首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
In the Euryarchaeota species Pyrococcus furiosus and Thermococcus litoralis, phosphoglucose isomerase (PGI) activity is catalyzed by an enzyme unrelated to the well known family of PGI enzymes found in prokaryotes, eukaryotes, and some archaea. We have determined the crystal structure of PGI from Pyrococcus furiosus in native form and in complex with two active site ligands, 5-phosphoarabinonate and gluconate 6-phosphate. In these structures, the metal ion, which in vivo is presumed to be Fe2+, is located in the core of the cupin fold and is immediately adjacent to the C1-C2 region of the ligands, suggesting that Fe2+ is involved in catalysis rather than serving a structural role. The active site contains a glutamate residue that contacts the substrate, but, because it is also coordinated to the metal ion, it is highly unlikely to mediate proton transfer in a cis-enediol mechanism. Consequently, we propose a hydride shift mechanism of catalysis. In this mechanism, Fe2+ is responsible for proton transfer between O1 and O2, and the hydride shift between C1 and C2 is favored by a markedly hydrophobic environment in the active site. The absence of any obvious enzymatic machinery for catalyzing ring opening of the sugar substrates suggests that pyrococcal PGI has a preference for straight chain substrates and that metabolism in extreme thermophiles may use sugars in both ring and straight chain forms.  相似文献   

2.
The location of hydrogen atoms in enzyme structures can bring critical understanding of catalytic mechanism. However, whilst it is often difficult to determine the position of hydrogen atoms using X-ray crystallography even with subatomic (<1.0 A) resolution data available, neutron crystallography provides an experimental tool to directly localize hydrogen/deuterium atoms in biological macromolecules at resolution of 1.5-2.0 A. D-Xylose isomerase (D-xylose ketol-isomerase, EC 5.3.1.5) is a 43 kDa enzyme that catalyses the first reaction in the catabolism of D-xylose. Linearization and isomerization of D-xylose at the active site of D-xylose isomerase rely upon a complex hydrogen transfer. Neutron quasi-Laue data at 2.2 A resolution were collected at room temperature on a partially deuterated Streptomyces rubiginosus D-xylose isomerase crystal using the LADI instrument at ILL with the objective to provide insight into the enzymatic mechanism. The neutron structure shows unambiguously that residue His 53 is doubly protonated at the active site of the enzyme. This suggests that the reaction proceeds through an acid catalyzed opening of the sugar ring, which is in accord with the mechanism suggested by Fenn et al. (Biochemistry 43(21): 6464-6474, 2004). This is the first report of direct observation of double protonation of His 53 and the first validation of the ring opening mechanism at the active site of D-xylose isomerase.  相似文献   

3.
Crystal structures of complexes of D-xylose isomerase with deoxysugars have been determined. Deoxynojirimycin is a structural analogue of alpha-pyranose and mimics the binding of these aldose substrates. The structure of this complex supports the hypothesis that an imidazole group catalyzes ring opening of the pyranose. The steric restrictions in the active site of the enzyme prevent a beta-pyranose from binding in the same way. For the reverse reaction with ketoses, the anomeric specificity is less certain. Dideoxyimino-D-glucitol is a structural analogue of the ketose alpha-D-furanose. The binding of the inhibitor dideoxyimino-D-glucitol to the crystals of the enzyme does not mimic the binding of the reactive alpha-D-fructofuranose. Superposition of the nonphysiological substrate alpha-D-fructofuranose onto the atomic positions of dideoxyimino-D-glucitol is not possible due to the steric restrictions of the active site. However, by utilizing the approximate 2-fold symmetry of the sugar, a stereochemically sensible model is produced which is consistent with other data. In addition to reaction with alpha-D-furanose, the enzyme probably reacts with open ring keto sugars which are present at significant concentrations. Other sugars which resemble furanoses either do not inhibit significantly or are not observed in the crystals bound in a single conformation.  相似文献   

