALA on the association-dissociation equilibrium.  相似文献   

10.
In this study, rate equations that predict the regulatory kinetic behavior of homocitrate synthase were derived, and simulation of the predicted behavior was carried out over a range of values for the kinetic parameters. The data obtained allow application of the resulting expressions to enzyme systems that exhibit activation and inhibition as a result of the interaction of effectors at multiple sites in the free enzyme. Homocitrate synthase was used as an example in terms of its activation by Na+ binding to the active enzyme conformer at an allosteric site, inhibition by binding to the active site, and inhibition by lysine binding to the less active enzyme conformer.  相似文献   

11.
Lei Y  Pawelek PD  Powlowski J 《Biochemistry》2008,47(26):6870-6882
The meta-cleavage pathway for catechol is a central pathway for the bacterial dissimilation of a wide variety of aromatic compounds, including phenols, methylphenols, naphthalenes, and biphenyls. The last enzyme of the pathway is a bifunctional aldolase/dehydrogenase that converts 4-hydroxy-2-ketovalerate to pyruvate and acetyl-CoA via acetaldehyde. The structure of the NAD (+)/CoASH-dependent aldehyde dehydrogenase subunit is similar to that of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, with a Rossmann fold-based NAD (+) binding site observed in the NAD (+)-enzyme complex [Manjasetty, B. A., et al. (2003) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 100, 6992-6997]. However, the location of the CoASH binding site was not determined. In this study, hydrogen-deuterium exchange experiments, coupled with peptic digest and mass spectrometry, were used to examine cofactor binding. The pattern of hydrogen-deuterium exchange in the presence of CoASH was almost identical to that observed with NAD (+), consistent with the two cofactors sharing a binding site. This is further supported by the observations that either CoASH or NAD (+) is able to elute the enzyme from an NAD (+) affinity column and that preincubation of the enzyme with NAD (+) protects against inactivation by CoASH. Consistent with these data, models of the CoASH complex generated using AUTODOCK showed that the docked conformation of CoASH can fully occupy the cavity containing the enzyme active site, superimposing with the NAD (+) cofactor observed in the X-ray crystal structure. Although CoASH binding Rossmann folds have been described previously, this is the first reported example of a Rossmann fold that can alternately bind CoASH or NAD (+) cofactors required for enzymatic catalysis.  相似文献   

12.
1. A purification of l(+)-lactate dehydrogenase is described. 2. The final preparation is active with NADH and NADPH and with a number of keto acids, but evidence is presented to support the view that a single enzyme is involved. 3. NAD(+) showed product inhibition, but at slightly acid pH values there was evidence of co-operative binding. 4. At acid pH values ATP was a potent inhibitor and appears to be an allosteric effector. At neutral or alkaline pH values ATP behaved as a weak competitive inhibitor. 5. The physiological significance of inhibition by ATP is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
The locking-on strategy uses soluble analogues of the enzymes specific substrate to produce biospecific adsorption of individual NAD(P)(+)-dependent dehydrogenases on immobilized NAD(P)(+) derivatives, which is so selective that a single enzyme activity can be purified from crude cellular extracts in a single chromatographic step with yields approaching 100%. However, attempts to further develop and apply this strategy to the biospecific chromatographic purification of a range of NAD(P)(+)-dependent dehydrogenases revealed some anomalous chromatographic behavior and certain unexplained phenomenon. Much of this can be attributed to nonbiospecific interference effects. Identification and elimination of this interference is discussed in the present study focusing on bovine liver glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH; EC 1.4.1.3) as the "test" enzyme. Results further confirm the potential of the locking-on strategy for the rapid purification of NAD(P)(+)-dependent dehydrogenases and provide further insight into the parameters which should be considered during the development of a truly biospecific affinity chromatographic system based on the locking-on strategy. The kinetic mechanism of bovine liver GDH has been the topic of much controversy with some reports advocating a sequential ordered mechanism of substrate binding and others reporting a sequential random mechanism. Since the kinetic locking-on strategy is dependent on the target NAD(P)(+)-dependent dehydrogenase having an ordered sequential mechanism of substrate binding, the bioaffinity chromatographic behavior of bovine liver GDH using the locking-on tactic suggests that this enzyme has an ordered sequential mechanism of substrate binding under a variety of experimental conditions when NAD(+) is used as cofactor.  相似文献   

