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1.
The binding of retinoic acid to mutants of Cellular Retinoic Acid Binding Protein II (CRABPII) was evaluated to better understand the importance of the direct protein/ligand interactions. The important role of Arg111 for the correct structure and function of the protein was verified and other residues that directly affect retinoic acid binding have been identified. Furthermore, retinoic acid binding to CRABPII mutants that lack all previously identified interacting amino acids was rescued by providing a carboxylic acid dimer partner in the form of a Glu residue. Proteins 2009. © 2008 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

2.
In this paper we first review what is known about the kinetics of Meta II formation, the role and stoichiometry of protons in Meta II formation, the kinetics of the light-induced changes of proton concentration, and the site of proton uptake. We then go on to compare the processes that lead to the deprotonation of the Schiff base in bacteriorhodopsin with rhodopsin. We point out that the similarity of the signs of the light-induced electrical signals from the two kinds of oriented pigment molecules could be explained by bacteriorhodopsin releasing a proton from its extracellular side while rhodopsin taking up a proton on its cytoplasmic side. We then examined the pH dependence of both the absorption spectrum of the unphotolyzed state and the amplitude and kinetics of Meta II formation in bovine rhodopsin. We also measured the effect of deuteration and azide on Meta II formation. We concluded that the pK a of the counter-ion to the Schiff base of bovine rhodopsin and of a surface residue that takes up a proton upon photolysis are both less than 4 in the unphotolyzed state. The data on pH dependence of Meta II formation indicated that the mechanisms involved are more complicated than just two sequential, isospectral forms of Meta II in the bleaching sequence. Finally we examined the evidence that, like in bacteriorhodopsin, the protonation of the Schiff bases's counter-ion (Glu113) is coupled to the changing of the pK a of a protonatable surface group, called Z for rhodopsin and tentatively assigned to Glu134. We conclude that there probably is such a coupling, leading to the formation of the active form of Meta II.  相似文献   

3.
T4 phage lysozyme is an inverting glycoside hydrolase that degrades the murein of bacterial cell walls by cleaving the β‐1,4‐glycosidic bond. The substitution of the catalytic Thr26 residue to a histidine converts the wild type from an inverting to a retaining enzyme, which implies that the original general acid Glu11 can also act as an acid/base catalyst in the hydrolysis. Here, we have determined the neutron structure of the perdeuterated T26H mutant to clarify the protonation states of Glu11 and the substituted His26, which are key in the retaining reaction. The 2.09‐Å resolution structure shows that the imidazole group of His26 is in its singly protonated form in the active site, suggesting that the deprotonated N?2 atom of His26 can attack the anomeric carbon of bound substrate as a nucleophile. The carboxyl group of Glu11 is partially protonated and interacts with the unusual neutral state of the guanidine moiety of Arg145, as well as two heavy water molecules. Considering that one of the water‐binding sites has the potential to be occupied by a hydronium ion, the bulk solvent could be the source for the protonation of Glu11. The respective protonation states of Glu11 and His26 are consistent with the bond lengths determined by an unrestrained refinement of the high‐resolution X‐ray structure of T26H at 1.04‐Å resolution. The detail structural information, including the coordinates of the deuterium atoms in the active site, provides insight into the distinctively different catalytic activities of the mutant and wild type enzymes.  相似文献   

