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1.
The glutamate dehydrogenase-NADPH-alpha-ketoglutarate complex, an active intermediate on the reaction pathway has a number of unusual properties: 1) it is the only blue-shifted natural complex of this enzyme; 2) it has an anomalously slow rate of dissociation; 3) its off-rate shows a substantial pH-independent D2O solvent isotope effect not exhibited by any other ternary complex of this enzyme; and 4) it has an unusually large enthalpy of interaction parameter. These properties must be ascribable to at least one of the two possibilities conferred on the complex by the presence of the alpha-carbonyl group of alpha-ketoglutarate; the ability to engage in carbonyl addition reactions; and/or the ability to form a specific hydrogen bond. Oxalylglycine, a competitive inhibitor of alpha-ketoglutarate in this enzyme-catalyzed reaction, provides a means of discriminating between these two modes of action. The structure of oxalylglycine provides a dicarboxylic compound which has the same intercarboxylate proton distance and has a carbonyl group in a position spatially analogous to that of alpha-ketoglutarate. Its carbonyl group, however, is that of an amide group and cannot, therefore, engage in carbonyl addition reactions, but can hydrogen bond. Therefore, any effects observed with both oxalylglycine and alpha-ketoglutarate must be ascribed to formation of specific alpha-carbonyl hydrogen bonding, whereas any effects observed with alpha-ketoglutarate alone must be due to an alpha-carbonyl addition reaction. We have used this logic to test the source of the four phenomena listed above. In each case, oxalylglycine and alpha-ketoglutarate showed the same effect. Therefore, we conclude that all four phenomena are in fact due to the formation of a specific alpha-carbonyl hydrogen bond and that the specific carbonyl addition reaction between alpha-ketoglutarate and an enzyme lysine group, postulated in one proposed catalytic mechanism, does not occur.  相似文献   

2.
The early steps in dioxygen activation by the monooxygenase cytochrome P450cam (CYP101) include binding of O2 to ferrous P450cam to yield the ferric-superoxo form (oxyP450cam) followed by an irreversible, long-range electron transfer from putidaredoxin to reduce the oxyP450cam. The steady state kinetic parameter kcat/Km(O2) has been studied by a variety of probes that indicate a small D2O solvent isotope effect (1.21 +/- 0.08), a very small solvent viscosogen effect, and a 16O/18O isotope effect of 1.0147 +/- 0.0007. This latter value, which can be compared with the 16O/18O equilibrium isotope effect of 1.0048 +/- 0.0003 measured for oxyP450cam formation, is attributed to a primarily rate-limiting outer-sphere electron transfer from the heme iron center as O2 that has prebound to protein approaches the active site cofactor. The electron transfer from putidaredoxin to oxyP450cam was investigated by rapid mixing at 25 degrees C to complement previous lower-temperature measurements. A rate of 390 +/- 23 s-1 (and a near-unity solvent isotope effect) supports the view that the long-range electron transfer from reduced putidaredoxin to oxyP450cam is rapid relative to dissociation of O2 from the enzyme. P450cam represents the first enzymatic reaction of O2 in which both equilibrium and kinetic 16O/18O isotope effects have been measured.  相似文献   

