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1.
beta-d-Xylosidases (EC 3.2.1.37) are exo-type glycoside hydrolases that hydrolyze short xylooligosaccharides to xylose units. The enzymatic hydrolysis of the glycosidic bond involves two carboxylic acid residues, and their identification, together with the stereochemistry of the reaction, provides crucial information on the catalytic mechanism. Two catalytic mutants of a beta-xylosidase from Geobacillus stearothermophilus T-6 were subjected to detailed kinetic analysis to verify their role in catalysis. The activity of the E335G mutant decreased approximately 106-fold, and this activity was enhanced 103-fold in the presence of external nucleophiles such as formate and azide, resulting in a xylosyl-azide product with an opposite anomeric configuration. These results are consistent with Glu335 as the nucleophile in this retaining enzyme. The D495G mutant was subjected to detailed kinetic analysis using substrates bearing different leaving groups (pKa). The mutant exhibited 103-fold reduction in activity, and the Br?nsted plot of log(kcat) versus pKa revealed that deglycosylation is the rate-limiting step, indicating that this step was reduced by 103-fold. The rates of the glycosylation step, as reflected by the specificity constant (kcat/Km), were similar to those of the wild type enzyme for hydrolysis of substrates requiring little protonic assistance (low pKa) but decreased 102-fold for those that require strong acid catalysis (high pKa). Furthermore, the pH dependence profile of the mutant enzyme revealed that acid catalysis is absent. Finally, the presence of azide significantly enhanced the mutant activity accompanied with the generation of a xylosyl-azide product with retained anomeric configuration. These results are consistent with Asp495 acting as the acid-base in XynB2.  相似文献   

2.
beta-D-Xylosidases are glycoside hydrolases that catalyze the release of xylose units from short xylooligosaccharides and are engaged in the final breakdown of plant cell-wall hemicellulose. Here we describe the enzyme-substrate crystal structure of an inverting family 43 beta-xylosidase, from Geobacillus stearothermophilus T-6 (XynB3). Each XynB3 monomeric subunit is organized in two domains: an N-terminal five-bladed beta-propeller catalytic domain, and a beta-sandwich domain. The active site possesses a pocket topology, which is mainly constructed from the beta-propeller domain residues, and is closed on one side by a loop that originates from the beta-sandwich domain. This loop restricts the length of xylose units that can enter the active site, consistent with the exo mode of action of the enzyme. Structures of the enzyme-substrate (xylobiose) complex provide insights into the role of the three catalytic residues. The xylose moiety at the -1 subsite is held by a large number of hydrogen bonds, whereas only one hydroxyl of the xylose unit at the +1 subsite can create hydrogen bonds with the enzyme. The general base, Asp15, is located on the alpha-side of the -1 xylose sugar ring, 5.2 Angstroms from the anomeric carbon. This location enables it to activate a water molecule for a single-displacement attack on the anomeric carbon, resulting in inversion of the anomeric configuration. Glu187, the general acid, is 2.4 Angstroms from the glycosidic oxygen atom and can protonate the leaving aglycon. The third catalytic carboxylic acid, Asp128, is 4 Angstroms from the general acid; modulating its pK(a) and keeping it in the correct orientation relative to the substrate. In addition, Asp128 plays an important role in substrate binding via the 2-O of the glycon, which is important for the transition-state stabilization. Taken together, these key roles explain why Asp128 is an invariant among all five-bladed beta-propeller glycoside hydrolases.  相似文献   

