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1.
Escherichia coli outer membrane phospholipase A (OMPLA) is an integral membrane enzyme. OMPLA is active as a homodimer and requires calcium as a cofactor. The crystal structures of the monomeric and the inhibited dimeric enzymes were recently determined [Snijder, H. J., et al. (1999) Nature 401, 717-721] and revealed that OMPLA monomers are folded into a 12-stranded antiparallel beta-barrel. The active site consists of previously identified essential residues Ser144 and His142 in an arrangement resembling the corresponding residues of a serine hydrolase catalytic triad. However, instead of an Asp or Glu that normally is present in the triad of serine hydrolases, a neutral asparagine (Asn156) was found in OMPLA. In this paper, the importance of the catalytic Asn156 is addressed by site-directed mutagenesis studies. All variants were purified at a 30 mg scale, and were shown to be properly folded using SDS-PAGE and circular dichroism spectroscopy. Using chemical cross-linking, it was shown that all variants were not affected in their calcium-dependent dimerization properties. The Asn156Asp variant exhibited a 2-fold lower activity than wild-type OMPLA at neutral pH. Interestingly, the activity of the variant is 1 order of magnitude higher than that of the wild type at pH >10. Modest residual activities (5 and 2.5%, respectively) were obtained for the Asn156Ala and Asn156Gln mutants, showing that the active site of OMPLA is more tolerant toward replacements of this third residue of the catalytic triad than other serine hydrolases, and that the serine and histidine residues are minimally required for catalysis. In the X-ray structure of dimeric OMPLA, the cofactor calcium is coordinating the putative oxyanion via two water molecules. We propose that this may lessen the importance for the asparagine in the catalytic triad of OMPLA.  相似文献   

2.
F Faustinella  L C Smith  L Chan 《Biochemistry》1992,31(32):7219-7223
Lipoprotein lipase (LPL), hepatic lipase, and pancreatic lipase show high sequence homology to one another. The crystal structure of pancreatic lipase suggests that it contains a trypsin-like Asp-His-Ser catalytic triad at the active center, which is shielded by a disulfide bridge-bounded surface loop that must be repositioned before the substrate can gain access to the catalytic residues. By sequence alignment, the homologous catalytic triad in LPL corresponds to Asp156-His241-Ser132, absolutely conserved residues, and the homologous surface loop to residues 217-238, a poorly conserved region. To verify these assignments, we expressed in vitro wild-type LPL and mutant LPLs having single amino acid mutations involving residue Asp156 (to His, Ser, Asn, Ala, Glu, or Gly), His241 (to Asn, Ala, Arg, Gln, or Trp), or Ser132 (to Gly, Ala, Thu, or Asp) individually. All 15 mutant LPLs were totally devoid of enzyme activity, while wild-type LPL and other mutant LPLs containing substitutions in other positions were fully active. We further replaced the 22-residue LPL loop which shields the catalytic center either partially (replacing 6 of 22 residues) or completely with the corresponding hepatic lipase loop. The partial loop-replacement chimeric LPL was found to be fully active, and the complete loop-replacement mutant had approximately 60% activity, although the primary sequence of the hepatic lipase loop is quite different. In contrast, replacement with the pancreatic lipase loop completely inactivated the enzyme. Our results are consistent with Asp156-His241-Ser132 being the catalytic triad in lipoprotein lipase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
Outer-membrane phospholipase A (OMPLA) is one of the few enzymes present in the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria. The enzymatic activity of OMPLA is strictly regulated to prevent uncontrolled breakdown of the surrounding phospholipids. The activity of OMPLA can be induced by membrane perturbation and concurs with dimerization of the enzyme. The recently elucidated crystal structures of the inactive, monomeric and an inhibited dimeric form of the enzyme provide detailed structural insight into the functional properties of the enzyme. OMPLA is a serine hydrolase with a unique Asn-156-His-142-Ser-144 catalytic triad. Only in the dimeric state, complete substrate binding pockets and functional oxyanion holes are formed. A model is proposed for the activation of OMPLA in which membrane perturbation causes the formation of non-bilayer structures, resulting in the presentation of phospholipids to the active site of OMPLA and leading to the formation of the active dimeric species. Possible roles for OMPLA in maintaining the cell envelope integrity and in pathogenicity are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
The serine and cysteine proteinases represent two important classes of enzymes that use a catalytic triad to hydrolyze peptides and esters. The active site of the serine proteinases consists of three key residues, Asp...His...Ser. The hydroxyl group of serine functions as a nucleophile and the imidazole ring of histidine functions as a general acid/general base during catalysis. Similarly, the active site of the cysteine proteinases also involves three key residues: Asn, His, and Cys. The active site of the cysteine proteinases is generally believed to exist as a zwitterion (Asn...His+...Cys-) with the thiolate anion of the cysteine functioning as a nucleophile during the initial stages of catalysis. Curiously, the mutant serine proteinases, thiol subtilisin and thiol trypsin, which have the hybrid Asp...His...Cys triad, are almost catalytically inert. In this study, ab initio Hartree-Fock calculations have been performed on the active sites of papain and the mutant serine proteinase S195C rat trypsin. These calculations predict that the active site of papain exists predominately as a zwitterion (Cys-...His+...Asn). However, similar calculations on S195C rat trypsin demonstrate that the thiol mutant is unable to form a reactive thiolate anion prior to catalysis. Furthermore, structural comparisons between native papain and S195C rat trypsin have demonstrated that the spatial juxtapositions of the triad residues have been inverted in the serine and cysteine proteinases and, on this basis, I argue that it is impossible to convert a serine proteinase to a cysteine proteinase by site-directed mutagenesis.  相似文献   

