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1.
Comparison of subunit sequences and X-ray crystal structures of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase indicates that the loop between beta-strands A and B of the small subunit is one of the most variable regions of the holoenzyme. In prokaryotes and nongreen algae, the loop contains 10 residues. In land plants and green algae, the loop is comprised of approximately 22 and 28 residues, respectively. Previous studies indicated that the longer betaA-betaB loop was required for the assembly of cyanobacterial small subunits with plant large subunits in isolated chloroplasts. In the present study, chimeric small subunits were constructed by replacing the loop of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii with the sequences of Synechococcus or spinach. When these engineered genes were transformed into a Chlamydomonas mutant that lacks small-subunit genes, photosynthesis-competent colonies were recovered, indicating that loop size is not essential for holoenzyme assembly. Whereas the Synechococcus loop causes decreases in carboxylation V(max), K(m)(O(2)), and CO(2)/O(2) specificity, the spinach loop causes complementary decreases in carboxylation V(max), K(m)(O(2)), and K(m)(CO(2)) without a change in specificity. X-ray crystal structures of the engineered proteins reveal remarkable similarity between the introduced betaA-betaB loops and the respective loops in the Synechococcus and spinach enzymes. The side chains of several large-subunit residues are altered in regions previously shown by directed mutagenesis to influence CO(2)/O(2) specificity. Differences in the catalytic properties of divergent Rubisco enzymes may arise from differences in the small-subunit betaA-betaB loop. This loop may be a worthwhile target for genetic engineering aimed at improving photosynthetic CO(2) fixation.  相似文献   

2.
The loop between alpha-helix 6 and beta-strand 6 in the alpha/beta-barrel active site of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco, EC 4.1.1.39) plays a key role in discriminating between gaseous substrates CO(2) and O(2). Based on numerous x-ray crystal structures, loop 6 is either closed or open depending on the presence or absence, respectively, of substrate ligands. The carboxyl terminus folds over loop 6 in the closed conformation, prompting speculation that it may trigger or latch loop 6 closure. Because an x-ray crystal structure of tobacco Rubisco revealed that phosphate is located at a site in the open form that is occupied by the carboxyl group of Asp-473 in the closed form, it was proposed that Asp-473 may serve as the latch that holds the carboxyl terminus over loop 6. To assess the essentiality of Asp-473 in catalysis, we used directed mutagenesis and chloroplast transformation of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii to create D473A and D473E mutant enzymes. The D473A and D473E mutant strains can grow photoautotrophically, indicating that Asp-473 is not essential for catalysis. However, both substitutions caused 87% decreases in carboxylation catalytic efficiency (V(max)/K(m)) and approximately 16% decreases in CO(2)/O(2) specificity. If the carboxyl terminus is required for stabilizing loop 6 in the closed conformation, there must be additional residues at the carboxyl terminus/loop 6 interface that contribute to this mechanism. Considering that substitutions at residue 473 can influence CO(2)/O(2) specificity, further study of interactions between loop 6 and the carboxyl terminus may provide clues for engineering an improved Rubisco.  相似文献   

3.
Role of the small subunit in ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) catalyzes the rate-limiting step of CO2 fixation in photosynthesis, but O2 competes with CO2 for substrate ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate, leading to the loss of fixed carbon. Interest in genetically engineering improvements in carboxylation catalytic efficiency and CO2/O2 specificity has focused on the chloroplast-encoded large subunit because it contains the active site. However, there is another type of subunit in the holoenzyme of plants, which, like the large subunit, is present in eight copies. The role of these nuclear-encoded small subunits in Rubisco structure and function is poorly understood. Small subunits may have originated during evolution to concentrate large-subunit active sites, but the extensive divergence of structures among prokaryotes, algae, and land plants seems to indicate that small subunits have more-specialized functions. Furthermore, plants and green algae contain families of differentially expressed small subunits, raising the possibility that these subunits may regulate the structure or function of Rubisco. Studies of interspecific hybrid enzymes have indicated that small subunits are required for maximal catalysis and, in several cases, contribute to CO2/O2 specificity. Although small-subunit genetic engineering remains difficult in land plants, directed mutagenesis of cyanobacterial and green-algal genes has identified specific structural regions that influence catalytic efficiency and CO2/O2 specificity. It is thus apparent that small subunits will need to be taken into account as strategies are developed for creating better Rubisco enzymes.  相似文献   