3.
Vocadlo DJ  Wicki J  Rupitz K  Withers SG 《Biochemistry》2002,41(31):9736-9746
The catalytic mechanism of the family 39 Thermoanaerobacterium saccharolyticum beta-xylosidase (XynB) involves a two-step double-displacement mechanism in which a covalent alpha-xylosyl-enzyme intermediate is formed with assistance from a general acid and then hydrolyzed with assistance from a general base. Incubation of recombinant XynB with the newly synthesized active site-directed inhibitor, N-bromoacetyl-beta-D-xylopyranosylamine, resulted in rapid, time-dependent inactivation of the enzyme (k(i)/K(i) = 4.3 x 10(-4) s(-1)mM(- 1)). Protection from inactivation using xylose or benzyl 1-thio-beta-xyloside suggested that the inactivation was active site-directed. Mass spectrometric analysis indicated that incubation of the enzyme with the inactivator resulted in the stoichiometric formation of a new enzyme species bearing the label. Comparative mapping of peptic digests of both the labeled and unlabeled enzyme by HPLC coupled to an electrospray ionization mass spectrometer permitted the identification of a labeled peptide. Sequencing of this peptide by tandem mass spectrometry identified Glu160 within the sequence (157)IWNEPNL(164) as the site of attachment of the N-acetyl-beta-D-xylopyranosylamine moiety. Kinetic analysis of the Glu160Ala mutant strongly suggests that this residue is involved in acid/base catalysis as follows. First, a significant difference in the dependence of k(cat)/K(m) on pH as compared to that seen for the wild-type enzyme was found, as expected for a residue that is involved in acid/base catalysis. The changes, however, were not as simple as those seen in other cases. Second, a dramatic decrease (up to 10(5)-fold) in the catalytic efficiency (k(cat)/K(m)) of the enzyme with a substrate requiring protonic assistance is observed upon such mutation. In contrast, the catalytic efficiency of the enzyme with substrates bearing a good leaving group, not requiring acid catalysis, is only moderately impaired relative to that of the wild-type enzyme (8-fold). Surprisingly, however, the glycosylation step was rate-limiting for all but the most reactive substrates. Last, the addition of azide as a competitive nucleophile resulted in the formation of a beta-xylosyl azide product and increased the k(cat) and K(m) values up to 8-fold while k(cat)/K(m) remained relatively unchanged. Such kinetic behavior is consistent with azide acting competitively with water as a nucleophile in the second step of the enzyme catalyzed reaction involving breakdown of the xylosyl-enzyme intermediate. Together, these results provide strong evidence for a role of Glu160 in acid/base catalysis but suggest that it may be partnered by a second carboxylic acid residue and that the enzyme may function through using acid catalysis involving reverse protonation of active site residues.  相似文献   

4.
The Streptomyces sp. beta-glucosidase (Bgl3) is a retaining glycosidase that belongs to family 1 glycosyl hydrolases. Steady-state kinetics with p-nitrophenyl beta-D-glycosides revealed that the highest k(cat)/K(M) values are obtained with glucoside (with strong substrate inhibition) and fucoside (with no substrate inhibition) substrates and that Bgl3 has 10-fold glucosidase over galactosidase activity. Reactivity studies by means of a Hammett analysis using a series of substituted aryl beta-glucosides gave a biphasic plot log k(cat) vs pK(a) of the phenol aglycon: a linear region with a slope of beta(lg) = -0.8 for the less reactive substrates (pK(a) > 8) and no significant dependence for activated substrates (pK(a) < 8). Thus, according to the two-step mechanism of retaining glycosidases, formation of the glycosyl-enzyme intermediate is rate limiting for the former substrates, while hydrolysis of the intermediate is for the latter. To identify key catalytic residues and on the basis of sequence similarity to other family 1 beta-glucosidases, glutamic acids 178 and 383 were changed to glutamine and alanine by site-directed mutagenesis. Mutation of Glu178 to Gln and Ala yielded enzymes with 250- and 3500-fold reduction in their catalytic efficiencies, whereas larger reduction (10(5)-10(6)-fold) were obtained for mutants at Glu383. The functional role of both residues was probed by a chemical rescue methodology based on activation of the inactive Ala mutants by azide as exogenous nucleophile. The E178A mutant yielded the beta-glucosyl azide adduct (by (1)H NMR) with a 200-fold increase on k(cat) for the 2,4-dinitrophenyl glucoside but constant k(cat)/K(M) on azide concentration. On the other hand, the E383A mutant with the same substrate gave the alpha-glucosyl azide product and a 100-fold increase in k(cat) at 1 M azide. In conclusion, Glu178 is the general acid/base catalyst and Glu383 the catalytic nucleophile. The results presented here indicate that Bgl3 beta-glucosidase displays kinetic and mechanistic properties similar to other family 1 enzymes analyzed so far. Subtle differences in behavior would lie in the fine and specific architecture of their respective active sites.  相似文献   