5.
The reported crystal structures of plant and animal lipoxygenases (LOX) show that the nonheme iron in the catalytic domain is ligated by three histidines, the C-terminal isoleucine, and in certain structures also by a fifth iron ligand, an asparagine or histidine residue. Mouse 8-LOX and its homologues (e.g., human 15-LOX-2) are unique in having a serine in place of the usual Asn or His in this fifth position. To investigate the importance of the residue in mouse 8-LOX structure-function, the serine-558 was replaced by asparagine, histidine, or alanine using oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis. Wild-type mouse 8-LOX and the mutant cDNAs were expressed in HeLa cells infected with vaccinia virus encoding T7 RNA polymerase and their relative lipoxygenase activities assessed by incubation with [14C]arachidonic acid or [14C]linoleic acid followed by HPLC analysis of the products. The Ser558Asn and Ser558His mutants had equivalent or greater activity than wild-type 8-LOX. They also exhibited some 15-LOX activity, indicating that small structural perturbations (in this case to a residue identical in mouse 8-LOX and its 15-LOX-2 homologues) can interchange the positional specificity of these closely related enzymes. Remarkably, the Ser558Ala mutant exhibited significant 8-LOX activity, indicating that this position is not an essential iron ligand in the enzyme. We conclude that mouse 8-LOX is catalytically competent with only four amino acid iron ligands, and that Ser-558 of the wild-type enzyme does not play an essential role in catalysis.  相似文献   

6.
Outer membrane phospholipase A (OMPLA) is an integral membrane enzyme that hydrolyses phospholipids requiring Ca(2+) as cofactor. In vitro studies have shown that OMPLA is only active as a dimer. The structures of monomeric and dimeric OMPLA provided possible clues to the activation process. In the inhibited dimeric species calcium ions are located at the dimer interface ideally suited to stabilise the oxyanion intermediates formed during catalysis. The side chain hydroxyl function of Ser152 is one of the ligands of this interfacial calcium. In the crystal structure of monomeric OMPLA the interfacial calcium site is lacking, but calcium was found to bind at a site involving the carboxylates of Asp149 and Asp184. In the current study the relevance of the identified calcium sites has been studied by site-directed mutagenesis. The Ser152Asn variant confirmed the importance of the interfacial calcium site for catalysis, and also demonstrated that this site is essentially involved in the dimerisation process. Replacements of the ligands in monomeric OMPLA, i.e. Asp149Asn, Asp149Ala and Asp184Asn, only showed minor effects on catalytic activity and dimerisation. A stronger effect observed for the variant Asp184Ala was explained by the proximity of Asp184 to the catalytically important Ser152 residue. We propose that Asp149 and Asp184 provide an electronegative funnel that may facilitate Ca(2+) transfer to the interfacial calcium site.  相似文献   