3.
J J Driscoll  D J Kosman 《Biochemistry》1987,26(12):3429-3436
Solvent and solvent proton dependent steps involved in the mechanism of the enzyme galactose oxidase have been examined. The deuterium kinetic solvent isotope effect (KSIE) on the velocity of the galactose oxidase catalyzed oxidation of methyl beta-galactopyranoside by O2 was measured. Examination of the thermodynamic activation parameters for the reaction indicated that the isotope effect was attributable to a slightly less favorable delta H value, consistent with a KSIE on proton transfer. A detailed kinetic analysis was performed, examining the effect of D2O on the rate of reaction over the pH range 4.8-8.0. Both pL-rate profiles exhibited bell-shaped curves. Substitution of D2O as solvent shifted the pKes values for the enzymic central complex: pKes1 from 6.30 to 6.80 and pKes2 from 7.16 to 7.35. Analysis of the observed shifts in dissociation constants was performed with regard to potential hydrogenic sites. pKes1 can be attributed to a histidine imidazole, while pKes2 is tentatively assigned to a Cu2+-bound water molecule. A proton inventory was performed (KSIE = +1.55); the plot of kcat vs. mole fraction D2O was linear, indicating the existence of a single solvent-derived proton involved in a galactose oxidase rate-determining step (or steps). The pH dependence of CN- inhibition was also examined. The Ki-pH profile indicated that a group ionization, with pKa = 7.17, modulated CN- inhibition; Ki was at a minimum when this group was in the protonated state. The inhibition profile followed the alkaline limit of the pH-rate profile for the enzymic reaction, suggesting that the group displaced by CN- was also deprotonating above pH 7.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
A Brown  A H Colen  H F Fisher 《Biochemistry》1979,18(26):5924-5928
Ammonia is known to inhibit the steady-state rate of oxidation of L-glutamate catalyzed by glutamate dehydrogenase. We reported previously [Brown, A., Colen, A. H., & Fisher, H. F. (1978) Biochemistry 17, 2031] kinetic evidence supporting the formation in the initial rapid phase of a complex which is composed of enzyme, reduced coenzyme, alpha-ketoglutarate, and ammonia. We show here that the effects of ammonia on the steady-state reaction can be correlated with transient-state kinetic effects related to the concentration of that ammonia-containing complex. These results indicate the existence of alternate reaction pathways which become important at high ammonia concentrations. These new pathways provide an additional route for the release of NADPH from the enzyme surface. The expanded mechanism shows that the noncompetitive product inhibition by ammonia can occur without the simultaneous presence of ammonia and L-glutamate on the enzyme. This mechanism also accommodates the observed substrate inhibition by L-glutamate.  相似文献   

5.
Klimacek M  Nidetzky B 《Biochemistry》2002,41(31):10158-10165
Mannitol dehydrogenases (MDH) are a family of Zn(2+)-independent long-chain alcohol dehydrogenases that catalyze the regiospecific NAD(+)-dependent oxidation of a secondary alcohol group in polyol substrates. pH and primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects on kinetic parameters for reaction of recombinant MDH from Pseudomonas fluorescens with D-mannitol have been measured in H(2)O and D(2)O at 25 degrees C and used to determine the relative timing of C-H and O-H bond cleavage steps during alcohol conversion. The enzymatic rates decreased at low pH; apparent pK values for log(k(cat)/K(mannitol)) and log k(cat) were 9.2 and 7.7 in H(2)O, respectively, and both were shifted by +0.4 pH units in D(2)O. Proton inventory plots for k(cat) and k(cat)/K(mannitol) were determined at pL 10.0 using protio or deuterio alcohol and were linear at the 95% confidence level. They revealed the independence of primary deuterium isotope effects on the atom fraction of deuterium in a mixed H(2)O-D(2)O solvent and yielded single-site transition-state fractionation factors of 0.43 +/- 0.05 and 0.47 +/- 0.01 for k(cat)/K(mannitol) and k(cat), respectively. (D)(k(cat)/K(mannitol)) was constant (1.80 +/- 0.20) in the pH range 6.0-9.5 and decreased at high pH to a limiting value of approximately 1. Measurement of (D)(k(cat)/K(fructose)) at pH 10.0 and 10.5 using NADH deuterium-labeled in the 4-pro-S position gave a value of 0.83, the equilibrium isotope effect on carbonyl group reduction. A mechanism of D-mannitol oxidation by MDH is supported by the data in which the partly rate-limiting transition state of hydride transfer is stabilized by a single solvation catalytic proton bridge. The chemical reaction involves a pH-dependent internal equilibrium which takes place prior to C-H bond cleavage and in which proton transfer from the reactive OH to the enzyme catalytic base may occur. Loss of a proton from the enzyme at high pH irreversibly locks the ternary complex with either alcohol or alkoxide bound in a conformation committed of undergoing NAD(+) reduction at a rate about 2.3-fold slower than the corresponding reaction rate of the protonated complex. Transient kinetic studies for D-mannitol oxidation at pH(D) 10.0 showed that the solvent isotope effect on steady-state turnover originates from a net rate constant of NADH release that is approximately 85% rate-limiting for k(cat) and 2-fold smaller in D(2)O than in H(2)O.  相似文献   