5.
The DNA repair enzyme uracil DNA glycosylase (UDG) catalyzes the hydrolysis of premutagenic uracil residues from single-stranded or duplex DNA, producing free uracil and abasic DNA. Here we report the high-resolution crystal structures of free UDG from Escherichia coli strain B (1.60 A), its complex with uracil (1.50 A), and a second active-site complex with glycerol (1.43 A). These represent the first high-resolution structures of a prokaryotic UDG to be reported. The overall structure of the E. coli enzyme is more similar to the human UDG than the herpes virus enzyme. Significant differences between the bacterial and viral structures are seen in the side-chain positions of the putative general-acid (His187) and base (Asp64), similar to differences previously observed between the viral and human enzymes. In general, the active-site loop that contains His187 appears preorganized in comparison with the viral and human enzymes, requiring smaller substrate-induced conformational changes to bring active-site groups into catalytic position. These structural differences may be related to the large differences in the mechanism of uracil recognition used by the E. coli and viral enzymes. The pH dependence of k(cat) for wild-type UDG and the D64N and H187Q mutant enzymes is consistent with general-base catalysis by Asp64, but provides no evidence for a general-acid catalyst. The catalytic mechanism of UDG is critically discussed with respect to these results.  相似文献   

6.
Retaining glycosidases promote the hydrolysis of the substrate by following a double-displacement mechanism involving a covalent intermediate. The catalytic residues are a general acid/base catalyst and the nucleophile. Experimental identification of these residues in a specific glycosidase allows for the assigning of the corresponding residues in all of the other enzymes belonging to the same family. By means of sequence alignment, mutagenesis, and detailed kinetic studies of the alpha-fucosidase from Sulfolobus solfataricus (Ssalpha-fuc) (family 29), we show here that the residues, invariant in this family, have the function inferred from the analysis of the 3D structure of the enzyme from Thermotoga maritima (Tmalpha-fuc). These include in Ssalpha-fuc the substrate-binding residues His46 and His123 and the nucleophile of the reaction, previously described. The acid/base catalyst could be assigned less easily. The k(cat) of the Ssalpha-fucGlu292Gly mutant, corresponding to the acid/base catalyst of Tmalpha-fuc, is reduced by 154-fold but could not be chemically rescued. Instead, the Ssalpha-fucGlu58Gly mutant revealed a 4000-fold reduction of k(cat)/K(M) if compared to the wild-type and showed the rescue of the k(cat) by sodium azide at wild-type levels. Thus, our data suggest that a catalytic triad, namely, Glu58, Glu292, and Asp242, is involved in catalysis. Glu58 and Glu292 cooperate in the role of acid/base catalyst, while Asp242 is the nucleophile of the reaction. Our data suggest that in glycosidase family 29 alpha-fucosidases promoting the retaining mechanism with slightly different catalytic machineries coexist.  相似文献   

7.
The Y370G inverting mutant sialidase from Micromonospora viridifaciens possesses beta-sialidase activity with phenyl beta-sialoside (Ph-betaNeuAc) to give alpha-sialic acid as the first formed product. The derived catalytic rate constants for k(cat) and k(cat)/K(m) are 13.3 +/- 0.3 and (2.9 +/- 0.3) x 10(5) M(-)(1) s(-)(1), respectively. This enzyme is highly specific for the phenyl substrate, with substituted phenyl and thiophenyl leaving groups having k(cat) values that are at least 1000-fold lower. In addition, the Y370G mutant can transfer the sialic acid moiety from Ph-betaNeuAc to lactose in yields of up to 13%. Greater than 90% of the sialyl-lactose product formed in the coupling reactions is the alpha-2,6-isomer. A library encoding 6 x 10(5) different sialidases was constructed by mutating Y370, E260, T309, N310, and N311, residues that include and are proximal the catalytic tyrosine residue. A total of 2628 individuals were screened for hydrolytic activity against 4-nitrophenyl 2-thio-beta-sialoside and 4-methylumbelliferyl beta-sialoside. However, none of the mutants screened possessed a significant activity against either of the beta-sialosides.  相似文献   