4.
Systematic single and multiple replacement studies have been applied to Escherichia coli aspartate aminotransferase to probe the electrostatic effect of the two substrate-binding arginine residues, Arg292 and Arg386, and the structural effect of the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate-Asn194-Arg386 hydrogen-bond linkage system (PLP-N-R) on the pK(a) value of the Schiff base formed between pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP) and Lys258. The electrostatic effects of the two arginine residues cannot be assessed by simple mutational studies of the residues. PLP-N-R lowers the pK(a) value of the PLP-Lys258 Schiff base by keeping it in the distorted conformation, which is unfavorable for protonation. Mutation of Arg386 eliminates its hydrogen bond with Asn194 and partially disrupts PLP-N-R, thereby relaxing the strain of the Schiff base. On the other hand, mutation of Arg292, the large domain residue that interacts with the small domain residue Asp15, makes the domain opening easier. Because PLP-N-R lies between the two domains, the domain opening increases the strain of the Schiff base. Therefore, the true electrostatic effects of Arg292 and Arg386 could be derived from mutational analysis of the enzyme in which PLP-N-R had been completely disrupted by the Asn194Ala mutation. Through the analyses, we could dissect the electrostatic and structural effects of the arginine mutations on the Schiff base pK(a). The positive charges of the two arginine residues and the PLP-N-R-mediated strain of the Schiff base lower the Schiff base pK(a) by 0.7 and 1.7, respectively. Thus, the electrostatic effect of the arginine residues is not as strong as has historically been thought, and this finding substantiates our recent finding that the imine-pyridine torsion of the Schiff base is the primary determinant (2.8 unit decrease) of the extremely low pK(a) value of the Schiff base [Hayashi, H., Mizuguchi, H., and Kagamiyama, H. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 15076-15085].  相似文献   

5.
Glycinamide ribonucleotide transformylase (GART) undergoes a pH-dependent coil-helix transition with pK(a) approximately 7. An alpha-helix is formed at high pH spanning 8 residues of a 21-residue-long loop, comprising the segment Thr120-His121-Arg122-Gln123-Ala124-Leu125-Glu126-Asn127. To understand the electrostatic nature of this loop-helix, called the activation loop-helix, which leads to the formation and stability of the alpha-helix, pK(a) values of all ionizable residues of GART have been calculated, using Poisson-Boltzmann electrostatic calculations and crystallographic data. Crystallographic structures of high and low pH E70A GART have been used in our analysis. Low pK(a) values of 5.3, 5.3, 3.9, 1.7, and 4.7 have been calculated for five functionally important histidines, His108, His119, His121, His132, and His137, respectively, using the high pH E70A GART structure. Ten theoretical single and double mutants of the high pH E70A structure have been constructed to identify pairwise interactions of ionizable residues, which have aided in elucidating the multiplicity of electrostatic interactions of the activation loop-helix, and the impact of the activation helix on the catalytic site. Based on our pK(a) calculations and structural data, we propose that: (1) His121 forms a molecular switch for the coil-helix transition of the activation helix, depending on its protonation state; (2) a strong electrostatic interaction between His132 and His121 is observed, which can be of stabilizing or destabilizing nature for the activation helix, depending on the relative orientation and protonation states of the rings of His121 and His132; (3) electrostatic interactions involving His119 and Arg122 play a role in the stability of the activation helix; and (4) the activation helix contains the helix-promoting sequence Arg122-Gln123-Ala124-Leu125-Glu126, but its alignment relative to the N and C termini of the helix is not optimal, and is possibly of a destabilizing nature. Finally, we provide electrostatic evidence that the formation and closure of the activation helix create a hydrophobic environment for catalytic-site residue His108, to facilitate catalysis.  相似文献   

6.
Site-directed mutagenesis of the ecoRII gene has been used to search for the active site of the EcoRII restriction endonuclease. Plasmids with point mutations in ecoRII gene resulting in substitutions of amino acid residues in the Asp110-Glu112 region of the EcoRII endonuclease (Asp110 --> Lys, Asn, Thr, Val, or Ile; Pro111 --> Arg, His, Ala, or Leu; Glu112 --> Lys, Gln, or Asp) have been constructed. When expressed in E. coli, all these plasmids displayed EcoRII endonuclease activity. We also constructed a plasmid containing a mutant ecoRII gene with deletion of the sequence coding the Gln109-Pro111 region of the protein. This mutant protein had no EcoRII endonuclease activity. The data suggest that Asp110, Pro111, and Glu112 residues do not participate in the formation of the EcoRII active site. However, this region seems to be relevant for the formation of the tertiary structure of the EcoRII endonuclease.  相似文献   

