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1.
Glutamate 151 has been proposed to act as the general acid/base during the peptide hydrolysis reaction catalyzed by the co-catalytic metallohydrolase from Aeromonas proteolytica (AAP). However, to date, no direct evidence has been reported for the role of Glu-151 during catalytic turnover by AAP. In order to elucidate the catalytic role of Glu-151, altered AAP enzymes have been prepared in which Glu-151 has been substituted with a glutamine, an alanine, and an aspartate. The Michaelis constant (K(m)) does not change upon substitution to aspartate or glutamine, but the rate of the reaction changes drastically in the following order: glutamate (100% activity), aspartate (0.05%), glutamine (0.004%), and alanine (0%). Examination of the pH dependence of the kinetic constants k(cat) and K(m) revealed a change in the pK(a) of a group that ionizes at pH 4.8 in recombinant leucine aminopeptidase (rAAP) to 4.2 for E151D-AAP. The remaining pK(a) values at 5.2, 7.5, and 9.9 do not change. Proton inventory studies indicate that one proton is transferred in the rate-limiting step of the reaction at pH 10.50 for both rAAP and E151D-AAP, but at pH 6.50 two protons and general solvation effects are responsible for the observed effects in the reaction catalyzed by rAAP and E151D-AAP, respectively. Based on these data, Glu-151 is intrinsically involved in the peptide hydrolysis reaction catalyzed by AAP and can be assigned the role of a general acid and base.  相似文献   

2.
The caspase-activated DNase (CAD) is an important nuclease involved in apoptotic DNA degradation. Results of a sequence comparison of CAD proteins with beta beta alpha-Me-finger nucleases in conjunction with a mutational and chemical modification analysis suggest that CAD proteins constitute a new family of beta beta alpha-Me-finger nucleases. Nucleases of this family have widely different functions but are characterized by a common active-site fold and similar catalytic mechanisms. According to our results and comparisons with related nucleases, the active site of CAD displays features that partly resemble those of the colicin E9 and partly those of the T4 endonuclease VII active sites. We suggest that the catalytic mechanism of CAD involves a conserved histidine residue, acting as a general base, and another histidine as well as an aspartic acid residue required for cofactor binding. Our findings provide a first insight into the likely active-site structure and catalytic mechanism of a nuclease involved in the degradation of chromosomal DNA during programmed cell death.  相似文献   

3.
On the basis of the X-ray crystal structure of scytalone dehydratase complexed with an active center inhibitor [Lundqvist, T., Rice, J., Hodge, C. N., Basarab, G. S., Pierce, J. and Lindqvist, Y. (1994) Structure (London) 2, 937-944], eight active-site residues were mutated to examine their roles in the catalytic mechanism. All but one residue (Lys73, a potential base in an anti elimination mechanism) were found to be important to catalysis or substrate binding. Steady-state kinetic parameters for the mutants support the native roles for the residues (Asn131, Asp31, His85, His110, Ser129, Tyr30, and Tyr50) within a syn elimination mechanism. Relative substrate specificities for the two physiological substrates, scytalone and veremelone, versus a Ser129 mutant help assign the orientation of the substrates within the active site. His85Asn was the most damaging mutation to catalysis consistent with its native roles as a general base and a general acid in a syn elimination. The additive effect of Tyr30Phe and Tyr50Phe mutations in the double mutant is consistent with their roles in protonating the substrate's carbonyl through a water molecule. Studies on a synthetic substrate, which has an anomeric carbon atom which can better stabilize a carbocation than the physiological substrate (vermelone), suggest that His110Asn prefers this substrate over vermelone in order to balance the mutation-imposed weakness in promoting the elimination of hydroxide from substrates. All mutant enzymes bound a potent active-site inhibitor in near 1:1 stoichiometry, thereby supporting their active-site integrity. An X-ray crystal structure of the Tyr50Phe mutant indicated that both active-site waters were retained, likely accounting for its residual catalytic activity. Steady-state kinetic parameters with deuterated scytalone gave kinetic isotope effects of 2.7 on kcat and 4.2 on kcat/Km, suggesting that steps after dehydration partially limit kcat. Pre-steady-state measurements of a single-enzyme turnover with scytalone gave a rate that was 6-fold larger than kcat. kcat/Km with scytalone has a pKa of 7.9 similar to the pKa value for the ionization of the substrate's C6 phenolic hydroxyl, whereas kcat was unaffected by pH, indicating that the anionic form of scytalone does not bind well to enzyme. With an alternate substrate having a pKa above 11, kcat/Km had a pKa of 9.3 likely due to the ionization of Tyr50. The non-enzyme-catalyzed rate of dehydration of scytalone was nearly a billion-fold slower than the enzyme-catalyzed rate at pH 7.0 and 25 degrees C. The non-enzyme-catalyzed rate of dehydration of scytalone had a deuterium kinetic isotope effect of 1.2 at pH 7.0 and 25 degrees C, and scytalone incorporated deuterium from D2O in the C2 position about 70-fold more rapidly than the dehydration rate. Thus, scytalone dehydrates through an E1cb mechanism off the enzyme.  相似文献   