8.
The contributions to catalysis of the conserved catalytic aspartate (Asp149) in the phosphorylase kinase catalytic subunit (PhK; residues 1-298) have been studied by kinetic and crystallographic methods. Kinetic studies in solvents of different viscosity show that PhK, like cyclic AMP dependent protein kinase, exhibits a mechanism in which the chemical step of phosphoryl transfer is fast and the rate-limiting step is release of the products, ADP and phosphoprotein, and possibly viscosity-dependent conformational changes. Site-directed mutagenesis of Asp149 to Ala and Asn resulted in enzymes with a small increase in K(m) for glycogen phosphorylase b (GPb) and ATP substrates and dramatic decreases in k(cat) (1.3 x 10(4) for Asp149Ala and 4.7 x 10(3) for Asp149Asn mutants, respectively). Viscosometric kinetic measurements with the Asp149Asn mutant showed a reduction in the rate-limiting step for release of products by 4.5 x 10(3) and a significant decrease (possibly as great as 2.2 x 10(3)) in the rate constant characterizing the chemical step. The date combined with the crystallographic evidence for the ternary PhK-AMPPNP-peptide complex [Lowe et al. (1997) EMBO J. 6, 6646-6658] provide powerful support for the role of the carboxyl of Asp149 in binding and orientation of the substrate and in catalysis of phosphoryl transfer. The constitutively active subunit PhK has a glutamate (Glu182) residue in the activation segment, in place of a phosphorylatable serine, threonine, or tyrosine residue in other protein kinases that are activated by phosphorylation. Site-directed mutagenesis of Glu182 and other residues involved in a hydrogen bond network resulted in mutant proteins (Glu182Ser, Arg148Ala, and Tyr206Phe) with decreased catalytic efficiency (approximate average decrease in k(cat)/K(m) by 20-fold). The crystal structure of the mutant Glu182Ser at 2.6 A resolution showed a phosphate dianion about 2.6 A from the position previously occupied by the carboxylate of Glu182. There was no change in tertiary structure from the native protein, but the activation segment in the region C-terminal to residue 182 showed increased disorder, indicating that correct localization of the activation segment is necessary in order to recognize and present the protein substrate for catalysis.  相似文献   

9.
Geobacillus stearothermophilus T-6 encodes for a beta-xylosidase (XynB2) from family 52 of glycoside hydrolases that was previously shown to hydrolyze its substrate with net retention of the anomeric configuration. XynB2 significantly prefers substrates with xylose as the glycone moiety and exhibits a typical bell-shaped pH dependence curve. Binding properties of xylobiose and xylotriose to the active site were measured using isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC). Binding reactions were enthalpy driven with xylobiose binding more tightly than xylotriose to the active site. The kinetic constants of XynB2 were measured for the hydrolysis of a variety of aryl beta-D-xylopyranoside substrates bearing different leaving groups. The Br?nsted plot of log k(cat) versus the pK(a) value of the aglycon leaving group reveals a biphasic relationship, consistent with a double-displacement mechanism as expected for retaining glycoside hydrolases. Hydrolysis rates for substrates with poor leaving groups (pK(a) > 8) vary widely with the aglycon reactivity, indicating that, for these substrates, the bond cleavage is rate limiting. However, no such dependence is observed for more reactive substrates (pK(a) < 8), indicating that in this case hydrolysis of the xylosyl-enzyme intermediate is rate limiting. Secondary kinetic isotope effects suggest that the intermediate breakdown proceeds with modest oxocarbenium ion character at the transition state, and bond cleavage proceeds with even lower oxocarbenium ion character. Inhibition studies with several gluco analogue inhibitors could be measured since XynB2 has low, yet sufficient, activity toward 4-nitrophenyl beta-D-glucopyranose. As expected, inhibitors mimicking the proposed transition state structure, such as 1-deoxynojirimycin, bind with much higher affinity to XynB2 than ground state inhibitors.  相似文献   

