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1.
Comparisons among evolutionarily related enzymes offer opportunities to reveal how structural differences produce different catalytic activities. Two structurally related enzymes, Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase (AP) and Xanthomonas axonopodis nucleotide pyrophosphatase/phosphodiesterase (NPP), have nearly identical binuclear Zn2+ catalytic centers but show tremendous differential specificity for hydrolysis of phosphate monoesters or phosphate diesters. To determine if there are differences in Zn2+ coordination in the two enzymes that might contribute to catalytic specificity, we analyzed both x-ray absorption spectroscopic and x-ray crystallographic data. We report a 1.29-Å crystal structure of AP with bound phosphate, allowing evaluation of interactions at the AP metal site with high resolution. To make systematic comparisons between AP and NPP, we measured zinc extended x-ray absorption fine structure for AP and NPP in the free-enzyme forms, with AMP and inorganic phosphate ground-state analogs and with vanadate transition-state analogs. These studies yielded average zinc–ligand distances in AP and NPP free-enzyme forms and ground-state analog forms that were identical within error, suggesting little difference in metal ion coordination among these forms. Upon binding of vanadate to both enzymes, small increases in average metal–ligand distances were observed, consistent with an increased coordination number. Slightly longer increases were observed in NPP relative to AP, which could arise from subtle rearrangements of the active site or differences in the geometry of the bound vanadyl species. Overall, the results suggest that the binuclear Zn2+ catalytic site remains very similar between AP and NPP during the course of a reaction cycle.  相似文献   

2.
Extended x-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) spectroscopy was combined with thermodynamic and kinetic approaches to investigate zinc binding to a zinc finger (C2H2) and a tetrathiolate (C4) peptide. Both peptides represent structural zinc sites of proteins and rapidly bind a single zinc ion with picomolar dissociation constants. In competition with EDTA the transfer of peptide-bound zinc ions proved to be 6 orders of magnitude faster than predicted for a dissociation-association mechanism thus requiring ligand exchange mechanisms via peptide-zinc-EDTA complexes. EXAFS spectra of C2H2 showed the expected Cys2His2-ligand geometry when fully loaded with zinc. For a 2-fold excess of peptide, however, the existence of zinc-bridged peptide-peptide complexes with dominating sulfur coordination could be clearly shown. Whereas zinc binding kinetics of C2H2 appeared as a simple second order process, the suggested mechanism for C4 comprises a zinc-bridged Zn-(C4)2 species as well as a Zn-C4 species with less than 4 metal-bound thiolates, which is supported by EXAFS results. A rapid equilibrium of bound and unbound states of individual ligands might explain the kinetic instability of zinc-peptide complexes, which enables fast ligand exchange during the encounter of occupied and unoccupied acceptor sites. Depending on relative concentrations and stabilities, this results in a rapid transfer of zinc ions in the virtual absence of free zinc ions, as seen for the zinc transfer to EDTA, or in the formation of zinc-bridged complexes, as seen for both peptides with excess of peptides over available zinc.  相似文献   