7.
Surface-enhanced Raman spectra of membrane protein, located in native mem brane, bacteriorhodopsin, adsorbed by silver electrodes and hydrosols have been obtained for the first time. The distance between the retinal Schiff’s base and the external side of purple membrane of Halobacteriim halobiim was shown to be 6–9 A. The possible distribition of the point charges aroind protonated retinal Schiff’s base has been proposed on the basis of the resonance Raman data and quantim chemical CNDO/S-CI calculations. Such a model contains tyrosine residue located near the retinal Schiff’s base and connected with COO- groipvia hydrogen bond COO- group acts as a protonated Schiff’s base counterion. The distance between oxygen atoms of COO- group and retinal Schiff’s base plane is 2.5–3.0A. The hydrogen bond (O-H. . .O-) length between oxygen atom of OH-group and oxygen atom of COO- group has been chosen 2.7±0.1Å Tyrosine hydroxyl group is located at 2.8–3.5 A from retinal Schiff’s base plane. It was shown that in contrast to generally accepted Honig and Nakanishi model the spectral properties of Brh570, K610, L550 and M4Ï2 forms of bacteriorhodopsin photocycle as well as observed tyrosine deprotonation and COO- group protonation during M412 formation can be explained reasonably well by the suggested charge distribution. Furthermore, such a model of bacteriorhodopsin active site microenvironment allows to explain catalyzing of photo-induced protonated retinal Schiff’s base deprotonation observed in our preliminary experiments.  相似文献   

8.
Dehydroquinate dehydratase (DHQD) catalyzes the third reaction in the biosynthetic shikimate pathway. Type I DHQDs are members of the greater aldolase superfamily, a group of enzymes that contain an active site lysine that forms a Schiff base intermediate. Three residues (Glu86, His143, and Lys170 in the Salmonella enterica DHQD) have previously been proposed to form a triad vital for catalysis. While the roles of Lys170 and His143 are well defined—Lys170 forms the Schiff base with the substrate and His143 shuttles protons in multiple steps in the reaction—the role of Glu86 remains poorly characterized. To probe Glu86′s role, Glu86 mutants were generated and subjected to biochemical and structural study. The studies presented here demonstrate that mutant enzymes retain catalytic proficiency, calling into question the previously attributed role of Glu86 in catalysis and suggesting that His143 and Lys170 function as a catalytic dyad. Structures of the Glu86Ala (E86A) mutant in complex with covalently bound reaction intermediate reveal a conformational change of the His143 side chain. This indicates a predominant steric role for Glu86, to maintain the His143 side chain in position consistent with catalysis. The structures also explain why the E86A mutant is optimally active at more acidic conditions than the wild‐type enzyme. In addition, a complex with the reaction product reveals a novel, likely nonproductive, binding mode that suggests a mechanism of competitive product inhibition and a potential strategy for the design of therapeutics.  相似文献   

9.
Molecular dynamics simulations of the tetradecasaccharide XXXGXXXG in complex with the hybrid aspen xyloglucan endo-transglycosylase PttXET16-34 have been performed and analysed with respect to structure, dynamics, flexibility and ligand interactions. Notably, the charge state of the so-called ‘helper residue’ aspartate 87 (Asp87), which lies between the catalytic nucleophile [glutamate 85 (Glu85)] and general acid/base (Glu89) residues on the same beta strand, had a significant effect on PttXET16-34 active site structure. When Asp87 was deprotonated, electrostatic repulsion forced the nucleophile away from C1 of the sugar ring in subsite ? 1 and the proton–donating ability of Glu89 was also weakened due to the formation of a hydrogen bond with Asp87, whereas the protonation of Asp87 resulted in the formation of a hydrogen bond with the catalytic nucleophile and correct positioning of the catalytic machinery. The results suggest that catalysis in glycoside hydrolase family 16, and by extension clan GH-B enzymes, is optimal when the catalytic nucleophile is deprotonated for nucleophilic attack on the substrate, whereas the ‘helper residue’ and general acid/base residue are both in their conjugate acid forms to align the nucleophile and deliver a proton to the departing sugar, respectively.  相似文献   