6.
The effects of pH, solvent isotope, and primary isotope replacement on substrate dehydrogenation by Rhodotorula gracilis d-amino acid oxidase were investigated. The rate constant for enzyme-FAD reduction by d-alanine increases approximately fourfold with pH, reflecting apparent pKa values of approximately 6 and approximately 8, and reaches plateaus at high and low pH. Such profiles are observed in all presteady-state and steady-state kinetic experiments, using both d-alanine and d-asparagine as substrates, and are inconsistent with the operation of a base essential to catalysis. A solvent deuterium isotope effect of 3.1 +/- 1.1 is observed on the reaction with d-alanine at pH 6; it decreases to 1.2 +/- 0.2 at pH 10. The primary substrate isotope effect on the reduction rate with [2-D]d-alanine is 9.1 +/- 1.5 at low and 2.3 +/- 0.3 at high pH. At pH 6.0, the solvent isotope effect is 2.9 +/- 0.8 with [2-D]d-alanine, and the primary isotope effect is 8.4 +/- 2.4 in D2O. Thus, primary and solvent kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) are independent of the presence of the other isotope, i.e. the 'double' kinetic isotope effect is the product of the individual KIEs, consistent with a transition state in which rupture of the two bonds of the substrate to hydrogen is concerted. These results support a hydride transfer mechanism for the dehydrogenation reaction in d-amino acid oxidase and argue against the occurrence of any intermediates in the process. A pKa,app of approximately 8 is interpreted to arise from the microscopic ionization of the substrate amino acid alpha-amino group, but also includes contributions from kinetic parameters.  相似文献   

7.
A K Mishra  M H Klapper 《Biochemistry》1986,25(23):7328-7336
We have measured, by permeable membrane/mass spectrometry, the 16O/18O, 12C/13C, and solvent H2O/D2O kinetic isotope effects (kie) associated with acyl-alpha-chymotrypsin hydrolysis and transesterification. The hydrolysis of alpha-chymotrypsinyl 2-furoate has a 12C/13C kie of approximately 1.06. Transesterification of the same acyl enzyme shows 16O/18O, 12C/13C, and solvent H2O/D2O kinetic isotope effects of 1.015 (0.003), 1.01-1.02, and 2.226 (0.007), respectively. From the temperature independence of the 16O/18O transesterification kinetic isotope effect and kinetic data reported elsewhere [Wang, C.-L. A., Calvo, K. C., & Klapper, M. H. (1981) Biochemistry 20, 1401-1408], we conclude that there are two active forms of acylchymotrypsin. We also propose that formation of the tetrahedral intermediate is the rate-limiting step in both hydrolysis and transesterification and that the position of the transition state in the transesterification is closer to the starting enzyme ester while that for the hydrolytic reaction is closer to the tetrahedral intermediate. These results are discussed in terms of reaction mechanism plasticity.  相似文献   

8.
R Hille 《Biochemistry》1991,30(35):8522-8529
Solvent kinetic isotope effect studies of electron transfer within xanthine oxidase have been performed, using a stopped-flow pH-jump technique to perturb the distribution of reducing equivalents within partially reduced enzyme and follow the kinetics of reequilibration spectrophotometrically. It is found that the rate constant for electron transfer between the flavin and one of the iron-sulfur centers of the enzyme observed when the pH is jumped from 10 to 6 decreases from 173 to 25 s-1 on going from H2O to D2O, giving an observed solvent kinetic isotope effect of 6.9. An effect of comparable magnitude is observed for the pH jump in the opposite direction, the rate constant decreasing from 395 to 56 s-1. The solvent kinetic isotope effect on kobs is found to be directly proportional to the mole fraction of D2O in the reaction mix for the pH jump in each direction, consistent with the effect arising from a single exchangeable proton. Calculations of the microscopic rate constants for electron transfer between the flavin and the iron-sulfur center indicate that the intrinsic solvent kinetic isotope effect for electron transfer from the neutral flavin semiquinone to the iron-sulfur center designated Fe/S I is substantially greater than for electron transfer in the opposite direction and that the observed solvent kinetic isotope effect is a weighted averaged of the intrinsic isotope effects for the forward and reverse microscopic electron-transfer steps.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Qian J  West AH  Cook PF 《Biochemistry》2006,45(39):12136-12143
Homocitrate synthase (acetyl-coenzyme A:2-ketoglutarate C-transferase; E.C. 2.3.3.14) catalyzes the condensation of AcCoA and alpha-ketoglutarate to give homocitrate and CoA. The enzyme was found to be a Zn-containing metalloenzyme using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. Dead-end analogues of alpha-ketoglutarate were used to obtain information on the topography of the alpha-ketoglutarate binding site. The alpha-carboxylate and alpha-oxo groups of alpha-ketoglutarate are required for optimum binding to coordinate to the active site Zn. Optimum positioning of the alpha-carboxylate, alpha-oxo, and gamma-carboxylate of alpha-ketoglutarate is likely mimicked by the location in space of the 2-carboxylate, pyridine nitrogen, and 4 carboxylate of pyridine 2,4-dicarboxylate. The pH dependence of the kinetic parameters was determined to obtain information on the chemical mechanism of homocitrate synthase. The V profile is bell shaped with slopes of 1 and -1, giving pKa values of 6.7 and 8.0, while V/K(AcCoA) exhibits a slope of 2 on the acidic side with an average pKa value of 6.6 and a slope of -2 on basic side of the profile with an average pKa value of 8.2. The V/K(alpha-Kg) pH-rate profile exhibits a single pKa of 6.9 on the acidic side and two on the basic side with an average value of 7.8. The pH dependence of the Ki for glyoxylate, a competitive inhibitor vs alpha-ketoglutarate, gives a pKa of 7.1 for a group, required to be protonated for optimum binding. Data suggest a chemical mechanism for the enzyme in which alpha-ketoglutarate first binds to the active site Zn via its alpha-carboxylate and alpha-oxo groups, followed by acetyl-CoA. A general base then accepts a proton from the methyl of acetyl-CoA, and a general acid protonates the carbonyl of alpha-ketoglutarate in the formation of homocitryl-CoA. The general acid then acts as a base in deprotonating Zn-OH2 in the hydrolysis of homocitryl-CoA to give homocitrate and CoA. A solvent deuterium kinetic isotope effect of 1 is measured for homocitrate synthase, while a small pH-independent primary kinetic deuterium isotope effect (approximately 1.3) is observed using deuterioacetyl-CoA. Data suggest rate-limiting condensation to form the alkoxide of homocitryl-CoA, followed by hydrolysis to give products.  相似文献   