3.
Binding of axial ligands to the nickel(II) of isolated factor F430 from the methyl reductase enzyme of Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum is demonstrated. Evidence of bis-ligand coordination is obtained from the x-ray absorption, optical, and resonance Raman spectral characterization of F430 and its 12,13-diepimeric isomer in the presence of a large excess of cyanide, pyridine, or 1-methylimidazole. Significant broadening and 5-10-nm red shifts of the main 430-nm optical absorption band and shifts of up to 30 cm-1 for the high-frequency Raman lines are observed upon coordination of these axial ligands. The Raman spectra of native F430 and the diepimer with a particular axial ligand are nearly identical. Nickel x-ray absorption edge spectra of the diepimer in the absence and presence of these exogenous ligands are indicative of conversion from a square-planar to a tetragonally distorted octahedral geometry. Analyses of the nickel extended x-ray absorption fine structure data for the ligated diepimer complexes yield detailed structural information for these complexes. Implications of these data with respect to the enzymatic mechanism and the structure of the enzyme-bound factor are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Thermoanaerobacter brockii alcohol dehydrogenase (TbADH) catalyzes the reversible oxidation of secondary alcohols to the corresponding ketones using NADP(+) as the cofactor. The active site of the enzyme contains a zinc ion that is tetrahedrally coordinated by four protein residues. The enzymatic reaction leads to the formation of a ternary enzyme-cofactor-substrate complex; and catalytic hydride ion transfer is believed to take place directly between the substrate and cofactor at the ternary complex. Although crystallographic data of TbADH and other alcohol dehydrogenases as well as their complexes are available, their mode of action remains to be determined. It is firmly established that the zinc ion is essential for catalysis. However, there is no clear agreement about the coordination environment of the metal ion and the competent reaction intermediates during catalysis. We used a combination of X-ray absorption, circular dichroism (CD), and fluorescence spectroscopy, together with structural analysis and modeling studies, to investigate the ternary complexes of TbADH that are bound to a transition-state analogue inhibitor. Our structural and spectroscopic studies indicated that the coordination sphere of the catalytic zinc site in TbADH undergoes conformational changes when it binds the inhibitor and forms a pentacoordinated complex at the zinc ion. These studies provide the first active site structure of bacterial ADH bound to a substrate analogue. Here, we suggest the active site structure of the central intermediate complex and, more specifically, propose the substrate-binding site in TbADH.  相似文献   

5.
The affinity of nitrogen and sulfur ligands for the catalytic zinc ion in horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase has been investigated by their influence on the affinity labeling reaction with iodoacetate. All the nitrogen compounds including ammonia, a primary and a secondary amine, and heterocycles containing a pyridine-type nitrogen with the exception of 2,2-dipyridyl were found to activate the affinity labeling reaction. Activation results from inner-sphere ligand coordination to the catalytic zinc ion. Closely related pyridine compounds gave a regular increase in affinity for the enzyme with increasing basicity, as expected for coordination to a metal ion. The sulfur compounds penicillamine and mercaptoethanol also activated the affinity labeling reaction, but dimercaptopropanol bound very tightly as a bidentate inhibited the reaction. The anions hydrosulfide, diethyldithiocarbamate, and cyanide coordinated to the catalytic zinc ion, whereas azide, thiocyanate, tetrazole, and iodide complexed the anion-binding site. The anionic metal ligands increased the rate of inactivation of the enzyme with iodoacetamide by binding to the catalytic zinc ion, while the binding of iodoacetate to the anion-binding site was prevented.  相似文献   

6.
The binding of substrate analogs to phosphotriesterase   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Phosphotriesterase (PTE) from Pseudomonas diminuta catalyzes the detoxification of organophosphates such as the widely utilized insecticide paraoxon and the chemical warfare agent sarin. The three-dimensional structure of the enzyme is known from high resolution x-ray crystallographic analyses. Each subunit of the homodimer folds into a so-called TIM barrel, with eight strands of parallel beta-sheet. The two zinc ions required for activity are positioned at the C-terminal portion of the beta-barrel. Here, we describe the three-dimensional structure of PTE complexed with the inhibitor diisopropyl methyl phosphonate, which serves as a mimic for sarin. Additionally, the structure of the enzyme complexed with triethyl phosphate is also presented. In the case of the PTE-diisopropyl methyl phosphonate complex, the phosphoryl oxygen of the inhibitor coordinates to the more solvent-exposed zinc ion (2.5 A), thereby lending support to the presumed catalytic mechanism involving metal coordination of the substrate. In the PTE-triethyl phosphate complex, the phosphoryl oxygen of the inhibitor is positioned at 3.4 A from the more solvent-exposed zinc ion. The two structures described in this report provide additional molecular understanding for the ability of this remarkable enzyme to hydrolyze such a wide range of organophosphorus substrates.  相似文献   