4.
Biliverdin reductase (BVR) catalyzes the last step in heme degradation by reducing the gamma-methene bridge of the open tetrapyrrole, biliverdin IXalpha, to bilirubin with the concomitant oxidation of a beta-nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) or beta-nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) cofactor. Bilirubin is the major bile pigment in mammals and has antioxidant and anticompliment activity. We have determined X-ray crystal structures of apo rat BVR and its complex with NADH at 1.2 A and 1.5 A resolution, respectively. In agreement with an independent structure determination of the apo-enzyme, BVR consists of an N-terminal dinucleotide-binding domain (Rossmann-fold) and a C-terminal domain that contains a six-stranded beta-sheet that is flanked on one face by several alpha-helices. The C-terminal and N-terminal domains interact extensively, forming the active site cleft at their interface. The cofactor complex structure reported here reveals that the cofactor nicotinamide ring extends into the active site cleft, where it is adjacent to conserved amino acid residues and, consistent with the known stereochemistry of the reaction catalyzed by BVR, the si face of the ring is accessible for hydride transfer. The only titratable side-chain that appears to be suitably positioned to function as a general acid in catalysis is Tyr97. This residue, however, is not essential for catalysis, since the Tyr97Phe mutant protein retains 50% activity. This finding suggests that the dominant role in catalysis may be performed by hydride transfer from the cofactor, a process that may be promoted by proximity of the invariant residues Glu96, Glu123, and Glu126, to the nicotinamide ring.  相似文献   

5.
Crystallographic studies of the mechanism of xylose isomerase   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The mechanism of xylose isomerase (EC 5.3.1.5) has been studied with X-ray crystallography. Four refined crystal structures are reported at 3-A resolution: native enzyme, enzyme + glucose, enzyme + glucose + Mg2+, and enzyme + glucose + Mn2+. One of these structures (E.G.Mg) was determined in a crystal mounted in a flow cell. The other structures were equilibrium experiments carried out by soaking crystals in substrate containing solution. These structures and other studies suggest that, contrary to expectation, xylose isomerase may not use the generally expected base-catalyzed enolization mechanism. A mechanism involving a hydride shift is consistent with the structures presented here and warrants further investigation. Additional evidence in support of a hydride shift comes from comparing xylose isomerase with triosephosphate isomerase which is known to catalyze an analogous reaction via an enediol intermediate. Evidence is presented that suggests that aldose-ketose isomerases can be divided into two groups. Phospho sugar isomerases generally do not require a metal ion for activity and show exchange of substrate protons with solvent. In contrast, simple sugar isomerases all require a metal ion and show very low solvent exchange. These observations are rationalized on the basis of the need for stereospecific sugar binding.  相似文献   

6.
The gene coding for thermophilic xylose (glucose) isomerase of Clostridium thermosulfurogenes was isolated and its complete nucleotide sequence was determined. The structural gene (xylA) for xylose isomerase encodes a polypeptide of 439 amino acids with an estimated molecular weight of 50,474. The deduced amino acid sequence of thermophilic C. thermosulfurogenes xylose isomerase displayed higher homology with those of thermolabile xylose isomerases from Bacillus subtilis (70%) and Escherichia coli (50%) than with those of thermostable xylose isomerases from Ampullariella (22%), Arthrobacter (23%), and Streptomyces violaceoniger (24%). Several discrete regions were highly conserved throughout the amino acid sequences of all these enzymes. To identify the histidine residue of the active site and to elucidate its function during enzymatic xylose or glucose isomerization, histidine residues at four different positions in the C. thermosulfurogenes enzyme were individually modified by site-directed mutagenesis. Substitution of His101 by phenylalanine completely abolished enzyme activity whereas substitution of other histidine residues by phenylalanine had no effect on enzyme activity. When His101 was changed to glutamine, glutamic acid, asparagine, or aspartic acid, approximately 10-16% of wild-type enzyme activity was retained by the mutant enzymes. The Gln101 mutant enzyme was resistant to diethylpyrocarbonate inhibition which completely inactivated the wild-type enzyme, indicating that His101 is the only essential histidine residue involved directly in enzyme catalysis. The constant Vmax values of the Gln101, Glu101, Asn101, and Asp101 mutant enzymes over the pH range of 5.0-8.5 indicate that protonation of His101 is responsible for the reduced Vmax values of the wild-type enzyme at pH below 6.5. Deuterium isotope effects by D-[2-2H]glucose on the rate of glucose isomerization indicated that hydrogen transfer and not substrate ring opening is the rate-determining step for both the wild-type and Gln101 mutant enzymes. These results suggest that the enzymatic sugar isomerization does not involve a histidine-catalyzed proton transfer mechanism. Rather, essential histidine functions to stabilize the transition state by hydrogen bonding to the C5 hydroxyl group of the substrate and this enables a metal-catalyzed hydride shift from C2 to C1.  相似文献   