7.
G L Vaaler  E E Snell 《Biochemistry》1989,28(18):7306-7313
The hdc gene coding for the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate dependent histidine decarboxylase from Morganella morganii has been expressed in Escherichia coli under control of the lac promoter. The enzyme accumulates to 7-8% of total cell protein and is purified to homogeneity by passage through three columns. Fourteen site-directed mutant enzymes were constructed to explore the roles of residues of interest, especially those in the sequence Ser229-X230-His231-N epsilon-(phosphopyridoxylidene)Lys232, since identical sequences also appear in several other decarboxylases. Most of the overproduced mutant proteins were aggregated into inclusion bodies, but when the late log phase cultures were cooled from 37 to 25 degrees C before induction, the mutant proteins were obtained as soluble products. Ala or Cys in place of Ser-229 yielded mutant enzymes about 7% as active as wild-type, indicating that this serine residue is not essential for catalysis but contributes to activity through conformational or other effects. Of the replacements made for His-231 (Asn, Gln, Phe, and Arg), only Gln and Asn gave partially active enzymes (about 12% and 0.2% of wild-type, respectively). The side-chain amide of Gln may act by mimicking the positionally equivalent tau-nitrogen on the imidazole ring of histidine to provide an interaction (e.g., a hydrogen bond) required for efficient catalysis. The Lys-232 residue that interacts with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate appears central to catalytic efficiency since replacing it with Ala yields a mutant protein that is virtually inactive but retains the ability to bind both pyridoxal 5'-phosphate and histidine efficiently.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Bleomycin hydrolase (BH) is a hexameric papain family cysteine protease which is involved in preparing peptides for antigen presentation and has been implicated in tumour cell resistance to bleomycin chemotherapy. Structures of active-site mutants of yeast BH yielded unexpected results. Replacement of the active-site asparagine with alanine, valine or leucine results in the destabilization of the histidine side chain, demonstrating unambiguously the role of the asparagine residue in correctly positioning the histidine for catalysis. Replacement of the histidine with alanine or leucine destabilizes the asparagine position, indicating a delicate arrangement of the active-site residues. In all of the mutants, the C-terminus of the protein, which lies in the active site, protrudes further into the active site. All mutants were compromised in their catalytic activity. The structures also revealed the importance of a tightly bound water molecule which stabilizes a loop near the active site and which is conserved throughout the papain family. It is displaced in a number of the mutants, causing destabilization of this loop and a nearby loop, resulting in a large movement of the active-site cysteine. The results imply that this water molecule plays a key structural role in this family of enzymes.  相似文献   

9.
Cyclic nucleotide monophosphate (cNMP) hydrolysis in bacteria and eukaryotes is brought about by distinct cNMP phosphodiesterases (PDEs). Since these enzymes differ in amino acid sequence and properties, they have evolved by convergent evolution. Cyclic NMP PDEs cleave cNMPs to NMPs, and the Rv0805 gene product is, to date, the only identifiable cNMP PDE in the genome of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. We have shown that Rv0805 is a cAMP/cGMP dual specificity PDE, and is unrelated in amino acid sequence to the mammalian cNMP PDEs. Rv0805 is a dimeric, Fe(3+)-Mn(2+) binuclear PDE, and mutational analysis demonstrated that the active site metals are co-ordinated by conserved aspartate, histidine and asparagine residues. We report here the structure of the catalytic core of Rv0805, which is distantly related to the calcineurin-like phosphatases. The crystal structure of the Rv0805 dimer shows that the active site metals contribute to dimerization and thus play an additional structural role apart from their involvement in catalysis. We also present the crystal structures of the Asn97Ala mutant protein that lacks one of the Mn(2+) co-ordinating residues as well as the Asp66Ala mutant that has a compromised cAMP hydrolytic activity, providing a structural basis for the catalytic properties of these mutant proteins. A molecule of phosphate is bound in a bidentate manner at the active site of the Rv0805 wild-type protein, and cacodylate occupies a similar position in the crystal structure of the Asp66Ala mutant protein. A unique substrate binding pocket in Rv0805 was identified by computational docking studies, and the role of the His140 residue in interacting with cAMP was validated through mutational analysis. This report on the first structure of a bacterial cNMP PDE thus significantly extends our molecular understanding of cAMP hydrolysis in class III PDEs.  相似文献   