4.
Chang SC  Lin KY  Chen YJ  Lai CH  Chang GG  Chou WY 《The FEBS journal》2006,273(17):4072-4081
Malic enzyme catalyses the reduction of NADP+ to NADPH and the decarboxylation of L-malate to pyruvate through a general acid/base mechanism. Previous kinetic and structural studies differ in their interpretation of the amino acids responsible for the general acid/base mechanism. To resolve this discrepancy, we used site-directed mutagenesis and kinetic analysis to study four conserved carboxylic amino acids. With the D257A mutant, the Km for Mn2+ and the kcat decreased relative to those of the wild-type by sevenfold and 28-fold, respectively. With the E234A mutant, the Km for Mg2+ and L-malate increased relative to those of the wild-type by 87-fold and 49-fold, respectively, and the kcat remained unaltered, which suggests that the E234 residue plays a critical role in bivalent metal ion binding. The kcat for the D235A and D258A mutants decreased relative to that of the wild-type by 7800-fold and 5200-fold, respectively, for the overall reaction, by 800-fold and 570-fold, respectively, for the pyruvate reduction partial reaction, and by 371-fold and 151-fold, respectively, for the oxaloacetate decarboxylation. The activities of the overall reaction and the pyruvate reduction partial reaction of the D258A mutant were rescued by the presence of 50 mM sodium azide. In contrast, small free acids did not have a rescue effect on the activities of the E234A, D235A, and D257A mutants. These data suggest that D258 may act as a general base to extract the hydrogen of the C2 hydroxy group of L-malate with the aid of D235-chelated Mn2+ to polarize the hydroxyl group.  相似文献   