7.
Thermoanaerobacter brockii alcohol dehydrogenase (TbADH) catalyzes the reversible oxidation of secondary alcohols to the corresponding ketones using NADP(+) as the cofactor. The active site of the enzyme contains a zinc ion that is tetrahedrally coordinated by four protein residues. The enzymatic reaction leads to the formation of a ternary enzyme-cofactor-substrate complex; and catalytic hydride ion transfer is believed to take place directly between the substrate and cofactor at the ternary complex. Although crystallographic data of TbADH and other alcohol dehydrogenases as well as their complexes are available, their mode of action remains to be determined. It is firmly established that the zinc ion is essential for catalysis. However, there is no clear agreement about the coordination environment of the metal ion and the competent reaction intermediates during catalysis. We used a combination of X-ray absorption, circular dichroism (CD), and fluorescence spectroscopy, together with structural analysis and modeling studies, to investigate the ternary complexes of TbADH that are bound to a transition-state analogue inhibitor. Our structural and spectroscopic studies indicated that the coordination sphere of the catalytic zinc site in TbADH undergoes conformational changes when it binds the inhibitor and forms a pentacoordinated complex at the zinc ion. These studies provide the first active site structure of bacterial ADH bound to a substrate analogue. Here, we suggest the active site structure of the central intermediate complex and, more specifically, propose the substrate-binding site in TbADH.  相似文献   

8.
Considerable progress has been made in recent years in our understanding of the structural basis of glycosyl transfer. Yet the nature and relevance of the conformational changes associated with substrate recognition and catalysis remain poorly understood. We have focused on the glucosyl-3-phosphoglycerate synthase (GpgS), a "retaining" enzyme, that initiates the biosynthetic pathway of methylglucose lipopolysaccharides in mycobacteria. Evidence is provided that GpgS displays an unusually broad metal ion specificity for a GT-A enzyme, with Mg(2+), Mn(2+), Ca(2+), Co(2+), and Fe(2+) assisting catalysis. In the crystal structure of the apo-form of GpgS, we have observed that a flexible loop adopts a double conformation L(A) and L(I) in the active site of both monomers of the protein dimer. Notably, the L(A) loop geometry corresponds to an active conformation and is conserved in two other relevant states of the enzyme, namely the GpgS·metal·nucleotide sugar donor and the GpgS·metal·nucleotide·acceptor-bound complexes, indicating that GpgS is intrinsically in a catalytically active conformation. The crystal structure of GpgS in the presence of Mn(2+)·UDP·phosphoglyceric acid revealed an alternate conformation for the nucleotide sugar β-phosphate, which likely occurs upon sugar transfer. Structural, biochemical, and biophysical data point to a crucial role of the β-phosphate in donor and acceptor substrate binding and catalysis. Altogether, our experimental data suggest a model wherein the catalytic site is essentially preformed, with a few conformational changes of lateral chain residues as the protein proceeds along the catalytic cycle. This model of action may be applicable to a broad range of GT-A glycosyltransferases.  相似文献   

