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1.
Shah DD  Conrad JA  Heinz B  Brownlee JM  Moran GR 《Biochemistry》2011,50(35):7694-7704
4-Hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) and hydroxymandelate synthase (HMS) each catalyze similar complex dioxygenation reactions using the substrates 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate (HPP) and dioxygen. The reactions differ in that HPPD hydroxylates at the ring C1 and HMS at the benzylic position. The HPPD reaction is more complex in that hydroxylation at C1 instigates a 1,2-shift of an aceto substituent. Despite that multiple intermediates have been observed to accumulate in single turnover reactions of both enzymes, neither enzyme exhibits significant accumulation of the hydroxylating intermediate. In this study we employ a product analysis method based on the extents of intermediate partitioning with HPP deuterium substitutions to measure the kinetic isotope effects for hydroxylation. These data suggest that, when forming the native product homogentisate, the wild-type form of HPPD produces a ring epoxide as the immediate product of hydroxylation but that the variant HPPDs tended to also show the intermediacy of a benzylic cation for this step. Similarly, the kinetic isotope effects for the other major product observed, quinolacetic acid, showed that either pathway is possible. HMS variants show small normal kinetic isotope effects that indicate displacement of the deuteron in the hydroxylation step. The relatively small magnitude of this value argues best for a hydrogen atom abstraction/rebound mechanism. These data are the first definitive evidence for the nature of the hydroxylation reactions of HPPD and HMS.  相似文献   

2.
Hydroxymandelate synthase (HMS) catalyzes the committed step in the formation of para-hydroxyphenylglycine, a recurrent substructure of polycyclic non-ribosomal peptide antibiotics such as vancomycin. HMS uses the same substrates as 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD), 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate (HPP) and O2, and also conducts a dioxygenation reaction. The difference between the two lies in the insertion of the second oxygen atom, HMS directing this atom onto the benzylic carbon of the substrate while HPPD hydroxylates the aromatic C1 carbon. We have shown that HMS will bind NTBC, a herbicide/therapeutic whose mode of action is based on the inhibition of HPPD. This occurs despite residue differences at the active site of HMS from those known to contact the inhibitor in HPPD. Moreover, the minimal kinetic mechanism for association of NTBC to HMS differs only slightly from that observed with HPPD. The primary difference is that three charge-transfer species are observed to accumulate during association. The first reversible complex forms with a weak dissociation constant of 520 μM, the subsequent two charge-transfer complexes form with rate constants of 2.7 s−1 and 0.67 s−1. As was the case for HPPD, the final complex has the most intense charge-transfer, is not observed to dissociate, and is unreactive towards dioxygen.  相似文献   

3.
Purpero VM  Moran GR 《Biochemistry》2006,45(19):6044-6055
(4-Hydroxyphenyl)pyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) incorporates both atoms of molecular oxygen into 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate (HPP) to form homogentisate (HG). This reaction has direct relevance in both medicine and agriculture. In humans, the specific inhibition of HPPD alleviates the symptoms of diseases that arise from tyrosine catabolism defects. However, in plants, the inhibition of HPPD bleaches, stunts, and ultimately kills the organism. The reason for this is that in mammalian metabolism the product HG does not feed into other pathways, whereas in plants it is the precursor for the redox active portion of tocopherols and plastoquinones. There are a number of commercially available herbicides that directly target the inhibition of the HPPD reaction. Plant HPPD however is largely uncharacterized in terms of its catalysis and inhibition reactions. In this study, we examine the catalysis and inhibition of HPPD from Arabidopsis thaliana (AtHPPD). We have expressed AtHPPD and purified the enzyme to high specific activity. This form of HPPD accumulates two transient species in single turnover reactions with the native substrate HPP. These transients appear to be equivalent to intermediates I and III observed in the enzyme from Streptomyces (Johnson-Winters et al. (2005), Biochemistry, 44, 7189-7199). The first intermediate is a relatively strongly absorbing species with maxima at 380 and 490 nm. This species decays to a second intermediate that is fluorescent and has been assigned as the complex of the enzyme with the product, HG. The decay of this intermediate is rate-determining in multiple turnover reactions. The reaction of the enzyme with the analogue of the substrate, phenylpyruvate (PPA), is noncatalytic. A single turnover reaction is observed with this ligand that renders the enzyme oxidized to the ferric form, consumes a stoichiometric amount of dioxygen, and yields 66% phenylacetate as a product. Additional absorbance features at 365 and 670 nm accumulate during inactivation and give the inactivated enzyme a green color but has the same molecular mass as the active enzyme as determined by mass spectrometry.  相似文献   