4.
Despite conservation of three-dimensional structure and active-site residues, ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco, EC 4.1.1.39) enzymes from divergent species differ with respect to catalytic efficiency and CO2/O2 specificity. A deeper understanding of the structural basis for these differences may provide a rationale for engineering an improved enzyme, thereby leading to an increase in photosynthetic CO2 fixation and agricultural productivity. By comparing 500 active-site large subunit sequences from flowering plants with that of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, a small number of residues were found to differ in regions previously shown by mutant screening to influence CO2/O2 specificity. When directed mutagenesis and chloroplast transformation were used to change Chlamydomonas Met-42 and Cys-53 to land plant Val-42 and Ala-53 in the large subunit N-terminal domain, little or no change in Rubisco catalytic properties was observed. However, changing Chlamydomonas methyl-Cys-256, Lys-258, and Ile-265 to land plant Phe-256, Arg-258, and Val-265 at the bottom of the alpha/beta-barrel active site caused a 10% decrease in CO2/O2 specificity, largely due to an 85% decrease in carboxylation catalytic efficiency (Vmax/Km). Because land plant Rubisco enzymes have greater CO2/O2 specificity than the Chlamydomonas enzyme, this group of residues must be complemented by other residues that differ between Chlamydomonas and land plants. The Rubisco x-ray crystal structures indicate that these residues may reside in a variable loop of the nuclear-encoded small subunit, more than 20 A away from the active site.  相似文献   

5.
Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) catalyzes the initial step of carbon metabolism in photosynthesis. The holoenzyme comprises eight large subunits, arranged as a tetramer of dimers around a central solvent channel that defines a fourfold axis of symmetry, and eight small subunits, arranged as two tetramers at the poles of the axis. The phylogenetically divergent small-subunit loops between β-strands A and B form the entrance to the solvent channel. In the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, Ile-58 from each of the four small-subunit βA–βB loops defines the minimal diameter of the channel opening. To understand the role of the central solvent channel in Rubisco function, directed mutagenesis and transformation of Chlamydomonas were employed to replace Ile-58 with Ala, Lys, Glu, Trp, or three Trp residues (I58W3) to close the entrance to the channel. The I58E, I58K, and I58W substitutions caused only small decreases in photosynthetic growth at 25 and 35 °C, whereas I58W3 had a substantial effect at both temperatures. The mutant enzymes had decreased carboxylation rates, but the I58W3 enzyme had decreases in both carboxylation and CO2/O2 specificity. The I58E, I58W, and I58W3 enzymes were inactivated at lower temperatures than wild-type Rubisco, and were degraded at slower rates under oxidative stress. However, these mutant enzymes were activated by Rubisco activase at normal rates, indicating that the structural transition required for carboxylation is not affected by altering the solvent channel opening. Structural dynamics alone may not be responsible for these distant effects on the Rubisco active site.  相似文献   

6.
R J Spreitzer  G Thow    G Zhu 《Plant physiology》1995,109(2):681-685
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii mutant 31-4E lacks ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco; EC 4.1.1.39) holoenzyme due to a mutation in the chloroplast rbcL gene. This mutation causes a glycine54-to-aspartate substitution within the N-terminal domain of the Rubisco large subunit. In the present study, photosynthesis-competent revertants were selected to determine whether other amino acid substitutions might complement the primary defect. Revertants were found to arise from only true reversion or either of two forms of pseudoreversion affecting residue 54. One pseudorevertant has a glycine54-to-alanine substitution that decreases the accumulation of holoenzyme, but the purified Rubisco has near-normal kinetic properties. The other pseudorevertant has a glycine54-to-valine substitution that causes an even greater decrease in holoenzyme accumulation. Rubisco purified from this strain was found to have an 83% decrease in the Vmax of carboxylation and an 18% decrease in the CO2/O2 specificity factor. These results indicate that small increases in the size of amino acid side chains can influence Rubisco assembly or stability. Even though such changes occur far from the active site, they also play a significant role in determining Rubisco catalytic efficiency.  相似文献   

