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1.
Born TL  Blanchard JS 《Biochemistry》1999,38(43):14416-14423
The first unique step in bacterial and plant methionine biosynthesis involves the activation of the gamma-hydroxyl of homoserine. In Escherichia coli, this activation is accomplished via a succinylation reaction catalyzed by homoserine transsuccinylase. The activity of this enzyme is closely regulated in vivo and therefore represents a critical control point for cell growth and viability. We have cloned homoserine transsuccinylase from E. coli and present the first detailed enzymatic study of this enzyme. Steady-state kinetic experiments demonstrate that the enzyme utilizes a ping-pong kinetic mechanism in which the succinyl group of succinyl-CoA is initially transferred to an enzyme nucleophile before subsequent transfer to homoserine to form the final product, O-succinylhomoserine. The maximal velocity, V/K(succinyl)(-)(CoA), and V/K(homoserine) all exhibited a bell-shaped pH dependence with apparent pK's of 6.6 and approximately 7.9. The enzyme was inhibited by iodoacetamide in a pH-dependent manner, with an apparent pK of the group being inactivated of 6.4. This suggests the presence of an active site cysteine which forms a succinyl-cysteine intermediate during enzymatic turnover. Solvent kinetic isotope effect studies yielded inverse effects of 0.7 on V and 0.61 on V/K in the reverse reaction only. On the basis of these observations, we propose a detailed chemical mechanism for this important member of the acyltransferase family.  相似文献   

2.
Homoserine transacetylase catalyzes one of the required steps in the biosynthesis of methionine in fungi and several bacteria. We have determined the crystal structure of homoserine transacetylase from Haemophilus influenzae to a resolution of 1.65 A. The structure identifies this enzyme to be a member of the alpha/beta-hydrolase structural superfamily. The active site of the enzyme is located near the end of a deep tunnel formed by the juxtaposition of two domains and incorporates a catalytic triad involving Ser143, His337, and Asp304. A structural basis is given for the observed double displacement kinetic mechanism of homoserine transacetylase. Furthermore, the properties of the tunnel provide a rationale for how homoserine transacetylase catalyzes a transferase reaction vs hydrolysis, despite extensive similarity in active site architecture to hydrolytic enzymes.  相似文献   

3.
The methionine biosynthetic pathway found in bacteria is controlled at the first step, acylation of the γ-hydroxyl of homoserine. This reaction is catalyzed by one of two unique enzymes, homoserine transacetylase or homoserine transsuccinylase, which have no amino acid sequence similarity. We cloned, expressed, and purified homoserine transsuccinylase from the thermophilic bacterium Thermotoga maritima. Substrate specificity experiments demonstrated that acetyl-coenzyme A (CoA) is the preferred acyl donor and is used at least 30-fold more efficiently than succinyl-CoA. Steady-state kinetic experiments confirm that the enzyme utilizes a ping-pong kinetic mechanism in which the acetate group of acetyl-CoA is initially transferred to an enzyme nucleophile before subsequent transfer to homoserine. The maximal velocity, V/K acetyl-CoA and V/K homoserine, all exhibited bell-shaped pH curves with apparent pKs of 6.0–6.9 and 8.2–8.8. The enzyme was inactivated by iodoacetamide in a pH-dependent manner, with an apparent pK of 6.3, suggesting the presence of an active-site cysteine residue which forms an acetyl-enzyme thioester intermediate during catalytic turnover, similar to observations with other transsuccinylases. In addition, the enzyme is highly stable at elevated temperatures, maintaining full activity at 70°C. Taken together, these data suggest that the T. maritima enzyme functions biochemically as a transacetylase, despite having the sequence of a transsuccinylase.  相似文献   