4.
The transformation of 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate to homogentisate, catalyzed by 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD), plays an important role in degrading aromatic amino acids. As the reaction product homogentisate serves as aromatic precursor for prenylquinone synthesis in plants, the enzyme is an interesting target for herbicides. In this study we report the first x-ray structures of the plant HPPDs of Zea mays and Arabidopsis in their substrate-free form at 2.0 A and 3.0 A resolution, respectively. Previous biochemical characterizations have demonstrated that eukaryotic enzymes behave as homodimers in contrast to prokaryotic HPPDs, which are homotetramers. Plant and bacterial enzymes share the overall fold but use orthogonal surfaces for oligomerization. In addition, comparison of both structures provides direct evidence that the C-terminal helix gates substrate access to the active site around a nonheme ferrous iron center. In the Z. mays HPPD structure this helix packs into the active site, sequestering it completely from the solvent. In contrast, in the Arabidopsis structure this helix tilted by about 60 degrees into the solvent and leaves the active site fully accessible. By elucidating the structure of plant HPPD enzymes we aim to provide a structural basis for the development of new herbicides.  相似文献   

5.
(4-hydroxyphenyl)pyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) catalyzes the second step in the pathway for the catabolism of tyrosine, the conversion of (4-hydroxyphenyl)pyruvate (HPP) to homogentisate (HG). This reaction involves decarboxylation, substituent migration, and aromatic oxygenation. HPPD is a member of the alpha-keto acid dependent oxygenases that require Fe(II) and an alpha-keto acid substrate to oxygenate an organic molecule. We have examined the binding of ligands to HPPD from Streptomyces avermitilis. Our data show that HPP binds to the apoenzyme and that the apo-HPPD.HPP complex does not bind Fe(II) to generate active holoenzyme. The binding of HPP, phenylpyruvate (PPA), and pyruvate to the holoenzyme produces a weak ligand charge-transfer band at approximately 500 nm that is indicative of bidentate binding of the 1-carboxylate and 2-keto pyruvate oxygen atoms to the active site metal ion. For HPPD from this organism the 4-hydroxyl group of (4-hydroxyphenyl)pyruvate is a requirement for catalysis; no turnover is observed in the presence of phenylpyruvate. The rate constant for the dissociation of Fe(II) from the holoenzyme is 0.0006 s(-)(1) and indicates that this phenomenon is not significantly relevant in steady-state turnover. The addition of HPP and molecular oxygen to the holoenzyme is formally random. The basis of the ordered bi bi steady-state kinetic mechanism previously observed by Rundgren (Rundgren, M. (1977) J. Biol. Chem. 252, 5094-9) is the 3600-fold increase in oxygen reactivity when holo-HPPD is in complex with HPP. This complex reacts with molecular oxygen with a second-order rate constant of 1.4 x 10(5) M(-)(1) s(-)(1) inducing the formation of an intermediate that decays at the catalytically relevant rate of 7.8 s(-)(1).  相似文献   

6.
4-Hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) catalyzes the conversion of 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate (HPP) into homogentisate. HPPD is the molecular target of very effective synthetic herbicides. HPPD inhibitors may also be useful in treating life-threatening tyrosinemia type I and are currently in trials for treatment of Parkinson disease. The reaction mechanism of this key enzyme in both plants and animals has not yet been fully elucidated. In this study, using site-directed mutagenesis supported by quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical theoretical calculations, we investigated the role of catalytic residues potentially interacting with the substrate/intermediates. These results highlight the following: (i) the central role of Gln-272, Gln-286, and Gln-358 in HPP binding and the first nucleophilic attack; (ii) the important movement of the aromatic ring of HPP during the reaction, and (iii) the key role played by Asn-261 and Ser-246 in C1 hydroxylation and the final ortho-rearrangement steps (numbering according to the Arabidopsis HPPD crystal structure 1SQD). Furthermore, this study reveals that the last step of the catalytic reaction, the 1,2 shift of the acetate side chain, which was believed to be unique to the HPPD activity, is also catalyzed by a structurally unrelated enzyme.  相似文献   