10.
The recently discovered extracellular poly[(R)-3-hydroxybutyrate] (PHB) depolymerase PhaZ7 of Paucimonas lemoignei represents the first member of a new subgroup (EC 3.1.1.75) of serine hydrolases with no significant amino acid similarities to conventional PHB depolymerases, lipases or other hydrolases except for a potential lipase box-like motif (Ala-His-Ser136-Met-Gly) and potential candidates for catalytic triad and oxyanion pocket amino acids. In order to identify amino acids essential for activity 11 mutants of phaZ7 were generated by site-directed mutagenesis and expressed in recombinant protease-deficient Bacillus subtilis WB800. The wild-type depolymerase and 10 of the 11 mutant proteins (except for Ser136Cys) were expressed and efficiently secreted by B. subtilis as shown by Western blots of cell-free culture fluid proteins. No PHB depolymerase activity was detected in strains harbouring one of the following substitutions: His47Ala, Ser136Ala, Asp242Ala, Asp242Asn, His306Ala, indicating the importance of these amino acids for activity. Replacement of Ser136 by Thr resulted in a decrease of activity to about 20% of the wild-type level and suggested that the hydroxy group of the serine side chain is important for activity but can be partially replaced by the hydroxy function of threonine. Alterations of Asp256 to Ala or Asn or of the putative serine hydrolase pentapeptide motif (Ala-His-Ser136-Met-Gly) to a lipase box consensus sequence (Gly134-His-Ser136-Met-Gly) or to the PHB depolymerase box consensus sequence (Gly134-Leu135-Ser136-Met-Gly) had no significant effect on PHB depolymerase activity, indicating that these amino acids or sequence motifs were not essential for activity. In conclusion, the PHB depolymerase PhaZ7 is a serine hydrolase with a catalytic triad and oxyanion pocket consisting of His47, Ser136, Asp242 and His306.  相似文献   

11.
In mammalian peroxidases the proximal histidine is in close interaction with a fully conserved asparagine which in turn is hydrogen bonded with an arginine that stabilizes the propionate substituent of pyrrol ring D in bent conformation. In order to probe the role of this rigid proximal architecture for structural integrity and catalysis of human myeloperoxidase (MPO), the variants Asn421Asp, Arg333Ala and Arg333Lys have been recombinantly expressed in HEK cell lines. The standard reduction potential of the Fe(III)/Fe(II) couple of Asn421Asp was still wild-type-like (−50 mV at pH 7.0) but the spectral properties of the ferric and ferrous forms as well as of higher oxidation states showed significant differences. Additionally, rates of ligand binding and oxidation of both one- and two-electron donors were diminished. The effect of exchange of Arg333 was even more dramatic. We did not succeed in production of mutant proteins that could bind heme at the active site. The importance of this His–Asn–Arg triad in linking the heme iron with the propionate at pyrrol ring D for heme insertion and binding as well as in maintenance of the architecture of the substrate binding site(s) at the entrance to the heme cavity is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Stehle F  Brandt W  Milkowski C  Strack D 《FEBS letters》2006,580(27):6366-6374
Structures of the serine carboxypeptidase-like enzymes 1-O-sinapoyl-beta-glucose:L-malate sinapoyltransferase (SMT) and 1-O-sinapoyl-beta-glucose:choline sinapoyltransferase (SCT) were modeled to gain insight into determinants of specificity and substrate recognition. The structures reveal the alpha/beta-hydrolase fold as scaffold for the catalytic triad Ser-His-Asp. The recombinant mutants of SMT Ser173Ala and His411Ala were inactive, whereas Asp358Ala displayed residual activity of 20%. 1-O-sinapoyl-beta-glucose recognition is mediated by a network of hydrogen bonds. The glucose moiety is recognized by a hydrogen bond network including Trp71, Asn73, Glu87 and Asp172. The conserved Asp172 at the sequence position preceding the catalytic serine meets sterical requirements for the glucose moiety. The mutant Asn73Ala with a residual activity of 13% underscores the importance of the intact hydrogen bond network. Arg322 is of key importance by hydrogen bonding of 1-O-sinapoyl-beta-glucose and L-malate. By conformational change, Arg322 transfers L-malate to a position favoring its activation by His411. Accordingly, the mutant Arg322Glu showed 1% residual activity. Glu215 and Arg219 establish hydrogen bonds with the sinapoyl moiety. The backbone amide hydrogens of Gly75 and Tyr174 were shown to form the oxyanion hole, stabilizing the transition state. SCT reveals also the catalytic triad and a hydrogen bond network for 1-O-sinapoyl-beta-glucose recognition, but Glu274, Glu447, Thr445 and Cys281 are crucial for positioning of choline.  相似文献   