5.
Legler PM  Massiah MA  Mildvan AS 《Biochemistry》2002,41(35):10834-10848
GDP-mannose mannosyl hydrolase (GDPMH) is an unusual Nudix family member, which catalyzes the hydrolysis of GDP-alpha-D-mannose to GDP and the beta-sugar by nucleophilic substitution at carbon rather than at phosphorus (Legler, P. M., Massiah, M. A., Bessman, M. J., and Mildvan, A. S. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 8603-8608). Using the structure and mechanism of MutT, the prototypical Nudix enzyme as a guide, we detected six catalytic residues of GDPMH, three of which were unique to GDPMH, by the kinetic and structural effects of site-specific mutations. Glu-70 (corresponding to Glu-57 in MutT) provides a ligand to the essential divalent cation on the basis of the effects of the E70Q mutation which decreased kcat 10(2.2)-fold, increased the dissociation constant of Mn2+ from the ternary E-Mn2+-GDP complex 3-fold, increased the K(m)Mg2+ 20-fold, and decreased the paramagnetic effect of Mn2+ on 1/T1 of water protons, indicating a change in the coordination sphere of Mn2+. In the E70Q mutant, Gln-70 was shown to be very near the active site metal ion by large paramagnetic effects of Mn2+ on its side chain -NH2 group. With wild-type GDPMH, the effect of pH on log(kcat/K(m)GDPmann) at 37 degrees C showed an ascending limb of unit slope, followed by a plateau yielding a pK(a) of 6.4, which increased to 6.7 +/- 0.1 in the pH dependence of log(kcat). The general base catalyst was identified as a neutral His residue by the DeltaH(ionization) = 7.0 +/- 0.7 kcal/mol, by the increase in pK(a) with ionic strength, and by mutation of each of the four histidine residues of GDPMH to Gln. Only the H124Q mutant showed the loss of the ascending limb in the pH versus log(kcat) rate profile, which was replaced by a weak dependence of rate on hydroxide concentration, as well as an overall 10(3.4)-fold decrease in kcat, indicating His-124 to be the general base, unlike MutT, which uses Glu-53 in this role. The H88Q mutant showed a 10(2.3)-fold decrease in kcat, a 4.4-fold increase in K(m)GDPmann, and no change in the pH versus log(kcat) rate profile, indicating an important but unidentified role of His-88 in catalysis. One and two-dimensional NMR studies permitted the sequence specific assignments of the imidazole HdeltaC, H(epsilon)C, N(delta), and N(epsilon) resonances of the four histidines and defined their protonation states. The pK(a) of His-124 (6.94 +/- 0.04) in the presence of saturating Mg2+ was comparable to the kinetically determined pK(a) at the same temperature (6.40 +/- 0.20). The other three histidines were neutral N(epsilon)H tautomers with pK(a) values below 5.5. Arg-52 and Arg-65 were identified as catalytic residues which interact electrostatically with the GDP leaving group by mutating these residues to Gln and Lys. The R52Q mutant decreased kcat 309-fold and increased K(m)GDPmann 40.6-fold, while the R52K mutant decreased kcat by only 12-fold and increased K(m)GDPmann 81-fold. The partial rescue of kcat, but not of K(m)GDPmann in the R52K mutant, suggests that Arg-52 is a bifunctional hydrogen bond donor to the GDP leaving group in the ground state and a monofunctional hydrogen bond donor in the transition state. Opposite behavior was found with the Arg-65 mutants, suggesting this residue to be a monofunctional hydrogen bond donor to the GDP leaving group in the ground state and a bifunctional hydrogen bond donor in the transition state. From these observations, a mechanism for GDPMH is proposed involving general base catalysis and electrostatic stabilization of the leaving group.  相似文献   

6.
1. Ficin and stem-bromelain are irreversibly inhibited by 1,3-dibromoacetone, a reagent designed to react first with the active-site cysteine residue and subsequently with a second nucleophile. Evidence is presented that establishes that a histidine residue is within a 5A locus of the active-site cysteine residue in both enzymes. The histidine residue in both enzymes is alkylated at N-1 by dibromoacetone. It is suggested that, as with papain, the thiol and imidazole groups act in concert in the hydrolysis of substrates by these enzymes. 2. The inhibition of thiol-subtilisin with 1,3-dibromoacetone is shown to be due to the alkylation of a cysteine residue only.  相似文献   

7.
beta-Lactamase K1 from Klebsiella aerogenes 1082E hydrolyses both penicillins and cephalosporins comparably and is inhibited by mercurials but not by cloxacillin. These properties distinguish it from those other beta-lactamases that have been allotted to classes on the basis of their amino sequences. beta-Lactamase K1 has been isolated by affinity chromatography; its composition shows resemblances to class A beta-lactamases. Moreover, the N-terminal sequence is similar to those of class A beta-lactamases: there is about 30% identity over the first 32 residues. Furthermore, a putative active-site octapeptide has been isolated and its sequence is similar to the region around the active-site serine residue in class A beta-lactamases. There is one thiol group in beta-lactamase K1; it is not essential for activity. The pH-dependence of kcat. and kcat./Km for the hydrolysis of benzylpenicillin by beta-lactamase K1 were closely similar, suggesting that the rate-determining step is cleavage of the beta-lactam ring.  相似文献   

