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1.
Deuterium and 13C isotope effects for the enzymic decarboxylation of oxalacetate showed that both deuterium- and 13C-sensitive steps in the reaction are partially rate limiting. A normal alpha-secondary effect of 1.2 per deuterium was calculated for the reaction in which pyruvate-d3 was the substrate, suggesting that the enolate of pyruvate was an intermediate in the reaction. The large normal alpha-secondary deuterium isotope effect of 1.7 when oxalacetate-d2 was the substrate suggests that the motions of the secondary hydrogens are coupled to that of the primary hydrogen during the protonation of the enolate of pyruvate. The reduction in the magnitude of the 13C isotope effect for the oxamate-dependent decarboxylation of oxalacetate from 1.0238 to 1.0155 when the reaction was performed in D2O (primary deuterum isotope effect = 2.1) clearly indicates that the transfer of the proton and carboxyl group between biotin and pyruvate does not occur via a single concerted reaction. Mechanisms in which biotin is activated to react with CO2 (prior to transfer of the proton on N-1) by bond formation between the sulfur and the ureido carbon, or in which the sequence of events is decarboxylation of oxalacetate, proton transfer from biotin to enolpyruvate, and carboxylation of enolbiotin, predict that the 13C isotope effect in D2O should be substantially lower than the observed value. A stepwise mechanism that does fit the data is one in which a proton is removed from biotin by a sulfhydryl group on the enzyme prior to carboxyl transfer, as long as the sulfhydryl group has an abnormally low pK.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
Beta-ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein (ACP) reductase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MabA) is responsible for the second step of the type-II fatty acid elongation system of bacteria, plants, and apicomplexan organisms, catalyzing the NADPH-dependent reduction of beta-ketoacyl-ACP to generate beta-hydroxyacyl-ACP and NADP(+). In the present work, the mabA-encoded MabA has been cloned, expressed, and purified to homogeneity. Initial velocity studies, product inhibition, and primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects suggested a steady-state random bi-bi kinetic mechanism for the MabA-catalyzed reaction. The magnitudes of the primary deuterium kinetic isotope effect indicated that the C(4)-proS hydrogen is transferred from the pyridine nucleotide and that this transfer contributes modestly to the rate-limiting step of the reaction. The pH-rate profiles demonstrated groups with pK values of 6.9 and 8.0, important for binding of NADPH, and with pK values of 8.8 and 9.6, important for binding of AcAcCoA and for catalysis, respectively. Temperature studies were employed to determine the activation energy of the reaction. Solvent kinetic isotope effects and proton inventory analysis established that a single proton is transferred in a partially rate-limiting step and that the mechanism of carbonyl reduction is probably concerted. The observation of an inverse (D)2(O)V/K and an increase in (D)2(O)V when [4S-(2)H]NADPH was the varied substrate obscured the distinction between stepwise and concerted mechanisms; however, the latter was further supported by the pH dependence of the primary deuterium kinetic isotope effect. Kinetic and chemical mechanisms for the MabA-catalyzed reaction are proposed on the basis of the experimental data.  相似文献   

3.
W L Sweet  J S Blanchard 《Biochemistry》1991,30(35):8702-8709
Kinetic parameters and primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects for NADH and five pyridine nucleotide substrates have been determined at pH 8.1 for human erythrocyte glutathione reductase. DV/KNADH and DV are equal to 1.4 and are pH independent below pH 8.1, but DV decreases to 1.0 at high pH as a group exhibiting a pK of 8.6 is deprotonated. This result suggests that as His-467' is deprotonated, the rate of the isotopically insensitive oxidative half-reaction is specifically decreased and becomes rate-limiting. For all substrates, equivalent V and V/K primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects are observed at pH values below 8.1. The primary deuterium kinetic isotope effect on V, but not V/K, is sensitive to solvent isotopic composition. The primary tritium kinetic isotope effects agree well with the corresponding value calculated from the primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects by using the Swain-Schaad relationship. This suggests that the primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects observed in these steady-state experiments are the intrinsic primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects for hydride transfer. The magnitude of the primary deuterium kinetic isotope effect is dependent on the redox potential of the pyridine nucleotide substrate used, varying from approximately 1.4 for NADH and -320 mV reductants to 2.7 for thioNADH to 4.2-4.8 for 3-acetylpyridine adenine dinucleotide (3APADH). The alpha-secondary tritium kinetic isotope effects also increase as the redox potential of the pyridine nucleotide substrate becomes more positive. Together, these data indicate that the transition state for hydride transfer is very early for NADH and becomes later for thioNADH and 3APADH, as predicted by Hammond's postulate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
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   

6.