7.
The crystal structure of Rubisco (ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase) from the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii has been determined to 1.4 A resolution. Overall, the structure shows high similarity to the previously determined structures of L8S8 Rubisco enzymes. The largest difference is found in the loop between beta strands A and B of the small subunit (betaA-betaB loop), which is longer by six amino acid residues than the corresponding region in Rubisco from Spinacia. Mutations of residues in the betaA-betaB loop have been shown to affect holoenzyme stability and catalytic properties. The information contained in the Chlamydomonas structure enables a more reliable analysis of the effect of these mutations. No electron density was observed for the last 13 residues of the small subunit, which are assumed to be disordered in the crystal. Because of the high resolution of the data, some posttranslational modifications are unambiguously apparent in the structure. These include cysteine and N-terminal methylations and proline 4-hydroxylations.  相似文献   

8.
A temperature-conditional, photosynthesis-deficient mutant of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, previously recovered by genetic screening, results from a leucine 290 to phenylalanine (L290F) substitution in the chloroplast-encoded large subunit of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco, EC ). Rubisco purified from mutant cells grown at 25 degrees C has a reduction in CO(2)/O(2) specificity and is inactivated at lower temperatures than those that inactivate the wild-type enzyme. Second-site alanine 222 to threonine (A222T) or valine 262 to leucine (V262L) substitutions were previously isolated via genetic selection for photosynthetic ability at the 35 degrees C restrictive temperature. These intragenic suppressors improve the CO(2)/O(2) specificity and thermal stability of L290F Rubisco in vivo and in vitro. In the present study, directed mutagenesis and chloroplast transformation were used to create the A222T and V262L substitutions in an otherwise wild-type enzyme. Although neither substitution improves the CO(2)/O(2) specificity above the wild-type value, both improve the thermal stability of wild-type Rubisco in vitro. Based on the x-ray crystal structure of spinach Rubisco, large subunit residues 222, 262, and 290 are far from the active site. They surround a loop of residues in the nuclear-encoded small subunit. Interactions at this subunit interface may substantially contribute to the thermal stability of the Rubisco holoenzyme.  相似文献   

9.
The binding of the Epstein-Barr virus glycoprotein gp350 by complement receptor type 2 (CR2) is critical for viral attachment to B lymphocytes. We set out to test hypotheses regarding the molecular nature of this interaction by developing an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for the efficient analysis of the gp350-CR2 interaction by utilizing wild-type and mutant forms of recombinant gp350 and also of the CR2 N-terminal domains SCR1 and SCR2 (designated CR2 SCR1-2). To delineate the CR2-binding site on gp350, we generated 17 gp350 single-site substitutions targeting an area of gp350 that has been broadly implicated in the binding of both CR2 and the major inhibitory anti-gp350 monoclonal antibody (MAb) 72A1. These site-directed mutations identified a novel negatively charged CR2-binding surface described by residues Glu-21, Asp-22, Glu-155, Asp-208, Glu-210, and Asp-296. We also identified gp350 amino acid residues involved in non-charge-dependent interactions with CR2, including Tyr-151, Ile-160, and Trp-162. These data were supported by experiments in which phycoerythrin-conjugated wild-type and mutant forms of gp350 were incubated with CR2-expressing K562 cells and binding was assessed by flow cytometry. The ELISA was further utilized to identify several positively charged residues (Arg-13, Arg-28, Arg-36, Lys-41, Lys-57, Lys-67, Arg-83, and Arg-89) within SCR1-2 of CR2 that are involved in the binding interaction with gp350. These experiments allowed a comparison of those CR2 residues that are important for binding gp350 to those that define the epitope for an effective inhibitory anti-CR2 MAb, 171 (Asn-11, Arg-13, Ser-32, Thr-34, Arg-36, and Tyr-64). The mutagenesis data were used to calculate a model of the CR2-gp350 complex using the soft-docking program HADDOCK.  相似文献   