7.
2-Hydroxy-6-ketonona-2,4-diene-1,9-dioic acid 5,6-hydrolase (MhpC) is a 62 kDa homodimeric enzyme of the phenylpropionate degradation pathway of Escherichia coli. The 2.1 A resolution X-ray structure of the native enzyme determined from orthorhombic crystals confirms that it is a member of the alpha/beta hydrolase fold family, comprising eight beta-strands interconnected by loops and helices. The 2.8 A resolution structure of the enzyme co-crystallised with the non-hydrolysable substrate analogue 2,6-diketo-nona-1,9-dioic acid (DKNDA) confirms the location of the active site in a buried channel including Ser110, His263 and Asp235, postulated contributors to a serine protease-like catalytic triad in homologous enzymes. It appears that the ligand binds in two separate orientations. In the first, the C6 keto group of the inhibitor forms a hemi-ketal adduct with the Ser110 side-chain, the C9 carboxylate group interacts, via the intermediacy of a water molecule, with Arg188 at one end of the active site, while the C1 carboxylate group of the inhibitor comes close to His114 at the other end. In the second orientation, the C1 carboxylate group binds at the Arg188 end of the active site and the C9 carboxylate group at the His114 end. These arrangements implicated His114 or His263 as plausible contributors to catalysis of the initial enol/keto tautomerisation of the substrate but lack of conservation of His114 amongst related enzymes and mutagenesis results suggest that His263 is the residue involved. Variability in the quality of the electron density for the inhibitor amongst the eight molecules of the crystal asymmetric unit appears to correlate with alternative positions for the side-chain of His114. This might arise from half-site occupation of the dimeric enzyme and reflect the apparent dissociation of approximately 50% of the keto intermediate from the enzyme during the catalytic cycle.  相似文献   

8.
The alpha-ketoglutate (alpha-KG)-dependent dioxygenases are a large class of mononuclear non-heme iron enzymes that require Fe(II), alpha-KG and dioxygen for catalysis, with the alpha-KG cosubstrate supplying the two additional electrons required for dioxygen activation. A sub-class of these enzymes exists in which the alpha-keto acid is covalently attached to the substrate, including (4-hydroxy)mandelate synthase (HmaS) and (4-hydroxyphenyl)pyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) which utilize the same substrate but exhibit two different general reactivities (H-atom abstraction and electrophilic attack). Previous kinetic studies of Streptomyces avermitilis HPPD have shown that the substrate analog phenylpyruvate (PPA), which only differs from the normal substrate (4-hydroxyphenyl)pyruvate (HPP) by the absence of a para-hydroxyl group on the aromatic ring, does not induce a reaction with dioxygen. While an Fe(IV)O intermediate is proposed to be the reactive species in converting substrate to product, the key step utilizing O(2) to generate this species is the decarboxylation of the alpha-keto acid. It has been generally proposed that the two requirements for decarboxylation are bidentate coordination of the alpha-keto acid to Fe(II) and the presence of a 5C Fe(II) site for the O(2) reaction. Circular dichroism and magnetic circular dichroism studies have been performed and indicate that both enzyme complexes with PPA are similar with bidentate alpha-KG coordination and a 5C Fe(II) site. However, kinetic studies indicate that while HmaS reacts with PPA in a coupled reaction similar to the reaction with HPP, HPPD reacts with PPA in an uncoupled reaction at an approximately 10(5)-fold decreased rate compared to the reaction with HPP. A key difference is spectroscopically observed in the n-->pi( *) transition of the HPPD/Fe(II)/PPA complex which, based upon correlation to density functional theory calculations, is suggested to result from H-bonding between a nearby residue and the carboxylate group of the alpha-keto acid. Such an interaction would disfavor the decarboxylation reaction by stabilizing electron density on the carboxylate group such that the oxidative cleavage to yield CO(2) is disfavored.  相似文献   