8.
Huntington KM  Bienvenue DL  Wei Y  Bennett B  Holz RC  Pei D 《Biochemistry》1999,38(47):15587-15596
Peptide-derived thiols of the general structure N-mercaptoacyl-leucyl-p-nitroanilide (1a-c) were synthesized and found to be potent, slow-binding inhibitors of the aminopeptidase from Aeromonas proteolytica (AAP). The overall potencies (K(I)) of these inhibitors against AAP range from 2.5 to 57 nM exceeding that of the natural product bestatin and approaching that of amastatin. The corresponding alcohols (2a-b) are simple competitive inhibitors of much lower potencies (K(I) = 23 and 360 microM). These data suggest that the free thiols are involved in the formation of the E. I and E.I complexes, presumably serving as a metal ligand. To investigate the nature of the interaction of the thiol-based inhibitors with the dinuclear active site of AAP, we have recorded electronic absorption and EPR spectra of Co(II)Co(II)-, Co(II)Zn(II)-, and Zn(II)Co(II)-AAP in the presence of the strongest binding inhibitor, 1c. Both [CoZn(AAP)] and [ZnCo(AAP)], in the presence of 1c, exhibited an absorption band centered at 320 nm characteristic of an S --> Co(II) ligand-metal charge-transfer band. In addition, absorption spectra recorded between 400 and 700 nm showed changes characteristic of 1c interacting with each active-site metal ion. EPR spectra recorded at high temperature (19 K) and low power (2.5 mW) indicated that in a given enzyme molecule, 1c interacts weakly with one of the metal ions in the dinuclear site and that the crystallographically identified micro-OH(H) bridge, which has been shown to mediate electronic interaction of the Co(II) ions, is likely broken upon 1c binding. EPR spectra of [CoCo(AAP)]-1c, [ZnCo(AAP)]-1c, and [CoZn(AAP)]-1c were also recorded at lower temperature (3.5-4.0 K) and high microwave power (50-553 mW). The observed signals were unusual and appeared to contain, in addition to the incompletely saturated contributions from the signals characterized at 19 K, a very sharp feature at g(eff) approximately 6.8 that is characteristic of thiolate-Co(II) interactions. These data suggest that the thiolate moiety can bind to either of the metal ions in the dinuclear active site of AAP but does not bridge the dinuclear cluster. Compounds 1a-c are readily accessible by synthesis and thus provide a novel class of potent aminopeptidase inhibitors.  相似文献   

9.
Nuclear inclusion a (NIa) protease of tobacco vein mottling virus is responsible for the processing of the viral polyprotein into functional proteins. In order to identify the active-site residues of the TVMV NIa protease, the putative active-site residues, His-46, Asp-81 and Cys-151, were mutated individually to generate H46R, H46A, D81E, D81N, C151S, and C151A, and their mutational effects on the proteolytic activities were examined. Proteolytic activity was completely abolished by the mutations of H46R, H46A, D81N, and C151A, suggesting that the three residues are crucial for catalysis. The mutation of D81E decreased kcat marginally by about 4.7-fold and increased Km by about 8-fold, suggesting that the aspartic acid at position 81 is important for substrate binding but can be substituted by glutamate without any significant decrease in catalysis. The replacement of Cys-151 by Ser to mimic the catalytic triad of chymotrypsin-like serine protease resulted in the drastic decrease in kcat by about 1,260-fold. This result might be due to the difference of the active-site geometry between the NIa protease and chymotrypsin. The protease exhibited a bell-shaped pH-dependent profile with a maximum activity approximately at pH 8.3 and with the abrupt changes at the respective pKm values of approximately 6.6 and 9.2, implying the involvement of a histidine residue in catalysis. Taken together, these results demonstrate that the three residues, His-46, Asp-81, and Cys-151, play a crucial role in catalysis of the TVMV NIa protease.  相似文献   