9.
Site-directed mutagenesis in the active site of xylose isomerase derived from Actinoplanes missouriensis is used to investigate the structural and functional role of specific residues. The mutagenesis work together with the crystallographic studies presented in detail in two accompanying papers adds significantly to the understanding of the catalytic mechanism of this enzyme. Changes caused by introduced mutations emphasize the correlation between substrate specificity and cation preference. Mutations in both His 220 and His 54 mainly affect the catalytic rate constant, with catalysis being severely reduced but not abolished, suggesting that both histidines are important, but not essential, for catalysis. Our results thus challenge the hypothesis that His 54 acts as an obligatory catalytic base for ring opening; this residue appears instead to be implicated in governing the anomeric specificity. With none of the active site histidines acting as a catalytic base, the role of the cations in catalyzing proton transfer is confirmed. In addition, Lys 183 appears to play a crucial part in the isomerization step, by assisting the proton shuttle. Other residues also are important but to a lesser extent. The conserved Lys 294 is indirectly involved in binding the activating cations. Among the active site aromatic residues, the tryptophans (16 and 137) play a role in maintaining the general architecture of the substrate binding site while the role of Phe 26 seems to be purely structural.  相似文献   

10.
Environmental protection through biological mechanisms that aid in the reductive immobilization of toxic metals (e.g., chromate and uranyl) has been identified to involve specific NADH-dependent flavoproteins that promote cell viability. To understand the enzyme mechanisms responsible for metal reduction, the enzyme kinetics of a putative chromate reductase from Gluconacetobacter hansenii (Gh-ChrR) was measured and the crystal structure of the protein determined at 2.25 Å resolution. Gh-ChrR catalyzes the NADH-dependent reduction of chromate, ferricyanide, and uranyl anions under aerobic conditions. Kinetic measurements indicate that NADH acts as a substrate inhibitor; catalysis requires chromate binding prior to NADH association. The crystal structure of Gh-ChrR shows the protein is a homotetramer with one bound flavin mononucleotide (FMN) per subunit. A bound anion is visualized proximal to the FMN at the interface between adjacent subunits within a cationic pocket, which is positioned at an optimal distance for hydride transfer. Site-directed substitutions of residues proposed to involve in both NADH and metal anion binding (N85A or R101A) result in 90–95% reductions in enzyme efficiencies for NADH-dependent chromate reduction. In comparison site-directed substitution of a residue (S118A) participating in the coordination of FMN in the active site results in only modest (50%) reductions in catalytic efficiencies, consistent with the presence of a multitude of side chains that position the FMN in the active site. The proposed proximity relationships between metal anion binding site and enzyme cofactors is discussed in terms of rational design principles for the use of enzymes in chromate and uranyl bioremediation.  相似文献   

11.
Guo F  Gooding AR  Cech TR 《Molecular cell》2004,16(3):351-362
The Tetrahymena intron is an RNA catalyst, or ribozyme. As part of its self-splicing reaction, this ribozyme catalyzes phosphoryl transfer between guanosine and a substrate RNA strand. Here we report the refined crystal structure of an active Tetrahymena ribozyme in the absence of its RNA substrate at 3.8 A resolution. The 3'-terminal guanosine (omegaG), which serves as the attacking group for RNA cleavage, forms a coplanar base triple with the G264-C311 base pair, and this base triple is sandwiched by three other base triples. In addition, a metal ion is present in the active site, contacting or positioned close to the ribose of the omegaG and five phosphates. All of these phosphates have been shown to be important for catalysis. Therefore, we provide a picture of how the ribozyme active site positions both a catalytic metal ion and the nucleophilic guanosine for catalysis prior to binding its RNA substrate.  相似文献   

12.
Hao Hu  Haiyan Liu  Yunyu Shi 《Proteins》1997,27(4):545-555
Different pathways of the metal-induced isomerization of D-xylose to D-xylulose are investigated and compared in detail using energy minimization and molecular dynamics simulation. Two theoretical models are constructed for the reaction: in vacuum and in the enzyme D-xylose isomerase. The vacuum model is constructed based on the X-ray structure of the active site of D-xylose isomerase. It contains the atoms directly involved in the reaction and is studied using a semi-empirical molecular orbital method (PM3). The model in the enzyme includes the effects of the enzyme environment on the reaction using a combined quantum mechanical and molecular mechanical potential. For both models, the structures of the reactants, products, and intermediate complexes along the isomerization pathway are optimized. The effects of the position of the “catalytic Mg2+ ion” on the energies of the reactions are studied. The results indicate: 1) in vacuum, the isomerization reaction is favored when the catalytic metal cation is at site A, which is remote from the substrate; 2) in the enzyme, the catalytic metal cation, starting from site A, moves and stays at site B, which is close to the substrate; analysis of the charge redistribution of the active site during the catalytic process shows that the metal ion acts as a Lewis acid to polarize the substrate and catalyze the hydride shift; these results are consistent with previous experimental observations; and 3) Lys183 plays an important role in the isomerization reaction. The ϵ-NH3+ group of its side chain can provide a proton to the carboxide ion of the substrate to form a hydroxyl group after the hydride shift step. This role of Lys183 has not been suggested before. Based on our calculations, we believe that this is a reasonable mechanism and consistent with site-directed mutation experiments. © 1997 Wiley-Liss Inc.  相似文献   