10.
Random PCR mutagenesis was applied to the Thermus thermophilus xylA gene encoding xylose isomerase. Three cold-adapted mutants were isolated with the following amino-acid substitutions: E372G, V379A (M-1021), E372G, F163L (M-1024) and E372G (M-1026). The wild-type and mutated xylA genes were cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli HB101 using the vector pGEM-T Easy, and their physicochemical and catalytic properties were determined. The optimum pH for xylose isomerization activity for the mutants was approximately 7.0, which is similar to the wild-type enzyme. Compared with the wild-type, the mutants were active over a broader pH range. The mutants exhibited up to nine times higher catalytic rate constants (k(cat)) for d-xylose compared with the wild-type enzyme at 60 degrees C, but they did not show any increase in catalytic efficiency (k(cat)/K(m)). For d-glucose, both the k(cat) and the k(cat)/K(m) values for the mutants were increased compared with the wild-type enzyme. Furthermore, the mutant enzymes exhibited up to 255 times higher inhibition constants (K(i)) for xylitol than the wild-type, indicating that they are less inhibited by xylitol. The thermal stability of the mutated enzymes was poorer than that of the wild-type enzyme. The results are discussed in terms of increased molecular flexibility of the mutant enzymes at low temperatures.  相似文献   

11.
An E461G mutation of beta-galactosidase results in the disappearance of the high pL (L = H, D) downward break in the rate profiles for k(cat)/K(m) for wild-type enzyme-catalyzed hydrolysis of 4-nitrophenyl beta-D-galactopyranoside (Gal-OPNP) and a decrease from (k(cat))(HOH)/(k(cat))(DOD) = 1.7 to (k(cat))(HOH)/(k(cat))(DOD) = 1.2 in the solvent deuterium isotope effect. These observations provide evidence that the propionic acid side chain of Glu 461 is protonated at catalytically active free beta-galactosidase and they are consistent with a role for this residue in Br?nsted acid catalysis at the leaving group. The earlier observation that this same E461G mutation results in the loss of a downward break at high pH in the rate profile for k(s) for transfer of the beta-D-galactopyranosyl group from beta-galactosidase to water cannot be simply explained by a mechanism in which the single side chain of Glu 461 functions to provide general acid catalysis in the rate limiting step for formation of the beta-D-galactopyranosyl intermediate and general base catalysis of breakdown of this intermediate. Evidence is presented that there may be different catalytic mechanisms, with different roles for the side chain for Glu-461, for nucleophilic addition of water and of small alkyl alcohols to the beta-D-galactopyranosyl reaction intermediate.  相似文献   

12.
Escherichia coli uracil DNA glycosylase (UDG) catalyzes the hydrolysis of premutagenic uracil bases in DNA by flipping the deoxyuridine from the DNA helix [Stivers, J. T., et al. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 952]. A general acid-base mechanism has been proposed whereby His187 facilitates leaving group departure by protonating the O2 of uracil and Asp64 activates a water molecule for nucleophilic attack at C1' of the deoxyribose. Detailed kinetic studies on the H187Q, H187A, and D64N mutant enzymes indicate that Asp64 and His187 stabilize the chemical transition state by 5.3 and 4.8 kcal/mol, respectively, with little effect on substrate or product binding. The pH dependence of k(cat) for wild-type and H187Q UDG indicates that an unprotonated group in the enzyme-substrate complex (pK(a) = 6.2 +/- 0.2) is required for catalysis. This unprotonated group has a small DeltaH of ionization (-0.4 +/- 1.7 kcal/mol) and is absent in the pH profile for D64N UDG, suggesting that it corresponds to the general base Asp64. The pH dependence of k(cat) for wild-type, H187Q, and D64N UDG shows no evidence for an essential protonated group over the pH range of 5.5-10. Hence, the pK(a) of His187 must be outside this pH range if it serves as an electrophilic catalyst. These results support a mechanism in which Asp64 serves as the general base and His187 acts as a neutral electrophile, stabilizing a developing negative charge on uracil O2 in the transition state. In the following paper of this issue we establish by crystallography and heteronuclear NMR spectroscopy that the imidazole of His187 is neutral during the catalytic cycle of UDG.  相似文献   