10.
Several unique protein folds that catalyze the hydrolysis of phosphodiester bonds have arisen independently in nature, including the PD(D/E)XK superfamily (typified by type II restriction endonucleases and many recombination and repair enzymes) and the HNH superfamily (found in an equally wide array of enzymes, including bacterial colicins and homing endonucleases). Whereas the identity and position of catalytic residues within the PD(D/E)XK superfamily are highly variable, the active sites of HNH nucleases are much more strongly conserved. In this study, the ability of an HNH nuclease to tolerate a mutation of its most conserved catalytic residue (its histidine general base), and the mechanism of the most active enzyme variant, were characterized. Conversion of this residue into several altered chemistries, glutamine, lysine, or glutamate, resulted in measurable activity. The histidine to glutamine mutant displays the highest residual activity and a pH profile similar to that of the wild-type enzyme. This activity is dependent on the presence of a neighboring imidazole ring, which has taken over as a less efficient general base for the reaction. This result implies that mutational pathways to alternative HNH-derived catalytic sites do exist but are not as extensively or successfully diverged or reoptimized in nature as variants of the PD(D/E)XK nuclease superfamily. This is possibly due to multiple steric constraints placed on the compact HNH motif, which is simultaneously involved in protein folding, DNA binding, and catalysis, as well as the use of a planar, aromatic imidazole group as a general base.  相似文献   

11.
Evidence for an essential histidine in neutral endopeptidase 24.11   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
R C Bateman  L B Hersh 《Biochemistry》1987,26(14):4237-4242
Rat kidney neutral endopeptidase 24.11, "enkephalinase", was rapidly inactivated by diethyl pyrocarbonate under mildly acidic conditions. The pH dependence of inactivation revealed the modification of an essential residue with a pKa of 6.1. The reaction of the unprotonated group with diethyl pyrocarbonate exhibited a second-order rate constant of 11.6 M-1 s-1 and was accompanied by an increase in absorbance at 240 nm. Treatment of the inactivated enzyme with 50 mM hydroxylamine completely restored enzyme activity. These findings indicate histidine modification by diethyl pyrocarbonate. Comparison of the rate of inactivation with the increase in absorbance at 240 nm revealed a single histidine residue essential for catalysis. The presence of this histidine at the active site was indicated by (a) the protection of enzyme from inactivation provided by substrate and (b) the protection by the specific inhibitor phosphoramidon of one histidine residue from modification as determined spectrally. The dependence of the kinetic parameter Vmax/Km upon pH revealed two essential residues with pKa values of 5.9 and 7.3. It is proposed that the residue having a kinetic pKa of 5.9 is the histidine modified by diethyl pyrocarbonate and that this residue participates in general acid/base catalysis during substrate hydrolysis by neutral endopeptidase 24.11.  相似文献   

12.
Fukasawa KM  Hirose J  Hata T  Ono Y 《Biochemistry》2006,45(38):11425-11431
Aminopeptidase B (EC 3.4.11.6, ApB) specifically cleaves in vitro the N-terminal Arg or Lys residue from peptides and synthetic derivatives. Ap B was shown to have a consensus sequence found in the metallopeptidase family. We determined the putative zinc binding residues (His324, His328, and Glu347) and the essential Glu325 residue for the enzyme using site-directed mutagenesis (Fukasawa, K. M., et al. (1999) Biochem. J. 339, 497-502). To identify the residues binding to the amino-terminal basic amino acid of the substrate, rat cDNA encoding ApB was cloned into pGEX-4T-3 so that recombinant protein was expressed as a GST fusion protein. Twelve acidic amino acid residues (Glu or Asp) in ApB were replaced with a Gln or Asn using site-directed mutagenesis. These mutants were isolated to characterize the kinetic parameters of enzyme activity toward Arg-NA and compare them to those of the wild-type ApB. The catalytic efficiency (kcat/Km) of the mutant D405N was 1.7 x 10(4) M(-1) s(-1), markedly decreased compared with that of the wild-type ApB (6.2 x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1)). The replacement of Asp405 with an Asn residue resulted in the change of substrate specificity such that the specific activity of the mutant D405N toward Lys-NA was twice that toward Arg-NA (in the case of wild-type ApB; 0.4). Moreover, when Asp405 was replaced with an Ala residue, the kcat/Km ratio was 1000-fold lower than that of the wild-type ApB for hydrolysis of Arg-NA; in contrast, in the hydrolysis of Tyr-NA, the kcat/Km ratios of the wild-type (1.1 x 10(4) M(-1) s(-1)) and the mutated (8.2 x 10(3) M(-1) s(-1)) enzymes were similar. Furthermore, the replacement of Asp-405 with a Glu residue led to the reduction of the kcat/Km ratio for the hydrolysis of Arg-NA by a factor of 6 and an increase of that for the hydrolysis of Lys-NA. Then the kcat/Km ratio of the D405E mutant for the hydrolysis of Lys-NA was higher than that for the hydrolysis of Arg-NA as opposed to that of wild-type ApB. These data strongly suggest that the Asp 405 residue is involved in substrate binding via an interaction with the P1 amino group of the substrate's side chain.  相似文献   