13.
Cholinesterases use a Glu-His-Ser catalytic triad to enhance the nucleophilicity of the catalytic serine. We have previously shown by proton NMR that horse serum butyryl cholinesterase, like serine proteases, forms a short, strong hydrogen bond (SSHB) between the Glu-His pair upon binding mechanism-based inhibitors, which form tetrahedral adducts, analogous to the tetrahedral intermediates in catalysis [Viragh, C., et al. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 16200-16205]. We now extend these studies to human acetylcholinesterase, a 136 kDa homodimer. The free enzyme at pH 7.5 shows a proton resonance at 14.4 ppm assigned to an imidazole NH of the active-site histidine, but no deshielded proton resonances between 15 and 21 ppm. Addition of a 3-fold excess of the mechanism-based inhibitor m-(N,N,N-trimethylammonio)trifluoroacetophenone (TMTFA) induced the complete loss of the 14.4 ppm signal and the appearance of a broad, deshielded resonance of equal intensity with a chemical shift delta of 17.8 ppm and a D/H fractionation factor phi of 0.76 +/- 0.10, consistent with a SSHB between Glu and His of the catalytic triad. From an empirical correlation of delta with hydrogen bond lengths in small crystalline compounds, the length of this SSHB is 2.62 +/- 0.02 A, in agreement with the length of 2.63 +/- 0.03 A, independently obtained from phi. Upon addition of a 3-fold excess of the mechanism-based inhibitor 4-nitrophenyl diethyl phosphate (paraoxon) to the free enzyme at pH 7.5, and subsequent deethylation, two deshielded resonances of unequal intensity appeared at 16.6 and 15.5 ppm, consistent with SSHBs with lengths of 2.63 +/- 0.02 and 2.65 +/- 0.02 A, respectively, suggesting conformational heterogeneity of the active-site histidine as a hydrogen bond donor to either Glu-327 of the catalytic triad or to Glu-199, also in the active site. Conformational heterogeneity was confirmed with the methylphosphonate ester anion adduct of the active-site serine, which showed two deshielded resonances of equal intensity at 16.5 and 15.8 ppm with phi values of 0.47 +/- 0.10 and 0.49 +/- 0.10 corresponding to average hydrogen bond lengths of 2.59 +/- 0.04 and 2.61 +/- 0.04 A, respectively. Similarly, lowering the pH of the free enzyme to 5.1 to protonate the active-site histidine (pK(a) = 6.0 +/- 0.4) resulted in the appearance of two deshielded resonances, at 17.7 and 16.4 ppm, consistent with SSHBs with lengths of 2.62 +/- 0.02 and 2.63 +/- 0.02 A, respectively. The NMR-derived distances agree with those found in the X-ray structures of the homologous acetylcholinesterase from Torpedo californica complexed with TMTFA (2.66 +/- 0.28 A) and sarin (2.53 +/- 0.26 A) and at low pH (2.52 +/- 0.25 A). However, the order of magnitude greater precision of the NMR-derived distances establishes the presence of SSHBs at the active site of acetylcholinesterase, and detect conformational heterogeneity of the active-site histidine. We suggest that the high catalytic power of cholinesterases results in part from the formation of a SSHB between Glu and His of the catalytic triad.  相似文献   