The pH dependence of the kinetic parameters V, V/KNADH, and V/KH2O2 has been determined for the flavoenzyme NADH peroxidase. Both V/KNADH and V/KH2O2 decrease as groups exhibiting pK's of 9.2 and 9.9, respectively, are deprotonated. The V profile decreases by a factor of 5 as a group exhibiting a pK of 7.2 is deprotonated. Primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects on NADH oxidation are observed on V only, and the magnitude of DV is independent of H2O2 concentration at pH 7.5. DV/KNADH is pH independent and equal to 1.0 between pH 6 and pH 9.5, but DV is pH dependent, decreasing from a value of 7.2 at pH 5.5 to 1.9 at pH 9.5. The shape of the DV versus pH profile parallels that observed in the V profile and yields a similar pK of 6.6 for the group whose deprotonation decreases DV. Solvent kinetic isotope effects obtained with NADH or reduced nicotinamide hypoxanthine dinucleotide as the variable substrate are observed on V only, while equivalent solvent kinetic isotope effects on V and V/K are observed when H2O2 is used as the variable substrate. In all cases linear proton inventories are observed. Primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects on V for NADH oxidation decrease as the solvent isotopic composition is changed from H2O to D2O. These data are consistent with a change in the rate-limiting step from a step in the reductive half-reaction at low pH to a step in the oxidative half-reaction at high pH. Analysis of the multiple kinetic isotope effect data suggests that at high D2O concentrations the rate of a single proton transfer step in the oxidative half-reaction is slowed. These data are used to propose a chemical mechanism involving the pH-dependent protonation of a flavin hydroxide anion, following flavin peroxide bond cleavage.  相似文献   

7.
The pH dependence of the kinetic parameters and the primary deuterium isotope effects with nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) and also thionicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (thio-NAD) as the nucleotide substrates were determined in order to obtain information about the chemical mechanism and location of rate-determining steps for the Ascaris suum NAD-malic enzyme reaction. The maximum velocity with thio-NAD as the nucleotide is pH-independent from pH 4.2 to 9.6, while with NAD, V decreases below a pK of 4.8. V/K for both nucleotides decreases below a pK of 5.6 and above a pK of 8.9. Both the tartronate pKi and V/Kmalate decrease below a pK of 4.8 and above a pK of 8.9. Oxalate is competitive vs. malate above pH 7 and noncompetitive below pH 7 with NAD as the nucleotide. The oxalate Kis increases from a constant value above a pK of 4.9 to another constant value above a pK of 6.7. The oxalate Kii also increases above a pK of 4.9, and this inhibition is enhanced by NADH. In the presence of thio-NAD the inhibition by oxalate is competitive vs. malate below pH 7. For thio-NAD, both DV and D(V/K) are pH-independent and equal to 1.7. With NAD as the nucleotide, DV decreases to 1.0 below a pK of 4.9, while D(V/KNAD) and D(V/Kmalate) are pH-independent. Above pH 7 the isotope effects on V and the V/K values for NAD and malate are equal to 1.45, the pH-independent value of DV above pH 7. From the above data, the following conclusions can be made concerning the mechanism for this enzyme. Substrates bind to only the correctly protonated form of the enzyme. Two enzyme groups are necessary for binding of substrates and catalysis. Both NAD and malate are released from the Michaelis complex at equal rates which are equal to the rate of NADH release from E-NADH above pH 7. Below pH 7 NADH release becomes more rate-determining as the pH decreases until at pH 4.0 it completely limits the overall rate of the reaction.  相似文献   

8.