10.
The effect of D2O on the kinetic parameters for the hydroperoxide-supported N-demethylation of N,N-dimethylaniline catalyzed by chloroperoxidase and horseradish peroxidase was investigated in order to assess the roles of exchangeable hydrogens in the demethylation reaction. The initial rate of the chloroperoxidase-catalyzed N-demethylation of N,N-dimethylaniline supported by ethyl hydroperoxide exhibited a pL optimum (where L denotes H or D) of 4.5 in both H2O and D2O. The solvent isotope effect on the initial rate of the chloroperoxidase-catalyzed demethylation reaction was independent of pL, suggesting that the solvent isotope effect is not due to a change in the pK of a rate-controlling ionization in D2O. The solvent isotope effect on the Vmax for the chloroperoxidase-catalyzed demethylation reaction was 3.66 +/- 0.62. In contrast, the solvent isotope effect on the Vmax for the horseradish peroxidase catalyzed demethylation reaction was approximately 1.5 with either ethyl hydroperoxide or hydrogen peroxide as the oxidant, indicating that the exchange of hydrogens in the enzyme and hydroperoxide for deuterium in D2O has little effect on the rate of the demethylation reaction. The solvent isotope effect on the Vmax/KM for ethyl hydroperoxide in the chloroperoxidase-catalyzed demethylation reaction was 8.82 +/- 1.57, indicating that the rate of chloroperoxidase compound I formation is substantially decreased in D2O. This isotope effect is suggested to arise from deuterium exchange of the hydroperoxide hydrogen and of active-site residues involved in compound I formation. A solvent isotope effect of 2.96 +/- 0.57 was observed on the Vmax/KM for N,N-dimethylaniline in the chloroperoxidase-catalyzed reaction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Using 4-methoxybenzoate monooxygenase from Pseudomonas putida, the substrate deuterium isotope effect on product formation and the solvent isotope effect on the stoichiometry of oxygen uptake, NADH oxidation, product and/or H2O2 (D2O2) formation for tight couplers, partial uncouplers, and uncouplers as substrates were measured. These studies revealed for the true, intrinsic substrate deuterium isotope effect on the oxygenation reaction a k1H/k2H ratio of < 2.0, derived from the inter- and intramolecular substrate isotope effects. This value favours a concerted oxygenation mechanism of the substrate. Deuterium substitution in a tightly coupling substrate initiated a partial uncoupling of oxygen reduction and substrate oxygenation, with release of H2O2 corresponding to 20% of the overall oxygen uptake. This H2O2 (D2O2) formation (oxidase reaction) almost completely disappeared when the oxygenase function was increased by deuterium substitution in the solvent. The electron transfer from NADH to oxygen, however, was not affected by deuterium substitution in the substrate and/or the solvent. With 4-trifluoromethylbenzoate as uncoupling substrate and D2O as solvent, a reduction (peroxidase reaction) of the active oxygen complex was initiated in consequence of its extended lifetime. These additional two electron-transfer reactions to the active oxygen complex were accompanied by a decrease of both NADH oxidation and oxygen uptake rates. These findings lead to the following conclusions: (a) under tightly coupling conditions the rate-limiting step must be the formation time and lifetime of an active transient intermediate within the ternary complex iron/peroxo/substrate, rather than an oxygenative attack on a suitable C-H bond or electron transfer from NADH to oxygen. Water is released after the monooxygenation reaction; (b) under uncoupling conditions there is competition in the detoxification of the active oxygen complex between its protonation (deuteronation), with formation of H2O2 (D2O2) and its further reduction to water. The additional two electron-transfer reactions onto the active oxygen complex then become rate limiting for the oxygen uptake rate.  相似文献   