9.
BACKGROUND: In plants and photosynthetic bacteria, the tyrosine degradation pathway is crucial because homogentisate, a tyrosine degradation product, is a precursor for the biosynthesis of photosynthetic pigments, such as quinones or tocophenols. Homogentisate biosynthesis includes a decarboxylation step, a dioxygenation and a rearrangement of the pyruvate sidechain. This complex reaction is carried out by a single enzyme, the 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD), a non-heme iron dependent enzyme that is active as a homotetramer in bacteria and as a homodimer in plants. Moreover, in humans, a HPPD deficiency is found to be related to tyrosinemia, a rare hereditary disorder of tyrosine catabolism. RESULTS: We report here the crystal structure of Pseudomonas fluorescens HPPD refined to 2.4 A resolution (Rfree 27.6%; R factor 21.9%). The general topology of the protein comprises two barrel-shaped domains and is similar to the structures of Pseudomonas 2,3-dihydroxybiphenyl dioxygenase (DHBD) and Pseudomonas putida catechol 2,3-dioxygenase (MPC). Each structural domain contains two repeated betaalpha betabeta betaalpha modules. There is one non-heme iron atom per monomer liganded to the sidechains of His161, His240, Glu322 and one acetate molecule. CONCLUSIONS: The analysis of the HPPD structure and its superposition with the structures of DHBD and MPC highlight some important differences in the active sites of these enzymes. These comparisons also suggest that the pyruvate part of the HPPD substrate (4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate) and the O2 molecule would occupy the three free coordination sites of the catalytic iron atom. This substrate-enzyme model will aid the design of new inhibitors of the homogentisate biosynthesis reaction.  相似文献   

10.
Kramer RA  Dekker N  Egmond MR 《FEBS letters》2000,468(2-3):220-224
Escherichia coli outer membrane protease OmpT has been characterised as a serine protease based on its inhibitor profile, but serine protease consensus sequences are absent. By site-directed mutagenesis we substituted all conserved serines and histidines. Substitution of His(101) and His(212) by Ala, Asn or Gln resulted in variant enzymes with 0.01 and 9-20% residual enzymatic activity towards a fluorogenic pentapeptide substrate, respectively. The mutations S140A and S201A did not decrease activity, while variants S40A and S99A yielded 0.5 and 0.2% residual activities, respectively. When measured with a dipeptide substrate the variant S40A demonstrated full activity, whereas variant S99A displayed at least 500-fold reduced activity. We conclude that Ser(99) and His(212) are essential active site residues. We propose that OmpT is a novel serine protease with Ser(99) as the active site nucleophile and His(212) as general base.  相似文献   

11.
Using the semi-empirical MNDO/H method several systems simulating the reaction of tetrahedral intermediate formation in the active site of serine proteases have been studied. The role played by elements of the "catalytic triad" in increasing the reactivity of serine hydroxyl has been discussed. The formation of a strong hydrogen bond between His and Asp was shown to be important in lowering the activation energy in the reaction of Ser with substrate. The change in position of the proton located between Ser and His and between His and Asp was analysed. The influence of substrate distortion on the energy of intermediate formation has been considered.  相似文献   

12.
Naught LE  Regni C  Beamer LJ  Tipton PA 《Biochemistry》2003,42(33):9946-9951
In Pseudomonas aeruginosa, the dual-specificity enzyme phosphomannomutase/phosphoglucomutase catalyzes the transfer of a phosphoryl group from serine 108 to the hydroxyl group at the 1-position of the substrate, either mannose 6-P or glucose 6-P. The enzyme must then catalyze transfer of the phosphoryl group on the 6-position of the substrate back to the enzyme. Each phosphoryl transfer is expected to require general acid-base catalysis, provided by amino acid residues at the enzyme active site. An extensive survey of the active site residues by site-directed mutagenesis failed to identify a single key residue that mediates the proton transfers. Mutagenesis of active site residues Arg20, Lys118, Arg247, His308, and His329 to residues that do not contain ionizable groups produced proteins for which V(max) was reduced to 4-12% of that of the wild type. The fact that no single residue decreased catalytic activity more significantly, and that several residues had similar effects on V(max), suggested that the ensemble of active site amino acids act by creating positive electrostatic potential, which serves to depress the pK of the substrate hydroxyl group so that it binds in ionized form at the active site. In this way, the necessity of positioning the reactive hydroxyl group near a specific amino acid residue is avoided, which may explain how the enzyme is able to promote catalysis of both phosphoryl transfers, even though the 1- and 6-positions do not occupy precisely the same position when the substrate binds in the two different orientations in the active site. When Ser108 is mutated, the enzyme retains a surprising amount of activity, which has led to the suggestion that an alternative residue becomes phosphorylated in the absence of Ser108. (31)P NMR spectra of the S108A protein confirm that it is phosphorylated. Although the S108A/H329N protein had no detectable catalytic activity, the (31)P NMR spectra were not consistent with a phosphohistidine residue.  相似文献   