Bakers' yeast flavocytochrome b2 is a flavin-dependent L-2-hydroxy acid dehydrogenase which also exhibits transhydrogenase activity. When a reaction takes place between [2-3H]lactate and a halogenopyruvate, tritium is found in water and at the halogenolactate C2 position. When the halogenopyruvate undergoes halide ion elimination, tritium is also found at the C3 position of the resulting pyruvate. The amount tau of this intermolecular tritium transfer depends on the initial keto acid-acceptor concentration. At infinite acceptor concentration, extrapolation yields a maximal transfer of 97 +/- 11%. This indicates that the hydroxy acid-derived hydrogen resides transiently on enzyme monoprotic heteroatoms and that exchange with bulk solvent occurs only at the level of free reduced enzyme. Using a minimal kinetic scheme, the rate constant for hydrogen exchange between Ered and solvent is calculated to be on the order of 10(2) M-1 S-1, which leads to an estimated pK approximately equal to 15 for the ionization of the substrate-derived proton while on the enzyme. It is suggested that this hydrogen could be shared between the active site base and Flred N5 anion. It is furthermore shown that some tritium is incorporated into the products when the transhydrogenation is carried out in tritiated water. Finally, with [2-2H]lactate-reduced enzyme, a deuterium isotope effect is observed on the rate of bromopyruvate disappearance. Extrapolation to infinite bromopyruvate concentration yields DV = 4.4. An apparent inverse isotope effect is determined for bromide ion elimination. These results strengthen the idea that oxidoreduction and elimination pathways involve a common carbanionic intermediate.  相似文献   

9.
Lee SS  Yu S  Withers SG 《Biochemistry》2003,42(44):13081-13090
The unusual enzyme, Gracilariopsis alpha-1,4-glucan lyase of the sequence-related glycoside hydrolase family 31, cleaves the glycosidic bond of alpha-1,4-glucans via a beta-elimination reaction involving a covalent glycosyl-enzyme intermediate (Lee, S. S., Yu, S., and Withers, S. G. (2002) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 124, 4948-4949). The classical bell-shaped pH dependence of k(cat)/K(m) indicates two ionizable groups in the active site with apparent pK(a) values of 3.05 and 6.66. Br?nsted relationships of log k(cat) versus pK(a) and log(k(cat)/K(m)) versus pK(a) for a series of aryl glucosides both show a linear monotonic dependence on leaving group pK(a) with low beta(lg) values of 0.32 and 0.33, respectively. The combination of these low beta(lg) values with large secondary deuterium kinetic isotope effects (k(H)/k(D) = 1.16 - 1.19) on the first step indicate a glycosylation step with substantial glycosidic bond cleavage and proton donation to the leaving group oxygen at the transition state. Developed oxocarbenium ion character of the transition state is also suggested by the potent inhibition afforded by acarbose and 1-deoxynojirimycin (K(i) = 20 and 130 nM, respectively) and by the substantial rate reduction afforded by adjacent fluorine substitution. For only one substrate, 5-fluoro-alpha-D-glucopyranosyl fluoride, was the second elimination step shown to be rate-limiting. The large alpha-secondary deuterium kinetic isotope effect (k(H)/k(D) = 1.23) at C-1 and the small primary deuterium kinetic isotope effect (k(H)/k(D) = 1.92) at C-2 confirm an E2 mechanism with strong E1 character for this second step. This considerable structural and mechanistic similarity with retaining alpha-glucosidases is clear evidence for the evolution of an enzyme mechanism within the family.  相似文献   

10.