14.
Phosphofructokinase was immobilized within a protein membrane or on soluble protein polymers using glutaraldehyde as cross-linking reagent. The native enzyme was also modified chemically, using the cross-linking reagent alone. A comparative kinetic investigation of these preparations was carried out. The catalytic activity of the chemically modified enzyme and its affinity towards fructose 6-phosphate decreased significantly; the modified enzyme lost its cooperative properties and the allosteric regulation by AMP was affected. When the chemical treatment was performed in the presence of effectors (AMP or ATP) the allosteric transition induced by AMP was restored, suggesting that the cross-linking reagent modified the AMP regulatory sites, albeit no higher-substrate-affinity enzyme conformation was frozen. Molecular data showed that glutaraldehyde produced intramolecular then intermolecular bonds as its concentration increased. When the enzyme was immobilized into protein membranes or on soluble polymers, the enzyme behavior was quite similar: decrease of affinity towards fructose 6-phosphate but no changes in cooperative properties and modifications of allosteric transition induced by AMP. When AMP was present during the immobilisation process, the enzyme immobilized in this way was no longer sensitive to effectors, either AMP or ATP. It showed Michaelian behavior and higher substrate affinity quite similar to that of the native enzyme. The data suggested that a higher-substrate-affinity enzymatic form was most probably stabilized by immobilization.  相似文献   

15.
The alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase complex of Acetobacter xylinum was purified to homogeneity. It consists of three main polypeptide chains with a total molecular weight of about 2.4 X 10(6). It catalyzes the overall Mg2+ and thiamin pyrophosphate-dependent, NAD+- and CoA-linked oxidative decarboxylation of alpha-ketoglutarate, as well as the partial reactions characteristic of the three enzyme components described for the complex from other sources. Initial velocity studies revealed marked positive cooperativity for the substrate alpha-ketoglutarate (Hill coefficient (nH) = 2.0; concentration of ligand at half-maximum effect (S0.5) = 8 mM). The sigmoidal [alpha-ketoglutarate]-velocity relationship became hyperbolic upon addition of AMP or 3-acetylpyridine adenine dinucleotide (AcPyAD) or in the presence of high concentrations of NAD. S0.5 (alpha-ketoglutarate) decreased to 1 mM, but Vmax was unchanged. Saturation curves for NAD and AMP are sigmoidal (nH = 2) at low alpha-ketoglutarate concentrations and become hyperbolic at high alpha-ketoglutarate concentrations. As judged by S0.5, the relative efficiency of the allosteric effectors is AcPyAD greater than AMP greater than alpha-ketoglutarate- greater than NAD+. Half-maximal changes in nH, S0.5, and activation by AMP occur at a pH significantly different from that of half-maximal activity. A model for the allosteric behavior of the complex is proposed in which the first enzyme component of the complex (E1) is the site for the allosteric interactions and AMP is the primary positive modifier, whereas NAD and AcPyAD act as AMP analogues. The overall reaction is competitively inhibited by NADH with respect to NAD (K1 = 20 micronM) and by succinyl-CoA with respect of CoA (K1 = 3 micronM). The properties of the alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase complex of A. xylinum appear to provide for appropriate partitioning of alpha-ketoglutarate carbon between competing pathways in response to the energy state of the cells.  相似文献   

16.
NAD kinase is the only known enzyme catalyzing the formation of NADP, a coenzyme implicated in most reductive biosynthetic reactions and in many antioxidant defense systems. Despite its importance, nothing is known regarding its structure or mechanism of catalysis. Mycobacterium tuberculosis NAD kinase has been overexpressed in Escherichia coli and purified to homogeneity. The molecular and kinetic properties of the enzyme resulted in significant differences from those reported by others on a proteolytically degraded form of the protein. Indeed the full-length enzyme displays an allosteric behavior and shows a strict preference for inorganic polyphosphate as the phosphate donor. It is inhibited by the reaction product NADP and by both NADH and NADPH. The mycobacterial enzyme shares with all other known NAD kinases a highly conserved region (spanning residues 189-210), particularly rich in glycines, which differs from the primary sequences of all previously identified nucleotide-binding sites. Alanine-scanning mutagenesis performed on 11 conserved residues within this domain revealed its importance in catalysis. A total of 6 of 11 mutated proteins completely lost the enzymatic activity while retaining the same oligomeric state of the wild-type protein, as demonstrated by gel-filtration analysis. Substitutions of S199 and G208 with alanine rendered enzyme versions with reduced activity. Their kinetic characterization, performed on purified proteins, revealed kinetic parameters toward ATP and polyphosphate similar to those of the wild-type enzyme. On the contrary, when the kinetic analysis was performed by using NAD as the variable substrate, significant differences were observed with respect to both the allosteric behavior and the catalytic efficiency, suggesting that the mutated region is likely involved in NAD binding.  相似文献   