13.
Human beta-hexosaminidase A (alpha beta) and B (beta beta) are composed of subunits (alpha and beta) that are 60% identical and have been grouped with other evolutionarily related glycosidases into "Family 20". The three-dimensional structure of only one Family 20 member has been elucidated, a bacterial chitobiase. This enzyme shares primary structure homology with both the human subunits only in its active-site region, and even in this restricted area, the level of identity is only 26%. Thus, the validity of the molecular model for the active site of the human enzyme based on chitobiase must be determined experimentally. In this report, we analyze highly purified mutant forms of human hexosaminidase B that have had conservative substitutions made at Glu and Asp residues predicted by the chitobiase model to be part of its active site. Mutation of beta Glu(355) to Gln reduces k(cat) 5000-fold with only a small effect on K(m), while also shifting the pH optimum. These effects are consistent with assignment of this residue as the acid/base catalytic residue. Similarly, mutation of beta Asp(354) to Asn reduced k(cat) 2000-fold while leaving K(m) essentially unaltered, consistent with assignment of this residue as the residue that interacts with the substrate acetamide group to promote its attack on the anomeric center. These data in conjunction with the mutagenesis studies of Asp(241) and Glu(491) indicate that the molecular model is substantially accurate in its identification of catalytically important residues.  相似文献   

14.
The functional and structural significance of amino acid residues Met(39), Glu(56), Asp(58), Glu(60), and Gly(63) of Fibrobacter succinogenes 1,3-1,4-beta-d-glucanase was explored by the approach of site-directed mutagenesis, initial rate kinetics, fluorescence spectroscopy, and CD spectrometry. Glu(56), Asp(58), Glu(60), and Gly(63) residues are conserved among known primary sequences of the bacterial and fungal enzymes. Kinetic analyses revealed that 240-, 540-, 570-, and 880-fold decreases in k(cat) were observed for the E56D, E60D, D58N, and D58E mutant enzymes, respectively, with a similar substrate affinity relative to the wild type enzyme. In contrast, no detectable enzymatic activity was observed for the E56A, E56Q, D58A, E60A, and E60Q mutants. These results indicated that the carboxyl side chain at positions 56 and 60 is mandatory for enzyme catalysis. M39F, unlike the other mutants, exhibited a 5-fold increase in K(m) value. Lower thermostability was found with the G63A mutant when compared with wild type or other mutant forms of F. succinogenes 1,3-1,4-beta-d-glucanase. Denatured wild type and mutant enzymes were, however, recoverable as active enzymes when 8 m urea was employed as the denaturant. Structural modeling and kinetic studies suggest that Glu(56), Asp(58), and Glu(60) residues apparently play important role(s) in the catalysis of F. succinogenes 1,3-1,4-beta-d-glucanase.  相似文献   

15.
Vocadlo DJ  Wicki J  Rupitz K  Withers SG 《Biochemistry》2002,41(31):9727-9735
The catalytic mechanism of Thermoanaerobacterium saccharolyticum beta-xylosidase (XynB) from family 39 of glycoside hydrolases has been subjected to a detailed kinetic investigation using a range of substrates. The enzyme exhibits a bell-shaped pH dependence of k(cat)/K(m), reflecting apparent pK(a) values of 4.1 and 6.8. The k(cat) and k(cat)/K(m) values for a series of aryl xylosides have been measured and used to construct two Br?nsted plots. The plot of log(k(cat)/K(m)) against the pK(a) of the leaving group reveals a significant correlation (beta(lg) = -0.97, r(2) = 0.94, n = 8), indicating that fission of the glycosidic bond is significantly advanced in the transition state leading to the formation of the xylosyl-enzyme intermediate. The large negative value of the slope indicates that there is relatively little proton donation to the glycosidic oxygen in the transition state. A biphasic, concave-downward plot of log(k(cat)) against pK(a) provides good evidence for a two-step double-displacement mechanism involving a glycosyl-enzyme intermediate. For activated leaving groups (pK(a) < 9), the breakdown of the xylosyl-enzyme intermediate is the rate-determining step, as indicated by the absence of any effect of the pK(a) of the leaving group on log(k(cat)) (beta(lg) approximately 0). However, a strong dependence of the first-order rate constant on the pK(a) value of relatively poor leaving groups (pK(a) > 9) suggests that the xylosylation step is rate-determining for these substrates. Support for the dexylosylation chemical step being rate-determining for activated substrates comes from nucleophilic competition experiments in which addition of dithiothreitol results in an increase in turnover rates. Normal secondary alpha-deuterium kinetic isotope effects ((alpha-D)(V) or (alpha-D)(V/K) = 1.08-1.10) for three different substrates of widely varying pK(a) value (5.15-9.95) have been measured and these reveal that the transition states leading to the formation and breakdown of the intermediate are similar and both steps involve rehybridization of C1 from sp(3) to sp(2). These results are consistent only with "exploded" transition states, in which the saccharide moiety bears considerable positive charge, and the intermediate is a covalent acylal-ester where C1 is sp(3) hybridized.  相似文献   