10.
Catalysis of the aldol reaction between cyclohexanone and 4‐nitrobenzaldehyde by mixtures of L‐Arg and of L‐Glu in wet dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) takes place with higher enantioselectivity (up to a 7‐fold enhancement in the anti‐aldol for the 1:1 mixture) than that observed when either L‐Glu or L‐Arg alone are used as the catalysts. These results can be explained by the formation of a catalytically active hydrogen‐bonded complex between both amino acids, and demonstrate the possibility of positive cooperative effects in catalysis by two different α‐amino acids. Chirality 28:599605, 2016. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
Saccharomyces cerevisiae NAD(H)‐dependent 2,3‐butanediol dehydrogenase (Bdh1), a medium chain dehydrogenase/reductase is the main enzyme catalyzing the reduction of acetoin to 2,3‐butanediol. In this work we focused on altering the coenzyme specificity of Bdh1 from NAD(H) to NADP(H). Based on homology studies and the crystal structure of the NADP(H)‐dependent yeast alcohol dehydrogenase Adh6, three adjacent residues (Glu221, Ile222, and Ala223) were predicted to be involved in the coenzyme specificity of Bdh1 and were altered by site‐directed mutagenesis. Coenzyme reversal of Bdh1 was obtained with double Glu221Ser/Ile222Arg and triple Glu221Ser/Ile222Arg/Ala223Ser mutants. The performance of the triple mutant for NADPH was close to that of native Bdh1 for NADH. The three engineered mutants were able to restore the growth of a phosphoglucose isomerase deficient strain (pgi), which cannot grow on glucose unless an alternative NADPH oxidizing system is provided, thus demonstrating their in vivo functionality. These mutants are interesting tools to reduce the excess of acetoin produced by engineered brewing or wine yeasts overproducing glycerol. In addition, they represent promising tools for the manipulation of the NADP(H) metabolism and for the development of a powerful catalyst in biotransformations requiring NADPH regeneration. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2009; 104: 381–389 © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

12.
Summary O-Acetylserine sulfhydrylase is a pyridoxal 5-phosphate (PLP) dependent enzyme that catalyzes the final step of L-cysteine biosynthesis inSalmonella, viz. the conversion of O-acetyl-L-serine (OAS) and sulfide to L-cysteine and acetate. A spectrophotometric assay is available using 5-thio(2-nitrobenzoate) (TNB) as an analog of sulfide and monitoring the disappearance of absorbance at 412 nm. The enzyme catalyzes a ping pong mechanism with-aminoacrylate in Schiff base with the active site PLP as a covalent intermediate. Using data obtained from the pH dependence of kinetic parameters, the acid-base chemical mechanism and the optimum protonation state of enzyme and substrate functional groups necessary for binding has been determined. The Schiff base and the-amine of the substrate OAS are unprotonated for binding. There also appears to be a requirement for one active site general base to accept a proton from the-amine and to donate a proton to form cysteine. The enzyme also catalyzes an OAS hydrolase activity, and the pH dependence of this reaction suggests that the active site lysine that participated in the Schiff base linkage is protonated to start the second half reaction, and has a pK of about 8.2. The stereochemistry of3H-borohydride reduction of the Schiff base in free enzyme has been determined by degradation of the resulting pyridoxyllysine to pyridoxamine and measuring3H-release with apo-aspartate aminotransferase. The sequence around the active site lysine is AsnProSerPheSerValLysCysArg.  相似文献   