14.
Among the seven known isozymes of carbonic anhydrase in higher vertebrates, isozyme III is the least efficient in catalytic hydration of CO2 and the least susceptible to inhibition by sulfonamides. We have investigated the role of two basic residues near the active site of human carbonic anhydrase III (HCA III), lysine 64 and arginine 67, to determine whether they can account for some of the unique properties of this isozyme. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to replace these residues with histidine 64 and asparagine 67, the amino acids present at the corresponding positions of HCA II, the most efficient of the carbonic anhydrase isozymes. Catalysis by wild-type HCA III and mutants was determined from the initial velocity of hydration of CO2 at steady state by stopped-flow spectrophotometry and from the exchange of 18O between CO2 and water at chemical equilibrium by mass spectrometry. We have shown that histidine 64 functions as a proton shuttle in carbonic anhydrase by substituting histidine for lysine 64 in HCA III. The enhanced CO2 hydration activity and pH profile of the resulting mutant support this role for histidine 64 in the catalytic mechanism and suggest an approach that may be useful in investigating the mechanistic roles of active-site residues in other isozyme groups. Replacing arginine 67 in HCA III by asparagine enhanced catalysis of CO2 hydration 3-fold compared with that of wild-type HCA III, and the pH profile of the resulting mutant was consistent with a proton transfer role for lysine 64. Neither replacement enhanced the weak inhibition of HCA III by acetazolamide or the catalytic hydrolysis of 4-nitrophenyl acetate.  相似文献   

15.
Catalase-peroxidases (KatGs) are unique in exhibiting an overwhelming catalase activity and a peroxidase activity of broad specificity. Similar to other peroxidases the distal histidine in KatGs forms a hydrogen bond with an adjacent conserved asparagine. To investigate the catalytic role(s) of this potential hydrogen bond in the bifunctional activity of KatGs, Asn153 in Synechocystis KatG was replaced with either Ala (Asn153-->Ala) or Asp (Asn153-->Asp). Both variants exhibit an overall peroxidase activity similar with wild-type KatG. Cyanide binding is monophasic, however, the second-order binding rates are reduced to 5.4% (Asn153-->Ala) and 9.5% (Asn153-->Asp) of the value of native KatG [(4.8 +/- 0.4) x 105 m-1.s-1 at pH 7 and 15 degrees C]. The turnover number of catalase activity of Asn153-->Ala is 6% and that of Asn153-->Asp is 16.5% of wild-type activity. Stopped-flow analysis of the reaction of the ferric forms with H2O2 suggest that exchange of Asn did not shift significantly the ratio of rates of H2O2-mediated compound I formation and reduction. Both rates seem to be reduced most probably because (a) the lower basicity of His123 hampers its function as acid-base catalyst and (b) Asn153 is part of an extended KatG-typical H-bond network, the integrity of which seems to be essential to provide optimal conditions for binding and oxidation of the second H2O2 molecule necessary in the catalase reaction.  相似文献   

16.
The human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) proteinase is synthesized as a 709-amino-acid precursor that undergoes at least three autoproteolytic cleavages. The mature proteinase, called assemblin, is one of the products of autoproteolysis and is composed of the first 256 amino acids of the precursor. HCMV assemblin and its homologs in other herpes group viruses contain five highly conserved domains (CD1 through CD5). An absolutely conserved serine in CD3 has been shown by site-directed mutagenesis of the simian cytomegalovirus (SCMV) and herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) enzymes and by inhibitor affinity labeling of the HSV-1 and HCMV enzymes to be the active-site nucleophile of assemblin. An absolutely conserved histidine in CD2 has also been demonstrated by site-directed mutagenesis of the SCMV and HSV-1 enzymes to be essential for proteolytic activity and has been proposed to be a second member of the catalytic triad of this serine proteinase. We report here the use of site-directed mutagenesis to investigate the active-site amino acids of HCMV assemblin. Substitutions were made for the CD3 serine and CD2 histidine residues implicated as active-site components, and for other amino acids whose influence on enzyme activity was of interest. The mutant proteinases were tested in a transient transfection assay for their ability to cleave their natural substrate, the assembly protein precursor. Results of these experiments verified that HCMV CD3 serine (Ser-132) and CD2 histidine (His-63) are essential for proteolytic activity and identified a glutamic acid (Glu-122) within CD3 that is also essential for proteolytic activity and may be conserved among all herpesvirus assemblin homologs. We suggest that CD3 Glu-122, CD3 Ser-132, and CD2 His-63 constitute the active-site triad of this serine proteinase.  相似文献   