7.
A detailed study of the x-ray absorption spectrum of tetanus neurotoxin in the K-edge EXAFS region of the zinc absorber is presented that allows the complete identification of the amino acid residues coordinated to the zinc active site. A very satisfactory interpretation of the experimental data can be given if multiple scattering contributions are included in the analysis. Comparing the absorption spectrum of tetanus neurotoxin to that of two other structurally similar zinc-endopeptidases, thermolysin and astacin, in which the zinc coordination mode is known from crystallographic data, we conclude that in tetanus neurotoxin, besides a water molecule, zinc is coordinated to two histidines and a tyrosine.  相似文献   

8.
Sousa SF  Fernandes PA  Ramos MJ 《Proteins》2007,66(1):205-218
In spite of the enormous interest that has been devoted to its study, the mechanism of the enzyme farnesyltransferase (FTase) remains the subject of several crucial doubts. In this article, we shed a new light in one of the most fundamental dilemmas that characterize the mechanism of this puzzling enzyme commonly referred to as the "distances paradox", which arises from the existence of a large 8-A distance between the two reactive atoms in the reaction catalyzed by this enzyme: a Zn-bound cysteine sulphur atom from a peptidic substrate and the farnesyldiphosphate (FPP) carbon 1. This distance must be overcome for the reaction to occur. In this study, the two possible alternatives were evaluated by combining molecular mechanics (AMBER) and quantum chemical calculations (B3LYP). Basically, our results have shown that an activation of the Zn-bound cysteine thiolate with subsequent displacement from the zinc coordination sphere towards the FPP carbon 1 is not a realistic hypothesis of overcoming the large distance reported in the crystallographic structures of the ternary complexes between the two reactive atoms, but that a rotation involving the FPP molecule can bring the two atoms closer with moderate energetic cost, coherent with previous experimental data. This conclusion opens the door to an understanding of the chemical step in the farnesylation reaction.  相似文献   

9.
Zinc serves regulatory functions in cells and thus, several mechanisms exist for tight control of its homeostasis. One mechanism is storage in and retrieval from vesicles, so-called zincosomes, but the chemical speciation of zincosomal zinc has remained enigmatic. Here, we determine the intravesicular zinc-coordination in isolated zincosomes in comparison to intact RAW264.7 murine macrophage cells. In elemental maps of a cell monolayer, generated by microbeam X-ray fluorescence, zincosomes were identified as spots of high zinc accumulation. A fingerprint for the binding motif obtained by μXANES (X-ray absorption near edge structure) matches the XANES from isolated vesicles; zinc is not free, but present as a complexed form (average coordination; 1.0 sulfur, 2,5 histidines 30 and 1.0 oxygen), resembling regulatory or catalytic zinc sites in proteins. Such coordination enables reversible binding, acting as a ‘zinc sink’, facilitating the accumulation of high amounts of zinc against a concentration gradient.  相似文献   

10.
The first crystallographic structure of an N-hydroxyurea inhibitor bound into the active site of a matrix metalloproteinase is reported. The ligand and three other analogues were prepared and studied as inhibitors of MMP-2, MMP-3, and MMP-8. The crystal structure of the complex with MMP-8 shows that the N-hydroxyurea, contrary to the analogous hydroxamate, binds the catalytic zinc ion in a monodentate rather than bidentate mode and with high out-of-plane distortion of the amide bonds.  相似文献   