Homoisocitrate dehydrogenase (HIcDH, 3-carboxy-2-hydroxyadipate dehydrogenase) catalyzes the fourth reaction of the alpha-aminoadipate pathway for lysine biosynthesis, the conversion of homoisocitrate to alpha-ketoadipate using NAD as an oxidizing agent. A chemical mechanism for HIcDH is proposed on the basis of the pH dependence of kinetic parameters, dissociation constants for competitive inhibitors, and isotope effects. According to the pH-rate profiles, two enzyme groups act as acid-base catalysts in the reaction. A group with a p K a of approximately 6.5-7 acts as a general base accepting a proton as the beta-hydroxy acid is oxidized to the beta-keto acid, and this residue participates in all three of the chemical steps, acting to shuttle a proton between the C2 hydroxyl and itself. The second group acts as a general acid with a p K a of 9.5 and likely catalyzes the tautomerization step by donating a proton to the enol to give the final product. The general acid is observed in only the V pH-rate profile with homoisocitrate as a substrate, but not with isocitrate as a substrate, because the oxidative decarboxylation portion of the isocitrate reaction is limiting overall. With isocitrate as the substrate, the observed primary deuterium and (13)C isotope effects indicate that hydride transfer and decarboxylation steps contribute to rate limitation, and that the decarboxylation step is the more rate-limiting of the two. The multiple-substrate deuterium/ (13)C isotope effects suggest a stepwise mechanism with hydride transfer preceding decarboxylation. With homoisocitrate as the substrate, no primary deuterium isotope effect was observed, and a small (13)C kinetic isotope effect (1.0057) indicates that the decarboxylation step contributes only slightly to rate limitation. Thus, the chemical steps do not contribute significantly to rate limitation with the native substrate. On the basis of data from solvent deuterium kinetic isotope effects, viscosity effects, and multiple-solvent deuterium/ (13)C kinetic isotope effects, the proton transfer step(s) is slow and likely reflects a conformational change prior to catalysis.  相似文献   

11.
Since hydride transfer is completely rate limiting for yeast formate dehydrogenase [Blanchard, J.S., & Cleland, W. W. (1980) Biochemistry 19, 3543], the intrinsic isotope effects on this reaction are fully expressed. Primary deuterium, 13C, and 18O isotope effects in formate and the alpha-secondary deuterium isotope effect at C-4 of the nucleotide have been measured for nucleotide substrates with redox potentials varying from -0.320 (NAD) to -0.258 V (acetylpyridine-NAD). As the redox potential gets more positive, the primary deuterium isotope effect increases from 2.2 to 3.1, the primary 13C isotope effect decreases from 1.042 to 1.036, the alpha-secondary deuterium isotope effect drops from 1.23 to 1.06, and Vmax decreases. The 18O isotope effects increase from 1.005 to 1.008 per single 18O substitution in formate (these values are dominated by the normal isotope effect on the dehydration of formate during binding; pyridinealdehyde-NAD gives an inverse value, possibly because it is not fully dehydrated during binding). These isotope effects suggest a progression toward earlier transition states as the redox potential of the nucleotide becomes more positive, with NAD having a late and acetyl-pyridine-NAD a nearly symmetrical transition state. By contrast, the I2 oxidation of formate in dimethyl sulfoxide has a very early transition state (13k = 1.0154; Dk = 2.2; 18k = 0.9938), which becomes later as the proportion of water in the solvent increases (13k = 1.0265 in 40% dimethyl sulfoxide and 1.0362 in water). alpha-secondary deuterium isotope effects with formate dehydrogenase are decreased halfway to the equilibrium isotope effect when deuterated formate is the substrate, showing that the bending motion of the secondary hydrogen is coupled to hydride transfer in the transition state and that tunneling of the two hydrogens is involved. The 15N isotope effect of 1.07 for NAD labeled at N-1 of the nicotinamide ring suggests that N-1 becomes pyramidal during the reaction. 18O fractionation factors for formate ion relative to aqueous solution are 1.0016 in sodium formate crystal, 1.0042 bound to Dowex-1, and 1.0040 as an ion pair (probably hydrated) in CHCl3. The CO2 analogue azide binds about 10(4) times better than the formate analogue nitrate to enzyme-nucleotide complexes (even though the Ki values for both and the affinity for formate vary by 2 orders of magnitude among the various nucleotides), but the ratio is not sensitive to the redox potential of the nucleotide. Thus, not the nature of the transition state but rather the shape of the initial binding pocket for formate is determining the relative affinity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