13.
Yead Jewel  Prashanta Dutta  Jin Liu 《Proteins》2016,84(8):1067-1074
During lactose/H+ symport, the Escherichia coli lactose permease (LacY) undergoes a series of global conformational transitions between inward‐facing (open to cytoplasmic side) and outward‐facing (open to periplasmic side) states. However, the exact local interactions and molecular mechanisms dictating those large‐scale structural changes are not well understood. All‐atom molecular dynamics simulations have been performed to investigate the molecular interactions involved in conformational transitions of LacY, but the simulations can only explore early or partial global structural changes because of the computational limits (< 100 ns). In this work, we implement a hybrid force field that couples the united‐atom protein models with the coarse‐grained MARTINI water/lipid, to investigate the proton‐dependent dynamics and conformational changes of LacY. The effects of the protonation states on two key glutamate residues (Glu325 and Glu269) have been studied. Our results on the salt‐bridge dynamics agreed with all‐atom simulations at early short time period, validating our simulations. From our microsecond simulations, we were able to observe the complete transition from inward‐facing to outward‐facing conformations of LacY. Our results showed that all helices have participated during the global conformational transitions and helical movements of LacY. The inter‐helical distances measured in our simulations were consistent with the double electron‐electron resonance experiments at both cytoplasmic and periplasmic sides. Our simulations indicated that the deprotonation of Glu325 induced the opening of the periplasmics side and partial closure of the cytoplasmic side of LacY, while protonation of the Glu269 caused a stable cross‐domain salt‐bridge (Glu130‐Arg344) and completely closed the cytoplasmic side. Proteins 2016; 84:1067–1074. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

14.
Bacteriorhodopsin, a light-driven proton pump found in the purple membrane of Halobacterium salinarum, exhibits purple at neutral pH but its color is sensitive to pH. Here, structures are reported for an acid blue form and an alkaline purple form of wild-type bacteriorhodopsin. When the P622 crystal prepared at pH 5.2 was acidified with sulfuric acid, its color turned to blue with a pKa of 3.5 and a Hill coefficient of 2. Diffraction data at pH 2-5 indicated that the purple-to-blue transition accompanies a large structural change in the proton release channel; i.e. the extracellular half of helix C moves towards helix G, narrowing the proton release channel and expelling a water molecule from a micro-cavity in the vicinity of the retinal Schiff base. In this respect, the acid-induced structural change resembles the structural change observed upon formation of the M intermediate. But, the acid blue form contains a sulfate ion in a site(s) near Arg82 that is created by re-orientations of the carboxyl groups of Glu194 and Glu204, residues comprising the proton release complex. This result suggests that proton uptake by the proton release complex evokes the anion binding, which in turn induces protonation of Asp85, a key residue regulating the absorption spectrum of the chromophore. Interestingly, a pronounced structural change in the proton release complex was also observed at high pH; i.e. re-orientation of Glu194 towards Tyr83 was found to take place at around pH 10. This alkaline transition is suggested to be accompanied by proton release from the proton release complex and responsible for rapid formation of the M intermediate at high pH.  相似文献   