4.
Nazi I  Wright GD 《Biochemistry》2005,44(41):13560-13566
Homoserine transacetylase is a required catalyst in the biochemical pathway that metabolizes Asp to Met in fungi. The enzyme from the yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe activates the hydroxyl group of L-homoserine by acetylation from acetyl coenzyme A. This enzyme is unique to fungi and some bacteria and presents an important new target for drug discovery. Steady-state kinetic parameters provide evidence that this enzyme follows a ping-pong mechanism. Proton inventory was consistent with a single-proton transfer, and pH studies suggested the participation of at least one residue with a pKa value of 6.4-6.6, possibly a His or Asp/Glu in catalysis. Protein sequence alignments indicate that this enzyme belongs to the alpha/beta-hydrolase fold superfamily of enzymes, indicating the involvement of an active-site nucleophile and possibly a canonical catalytic triad. We constructed site-specific mutants and identified Ser163, Asp403, and His432 as the likely active-site residues of a catalytic triad based on steady-state kinetics and genetic complementation of a yeast null mutant. Moreover, unlike the wild-type enzyme, inactive site mutants were not capable of producing an acetyl-enzyme intermediate. Homoserine transacetylase therefore catalyzes the acetylation of L-homoserine via a covalent acyl-enzyme intermediate through an active-site Ser. These results form the basis of future exploitation of this enzyme as an antimicrobial target.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Fillgrove KL  Anderson VE 《Biochemistry》2001,40(41):12412-12421
The chemical mechanism of the 2,4-dienoyl-CoA reductase (EC 1.3.1.34) from rat liver mitochondria has been investigated. This enzyme catalyzes the NADPH-dependent reduction of 2,4-dienoyl-coenzyme A (CoA) thiolesters to the resulting trans-3-enoyl-CoA. Steady-state kinetic parameters for trans-2,trans-4-hexadienoyl-CoA and 5-phenyl-trans-2,trans-4-pentadienoyl-CoA were determined and demonstrated that the dienoyl-CoA and NADPH bind to the 2,4-dienoyl-CoA reductase via a sequential kinetic mechanism. Kinetic isotope effect studies and the transient kinetics of substrate binding support a random order of nucleotide and dienoyl-CoA addition. The large normal solvent isotope effects on V/K ((D)(2)(O)V/K) and V ((D)(2)(O)V) for trans-2,trans-4-hexadienoyl-CoA reduction indicate that a proton transfer step is rate limiting for this substrate. The stability gained by conjugating the phenyl ring to the diene in PPD-CoA results in the reversal of the rate-determining step, as evidenced by the normal isotope effects on V/K(CoA) ((D)V/K(CoA)) and V/K(NADPH) ((D)V/K(NADPH)). The reversal of the rate-determining step was supported by transient kinetics where a burst was observed for the reduction of trans-2,trans-4-hexadienoyl-CoA but not for 5-phenyl-trans-2,trans-4-pentadienoyl-CoA reduction. The chemical mechanism is stepwise where hydride transfer from NADPH occurs followed by protonation of the observable dienolate intermediate, which has an absorbance maximum at 286 nm. The exchange of the C alpha protons of trans-3-decenoyl-CoA, catalyzed by the 2,4-dienoyl-CoA reductase, in the presence of NADP(+) suggests that formation of the dienolate is catalyzed by the enzyme active site.  相似文献   

7.
The kinetic mechanism of serine acetyltransferase from Haemophilus influenzae was studied in both reaction directions. The enzyme catalyzes the conversion of acetyl CoA and L-serine to O-acetyl-L-serine (OAS) and coenzyme A (CoASH). In the direction of L-serine acetylation, an equilibrium ordered mechanism is assigned at pH 6.5. The initial velocity pattern in the absence of added inhibitors is best described by a series of lines converging on the ordinate when L-serine is varied at different fixed levels of acetyl CoA. The initial velocity pattern at pH 7.5 is also intersecting, but the lines are nearly parallel. Product inhibition by OAS is noncompetitive against acetyl CoA, while it is uncompetitive against L-serine. Product inhibition by L-serine in the reverse reaction direction is noncompetitive with respect to both OAS and CoASH. Glycine and S-methyl-L-cysteine (SMC) were used as dead-end analogs of L-serine and OAS, respectively. Glycine is competitive versus L-serine and uncompetitive versus acetyl CoA, while SMC is competitive against OAS and uncompetitive against CoASH. Desulfo-CoA was used as a dead-end analog of both acetyl CoA and CoASH, and is competitive versus both substrates in the direction of L-serine acetylation; while it is competitive against CoASH and noncompetitive against OAS in the direction of CoASH acetylation. All of the above kinetic parameters are consistent with those predicted for an ordered mechanism at pH 6.5 with the exception of the uncompetitive inhibition by OAS vs. serine. The latter inhibition pattern suggests combination of OAS with the central E:acetyl CoA:serine complex. Cysteine is known to regulate its own biosynthesis at the level of SAT. As a dead-end inhibitor, L-cysteine is competitive against both substrates in both reaction directions. These results are discussed in terms of the mechanism of regulation.  相似文献   