13.
The α-ketoglutate (α-KG)-dependent dioxygenases are a large class of mononuclear non-heme iron enzymes that require FeII, α-KG and dioxygen for catalysis, with the α-KG cosubstrate supplying the two additional electrons required for dioxygen activation. A sub-class of these enzymes exists in which the α-keto acid is covalently attached to the substrate, including (4-hydroxy)mandelate synthase (HmaS) and (4-hydroxyphenyl)pyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) which utilize the same substrate but exhibit two different general reactivities (H-atom abstraction and electrophilic attack). Previous kinetic studies of Streptomyces avermitilis HPPD have shown that the substrate analog phenylpyruvate (PPA), which only differs from the normal substrate (4-hydroxyphenyl)pyruvate (HPP) by the absence of a para-hydroxyl group on the aromatic ring, does not induce a reaction with dioxygen. While an FeIVO intermediate is proposed to be the reactive species in converting substrate to product, the key step utilizing O2 to generate this species is the decarboxylation of the α-keto acid. It has been generally proposed that the two requirements for decarboxylation are bidentate coordination of the α-keto acid to FeII and the presence of a 5C FeII site for the O2 reaction. Circular dichroism and magnetic circular dichroism studies have been performed and indicate that both enzyme complexes with PPA are similar with bidentate α-KG coordination and a 5C FeII site. However, kinetic studies indicate that while HmaS reacts with PPA in a coupled reaction similar to the reaction with HPP, HPPD reacts with PPA in an uncoupled reaction at an 105-fold decreased rate compared to the reaction with HPP. A key difference is spectroscopically observed in the n → π* transition of the HPPD/FeII/PPA complex which, based upon correlation to density functional theory calculations, is suggested to result from H-bonding between a nearby residue and the carboxylate group of the α-keto acid. Such an interaction would disfavor the decarboxylation reaction by stabilizing electron density on the carboxylate group such that the oxidative cleavage to yield CO2 is disfavored.  相似文献   

14.
The aminocoumarin antibiotics novobiocin and clorobiocin contain a 3-dimethylallyl-4-hydroxybenzoate (3DMA-4HB) moiety. The biosynthesis of this moiety has now been identified by biochemical and molecular biological studies. CloQ from the clorobiocin biosynthetic gene cluster in Streptomyces roseochromogenes DS 12976 has recently been identified as a 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate-3-dimethylallyltransferase. In the present study, the enzyme CloR was overexpressed in Escherichia coli, purified, and identified as a bifunctional non-heme iron oxygenase, which converts 3-dimethylallyl-4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate (3DMA-4HPP) via 3-dimethylallyl-4-hydroxymandelic acid (3DMA-4HMA) to 3DMA-4HB by two consecutive oxidative decarboxylation steps. In 18O2 labeling experiments we showed that two oxygen atoms are incorporated into the intermediate 3DMA-4HMA in the first reaction step, but only one further oxygen is incorporated into the final product 3DMA-4HB during the second reaction step. CloR does not show sequence similarity to known oxygenases. It apparently presents a novel member of the diverse family of the non-heme iron (II) and alpha-ketoacid-dependent oxygenases, with 3DMA-4HPP functioning both as an alpha-keto acid and as a hydroxylation substrate. The reaction catalyzed by CloR represents a new pathway for the formation of benzoic acids in nature.  相似文献   