12.
Benzoylformate decarboxylase (benzoylformate carboxy-lyase, BFD; EC 4.1.1.7) from Pseudomonas putida is a thiamine pyrophosphate (TPP) dependent enzyme which converts benzoylformate to benzaldehyde and carbon dioxide. The kinetics and mechanism of the benzoylformate decarboxylase reaction were studied by solvent deuterium and 13C kinetic isotope effects with benzoylformate and a series of substituted benzoylformates (pCH3O, pCH3, pCl, and mF). The reaction was found to have two partially rate-determining steps: initial tetrahedral adduct formation (D2O sensitive) and decarboxylation (13C sensitive). Solvent deuterium and 13C isotope effects indicate that electron-withdrawing substituents (pCl and mF) reduce the rate dependence upon decarboxylation such that decreased 13(V/K) effects are observed. Conversely, electron-donating substituents increase the rate dependence upon decarboxylation such that a larger 13(V/K) is seen while the D2O effects on V and V/K are not dramatically different from those for benzoylformate. All of the data are consistent with substituent stabilization or destabilization of the carbanionic intermediate (or carbanion-like transition state) formed during decarboxylation. Additional information regarding the mechanism of the enzymic reaction was obtained from pH studies on the reaction of benzoylformate and the binding of competitive inhibitors. These studies suggest that two enzymic bases are required to be in the correct protonation state (one protonated and one unprotonated) for optimal binding of substrate (or inhibitors).  相似文献   

13.
Zheng R  Blanchard JS 《Biochemistry》2003,42(38):11289-11296
Ketopantoate reductase (EC 1.1.1.169), an enzyme in the pantothenate biosynthetic pathway, catalyzes the NADPH-dependent reduction of alpha-ketopantoate to form D-(-)-pantoate. The enzyme exhibits high specificity for ketopantoate, with V and V/K for ketopantoate being 5- and 365-fold higher than those values for alpha-ketoisovalerate and 20- and 648-fold higher than those values for alpha-keto-beta-methyl-n-valerate, respectively. For pyridine nucleotides, V/K for beta-NADPH is 3-500-fold higher than that for other nucleotide substrates. The magnitude of the primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects on V and V/K varied substantially when different ketoacid and pyridine nucleotide substrates were used. The small primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects observed using NADPH and NHDPH suggest that the chemical step is not rate-limiting, while larger primary deuterium isotope effects were observed for poor ketoacid and pyridine nucleotide substrates, indicating that the chemical reaction has become partially or completely rate-limiting. The pH dependence of (D)V using ketopantoate was observed to vary from a value of 1.1 at low pH to a value of 2.5 at high pH, while the magnitude of (D)V/K(NADPH) and (D)V/K(KP) were pH-independent. The value of (D)V is large and pH-independent when alpha-keto-beta-methyl-n-valerate was used as the ketoacid substrate. Solvent kinetic isotope effects of 2.2 and 1.2 on V and V/K, respectively, were observed with alpha-keto-beta-methyl-n-valerate. Rapid reaction analysis of NADPH oxidation using ketopantoate showed no "burst" phase, suggesting that product-release steps are not rate-limiting and the cause of the small observed kinetic isotope effects with this substrate pair. Large primary deuterium isotope effects on V and V/K using 3-APADPH in steady-state experiments, equivalent to the isotope effect observed in single turnover studies, suggests that chemistry is rate-limiting for this poorer reductant. These results are discussed in terms of a kinetic and chemical mechanism for the enzyme.  相似文献   