17.
Lin Y  West AH  Cook PF 《Biochemistry》2008,47(40):10809-10815
Potassium is an activator of the reaction catalyzed by homoisocitrate (HIc) dehydrogenase (HIcDH) from Saccharomyces cerevisiae with either the natural substrate, homoisocitrate, or the slow substrate isocitrate. On the basis of initial velocity studies, the selectivity of the activator site for monovalent ions was determined. Potassium is the best activator, and NH 4 (+) and Rb (+) are also activators of the reaction, while Cs (+), Li (+), and Na (+) are not. Chloride inhibits the reaction, while acetate is much less effective. Substitution of potassium acetate for KCl changes the kinetic mechanism of HIcDH from a steady state random to a fully ordered mechanism with the binding of MgHIc followed by K (+) and NAD. The change in mechanism likely reflects an apparent increase in the affinity of enzyme for MgHIc as a result of elimination of the inhibitory effect of Cl (-). The V/K NAD pH-rate profile in the absence of K (+) exhibits a >10-fold decrease in the affinity of enzyme for NAD upon deprotonation of an enzyme side chain with a p K a of about 5.5-6. On the other hand, the affinity for NAD is relatively constant at high pH in the presence of 200 mM KCl. Since the affinity of the dinucleotide decreases as the enzyme group is protonated and the effect is overcome by a monovalent cation, the enzyme residue may be a neutral acid, aspartate or glutamate. Data suggest that K (+) replaces the proton, and likely binds to the enzyme residue, the pyrophosphoryl moiety of NAD, or both. Viscosity and solvent deuterium isotope effects studies suggest the isomerization of E-MgHIc binary complex limits the rate in the absence of K (+).  相似文献   

18.
Yeast glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase as a typical SH enzyme is inactivated by the antipodes of a-iodopropionic acid and its amide at different rates. The apoenzyme reacts faster with the D(+) antipode of the free a-iodopropionic acid (k(D)/k(L) = 6.8) and the L(-) antipode of the amide (k(L)/k(D) = 3). On addition of NAD(+) the stereoselectivity of the SH group towards a-iodopropionic acid is inverted, that towards the amide is enlarged, the rate relationships depending on the NAD(+) concentration.The results were interpreted by the assumption, that the allosteric T state of the enzyme reacts most rapidly with the D(+) antipodes, whereas the R state favours the L(-) antipodes of the alkylation reagents. The dependence of the reaction rates on the NAD(+) concentration could be fitted to the allosteric function of state R.  相似文献   

19.
On- and off-velocity constants for NADH and NAD+ binding to liver alcohol dehydrogenase in the pH range 10-12 have been determined by stopped-flow kinetic methods. The results are consistent with previously reported equilibrium binding data and proposals attributing the main effects of pH on coenzyme binding to ionization of Lys-228 and zinc-bound water. Deprotonation of the group identified as Lys-228 decreases the NADH and NAD+ association rates by a factor exceeding 20 and has no detectable effect on the coenzyme dissociation rates in the examined pH range. Ionization of the group identified as zinc-bound water causes a 3-fold increase of the rate of NADH dissociation from the enzyme, and decreases the rate of NAD+ dissociation by a factor of 200. The NADH and NAD+ association rates are decreased by a factor of 30 and 5, respectively. The observed effects of pH can be rationalized in terms of electrostatic interactions of the ionizing groups with the charges present on the coenzyme molecules and lend support to the idea that binding of the coenzyme nicotinamide ring occurs subsequent to binding of the AMP portion of the coenzyme.  相似文献   

20.
Yeast NAD(+)-specific isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH) is an octamer containing two types of homologous subunits. Ligand-binding analyses were conducted to examine effects of residue changes in putative catalytic and regulatory isocitrate-binding sites respectively contained in IDH2 and IDH1 subunits. Replacement of homologous serine residues in either subunit site, S98A in IDH2 or S92A in IDH1, was found to reduce by half the total number of holoenzyme isocitrate-binding sites, confirming a correlation between detrimental effects on isocitrate binding and respective kinetic defects in catalysis and allosteric activation by AMP. Replacement of both serine residues eliminates isocitrate binding and measurable catalytic activity. The putative isocitrate-binding sites of IDH1 and IDH2 contain five identical and four nonidentical residues. Reciprocal replacement of the four nonidentical residues in either or both subunits (A108R, F136Y, T241D, and N245D in IDH1 and/or R114A, Y142F, D248T, and D252N in IDH2) was found to be permissive for isocitrate binding. This provides further evidence for two types of binding sites in IDH, although the authentic residues have been shown to be necessary for normal kinetic contributions. Finally, the mutant enzymes with residue replacements in the IDH1 site were found to be unable to bind AMP, suggesting that allosteric activation is dependent both upon binding of isocitrate at the IDH1 site and upon the changes in the enzyme normally elicited by this binding.  相似文献   

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