15.
Nitric oxide (NO) is synthesized from l-Arg via N(G)-hydroxyl-l-Arg (NHA) in the heme active site of nitric oxide synthase (NOS). According to the crystal structure of other NOS isoforms, the carboxylate group of l-Arg hydrogen bonds to the hydroxyl group of the conserved Tyr588 residue in the heme distal site of neuronal NOS (nNOS). Indeed, the nNOS mutations Tyr588His, Tyr588Ser, and Tyr588Phe markedly increased the dissociation constants for l-Arg and NHA by 2.2-8.2-fold and 1.5-3.9-fold, respectively. Similarly, Tyr588His and Tyr588Ser mutations markedly decreased the l-Arg-driven NO formation rates by 50 and 30% than that of the wild type, respectively. However, the catalytic activities of the same mutants using NHA were higher than that of the wild type by up to 136%. As a result, the turnover ratio of NHA to l-Arg was 4.12 for the Tyr588Ser mutant, compared with 1.07 for the wild-type enzyme. Intriguingly, heme reduction rates for the Tyr588 mutants were much lower than for wild type by two orders of magnitude.  相似文献   

16.
The crystal structure of the homodimeric serine carboxypeptidase II from wheat (CPDW-II, M(r) 120K) has been determined and fully refined at 2.2-A resolution to a standard crystallographic R factor of 16.9% using synchrotron data collected at the Brookhaven National Laboratory. The model has an rms deviation from ideal bond lengths of 0.018 A and from bond angles of 2.8 degrees. The model supports the general conclusions of an earlier study at 3.5-A resolution and will form the basis for investigation into substrate binding and mechanistic studies. The enzyme has an alpha + beta fold, consisting of a central 11-stranded beta-sheet with a total of 15 helices on either side. The enzyme, like other serine proteinases, contains a "catalytic triad" Ser146-His397-Asp338 and a presumed "oxyanion hole" consisting of the backbone amides of Tyr147 and Gly53. The carboxylate of Asp338 and imidazole of His397 are not coplanar in contrast to the other serine proteinases. A comparison of the active site features of the three families of serine proteinases suggests that the "catalytic triad" should actually be regarded as two diads, a His-Asp diad and a His-Ser diad, and that the relative orientation of one diad with respect to the other is not particularly important. Four active site residues (52, 53, 65, and 146) have unfavorable backbone conformations but have well-defined electron density, suggesting that there is some strain in the active site region. The binding of the free amino acid arginine has been analyzed by difference Fourier methods, locating the binding site for the C-terminal carboxylate of the leaving group. The carboxylate makes hydrogen bonds to Glu145, Asn51, and the amide of Gly52. The carboxylate of Glu145 also makes a hydrogen bond with that of Glu65, suggesting that one or both may be protonated. Thus, the loss of peptidase activity at pH > 7 may in part be due to deprotonation of Glu145. The active site does not reveal exposed peptide amides and carbonyl oxygen atoms that could interact with substrate in an extended beta-sheet fashion. The fold of the polypeptide backbone is completely different than that of trypsin or subtilisin, suggesting that this is a third example of convergent molecular evolution to a common enzymatic activity. Furthermore, it is suggested that the active site sequence motif "G-X-S-X-G/A", often considered the hallmark of serine peptidase or esterase activity, is fortuitous and not the result of divergent evolution.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
To identify proteins involved in cellular adaptive responses to zinc, a comparative proteome analysis between a previously developed high zinc- and cadmium-resistant human epithelial cell line (high zinc-resistant HeLa cells, HZR) and the parental HeLa cells has been carried out. Differentially produced proteins included cochaperones, proteins associated with oxido-reductase activities, and ubiquitin. Biochemical pathways to which these proteins belong were probed for their involvement in the resistance of both cell lines against cadmium toxicity. Among ER stressors, thapsigargin sensitized HZR cells, but not HeLa cells, to cadmium toxicity more acutely than tunicamycin, implying that these cells heavily relied on proper intracellular calcium distribution. The similar sensitivity of both HeLa and HZR cells to inhibitors of the proteasome, such as MG-132 or lactacystin, excluded improved proteasome activity as a mechanism associated with zinc adaptation of HZR cells. The enzyme 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) was overproduced in HZR cells as compared to HeLa cells. It transforms HPP to homogentisate in the second step of tyrosine catabolism. Inhibition of HPPD decreased the resistance of HZR cells against cadmium, but not that of HeLa cells, suggesting that adaptation to zinc overload and increased HPP removal are linked in HZR cells.  相似文献   