17.
The sequences of the epidermolytic toxins and V8 serine proteinase share about 25% identity, including the catalytic triad at the proteinase active centre. Here we have altered the putative ETA active-site serine-195 to glycine by site-directed mutagenesis. No epidermolytic activity was detected when up to 100-fold greater amounts of the homogeneous mutant ETA were injected subcutaneously into neonatal mice showing that serine-195 is required for toxicogenesis.  相似文献   

18.
Background: beta-Ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein synthase III (FabH) initiates elongation in type II fatty acid synthase systems found in bacteria and plants. FabH is a ubiquitous component of the type II system and is positioned ideally in the pathway to control the production of fatty acids. The elucidation of the structure of FabH is important for the understanding of its regulation by feedback inhibition and its interaction with drugs. Although the structures of two related condensing enzymes are known, the roles of the active-site residues have not been experimentally tested. Results: The 1.8 A crystal structure of FabH was determined using a 12-site selenium multiwavelength anomalous dispersion experiment. The active site (Cys112, His244 and Asn274) is formed by the convergence of two alpha helices and is accessed via a narrow hydrophobic tunnel. Hydrogen-bonding networks that include two tightly bound water molecules fix the positions of His244 and Asn274, which are critical for the decarboxylation and condensation reactions. Surprisingly, the His244-->Ala mutation does not affect the transacylation reaction suggesting that His244 has only a minor influence on the nucleophilicity of Cys112. Conclusions: The histidine and asparagine active-site residues are both required for the decarboxylation step in the condensation reaction. The nucleophilicity of the active-site cysteine is enhanced by the alpha-helix dipole effect, and an oxyanion hole promotes the formation of the tetrahedral transition state.  相似文献   

19.
Ser130, Asp131 and Asn132 ('SDN') are highly conserved residues in class A beta-lactamases forming one wall of the active-site cavity. All three residues of the SDN loop in Streptomyces albus G beta-lactamase were modified by site-directed mutagenesis. The mutant proteins were expressed in Streptomyces lividans, purified from culture supernatants and their kinetic parameters were determined for several substrates. Ser130 was substituted by Asn, Ala and Gly. The first modification yielded an almost totally inactive protein, whereas the smaller-side-chain mutants (A and G) retained some activity, but were less stable than the wild-type enzyme. Ser130 might thus be involved in maintaining the structure of the active-site cavity. Mutations of Asp131 into Glu and Gly proved to be highly detrimental to enzyme stability, reflecting significant structural perturbations. Mutation of Asn132 into Ala resulted in a dramatically decreased enzymic activity (more than 100-fold) especially toward cephalosporin substrates, kcat. being the most affected parameter, which would indicate a role of Asn132 in transition-state stabilization rather than in ground-state binding. Comparison of the N132A and the previously described N132S mutant enzymes underline the importance of an H-bond-forming residue at position 132 for the catalytic process.  相似文献   

20.
Butyrylcholinesterase is a serine esterase, closely related to acetylcholinesterase. Both enzymes employ a catalytic triad mechanism for catalysis, similar to that used by serine proteases such as alpha-chymotrypsin. Enzymes of this type are generally considered to be inactive at pH values below 5, because the histidine member of the catalytic triad becomes protonated. We have found that butyrylcholinesterase retains activity at pH 相似文献   

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