11.
Binding of Zn2+ has been shown previously to inhibit the ubiquinol cytochrome c oxidoreductase (cyt bc1 complex). X-ray diffraction data in Zn-treated crystals of the avian cyt bc1 complex identified two binding sites located close to the catalytic Qo site of the enzyme. One of them (Zn01) might interfere with the egress of protons from the Qo site to the aqueous phase. Using Zn K-edge x-ray absorption fine-structure spectroscopy, we report here on the local structure of Zn2+ bound stoichiometrically to noncrystallized cyt bc1 complexes. We performed a comparative x-ray absorption fine-structure spectroscopy study by examining avian, bovine, and bacterial enzymes. A large number of putative clusters, built by combining information from first-shell analysis and metalloprotein databases, were fitted to the experimental spectra by using ab initio simulations. This procedure led us to identify the binding clusters with high levels of confidence. In both the avian and bovine enzyme, a tetrahedral ligand cluster formed by two His, one Lys, and one carboxylic residue was found, and this ligand attribution fit the crystallographic Zn01 location of the avian enzyme. In the chicken enzyme, the ligands were the His121, His268, Lys270, and Asp253 residues, and in the homologous bovine enzyme they were the His121, His267, Lys269, and Asp254 residues. Zn2+ bound to the bacterial cyt bc1 complex exhibited quite different spectral features, consistent with a coordination number of 6. The best-fit octahedral cluster was formed by one His, two carboxylic acids, one Gln or Asn residue, and two water molecules. It was interesting that by aligning the crystallographic structures of the bacterial and avian enzymes, this group of residues was found located in the region homologous to that of the Zn01 site. This cluster included the His276, Asp278, Glu295, and Asn279 residues of the cyt b subunit. The conserved location of the Zn2+ binding sites at the entrance of the putative proton release pathways, and the presence of His residues point to a common mechanism of inhibition. As previously shown for the photosynthetic bacterial reaction center, zinc would compete with protons for binding to the His residues, thus impairing their function as proton donors/acceptors.  相似文献   

12.
The carbonic anhydrase (CA) family of zinc metalloenzymes includes many known isozymes that have different subcellular distributions. The study described here focuses on identification of the structural features that define low-temperature adaptation in a Chionodraco hamatus protein, both for the reaction center, at an atomic level, and for the tertiary structure of the protein. To this aim, an x-ray absorption near-edge spectroscopy/Minuit x-ray absorption near-edge spectroscopy analysis of the reaction center was undertaken for both a structurally characterized human CAII and CA of C. hamatus. Higher structural levels were analyzed by sequence comparison and homology modeling. To establish whether the structural insights acquired in fish CAs are general, theoretical models were generated by homology modeling for three temperate-climate-adapted fish CAs. The measured structural differences between the two proteins are discussed in terms of the differences in the electrostatic potential between human CAII and CA of C. hamatus. We conclude that modulation of the interaction between the catalytic water molecule and the zinc ion could depend on the effect of the electrostatic potential distribution.  相似文献   

13.
X-ray absorption spectroscopy is ideally suited for the investigation of the electronic structure and the local environment (approximately 5 A) of specific atoms in biomolecules. While the edge region provides information about the valence state of the absorbing atom, the chemical identity of neighboring atoms, and the coordination geometry, the extended x-ray absorption fine structure region contains information about the number and average distance of neighboring atoms and their relative disorder. The development of sensitive detection methods has allowed studies using near physiological concentrations (as low as approximately 100 microM). RNA polymerase from Escherichia coli contains two zinc atoms: one tightly bound in the beta' subunit, the subunit that participates in template binding, and the other loosely bound in the beta subunit, the subunit that participates in substrate binding. X-ray absorption studies of these zinc sites in the native protein and of the zinc site in the beta' subunit after removal of the zinc in the beta subunit site by p-(hydroxymercuri)benzenesulfonate (Giedroc, D. P., and Coleman, J. E. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 4969-4978) indicate that both zinc sites have octahedral coordination. The zinc in the beta' subunit site has four sulfur ligands at an average distance of 2.36 +/- 0.02 A and two oxygen (or nitrogen) ligands at an average distance of 2.23 +/- 0.02 A. The beta subunit zinc site has five sulfur ligands at an average distance of 2.38 +/- 0.01 A and one histidine nitrogen ligand at 2.14 +/- 0.02 A. These results are in general agreement with earlier biochemical and spectroscopic studies.  相似文献   