14.
Recent studies on taurine:alpha-ketoglutarate dioxygenase (TauD) from Escherichia coli have provided evidence for a three-step, minimal kinetic mechanism involving the quaternary TauD.Fe(II).alpha-ketoglutarate.taurine complex, the taurine-hydroxylating Fe(IV)-oxo intermediate (J) that forms upon reaction of the quaternary complex with O(2), and a poorly defined, Fe(II)-containing intermediate state that converts in the rate-limiting step back to the quaternary complex [Price, J. C., Barr, E. W., Tirupati, B., Bollinger, J. M., Jr., and Krebs, C. (2003) Biochemistry 42, 7497-7508]. The mapping of this kinetic mechanism onto the consensus chemical mechanism for the Fe(II)- and alpha-ketoglutarate-dependent engendered several predictions and additional questions that have been experimentally addressed in the present study. The results demonstrate (1) that postulated intermediates between the quaternary complex and J accumulate very little or not at all; (2) that decarboxylation of alpha-ketoglutarate occurs prior to or concomitantly with formation of J; (3) that the second intermediate state comprises one or more product complex with Mossbauer features that are partially resolved from those of the binary TauD.Fe(II), ternary TauD.Fe(II).alpha-ketoglutarate, and quaternary TauD.Fe(II).alpha-ketoglutarate.taurine complexes; and (4) that the rate-determining step in the catalytic cycle is release of product(s) prior to the rapid, ordered binding of alpha-ketoglutarate and then taurine to regenerate the O(2)-reactive quaternary complex. The results thus integrate the previously proposed kinetic and chemical mechanisms and indicate which of the postulated intermediates in the latter will be detectable only upon perturbation of the kinetics by changes in reaction conditions (e.g., temperature), protein mutagenesis, the use of substrate analogues, or some combination of these.  相似文献   

15.
J M Denu  P F Fitzpatrick 《Biochemistry》1992,31(35):8207-8215
Primary deuterium kinetic isotope and pH effects on the reduction of D-amino acid oxidase by amino acid substrates were determined using steady-state and rapid reaction methods. With D-serine as substrate, reduction of the enzyme-bound FAD requires that a group with a pKa value of 8.7 be unprotonated and that a group with a pKa value of 10.7 be protonated. The DV/Kser value of 4.5 is pH-independent, establishing that these pKa values are intrinsic. The limiting rate of reduction of the enzyme shows a kinetic isotope effect of 4.75, consistent with this as the intrinsic value. At high enzyme concentration (approximately 15 microM) at pH 9,D-serine is slightly sticky (k3/k2 = 0.8), consistent with a decrease in the rate of substrate dissociation. With D-alanine as substrate, the pKa values are perturbed to 8.1 and 11.5. The DV/Kala value increases from 1.3 at pH 9.5 to 5.1 at pH 4, establishing that D-alanine is sticky with a forward commitment of approximately 10. The effect of pH on the DV/Kala value is consistent with a model in which exchange with solvent of the proton from the group with pKa 8.7 is hindered and is catalyzed by H2O and OH- above pH 7 and by H3O+ and H2O below pH 7. With glycine, the pH optimum is shifted to a more basic value, 10.3. The DV/Kgly value increases from 1.26 at pH 6.5 to 3.1 at pH 10.7, consistent with fully reversible CH bond cleavage followed by a pH-dependent step. At pH 10.5, the kinetic isotope effect on the limiting rate of reduction is 3.4.  相似文献   