13.
Olsen LR  Roderick SL 《Biochemistry》2001,40(7):1913-1921
N-Acetylglucosamine-1-PO(4) uridyltransferase (GlmU) is a trimeric bifunctional enzyme that catalyzes the last two sequential reactions in the de novo biosynthetic pathway for UDP-GlcNAc. The X-ray crystal structure of Escherichia coli GlmU in complex with UDP-GlcNAc and CoA has been determined to 2.1 A resolution and reveals a two-domain architecture that is responsible for these two reactions. The C-terminal domain is responsible for the CoA-dependent acetylation of Glc-1-PO(4) to GlcNAc-1-PO(4) and displays the longest left-handed parallel beta-helix observed to date. The acetyltransferase active site defined by the binding site for CoA makes use of residues from all three subunits and is positioned beneath an open cavity large enough to accommodate the Glc-1-PO(4) acetyl acceptor. The N-terminal domain catalyzes uridyl transfer from UTP to GlcNAc-1-PO(4) to form the final products UDP-GlcNAc and pyrophosphate. This domain is composed of a central seven-stranded beta-sheet surrounded by six alpha-helices in a Rossmann fold-like topology. A Co(2+) ion binds to just one of the two independent pyrophosphorylase active sites present in the crystals studied here, each of which nonetheless binds UDP-GlcNAc. The conformational changes of the enzyme and sugar nucleotide that accompany metal binding may provide a window into the structural dynamics that accompany catalysis.  相似文献   

14.
Bochar DA  Stauffacher CV  Rodwell VW 《Biochemistry》1999,38(48):15848-15852
Sequence analysis has revealed two classes of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase. Crystal structures of ternary complexes of the Class II enzyme from Pseudomonas mevalonii revealed lysine 267 critically positioned at the active site. This observation suggested a revised catalytic mechanism in which lysine 267 facilitates hydride transfer from reduced coenzyme by polarizing the carbonyl group of HMG-CoA and subsequently of bound mevaldehyde, an inference supported by mutagenesis of lysine 267 to aminoethylcysteine. For this mechanism to be general, Class I HMG-CoA reductases ought also to possess an active site lysine. Three lysines are conserved among all Class I HMG-CoA reductases. The three conserved lysines of Syrian hamster HMG-CoA reductase were mutated to alanine. All three mutant enzymes had reduced but detectable activity. Of the three conserved lysines, sequence alignments implicate lysine 734 of the hamster enzyme as the most likely cognate of P. mevalonii lysine 267. Low activity of enzyme K734A did not reflect an altered structure. Substrate recognition was essentially normal, and both circular dichroism spectroscopy and analytical ultracentrifugation implied a native structure. Enzyme K734A also formed an active heterodimer when coexpressed with inactive mutant enzyme D766N. We infer that a lysine is indeed essential for catalysis by the Class I HMG-CoA reductases and that the revised mechanism for catalysis is general for all HMG-CoA reductases.  相似文献   