10.
Human tissue factor pathway inhibitor-2 (TFPI-2) is a Kunitz-type proteinase inhibitor that regulates a variety of serine proteinases involved in coagulation and fibrinolysis through their non-productive interaction with a P(1) residue (Arg-24) in its first Kunitz-type domain (KD1). Previous kinetic studies revealed that TFPI-2 was a more effective inhibitor of plasmin than several other serine proteinases, but the molecular basis for this specificity was unclear. In this study, we employed molecular modeling and mutagenesis strategies to produce several variants of human TFPI-2 KD1 in an effort to identify interactive site residues other than the P(1) Arg that contribute significantly to its inhibitory activity and specificity. Molecular modeling of KD1 based on the crystal structure of bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor revealed that KD1 formed a more energetically favorable complex with plasmin versus trypsin and/or the factor VIIa-tissue factor complex primarily due to strong ionic interactions between Asp-19 (P(6)) and Arg residues in plasmin (Arg-644, Arg-719, and Arg-767), Arg-24 (P(1)) with Asp-735 in plasmin, and Arg-29 (P(5)') with Glu-606 in plasmin. In addition, Leu-26 through Leu-28 (P(2)'-P(4)') in KD1 formed strong van der Waals contact with a hydrophobic cluster in plasmin (Phe-583, Met-585, and Phe-587). Mutagenesis of Asp-19, Tyr-20, Arg-24, Arg-29, and Leu-26 in KD1 resulted in substantial reductions in plasmin inhibitory activity relative to wild-type KD1, but the Asp-19 and Tyr-20 mutations revealed the importance of these residues in the specific inhibition of plasmin. In addition to the reactive site residues in the P(6)-P(5)' region of KD1, mutation of a highly conserved Phe at the P(18)' position revealed the importance of this residue in the inhibition of serine proteinases by KD1. Thus, together with the P(1) residue, the nature of other residues flanking the P(1) residue, particularly at P(6) and P(5)', strongly influences the inhibitory activity and specificity of human TFPI-2.  相似文献   

11.
P2X receptors for ATP are a family of ligand-gated cation channels. There are 11 conserved positive charges in the extracellular loop of P2X receptors. We have generated point mutants of these conserved residues (either Lys --> Arg, Lys --> Ala, Arg --> Lys, or Arg --> Ala) in the human P2X(1) receptor to determine their contribution to the binding of negatively charged ATP. ATP evoked concentration-dependent (EC(50) approximately 0.8 microm) desensitizing responses at wild-type (WT) P2X(1) receptors expressed in Xenopus oocytes. Suramin produced a parallel rightward shift in the concentration response curve with an estimated pK(B) of 6.7. Substitution of amino acids at positions Lys-53, Lys-190, Lys-215, Lys-325, Arg-202, Arg-305, and Arg-314 either had no effect or only a small change in ATP potency, time course, and/or suramin sensitivity. Modest changes in ATP potency were observed for mutants at K70R and R292K/A (20- and 100-fold decrease, respectively). Mutations at residues K68A and K309A reduced the potency of ATP by >1400-fold and prolonged the time course of the P2X(1) receptor current but had no effect on suramin antagonism. Lys-68, Lys-70, Arg-292, and Lys-309 are close to the predicted transmembrane domains of the receptor and suggest that the ATP binding pocket may form close to the channel vestibule.  相似文献   

12.
The gene glpK, encoding glycerol kinase (GlpK) of Thermus aquaticus, has recently been identified. The protein encoded by glpK was found to have an unusually high identity of 81% with the sequence of GlpK from Bacillus subtilis. Three residues (Arg-82, Glu-83, and Asp-244) of T. aquaticus GlpK are conserved in all the known GlpK sequences, including those from various bacteria, yeast and human. The roles that these three residues play in the catalytic mechanism were investigated by using site-directed mutagenesis to produce three mutants: Arg-82-Ala, Glu-83-Ala, and Asp-244-Ala. Replacement of Asp-244 by Ala resulted in a complete loss of activity, thus suggesting that Asp-244 is important for catalysis. Taking k(cat)/K(m) as a simple measure of catalytic efficiency, the mutants Arg-82-Ala and Glu-83-Ala were judged to cause 190- and 37,000-fold decrease, respectively, when compared to the wild-type GlpK. Thus, these three residues play a critical role in the catalytic mechanism. However, only mutant Glu-83-Ala was cleaved by alpha-chymotrypsin, and proteolysis studies showed that the mutant Glu-83-Ala involves a change in the exposure of Tyr-331 at the alpha-chymotrypsin site. This indicates a large domain conformational change, since the residues corresponding to Glu-83 and Tyr-331 in the Escherichia coli GlpK sequence are located in domain IB and domain IIB, respectively. The apparent conformational change caused by replacement of Glu-83 leads us to propose that Glu-83 is an important residue for stabilization of domain conformation.  相似文献   