16.
B J Bahnson  V E Anderson 《Biochemistry》1991,30(24):5894-5906
Determining the sequence of bond cleavages, and consequently the nature of intermediates, in enzyme-catalyzed reactions is a major goal of mechanistic enzymology. When significant primary isotope effects on V/K are observed for two different bond cleavages, both bonds may be broken in the same transition state or they can reflect two different transition states that are of nearly identical energy and consequently both are partially rate limiting. For the crotonase-catalyzed dehydration of 3-hydroxybutyrylpantetheine, the primary D(V/K) and 18(V/K) are 1.60 and 1.053 [Bahnson, B. J., & Anderson, V. E. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 4173-4181], respectively. In this case, double isotope effects can discriminate between the two possibilities [Hermes, J. D., Roeske, C. A., O'Leary, M. H., & Cleland, W. W. (1982) Biochemistry 21, 5106-5114; Belasco, J. G., Albery, W. J., & Knowles, J. R. (1983) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 105, 2475-2477]. The ratio of the alpha-secondary D(V/K) for the hydration of crotonylpantetheine catalyzed by crotonase in H2O and D2O has been determined to be 1.003 +/- 0.006. The invariance of the alpha-secondary effect where the chemical reaction is completely rate determining requires that both bond cleavages be concerted or that the substitution of 2H at the primary position not significantly alter the partitioning of a hypothetical carbanion. The observation of a solvent discrimination isotope effect determined from the relative incorporation of 2H from 50% D2O of 1.60 +/- 0.03, identical with the primary D(V/K), and the determination that the rate of exchange of the abstracted proton with solvent proceeds at less than 3% of the overall reaction rate also fail to provide evidence for a carbanion intermediate and are consistent with a concerted reaction. Identical primary D(V/K)s determined in H2O and D2O indicate that there is not a significant solvent isotope effect on C-O bond cleavage. The isotope ratios determined in these studies were performed by negative ion chemical ionization whole molecule mass spectrometry of the pentafluorobenzyl esters, a new method whose validity is established by comparison with previously determined kinetic and equilibrium isotope effects.  相似文献   

17.
We have determined 15N isotope effects and solvent deuterium isotope effects for adenosine deaminase using both adenosine and the slow alternate substrate 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoadenosine. With adenosine, 15N isotope effects were 1.0040 in H2O and 1.0023 in D2O, and the solvent deuterium isotope effect was 0.77. With 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoadenosine, 15N isotope effects were 1.015 in H2O and 1.0131 in D2O, and the solvent deuterium isotope effect was 0.45. The inverse solvent deuterium isotope effect shows that the fractionation factor of a proton, which is originally less than 0.6, increases to near unity during formation of the tetrahedral intermediate from which ammonia is released. Proton inventories for 1/V and 1/(V/K) vs percent D2O are linear, indicating that a single proton has its fractionation factor altered during the reaction. We conclude that a sulfhydryl group on the enzyme donates its proton to oxygen or nitrogen during this step. pH profiles with 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoadenosine suggest that the pK of this sulfhydryl group is 8.45. The inhibition of adenosine deaminase by cadmium also shows a pK of approximately 9 from the pKi profile. Quantitative analysis of the isotope effects suggests an intrinsic 15N isotope effect for the release of ammonia from the tetrahedral intermediate of approximately 1.03 for both substrates; however, the partition ratio of this intermediate for release of ammonia as opposed to back-reaction is 14 times greater for adenosine (1.4) than for 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoadenosine (0.1).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Patel MP  Liu WS  West J  Tew D  Meek TD  Thrall SH 《Biochemistry》2005,44(50):16753-16765
Beta-ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein reductase (KACPR) catalyzes the NADPH-dependent reduction of beta-ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein (AcAc-ACP) to generate (3S)-beta-hydroxyacyl-ACP during the chain-elongation reaction of bacterial fatty acid biosynthesis. We report the evaluation of the kinetic and chemical mechanisms of KACPR using acetoacetyl-CoA (AcAc-CoA) as a substrate. Initial velocity, product inhibition, and deuterium kinetic isotope effect studies were consistent with a random bi-bi rapid-equilibrium kinetic mechanism of KACPR with formation of an enzyme-NADP(+)-AcAc-CoA dead-end complex. Plots of log V/K(NADPH) and log V/K(AcAc)(-)(CoA) indicated the presence of a single basic group (pK = 5.0-5.8) and a single acidic group (pK = 8.0-8.8) involved in catalysis, while the plot of log V vs pH indicated that at high pH an unprotonated form of the ternary enzyme complex was able to undergo catalysis. Significant and identical primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects were observed for V (2.6 +/- 0.4), V/K(NADPH) (2.6 +/- 0.1), and V/K(AcAc)(-)(CoA) (2.6 +/- 0.1) at pH 7.6, but all three values attenuated to values of near unity (1.1 +/- 0.03 or 0.91 +/- 0.02) at pH 10. Similarly, the large alpha-secondary deuterium kinetic isotope effect of 1.15 +/- 0.02 observed for [4R-(2)H]NADPH on V/K(AcAc)(-)(CoA) at pH 7.6 was reduced to a value of unity (1.00 +/- 0.04) at high pH. The complete analysis of the pH profiles and the solvent, primary, secondary, and multiple deuterium isotope effects were most consistent with a chemical mechanism of KACPR that is stepwise, wherein the hydride-transfer step is followed by protonation of the enolate intermediate. Estimations of the intrinsic primary and secondary deuterium isotope effects ((D)k = 2.7, (alpha)(-D)k = 1.16) and the correspondingly negligible commitment factors suggest a nearly full expression of the intrinsic isotope effects on (D)V/K and (alpha)(-D)V/K, and are consistent with a late transition state for the hydride transfer step. Conversely, the estimated intrinsic solvent effect ((D)2(O)k) of 5.3 was poorly expressed in the experimentally derived parameters (D)2(O)V/K and (D)2(O)V (both = 1.2 +/- 0.1), in agreement with the estimation that the catalytic commitment factor for proton transfer to the enolate intermediate is large. Such detailed knowledge of the chemical mechanism of KAPCR may now help guide the rational design of, or inform screening assay-design strategies for, potent inhibitors of this and related enzymes of the short chain dehydrogenase enzyme class.  相似文献   