13.
Chemical modification of spinach ribulosebisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase by diethyl pyrocarbonate led to the conclusion that His-298 is an essential active-site residue (Igarashi, Y., McFadden, B. A., and El-Gul, T. (1985) Biochemistry 24, 3957-3962). From the pH dependence of inactivation, the pKa of His-298 was observed to be approximately 6.8, and it was suggested that this histidine might be the essential base that initiates catalysis (Paech, C. (1985) Biochemistry 24, 3194-3199). To explore further the possible function of His-298, we have used site-directed mutagenesis to replace the corresponding residue of the Rhodospirillum rubrum carboxylase (His-291) with alanine. Assays of extracts of Escherichia coli JM107, harboring either the wild-type or mutant gene in an expression vector, revealed that the mutant protein is approximately 40% as active catalytically as the normal carboxylase. After purification to near homogeneity by immunoaffinity chromatography, the mutant protein was partially characterized with respect to subunit structure, kinetic parameters, and interaction with a transition-state analogue. The purified mutant carboxylase had a kcat of 1.5 s-1 and a kcat/Km of 1.7 X 10(4) M-1 s-1 in contrast to values of 3.6 s-1 and 6 X 10(5) M-1 s-1 for the normal enzyme. The high level of enzyme activity exhibited by the Ala-291 mutant excludes His-291 in the R. rubrum carboxylase (and by inference His-298 in the spinach carboxylase) as a catalytically essential residue.  相似文献   

14.
The nature of the interaction of the transition-state analogue inhibitor L-leucinephosphonic acid (LPA) with the leucine aminopeptidase from Aeromonas proteolytica (AAP) was investigated. LPA was shown to be a competitive inhibitor at pH 8.0 with a K(i) of 6.6 microM. Electronic absorption spectra, recorded at pH 7.5 of [CoCo(AAP)], [CoZn(AAP)], and [ZnCo(AAP)] upon addition of LPA suggest that LPA interacts with both metal ions in the dinuclear active site. EPR studies on the Co(II)-substituted forms of AAP revealed that the environments of the Co(II) ions in both [CoZn(AAP)] and [ZnCo(AAP)] become highly asymmetric and constrained upon the addition of LPA and clearly indicate that LPA interacts with both metal ions. The X-ray crystal structure of AAP complexed with LPA was determined at 2.1 A resolution. The X-ray crystallographic data indicate that LPA interacts with both metal centers in the dinuclear active site of AAP and a single oxygen atom bridge is absent. Thus, LPA binds to the dinuclear active site of AAP as an eta-1,2-mu-phosphonate with one ligand to the second metal ion provided by the N-terminal amine. A structural comparison of the binding of phosphonate-containing transition-state analogues to the mono- and bimetallic peptidases provides insight into the requirement for the second metal ion in bridged bimetallic peptidases. On the basis of the results obtained from the spectroscopic and X-ray crystallographic data presented herein along with previously reported mechanistic data for AAP, a new catalytic mechanism for the hydrolysis reaction catalyzed by AAP is proposed.  相似文献   