8.
The enzymic formation of acetylglutamate has been studied in Chlorella vulgaris extracts. Acetyl CoA and N(2)-acetyl-l-ornithine served as substrates for glutamate acetylation whereas acetylphosphate, N(5)-acetyl-l-ornithine, and N(2)-acetyl-2,4-diamino butyrate were ineffective. Acetyl CoA-glutamate transacetylase and acetylornithine-glutamate transacetylase activities have been purified over 180-fold with no indication of any separation of activities. The acetyl CoA activity was more labile than acetylornithine activity so that preparations having acetylornithine-glutamate transacetylase activity but no acetyl CoA-glutamate transacetylase activity were obtained. The two acetylating activities appear to be properties of one enzyme with one portion more easily denatured.Both acetylating activities had pH optima between 8 and 8.5. The Km value for glutamate was 3 mm for both activities. The Km values were 0.2 mm for acetylornithine and 3.2 mm for acetyl CoA. Arginine inhibited acetyl CoA-glutamate transacetylase (Ki = 0.94 mm) and acetylglutamate phosphokinase (Ki = 0.5 mm) but had no effect on acetylornithine-glutamate transacetylase. The lack of an inhibitory effect of proline on any of the three enzymic activities indicates that acetylglutamate is not a normal intermediate in proline biosynthesis. Growth of Chlorella with arginine as a nitrogen source had no effect on enzyme levels, showing that end-product repression is not a control factor in arginine biosynthesis in Chlorella. In Chlorella, arginine controls its own biosynthesis by inhibiting acetylglutamate phosphokinase and controls the level of acetylated intermediates by inhibiting acetyl CoA-glutamate transacetylase.  相似文献   

9.
Johnson CM  Huang B  Roderick SL  Cook PF 《Biochemistry》2004,43(49):15534-15539
The pH dependence of kinetic parameters was determined in both reaction directions to obtain information about the acid-base chemical mechanism of serine acetyltransferase from Haemophilus influenzae (HiSAT). The maximum rates in both reaction directions, as well as the V/K(serine) and V/K(OAS), decrease at low pH, exhibiting a pK of approximately 7 for a single enzyme residue that must be unprotonated for optimum activity. The pH-independent values of V(1)/E(t), V(1)/K(serine)E(t), V/K(AcCoA)E(t), V(2)/E(t), V(2)/K(OAS)E(t), and V/K(CoA)E(t) are 3300 +/- 180 s(-1), (9.6 +/- 0.4) x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1), 3.3 x 10(6) M(-1) s(-1), 420 +/- 50 s(-1), (2.1 +/- 0.5) x 10(4) M(-1) s(-1), and (4.2 +/- 0.7) x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1), respectively. The K(i) values for the competitive inhibitors glycine and l-cysteine are pH-independent. The solvent deuterium kinetic isotope effects on V and V/K in the direction of serine acetylation are 1.9 +/- 0.2 and 2.5 +/- 0.4, respectively, and the proton inventories are linear for both parameters. Data are consistent with a single proton in flight in the rate-limiting transition state. A general base catalytic mechanism is proposed for the serine acetyltransferase. Once acetyl-CoA and l-serine are bound, an enzymic general base accepts a proton from the l-serine side chain hydroxyl as it undergoes a nucleophilic attack on the carbonyl of acetyl-CoA. The same enzyme residue then functions as a general acid, donating a proton to the sulfur atom of CoASH as the tetrahedral intermediate collapses, generating the products OAS and CoASH. The rate-limiting step in the reaction at limiting l-serine levels is likely formation of the tetrahedral intermediate between serine and acetyl-CoA.  相似文献   

10.
Yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) is unusual in being the only organism thus far identified as having two genes for pyruvate carboxylase. The expression of the two isozymes Pyc1 and Pyc2 appears to be differentially regulated, and since both are expressed cytoplasmically, this suggests that they have different properties. To the present, little has been done to characterize these isozymes, and almost all of the published kinetic information on yeast pyruvate carboxylase comes from measurements of enzyme prepared from bakers' yeast which is likely to be a mixture of both isozymes. Here we have measured basic kinetic parameters for Pyc1 and found that the K(a) of this isozyme for acetyl CoA is in the order of 8-10-fold higher than previously recorded, suggesting that Pyc1 and Pyc2 may be differentially regulated by this effector. Pyc1 is highly dependent on the presence of acetyl CoA for activity and in this respect is similar to chicken liver pyruvate carboxylase. However, unlike the chicken liver enzyme, the quaternary structure of the enzyme is quite stable in the absence of acetyl CoA, and the major locus of action of this effector appears to lie outside of the stimulation of the biotin carboxylation reaction.  相似文献   