16.
Hint1 is a homodimeric protein and member of the ubiquitous HIT superfamily. Hint1 catalyzes the hydrolysis of purine phosphoramidates and lysyl-adenylate generated by lysyl-tRNA synthetase (LysRS). To determine the importance of homodimerization on the biological and catalytic activity of Hint1, the dimer interface of human Hint1 (hHint1) was destabilized by replacement of Val(97) of hHint1 with Asp, Glu, or Arg. The mutants were shown to exist as monomers in solution by a combination of size exclusion chromatograph, static light scattering, and chemically induced dimerization studies. Circular dichroism studies revealed little difference between the stability of the V97D, V97E, and wild-type hHint1. Relative to wild-type and the V97E mutant, however, significant perturbation of the V97D mutant structure was observed. hHint1 was shown to prefer 3-indolepropionic acyl-adenylate (AIPA) over tryptamine adenosine phosphoramidate monoester (TpAd). Wild-type hHint1 was found to be 277- and 1000-fold more efficient (k(cat)/K(m) values) than the V97E and V97D mutants, respectively. Adenylation of wild-type, V97D, and V97E hHint1 by human LysRS was shown to correlate with the mutant k(cat)/K(m) values using 3-indolepropionic acyl-adenylate as a substrate, but not tryptamine adenosine phosphoramidate monoester. Significant perturbations of the active site residues were not detected by molecular dynamics simulations of the hHint1s. Taken together, these results demonstrate that for hHint1; 1) the efficiency (k(cat)/K(m)) of acylated AMP hydrolysis, but not maximal catalytic turnover (k(cat)), is dependent on homodimerization and 2) the hydrolysis of lysyl-AMP generated by LysRS is not dependent on homodimerization if the monomer structure is similar to the wild-type structure.  相似文献   

17.
Faijes M  Pérez X  Pérez O  Planas A 《Biochemistry》2003,42(45):13304-13318
Glycosynthases are engineered retaining glycosidases devoid of hydrolase activity that efficiently catalyze transglycosylation reactions. The mechanism of the glycosynthase reaction is probed with the E134A mutant of Bacillus licheniformis 1,3-1,4-beta-glucanase. This endo-glycosynthase is regiospecific for formation of a beta-1,4-glycosidic bond with alpha-glycosyl fluoride donors (laminaribiosyl as the minimal donor) and oligosaccharide acceptors containing glucose or xylose on the nonreducing end (aryl monosaccharides or oligosaccharides). The pH dependence of the glycosynthase activity reflects general base catalysis with a kinetic pK(a) of 5.2 +/- 0.1. Kinetics of enzyme inactivation by a water-soluble carbodiimide (EDC) are consistent with modification of an active site carboxylate group with a pK(a) of 5.3 +/- 0.2. The general base is Glu138 (the residue acting as the general acid-base in the parental wild-type enzyme) as probed by preparing the double mutant E134A/E138A. It is devoid of glycosynthase activity, but use of sodium azide as an acceptor not requiring general base catalysis yielded a beta-glycosyl azide product. The pK(a) of Glu138 (kinetic pK(a) on k(cat)/K(M) and pK(a) of EDC inactivation) for the E134A glycosynthase has dropped 1.8 pH units compared to the pK(a) values of the wild type, enabling the same residue to act as a general base in the glycosynthase enzyme. Kinetic parameters of the E134A glycosynthase-catalyzed condensation between Glcbeta4Glcbeta3GlcalphaF (2) as a donor and Glcbeta4Glcbeta-pNP (15) as an acceptor are as follows: k(cat) = 1.7 s(-)(1), K(M)(acceptor) = 11 mM, and K(M)(donor) < 0.3 mM. Donor self-condensation and elongation reactions are kinetically evaluated to establish the conditions for preparative use of the glycosynthase reaction in oligosaccharide synthesis. Yields are 70-90% with aryl monosaccharide and cellobioside acceptors, but 25-55% with laminaribiosides, the lower yields (and lower initial rates) due to competitive inhibition of the beta-1,3-linked disaccharide acceptor for the donor subsites of the enzyme.  相似文献   