15.
Transketolase is a prominent thiamin diphosphate-dependent enzyme in sugar metabolism that catalyzes the reversible transfer of a 2-carbon dihydroxyethyl fragment between a donor ketose and an acceptor aldose. The X-ray structures of transketolase from E. coli in a covalent complex with donor ketoses d-xylulose 5-phosphate (X5P) and d-fructose 6-phosphate (F6P) at 1.47 A and 1.65 A resolution reveal significant strain in the tetrahedral cofactor-sugar adducts with a 25-30 degrees out-of-plane distortion of the C2-Calpha bond connecting the substrates' carbonyl with the C2 of the cofactor's thiazolium part. Both intermediates adopt very similar extended conformations in the active site with a perpendicular orientation of the scissile C2-C3 sugar bond relative to the thiazolium ring. The sugar-derived hydroxyl groups of the intermediates form conserved hydrogen bonds with one Asp side chain, with a cluster of His residues and with the N4' of the aminopyrimidine ring of the cofactor. The phosphate moiety is held in place by electrostatic and hydrogen-bonding interactions with Arg, His, and Ser side chains. With the exception of the thiazolium part of the cofactor, no structural changes are observable during intermediate formation indicating that the active site is poised for catalysis. DFT calculations on both X5P-thiamin and X5P-thiazolium models demonstrate that an out-of-plane distortion of the C2-Calpha bond is energetically more favorable than a coplanar bond. The X-ray structure with the acceptor aldose d-ribose 5-phosphate (R5P) noncovalently bound in the active site suggests that the sugar is present in multiple forms: in a strained ring-closed beta-d-furanose form in C2-exo conformation as well as in an extended acyclic aldehyde form, with the reactive C1 aldo function held close to Calpha of the presumably planar carbanion/enamine intermediate. The latter form of R5P may be viewed as a near attack conformation. The R5P binding site overlaps with those of the leaving group moieties of the covalent donor-cofactor adducts, demonstrating that R5P directly competes with the donor-derived products glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate and erythrose 4-phosphate, which are substrates of the reverse reaction, for the same docking site at the active site and reaction with the DHEThDP enamine.  相似文献   

16.
Mechanistic studies have been undertaken on the coenzyme F420 dependent formate dehydrogenase from Methanobacterium formicicum. The enzyme was specific for the si face hydride transfer to C5 of F420 and joins three other F420-recognizing methanogen enzymes in this stereospecificity, consistent perhaps with a common type of binding site for this 8-hydroxy-5-deazariboflavin. While catalysis probably occurs by hydride transfer from formate to the enzyme to generate an EH2 species and then by hydride transfer back out to F420, the formate-derived hydrogen exchanged with solvent protons before transfer back out to F420. The kinetics of hydride transfer from formate revealed that this step is not rate determining, which suggests that the rate-determining step is an internal electron transfer. The deflavo formate dehydrogenase was amenable to reconstitution with flavin analogues. The enzyme was sensitive to alterations in FAD structure in the 6-, 7-, and 8-loci of the benzenoid moiety in the isoalloxazine ring.  相似文献   

17.
Oxaloacetate decarboxylase is a membrane-bound multiprotein complex that couples oxaloacetate decarboxylation to sodium ion transport across the membrane. The initial reaction catalyzed by this enzyme machinery is the carboxyl transfer from oxaloacetate to the prosthetic biotin group. The crystal structure of the carboxyltransferase at 1.7 A resolution shows a dimer of alpha(8)beta(8) barrels with an active site metal ion, identified spectroscopically as Zn(2+), at the bottom of a deep cleft. The enzyme is completely inactivated by specific mutagenesis of Asp17, His207 and His209, which serve as ligands for the Zn(2+) metal ion, or by Lys178 near the active site, suggesting that Zn(2+) as well as Lys178 are essential for the catalysis. In the present structure this lysine residue is hydrogen-bonded to Cys148. A potential role of Lys178 as initial acceptor of the carboxyl group from oxaloacetate is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Fritz TA  Liu L  Finer-Moore JS  Stroud RM 《Biochemistry》2002,41(22):7021-7029
Mutant forms of thymidylate synthase (TS) with substitutions at the conserved active site residue, Trp 80, are deficient in the hydride transfer step of the TS reaction. These mutants produce a beta-mercaptoethanol (beta-ME) adduct of the 2'-deoxyuridine-5'-monophosphate (dUMP) exocyclic methylene intermediate. Trp 80 has been proposed to assist hydride transfer by stabilizing a 5,6,7,8-tetrahydrofolate (THF) radical cation intermediate [Barrett, J. E., Lucero, C. M., and Schultz, P. G. (1999) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 121, 7965-7966.] formed after THF changes its binding from the cofactor pocket to a putative alternate site. To understand the molecular basis of hydride transfer deficiency in a mutant in which Trp 80 was changed to Gly, we determined the X-ray structures of this mutant Escherichia coli TS complexed with dUMP and the folate analogue 10-propargyl-5,8-dideazafolate (CB3717) and of the wild-type enzyme complexed with dUMP and THF. The mutant enzyme has a cavity in the active site continuous with bulk solvent. This cavity, sealed from bulk solvent in wild-type TS by Leu 143, would allow nucleophilic attack of beta-ME on the dUMP C5 exocyclic methylene. The structure of the wild-type enzyme/dUMP/THF complex shows that THF is bound in the cofactor binding pocket and is well positioned to transfer hydride to the dUMP exocyclic methylene. Together, these results suggest that THF does not reorient during hydride transfer and indicate that the role of Trp 80 may be to orient Leu 143 to shield the active site from bulk solvent and to optimally position the cofactor for hydride transfer.  相似文献   