19.
3alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase/carbonyl reductase from Comamonas testosteroni catalyzes the oxidation of androsterone with NAD(+) to form androstanedione and NADH with a concomitant releasing of protons to bulk solvent. To probe the proton transfer during the enzyme reaction, we used mutagenesis, chemical rescue, and kinetic isotope effects to investigate the release of protons. The kinetic isotope effects of (D)V and (D(2)O)V for wild-type enzyme are 1 and 2.1 at pL 10.4 (where L represents H, (2)H), respectively, and suggest a rate-limiting step in the intramolecular proton transfer. Substitution of alanine for Lys(159) changes the rate-limiting step to the hydride transfer, evidenced by an equal deuterium isotope effect of 1.8 on V(max) and V/K(androsterone) and no solvent kinetic isotope effect at saturating 3-(cyclohexylamino)propanesulfonic acid (CAPS). However, a value of 4.4 on V(max) is observed at 10 mm CAPS at pL 10.4, indicating a rate-limiting proton transfer. The rate of the proton transfer is blocked in the K159A and K159M mutants but can be rescued using exogenous proton acceptors, such as buffers, small primary amines, and azide. The Br?nsted relationship between the log(V/K(d)(-base)Et) of the external amine (corrected for molecular size effects) and pK(a) is linear for the K159A mutant-catalyzed reaction at pH 10.4 (beta = 0.85 +/- 0.09) at 5 mm CAPS. These results show that proton transfer to the external base with a late transition state occurred in a rate-limiting step. Furthermore, a proton inventory on V/Et is bowl-shaped for both the wild-type and K159A mutant enzymes and indicates a two-proton transfer in the transition state from Tyr(155) to Lys(159) via 2'-OH of ribose.  相似文献   

20.
The neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) basal and calmodulin- (CaM-) stimulated reduction of 2,6-dichloroindophenol (DCIP) and cytochrome c(3+) follow ping-pong mechanisms [Wolthers and Schimerlik (2001) Biochemistry 40, 4722-4737]. Primary deuterium [NADPH(D)] and solvent deuterium isotope effects on the kinetic parameters were studied to determine rate-limiting step(s) in the kinetic mechanisms for the two substrates. nNOS was found to abstract the pro-R (A-side) hydrogen from NADPH. Values for (D)V and (D)(V/K)(NADPH) were similar for the basal (1.3-1.7) and CaM-stimulated (1.5-2.1) reduction of DCIP, while (D)V (2.1-2.8) was higher than (D)(V/K)(NADPH) (1.1-1.5) for cytochrome c(3+) reduction with and without CaM. This suggests that the rate of the reductive half-reaction (NADPH oxidation) rather than that of the oxidative half-reaction (reduction of DCIP or cytochrome c(3+)) limits the overall reaction rate. A value for (D)(V/K)(NADPH) close to 1 indicates the intrinsic isotope effect on hydride transfer is suppressed by a slower step in the reductive half-reaction. The oxidative half-reaction is insensitive to NADPD isotope effects as both (D)(V/K)(DCIP) and (D)(V/K)(cytc) equal 1 within experimental error. Large solvent kinetic isotope effects (SKIE) observed for (V/K)(cytc) for basal (approximately 8) and CaM-stimulated (approximately 31) reduction of cytochrome c(3+) suggest that proton uptake from the solvent limits the rate of the oxidative half-reaction. This step does not severely limit the overall reaction rate as (D2O)V equaled 2 and (D2O)(V/K)(NADPH) was between 0.9 and 1.3 for basal and CaM-stimulated cytochrome c(3+) reduction.  相似文献   

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