15.
Various esters and amides of benzoylarginine and of benzyloxycarbonylarginine were subjected to enzymic hydrolysis at pH 8.5 and 7.2 by soybean trypsin-like enzyme (STLE). The kcat values for the hydrolysis of esters and amides were essentially identical regardless of the kind of leaving group. These results suggest that the STLE-catalyzed hydrolysis of ester and amide substrates proceeds via an acylenzyme intermediate and that the deacylation step is rate-determining. Hydrolysis of various 4-methylcoumaryl-7-amides of varying chain length and amino acid sequence was carried out at pH 8.5. Analysis of kinetic parameters revealed that STLE does not exhibit any remarkable subsite requirement, but somewhat preferentially hydrolyzes shorter substrates. These observations are consistent with the fact that STLE does not hydrolyze protein substrates or oxidized insulin B chain but hydrolyzes oligopeptides (Nishikata, M. (1984) J. Biochem. 95, 1169-1177). It is possible that the active site of STLE is located at a deep position in the enzyme molecule. From the pH dependency of kcat/Km, the participation of a histidine residue in the catalytic process of STLE was suggested.  相似文献   

16.
Kinetic constants for the hydrolysis by porcine tissue beta-kallikrein B and by bovine trypsin of a number of peptides related to the sequence of kininogen (also one containing a P2 glycine residue instead of phenylalanine) and of a series of corresponding arginyl peptide esters with various apolar P2 residues have been determined under strictly comparative conditions. kcat and kcat/Km values for the hydrolysis of the Arg-Ser bonds of the peptides by trypsin are conspicuously high. kcat for the best of the peptide substrates, Ac-Phe-Arg-Ser-Val-NH2, even reaches kcat for the corresponding methyl ester, indicating rate-limiting deacylation also in the hydrolysis of a peptide bond by this enzyme. kcat/Km for the hydrolysis of the peptide esters with different nonpolar L-amino acids in P2 is remarkably constant (range 1.7), as it is for the pair of the above pentapeptides with P2 glycine or phenylalanine. kcat for the ester substrates varies fivefold, however, being greatest for the P2 glycine compounds. Obviously, an increased potential of a P2 residue for interactions with the enzyme lowers the rate of deacylation. In contrast to results obtained with chymotrypsin and pancreatic elastase, trypsin is well able to tolerate a P3 proline residue. In the hydrolysis of peptide esters, tissue kallikrein is definitely superior to trypsin. Conversely, peptide bonds are hydrolyzed less efficiently by tissue kallikrein and the acylation reaction is rate-limiting. The influence of the length of peptide substrates is similar in both enzymes and indicates an extension of the substrate recognition site from subsite S3 to at least S'3 of tissue kallikrein and the importance of a hydrogen bond between the P3 carbonyl group and Gly-216 of the enzymes. Tissue kallikrein also tolerates a P3 proline residue well. In sharp contrast to the behaviour of trypsin is the very strong influence of the P2 residue in tissue-kallikrein-catalyzed reactions. kcat/Km varies 75-fold in the series of the dipeptide esters with nonpolar L-amino acid residues in P2, a P2 glycine residue furnishing the worst and phenylalanine the best substrate, whereas this exchange in the pentapeptides changes kcat/Km as much as 730-fold. This behaviour, together with the high value of kcat/Km for Ac-Phe-Arg-OMe of 3.75 X 10(7) M-1 s-1, suggests rate-limiting binding (k1) in the hydrolysis of the best ester substrates.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
Contribution of dppA to urease activity in Helicobacter pylori 26695   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Davis GS  Mobley HL 《Helicobacter》2005,10(5):416-423
BACKGROUND: The gastric pathogen Helicobacter pylori produces urease in amounts up to 10% of its cell protein. This enzyme, which catalyzes the hydrolysis of urea to ammonia and carbon dioxide, protects the bacterium from gastric acid. Urease, a nickel metalloenzyme, requires active uptake of nickel ions from the environment to maintain its activity. NixA is a nickel transport protein that resides in the cytoplasmic membrane. Mutation of nixA significantly reduces but does not abolish urease activity, strongly suggesting the presence of a second transporter. We postulated that the dipeptide permease (dpp) genes that are homologous to the nik operon of Escherichia coli could be a second nickel transporter. The predicted Dpp polypeptides DppA, DppC, and DppD of H. pylori share approximately 40%, 53%, and 56% amino acid sequence identity with their respective E. coli homologs. METHODS: A mutation in dppA, constructed by insertional inactivation with a chloramphenicol resistance cassette, was introduced by allelic exchange into H. pylori strain 26695. RESULTS: When compared to the parental strain, urease activity was not decreased in a dppA mutant. CONCLUSIONS: DppA does not contribute to the synthesis of catalytically active urease in H. pylori 26695 and is likely not a nickel importer in H. pylori.  相似文献   