13.
Laisk A  Sumberg A 《Plant physiology》1994,106(2):689-695
Photorespiration was calculated from chlorophyll fluorescence and ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) kinetics and compared with CO2 evolution rate in the light, measured by three gas-exchange methods in mature sunflower (Helianthus annuus L.) leaves. The gas-exchange methods were (a) postillumination CO2 burst at unchanged CO2 concentration, (b) postillumination CO2 burst with simultaneous transfer into CO2-free air, and (c) extrapolation of the CO2 uptake to zero CO2 concentration at Rubisco active sites. The steady-state CO2 compensation point was proportional to O2 concentration, revealing the Rubisco specificity coefficient (Ksp) of 86. Electron transport rate (ETR) was calculated from fluorescence, and photorespiration rate was calculated from ETR using CO2 and O2 concentrations, Ksp, and diffusion resistances. The values of the best-fit mesophyll diffusion resistance for CO2 ranged between 0.3 and 0.8 s cm-1. Comparison of the gas-exchange and fluorescence data showed that only ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP) carboxylation and photorespiratory CO2 evolution were present at limiting CO2 concentrations. Carboxylation of a substrate other than RuBP, in addition to RuBP carboxylation, was detected at high CO2 concentrations. A simultaneous decarboxylation process not related to RuBP oxygenation was also detected at high CO2 concentrations in the light. We propose that these processes reflect carboxylation of phosphoenolpyruvate, formed from phosphoglyceric acid and the subsequent decarboxylation of malate.  相似文献   

14.
Because charged residues at the intracellular ends of transmembrane helix (TMH) 2 and TMH3 of G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) affect signaling, we performed mutational analysis of these residues in the constitutively signaling Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus GPCR (KSHV-GPCR). KSHV-GPCR contains the amino acid sequence Val-Arg-Tyr rather than the Asp/Glu-Arg-Tyr ((D/E)RY) motif at the intracellular end of TMH3. Mutation of Arg-143 to Ala (R143A) or Gln (R143Q) abolished constitutive signaling whereas R143K exhibited 50% of the basal activity of KSHV-GPCR. R143A was not stimulated by agonist, whereas R143Q was stimulated by growth-related oncogene-alpha, and R143K, similar to KSHV-GPCR, was stimulated further. These findings show that Arg-143 is critical for signal generation in KSHV-GPCR. In other GPCRs, Arg in this position may act as a signaling switch by movement of its sidechain from a hydrophilic pocket in the TMH bundle to a position outside the bundle. In rhodopsin, the Arg of Glu-Arg-Tyr interacts with the adjacent Asp to constrain Arg outside the TMH bundle. V142D was 70% more active than KSHV-GPCR, suggesting that an Arg residue, which is constrained outside the bundle by interacting with Asp-142, leads to a receptor that signals more actively. Because the usually conserved Asp in the middle of TMH2 is not present in KSHV-GPCR, we tested whether Asp-83 at the intracellular end of TMH2 was involved in signaling. D83N and D83A were 110 and 190% more active than KSHV-GPCR, respectively. The double mutant D83A/V142D was 510% more active than KSHV-GPCR. That is, cosubstitutions of Asp-83 by Ala and Val-142 by Asp act synergistically to increase basal signaling. A model of KSHV-GPCR predicts that Arg-143 interacts with residues in the TMH bundle and that the sidechain of Asp-83 does not interact with Arg-143. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that Arg-143 and Asp-83 independently affect the signaling activity of KSHV-GPCR.  相似文献   

15.
Aspartate transcarbamylase (EC 2.1.3.2) from E. coli is a multimeric enzyme consisting of two catalytic subunits and three regulatory subunits whose activity is regulated by subunit interactions. Differential scanning calorimetric (DSC) scans of the wild-type enzyme consist of two peaks, each comprised of at least two components, corresponding to denaturation of the catalytic and regulatory subunits within the intact holoenzyme (Vickers et al., J. Biol. Chem. 253 (1978) 8493; Edge et al., Biochemistry 27 (1988) 8081). We have examined the effects of nine single-site mutations in the catalytic chains. Three of the mutations (Asp-100-Gly, Glu-86-Gln, and Arg-269-Gly) are at sites at the C1: C2 interface between c chains within the catalytic subunit. These mutations disrupt salt linkages present in both the T and R states of the molecule (Honzatko et al., J. Mol. Biol. 160 (1982) 219; Krause et al., J. Mol. Biol. 193 (1987) 527). The remainder (Lys-164-Ile, Tyr-165-Phe, Glu-239-Gln, Glu-239-Ala, Tyr-240-Phe and Asp-271-Ser) are at the C1: C4 interface between catalytic subunits and are involved in interactions which stabilize either the T or R state. DSC scans of all of the mutants except Asp-100-Gly and Arg-269-Gly consisted of two peaks. At intermediate concentrations, Asp-100-Gly and Arg-269-Gly had only a single peak near the Tm of the regulatory subunit transition in the holoenzyme, although their denaturational profiles were more complex at high and low protein concentrations. The catalytic subunits of Glu-86-Gln, Lys-164-Ile and Asp-271-Ser appear to be significantly destabilized relative to wild-type protein while Tyr-165-Phe and Tyr-240-Phe appear to be stabilized. Values of delta delta G degree cr, the difference between the subunit interaction energy of wild-type and mutant proteins, evaluated as suggested by Brandts et al. (Biochemistry 28 (1989) 8588) range from -3.7 kcal mol-1 for Glu-86-Gln to 2.4 kcal mol-1 for Tyr-165-Phe.  相似文献   