A method has been developed for the positional 13C isotope analysis of pyruvate and acetate by stepwise quantitative degradation. On its base, the kinetic isotope effects on the pyruvate dehydrogenase reaction (enzymes from Escherichia coli and Saccharomyces cerevisiae) for both of the carbon atoms involved in the bond scission (double isotope effect determination) and on C-3 of pyruvate have been determined. The experimental k12/k13 values with the enzyme from E. coli on C-1 and C-2 of pyruvate are 1.0093 +/- 0.0007 and 1.0213 +/- 0.0017, respectively, and, with the enzyme from S. cerevisiae, the values are 1.0238 +/- 0.0013 and 1.0254 +/- 0.0016, respectively. A secondary isotope effect of 1.0031 +/- 0.0009 on C-3 (CH3-group) was found with both enzymes. The size of the isotope on C-1 indicates that decarboxylation is more rate-determining with the yeast enzyme than with the enzyme from E. coli, although it is not the entirely rate-limiting step in the overall reaction sequence. Assuming appropriate values for the intrinsic isotope effect on the decarboxylation step (k3) and the equilibrium isotope effect on the reversible substrate binding (k1, k2), one can calculate values for the partitioning factor R (k3/k2: E. coli enzyme 4.67, S. cerevisiae enzyme 1.14) and the intrinsic isotope effects related to the carbonyl-C (k1/k'1 = 1.019; k3/k'3 = 1.033). The isotope fractionation at C-2 of pyruvate gives strong evidence that the well known relative carbon-13 depletion in lipids from biological material is mainly caused by the isotope effect on the pyruvate dehydrogenase reaction. In addition, our results indicate an alternating 13C abundance in fatty acids, that has already been verified in some cases.  相似文献   

13.
The prephenate dehydrogenase activity of the bifunctional enzyme chorismate mutase-prephenate dehydrogenase from Escherichia coli catalyzes the oxidative decarboxylation of both prephenate and deoxoprephenate, which lacks the keto group in the side chain (V 78% and V/K 18% those of prephenate). Hydride transfer is to the B side of NAD, and the acetylpyridine and pyridinecarboxaldehyde analogues of NAD have V/K values 40 and 9% and V values 107 and 13% those of NAD. Since the 13C isotope effect on the decarboxylation is 1.0103 with deuterated and 1.0033 with unlabeled deoxoprephenate (the deuterium isotope effect on V/K is 2.34), the mechanism is concerted, and if CO2 has no reverse commitment, the intrinsic 13C and deuterium isotope effects are 1.0155 (corresponding to a very early transition state for C-C bond cleavage) and 7.3, and the forward commitment is 3.7. With deoxodihydroprephenate (lacking one double bond in the ring), oxidation occurs without decarboxylation, and one enantiomer has a V/K value 23-fold higher than the other (deuterium isotope effects are 3.6 and 4.1 for fast and slow isomers; V for the fast isomer is 5% and V/K 0.7% those of prephenate). The fully saturated analogue of deoxoprephenate is a very slow substrate (V 0.07% and V/K approximately 10(-5%) those of prephenate). pH profiles show a group with pK = 8.3 that must be protonated for substrate binding and a catalytic group with pK = 6.5 that is a cationic acid (likely histidine). This group facilitates hydride transfer by beginning to accept the proton from the 4-hydroxyl group of prephenate prior to the beginning of C-C cleavage (or fully accepting it in the oxidation of the analogues with only one double bond or none in the ring). In contrast with the enzymatic reaction, the acid-catalyzed decarboxylation of prephenate and deoxoprephenate (t1/2 of 3.7 min at low pH) is a