18.
The kinetic parameter kcat/Km has been determined for the hydrolysis of peptide 4-nitroanilides, catalysed by complement component C1s. Substrates based on the C-terminal sequence of human C4a (Leu-Gln-Arg) were synthesised. Replacement of the glutamine residue by glycine or serine increased kcat/Km. Substitution of valine for the leucine residue increased kcat/Km, while substitution of glycine or lysine for the leucine residue decreased kcat/Km slightly. D-Val-Ser-Arg 4-nitroanilide is the most reactive 4-nitroanilide substrate towards C1s, so far. These results are discussed in relation to the amino acid sequences near the bonds cleaved by C1s in C4, C2 and C1 inhibitor.  相似文献   

19.
Some of the essential structural requirements for the enzymatic reaction of pure human renin acting on pure human and rat angiotensinogen and on their synthetic tetradecapeptide substrates were investigated. The five carboxy terminal amino acids of synthetic tetradecapeptides played a significant role in substrate recognition and/or hydrolysis by human renin. Kinetic constants Km, Kcat and kcat/Km of the various human renin assays were different according to the substrate used. The presence of either an asparagine or a threonine residue in the S'4 renin subsite did not affect significantly the kinetic constant values. A tyrosine residue, rather than a histidine residue, in the S'3 renin subsite gave the best synthetic substrate studied. When tyrosine residue was present in the S'2 renin subsite an important decrease in kcat was observed. Human angiotensinogen was hydrolysed by human renin with lower Km and kcat values than those measured with human and porcine synthetic substrates, suggesting that the 3-dimensional structure of human angiotensinogen plays a key role in the hydrolysis. This finding was supported by assays performed with rat angiotensinogen, which was cleared by human renin with the same kcat value as rat tetradecapeptide, but with a 49-fold lower Km. Between human and rat angiotensinogen a kcat/Km value of only 2-fold higher has been found in the renin assay using human substrate.  相似文献   

20.
Mutagenesis of the conserved glutamic acid of influenza type A (E277) and Micromonospora viridifaciens (E260) sialidases was performed to probe the contribution of this strictly conserved residue to catalysis. Kinetic studies of the E260D and E260C M. viridifaciens mutant enzymes reveal that the overall mechanism of action has not changed. That is, the mutants are retaining sialidases in which glycosylation and deglycosylation are rate-limiting for k(cat)/K(m) and k(cat), respectively. The solvent kinetic isotope effect and proton inventory on k(cat) for the E260C mutant sialidase provide strong evidence that the newly installed cysteine residue provides little catalytic acceleration. The results are consistent with the conserved aspartic acid residue (D92) becoming the key general acid/base residue in the catalytic cycle. In addition, the E277D mutant influenza type A sialidase is catalytically active toward 4-nitrophenyl α-D-sialoside, although no measurable hydrolysis of natural substrates was observed. Thus, mutating the glutamate residue (E277) to an aspartate increases the activation free energy of hydrolysis for natural substrates by >22 kJ/mol.  相似文献   

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