18.
Human plasma platelet-activating factor (PAF) acetylhydrolase functions by reducing PAF levels as a general anti-inflammatory scavenger and is linked to anaphylactic shock, asthma, and allergic reactions. The enzyme has also been implicated in hydrolytic activities of other pro-inflammatory agents, such as sn-2 oxidatively fragmented phospholipids. This plasma enzyme is tightly bound to low and high density lipoprotein particles and is also referred to as lipoprotein-associated phospholipase A2. The crystal structure of this enzyme has been solved from x-ray diffraction data collected to a resolution of 1.5 angstroms. It has a classic lipase alpha/beta-hydrolase fold, and it contains a catalytic triad of Ser273, His351, and Asp296. Two clusters of hydrophobic residues define the probable interface-binding region, and a prediction is given of how the enzyme is bound to lipoproteins. Additionally, an acidic patch of 10 carboxylate residues and a neighboring basic patch of three residues are suggested to play a role in high density lipoprotein/low density lipoprotein partitioning. A crystal structure is also presented of PAF acetylhydrolase reacted with the organophosphate compound paraoxon via its active site Ser273. The resulting diethyl phosphoryl complex was used to model the tetrahedral intermediate of the substrate PAF to the active site. The model of interface binding begins to explain the known specificity of lipoprotein-bound substrates and how the active site can be both close to the hydrophobic-hydrophilic interface and at the same time be accessible to the aqueous phase.  相似文献   

19.
The reduction of inactive estrone (E1) to the active estrogen 17beta-estradiol (E2) is catalyzed by type 1 17beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (17HSD1). Crystallographic studies, modeling and activity measurement of mutants and chimeric enzymes have led to the understanding of its mechanism of action and the molecular basis for the estrogenic specificity. An electrophilic attack on the C17-keto oxygen by the Tyr 155 hydroxyl is proposed for initiation of the transition state. The active site is a hydrophobic pocket with catalytic residues at one end and the recognition machinery on the other. Tyr 155, Lys 159 and Ser 142 are essential for the activity. The presence of certain other amino acids near the substrate recognition end of the active site including His 152 and Pro 187 is critical to the shape complementarity of estrogenic ligands. His 221 and Glu 282 form hydrogen bonds with 3-hydroxyl of the aromatic A-ring of the ligand. This mechanism of recognition of E1 by 17HSD1 is similar to that of E2 by estrogen receptor alpha. In a ternary complex with NADP(+) and equilin, an equine estrogen with C7=C8 double bond, the orientation of C17=O of equilin relative to the C4-hydride is more acute than the near normal approach of the hydride for the substrate. In the apo-enzyme structure, a substrate-entry loop (residues 186-201) is in an open conformation. The loop is closed in this complex and Phe 192 and Met 193 make contacts with the ligand. Residues of the entry loop could be partially responsible for the estrogenic specificity.  相似文献   

20.
The enzyme p-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) catalyzes the conversion of p-hydroxyphenylpyruvate to homogentisic acid (HGA), the aromatic precursor for the biosynthesis of vitamin E (α-tocopherol) and plastoquinone. In order to determine if increased HPPD activity could positively impact tocopherol yields, transgenic plants were generated that overexpressed the gene encoding Arabidopsis HPPD. Transgenic plants exhibiting high levels of HPPD expression were identified by increased tolerance to a competitive inhibitor of HPPD, the herbicide sulcotrione. HPPD gene expression in these transgenic lines, as determined at the RNA, protein and activity levels, was at least 10-fold higher than that of wild-type plants. Subsequent tocopherol analysis of leaf and seed material revealed that the increased HPPD expression resulted in up to a 37% increase in leaf tocopherol levels and a 28% increase in seed tocopherol levels relative to control plants. These results demonstrate that HPPD activity, and likely HGA levels, are at least one factor limiting the production of tocopherols in photosynthetic and non-photosynthetic plant tissues.  相似文献   

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