stepwise reaction with a carbonium ion intermediate, since 18O is incorporated into substrate and its epi isomer during reaction in H218O. pH profiles show that the hydroxyl group must be protonated and the carboxyl (pK approximately 4.2) ionized for carbonium ion formation. The carbonium ion formed from prephenate decarboxylates 1.75 times faster than it reacts with water (giving 1.8 times as much prephenate as epi isomer). The observed 13C isotope effect of 1.0082 thus corresponds to an intrinsic isotope effect of 1.023, indicating an early transition state for the decarboxylation step. epi-Prephenate is at least 20 times more stable to acid than prephenate because it exists largely as an internal hemiketal.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
D M Kiick  R S Phillips 《Biochemistry》1988,27(19):7333-7338
The pH dependence of the kinetic parameters and primary deuterium isotope effects have been determined for tyrosine phenol-lyase from both Erwinia herbicola and Citrobacter freundii. The primary deuterium isotope effects indicate that proton abstraction from the 2-position of the substrate is partially rate-limiting for both enzymes. The C. freundii enzyme primary deuterium isotope effects [DV = 3.5 and D(V/Ktyr) = 2.5] are pH independent, indicating that tyrosine is not sticky (i.e., does not dissociate slower than it reacts to give products). Since Vmax for both tyrosine and the alternate substrate S-methyl-L-cysteine is also pH independent, substrate binds only to the correctly protonated form of the enzyme. For the E. herbicola enzyme, both Vmax and V/K for tyrosine or S-methyl-L-cysteine are pH dependent, as well as both DV and D(V/Ktyr). Thus, while both the protonated and unprotonated enzyme can bind substrate, and may be interconverted directly, only the unprotonated Michaelis complex is catalytically competent. At pH 9.5, DV = 2.5 and D(V/Ktyr) = 1.5. However, at pH 6.4 the isotope effect on both parameters is equal to 4.1. From these data, the forward commitment factor (cf = 5.2) and catalytic ratio (cvf = 1.1) for tyrosine and S-methyl-L-cysteine (cf = 2.2, cvf = 24) are calculated. Also, the Michaelis complex partition ratio (cf/cvf) for substrate and products is calculated to be 4.7 for tyrosine and 0.1 for S-methyl-L-cysteine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
African trypanosomes are devoid of glutathione reductase activity, and instead contain a unique flavoprotein variant, trypanothione reductase, which acts on a cyclic derivative of glutathione, trypanothione. The high degree of sequence similarity between trypanothione reductase and glutathione reductase, as well as the obvious similarity in the reactions catalyzed, led us to investigate the pH dependence of the kinetic parameters, and the isotopic behavior of trypanothione reductase. The pH dependence of the kinetic parameters V, V/K for NADH, and V/K for oxidized trypanothione has been determined for trypanothione reductase from Trypanosoma congolense. Both V/K for NADH and the maximum velocity decrease as single groups exhibiting pK values of 8.87 +/- 0.09 and 9.45 +/- 0.07, respectively, are deprotonated. V/K for oxidized trypanothione, T(S)2, decreases as two groups exhibiting experimentally indistinguishable pK values of 8.74 +/- 0.03 are deprotonated. Variable magnitudes of the primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects on pyridine nucleotide oxidation are observed on V and V/K when different pyridine nucleotide substrates are used, and the magnitude of DV and D(V/K) is independent of the oxidized trypanothione concentration at pH 7.25. Solvent kinetic isotope effects, obtained with 2',3'-cNADPH as the variable substrate, were observed on V only, and plots of V versus mole fraction of D2O (i.e., proton inventory) were linear, and yielded values of 1.3-1.6 for D2OV. Solvent kinetic isotope effects obtained with alternate pyridine nucleotides as substrates were also observed on V, and the magnitude of D2OV decreases for each pyridine nucleotide as its maximal velocity relative to that of NADPH oxidation decreases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