14.
X-ray absorption spectroscopic characterization of axial ligand coordination to factor F430, the nickel-tetrapyrrole cofactor of the S-methyl-coenzyme M (CH3SCoM) methyl reductase enzyme from methanogenic bacteria, is presented. The nickel of isolated F430 is hexacoordinate at 10 K in aqueous solution (as is the enzyme-bound cofactor), whereas the epimerized and ring-oxidized derivatives of F430 have four-coordinate nickel. Reduction of the ring-oxidized derivative, F560, with dithionite yields F430 in its native configuration, with axial ligands indistinguishable from those present when the cofactor is obtained directly from the holoenzyme. Thus, we conclude that the axial ligands to F430 in aqueous solution are water molecules. Analysis of the nickel extended x-ray absorption fine structure is consistent with this conclusion. Resonance Raman spectra obtained at room temperature contain features characteristic of both 4- and 6-coordinate forms of the cofactor. We have found that the resonance Raman, optical, and x-ray absorption spectra of aqueous solutions of F430 are temperature-dependent due to a ligand-binding equilibrium involving the square-planar and 6-coordinate bis-aquo forms of the cofactor. At low temperatures (less than 250 K) the 6-coordinate form predominates, whereas higher temperature solutions contain both 4- and 6-coordinate species in a dynamic equilibrium. Similar behavior is observed in other weakly coordinating solvents such as methanol and ethanol. The 4-coordinate form is predominant in solvents with strong electron-withdrawing substituents such as 2,2,2-trifluoroethanol and 2-mercaptoethanol. The relevance of this facile ligand exchange to the active site structure and enzymatic mechanism of the parent enzyme is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
The in vivo coordination structure of lanthanum ions interacting with chlorophyll-a of the fern Dicranopteris dichotoma grown in a rare earth minefield in southern China was determined by the extended x-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS). The results show that lanthanum includes two porphyrin rings in its coordination sphere. It is postulated that the La-chlorophyll-a complex may have a bilayer structure. The analytical method may serve as a new tool to gain insight in the in vivo interactions of rare earth elements.  相似文献   

16.
Re-evaluation of the crystallographic data of the molybdenum-containing E. coli formate dehydrogenase H (Boyington et al. Science 275:1305–1308, 1997), reported in two redox states, reveals important structural differences for the formate-reduced form, with large implications for the reaction mechanism proposed in that work. We have re-refined the reduced structure with revised protocols and found substantial rearrangement in some parts of it. The original model is essentially correct but an important loop close to the molybdenum active site was mistraced, and, therefore, catalytic relevant residues were located in wrong positions. In particular selenocysteine-140, a ligand of molybdenum in the original work, and essential for catalysis, is no longer bound to the metal after reduction of the enzyme with formate. These results are incompatible with the originally proposed reaction mechanism. On the basis of our new interpretation, we have revised and proposed a new reaction mechanism, which reconciles the new X-ray model with previous biochemical and extended X-ray absorption fine structure data.  相似文献   

17.
U Ryde 《Biophysical journal》1999,77(5):2777-2787
The relative energies of different coordination modes (bidentate, monodentate, syn, and anti) of a carboxylate group bound to a zinc ion have been studied by the density functional method B3LYP with large basis sets on realistic models of the active site of several zinc proteins. In positively charged four-coordinate complexes, the mono- and bidentate coordination modes have almost the same energy (within 10 kJ/mol). However, if there are negatively charged ligands other than the carboxylate group, the monodentate binding mode is favored. In general, the energy difference between monodentate and bidentate coordination is small, 4-24 kJ/mol, and it is determined more by hydrogen-bond interactions with other ligands or second-sphere groups than by the zinc-carboxylate interaction. Similarly, the activation energy for the conversion between the two coordination modes is small, approximately 6 kJ/mol, indicating a very flat Zn-O potential surface. The energy difference between syn and anti binding modes of the monodentate carboxylate group is larger, 70-100 kJ/mol, but this figure again strongly depends on interactions with second-sphere molecules. Our results also indicate that the pK(a) of the zinc-bound water ligand in carboxypeptidase and thermolysin is 8-9.  相似文献   