19.
Divalent metal ions play a crucial role in catalysis by many RNA and protein enzymes that carry out phosphoryl transfer reactions, and defining their interactions with substrates is critical for understanding the mechanism of biological phosphoryl transfer. Although a vast amount of structural work has identified metal ions bound at the active site of many phosphoryl transfer enzymes, the number of functional metal ions and the full complement of their catalytic interactions remain to be defined for any RNA or protein enzyme. Previously, thiophilic metal ion rescue and quantitative functional analyses identified the interactions of three active site metal ions with the 3'- and 2'-substrate atoms of the Tetrahymena group I ribozyme. We have now extended these approaches to probe the metal ion interactions with the nonbridging pro-S(P) oxygen of the reactive phosphoryl group. The results of this study combined with previous mechanistic work provide evidence for a novel assembly of catalytic interactions involving three active site metal ions. One metal ion coordinates the 3'-departing oxygen of the oligonucleotide substrate and the pro-S(P) oxygen of the reactive phosphoryl group; another metal ion coordinates the attacking 3'-oxygen of the guanosine nucleophile; a third metal ion bridges the 2'-hydroxyl of guanosine and the pro-S(P) oxygen of the reactive phosphoryl group. These results for the first time define a complete set of catalytic metal ion/substrate interactions for an RNA or protein enzyme catalyzing phosphoryl transfer.  相似文献   

20.
J H Lee  K Z Chang  V Patel  C J Jeffery 《Biochemistry》2001,40(26):7799-7805
Phosphoglucose isomerase (PGI, EC 5.3.1.9) catalyzes the interconversion of D-glucose 6-phosphate (G6P) and D-fructose 6-phosphate (F6P) and plays important roles in glycolysis and gluconeogenesis. Biochemical characterization of the enzyme has led to a proposed multistep catalytic mechanism. First, the enzyme catalyzes ring opening to yield the open chain form of the substrate. Then isomerization proceeds via proton transfer between C2 and C1 of a cis-enediol(ate) intermediate to yield the open chain form of the product. Catalysis proceeds in both the G6P to F6P and F6P to G6P directions, so both G6P and F6P are substrates. X-ray crystal structure analysis of rabbit and bacterial PGI has previously identified the location of the enzyme active site, and a recent crystal structure of rabbit PGI identified Glu357 as a candidate functional group for transferring the proton. However, it was not clear which active site amino acid residues catalyze the ring opening step. In this paper, we report the X-ray crystal structure of rabbit PGI complexed with the cyclic form of its substrate, D-fructose 6-phosphate, at 2.1 A resolution. The location of the substrate relative to the side chains of His388 suggest that His388 promotes ring opening by protonating the ring oxygen. Glu216 helps to position His388, and a water molecule that is held in position by Lys518 and Thr214 accepts a proton from the hydroxyl group at C2. Comparison to a structure of rabbit PGI with 5PAA bound indicates that ring opening is followed by loss of the protonated water molecule and conformational changes in the substrate and the protein so that a helix containing amino acids 513-520 moves in toward the substrate to form additional hydrogen bonds with the substrate.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号