We have investigated the dynamics of proton equilibration within the proton-transfer pathway of cytochrome c oxidase from bovine heart that is used for the transfer of both substrate and pumped protons during reaction of the reduced enzyme with oxygen (D-pathway). The kinetics of the slowest phase in the oxidation of the enzyme (the oxo-ferryl --> oxidized transition, F --> O), which is associated with proton uptake, were studied by monitoring absorbance changes at 445 nm. The rate constant of this transition, which is 800 s(-)(1) in H(2)O (at pH approximately 7.5), displayed a kinetic deuterium isotope effect of approximately 4 (i.e., the rate was approximately 200 s(-)(1) in 100% D(2)O). To investigate the kinetics of the onset of the deuterium isotope effect, fully reduced, solubilized CO-bound cytochrome c oxidase in H(2)O was mixed rapidly at a ratio of 1:5 with a D(2)O buffer saturated with oxygen. After a well-defined time period, CO was flashed off using a short laser flash. The time between mixing and flashing off CO was varied within the range 0. 04-10 s. The results show that for the bovine enzyme, the onset of the deuterium isotope effect takes place within two time windows of O transition is internal proton transfer from a site, proposed to be Glu (I-286) (R. sphaeroides amino acid residue numbering), to the binuclear center. The spontaneous equilibration of protons/deuterons with this site in the interior of the protein is slow (approximately 1 s).  相似文献   

18.
Mycobacterium tuberculosis shikimate dehydrogenase (MtbSD) catalyzes the fourth reaction in the shikimate pathway, the NADPH-dependent reduction of 3-dehydroshikimate. To gather information on the kinetic mechanism, initial velocity patterns, product inhibition, and primary deuterium kinetic isotope effect studies were performed and the results suggested a steady-state ordered bi-bi kinetic mechanism. The magnitudes of both primary and solvent kinetic isotope effects indicated that the hydride transferred from NADPH and protons transferred from the solvent in the catalytic cycle are not significantly rate limiting in the overall reaction. Proton inventory analysis indicates that one proton gives rise to solvent isotope effects. Multiple isotope effect studies indicate that both hydride and proton transfers are concerted. The pH profiles revealed that acid/base chemistry takes place in catalysis and substrate binding. The MtbSD 3D model was obtained in silico by homology modeling. Kinetic and chemical mechanisms for MtbSD are proposed on the basis of experimental data.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
P F Canellas  W W Cleland 《Biochemistry》1991,30(36):8871-8876
Carbon-13 and deuterium isotope effects have been measured on the reaction catalyzed by rabbit muscle glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase in an effort to locate the rate-limiting steps. With D-glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate as substrate, hydride transfer is a major, but not the only, slow step prior to release of the first product, and the intrinsic primary deuterium and 13C isotope effects on this step are 5-5.5 and 1.034-1.040, and the sum of the commitments to catalysis is approximately 3. The 13C isotope effects on thiohemiacetal formation and thioester phosphorolysis are 1.005 or less. The intrinsic alpha-secondary deuterium isotope effect at C-4 of the nicotinamide ring of NAD is approximately 1.4; this large normal value (the equilibrium isotope effect is 0.89) shows tight coupling of hydrogen motions in the transition state accompanied by tunneling. With D-glyceraldehyde as substrate, the isotope effects are similar, but the sum of commitments is approximately 1.5, so that hydride transfer is more, but still not solely, rate limiting for this slow substrate. The observed 13C and deuterium equilibrium isotope effects on the overall reaction from the hydrated aldehyde are 0.995 and 1.145, while the 13C equilibrium isotope effect for conversion of a thiohemiacetal to a thioester is 0.994, and that for conversion of a thioester to an acyl phosphate is 0.997. Somewhat uncertain values for the 13C equilibrium isotope effects on aldehyde dehydration and formation of a thiohemiacetal are 1.003 and 1.004.  相似文献   

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