15.
Understanding the secondary structure of peptides is important in protein folding, enzyme function, and peptide‐based drug design. Previous studies of synthetic Ala‐based peptides (>12 a.a.) have demonstrated the role for charged side chain interactions involving Glu/Lys or Glu/Arg spaced three (i, i + 3) or four (i, i + 4) residues apart. The secondary structure of short peptides (<9 a.a.), however, has not been investigated. In this study, the effect of repetitive Glu/Lys or Glu/Arg side chain interactions, giving rise to E‐R/K helices, on the helicity of short peptides was examined using circular dichroism. Short E‐R/K–based peptides show significant helix content. Peptides containing one or more E‐R interactions display greater helicity than those with similar E‐K interactions. Significant helicity is achieved in Arg‐based E‐R/K peptides eight, six, and five amino acids long. In these short peptides, each additional i + 3 and i + 4 salt bridge has substantial contribution to fractional helix content. The E‐R/K peptides exhibit a strongly linear melt curve indicative of noncooperative folding. The significant helicity of these short peptides with predictable dependence on number, position, and type of side chain interactions makes them an important consideration in peptide design.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Uracil-DNA glycosylase (UDG) is a ubiquitous enzyme found in bacteria and eukaryotes, which removes uracil residues from DNA strands. Methanococcus jannaschii UDG (MjUDG), a novel monofunctional glycosylase, contains a helix-hairpin-helix (HhH) motif and a Gly/Pro rich loop (GPD region), which is important for catalytic activity; it shares these features with other glycosylases, such as endonuclease III. First, to examine the role of two conserved amino acid residues (Asp150 and Tyr152) in the HhH-GPD region of MjUDG, mutant MjUDG proteins were constructed, in which Asp150 was replaced with either Glu or Trp (D150E and D150W), and Tyr152 was replaced with either Glu or Asn (Y152E and Y152N). Mutant D150W completely lacked DNA glycosylase activity, whereas D150E displayed reduced activity of about 70% of the wild type value. However, the mutants Y152E and Y152N retained unchanged levels of UDG activity. We also replaced Glu132 in the HhH motif with a lysine residue equivalent to Lys120 in endonuclease III. This mutation converted the enzyme into a bifunctional glycosylase/AP lyase capable of both removing uracil at a glycosylic bond and cleaving the phosphodiester backbone at an AP site. Mutant E132K catalyzes a β-elimination reaction at the AP site via uracil excision and forms a Schiff base intermediate in the form of a protein-DNA complex. This text was submitted by the authors in English.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Site-specific mutagenesis was employed to investigate the proposed contribution of proton-donating residues (Glu, Asp) in the membrane domains of bovine rhodopsin to protonation of the Schiff base-linking protein and chromophore or to wavelength modulation of this visual pigment. Three point-mutations were introduced to replace the highly conserved residues Asp83 by Asn (D83N), Glu113 by Gln (E113 Q) or Glu134 by Asp (E134D), respectively. All 3 substitutions had only marginal effects on the spectral properties of the final pigment (less than or equal to 3 nm blue-shift relative to native rhodopsin). Hence, none of these residues by itself is specifically involved in Schiff base protonation or wavelength modulation of bovine rhodopsin.  相似文献   

20.
Lactose permease is an integral membrane protein that uses the cell membrane's proton gradient for import of lactose. Based on extensive biochemical data and a substrate-bound crystal structure, intermediates involved in lactose/H(+) co-transport have been suggested. Yet, the transport mechanism, especially the coupling of protonation states of essential residues and protein conformational changes involved in the transport, is not understood. Here we report molecular-dynamics simulations of membrane-embedded lactose permease in different protonation states, both in the presence and in the absence of lactose. The results analyzed in terms of pore diameter, salt-bridge formation, and substrate motion, strongly implicate Glu(269) as one of the main proton translocation sites, whose protonation state controls several key steps of the transport process. A critical ion pair (Glu(269) and Arg(144)) was found to keep the cytoplasmic entrance open, but via a different mechanism than the currently accepted model. After protonation of Glu(269), the salt bridge between Glu(269) and Arg(144) was found to break, and Arg(144) to move away from Glu(269), establishing a new salt bridge with Glu(126); furthermore, neutralization of Glu(269) and the displacement of Arg(144) and consequently of water molecules from the interdomain region was seen to initiate the closing of the cytoplasmic half channel (2.6-4.0 A reduction in diameter in the cytoplasmic constriction region in 10 ns) by allowing hydrophobic surfaces of the N- and C-domains to fuse. Charged Glu(269) was found to strongly bind the lactose permeant, indicating that proton transfer from water or another residue to Glu(269) is a prerequisite for unbinding of lactose from the binding pocket.  相似文献   

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