11.
Isotope exchange kinetics at chemical equilibrium have been used to investigate the kinetic mechanism of homoserine dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.3) of the (Thr-sensitive) aspartokinase/homoserine dehydrogenase-I multifunctional enzyme from E. coli. For the reaction (L-ASA + NADPH + H+ = L-Hse + NADP+), at pH 9.0, 37 degrees C, Keq = 100 (+/- 20). Under these conditions, the rate for exchange of [14C]-L-homoserine (Hse) in equilibrium L-aspartate-beta-semialdehyde (ASA) is nearly twice that for the [3H]-NADP+ in equilibrium NADPH exchange. This indicates that covalent interconversion between reactants and products bound in the active site cannot be rate-limiting. Upon variation of the concentrations of all four substrates in constant ratio at equilibrium (to minimize dead-end complex formation), the Hse in equilibrium ASA exchange increased smoothly toward a maximum. In contrast, the NADP+ in equilibrium NADPH exchange rate increased to a maximum value at partial saturation, then decreased to approximately half the maximum rate. These data are consistent with a preferred-order random kinetic mechanism in which the dominant pathway involves association of NADPH prior to L-ASA and dissociation of L-Hse prior to NADP+.  相似文献   

12.
Characterization of ligand-induced states of maize homoserine dehydrogenase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The threonine-sensitive homoserine dehydrogenase (L-homoserine: NAD(P)+ oxido-reductase), isolated from seedlings of Zea mays L., is characterized by variable kinetic and regulatory properties. Previous analysis of this enzyme suggested that it is capable of ligand-mediated interconversions among four kinetically distinct states (S. Krishnaswamy and J. K. Bryan (1983) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 222, 449-463). These forms of the enzyme have been identified and found to differ in oligomeric configuration and conformation. In the presence of KCl and threonine a rapid equilibrium among three species of the enzyme (B, T, and K) is established. Each of these species can undergo a unique slow transition to a steady-state form under assay conditions. Results obtained from gel-filtration chromatography and sucrose density centrifugation indicate that the B and steady-state forms are tetramers and the T and K states are dimers. Evidence is presented to indicate that the rapid conversion from one dimeric species to the other can only occur via formation of the tetrameric B state. Chromatography under reacting-enzyme conditions provides direct support for the slow formation of a common steady-state species from any one of the other forms of the enzyme. The rate of transition is influenced by threonine, homoserine, NAD+, and, for transitions involving association reactions, by enzyme concentration. Small, reproducible differences in the apparent size of the T and K forms, and the B and steady-state species, are attributed to changes in conformation. This conclusion is supported by differential susceptibility of the enzymic states to proteolytic inactivation, by different rates of inactivation by dithio-bis-nitrobenzoate, and by alterations in their thermal stability. In addition, the B, T, and K states of the enzyme exhibit unique intrinsic fluorescence spectra. Spectral changes are shown to closely parallel changes in kinetic and hysteretic properties of the enzyme. The results of diverse methods of analysis are internally consistent, and provide considerable support for the conclusion that this pleiotropic regulatory enzyme can exist in any of several physically distinct states.  相似文献   

13.
Serine acetyltransferase is a member of the left-handed parallel beta-helix family of enzymes that catalyzes the committed step in the de novo synthesis of l-cysteine in bacteria and plants. The enzyme has an ordered kinetic mechanism with acetyl CoA bound prior to l-serine and O-acetyl-l-serine released prior to CoA. The rate-limiting step along the reaction pathway is the nucleophilic attack of the serine hydroxyl on the thioester of acetyl CoA. Product release contributes to rate-limitation at saturating concentrations of reactants. The reaction is catalyzed by an active site general base with a pK of 7, which accepts a proton from the serine hydroxyl as a tetrahedral intermediate is formed between the reactants, and donates it to the thiol of CoA as the intermediate collapses to give products. This mechanism is likely the same for all O-acyltransferases that catalyze their reaction by direct attack of the alcohol on the acyl donor, using an active-site histidine as the general base. Serine acetyltransferase is regulated by feedback inhibition by the end product l-cysteine, which acts by binding to the serine site in the active site and inducing a conformational change that prevents reactant binding. The enzyme also associates with O-acetylserine sulfhydrylase, the final enzyme in the biosynthetic pathway, which contributes to stabilizing the acetyltransferase.  相似文献   