18.
Binding of transition metal ions to the reaction center (RC) protein of the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides has been previously shown to slow light-induced electron and proton transfer to the secondary quinone acceptor molecule, Q(B). On the basis of x-ray diffraction at 2.5 angstroms resolution a site, formed by AspH124, HisH126, and HisH128, has been identified at the protein surface which binds Cd(2+) or Zn(2+). Using Zn K-edge x-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy we report here on the local structure of Zn(2+) ions bound to purified RC complexes embedded into polyvinyl alcohol films. X-ray absorption fine structure data were analyzed by combining ab initio simulations and multiparameter fitting; structural contributions up to the fourth coordination shell and multiple scattering paths (involving three atoms) have been included. Results for complexes characterized by a Zn to RC stoichiometry close to one indicate that Zn(2+) binds two O and two N atoms in the first coordination shell. Higher shell contributions are consistent with a binding cluster formed by two His, one Asp residue, and a water molecule. Analysis of complexes characterized by approximately 2 Zn ions per RC reveals a second structurally distinct binding site, involving one O and three N atoms, not belonging to a His residue. The local structure obtained for the higher affinity site nicely fits the coordination geometry proposed on the basis of x-ray diffraction data, but detects a significant contraction of the first shell. Two possible locations of the second new binding site at the cytoplasmic surface of the RC are proposed.  相似文献   

19.
Thermoanaerobacter brockii alcohol dehydrogenase (TbADH) is a zinc-dependent NADP(+)/H-linked class enzyme that reversibly catalyzes the oxidation of secondary alcohols to their corresponding ketones. Cobalt substitution studies of other members of the alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) family showed that the cobalt-containing ADHs have a similar active site structure but slightly decreased activity compared to wild-type zinc ADHs. In contrast, the cobalt-substituted TbADH (Co-TbADH) exhibits an increase in specific activity compared to the native enzyme [Bogin, O., Peretz, M., and Burstein, Y. (1997) Protein Sci. 6, 450-458]. However, the structural basis underlying this behavior is not yet clear. To shed more light on this issue, we studied the local structure and electronics at the catalytic metal site in Co-TbADH by combining X-ray absorption (XAS) and quantum chemical calculations. Importantly, we show that the first metal-ligand coordination shell of Co-TbADH is distorted compared to its native tetrahedral coordination shell and forms an octahedral structure. This is mediated presumably by the addition of two water molecules and results in more positively charged catalytic metal ions. Recently, we have shown that the metal-ligand coordination number of the zinc ion in TbADH changes dynamically during substrate turnover. These structural changes are associated with a higher coordination number of the native catalytic zinc ion and the consequent buildup of a positive charge. Here we propose that the accumulation of a higher coordination number and positive charge at the catalytic metal ion in TbADH stabilizes the structure of the catalytic transition state and hence lowers the barrier for enzyme catalysis.  相似文献   

20.
Zinc-dependent enzymes play important roles in many cellular processes. Assignment of their reaction mechanisms is often a subject of debate because the zinc ion is silent in several spectroscopic techniques. We have combined time-resolved X-ray absorption spectroscopy, pre-steady state kinetics and computational quantum chemistry to study the active site zinc ion of bacterial alcohol dehydrogenase during single substrate turnover. We detect a series of alternations in the coordination number and structure of the catalytic zinc ion with concomitant changes in metal-ligand bond distances. These structural changes are reflected in the effective charge of the metal ion. The present work emphasizes the flexibility of catalytic zinc sites during catalysis and provides novel mechanistic insights into alcohol dehydrogenase catalysis.  相似文献   

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