16.
Mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases control gene expression in response to extracellular stimuli and exhibit exquisite specificity for their cognate regulators and substrates. We performed a structure-based mutational analysis of ERK2 to identify surface areas that are important for recognition of its interacting proteins. We show that binding and activation of MKP3 by ERK2 involve two distinct protein-protein interaction sites in ERK2. Thus, the common docking (CD) site composed of Glu-79, Tyr-126, Arg-133, Asp-160, Tyr-314, Asp-316, and Asp-319 are important for high affinity MKP3 binding but not essential for ERK2-induced MKP3 activation. MKP3 activation requires residues Tyr-111, Thr-116, Leu-119, Lys-149, Arg-189, Trp-190, Glu-218, Arg-223, Lys-229, and His-230 in the ERK2 substrate-binding region, located distal to the common docking site. Interestingly, many of the residues important for MKP3 recognition are also used for Elk1 binding and phosphorylation. In addition to the shared residues, there are also residues that are unique to each target recognition. There is evidence indicating that the CD site and the substrate-binding region defined here are also utilized for MEK1 recognition, and indeed, we demonstrate that the binding of MKP3, Elk1, and MEK1 to ERK2 is mutually exclusive. Taken together, our data suggest that the efficiency and fidelity of ERK2 signaling is achieved by a bipartite recognition process. In this model, one part of the ERK2-binding proteins (e.g. the kinase interaction motif sequence) docks to the CD site located on the back side of the ERK2 catalytic pocket for high affinity association, whereas the interaction of the substrate-binding region with another structural element (e.g. the FXFP motif in MKP3 and Elk1) may not only stabilize binding but also provide contacts crucial for modulating the activity and/or specificity of ERK2 target molecules.  相似文献   

17.
Na(+) binding near the primary specificity pocket of thrombin promotes the procoagulant, prothrombotic, and signaling functions of the enzyme. The effect is mediated allosterically by a communication between the Na(+) site and regions involved in substrate recognition. Using a panel of 78 Ala mutants of thrombin, we have mapped the allosteric core of residues that are energetically linked to Na(+) binding. These residues are Asp-189, Glu-217, Asp-222, and Tyr-225, all in close proximity to the bound Na(+). Among these residues, Asp-189 shares with Asp-221 the important function of transducing Na(+) binding into enhanced catalytic activity. None of the residues of exosite I, exosite II, or the 60-loop plays a significant role in Na(+) binding and allosteric transduction. X-ray crystal structures of the Na(+)-free (slow) and Na(+)-bound (fast) forms of thrombin, free or bound to the active site inhibitor H-d-Phe-Pro-Arg-chloromethyl-ketone, document the conformational changes induced by Na(+) binding. The slow --> fast transition results in formation of the Arg-187:Asp-222 ion pair, optimal orientation of Asp-189 and Ser-195 for substrate binding, and a significant shift of the side chain of Glu-192 linked to a rearrangement of the network of water molecules that connect the bound Na(+) to Ser-195 in the active site. The changes in the water network and the allosteric core explain the thermodynamic signatures linked to Na(+) binding and the mechanism of thrombin activation by Na(+). The role of the water network uncovered in this study establishes a new paradigm for the allosteric regulation of thrombin and other Na(+)-activated enzymes involved in blood coagulation and the immune response.  相似文献   