14.
Homoserine acyltransferases catalyze the commitment step to methionine and other important biological precursors which make this class of enzymes essential for the survival of bacteria, plants and fungi. This class of enzymes is not found in humans, making them an attractive new target for antimicrobial design. Homoserine O-succinyltransferase (HST) is a representative from this class, with little known about the key amino acids involved in substrate specificity and catalysis. HST from Escherichia coli has been cloned, purified and kinetically characterized. Through site-directed mutagenesis and steady-state kinetic studies the residues that comprise a catalytic triad for HST, the catalytic cysteine nucleophile, an active site acid-base histidine, and the base orienting glutamate, have been identified and characterized. Several residues which confer substrate specificity for both homoserine and succinyl-CoA have also been identified and kinetically evaluated. Mutations of an active site glutamate to either aspartate or alanine drastically increase the K(m) for homoserine, assigning this glutamate to a binding role for the alpha-amino group of homoserine. An active site arginine orients the carboxyl moiety of homoserine, while the carboxyl moiety of succinyl-CoA is positioned for catalysis by a lysine residue. Removing functionality at either of these positions alters the enzyme's ability to effectively utilize homoserine or succinyl-CoA, respectively, reflected in an increased K(m) and decreased catalytic efficiency. The data presented here provides new details of the catalytic mechanism of succinyltransferases, resolves a controversy between alternative mechanistic hypotheses, and provides a starting point for the development of selective inhibitors of HST.  相似文献   

15.
Phosphotransacetylase (EC 2.3.1.8) catalyzes the reversible transfer of the acetyl group from acetyl phosphate to coenzyme A (CoA), forming acetyl-CoA and inorganic phosphate. A steady-state kinetic analysis of the phosphotransacetylase from Methanosarcina thermophila indicated that there is a ternary complex kinetic mechanism rather than a ping-pong kinetic mechanism. Additionally, inhibition patterns of products and a nonreactive substrate analog suggested that the substrates bind to the enzyme in a random order. Dynamic light scattering revealed that the enzyme is dimeric in solution.  相似文献   

16.
17.
The acetyl transacylase activity of the fatty acid synthase from yeast has been investigated using p-nitrophenylthiol acetate. The chromophoric nature of the nitrophenylthiol moiety affords a convenient spectrophotometric assay for the transacylase function as well as a means to investigate the kinetics and the mechanism of this process. A probable kinetic scheme for enzyme catalyzed transacetylation from p-nitrophenylthiol acetate to an acyl acceptor (CoA or N-acetylcysteamine) is proposed and the kinetic constants for acetylation of enzyme and for acetyl transfer to an acceptor were determined. It was also demonstrated that p-nitrophenylthiol acetate can replace acetyl-CoA as a substrate in fatty acid synthesis.  相似文献   

18.
A wild-type strain and six methionine auxotrophs of Saccharomyces cerevisiae were cultured in a synthetic medium supplemented with 0.1 mM L-cysteine or L-methionine and analyzed for the synthesis of homoserine O-acetyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.31). Among them, four mutant strains exhibited enzyme activity in cell extracts. Methionine added to the synthetic medium at concentrations higher than 0.1 mM repressed enzyme synthesis in two of these strains. The enzyme was partially purified (3,500-fold) from an extract of a mutant strain through ammonium sulfate fractionation and chromatography on columns of DEAE-cellulose, Phenyl-Sepharose C1-4B, and Sephadex G-150. The enzyme exhibited optimal pH at 7.5 for activity and at 7.8 for stability. The reaction product was ascertained to be O-acetyl-L-homoserine by confirming that it produced L-homocysteine in an O-acetyl-L-homoserine sulfhydrylase reaction. The Km for L-homoserine was 1.0 mM, and for acetyl coenzyme A it was 0.027 mM. The molecular weight of the enzyme was estimated to be approximately 104,000 by Sephadex G-150 column chromatography and 101,000 by sucrose density gradient centrifugation. The isoelectric point was at pH 4.0. Of the hydroxy amino acids examined, the enzyme showed reactivity only to L-homoserine. Succinyl coenzyme A was not an acyl donor. In the absence of L-homoserine, acetyl coenzyme A was deacylated by the enzyme, with a Km of 0.012 mM. S-Adenosylmethionine and S-adenosylhomocysteine slightly inhibited the enzyme, but methionine had no effect.  相似文献   