18.
Thrombin is an allosteric protease controlled through exosites flanking the catalytic groove. Binding of a peptide derived from hirudin (Hir(52-65)) and/or of heparin to these opposing exosites alters catalysis. We have investigated the contribution of subsites S(2)' and S(3)' to this allosteric transition by comparing the hydrolysis of two sets of fluorescence-quenched substrates having all natural amino acids at positions P(2)' and P(3)'. Regardless of the amino acids, Hir(52-65) decreased, and heparin increased the k(cat)/K(m) value of hydrolysis by thrombin. Several lines of evidence have suggested that Glu(192) participates in this modulation. We have examined the role of Glu(192) by comparing the catalytic activity of thrombin and its E192Q mutant. Mutation substantially diminishes the selectivity of thrombin. The substrate with the "best" P(2)' residue was cleaved with a k(cat)/K(m) value only 49 times higher than the one having the "least favorable" P(2)' residue (versus 636-fold with thrombin). Mutant E192Q also lost the strong preference of thrombin for positively charged P(3)' residues and its strong aversion for negatively charged P(3)' residues. Furthermore, both Hir(52-65) and heparin increased the k(cat)/K(m) value of substrate hydrolysis. We conclude that Glu(192) is critical for the P(2)' and P(3)' specificities of thrombin and for the allostery mediated through exosite 1.  相似文献   

19.
Catalysis by ChiB, a family 18 chitinase from Serratia marcescens, involves a conformational change of Asp142 which is part of a characteristic D(140)XD(142)XE(144) sequence motif. In the free enzyme Asp142 points towards Asp140, whereas it rotates towards the catalytic acid, Glu144, upon ligand binding. Mutation of Asp142 to Asn reduced k(cat) and affinity for allosamidin, a competitive inhibitor. The X-ray structure of the D142N mutant showed that Asn142 points towards Glu144 in the absence of a ligand. The active site also showed other structural adjustments (Tyr10, Ser93) that had previously been observed in the wild-type enzyme upon substrate binding. The X-ray structure of a complex of D142N with allosamidin, a pseudotrisaccharide competitive inhibitor, was essentially identical to that of the wild-type enzyme in complex with the same compound. Thus, the reduced allosamidin affinity in the mutant is not caused by structural changes but solely by the loss of electrostatic interactions with Asp142. The importance of electrostatics was further confirmed by the pH dependence of catalysis and allosamidin inhibition. The pH-dependent apparent affinities for allosamidin were not correlated with k(cat), indicating that it is probably better to view the inhibitor as a mimic of the oxazolinium ion reaction intermediate than as a transition state analogue.  相似文献   

20.
Glycosyltrehalose trehalohydrolase (GTHase) is an α-amylase that cleaves the α-1,4 bond adjacent to the α-1,1 bond of maltooligosyltrehalose to release trehalose. To investigate the catalytic and substrate recognition mechanisms of GTHase, two residues, Asp252 (nucleophile) and Glu283 (general acid/base), located at the catalytic site of GTHase were mutated (Asp252→Ser (D252S), Glu (D252E) and Glu283→Gln (E283Q)), and the activity and structure of the enzyme were investigated. The E283Q, D252E, and D252S mutants showed only 0.04, 0.03, and 0.6% of enzymatic activity against the wild-type, respectively. The crystal structure of the E283Q mutant GTHase in complex with the substrate, maltotriosyltrehalose (G3-Tre), was determined to 2.6-Å resolution. The structure with G3-Tre indicated that GTHase has at least five substrate binding subsites and that Glu283 is the catalytic acid, and Asp252 is the nucleophile that attacks the C1 carbon in the glycosidic linkage of G3-Tre. The complex structure also revealed a scheme for substrate recognition by GTHase. Substrate recognition involves two unique interactions: stacking of Tyr325 with the terminal glucose ring of the trehalose moiety and perpendicularly placement of Trp215 to the pyranose rings at the subsites −1 and +1 glucose.  相似文献   

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