18.
The loop between alpha-helix 6 and beta-strand 6 in the alpha/beta-barrel of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase plays a key role in discriminating between CO2 and O2. Genetic screening in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii previously identified a loop-6 V331A substitution that decreases carboxylation and CO2/O2 specificity. Revertant selection identified T342I and G344S substitutions that restore photosynthetic growth by increasing carboxylation and specificity of the V331A enzyme. In numerous X-ray crystal structures, loop 6 is closed or open depending on the activation state of the enzyme and the presence or absence of ligands. The carboxy terminus folds over loop 6 in the closed state. To study the molecular basis for catalysis, directed mutagenesis and chloroplast transformation were used to create T342I and G344S substitutions alone. X-ray crystal structures were then solved for the V331A, V331A/T342I, T342I, and V331A/G344S enzymes, as well as for a D473E enzyme created to assess the role of the carboxy terminus in loop-6 closure. V331A disturbs a hydrophobic pocket, abolishing several van der Waals interactions. These changes are complemented by T342I and G344S, both of which alone cause decreases in CO2/O2 specificity. In the V331A/T342I revertant enzyme, Arg339 main-chain atoms are displaced. In V331A/G344S, alpha-helix 6 is shifted. D473E causes disorder of the carboxy terminus, but loop 6 remains closed. Interactions between a transition-state analogue and several residues are altered in the mutant enzymes. However, active-site Lys334 at the apex of loop 6 has a normal conformation. A variety of subtle interactions must be responsible for catalytic efficiency and CO2/O2 specificity.  相似文献   

19.
Manithody C  Rezaie AR 《Biochemistry》2005,44(30):10063-10070
It has been hypothesized that two antiparallel structures comprised of residues 82-91 and 102-116 in factor Xa (fXa) may harbor a factor Va- (fVa-) dependent prothrombin recognition site in the prothrombinase complex. There are 11 charged residues in the 82-116 loop of human fXa (Glu-84, Glu-86, Lys-90, Arg-93, Lys-96, Glu-97, Asp-100, Asp-102, Arg-107, Lys-109, and Arg-115). With the exception of Glu-84, which did not express, and Asp-102, which is a catalytic residue, we expressed the Ala substitution mutants of all other residues and evaluated their proteolytic and amidolytic activities in both the absence and presence of fVa. K96A and K109A activated prothrombin with 5-10-fold impaired catalytic efficiency in the absence of fVa. All mutants, however, exhibited normal activity toward the substrate in the presence of fVa. K109A also exhibited impaired amidolytic activity and affinity for Na(+); however, both fVa and higher Na(+) restored the catalytic defect caused by the mutation. Analysis of the X-ray crystal structure of fXa indicated that Glu-84 may interact by a salt bridge with Lys-109, explaining the lack of expression of E84A and the lower activity of K109A in the absence of fVa. These results suggest that none of the residues under study is a fVa-dependent recognition site for prothrombin in the prothrombinase complex; however, Lys-96 is a recognition site for the substrate independent of the cofactor. Moreover, the 82-116 loop is energetically linked to fVa and Na(+) binding sites of the protease.  相似文献   

20.
The interaction of thrombin with protein C triggers a key down-regulatory process of the coagulation cascade. Using a panel of 77 Ala mutants, we have mapped the epitope of thrombin recognizing protein C in the absence or presence of the cofactor thrombomodulin. Residues around the Na(+) site (Thr-172, Lys-224, Tyr-225, and Gly-226), the aryl binding site (Tyr-60a), the primary specificity pocket (Asp-189), and the oxyanion hole (Gly-193) hold most of the favorable contributions to protein C recognition by thrombin, whereas a patch of residues in the 30-loop (Arg-35 and Pro-37) and 60-loop (Phe-60h) regions produces unfavorable contributions to binding. The shape of the epitope changes drastically in the presence of thrombomodulin. The unfavorable contributions to binding disappear and the number of residues promoting the thrombin-protein C interaction is reduced to Tyr-60a and Asp-189. Kinetic studies of protein C activation as a function of temperature reveal that thrombomodulin increases >1,000-fold the rate of diffusion of protein C into the thrombin active site and lowers the activation barrier for this process by 4 kcal/mol. We propose that the mechanism of thrombomodulin action is to kinetically facilitate the productive encounter of thrombin and protein C and to allosterically change the conformation of the activation peptide of protein C for optimal presentation to the thrombin active site.  相似文献   

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