19.
Cathepsin C, or dipeptidyl peptidase I, is a lysosomal cysteine protease of the papain family that catalyzes the sequential removal of dipeptides from the free N-termini of proteins and peptides. Using the dipeptide substrate Ser-Tyr-AMC, cathepsin C was characterized in both steady-state and pre-steady-state kinetic modes. The pH(D) rate profiles for both log k cat/ K m and log k cat conformed to bell-shaped curves for which an inverse solvent kinetic isotope effect (sKIE) of 0.71 +/- 0.14 for (D)( k cat/ K a) and a normal sKIE of 2.76 +/- 0.03 for (D) k cat were obtained. Pre-steady-state kinetics exhibited a single-exponential burst of AMC formation in which the maximal acylation rate ( k ac = 397 +/- 5 s (-1)) was found to be nearly 30-fold greater than the rate-limiting deacylation rate ( k dac = 13.95 +/- 0.013 s (-1)) and turnover number ( k cat = 13.92 +/- 0.001 s (-1)). Analysis of pre-steady-state burst kinetics in D 2O allowed abstraction of a normal sKIE for the acylation half-reaction that was not observed in steady-state kinetics. Since normal sKIEs were obtained for all measurable acylation steps in the presteady state [ (D) k ac = 1.31 +/- 0.04, and the transient kinetic isotope effect at time zero (tKIE (0)) = 2.3 +/- 0.2], the kinetic step(s) contributing to the inverse sKIE of (D)( k cat/ K a) must occur more rapidly than the experimental time frame of the transient kinetics. Results are consistent with a chemical mechanism in which acylation occurs via a two-step process: the thiolate form of Cys-234, which is enriched in D 2O and gives rise to the inverse value of (D)( k cat/ K a), attacks the substrate to form a tetrahedral intermediate that proceeds to form an acyl-enzyme intermediate during a proton transfer step expressing a normal sKIE. The subsequent deacylation half-reaction is rate-limiting, with proton transfers exhibiting normal sKIEs. Through derivation of 12 equations describing all kinetic parameters and sKIEs for the proposed cathepsin C mechanism, integration of both steady-state and pre-steady-state kinetics with sKIEs allowed the provision of at least one self-consistent set of values for all 13 rate constants in this cysteine protease's chemical mechanism. Simulation of the resulting kinetic profile showed that at steady state approximately 80% of the enzyme exists in an active-site cysteine-acylated form in the mechanistic pathway. The chemical and kinetic details deduced from this work provide a potential roadmap to help steer drug discovery efforts for this and other disease-relevant cysteine proteases.  相似文献   

20.
The enzymatic transfer of acetyl groups from acetylated xenobiotics to specific proteins is a relatively grey area in the evergreen field of biotransformation of foreign compounds. In this paper, we have documented evidence for the existence of a transacetylase in liver microsomes that catalyses the transfer of acetyl groups from 7,8-diacetoxy-4-methylcoumarin (DAMC) to glutathione S-transferase (GST), either purified or present in cytosol leading to the irreversible inhibition of GST. A simple procedure is described for the assay of transacetylase by preincubation of DAMC with liver microsomes and pure GST/liver cytosol, followed by the addition of 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (CDNB) and reduced glutathione (GSH) in order to quantify GST activity by the conventional procedure. The extent of inhibition of GST by DAMC under the conditions of the assay is indicative of DAMC:protein transacetylase activity. Following the assay procedure described here, the transacetylase was shown to exhibit hyperbolic kinetics. The bimolecular nature of the transacetylase reaction was apparent by the demonstration of Km and vmax values. 7,8-Dihydroxy-4-methylcoumarin (DHMC), one of the products of transacetylase reaction was identified and quantified using the partially purified enzyme. The fact that p-hydroxymercuribenzoate (PHMB) and iodoacetamide abolished irreversible inhibition of GST upon the action of transacetylase on DAMC strongly characterized transacetylase as a protein containing thiol group at the active site. In addition, the relative specificities of acetoxy 4-methylcoumarins to transacetylase have been demonstrated.  相似文献   

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